SMU Qu clasts T exas , 20-19 By JIM MONTGOMERY A sso cia te Sports Editor H eartb reak waited in th e end zone for Texas here S aturday as a pounding Longhorn second half surge fell sh o rt one point and SMU won, 20-19. Behind 20-0 when the third q u a rte r opened, the m ud sm eared S teers staged one of the most gallant comebacks ever seen in Memorial Stadium by bouncing off the ropes to score th ree times. T exas’ last touchdown came with only 3:15 left in the game and altered the scoreboard to 20-19. W alter Fondren, generally sure death on conversions, kicked wide to the right, however, a n d th a t w as all f o r the O r a n g e . Tom my G entry, who two weeks ago converted twice as SMU beat Rice 14-13, again provided the Pony m argin. The sure-footed Pony co-captain, k ic k e d true afte r SMU’s first and last scores. The longhorns, who previously this season had second half difficulties, reversed the pattern Sat­ urday. The Steers collapsed in the first half, touchdowns and 2:6 allowing th ree M ustang yards offense, then stopped the Ponies with only IO yards in the final 30 m inutes while rolling to 181 yards and 19 points themselves, SMU took th e opening kickoff and went 82 yards on 18 plays t o 'score. The M ustangs used a spread version of the T with both ends and a halfback spread wide. Most of the yardage came on end sweeps and off tackle. When the drive stalled on the UT 13, qu arter­ back Charlie Arnold threw 13 yards to G entry on fourth down for the score. The catch was vig­ orous]:/ disputed as most observers thought Gen­ try nabbed the ball on a bounce. The Steer offense, which didn’t generate a first down until 13:10 were gone in the second quarter, failed to function and they were forced to punt. SMU couldn’t move again until the second Period, vvhen they drove 88 yards in nine plays to? their next touchdown, G entry again scoring on a pass from Arnold. Jack Hobbs blocked G entry’s kick. P ony reserv es w ent 62 yard s for the third SMU score, w hich ca m e m id w ay second quarter. Q uarterback Larry Click threw 35 yards to D an Bowden in the end zone on a n ea tly executed fake line huck w hich clea red Bowden behind defender Fondren. the in T e x a n ‘First College D a i l y in the So u th ’ VO L. 56 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, S U N D A Y , NOVEMBER 4, 1956 Eight Pages Today NO. 60 News in Brief... By Th** Associated Pre*# Russia Hits H u n g a r y Speed Named Celia , Outstanding by Dads As the la st half began, m ost of the 35,000 fans settled back behind rain protection to w atch the slaugh- ter. T exas w a sn ’t buying any, how­ ever Fondren, J im m y W elch, and Joe C lem ents, w ho played his b est g a m e of the Steers on a 59-yard scorin g drive, m ostly on th* ground. the season , paced W ilson Score- Th* touchdown ca m e on a w eird pass p lay from C lem ents. The ball was d eflected in the end zone and grabbed at the nine-yard line by guard Don W ilson, w ho bulled through to score. the *surprised P on ies Wi th G e n e r a l A tt a c k V IENNA erful R ussia! launched a g e n e r a l attack on H ungary and its capital Sunday without w arning! Celia B uchan, U n iversity sw eet- \ ire- arid Speed Carroll, Sunday, N ov, 4 Pow- president of die Students’ A ssocia- lion, w ere nam ed m ost oustanding girl and boy af the U niv ersity in the ninth annual D ad s’ D ay pro­ the gram Saturday m orning T exas U nion M ain Lounge. “ R u ssian f orc es [h eart in Stanley M E rskm e of Midland w as elected president of the D a d s’ A ssociation. C hosen v ice-p residents w ere H. M. Adkins, A m arillo; w Colonel D . H arold B yrd , D a lla s; C. W. Cahoon J r., W ichita F a lls; H arry W, F erg u so n , H ouston; M. A. Olson, San Antonio; R ichard ti. Sim on, F ort Worth; John L. Tom pkins, Corpus C hristi; W. F . W eed, B eau m on t; and Sam D. Wolfe, Sherm an. Bob A rm strong of Austin w a s elected treasu rer and D ean W. I). Blunk, secreta ry . P resentation aw ards w a s of possession, m ovin g 55 y a rd s Fondren m issed the conversion. m ade by Mr. E rskine. He w a s a s­ T exas scored again on their n ext sisted by R ichard B lalock, out­ on going Assot iation president, and runs, Dr. Cl P. Boner, vice-p resident o f j w eR"HCrombine Underage? Vote A nyw ay Jucll R ee V C S C h O S d l ROY BEDICHEK c ea se-fii e. John R. B rougher of C alvert, Outstanding 'Tapped' Last year o n ly 58 per cent of the U n iversity faculty and staff contributed to the fund M em bers of the drive hope that this y ea r a larger p ercen tage w ill contribute The student presidential poll w ill be T uesday, as U n iv ersity students - of voting a g e or not -will have the opportunity their preferen ces for P resid en t. to e x p ress Friars Select Five New Members F iv e new m em b ers w ho have been tapped by the F ria rs, honor­ a ry o rgan ization for m en. are Har­ ley C lark, Lloyd H a y es, B. I). Mc­ K inney, Clov is M orrisson J r., and Sam R. P erry. “ The tow n had then a population of 4,000 w ho w ere served bv six ­ teen sa lo o n s,” Mr. B ed ich ek re­ ca lled w ith a ch u ck le, “ and. m y efforts w ere not a p preciated, either by the principal a d v ertisers o r the man w h o held the m ortgage on the The m em b ers w ere se le c te d for P l a n t . I w a s sab otaged , a lso , from | outstanding .scholarship, leadership, the in sid e a s som e of m y printers good c h a r a c t e r , and u n selfish n ess would often g et too drunk to get M e m b e r s w o r k individually the paper out on tim e and in w a g ­ tow ards a b o n er U n iv ersity . gish m oods would m a k e libelous typograp hical errors. Goodfellow and YMCA treasu rer, j and serv ed on the N ational Stu­ d en ts’ A ssociation D esegregation the student Sub-C om m ission and body p resid en t’s cabinet. Clark the 1955-561 w as N ational Independent Stud ents’ A s - j soc I at ion Convention. co o rd in a to r of on the C entral Rnund-Cp C om m it­ tee, is a d ele g a te to the N ational Students’ A ssociation, and a m e m ­ ber on P resid en t W ilson’s A dvisory Council. He is a D istinguished Army ROI C M ilitary Student. law is a m em b er of D elta Lloyd H ayes, a b u siness a d m in is-! Sigm a P i. Sigm a Iota E psilon. Al- l>elta Phi, student, is a past president i Pb;i 9 h i O m ega, Phi B. D . M cKinney, a Student, senior tra’tion | of K reshm an q *,,,, u preslrtpnt and Silver Spurs, "O nce I had to burn an entire edition to avoid a ch a rg e o f libel. W h e n Husky Voice Answers, H a n g Up, H arley Clark, m ajoring in philo- of the Stud ents’ A ssociation, treas- M cK inney is attorney general of urer of the U niversity YMCA and the Students’ A ssociation, student a m em b er o f the Board of D irer- assem b ly m a n , and trea su rer o f the tors. H e is recording secreta ry of j Great Issu es C om m ittee. He is on Phi G am m a D elta, co-chairm an of the Board of G overnors of Law the C am pus Chest, and U n iv ersity I School, E yes of T ex a s C opyright rep resen tative to the Student Con- C om m ittee, Sujdent A dvisory Colin - feren re on World A ffairs. H a y es is : cif, E x-Students' A ssociation, and a m em b er o f Silver Spurs, serv es * T e x a s L a w R eview E d itor.a1 sophy and governm ent, is p r u d e n t of the T eja s Club and c o c h a ir m a n of R eligious E m p h asis W eek. Ile is a m em b er of the C owtioys and w a s the 1955-56 head y ell leader. On the C om m ittee for H igher E du­ cation, h e se rv e s a s d irector of student a ctiv ities. Clark w a s a lo ca l w inner of is also a Q uizm aster the Delta- Law' Fraternity, Phi E ta financial adv isor of Board. A N athan Rurkan M em orial Compot!- j Sigm a, and tion in E ssa y s on C opyright Law, J Sigm a Phi Epsilon, M cKinney and G oodfellow , Sam R. Perry has served as | secreta ry and president of Silver j Spurs and a s a m em b er of the Conduct; and Code C om m ittee, V arsity C arnival, and chairm an of the Rush C om m ittee. He is a m em ­ ber of P hi Alpha D elta Legal Student G overnm ent F ratern ity, *”£•*■> R eorganization C om m ittee. Student A 1 A ssem bly, and the R epresentative Clovis M orrisson Jr. is a second- y ea r law' student, chairm an of the Union A ctivities Council and m em ­ ber of the U nion Board of D irec­ tors, P resident W ilson’s Student. A dvisory Council, Student Body .. , President s C abinet, anti a m em b er' . of the Silver Spurs, He is chairm an of the I dues?ion D ivision, T exas Y? _ i P erry, a m em ber of th e Inter- f Umon Forum Speakers t om - fi * e m ity Council, is iv h captain ..... QAI m itten, T exas Union 1954, and co­ and vice-president of L am bda Chi chairm an of the C am pus P a rtic i­ Alpha. pation C om m ittee, Round-Up, 1956. P a rty steerin g co m m ittee -ifvEc . . r, u ’ , i i , . M orrisson is a Goodfellow, 1955, l#h Alpha is a m em b er of and new' m em b ers T ex a s Union. A scroll w ith fo e n am es of the is on d isplay at As Most Beautiful Judi R e e v e s ’s selection es th* Mast B eautiful Freshm an girl w as announced the H om ecom ing Dance Saturday night. at M iss R eeves, an E nglish m ajor, was v ery surprised at winning th* Mica contest and said. “ I ’m so happy I have no word* to ex p ress it.” She w as presented w ith a neck­ lace which was inscribed “ I T ’s Most Beautiful F reshm an, '56” on she front and her nam e on the back. She also receiv ed a 15-hour charm course. M iss R eev es is an Alpha G am m a is a Spookier, and D elta pledge, it on the F la sh Card com m ittee. She w as a drum m ajorette at Angleton, w here she attended high school. Hail Reported Doing Fine After Intramural Injury : silon president, who w Tom tm Ha l . Sigm a Alpha E jv injured in foot b a it is reported to be in B rackenridge Hospi­ intram ural p ractice an g a m e Thursdav doing fine tal. Forty Acres And then the would-b* th ere’s R om eo w h o w a s giving a pretty Tn-INarm coed foe line all leading up to asking for a date for Satur­ day night But m idw ay rn his spiel, the phone for her. Yep, you gu essed it — another “ How bout Saturday n ight?” guy. rang "Why no, I ’m not doing anything Saturday night,” she said into the receiver. “ Why, y e s; I d love it. It’s a date." Then she turned to the sheepish R om eo on the couch. ‘ And you w ere sa> m g . J* —B IT ) MIMS CLOVIS MORRISSON JR. SAM PERRY DID HE C A T C H IT? The Referee said yes" end SMU e nd Tom Gentry scores his first t o u c h ­ in c o ' e c e play. Texas' halfback C ia :" d ow n >reak ’ ^ SM U a et- th e e r st c? three m'e up Council Assigned Job O f Picking New Coach C onsideration of a new football; ooaeh at the U n iv ersity w a s the m ain order o f b u sin ess this w eek­ end at the Board of R eg en ts m eet­ in g in A ustin. The job of picking a n ew head football co a ch for the em battled Longhorns w a s a ssig n ed the A thletic C o u n c il , who will have their recom m en d atio n ! read y he fore Jan uary I. to to Th* Council w ill m eet Monday to; con sid er w hether It w ill hire tw o I m en r ep la ce outgoing Head C oach Ed Prs re and refiring Ath­ letic D irector D ana X. Fable, or com b in e the jobs of head football co a ch and a t h l e t i c director for one rn sn. in the One sidelight o f the search for a new person to lead the fortunes of T exas e lev e n s future has been a la th er an onym ous c a m ­ paign on the U n iversity ca m p u s in the support of Vernon Brookes. B rookes is, as far as T exan re­ sc a n h * an tell, an o ran ge rancher in A lam eda, C alifornia, B rookes has been rep resented to U n iv ersity s t u d * rn s as having* coached in high schools and rolled up a record of 84 w in s, 5 lo sses, and a fie. H ow ever hic existent e, qualifi­ cations. or w illin g n ess to coach at T exas a re sui! m uch in doubt In o th er business, the R egen ts rea ffirm ed their policy regarding the Univer-1 political sp eech es on sk y ca m p u s, T his w a s in an sw er to an appeal by the U n iv e r sity ’s Young R epublicans, Y oung D em o ­ crats, and Law Students for S e\ en.son. T he groups had s .cued petition to P resident W ilson to let US Senator A lbert G ore sp eak on the cam p u s. , The R eg en ts decided also tiiat ad m in istra tiv e steps b e taken to cla rify the policy on this m atter, to prevent further confusion. Also, the Board approved the en­ tire air conditioning project of the U n iv ersity 's Main L ibrary. P re­ viou sly, it w as thought that funds would b e ava ila b le for only h alf of the job. Emeritus D irector Bedichek Retires ti-., the liquor flow w h ile Tho upshot w a s that continu ed to sore, e s of the H eadlight dried up ’ In m o re recen t y e a r s Mr. B e d i­ chek h a s b ecom e renow ned a s a n aturalist and w riter. A m ong his books a r e “ K arankaw a C ountry,” “ A dventures w iii a T ex a s N atur­ a lis t.” and a new h isto ry of die In tersch o la stic L eague. Bv BEN WOOII R o y B ed ich ek , director e m e r itu s ' the Bureau of P ublic School of Serv ice and the U n iversity Inter­ sch o la stic L eague las? IO y e a rs of serv ice. w eek a fte r “ B e d i,” as his friends rail him, has th*' instrum ental L ea g u e’s grow th to the la rg est or-, gani/.alion of its kind rn the world retired been in “ No on e m an m a k es an o r g a n i-. zn t ion a s big as the U n iversity In terscholastic L eague ” Mr. Bedi­ titular said . “ He m a y be chek head and he its in influential councils, but it ta k es m any, m any individuals to carry on and develop such a w ork.” Mr, B ed ichek w a s first a ssociated the L eague rn 1914. Three w ith y ea rs la te r he b eca m e athletic director, and he then b e c a m e d irec­ tor of the L eague in 1922. lea g u e . A lm ost D ra m a tics, c o m m ercia l contests, m ath, m u sic, journ alism , speech, sp ellin g, and w riting a re p a rt of the e v e r y high school in T ex a s is a m em b er of the L eagu e, and thousands o f stu­ dents m a k e the annual spring pil­ g rim a g e to A ustin for the contests. Mr. B edichek w as the city editor .San Antonio E x p r e ss. He of the ; once w orked in a W est V irginia coal m in e, and has been a steno­ grapher for a strict and eloquent Boston divine. The la tter o ccu p a ­ tion a ffected his style somewhat. litera ry A nother tim e he rode a b icy cle from E d d y to D em in g , N . M.. to b ecom e secreta ry of the Cham ber of C om m erce there during a boom period L ater he b e ca m e the editor of the local new spaper and started a prohibition crusade. ’Ed P rice is stepping down as the L onghorn football ro a ch D ecem b er SI, and D ana X , B ible wall retire from his job as a th letic director n e x t year* Frank L eahy, N otre D am e's g r ea t fo rm er head football coach- a th letic d irector, h a s been inter­ v iew ed bv ex-stu d en ts and J Au­ b re y G ooch of F ort Worth, i .cany e x p re sse d in becom ing a th le tic d irector and “ football sup­ e r v is o r ’' at T ex a s, a cco rd in g to an A sso cia ted P r e ss report. Interest L eahv h a s said he d o esn ’t wan? th e job of head football coach as h e prom ised p layers and o fficials at. N otre D a m e when he retired in 1953 that h e w ould not take a head co a ch in g job. H is ch o ice for th e head coaching sp o t, one o f the ex-st.udents told th e AP, would Ste Rob M cBride. M cB ride w a s an assistant, to Leahy w h ile he roached a t Notre D am e. R e quit coach in g w hen L ea h y left N otre D a m e and is now in private b u siness £ told H ow ever, no one h as b een offi­ c ia lly contacted for th e job, it w as inted out at the R e g e n ts’ m eet- g Saturday. U n iversity P resid ent L ogan Wil­ to n the R eg en ts Saturday, ‘‘W e’re not in terested in the win- jit-any-cost ty p e of co a ch . It is ex ­ tr e m e ly im portant in order to keep a b alance in the a th letic program th a t w e g et a m an w ho rea lizes th e y are students first and ath­ le te s seco n d .” R egen t C hairm an Tom S ea ly of M idland said, “ We w ouldn't w ant anyone w ho would w ink a t h e re­ cru itin g regu lation s of the South­ w est C onference. H ow ever, w e w ould w ant a coach w ho som e day ca n help u s beat O klah om a.” Southern Grants Open to Graduates Seniors gradu ating in January or June can w in fellow sh ip s total­ in g m ore than $4,500 if th ey plan to pursue a ca reer in c o lleg e teach ­ in g in the South, of one T he University is 25 sch ools w orking w ith the Southern F ello w sh ip s Fund, w hich fin ances tile program to en cou rage high­ ranking sen io rs in A rts and Sci­ en c es to w ork tow ard a ca reer in co lle g e teach in g. G rants a re on a th ree-y ea r basis, with $1,000 a s the first-year aw ard. 51,500 during the second y ea r, and $2,000 the third y ea r. In addition, the fellow ship pays th e stu d en t’s tuition fe e s and a de­ pen dency th at m ay a llow an ce am ount to $700 a y ea r. includ es D r A lo ca l co m m ittee, appointed to sc reen a p p lica n ts for the fellow ­ ships, r a t e U n iv e r sity coed has Archibald L ew is, a sso cia te p rofessor of h i s - . u n m a licio u sly been g iv in g possible to ry ; D r. E rnest L ovell, a sso cia te p rofessor of E nglish ; and D r. Wil liam L ivingston, a sso c ia te profes- ber w hen she listed it on her cards I so r of governm ent. He's N o t the G i r l One She w a sn ’t too sure of her num- d a tes a rough tim e. should students A co m m ittee sp o k esm a n said in­ terested inquire about the program as soon a s pos­ sib le, be< ause p relim in ary appli­ cations m u st be considered by mid- N ovem b er, Today: Cool w ith Rain The w ea th er Sunday w ill b e cool and cloudy w ith o cca sio n a l rain and thundershow ers. The low will be 48 d eg rees in the rnnrrwng and the high, 6G in the afternoon. hut w ent ahead and w rote a num­ ber down. N ow w hen m en who know her. hut not her correct phone num ber, g ive her r buzz th ey get a h usky voiced answ er. to talking T h e y ’re the Austin Chief of P olice The coed WTOte the c h ie f’s unlisted num ber. And an Austin w om an is a ls o : gettin g an unusual num b er o f phone ca lls. T he Phi K appa Psi, fraternity- listing the Student D irectory is in error and sh e ’s g ettin g their i calls The correct fratern ity is GR 6-5068. listin g for the in Bungey, November 4, 1956 THE DAILY TEXAN Page I T E X A N w a * * * N E W S O’- 77>/r H a7 in Headlines • Sundae : BIG 3 CALLS URG E NT U N SESSION; FIG H TIN G RAGES ON IN BU D A PEST - F o rt W orth S tar-T elegram • Manila v ; RUSSIANS TO L EA V E BUDA­ P E S T —San Antonio E x p re ss • T u e sd a y : ISR A E L I INVASION ROCKS ARAB WORLD; NEW FAC! O F I AST E U R O P E SHA PES U P —The C hristian Science M onitor • ll edRcsdav : PO W E R FU L BR ITISH FORCES S P E E D TO SUEZ —San Angelo S tan d ard Tim es • Thursday : ANGLO-FRENCH FO R C E HITS SHIPS, A IR FIE L D S - T h e D aily Texan • Friday: INVASION FO R CES MOVING ON SUEZ —The San Antonio Light • Saturday; BRITISH , FO R SUEZ ZONE INVASION F R EN Cl I PO ISED P A N O R A M A J U tPf I V ■$ —«3\iv,' -r^vr*-*’* "m*—.... . *£.- nm-*'*- Britain, France Move to Suez As U N Pleads for Cease-Fire As a •'Men in the UN w as taking place, the R ussians w ere m oving their forces back tow ard B udapest ■ encircling all H ungarian airp o rts a fte r w ithdraw ing them W ednes­ day. to he thought Action w as the result of P re sid e n t Im re N agy’s th a t H ungary w as announcem ent pulling out of K rem lin -dom inn ted W arsaw P act and claim ing neutral freedom from any governm ent P resident N agy T hursday asked the UN to tak e notice of the an­ nouncem ent of Hungary s neutral- it v. Ti resolution While an unprecedented m eeting -if the United N ations G eneral As­ sem bly d rafted a to m eet lsra e li-F g y p tia n fighting, the R ussians sfeathily m oved forces back into rcbollion-torn H u n g ary , G eneral As - bly w as to session F rid a y night to m eet the th rea t to tile in­ te rn a tio n a lly r e c ­ ognized right of a Ie its own form of tout intervention b\ Globus- Focus country to de governm ent w a foreign pow D ie 1 ;* net 64-5 w ith 6 a1 m ed iate coal fighting count a statem ent to E ngland asking tho two pow ers to absta n from th e Suez vicinity. ii A ssem bly vote -stentions for an in e-fire betw een th des. It also include md F ra rn landing troops in ift. n of fro uppc in ho ut cd to w it Canal. E gypt ie a re a , but lent -cia ii cv had co IYF B s d ! ported the d by canal. —The Austin A m erican — a i I y T e x a n o f flees th I s - in -'c h ie f w eek, student new sm en ad m itted in w a r or having n e v e r seen ano th er w eek _uite like it. E vents a f a r of wide local in te re st vied for space w ith local events of in te re st fa r and w ide. tho cort- the vention of the T exas P erso n n el and ( andidates f in Law and G raduate Alumni Conference, and School) a n d all but one on R epresentative P a rty slate (facing M anagem ent Association. no organized opposition this year*. ; R evival of one tradition was Top vote-getter am ong new Assam- coupled w ith talk of modifying an- blym en w as Liz E llisor, A&S, bene- other. The C entral Round-Up Com- fieiary of Chi O m eg a’s flapper-age m ittee nam ed a subcom m ittee to ballyhoo. The E lection Com mis- consider som e other events to re- sion’s lim it of cam paign s e re n a d -I place the spring Round-Up P a ra d e . inc to groups of five, though, w as The Council of F ra te rn ity F re sh ­ top d isp lay ; upheld by an A ppelate C ourt ruling dents voted to discourage p a rt lei- Tuesday. The Student C ourt ea rlier patten by th e ir groups, staff alone juggled t h r e e s to r ie s all m erit- ing Roach Ed P ric e ’s T uesday. The Student Court ea rlier C ultural E n te rta in m e n t devotees trekked twice to G regory D r F re d sim ultaneously, with W aring’s m usic and the MBC O p era Company’s English-language “ M ar- rlag e of F ig a ro ’ ready- and for next poorest of th ree less-than-best s e a - 1 A p relim in ary event sons for th e Longhorns, th e ir head w eek’s big g er b attle of the ballots m en to r w as held personally an d saw a stra n g e alignm ent of U T ’s exclusively responsible in the eyes Young D em o crats and Young Re- publicans. They petitioned the Ad- of m any fans. enough, m inistration to let Senator A lbert w ith sw inging effigies an d v erb a l Gore (D-Tenn I b rea k precedent dem ands for a new coach. The for a political speech on the cam - B oard of R egents this w eekend be- pus. P re sid e n t Logan Wilson, ad- tiering to policy, said “ N o,” and gan the laborious a tte m p t to satisfy touched off a new controversy over room *or ®n early-m ornine these dem ands. Coach P ric e tu rn ed Tile T exan, scram bling to re p o rt two “ edit­ everything, even had ions” one day. After printing sev­ eral hundred copies a P age One picture of Libby M astrrsnn in H al­ loween g ea r w as pulled to m a k e fire A sm all dem and for Salk anti- polio vaccine disappointed Student H ealth C enter officials. Criti* ism w*as pointed And denying plans for m aking In his reply to P re sid en t E isen ­ an “ all-our a Mat k “ on A dit! Ste­ how er T hursday evening. D em o­ venson in his cam paign for E isen­ c ra tic sta n d ard -b earer Adlai Stev­ how er, Shivers said he probably the P re sid e n t’s enson w ouldn’t say anything v ery cnrnpli- foreign policy has “ failed ,” and as m e n ta ry about him , because “ I a resu lt, the Soviet Union h as been j don’t know anything com plim ent- * handed “ two g re a t v ic to ries.” a r y ” to say. claim ed ’The first Com m unist victory'.’’ is the establishm ent In m News You Don 't Need \ A Cowboy or Silver Spur could lend a helping hand to som e dudes his im m ed iate attention to an SMU j freedom of controversy. jn C ranston, R I . I A dy Domino, a te a m w hich had never beaten his E x-students flocked to the F o rty photo. The d am ag e to a student resid en ce blaze caused $50,000 he said, the M iddle E ast of influence which th e C zars sought com e in voluntarily from the scrub in vain the Com m unists h a \e achieved in where g^e h aa been hiding out for bly election. Thirty-one politicos coincided w ith D ad s’ D ay, the Col- around a few m onths. though, boondocks, w as tile Student C ourt and Assem - ' over R Wrek, or w ait for h er next won places, Including two wTite-in the R ussian f$7Q-pound H ereford heifer, m u st j boys. for the firs t fall H om ecom ing in I 705 W est 22H Street, y ea rs, com plete w ith celebrations, I E x cep t for Novem ber-like w ea- football, and barbecue. The event ; ther, ‘tw as a hot w eek here, all lege of Business A dm inistration for centuries and which R outine and expected, thorn bull a t — JJm “ The second is the breakdow n of w rangle w ith C ran sto n ’s volunteer • F o r $25 each. ic;. C entra! T exas D em ocrats here W ednesday got a dinner and speech by T ennessee's S enator A lbert Gore A ttacking P resident E isenhow er’s handling of the M iddle E a s t situ­ ation, Gore also spoke unkindly of his national economic and de­ fense policies. the W estern A lliance. This has cowpokes. been a suprem e objective of Soviet the end of World policy W ar I I .” since —ph i Til Ak L Great Gods of the Campos No. 2 The Un-Thinker, Great God of Apathy Archives, “Little Buster" Drama H it Otherwise Quiet Texas W eek Protesting ano th er move of the hom eless state archives, 300 m em ­ bers at the Statew ide H istorical H erita g e M eeting voted down a pro­ posal to transfer the historic pa­ pers from h e ir row home at a C am p H ubbard quonset hut in Aus­ tin. All d elegates ag re ed , how ever, on the need for a p e rm a n e n t re­ pository for t!;e valu ab le docu­ the 55th m ent*, and petitioned L eg islatu re, w hich in January, to provide a “ p erm anent an d p ro p er" hom e convenes te m p o rary ed from one O r b i t V /iD ll * nsem ent o th e r R ecently, the archives w ere m ov­ location in the S tate High- Lone Star w ay B u i l d i n g to an- borrow ed •p a c e four m iles from the 1 A;..to! Although called “ inad eq u ate and inaccessible," the C am p H ubbard location was considered by most m eeting m em b ers to be suitable, being w aterproof, a in-conditioned and under constant guard. • State R epresentative D, B Har­ deman, former D aily Texan editor, edy in Three A cts," th e story has been labeled by som e persons as H a rd e m a n 's “ p re m a tu re o b itu a ry .” His m a in point says Shivers, once one of T exas' m ost prom ising po­ litical potentials, a tta in e d “ shining h eig h ts." but h it the skids and the real “ loser in this trag ed y is . . . his s ta te and country w hich need I all th e talented leadership it can p ro d u ce .” F o rm e r liberal, : anti-Shivers forces the T exas House of R ep resen tativ es, H ard e­ m an te now a S te\o n so n cam paign aide. le ad e r of the in His article tak es Shivers from early Piney Woods “ obscurity and days of sem i-poverty,” ] a sse rte d ram ro d politics over lob- ; byists and th e ir b a c k e rs to force aid on pro g ram s, to his sw itch to Eisenhow er in 1952 and up to tea­ through T h e T ex an The Dal iv Texan, a student newspaper of The University of Texas Is pub­ lished in Austin Texas, claim except Saturday, Monday and holiday periods. Scetembcr through May by Texas Student Publications. Inc News conin but Ions will he accepted by telephone (GR the editorial offices J B 103 or the n» .vs laborator . ' K. I L faquir!* concern­ ing deliver j should be made In J B. 17 end advertising J B 111 (GR 2-2750). IS, 1943 at the Post Office In Austin, . _‘473) or ut Entered ms second class matter Oct Texas, under the act of March 3 1879. ASSOCIATED PRESS MIRK KERVICK The Associated Priss is exclusively entitled to the us*' for republication of s . news d spatcr.es n ■ u < ♦*. , / i i tmm m It Hob G reenberg Bill D ay to n M arten Simon Ann A bshier CAMPUS • STATE • THE 44th WEEK OF 1956 • NATION • GLOBE A Campus Election... Ballot Box and Ballyhoo Photo by John L. Steal On O ctober 20, while being un­ loaded at M elvin Johnson’s H ill­ side F a rm , L ady D omino kicked up h er heels and frisked off into the boondocks. R ich ard Johnson, 12, who brought the $500 h eife r to s ta rt a H ereford herd, w*as broken­ h earted , bu t had to w ait until la st Sunday to organize a se arch p arty . L ady Domino ducked every la ri­ at, and w ent deeper into the b ru sh ­ land in C ranston s w estern border. • If an H-bomb w ere set off in the right place, M ount Bonnell could possibly be the site of a ski run. .Senator E stes K efauver recently a sserte d th a t hydrogen bom bs could “ rig h t now blow the earth off Its axis by 16 degrees, w’hich would affect th e seaso n s.” G overnor Folsom of Alabama says That the fish have stopped biting since the n u clear bom b tests w ere s ta lle d And out in I/)* An­ geles they a e blaming their sm og on the H-bomb. • In Berchtesgaden. Germany, j Adolf Hitler w as officially declared dead—more than l l years after he com m itted suicide and his b o d y : burned in the garden of B erlin’s Reich Chancellory. —dk \ Bowling, Bennis, Football Scheduled in Intramurals Captains of W om en's In tra m u ra ls in basketball w ill m eet at 5 p.m. M onday in Wom en’s < I.vrn 5. silon P h i, Kappa. P i Phi, Sigma Delta Tau, Alpha P h i I, and Theta I I w ill bowl, M anagers w ill not meet Monday, but any questions can be answered in the In tra m u ra l Office. Because of ram, an extra day w ill be allowed for tennis m atcher. T h e y must be played and the scores reported to the Intram ural O ffice by Wednesday. The P h ys ic a l Education M ajors club won the second place trophy in tourna­ ment the mixed volleyball T h u isd ay Alpha Chi Omega, The­ ta 0 , Newm an Club, ChiO IT, Tri- Delt, G am m a P h i Beta. Alpha P h i I, A D f y I. and A D P I ii w ill howl. Touch football games scheduled; for ‘his coming week are A lp h a ; P h i I vs, Delta G a m m a , and R S U j vs. AChiO I at 5 p m. M ond ay; j Kappa I vs. Co-Op at 4 p rn. Tues­ d a y ; Theta I vs, N ew m an Chih. and A Q iiO TI vs. Zeta I at 5 p.m. Tuesday. En trie s are due Novem ber 13 for the mixed bowling tournament. These tournaments w ill be played in the afternoon this year, N on em­ ber 20-22 from 4 to 6 p.m. Also Phi M u vs. Theta IT Thurs­ d a y at 5 p.m .; and A O P j vs Alpha the w inner Ph i IT. and P i P h i vs of B S H vs. AChiO I F r id a y at 5 p.m. Bow ling begins Monday at 4:30 p.m. at the Bowling Center. Row l­ ing Monday w ill be Alpha Oma ion P i. Delta Zeta, Delta P h i Epsilon I, Alpha G a m m a Del ta j Alpha Del­ ta P i, and Delta Phi Epsilon ll Tuesday Chi Omega I, Tri-Delt D elta G am m a, Theia I, Alpha E p ­ W inners of touch football games played recently are Theta I over AChiO I I ; Theta I I o ver A D P i I I ; I over T ri-D elt; S D T over ChiO I over G am m a A O P i: Alpha Phi P h i; Newm an over Z eta; O Z over P i P h i, and K appa over Alpha G am . S u n r a y , N o v e m b e r 4, 1 9 5 6 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P a g e J Recreation Specialist Will Train Freshmen training specialist and m anaging editor of “ Youth Leaders Digest,** has been brought to the U niversity b lith e Hogg Mental Health Foun­ dation. She w ill g iv e special train­ ing to fre-hman women taking physical training leadei -hip recreation in classes at 9 and Miss B o w n * w ill meet with l l a .rn . and 7 I p.m. on Monday and Tuesday in I the Women s Gym She w ill teach methods for leading recreation that any can he suited to any age Girl Geologists Organize Unit Women geology ma jors are res activating the Women s Geological Society which was disbanded in 1950 Anv woman geology m ajor hav­ ing completed Goo ogy 601 and enrolled for othct gook gy * our sos is eligible for membership. A grade average of C is required AH women interested and quali­ fied w ill meet at 5 p rn. Monday in Geology Building 108 to elect situation w netrier to plan a party or take up time on b rainy after­ noon, from "R ecrea tio n vitally ne*.* x*ary said Miss Row cr a, the standpoint of mental health and re­ lief from strain ’’ Unless a person in the gets release from tension form of fun, recreation, and relaxa­ tion it can cause excess mental strain Wom*m trained in recreational methods w ill he aide to help re­ lieve strain and to aid in emergen­ cy situation-. ’’ .said Miss Bowers. The lectures w ilt he directed at women who w ill some day be rom* rn inity leaders and homemakers working with P-TA, church, c u b , and home recreation The Hogg Foundation and Dr. Anna Hiss of the Departm ent of Health and P h ys ic a l Education for in bringing Women, cooperated Miss Bow ers to die campus to em­ phasize and demonstrate the value .if recreation in mental health ‘■pm C l o t h e s k e e p t h a t N ew L o o k with longer TKOS-O-CLEAN Drycleaning Exclusively at B U R T O N S 19 t h a t R i o G r a n d e (2,0 Q_ZA9| I OPPORTUNITIES j for Students with Bachelor Degrees in I ★ CHEMI CAL E N G I N E E R I N G j * C H E MI S T R Y { ^ ME CH ANI CAL E NGI NEERI NG I . I T h is is a chance to get a head start in your professional career with General Chemical Division. Allied Chemical & l i v e Corporation. Com pany representatives w ill be on the campus for interviews Confort Piatemer.t Offire Today fey aw I n t e r v i e w , A p potatm ent and P e u r lp tIv* Literature G E N E R A L C H E M I C A L D I V I S I O N ALLIED CHEMICAL A DYE CORPORATION AO Ratter Street, New York 6, N V. $ I j J . Let N IBLA C K fake fhem off in only a few short treatments G e t on the band­ wagon; not on the sideline! Don t put it off cAt a m ;mm mm University Religious Groups Schedule Services “ The Faith Behind Freed o m : the Religion of D em o cracy," w ill be spoken on by Marshfield at o f A ustin, S u n d ay af ll a rn. the Rev G eorg e W. R e c e iv in g ’’ th*' I nitarian ( huroh service. at ev enin g w o rship R E D U C E ! GIRLS, are your bumps, bulges and rolls showing7 • The Bible class of the t Diversity , xviii he , the topic o f Dr. Lew is P. Speaker - Lutheran Church w ill discuss “ Par- sermon in the F irs t English Luth- ables of Church ll a re. Je s u s '’ Sunday at IO a rn. services w ill be held at “ A T ota! Com m itm ent cra n C h u rch . • • • M iss Edlcen Begg, instructor of English, w ill speak to tim Disciples Student Fellow ship Sunday at 6:30; I nlversitv Christian p m. at Church on ‘'Litera tu re and R e li­ g io n " the D r M e rrill Hutchins. Canterbury Bible C hair professor, will speak at the Mosley Foundation Sunday a1 fi p.m. “ Adam and Fallen M an” will he the ionic of the Ie >son-sermons a* the First Church of Christ, Scion fist. • • • • Dr. Edm und Hetnsohn w ill speak on “ God As Host ' at th*' worship services Sunday at the U niversity M ethodist C h u rc h . Th*' Sacram ent of the Lord s Supper w ill he ob­ served at each of the morning 1 services The Rev. Gregory Rnh- ‘ prison will speak on “ Bringing and FOR Q U IC K A C TIO N O N is Secu rity'’ " a* Dr. M a rvin S. Vance w ill speak on “ W here the Methodist Church. At 7 .30 p rn. the R ev. I ton R. Benton w ill speak on "G o ing A stray " The College Departm ent Training Union of the U niversity Baptist Church w ill begin with a supper at 5:30 p m . in the Student Center followed bv a croup discussion led bv Hon Hoggs and Ted Falco ner the “ Toward Understanding on A D S H o n o r s P le d g e s Speaker for I fratern ity, held Alpha Delta Sigm a, professional advertising its pledge banquet Thursday night at Cedar Crest, Lodge the occasion was Al Marting, vice- president in charge of public rela­ for Southwest Airom otive. tions j Another feature of the banquet was I the presentation of aw ards to the A D S teams who sold the larges* number of student directories. n o J i 2338 Guadalupa o O o f} ____ T i - 5 e m v o 3 S L ­ I Z ) Te xsn C lassified A d D I A L GR 2-2473 Ask fo r Extension 29 M O N T H L Y C L A S S IF I E D R A T E S X w o r d * ........................................ $ H OO ........................................................ . . $ 1 1 . 0 0 2ft w o r d s CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Tuesday T ex an .................. Monday, 4 p m. Wednesday T ex an .......................Tuesday. 4 p.m. T hursday T exan .................... Wednesday. 4 p.m. F r id a y T ex an I p.m. Sunday T ex an ............................... F rid a y . 4 p.m. ...............Thursday, D A IL Y C L A S S IF I E D R A T E S 20 words or l e s s Additional words 1 day ......................... $ .95....................$ .02 % HS.......................S OI E a c h Traditional d a y Classified D isplay SI.35 per column inch In the event of errors made in an advertise­ ment, im mediate notice must be given, as the publishers are responsible for only one incor­ rect insertion. Lost and Found For Rent Typing R E W A R D $5 F o r return of glasses plastic frame, to Jo u rn a lism B u ild ­ ing 111, Classified Section. For Rent M O D E R N garage apartm ent on bus near com munitv center $5< 704 West 28 , S t r e e t . G R tv-3057. B E D R O O M w ith re frig e ra to r Also ga- -age apartm ent. N e a r C n iversltv Adults. U R 8-2IJS B O Y S T H R E E - R O O M furnished a p art­ ment, re-decorated Block University Also $22 .V entrance P riv a te bath -.ingle apartm ent, private bath, bills paid. G R 8-9444, M A L E S T U D E N T wanted to take over room Air-comh- Thrt e blocks from for s in s contract New H ollyw ood beds U N I V E R S I T Y M U N . Right at campus. tile shower*. Maid service TIO W e st 22’- Street. Pht ne G R 8-Ii57 M A L B ^ S T U D E N T S . T w o rooms Redec­ orated W a t e r anti gas paid. W a lk in g distance. $35. HQ 5-8750 Special Services T U T O R IN G U R E N C H . Translation. instructress M ile Dupuis. Expert G R 6-2296 2506 Rio Grande. M O V IN G ? C all G R 7-7894. L I G H T H A U L IN G operated bv students. Sp ecial student rates L E A S law E X P E R I E N C E D L A D Y w ill do '-our laundry. W i l l pick up. G R 6-9237 F U R N I S H E D air-conditioned bachelor student apartm ents. A u s tin s finest tile bath. Five blocks west C arpets of campus. L a rg e parking Leon. lot. 2^15, fnducive N O T IC E E ffic ie n c y Apartm ent — two or three boys Quiet neighborhood Lo catio n to study. Modern studyroom . bedroom, bath L a rg e elec­ tric Call refrigerato r. . Reasonable G R 2-9345 or Realtor .GR 2-6201. L o ­ cated §09c Bellevue Place, U P S T A I R S T h ree rooms, bath with refrigerator. U n iversity, tub. N ew bus. $42.50. G R 2-1656, A P A R T M E N T S F O R M H N La rg e modern unit* to t hree men. B lo ck northeast Sta- dium. for one JU D O C I. A S S E S F O R M IN G Instructions by Sgt Stark Knriok- wan graduate R eg istratio n at A U S T IN H E A L T H C L U B b W est 13 Tel. G R 2-9334 J. RAS G A R A T E 24-Hour Service. Free F:<-k ;p and Delivery. B rakes. T u n e-up*, S tarte rs A Generators A ll W o rk Guaranteed S E E M A N A G E R Rear of 405 W est 38th Street 603 Ea st 23t* (at Red R iv e r ) Phone HO 5-5533 T H E T E X A N Me n • Atr-condltl^ned room* Tw o blocks from campus 1905 Nue*-»s Phone G R 8-3038 A B A R H O T E L fo r men Air-conditioned rooms availab le 2612 Guada.upe Phone G R i>-.‘x^8 Top Ha! 4600 So. Congree j “ J A M S E S S I O N 0 S ta rtin g 3 30 F M. SP EC K H IC K S CUMBO Jim m y Iordan iSa\i Al bart Durst (Vex a Is) Ever'. Sunday Afternoon A C C U R A T E . IB M ty p e w rite r 25c dou- biespace, 35c single G R 2-5517 E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T C all Mrs D. Ii. Hutchins, H O 5-0987. E X P E R I E N C E D ty p in g : reports, etcet­ era. Electric M rs H unter. G L 3-3546. A L L T Y P U S w o rk done by experienced typist. Electro m atic. G it 2-6359. T Y P I N G W O R K to perfection j i m c i­ tations. theses, misc G R 6-8413 enced, F O U R B L O C K S fro m Union. E x p e ri­ M ino r reports electrom at i< editing Dissertations Mrs Bod our. G R 8-8113. typist theses D IS S E R T A T IO N S , E l Cetronia? (sym bols) M rs Ritchie. U T. theses ii neighborhood G R 2-4945 home Mrs >ELAf*T E L L ) • Y P IN G S E R V R tv T h - themes. Notary, sea. IR 2-6!569 dissertations H ESEIS, dissertations. ex pert I v■ typed Nits W v r i r k j G R 2-■2 15.-> bet ween '* rid 5 < IR 6 - 3 0 4 a f t er 5 or weekends L E H )FLTS letters, t ht CS guar•anteed t r cc pickup dei iv*'N' CIR 6-581.0. P u b l i c s t e n o g r a p h e r A u s t i n Excellent. G R 6-4361. home Hotel C L 3-2330 E X P E R T T Y P IN G Term papers ses. 91o W e st 21st. Apartm ent I, the­ For Sale T A P E R E C O R D E R . track speed dual Revere, pius 2 OOO single feet i recording tape Phone G R 7*3335. L O W C O ST C L A S S I C 1935 Pierce- A rrow form al sedan straig ht eight Excellent condition engineering M as­ ter pi et e Phone H O 5-66*25 after 6 p.rn K N G L I S H B IC Y C L E S . B o y ’s. $60. Girl's $30. 2008 W h it is G R 7-0729 j U N B E L I E V A B L E B A R G A IN S , muf- I Hers, duals manifolds, antenna*. J fend* r skirts fiesta hub caps lowering ; blocks mirrors accessories. Texas Au'** 1114 East. Isl CASH for GUNS BU Y * * S E L L • * TRAD E L A M A R S P O R T I N G G O O D S 913 La m a r golden tips or frosted lace— coloring 1956 style Here are two of the exciting ways Paris is accent­ ing hair this winter. Come in for consultation with our experts— see how your haircut and hair- color are design­ ed for each other. Cut 2.00; permanent wave 8.50; coloring starts at 5.00, Phene G R 2-2491 for appointment . . . you may use your charge account. Beauty Salon, third floor. holiday glamour, our wonderful cover-up dress in billowy chiffon and wool jersey its skirts have just •ards and yards of flowing chiffon . . . 29,98 cocktail glamour in shoes M i in 10 many Gabriel our 'ovely DE LU C A springalators . . , high heel 19.98, medium heel., • ^ 18.95 I r l g L th# sparkling A e g in a , in glittery gold 19 Brigham Young 33 N e w Mexico 33 Oregon State 28 W ash ngton 20 Idaho State 27, Colorado Mines 6 Montana State A3, Montana it Southern Cal W ash ingto n St Io w a 14 13 Enter "Lucky 7" Football Contest Spartans Batter Wisconsin, 33-0 ) E A S T LA N SIN G , Mich. UN — Michigan State’s resourceful Spar­ tan-. took but a full measure of inept Badgers Saturday, hauling out ihoir | onee-in-awhilc passing strength for a 33-0 Big Ten football triumph j revenge upon Wisconsin’s . before 53.647 fans. Striking ba? k with a furious five- touchdown assault after last week s Illinois that sent 20-13 upset a’ : them spinning off tho top of the I collegiate heap. the Spartans com­ bined a crisp offense and a never- yielding defense and nearly ran the ragged Badgers out of Macldin Field. 12 FO R T W O R TH — Deter­ mined Texas Christian offset a driving rain and 50-degree| weather here Saturday with hard-charging Buddy Dike and Baylor mistakes to nudge the Bears 7-6. The win kept the Froggies in the running for the Southwest Conference football title. A rain-soaked crowd of 20.000 saw both teams fail to get their powerful offenses rolling to any great extent, as Baylor suffered its second Conference defeat. The loss, as far as records prove, knocked the Bears out of the title running. Dike, returning to the gridiron this season after a layoff last year, was the only man a great Baylo r forward w all couldn’t contain. The 195-pound fullback was the day's leading ball carrier with 64 yards in nine carries, and was personally responsible for TCU s lone score in Cie fourth period. That score came I : 12 deep in the final period after Baylor had sud­ denly broken the scoring ice just before halftime to go ahead, 6-0. I tike recovered Bobby Jones’s fum­ ble on TCU s own 33 in the third period, then kept the 67-yard win­ ning touchdown drive alive with a 31-yard scamper to the Baylor 25, C u rtis Seorc* From there Jim m y Swink and Jim Shooter moved the hall to the one in three plays, where Quarter­ b a c k Charles Curtis went over to score. Harold Pollard kicked the extra point which eventually won for the Frogs. Tile continuous drizzle didn I ke^p the punters from having their day during the first half. T C I’ s Jim Shofner booted 54 and 50-yarders, while the Bears got 49. 46 and 45-yarders off the toe of Del Shofner and a 58-yarder from I .a try I Iii kman. Because o' The tremendous kick­ ing both clubs either found them­ selves deer-) in their own territory’ or managing to kick their way ou* of danger Tone* Connect* B O U L D E R , Colo. M — Trailing j 19-6 at halftime, Oklahoma’s top- rated football team struck for two third period touchdowns on the brilliant running of halfbacks Tom - 1 my McDonald and Clendon Thomas to defeat underdog Colorado 27-19 Saturday. ter four minutes of play when guard John Wooten blocked Okla­ homa fullback B illy P ric e r’s at­ tempted third down quick kirk on the Sooner IO. The ball bounced into the end zone with Colorado fu llb a ck John Bayuk recovering. The unranked Coloradans scored in the first four minutes on a , blocked punt and sailed for two second quarter touchdowns with a furious bingle wing assault. The touchdown trips covered 55 and 70 yards. That shocked the Sooners,, favor­ ed to win by four touchdowns, for only a period. They came roaring back after the halftime rest on touchdown drives of So and -IS yards. McDonald and Thomas de­ livered tile key gains behind the charged up Oklahoma line. M idway in the fourth period the Sooners wrapped it up with a mag­ nificent 91-yard march capped by quarterback Jim m y H arris’ 17-yard pass to Thomas in the end /one. Colorado bolted to a 7-0 lead af­ Oklahoma struck back late in th« first quarter with a 45-yard touch­ down march climaxed with a 35- yard scoring pass from Harris to Mc I k>nald i SPEEDW AY RADIO,TELEVISION and HI El SALES & SERVICE GR 8-6609 301ft Roadway J u s t S o u t h o f G r e g o r y Gym L O O K — L O O K ! 5-Minute Car Wash-Only T ° on Mondays, Tuesdays & Wednesdays each week YO U H A V E BEEN W A N T IN G A FAST C A R W A S H FO R H O O . .. N O W HERE IT IS! W E MUST HAVE A BIG V O LU M E TO KEEP THIS OFFER U P . . . IT IS UP TO YO U N O W . MINH-MAN AUTO WASH 221 SO UTH LA M A R _____________ Can Do the Job Better Free Delivery and Pick Up GR 8-4360 University Typewriter Exchange 2542 Guadalupe (82) S E C O N D - Q U A R T E R passing try by S M U goes awry as Tommy night two TD passes during the game, and C h ar­ ged hands on Char! 9 Arnold Rpass. J m^-'e Baumgarfen (36) are down defending for the w h u 74) ta h (15) and Sc V7eni lie Ji Vv elc Lon a Photo by John Steel UT Takes Double W in In Cross Country Run Texas swept to a double win—- in its own varsity and freshman Cross Country Im itational here Saturday morning and Baytown easily won the high school division. The Longhorns won four of th*-' first five spots in the varsity divi­ sion and five of the first seven to easily defeat runnerup Houston, Texas had 19 points, Houston 39. Texas’ Walter Mc N< \v won the three-mile event in Ii 12 and team­ mate Joe Villareal was second in I I 54. In the the freshman division Texas team defeated Houston by erts just two points even though Hous- --- ton runners swept first, second and third places. Charles Rosemont! and Humberto Adame took fourth and fifth for Texas. John M acy of Houston won the two-mile freshman division in 9:23 and J . D. Ross of Lamesa won the high school division in 30 07. In the schoolboy class, B ayto w n 1 won with 31 points and others in order included McCallun . Port Arthur, Ray of Corpus Christi, Reagan of Houston, Lanier of San Antonio, and S F Austin of Austin. Other finishers in order in the varsity division were, (3) Moro Garcia, Houston, < U George Fore­ Savage (5) Ken ster, Texas; (6 .) Terry Long, Houston, Texas; (8 ) Bob i7* Keith P in e r , Texas; Crawford, Texas: <9* Leonard Pen­ ny, Houston; (IO) Ja c k MacRob- Houston. No Extra Charge for Fast Service at 9 5 ©then et $6.95 Hundreds of Lovely Frame / Designs! M E N ' S W E A R 2332 Guadalupe DALLAS O PT IC IA N T w o < o n v e n l e n t I . o r a t io n s I M Fast 19th at W ichita: (.Ii 7-18*5 SOS Capital N a tl B ld g ; U K I'M yards A Curtis fumble on a pitchout - Mi* higan State marched 68 yards with 1:09 left in the second period T ige rs Beat B ro w n , 2 1 -7 in seven plays to score after the opening kickoff, stopped a brief gave the Bears the hall on the I Wisconsin flurry and *hen went 65 T O ' 92, then Quarterback Bobby touchdown. Jones found Right End Je rr y Mar- rontell on the Frog 23. The 200- More than half the yardage in pound end caught tho ball when four first-half touchdowns spurts came from the passing of quarter- ■ TCU"s O ’Day W illiam s ju st'missed backs Pat Wilson and Jim Ninow- an interception. Marcontell was I open to the goal the rest of the ski. P R IN C E T O N , N .J. 'P F Little Jim Mott ley, a refugee from last year’s 150-pound squad, pulled Princeton's stuttering offense together and led the Tigers to a hard-won 21-7 vic­ tory over Brown Saturday. for a second the most in DRY CLEANING I Open 7:00 e m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday SIO W . 19th St. Corner Nuece* Laundry Service E ach passed for a touchdown and ; way. Wilson’s pin-point aerials to end With 55 seconds left Baylo r wen! Tony Kolodzioj set up the other. out ahead 6-0 but Arthur B e a ll’s two scores. Michigan State passed only six times in the first half hut completed fixe of them for 143 yards. con’ 4 rion attempt went wide. Ba I ris Guard B ill Glass was by far die outstanding lineman with his ten tackles and 14 assists. Blocking and tackling as n whole was rugged, and injuries occurred frequently. SPORTSMAN S SPEC AL! First 5ft free of cha rue swimming pool. 'fen only SIO per month . . . absolutely room, Swedish massage, steam O NU-1 K A R F R E E underweights —if you don t gs'.n 12 lbs- I V ' on arms, 3’ on chest and shoulders in 60 da>s overweights— if you don’t Use 15 lbs — 11 j '' off w aist and 3 " off hips In OO day*. Oppn D a i l y IO to IO, San. IO to 6 605 W . 13th St. G R 2-9334 AUSTIN HEALTH CLUB SOPHOMORES! ^ >39' * '.A* - V ' y H;- Y'VV 4tv ; '. • • More and more men In Austin wear TAILOR-MADE SUITS • Hundreds of fabric* to select from • Any »tyl# at no extra cost • Guaranteed fit— expert workmanship • Free alterations during life of suit C R O W N T A I L O R S 40* Ka at Sixth G R 7-670S H E L D O V E R I Austin Civic Theatre's production THURSDAY November 8 Is the Deadline for Making Your Class Picture Appointment for the 1957 CACTUS Make your appointment and pay $1.25 fee in JOURNALISM BUILDING 107 Office Hours Week Days-8-1 & 2-5 RESERVE YOUR COPY OF THE CACTUS N O W IF YOU FAILED TO DO SO AT REGISTRATION Western H a t * — b h l r t * S n i t s — J e a n * J .w'keta—Skirts Ladies’ Bags Billfold# Gloves— B elts Shoe Repair C A P IlU L SADD LERY 1614 Lavaca Hou n a a C a t e e t Plan? One of tho moot Interesting cmd profitable c a r e e r s in which a y o u n g American can invest his future is FOREIGN TRADE or FOREIGN SERVICE Th# American I n s t i t u t e For Foreign Trade oilers you graduate level tor lucrative a satisfying and career abroad. Advanced degrees offered. training Arrange through your Placement Office to talk to an AHT representative on Friday, Nov. 9, 8:30 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. College of Busi­ ness Administration Placement O ffice, W ag g een r Hall 115. TEXAS vs. BAYLOR SPECIAL TRAIN FOOTBALL SPECIAL TRAIN TO WACO Saturday November IO Lv. Austin Ar. V/aco From Katy Station, 3rd and Congress 9:30 A.M. Lv. W aco I 1:55 A.M. Ar. Austin 5:30 P.M. 7:55 P.M. Purchase tickets now so adequate equipment can be provided Round trip coach fare — $4.79 including tax F O R F U R T H E R IN F O R M A T IO N CALL: G R 8-8871 — Katy Station G R 2-3141 — D. B. Foster, Dvn. Sales Rep. J L Texa* Federated Wom en's Club, Ballroom West 24th at San C.abTlrl St*. Dial GR 6-0541 For R e se rv a tio n !: " A diverting: performance of un ingenious stage contri­ vance. — John Rosenfleld, Dallas News U n a b r i d g e d , In-the-Rourd , a fine sample . . , one which could easily compare with tire best the Austin theatre group has ever offered ” -John Dustin, Austin Statesman SENIORS AND GRADUATE STUDENTS IN ENGINEERING, PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS The Douglas Aircraft Company invites you to O N CAMPUS INTERVIEWS NOV. 7, 8 and FEE. 20, 21 Find out about the interesting position?, assistance in fu rth e rin g y o u r education and outstanding p ro m o ­ tion opp ortu n ities with the w o rld ’s largest m a n u fa c ­ tu r e r of a irc ra ft and missiles. Get facts on living conditions, research facilities and opportu nities to a d v a n c e p r o f e s s i o n a l l y a t th e v a r i o u s D o u g l a s locations. Reserve y our career decision until vou have talked with the D ouglas representative. It may be the most im p o r ta n t interview o f your life. SEE YO U R EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT, ENGINEERING- SCIENCE PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR YO UR INTER­ V IEW APPOINTMENT Mustangs Rearing To Go After AGM Bv D O X ( L A R K Texan Sport* Staff C ries of “ C o t a n A g g ie" were h e a r d in the SM U d r e s s in g room j S a tu r d a y , b u t tile P o n ie s were also breathing sighs of relief after j squeaking by Texas, 20-19. The SM U players all agreed on they w e r e playing a dif­ in the second one thing f e r e n t Texas t e a m h a lf th a n in Hie first. E n d Tommy G e n t r y summed up his teammates' feelings w h en he said, "Texas played up to its cap- Ga. Tech Wins, 7-0, Over Touch Duke abilities In the second half, and proved themselves a terrific ball club." Halfback Lon Slaughter, a Junior, remarked that it "sure feels good to beat Texas, and that one point is worth a million." Coach Woody Woodward was ob­ viously pleaded at beating Texas, for the first time since he took over as head coach at SMU, Wood­ ward said that he was disappointed in his team’s second half play but that "Texas was responsible for the poor showing, and they played a fine ball game. We couldn't rush the passer (Clements) enough and they were completing too many short passes on us.” finally b ro k e D U RH A M , N. C. LF) Powerful the All of the Ponies were high In their praise of W alter Fondrrn. Jackson said. Halfbark Charlie G e o r g ia Tech shaders a g a i n s t a stout Duke de-! You ^mosf have to play fondrrn f. nse S a tu r d a y n ab a fourth-period . man-for-man when ho goes out for touchddwn Blue Devils 7-0. and maintain its undefeated record before a cheer- in t crow d of 38.000. to d e f e a t the inspired a PaSh; ° r ‘ 9 ^or themselves, the Ponies upon the game as a team j r;,lt J0U ,up' __ I Victory, F u llb a c k Dick e Madison of At-J They their offense l a n t a p lu n g ed o v e r fr o m the one u aso t moving in the second half, early in the fourth quarter to pro- but, as Charlie Jackson said, "W e vide in a ; couldn’t move after the first half skintight game. Quarterback Wade because of the Texas defense.’’ Mitchell conv erted. the winning margin The m a i n thing that felt , It was the ninth consecutive vic­ tory for Coach Bobby Dodd’s team, ranked second in the nation in the current Associated Press football poll, It was Duke's fourth loss in seven starts. a a l aNNOUNCER: "Music to Sweat the Draft B y , " d a lly over K T E C radio In Austin. 590 on your radio dial th a t th e M us­ t a n g s h a d to sa y a b o u t T e x a s, is th a t the ’H o rn s a c te d m a g n ific e n tly second half, a s a s o m e th in g th e S te e r s h a v e been tr y in g to do all seaso n . te a m the in Syracuse Takes Squeaker S Y R A C U S E , N.Y. WE-Syracuse’s three inter­ alert defense gobbled up Penn State fumbles and cepted three passes to come from I behind with a 13-9 victory Satur- da v Open |l 11:30 a.m.|I 9:00 p.m. Prime Steaks Charcoaled to your taste < also serving Austin's finest seafood, an epicure's delight and only one of our many delicious treats! Harris' W ayside Inn Two blocks west of Lamar on Barton Springs Road Sunday, November 4, 1956 THE DAfLY TEXAN paga S th e c a s u a l good lo o k s ... th e e a s y ste p ... of t h o r o u g h b r e d s bv Texas-SMU... (Continued from Page I ) Longhorn hopes rolled high with 2 30 left. The Ponies foiled three pass at­ tempts by Clements, however, forcing him to run each time and eventually setting up fourth and IS on Texas* 40. From deep punt formation, Fen dren took the snap, hesitated, then kicked. Orange chances died as the ball spiralled off his foot and Ja c k ­ son made a fair catch on SM U s 25. The Ponies killed the remaining 50 seconds on R a y M asters’ line buck, and the SM U band played “ Peruna” for the zillionth time of the afternoon. Jackson’s running and the pass­ ing of Arnold and Click were spot­ lighted in the SM U victory, but none of tho Mustangs did much after the first half. Fo r Texas, Wilson, Seaholm, a n i Bryant in the line and C le m e n ts, Welch, and Fondren in the back­ field were genuine stars. T he e n tire O r a n g e squad was nothing c h o r t of tremendous in the last half, how­ ever. The injury toll was light on Texas and rough on the Ponies. Wayne Wash, with a cut forehead, and : Garland Kennon, with a bruised I upper arm were the only Long- 1 horns hurt, outside rf Mike Trant'n re-injury of his knee. ! S ta tis tic s were a lm o s t as close I as th e sco re. T e x a s had 15 first : downs and 251 yards to S M U ’s 11 ; first downs, 256 y a r d s . H A Y M A S T E R S (44) lays ley block on exas' Clair Bm ach (42) as Lor ‘Slaughter (45), w* h an­ other assist from Smithy Keller (62) goes wide far a Pony first down with 6:30 acne in the first quart down was or e of series calm p....... re y cr. Fir Photo by James E. Wathen in SM U score a few minutes late-. Tommy G e n ­ try (82) is down after having thrown a block, and Louis De! Homme (5) is coming up to help corral Slaughter. Steers Now Have Something They Can Tie Onto —Price B y N R K J O H N S O N Texan Sport* Editor Coach Ed P rice talked at some lengih after his team lost to SMU by just one point, 20-19. He couldn t explain tile reason for Texas’ comeback but said th-it lie praised he wished he could, quite a few of his own players and wouldn’t say what he told them at halftime. He had lost his sixth game this . in But he \v is somewhat season. pleased. W hy? Because he saw something this this game that he hadn’t seen before He saw his team rome back. He saw his team come from under a 0-20 count to score three time*. team rn The pressure was off now. I irs team is not trying to win a confer­ ence title. He is not trying t > save his job. What !i<‘ is now at irrupt­ ing came into being in tho second half of Saturday’s game. His t( am is alive. It, proved that. Can it go on? W ill this comeback mean anything in the long range ? Coach Price ti would. “ Those arc tho type tilings that thought make a ball club; that bring them around to a realization of what they mn do.” he said ‘ I'm proud of them, that’s num­ ber one. And second, they now have s imething tie onto, something they've done for them­ s e lv e s .” they can What really happened at half- tim e What was it that turned a losin, , behind three ti>u< h- i rail 1 1 downs, into a winning one? No one could r e a lly e x p la in it. C oach P r i c e s a i d it w a s th e boys I th o u g h t! th e m s e lv e s . H e said he th e y just, took in v e n to ry a n d d e - 1 ended to go out th e r e and try to j win. ‘ I m a d e a few remarks, but noth ing th a t will go into th e his­ to ry b o o k s,” h e said . " T h e y ju s t decided th e y w e re g oin g I if to fall, t h e y ’d fall f o r w a r d . " t h a t I n j u rie s w e r e light, b ut costly. Mike T r a n t , w ho h a s n ’t p la y e d c;nee he in j u re d his knee against West Virginia, started this g a m e ami left th ree m in u te s l a t e r . It w a s the s a m e k n e e a n d he m a y n o t see action a g a in . The only o t h e r se rio u s in j u r y was a co ntu sion of the u p p e r a r m for Garland Kennon. He missed the second half of play. Wayne Wash will receive his usual quota of stitches. This time he was cut between the eyes. L a s t , week he was cut above his left I eye and the week before he was cut on the leg. The Texas dressing room was cheerful, despite the scoreboard. They had lost one game this day, and won another, The loss was 20-0, the win was 19-0. Texas got some good breaks, and had some bad ones. The best of the good ones was Don Wilson’s i catch of a loose forward pass for first Texas score. He said the that he was just lucky; happened to be in the right place. " I thought it would be called back," he s a id ., that j The rules, however, say when the ball has been touched by an eligible receiver (Bob B r y a n t : touched it) anyone is eligible to; catch it. And next week? Maybe Ja c k Hobbs is right. "Those bears better .watch it," he veiled. "W e 'v e got a taste of it now." Last Quarter Touchdown Nullified as Pitt Loses, 9-6 M IN N E A P O L IS IT Ailing D id: Borstad’s dramatic field goal wiih less than three minutes left, h i' second game-winning kick of the season, brought unbeaten Minne­ sota a nerve-jane! ng 9-6 victory over hard-luck Pittsburgh Satur­ day. Seconds after the injured Gopher full I sa ck came through with a b ad- angle boot from the 23-yard lim Pittsburgh’s brilliant end. Jo e W al­ ton, almost broke the hearts of Minnesota’s Homecoming crowd by speeding 77 yards into the encl zone with the Gopher kickoff. But Pittsburgh was caught clip­ ping on the play and Walton s last-gasp hid for a P itt victory went down the drain. aNNOUNCER: Y i d V S H O E J S T O W E 2348 Guadalupe — On the Drag Enter ' L u c k y / ' Football Contest ; ad, a . *h felt r *d I asos. a Century, five "cees high the pair, $5. b. Vogue, f a H e ra t h:g:\ t- * pair $5. a. Keynote, br ne es h i} 'n, ir e pa , $5. g. Serving Tray IO1 j * 15*2- above, available rn Red Lobster or Cocktail Time designs, as shown, or Coin, Tide- poo!, Key, or Fourieaf C over. A contemporasy favorite, $8.25, b.-a. < -- a. G raceful styling N o . 11476, 15 D F as high with candles es pictured, $8.95. Pe r, $17.00. tripod b. Unique Velambda design No. 11474, i I -inches high with car.dies. et pictured, $9.60. f a r , $18.50. Christmas W ill Be M errier lf You S H O P N O W • W id e r Selection • Avoid Crowds • Faster Service • Less Traffic h. Latter O p s n tr No, 1510 cf heavy, lta ::an-imported brass, nm® inches long, w rh handles o* Cherub or Nape eon, as shown, or Hercules. .Brilliant or an- t .nqua finish, $3.35. b .- b . . Ward of Mr. Marianl, assistant to the superintendent departnv nt. Car­ bide and Carbon Chemicals D ivi­ sion, Union Carbide Corporation, j presided at the meeting. Agreeing That "the crisis is on us." a special meeting on educa­ tion was opened with a panel dis­ Artist's Work Displayed Work by Antonio R ii.*. Mexican artist, is on display in the loggia of the Music Building. First Sn the fall-winter series of exhibitions presented by the Uni­ versity*’ s art department, the Ruiz collection im hides 15 oil and tem­ pera works. It is expected to have considerable popular appeal be­ ef subject matter and be­ per- the Ie. style is iv fret- j cause cause :eptit Dr. Edwin W , Mumma, associate 1 professor of management at the I university, was elected general chairman of the Texas Personnel c and Management Association F r i­ day. Other officers chosen during tile association’s 18th annual confer­ ence were R a y H. M arianl of the Union Carbide Corporation, vice- chairman, and Dr. Norris H. Hiett, associate dean of the Unh ersity's Division of Extension. Tile conference began Thursday with a general assembly in Hogg Auditorium. M. S Bcgeman, pro­ fessor of mechanical engineering the University and general at Twenty Groups Enter Sing-Song Registration opened for Sing-Song at 9 a m. Thursday, and Phi Gam ­ ma Delta immediately signed up sing "Oklahom a’' in the song festival to be held December 8, Others entering Thursday were Chi Omega with "Dose Bones," Delta Gamma with "Snow White M edley," "Alpha Omicron P i with "Tribute to Romberg Medley,” Pi Bota Phi with “ Wizard of Oz Med­ ley,” and Kappa Kappa Gamma with "Christmas in the A ir Med­ ley," Also Alpha Delta P i and "South Pacific M e dle y," Pi K a p p a Alpha and "Grandfather's Cleck," Delta Upsilon and "M edley of Harmony, P h i Sigma Kappa and "Stephen Foster M e d le y ." Alpha i"hi O m e g a find "Sklp-to-My-I-ou,” Kappa Al­ pha Theta and "Baubles Bangles. find Beads,’' and Dolts I 'cit a I ie I ta and "Syncopated Clock." Also, Alpha Gamma Delta and "M other Goose So u r,’’ Alpha Phi and "M edley of Railroad Song'*." Gam m a Phi Beta and "Iris h Med­ ti le y ." Delta Zeta and "T h e Twelve ie Days of Christmas.” Delta Tau D hoe D e l t a " I rn-uct S heel." B e ‘a Theta P i and ‘‘B a t ­ tle Hymn of Republic," and Phi Kappa Sigma and "Ju m p I'kjwn, Spin Around.” .w a - ar r i Eaeh group w ill also sing a am ity song. So far there have been no dupli­ cations, P a t Cox, secretary In the Dean of Men’s office, said. EXPERT SHOE REPAIR • Modem Equipment • Keys Mad* • 10% Off Goodyear Shoe Shop Off TH* Drag en 23rd Street Evaluation of business, executive development, profits, and advertis­ ing were discussed at the sixth an­ nual professional meeting of the Alumni Business Conference Fri- dny, Speaking of executive develop­ ment, Dr. V irg il Jam es, co-ordina­ tor of m a n a g e m e n t development of Chance Vought Aircraft, Inc., in Dallas, said that "management de­ va lopment is an attitude and a phi­ losophy of life.” He added, "W e have r I per cent of the top m a n a g e m e n t source b e ­ tween live ages of 55 and 63. M an-. a gem cut: has appointed executives 46 per cent faster in pc-tv.. r per­ iod- thai in prewar periods." Potential, drive, attitude .Incen­ tive, and leadership were brought out es requirements in the execu­ tive development. Carl J. Thoirmen, vice-president, control and finance Texas Instru­ ment?, Inc., In Dallas, spoke on evaluation of profits. An evaluation of advertising was given by Dr. M e lv m Hartwick, di­ rector of advertising of Continental Oil Company in Houston. A talk and discussion en business evaluation with Dr. C. Aubrey Smith, professor of accounting, as moderator, was given. I A business meeting in Batts Au­ Sunday, Novamb.f 4, 1954 TH! DAILY TEXAN Pag. T Fine Arts Festival Fraser lo View French-US Duly O pens November ll In North Africa The College of F in e Arts will und* - *he direction of Leopold celebrate its fifteenth anniversary Stokowski, will appear in Gregory bf the annual Fine Arts Festival Gym, November 11-18, . The Soc let a Corelli from Rome. Each year the festival provides! Italy, will present a concert on a week of emphasis on the arts November 16 and the week will with the departments of art, j he climaxed by a presentation of drama, music, and radio-television the University Symphonic Band participating in the event. November 18 at Hogg Auditorium, under the direction of J . Frank Elsass. ~ j blTS ONE'S TfcCRS, J M gcxnG 'E t a i * RANDY’* C & c& T t Convenient Locations: 3 3221 Red River 3515 Jefferson 5th and Neches ‘A Song to Remember’ To Be Shown M onday " A Song to Rem em ber," starring Cornel Wilde and Merle Oberon, will l f shown 'n the Main Ballroom . _ of I cx ts men at 7:30 p m. Men­ dei. \dmi'; -'-n :s frc* Film ed in Technicolor, " A Song to Remember” is the life story of Frederic Chopin, French-Polish j classical composer, The picture features manv of the compo- ■ sit ions played by pianist Jose Bu r­ in. Wilde, as Chopin, executes the finger-work to coincide with the music. broadcasting ^ P - e r ’s best known THC w ». > M i' y*. . V i & JWF . ITALIAN INN ^ "D elicious Italian Foods in a Friendly Candlelight Atm osphere” * STUDENT-STYLED PRICES ; 11 j r / r ■ ” ’ . 806 Rad River : ” 1 7 ” > v . ,t x Ph. G R 7-0665 • - Use The Classifieds a The calendar this year includes faculty exhibit of sculpture, i paintings, ceramics and textiles at I the Music Building Loggia, Novem- I ber 5-30. Novqpaber 1-17 "T h e Innocents” by William Archibald w ill be pre­ sented at X Hall. On November 4 radio-television i will broadcast a selection from the radio-television series, “ The Minds of Men,” together with the presen- tation of the first annual distin­ guished service award of the Col­ lege of Fine Arts by D r. Logan Wilson. The acceptance and re­ sponse will be given by Sylvester L. Weaver Jr ., chairman of the board of the National Company. - th The second broadcast '-'ill be "Decem ber’' by Henry Brant, win­ ner of the Prix Ita lia for 1955 for tho best original radio musical composition. Concerts, beginning November l l and continuing throughout that week, w ill include the University Symphony Orchestra, under the dire'Mon of Alexander von Krois- 1 lcr. Fernando I-aires, piano soloist, will be featured with the symphony November l l . On November 32 the Hungarian Quartet will perform In Recital Hall. An organ concert series will be given in the Recital H all by Flor Peeters of Malin* «, Belgium, beginning November 39. The faculty chamber music con­ cert w ill be given in Recital Hall November 14 and the next evening the Houston Symphony Orchestra. THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS Cultural Entertainment Committee Announces The Third Event of the 1956 57 Series What Goes On Here SU N D A Y 10—Dr. Edw ard Taborsky to speak on " Is Soviet Russia Coming Apart at the Seams'’ ’’ at Unitar­ ian Church Forum, Twenty-third and San Gabriel. IO Tape recording of "'1116 Study of Montgomery*, Ala.,’’ Friends Quaker Center. 11--Newman Club, St. Austin’s. 1:30 -Boat races. Bar-K Ranch. 2— Delta Sigma P i picnic, City j 7 .30—Charles F . Herring to address Newman Graduate Club, New­ man Center. M O N D A Y 8-12 Filings for Business Admlnl- ' stration sweetheart. 8-12 Drawing for Baylor tickets. 9-9—Illustrations from Indies Home Journal, Texas Union. 9-4—"B ird s and Tre^s of North America ” Rare Book Collections, Main Building. IO Coffee and discussion, Hillel 2—Czech Club meets at Littlefield Fountain for picnic at Harris Pa rk 2— Alphl Ph i Omega, Texas Union Park. 305. 2:30—Interscholastic League Advi­ sory Board, Driskill Hotel. 4 -Chamber Musie concert, Music Recital Hall. 5 —Business meeting and supper. Gamma Delta Center. 5—Sunday supper, Lutheran Stu­ dent Center. 5 :30 -Pat Wolf to talk on " I t ’s Flee- i tion Tim e,” Lutheran Student Center. 5:30-Talk by Miss Jane Dowell at W S F supper, University Presby­ terian Church. 5;30—Talk by M errill Hutchins at Wesley Foundation supper, U ni­ versity Methodist Church. 6:15 Professor Witherspoon to ad­ dress Newman Club, St. Austin's. 6:30 Talk by Miss Edleen Bcgg at D S F supper, University Chris­ tian Church. ONE HOUR CLEANING — NO I \ IK A ( H A U G E — LONGHORN CLEANERS G R 6-3847 233K Guadalupe Center. IO, l l and 3—Freshman Discussion Groups, YM C A . 1-4:30—Drawing for Baylor tickets. 3 effective Citizenship Group, 4 Race Relations Committee, Y M ­ 4 Panhellenic Council, Alpha E p ­ YM CA. CA. silon Phi. 4 Public lecture by Dr. Jose R. Chiriboga on "The Charter of the Organization of A m e r i c a n States," Batts Auditorium. 4-5—Closed circuit K U T V , Chem­ istry Building 319. 5 Women s Geological Society, Ge­ ology Building 108. 5:30-University Bowling League, Tower Bowlingside. 6 -R. W Gregory' to talk on "O pe­ rations of the Stock Exchange," H ill’s. 7- Baptist Student Choir, Baptist Student Center. 7 Free movie, "Song to Rem em­ ber,” Texas Union. 7 Dr. M errill Hutchins lead theological discussion on Nicho­ las Berdyaev, Gregg House, to 7:45- Longhorn Sports Parade, K V E T . 8 Dr. Ian Forbes Fraser to speak on "Fren ch and American R e ­ sponsibilities in North Africa,” Barts Auditorium. C A f € T € f l l A 2425 EXPO SITIO N FOR DELECTABLE FOOD AT DELIG H TFUL PRICES OUR SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER % Serving from 11:30 a.m. until 9:30 p.m. / 'Ii BAR B O CHICKEN From 2 Pound Chicken served with our Famous Tennessee Bar-B-Q Sauce English Peas St Potato Salad Garlic Bread Ice Cream & Cookies Coffee or Iced Tea S1.C 0 FILET STEAK Wrapped in Bacon Served with Shrimp Cocktail Combination Salad Baked or French Fried Potatoes Ice Cream & Cookies Garlic Bread $too Dine under the stars / in our garten 1607 San Jacinto ■— • T ririf Serving the finest C h o p Suey, C how M ein and other fine Chinese delicacies. G R 8-7641 223 Congress C!ot*d on Monday El Toro 1601 G U A D A L U P E G R 8 -4 3 2 1 ’ - 'IT ' ■ ‘ r - Monroe's "Mexican Food to Take Home' 5 0 0 E A S T A V E . G R 7 - 8 7 4 4 w \ v Constance Frank MCHUGH ^Robert STRAUSS Directed by Elliot SILVERSTEIN • Adapted for the stage by Reginald LAWRENCE Saturday Evening, November IO G REGO RY GYMNASIUM FREE To $15.85 Blanket Tax and Season Ticket Holders $15.85 Blanket Tax Holders must draw a ticket at the Box Office, Music Building, beginning Monday, November 5. Hours: 9-4 P.M. Monday-Friday, 9-12 Saturday. A charge of 25 cents will be made for all tickets not drawn before deadline, 12 noon, November IO. J Single Adm. - Adults S2.50 Children Under 12 - 51.00 No Advanced Sale No Reserved Seats Gregory Gym Box Office Opens 7:15 A.M. Dr. Tan Forbes Fraser, director of the American Lib rary in Paris. France, w ill speak on "F ren ch and : American Responsibilities in North : A frica" at a public lecture, Mon­ day at 8 p m. in Batts Auditorium. J Dr. Fraser will present, an analy­ sis of the problems of Morocco, : Tunisia, and Algeria. In an earlier meeting at 5 p m, I in the University R are Book Col­ lections, D r. Fra ser will describe the program of the American L i­ brary in Paris, In D r. Fraser, who was bom , S< otl&nd, received his bachelor of ! arts, master of arts, and doctor of philosophy degrees from Colum- ' bia University. I While at Columbia, he was an assistant to the dean and director (French of Mai son House! from 1930 to 1917. He has been director of the American L i­ brary* in Paris since 1947. Franchise A lieutenant colonel in the U S Air Force during World W ar II, Dr. Fraser organized and com­ manded the American M ilitary I *ni- versity in Paris in 3945-46, While in the Air Force, he was awarded the Bronze Star medal and six campaign decorations. The lectures are sponsored by the Lang­ Department of Romance uages an't History, Graduate School of Lib rary Science, and the Public Lectures Committee. 12 Reach Finals n Poetry Reading Twelve students qualified for the finals in the Oratorical Associ­ ation's intram ural poetry-reading contest Thursday night. The finalists are Martha Valliant, I Eton McDowell, M ary Herron, M ar­ cia Rogers, M eryl Boernstein, Col­ leen Mathews, Ken Erw in, Helen Plummer, Stephen Liu. David Rea­ gan. M arvin Lewis, and Lucia Romberg. D ie finals will be held Thursday at 7:30 in Speech Building 201. H ave you heard KHFI-FM? . ’ '** mr k * 98.3 M C v j I • }2. .-»• ’** *: The Pine Room Featuring Combo Wed., Thurs., Fri. Nights A LSO Sunday Afternoon 3:30-7:00 Dancing Nightly 2824 Guadalupe G R 7-0555 'm m m . * i M n ! ditorium and a dinner meeting in the Cryst a1 Ballroom of the Dris- kill Hole conference 1 activities concluded Eisenhower Tops Interstate Poll The Interstate Theatres’ presi­ dential "straw vote" shows Presi­ dent Eisenhower leading in Texas. He received 59,8 per cent cif the total votes. A-Uni Stevenson re­ ceived 43.2 per cent, W K. Hel­ iums, city manager < f Austin In­ t e r st a te Th eatres, announced S a t ­ urday*. Interstate’s 1952 poll was only a fraction of one per cent off in fore­ casting the general election results irs Texas. D ie results of the poll and the 25 towns sn which it was taken w ere: I K E Dallas .................... 64.7 Ft. Worth . . . . . . . . . . Pl 3 H ouston................ . 61.9 San Antonio . . . . . . . . 63.0 Austin .................... 568 Galveston ............ 53” Arlington ........... 7?,5 Abilene .................. 51.3 Am arillo ................. 65.3 Brownwood . . . . . . . . 57 I C o rsica n a ............... 56.9 D enison.................. 53.9 D enton............. . Kastland ................. 52.4 E l P a s o ................. 51.4 Paris ..................... 47.3 Temple .................. 49.2 Tyler ...................... 67.7 Waco ..................... Pl 3 Wichita Falls . . . . . . 54 6 Brownsville . . . . . . . . 54 4 Harlingen ............... 50,9 45.2 M erce d es.......... McAllen ................. 62.8 ADDAI 35.3 35.7 38 I 37.0 43 2 46 I 26 5 48.7 34 7 42.9 43J 46.1 45.3 47.6 48.6 52.7 50.8 32.3 45.2 38.7 45.4 45.6 49.1 54.8 37.2 W e Offer Expert Camera Repair Studtman Photo Finish G R 7-2820 222 West 19th A Welcome Change You're in jot a welcome chandi when you dine at The Manhatten, Foe that something different that your taste has been crating, try our truly delicious Kosher style food. (And if you mention you saw this ad, you'll be Sifted The Man hat' ten't exclusive and delightful home' made cheesecake for aesert,) ) Offering in addition. lr rd and a nod" i sr delicatessen In ! ? soon. cond Mexican cf'; of Kosher O'-:.,, fry rf O L r n KO SH ER DELICATESSEN & RESTAURANT 905 Congree ‘ Si,Si ...Es May Deliciosa! •• .. * r-45 j*• '■ 4 » .• V *c I C , TV* ” v E liila + 504 EAST AVE. GR 7-7023 %lced Tea or Coffee Room for parties ^ ,. .Gj O uor Box Office Music Building -- GR 6-8371, Ext. 444 r '•* I #.'.!*•## t f’» • •* R " G .****>-U* M gt»»I file# *'• .-I *? »* m r T F * A * T R A D f t f O u r M f * f ,* »>■ • *« I/, #, ''.wiver# r .*'• tt-t fftifti*' r * * »< j m r i * s in * * $■„»*.* 4# *># »'»> (sr "Lift* ie i iiJiH J iv,, , ♦ <»#<»,».* )A o » unit (WrtOf* tm* i ( IM i # i .if •* .o f o*‘ #{ 14 A* * ’ o r M i n o r i t i t * < »- «* t vt HiQVM Al* in * r r * # f e m # # !, Id* ii ft-#. * p<-,Bret* r e t * ./,*>, *'* , froes U»* W E A ! IM W f l l l i * t n t I " I' pee ft*,* •to# *< I.* 8 :•*■•' ■ ')*' •*'•* e .* h»l0 *'■** (I.*****# •>•*» * *i t i *; J .*»(, *■»..(,«« fttrm m r am* PTO* >I »!•’>*« r .I* 4 m f A I- I r o r pl fir miry* * i '» i* ow , r« t. t »« h o * f * *«**«!•«*♦ ## » As? * . « lh * m t m 1 *. Pint hr in* *04 mf *■*** •’ ' . • • • lli| h * 1 rw? e * ;* *, PW mr I, spirit ut I Br lf »•!>( «<*h*f i . fit u » * t i M il I ti l i l t i« * « f Os* I h r iii- I I X *14 I** I* WI f i t s lf p i ft- r< frn rn nil 14# * I Vt mi t i * t a j*#f Ci«i#t4 tit sri i i 5»y h I M I t il. *< fc t «rrr.-«*fk»tn»t f l M . l t ** I l f W U U r mtmmi U#n »I» «*»i»§fUr# * •*«* ftfl t v f l i t W O R I l l it* MIW O f I npO «M* si 19*1 * r|r#t f»lf»» J JitOr fcwi':', IT M f | » f *■*' I lft< !« OEH.J i H i f f t f# «l III* ft(9ar«i#U. .§1,Ilf MU R ? vt . W ith 18 H *m tJ I tili pain* mg* Hr cfi f 1 *# I ft J . M I I *- i i i ‘Wfit f i% Aw I • * *MCC fsf Ol|>U* I, Hi t o*! R*l» -ll l f I s I % A M M ! W M H I R I I M. 11* if} i Ji:1 Bf fhr m in ftRtR&ifHr f rrtl4 • Rfivnf# |rM wWh I* w i iii# * I . R f I t M M M I t H I # i*i H I HH I M r$it*• t t i * wiOf f th® if f.»n Hi® *f# ut m en *»in1 it hit »»f (ifihf 11 tm* * fo n t* tr»4 t v r n U II I fir t an* t i fU *H in i% t ttfflRfi-t f » ii*Elyf*h u n 4 *# ii b m C it f«! , f )«irr lh® cl nil#* nf «one#Ic i n t iff M r » hi ar»r| i »7f»* MI»m* if »»* in Hit I i i i< in* hiflin# pn*I I • * Ic n J en ne I. I fciiu n *, at *n IMI le i * I? l f I M I M O R I ! U I O O Mig »ni$$|itr I# f»«. innilw* fit I M A M U ! O f Vt M I O ! I i I Iii*** \nhin*® *ft* h i Rf r*itt|iRi t ami ut. th# t>f i « tar a* a1 i* I th)® WI Ut# «..i-e,lilie« f»r % ft* * #|»ft • U l twl *»f th # frtirnal* IM M * r a t # nit fit #t rut #% WRI * I Til# f Wit t ftiftiftl {fin# I he •• A •••* I »I rf# Ivirttffttl* IR M i* »I Ii rn nd |#*» l*»b a* *!*W ? I t l l »i«a the 9 cwt* t I* ' » » I Mi* I bote* at * "5 I giant steed enOudog* of M I P l a t Ell M O R eel bv I llyahellt and U , i | t , e | . f lu «ii»i i et the most *rn ,i,n i* amt ti H O I St V io l l i t ll al It* de SUI, ■ alb More n fit m odem tim e* I t Pub 55u it ts M ila Burnett la tiv b ),, and nit in w bfih He of the m o ld s bes! it* tug by mot |g|g pleas of thru Cw it f#*ot((e wot It. M in tea, egsn vg and cacfnona Ute land » tamed ” 1 KHI It Until D u al #40 It! of t ub el f ia t pi M f I-#* k, I atot * I , Oil,I ho holing "J hut bet, Nash P e l t , ii tunning of Ital* . m any other# 95$ pages Safe » a* . Set win T h rill one of bistnrr g moat and i, iv, a ir.I nm! put “ "is fioonnegt r t a r A r»fie»O u g latish enidlala of fo g I ram#.. Iiona Die T.lif al.rth I Oft It ', r * e bv ll I r » b *t »4 »e s ,I» I i I n t ft alo- Xlttn I h i gin,l ie g-e.i,t*r* I.ib o I Hundred* el le i ip r t menu* abd tot bx in * welgbj w lib 'U l «"Mot (ll 1(511 A O I H A P T E I t l l Pub al t i n s A u M t i 49 b tv ’ auh* P I M A ANH U # I Et A11! a * l f c l b ig lh# I ii ti a 11 hi*!, a i.rtoniig id a u d U n a l A m c i l i • lin e n , e d him a l ( I ' d * C U I* t i. t H a n d ( H H * A V D S l g ' w l f P r i h m a . Ihr lilted, ( III, in ,«*>n I la v ld a n n . el a1 ( I I X «•( b i it lla n l t i l S I A N M U l l l l I It# m in d I IM l l ii t i d h a h u A l i f J t i l l * ihinkria * - amin## in# .Me. I tm In.man alfa la hntgig i*.v- I Ii, J. , • t.-n# am! r „ l , #t n Mi IIH - l i n s bv ll Am I UMI alala Pup I " ##iinHnin» iii# if t n i e l a m e i n . i t e l. al * I AA ,1k nit im a m H ill* I dr ii S a le l l #* intl,. a p a r * , iiufei Sat# (I Ii h i I I I N A m A n i l . , I , . * , e ll f t B n it b m * A A h llm g n . la ,, r n , !* fm ib n l# I I n n . in a IM# g m l I H t n i h l l l e n d »m>. r im a « g * l An m a c ), m g i*, . m o o babu-, r n ! a ' I I M | d b # i o f s A IM p n lllv t ie t ih # n So p lf A U I# Hill* Pub a! t i l l AA (I W J l l f t Ai I D T (h e m o a t c l K U H A I I I M a k in g b # p | d # t pub at SI »* tula i t I i i i g | u n tie d lie . a d a d # d i i t # v im I Hate Ii 4# ti! A A H a l l o w a m i A » a t (el tala ll Special Purchase SALE STARTS Promptly at 8:30 a.m . M O N D A Y ! 3 CONVENIENTLY LOCATED STORES 109 East 21st St. GR 8-8715 2501 GUADALUPE GR 6-6316 2242 GUADALUPE GR 7-6141 NOT AT NO. 4 STORE P A R K IN G IO T * A T ( A C H STORC 79. TW ENTIETH f t VTI RY MENTAL H YG IEN E later mutts* •rtirl** pa bs M Shore Stimulating by IR noted authorities—pc' chowing tie rn en inn*- aer variant*, th* Rorcrhach Bn*‘hod. mental hy­ industry, the Arm . etc. Blo* giene in I* M F u * . at S » !e— I •* J ti* UA T H E G E O G R A P H Y ’ OE H I V G ! R bv f. astro. Coff ut. o-arching ans! n of '« * effect* of ma** stars at kw on two thirds of th* world* population im­ portant Fob. at Sale—f l . sa *! M N E P I.A Y * BT C H EK HOY' The Cheir I o d e Vans a. The Sea Gull, a ’s other O rch a rd ! rnaaterpiet i * ©I th* modern tne.itre, Brilliantly-wnttoa, timely and IS.Pft vpp-fi*!" J I >< m , N I N E F I A T S B V I B M N. The b*$«-known work* of the father of the modern drama. In­ cludes An Enem y of the People. A Doll** House Peer Gynt, Hedda Cabler and others Special— *! 9$ PVI bv H Sale— I t at $5.15 Sale—l l 98 I T I R VAI to ballet, acting plot to kill Hitler, Authoritative, detailed IVOO I I G r.A P i v M E M O IR ' O ver RT TUP \T R E DICTION * HT Thousands of ie ch s ir a I colloquial and trad* t e r r * succinctly explained-—dram a to staging. ‘ at Pub p ,*» 84 I H E inside revelation* of the Na* war of sensational machine and it* campaign*. Spies and secret agents, the stranger-ttsan-f lotion etc . etc H.store at lls most fascinating-don't m:>s •• *■ ru b . at $«,50 sale— SI 19 85. Social Psychology— E M I RCI FINT H> MAN NA T t R E by W. C'outu. Stimulating analyse f " h r we think and act av we (in, Individually and in group* -fads on personality, motivation, rte. hair— $1 98 Pub. at $4.35 86 AN O I T I IN P O E St I I N E IE IC < R IM IN G ! ( i t . I by NL Moi (and. The best introdurtion to the subject for both law officer and laym an. Fab 87 History of Obstetrics—THE B y H a rv e v G rah am i-Ti rag* arcount from earliest tim e* to th* present Hius Pub at $18.88 Bale—83.9* 88 Al T o IH S . Complete aper ii ira* ion* of all the leading foreign and domestic m akes as well as * fascinating H istory of Bods Design. 500 photos Pub 8? TIN AI. B y M trostatics. photo* lect n c ity diagram s. 356 pages. Sale— *1 9* Pub. al $7.Mi Introduction lo ( H i v r - t ARI A V D D IM O U T , SO by A . bilcock. 51 Illustration* enhance this study of a ll Chinese arts and t r a it s —c a i ti phase and per sod. Pub. 91. M IL I T A R Y term s defined ra d a r, etc on guided m issiles, atom ic weapons, Pub Vale— * I Oft 92 A m erica » Greatest S r le a K 't —JO N I AH M IM ARD (U R B N b.v L . P W heeler. Tri* life and w ort of one of me m ajor creative minds cf the po** e vil W a r period. Gibbs advanced concepts of phi*;** and chemistry the that have since tw entieth century Pub. at $4.08 Sale— l l '>» 9.1 Em il Ludwig * Store of Jesus—T H I SO V OE M A V A brilliant Interpretation by a master of biography Pub ai $3 50 Sale— l l 49 ho latest unclassified data PR A C T IC A L E L E C T R IC IT Y AND M A G N E 55 uh R em brandt drawings v a n A l D K H O V A R I it including Sciem e and use of and magnetism. transform ed gale—*1.91 Sale— $3 89 elec­ 282 illustrated at »7 .Mf al *6.00 at IS.WI Rubin. 94. T H E A R T O E E A T IN G , by M . K Fish e r. F iv e cookery classics in one volum e! 400 choice recipes- entrees to desserts, beans to crepe* surette. Am erie an Chinese, F ren ch and G erm an dishes, etc. 750-pp Fa b . at $6.80 Sal*— $7 9* I lr by at $7.50 .ii $5.88 t* Whltton Lu x u ry gift President*, by M ( OM E D Y , edition w ith 69 93. D U H O N A R T OE' A M E R IC A N MAXIMS, rd by It Kin, 537 pages of wisdom a n i wit--Ben Frank- l.n, M irk T w ain. John D e w e y, thousands of other*. Sale—$2.98 Pub ! G . 96 Dante * T H E D IV IN E full-pag* \5hite. ” xlOlV Pore engravings, A m agnificent volume. 8 Pub. at $6.58 S a le —*398 97. Be m i ami R u s s e lls D IC T IO N A E Y O F M IN D . M A T T E R A N D M O R A L S More than 1.800 defini­ tions and opinions on politics, religion, science, history and philosophy by 'he great modern think­ er Alphabet ic a lli -arr am cd Sale— I t .08 Pub. at $5.1*8 I- 'R S T F IR S T L A D I E S The W ives of Our 98 I sri* Intim ate, anecdote-fille ii studies of M artha Washington, B a ­ chel Jack son , M a ry Lin co ln , ct a1 M u* Sale—It ■»* Pub ft') A M IS H L A N D d ra w igs by Kiehl ft Christ mo N* w sw an g ct, text by C. New sw anker, ho superb drawings capture the essence of this colorful peo­ p le their religion, quaint speech and dress, fa rm ­ ing, schooling, etc Vale— $2 A* Pub. at SICO I D A IP O I N D IN G ft P1N- IO! P l V ' l M , ed. by R A. L y m a n . F ro m the pre- si notion to pricing- the Rtandard work for phar- m scists. teachers, atudtnts Pub. at $6 .sn New— SI 9$ 101 HOW TO R f AD H I S T O R Y , bv A Robertson. judged a guide to th# Ho-.* history is made and secular and the past and present Now— $1.9$ Pub. «l $115 Iii'.', ( 'brist ma* i R A N I I Issue 1955. The w o rld fa m o u s E tench art annual* lh tipped rn— Scores of brilliant full-color plates, t0'**,*14” . R em brandt, Men.Ung. M archand Pub. at $ •'9$ Sale—Ii 49 IC- 55 Af Thackerai , TH E ENGLISH 111 AfOR- I s t s R rillia B t recreation of the ttmev of S w ift, Pope, Hogarth, Sterne, others deluxe ed. Pub. al $2.65 Sale—*! In — I A RTH S G R E E N 104 H e 55 “ rid AAe L iv e 't A N T LE , bv Sidney M angham . (T e ar, com pre­ hensive account of th# plant covering of the earth, it* evolution, structure and use to man. A fa sci­ nating. basic book Lin s Put?, al $3 IS I I L l ST R .A THEN— Special re! gloss event* of P H ARM A C E I TIC.A L Sale—$i 49 lives and etc. 48 ii las B y ro n , at $5 25 fam ous I RAV E I than 80 n TH E ADV! NIT R E S O F A B A U E T ( R I T H t*v R . Buckle F e seine: tis panoram a of the dance w orld, w th pen-portraits of Balanchine f onteyn, etc. v fie— $1 9$ Pub 106 T H E G D I D E N A G E DE ed by F He - a B . M orris, a. E u ro p e ’s historic cities and r ciu re v iu e byway s. a* seen through the eye* of tra v ellers M ark Twain. m ere H awthorne, P ick e n s, Lh. pin, and m any others P u t , V - THE. R t'y f A N T IL N E W ( IR L E ( M A A ' , by R T enant. Colorful story of and A m ato *’*, etc. Pub. the c ity 's background traditions—M a rd i G u s . tee French Quarter. sate—$1.49 s ( K I A l M b E M I S leading pas ch la­ ir isis and social st-ser.t sis en the corr clat .an be­ tween '.he two c n id a ! s.;hi-- -is P sb . P S T I RD A N A L Y S IS A M ) THA essays by Sale— I t a* Sale—$1.98 im portant si $4 .'-8 Sh elley, .Vcmart, til *5.88 at r SO Trem endous S a v in g s ! Hundreds of W a n te d T itles! D cLux c V olum es! Fine Im ports! Color Print Portfolios In clu ded! V alu e s up to 20.00! BRAND N E W , O R IG IN A L EDITIONS OF LEAD ING PU BLISHERS I M t h e A r n e t t ! s a T h e a t l e It lH s O a t ln n * . T O D V l l S I I I lo ll ti M f , l l I ’ - ll Eli 11 ti net 1 em Min* i m i r a l Intl f of mu earl.* bam- tar* • tm rneb*. m a o a y r ii and ‘‘si to On to K n it* !" K ill filled '« Fa b at I w ith rare tits** 11 bm M ark hate *3 ’I* T O Hoyt i i st a S V D H IS T IM t a br Daniel Hop* A. it I tainted bv abbe a* tit# tw it the id ( hunt n e t w litten 01 • PP Put. p i ntrslant* #1 sr in and < ii botte* lidding *! :t» val# AA • bi. lei I •Ut): OBI I ! i AI t A I M SA 5 5" ■ ort'(dp'i and human picitir# of and (raaetD id (be el cai l-*lritd Pub at b s 55 l l "is I ' fit *i n l trig M I M M I ION * OE I,,,, w in n e r* A .oil.-, fed for S a le linsg t ilt arranged Of I Til lev It. O HnK' U. I I ..I *115 the Aim eivph*, c li "biogrsphle*'' bused on Ole J bine Id Att w ater, live* anti Ii... in 730 page* of ’’Stiiries J# m e * I 15 I VIi m ill I The Old and Veil Tesla , .«irr. It t* Berdvaey — ( DRI HAN Kl V Of I HON AHII S. rd lu c id , bfsptrtng accounts of I Mtdrews, ll m enu moi r en lovable reading and i n sum Pub SS K ierkeg anfd. 4. K. Ihrslerlnn MUOI IIN by the el i HIU* It Pub Pl I ski- N o bthan' <.i dregs of cm11 tnt o fficial preparations, alc Pnb et *5 00 ,0 IU , O pi se w ork a lo r d A lfred H o u ils * Sate—$1 98 Cub at $1 Mi " I b y I . S t o n e . The great we b e t's coufUct, ides**, sym bolism , c li I IA I s OI itei id principle* flu * importance Sale- ■ JI SS list letter-' P H A R M A ! IEI.D G T . bv PH O II M O s 55 Tile • structural form ula* complete data on l i f e e n d M u r k a t long. m om ce Vale St ss " p im in (O IL < I ( t i l I lf lid, I i WI t h e til ' t i to t Ie a liv e ly , detailed bk)ai »l'hv put, .( * i M C O R I E Iv 11,,! gb und m lvrn turi l i t e 5 4 o rtd of Rate- *1 49 l i m o th e V e n e t u e t a n I'a u l /.atli “ v» eXIMlltent lawtk cf t r a v e l ie (tat o f the r it st order” iir t t u r ;ill* t a lit e r a l' I .im o d 4t p h o to * I (e ld ie. t il P u b 55 in B t V I Mf ' ' I ' 1*’ * ' 4 * R O N IN bv P H R H I I O ' ! P II R E D D I I ! I. ,.undo i-ni full color I ' xl0” voluble with 34 full i c l1! ..d ic tiou' of the c» #f (h e A m e n . stars, stage com if* nm tor figure* lib itieati# in Ole PRti c e n t u r y ti* un# of r , Bi $i. cit Ult* A AN AA (N K I I 5 v i v i d l e i I e s t ion dlus , charts, tables, iiMm . etc ru b * 55 peusildr events 500 A D Pub D K I to v A R Y O I s Boeder, intro fUtdi Sale— $7,9* by In d o It I ST O K f Ba rnes to the present. E l H O P I AV ivnrld’s great figure* and s -de *2 9* to H a rry at 15 80 el $8,88 the to t I AAV bf ’'t c n c r ut tile Se p tic Abaorbiog h is'o r' Atuei n a n beginning* to today s problem*. Pub. bi I", '.ti Rom an and I net Hi ie (ley, bv W illia m sale—*1 49 .Angto- I H I K U I H I M OH ERD A ! P I S C H od by \y ever Pub the cre am of modern British humor Cob loo selections a ll of "N e w Y o rkci at $.1.50 Sale— l l 90 caliber renowned Included a r* she r e s i d e d philosophical ll III! Ani HA OE FUD KNOPH \ bv D D R u n # ' Nearly 1,300 page* covering t!>«' whole thoutht and % pa ii of w riting thinkers of the G reek and Hem an periods as «<’!1 as the outstanding Hebrew scholars, church there and the whole prodigious im * ct modern philosopher* from the ll en.usa a nee to the scien­ i .uh entry begins with * biographical tific era sketch cover tot the i h lusnphci # life, listing his m ajo r works and tone sac . careful statement of h s including a to the history cf phU- place and 'ig ntfican t «•' cot im p o rt*1'.** the in I pl AME H K AN of Ben Franklin buttons of Dew \5 na, Pub Bl $6 rn P H I I d n O PH A idea* and Thom as P a in e t i (he contri- F ro m Gfi* aind N in tjy a n a . i d hy R b Nile— *1 9$ 7(i U lt T IO V A RY D I Lark- ridge Guide ta modern m anner* hundreds of him* on dress, wedding*, parties, job hunting, etc Pub. at A1 58 tipping, speech, J.T K H I T T I *«1e— * 9* bv V T i n b a t h r o o m R I A D E R W ith an 7! Intro­ duction b.v E a r l VVilcon. A sparkling collection of ita lic s , poem* ;*nd sketches bv the great humorous Parker, writers, Benchky. Be mc I m s na M encken, Ogden Nu sh in., ny other* illustrations. Pcrelman, H ilarious I brothy and Special—$1 t* 72 The H eart of O H E N R Y , bv D K ra m e r l h youth, im prisonm ent, prolific N 5 ye a rs, and -'or the f ist tim e— the story of the woman he loved Nate— $1.9* Pub ‘ itm at J , 'te> r«, V u r n a ies .5 I ireplaces— E I R ! o n i t P ierce , Th* rom antic story H i a r t i l . by full of home heating d e v ilry of entertaining anecdotes and illus­ trations of ra re and popular types the world over. Sale-41 99 Pub ut *8.50 F delightful the agr-, thro .ch IH E I! 14 H A N D B O O K O F L I T E R A R Y T E R M S pensable far » bet ti r understanding of and modern betically •arrange.! term * related so illustrated with apt quotations. B v H Y'elland Pun. at Indis­ literature iioo alpha- criticism -over the basic explaining fit'.ion. poetry, d ram a, cie., and Sate— SI 4* articles literary *1 IO 73 T H E O R IG IN S O I A R I leading 99 plates Pub at $4 50 anthropologist s bv (June W e ltiish A com prehensivi account. Sale—$1 9* ( tun ne D ic tio n ;'!» id A N I ll NT H I n I g R E . Thousands of alpha- by Woodcock P . 76 cd bein ally .arranged entries on events Pub, at $6.08 s r i, science, etc of ancient tim es the people, places, Sa le—$2,9$ A I restBtiry of Middle English Literature— ’Va ill lams The best OS IKM 'lerp ie ces K ins Arthur, P u i a 77 G I I I W O O D . by \! to P low m an, Canterbury Tales ru b etc 553-pp. I ;h centai v Sale— l l 98 at $6 08 IIL-' ii IS N H A M S P I A RI S P R O S E , bv M Crane detailed survey of the trugedie*. w ith new technique Pub \ in astel s and insights into his an and comedic* ai $3.80 Sale—I t 59 G O O D B O O K S for C H IL D R E N and Young People Timber gen Ady enturc* of N . * ii' Ulus I$-8> Sale—58c ANDA A N D I H I M HOO! B l s . bv J B lin i it L u te boy whom d ie am d r a w t i c about AAI Kl I.(MN!, I ti 105AS !-,i \' Ald is T hree children of Ihe Of the w L l s Pub al $.’ (to Ic os h»\e a spree at one stere# Cv..n lh > i5-8 Sale— k$e I H E E R H N D I Y I v " Child ire. on a holiday find fun and aftvantttre, learn l ! ( H K . natuu- w . i's. rte I *h, ai $ 50 ! AK VI bl K 5ale—g««- l children and ADA I N TI H i . bv I rid " n e w orld's .ss a c ir c u s t a lc of b r e a th - I VC T II I I I R ! I s DE B b ton. Y oui starts* s most I.)ins;* ft patrol tak'.c.g ii sneer. m ystery Pub si F L U I •'it.’ .i beth D I ( A A U TA 153 vs ms story of un adv m ar- G.'udg. Beau tiful. Gov (12-up cs mu* Pc# ft,-! and her D iem P#b at $3 80 i and fun. HIU* GO IA F S a le—-Mc Sale— a 9c SONC. T IU bv M D M . R I I O I M E K R A M AA ham, Ty of ,i tiny and g irl vvho their live near advt durrs with a a adorabi* ilia * by E d w in M eg arcee, I ARM ! I in every home t m E H I An i R I B A I,, rd by in t hiU1ht«d clam*i* '. by s. re of Pub af *2.58 'a lc — toe vs Barksdale. B e au tifu lly UIue color. V superb collection Of the. w orlds crest* s wi der* belongs I W S ’ Pub at *3 80 ss Ie— I I V Gottlieb What 156. T A B U T IN N IN ’by \5 every boy and g ill needs to le .c n to become an c\i>crt pink pong p l.o e r. Photos #«« h s t AIN I (>l D H I t i rgc se#n,.« f t calili# ill v U la ir# sod *t hi ti.intmuig # »*(#lii'lui tuft ai < IBI Supei ti I, c tc.Uu ! let*v in 5 I#,*It':i# Jaii,tit*iat A# mMtlnW I* r u t - I I I P A P IN Kl V nut (i e ( It (As «l A* lie I L *11 Iv si:- **'( ,i' *»i ef 4 Ne# El l r * , . ult# * --l.it >*( lateen# el 4 H»# EJ *** E t A M I N IO D A M I HS the I id lh i# r n tuns , .Winnie# get in lh# r a h ai i ■*« Litho Int i. .it I up i n« el t« n remnant .aught i i I ! « s'.v N, I #r 4 M#« »t »• ( i l l p i! AS i neater# it I ' It a i a 11. hug vat UH >.? Deft al Ar* IS# i I L * NA I! 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P e tri Ninvi I ira iiftlii Mops in Color Al Aft D I NOK H I ASH hts A \ a, *5 (SO »sii ais an s u r n a m u d t , •- ’» i Sd *f t I..♦ SS Sr ** M A B ll? N . i R I l i AND S I’ ! IM A M I R H A I rh , e * i « iy sa s r cf Os# A m evuai R t w ii M A P L l ie ...ii I 'M I AAL Ii I D N ft IC 1 sac . .ii A u f h c n f u B u l l f i g h t P s 'S f Y T * val# ..(I A ti TNI* IAN Ms'AA 4 N A v. * ' ie O I s K I N S . m a O M AMS ftah #1 *1 NC AA', SPH A O I S S I ' I ( i x i a s l l A VI I K U A ss I N ' C l A N D D O R A R A U N bs V O' A Ash mf • I .'aft# net I# M •• est lh# I »• t » M is * « » f* i» , * ' E SUMMO \ x ii \$\? I $ t'H u n \ 4, k A I V - V* WHG pl ft NI I R U AN R O N D E R EA * I H R I A i N t V As HIN E H<,#e#ev I the A . w # , « r - , ,%* nrftwws* uExsphw. » »*-• ■:'some i'%,4 r4js^ sp,* ■tit #•«; V.Vi J) I fvj- Sol t-% to -s s mn a# a i t I 9# SVVS vms-v I .. We I J.' b M U Leto • . . 5 . e AE' * rv-l 5 h . ’ N ' O I ' Aft *»•»-BkvTO'. 'dhseccwisa ■ * Yhvto. t I RE r - vpEi.<- r ETO roWMbg ro* r« Os# wwwa. vs# j##fteA e Vr#e ,# t eve v. r , i , , * f m .' . ( I ' o w e , ,, Eta*-toe e r e « * w m lo#* %Aerosna*# ane. Ow ¥ v . . - 1 i## e-#,##* si#, r# s b«0e-g' si N. t • <• IN S I N I I C \ » v v . v PRETOR Blaws re. 80MRR roto (• AYA** RR ftVsi ,. I e."!". , , , , r,# '.A, I '-re ct I- r ,#■',* k l I >1 MMI K HO AU' iiK.s,- IIANDROOK. ftetafted guide N ile —l l Pl .•sss s ti sure * I NS,I I n (| U T I K A VI K l ihrotigh Shake* * . Andes', MQtoi. Sb#» ire ft I H I A N N O T A T O R The fan. sn l a m * F.'r sell .d v s 'lia s Seers*) Iv 5 b r in i i »•'>' of 'hake* E'v, , S J I ! h i TD ek. T H I t " K P> " i f TNA s EH AVRA .-I # .he bas . torts'* «*en s ' " - to gale-*#! P H U ' v i e - $ f l l F* SSS.'.to j-N Mi wvnft) L e i » sCsiSC s'* O '* K , i f ' * M A M M O T H B U I I A f a n,;ps‘. .vi.A'.-.i svm pendium ct IVV., , v and vs emir •' cs cr t w splciHlsd drawings si $3,95 r « b l l DR NOT faacw afrag 4N»r» to si range phew 'h i m , 5A HA NOT s i K V IA I ■ I " V! A' NUSH* $4 f a1 rev ..ices .«! h ti Gee 11- iv rf on Lie use* and abuses cf IL B v t \ Abe 59smess— 5 H H D K ! N H A IR I d r f o n I bv | ah:!'* as A»eV. ss .#:• heart and rn id Pub N e * - ' * ! B I As K- IH E KU**: A work of ache tor­ * love MWV b o m i hate th* *1 IS (to I * .inns» the A B R I' Aft bv M Stere, E1\r-se» ' e-gt lslsn sa a * —’ NO ANNO e I I M I os the roafnry » r.w*. v* naaiio-'-s' head! se — • her* • ( hi • a of 0 The DE .5 5..Ie— El I U : , I S I . i v . Liar jams# Revs,. soft B e rg m a n etc# fthWkw rub af k’i (tt » ON a I RA B A N D by T M I v • I.4, • sn TF* s e ; ' i- V a* v * vc Esroimr•*$*.. O T k f t l .ptXNgrams etc P m!' ai . mp sc I f v.,'-:' Eof $5 JC k ale—l l Es * d Vrftnk - and hsisdfr .••Hers. * sa Rale—*1 T H E D A M N O E T E R M A N A L I T Y , t o F C M I Rot. Pean* f«Uh< s» Vi-, dr a pf « ’• answ er Ahs m a r * bagie q eetkM U eat .ru t Xiv HW d r psn m tal ic.wr*> f '. ’L c s c r - a eft la * sad I M I I ' M P ANT *1 Rf CA TSS) TI, T H E progsto# yvift'es Ifead'ft grew w,'..)t v w vt ;..' - B a r # p y , S N ' - , E ARM IN * ow . to A R . ..'I ft".' tar..* segpw>.b.Vr ESI E X ftgr:ary trad*si':'* tbe I:-ft Rftl#— I '.-.(-—I * SSK T R O ) IT b R R l r NS n 1 «*—$ IN r a h #» i • t e l ? (set.eMS > e* PN H ITTA $ te *fg ' .O ( MOI# A U T Y t o s e w s A M E R M A N # . ; .,,- *!»/:* (N E at A i to $ af r " lh# wftitofttou* MRx-flt *»»»'! to w h v h snar F#ii'.t-e m t m a :* o roiH w ec b a e — i i to R t i Easa the Krcm.ba-afftfi J e w Be->. iadtob p'barm s d r o w»x-* E W P L ONION ' — T H E rovAesa J U B r r : r TTirtRflgWir Cwr-maa?'» m v s J! to r u t *t R S X r » «■ rker ami a W ii— I patnewk. F$w*ma r r i m tit it* it* B L V ARY ARIA k ^ ■xworo a. « * a i « w > : o R N a t e s K a # M I r o t o * ® » NLS!— * T r i s.. YI to ^I i %-$*>*'< b a n t * * * * N E E D U IN R A N D v f > i . #■:. . rr. v- ■ ft'to to Nto Clr ta ,> - rn ■- Sa to - 8 i f t i K W N IN *, t^U ■ . PWE «. %’ to S-fcto-4 & i m i' t h * I 'S & * * rn , ? t i t I n i m t< i T H I BA> ! R A U ID R A Tb e I s n » - N 'c e n W - .ie H e m e — ( A L I E D R N I A b 133 E M I L , K A N T The ex, .::rt geenfg ci>k tr.»r 5' T se net r n jjN».(t i e a sir * s ‘ or r I N I K K B I N A ckaeb docutaenwl IW S to to is t " ’ Fre e rh ronqiMHR c r E IM ( I T K I N — A All th* methods and r e n o cis* at $( to Fifth SS ii ISR G e e-cr b e ak NETM EL St IE KCE pr &&V t w w rM r » y P-T } 1 *i yr, to . t i t titulary * ' A G V r h . r rn. ak ear*—Seer a tea. Br aggros. SN U H U H CT ION! TO I C O rn.ga atte* rh* torero behksft emmet.* cycJro. Ame: scars and K I R K rv i*. Af s D *«* I T r i ) —1 H E ' E l R E T H In 11sRA OE NA as. SN ' fiMftpw c,-> -ct w s it w rwi'.igewro #2 : #* - .-ft I K I M E ' > :* !- « ras-w »••••• c 1 I TR* M I r n aw LM ft F lo r ­ siren *( $3 75 fabolous summon. The How the,* handled A m e r ic a s * — H O C K SH O ft, by Writ R I >-;»(rus— E.'n aa n in RCII Xi I IL. ence K " I mperors of P. •*abrek ng” tell of f ie generations of n-spfcl­ ar ie p*y»r.»nop business '.he H - 'p e P»amond. anf.q-.;e*. guns, coirs, a Strafti- v a r i u s . p a i n i n g * , r t e . rub IE I Ste * lent .G ra ils -minded ta ym tR , 5 Ie—I ! Ebib. at $2 IS 41 Bertrted Rustrl! es THi IvtFACT OE KCI E NI I ON MM ii ta Fr .And T radsttoa E t fe d s of Scienc.tic • e.-hviqae. and S. ’,#■•.# and V a l e t .-nenr.g key sc Im was to man- 'n .r f t crucial p ro hleirs p s i 14 H > b make xsft mend nun.lrofts c-t: i.»etu’j c -et » carpentry, etc. Profusely - i r s on power SCS HOME WORKSHOP PRO JECTS ft ID I A* Sale—St For > vs.- s bail— $1 i i $2.88 fools s, , Tub si $2 .to Sale—l l THE ROOK 0$ LITTLE KNOW I E EKsE bv th e r a w — m a d . m u r d e ro u s Ghcsilsran Ace. T V » c o m m e tu on p r o g r a m * and p ero o n a h K es Fab ai $5 95 to- J e a n W ahl. T h e d o c tr in e s of K ie r k e g a a r d , Re t o JEM* WfthL T h e (to c tr m e s es: K ie r k e g a a r d He:- d e r gar. J a tp e r * Bate— I i si $; is ft sib I 5 M im p # F E D E K A L R E STRYK P O L IC Y O ' l e f t ­ to G . L B a t h T he h isto ry o f she M A K IN G er* ! R e se r v e Sh ste m n j fic a c u r m a n e* ar* Petrey t e d Sa r it e c le a r ly d escrtb eft N —I) P e e ai m to A C P A l T NAI CV > UMH— Kcsrmj e th e r* P r e I d *1 * J t i P l* :* Sn* to' A G r e e r A N T H O L O G Y — U S . t * re agt Foe Shaw V V i , —~(| v i a I $3 * I I I M I M I I I VS B et t o r Tit tai SF h i m r • rtofthf• hJtooib M o FTrope# vc* a f>: ihr I I *>-e*r**>» Maroro t W m T o n - * t a i s- •...» w r ye t t.r >»** I h a t* •re portfc.’ ’■'* prr*:* er MvA*) twJpi* A X T I NE lie f A > i •w e ro m * C B G ACCT Ni SMU C ut lasts T exas. 20-19 B y JIM M ONTGOMERY A ssociate Sport* E d ito r H eartb reak w aited in th e end zone for Texas here S atu rd ay as a pounding Longhorn second half surge fell short one point and SMU won, 20-19. Behind 20-0 when the third q u arte r opened, the mud sm eared Steers staged one of the most gallant comebacks ever seen in Memorial Stadium by bouncing off th e ropes to score th ree times. Texas’ last touchdown came with only 3:15 left in the game and altered the scoreboard to 20-19. W alter Fondren, generally sure death on conversions, kicked wide to th e right, however, and that, w as all for the Orange. Tommy G entry, who two weeks ago converted twice as SMU beat Rice 14-13, again provided the Pony m argin. The sure-footed Pony co-captain, kicked tru e afte r SMU’s first and last scores. The I^onghorns, who previously this season had second half difficulties, reversed the pattern S at­ urday. The Steers collapsed in the first half, allowing th ree M ustang touchdowns and 216 yards offense, then stopped the Ponies with only IO yards in the final 30 m inutes while rolling to 181 yards and 19 points themselves. SMU took th e opening kickoff and went 82 yards on 18 plays t o 'score. The M ustangs used VOL. 56 Pd7e Five Ce AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1956 Eight Pages Today NO. 60 ‘First C o l l e g e Da i l y in the South' T exan DID HE C A T C H IT? Th© R e f e r e e s a i d y e s e n d S M U e ^ d T o m G e n t r y s c o r e s his f irst t o u c h ­ in c o l l e g e p la y . T e x a s 1 h a l f b a c k C l a i r d o w n B r a n c h a tte r r ft s t o b reak up th a. c.cm|r!e+ ... b u t t o n o a v a i l a s S M U g e ts t h e fi r s t o f th re e fi r s t - h a lf s c o r e s . r e ’N' 11 IE/ Council Assigned Job O f Picking New Coach C onsideration of a new fo o tb a ll. • o a th a t the U niversity w as th e I m ain o rd e r of business this w eek­ end a t the B oard of R egents m e et­ ing in Austin. The job of picking a new h ead football coach for th e em b attled the Longhorns w as assigned Athletic Council, 'cho will have th e ir recom m endation* rea d y be­ fore Jan u ary ’ I. to to The Council w ill m eet M onday to j co n sid er w h eth er It will h ire tw o I m en rep la ce outgoing H ead Coach E d P ric e and ret iring Ath­ letic D irecto r D ana X. Bible, or com bine the jobs of head football coach and ath letic d irecto r for one m a 'I. One sidelight of the se arch for a new person to lead th e fortunes of the future h as in T exas elevens been a r a th e r anonym ous ca m ­ paign on the U niversity cam p u s in the support of Vernon Brookes. Brookes is, as fa r as Texan r e ­ search can tell, an o range ra n c h e r in A lam eda. C alifornia. Brookes has been rep resen ted to U niversity s t u d e n t s as having coached in high schools and rolled up a reco rd of 84 wins, 5 losses, and a tie. H ow ever, bis existence, qu alify cations, o r w illingness to coach at T exas a re still m uch in doubt. In o th er business, the R egents reaffirm ed th eir policy reg ard in g political speeches on the U niver­ sity cam pus. This w as in an sw er to an ap p eal by the U n iv ersity ’s Young R epublicans, Young D em o­ c ra ts, and Law Students for Stev­ enson. The groups had signed a petition to P re sid en t Wilson to let US Senator A lbert G ore speak on the cam pus. The R egents decided also th a t ad m in istra tiv e step s he to clarify the policy on this m a tte r, to p rev en t fu rth e r confusion. taken Also, the B oard approved the en- tire a ir conditioning p ro ject of the U n iv ersity 's M ain L ib rary . P re ­ viously, it w as thought th at funds would be av ailab le for only half of the .job. Emeritus Director Bedichek Retires News in Brief... B y T h e A s s o c i a t e d f r e s * Russia Hits H u n g a r y With G e n e r a l Attack VIENNA. Sunday, Nov. 4—Pow ­ erful R ussian forces launched a g en eral atta c k on H ungary and its i cap ital Sunday w ithout w a r n in g “ R ussian g an g sters have be­ tray ed u s," saki a H ungarian new s I agency (MTD m essage from Bud- to th e A ssociated P re ss in i apest ' Vienna. “ The R ussian troops suddenly j attack ed B udapest and the whole I country. They opened fire on e v - 1 erybody in H ungary. It is a general a tta c k ." j MTI said Ja n o s H ad ar, H unga­ rian C om m unist p arty se creta ry , j I form ed a new governm ent, s id e d ) I with th e R ussians and has begun to “ annihiliate th e counter-revolu- j tion." tile lh a t liquor The upshot w as continued the r e ­ to flow w hile sources of the H eadlight dried u p .” In m o re rec en t y e a rs Mr. Bedi­ chek h as becom e renow ned as a n a tu ra list and w riter. Among his books a re “ K aran k aw a C ountry," “ A dventures w ith a T exas N atu r­ alist." and a new history of the In tersch o lastic League. H is choice for th e h ead coaching cation as big as Speed Named Ce/ia, Outstanding by Dads Celia B uchan, U niversity sw eet­ h ea rt, abd Speed C arroll, viee- president of the S tudents’ A ssoria- H a rry VV. tion, w ere nam ed m ost oustanding ; girl and boy a t th e U niversity in the ninth an n u al D ads' D ay pro­ gram S atu rd ay m orning the T exas Union M ain Lounge. Coionel D. H arold B yrd, D allas; C. \V. Cahoon J r ., W ichita F a lls; F erguson, H ouston; M. A. Olson, San A ntonio; R ich ard U. Simon, F o rt W orth; John L, T om pkins, Corpus C h risti; VV. F. Weed, B eaum ont; and Sam D. Wolfe, Sherm an. in Stanley M. E rsk in e of M idland w as elected president of ihe D ad s’ Association Chosen vice-presidents w ere H. M. Adkins, A m arillo; Bob A rm strong of Austin w as elected tre a s u re r and D ean VV. D. Blunk, secretary . P resen tatio n aw a rd s w as of Coaches, Old Discussed by Times Dads Vital Pip el ine Blasted In Syria, S t o p p i n g Oi l The m a ss of people th a t clogged the first floor of the Union Building i S atu rd ay talk ed about football coaches, old tim es, and “ how things h av e changed." for D ad s’ D ay The first rep o rted blow blasted I cent L onghorn players, but BEIRU T, Lebanon A rab sabo­ teu rs stru ck back a t B ritain and F ra n c e S aturday. As th e m en stood talking in little groups about football, m ost of the talk did not concern p resen t or re- tho a vital pipeline and flays of old. when such T exas stopped a g re a t flow of oil from g re a ts as Tom E nnis, Slippery Iraq to the M ed iterran ean and the E lam , and Swede Swenson w ere and W est. | cham pions of the O range in Syria The Ira q P etro leu m Co. pipeline White. wras rep o rted blown up a t th ree points. The governm ent of Iraq confirm ed th a t the flow of oil had been stopped. One of the old-tim ers asked, “ Do you rem e m b er ‘Shorty’ Nowotny? He w as a ch e erle ad e r back in ’24. Now h e ’s D ean of Student L ife.” The conversation turned P ric e ’s resig n atio n from his posi- tion as head football coach. fa th e r of junior Ken B rougher, com m ented. “ I d o n 't think th e re is anything w rong w ith th e coach. I t's the boys. som ething w rong w ith Som ething has killed th e football h e a rt a t T exas. The boys a re not tough enough. Why, they slat) in­ ste ad of ta ck le ." the discussion groups con­ As to th eir talk s and began cluded m ake the Main th e ir w ay Ballroom , one alum nus u tte re d the oft-heard rem a rk . “ T his place sure has changed since I w as a fresh ­ m a n ." into Faculty a n d Staff G iv e to Ed $1 2 ,50 0 to United Fund ‘Israel to Acc ep t Peace lf Egyp t Will,’ S o y s Eb o n U N ITED NATIONS, N. Y. i Isra eli A m bassador Abba Khan said .Saturday night his gov ernm ent had authorized him to announce th a t it would accept the UN cease­ fire if E gypt would do so. The U niversity’s faculty and staff H. R. C lark, fath e r of fo rm e r h a v e contributed app ro x im ately head ch e erle ad e r H arley C lark, $12,500 to the Austin U nited Fund. said, “ I think it will be for the This is m ore than one-half of the the the U n iv ersity ’s $21,860 quota. University'. But, ju st one of those things that happen a t ev ery u n iv ersity ." team and • b etterm e n t of it’s UN S ecre tary G eneral D ag Ham- m arskjold previously had received M ercer ll. P a rk s. Houston alu m ­ nus and fa th e r of fresh m an N ancy K ey P ark s, said, "E d P rice is a m essage from E gypt accepting I v ery resp e cta b le gentlem an, and from th a t standpoint, the loss will be very re g re tta b le , It s a sham e you c a n ’t be a g en tlem an and win football g am es at the sam e tim e." John R. B ro u g h er of C alvert, the cease-fire resolution on the con­ dition and F ra n ce ag reed to end th e ir attack s. B ritain and F ra n c e reje cte d the Israel. B ritain cease-fire. that Ja c k M aguire, who is in charge of the U n iv ersity ’s d riv e, u rg es de­ p artm en ts and b u reau s to turn in rep o rts by the first of the week. in by R eports have been three-fourths of the d ep artm en ts and bureaus. tu rn ed L ast y ea r only 58 p er cent of the U niversity faculty and staff contributed to the fund M em bers of the d riv e hope that this y e a r a la rg e r p ercen tag e will contribute. ROY BEDICHEK O u t s t a n d in g 'T a pped; Friars Select Five New Members “ The town had then a population of 4.000 who w ere served by six­ teen saloons," Mr. Bedichek re* | called w ith a chuckle, “ and m y efforts w ere not ap p reciated , eith er by the p rin cip al a d v e rtise rs o r the m an who held the m o rtg ag e on the plant. I w as sabotaged, also, from the inside as som e of m y p rin te rs would often g et too drunk to get the p ap e r out on tim e and in wag-1 tow ard gish moods would m ak e typographical e rro rs. libelous “ Once I had to burn an en tire edition lo avoid a ch arg e of libel. Five new m em b ers who have Goodfellow and YMCA tre a su re r, been tapped by the F ria rs , honor- and s e r v e d on tile N ational Stu- a ry o rganization for m en, a r e lia r- dents' A ssociation D esegregation the student ley C lark, Lloyd H ayes, B. I). Mc- Sub-Commission and cabinet. C la r k ; K inney, Clovis M orrisson J r ., and the 1955-561 Sam R. P e rry . body p resid e n t’s was co-ordinator of N ational Independent S tudents’ As­ sociation Convention. T he m em b ers w ere selected for outstanding scholarship, leadership, good ch a ra c te r, and unselfishness. individually M e rn ii e r s w o r k a b e tte r U niversity, H arley Clark, m ajoring in philo- ' sophy and governm ent, is president of the T ejas Club and c o c h a irm a n I of Religious E m phasis Week, He I is a m e m b er of the Cowboys and : w as the 1955-56 head yell leader, On the C om m ittee for H igher Edu- ! cation, he serves as d irec to r of activities. C lark w as a .student Lloyd H ayes, a business a d m in is-1 traction student, is a p ast president I of the F re sh m an Council, president of the S tudents’ Association, trea s- j u rer of the U niversity YMCA and a m em b er of the Board of D irec­ tors. He is recording se creta ry of Phi G am m a D elta, co-chairm an of the C am pus Chest, and U niversity j rep resen tativ e to the Student Con-j I ference on World A ffairs, H a je s is ' a m em b er of Silver Spurs, serves on the C entral Round-Up C om m it­ tee, is a d eleg a te to the N ational S tudents’ A ssociation, and a m em ­ ber on P resid en t W ilson's Advisory is a D istinguished Council, He Army ROTC M ilitary Student. B. D. M cKinney, a senior law student, is a m e m b er of D elta Sigm a P i, Sigm a Iota Epsilon, Al­ pha Phi O m ega, Phi I>eita Phi, and Silver Spurs. McKinney is atto rn ey general of the S tudents’ Association, student assem blym an, and tre a su re r of the G reat Issues Com m ittee. He is on the Board of G overnors of Law School, lives of T ex as C opyright C om m ittee, Student Advisory Coun­ cil, E x-S tudents’ Association, and T e x a s L a w Review E ditorial Dolta Law F ra te rn ity , Phi E ta Sigma, and financial advisor of Sigma Phi Epsilon. local w inner of Board. A the N athan B arkan M em orial Com peti­ tion in E ssays on C opyright Law, M cKinney is also a Q uizm aster and Goodfellow'. Clovis M orrisson J r . is a second- Sam R. P e rry has served as se creta ry and president of Silver Spurs and a s a m em b er of the and Code Com m ittee, Conduct y e a r law .tu d e n t c h a irm a n of the v a n i t y C arnival, and ch airm an of Union A ctivities Connell an.! mem - (h„ Rl;sh co m m ittee. Ile is a mom - b er of the Union Board of D irer I-egal tors,. P resident W ilson’s Student Advisory Council, Student Itody P re sid en t’s Cabinet, and a m em b er of the Silver Spurs. He is ch airm an of the Education Division, Texas Union 1955, F orum S peakers Com­ m ittee, T exas Union 1954, and co­ ch airm an of the C am pus P a rtic i­ pation Com m ittee, Round-Up, 1956. b er of Phi Alpha D elta F ra tern ity , Student G overnm ent] R eorganization Coram idee. Student A ssembly, and the R ep resen tativ e P a rty steerin g com m ittee. P erry , a m em b er of the Inter- fra tern ity Council, is rush cap tain j and vice-president of L am bda Chi Alpha, M orrisson is a Goodfellow, 1955, l#u Alpha is a m em b er of and A scroll w ith the nam es of the new' m em b ers ut on display at Texas Union. I Bv BEN BOOH Roy B edichek, d irec to r em eritu s of the B u reau of P ublic School Service and the U niversity In te r­ scholastic L eague, last w eek a fte r 40 y e a rs of service. “ B edi," as his friends call him , has the in stru m en tal L eague’s grow th to the la rg e st o r-, ganization of its kind in th e world. retired been in “ No one m an m ak es an o rg a n i-, the U niversity Interscholastic le a g u e ," Mr. Bedi­ titu la r chek said. “ He m ay be head its in influential councils, b u t it tak es m any, m any individuals to c a rry on and develop such a w ork.” and be the L eague Mr. Bedichek w as first asso ciated in 1914. T hree w ith y ea rs la te r he b ecam e athletic directo r, and he then b ecam e d irec­ to r of the L eague in 1922. D ra m a tics, co m m ercial contests. m ath, m usic, jo u rn alism , speech, spelling, and w ritin g a re p a rt of the league. A lm ost ev ery high school in T ex as is a m e m b er of the L eague, and thousands of stu ­ dents m ak e the annual spring pil­ g rim ag e to A ustin for the contests. M r. Bedichek w as the city ed ito r of the San Antonio E x p ress. He in a W est V irginia once w orked coal m ine, and h as been a steno­ g rap h e r fo r a stric t and eloquent Boston divine. The la tte r o ccu p a­ tion style som ew hat. affected his literary' A nother tim e he rode a bicycle I from E ddy to D em ing, N. M., to becom e s e c re ta ry of the C ham ber of C om m erce th e re d uring a boom period L a te r he b ecam e the editor of the local n ew spaper and sta rted a prohibition cru sad e. E d P ric e is stepping down a s the L onghorn football coach D ecem ber SI, and D ana X. Bible will re tire fro m his job as ath letic d irec to r n ex t y ear. F ra n k L eahy, N otre D a m e ’s g re a t fo rm e r head football coach- ath letic d irecto r, has been in ter­ view ed by ex-students and J. Au­ b rey Cooch of F o rt W orth. Leahy ex p ressed in becom ing ath letic d irec to r and “ football sup­ e rv iso r" a t T exas, according to an A ssociated P re ss rep o rt. in terest L eahy h as said he doesn’t w an t th e job of head football coach as he prom ised p lay ers and officials a t N otre D am e when he re tire d in 3953 th a t he would not tak e a head coach in g job. Bpot, one of th e ex-students told th e AP, would be Bob M cBride. M cB ride w as an assista n t to Leahy w hile he coached a t N otre D am e. H e quit coaching when L eahy left N otre D am e and is now in p riv a te business, H ow ever, no one hag been offi­ cially contacted for the job. it w as inted out a t the R e g en ts’ m e et­ poi lng ing S atu rd ay . told U niversity P resid en t Logan Wil­ to n th e R egents S atu rd ay , “ We’re not in terested in th e win- p t-any-cost ty p e of coach. It is ex­ tre m e ly im p o rtan t in o rd e r to keep a b alan ce in th e ath letic p ro g ram th a t w e g et a m an who realizes th ey a r e students first and a th ­ le tes second." R egent C h airm an Tom Sealy of M idland said. “ We w ouldn’t w an t anyone who would w ink a t .he r e ­ cru itin g regulations of th e South­ w est Conference. H ow ever, we would w an t a coach who som e day can help us b eat O klahom a." Southern Grants Open to Graduates Seniors g rad u atin g in Ja n u a ry o r Ju n e can w in fellowships to tal­ ing m ore than $4,500 if they plan to p u rsu e a c a re e r in college te ac h ­ ing in the South. The U niversity is one of 25 schools w orking with the Southern Fellow ships Fund, w hich finances to encourage high­ tile p ro g ra m ran k in g seniors in A rts and Sci­ ences to w ork tow ard a c a re e r in college teaching. G ra n ts a re on a th ree-y ear basis, with $1,000 as the first-y ear aw a rd , $1,500 during the second y e a r, and $2,000 the th ird year, In addition, the fellowship pays the stu d e n t's tuition fees and a de­ th a t m ay allow ance pendency am ount to $700 a y ear. / N W h e n H u s k y Voi ce Answers, H a n g Up, H e ' s N o t the G i r l A local com m ittee, appointed to the fellow­ includes D r. A rchibald sc re en ap p lican ts for ships, One cute U n iv ersity coed has Lewis, asso ciate professor of h is-, unm aliciously been giving possible to ry ; D r. E rn e st I/w ell, asso ciate d ates a rough tim e. professor of E nglish; and D r. Wil­ liam Livingston, associate profes­ sor of governm ent. should students A com m ittee spokesm an said in­ inquire te re ste d about the fling ram as soon as pos­ sible, bet aus© p relim in ary ap p li­ catio n s m u st be considered by mid- N ovem ber. T o d a y : C ool w ith R a in / The w eath er Sunday will be cool and cloudy w ith occasional rain and thundershow ers. The low will be IK degree* in the moi rung and the high, 60 in the afternoon. She w asn ’t t su re of h er num ­ b er when she listed it on h er card s but went ah ead and w rote a n um ­ ber down. Now w'hen men who know her, but not h er co rrect phone num ber, give h er a buzz they get a husky voiced answer. to talking T h ey ’re the Austin Chief of Police The c o e d W TO te the c h ie fs unlisted n um ber. And an Austin w o m a n is also g etting an unusual n u m b er of phone calls. The P hi K ap p a P s i fra te rn ity j listing th e S tudent D irecto ry J 1 is in e rro r and she s g e t t i n g th e ir listing for the i alls. The co rrect i fratern ity is GR 6-5068. in HARLEY CLA RK LLOYD HAYES b . 0. M cK i n n e y CLOVIS M O R R IS S O N JR. S A M PERRY a spread version of the T w ith both ends and a halfback spread wide. Most of the yardage came on end sweeps and off tackle. When the drive stalled on the UT 13, q u arter­ back Charlie Arnold threw 13 yards to G entry on fourth down for the score. The catch was vig­ orously disputed as most observers thought Gen­ try nabbed the ball on a bounce. The Steer offense, which didn't generate a first down until 13:10 w ere gone in the second q uarter, failed to function and they were forced to punt. SMU couldn’t move again until the second period, when they drove 88 yards in nine plays for th eir next touchdown, G entry again scoring on a pass from Arnold. Jack Hobbs blocked G entry’s kick. Pony rese rv e s w ent 62 y ard s for the th ird SMU score, w hich cam e m idw ay second q u arte r. Q u arterb ack L a rr\f Click th rew 35 y ard s to Dan Bowden in the end zone on a neatly executed fake line huck w hich cleared Bowden behind d efender Fondren. the in As the la st half began, m ost of the 35,000 fans settled b ack behind rain protection to w atch the slaugh- ter, T exas w asn ’t buying any. hou-- !«ever. Fondren. Jim m y W elch, and Jo e Clem ents, who played his b est g am e of the Steers on a 59-yard scoring drive, m ostly on the ground. the season, paced W ilson S c o re * The touchdown cam e on a w eird pass play from C lem ents. The ball w as deflected in the end zone and grabbed a t the nine-yard line by bulled g u ard Don Wilson, who through to score. t h e 's u rp r is e d Ponies F ondren m issed th e conversion. m ade by Mr. E rskine. He w as as­ Texas scored again on th eir next sisted by R ich ard Blalock, out­ possession, m oving 55 y ard s on going A ssociation president, and runs, D r. C, P . Boner, vice-president of j jveJ*com bined passes and tally cam e 3:15 deep in th© the M ain U niversity. Lloyd H ayes, president of th e S tudents’ A ssoria- f°u rfb period on a lunge by F en ­ ''' e,n ' rom an inch ° r tvvo out Th© to n . w elcom ed the dads on behalf anri SMT. loc! 20-13. of tile? students. goalw ard headed ^ e y cot th© m arch .eatu rin g C lem ents’ and Bob B ryant. Welch, who w as Texas* leading ru n n er with 45 y ard s on IO Ration, followed by en tertain m en t L ’gf in n p by students in the U nion's M ain I Lounge. M iss Buchan w as m istress ! Passes to Toe Losack of cerem onies. The p ro g ram began w ith regis- Steers ^ ' The pro g ram included the K appa Alpha T heta and Phi G am m a D elta q u arte ts, a pantom im e by Julie Lane, L app P arto n , and Janiel Hooten, and Bob A rm strong a t the ?;uitar, Music w as furnished by the longhorn D ance Band. The p ro g ram w as photographed and will be televised on “ Texas in R eview .’’ Vaccine Shots Brought to Close Salk vaccine shots tem p o rarily ended F rid a y for U niversity stu­ dents w ith “ disap p o in tin g ” results. Dr. P au l White, d irec to r of the H ealth C enter, said. More than TOO inoculations w ere given in a five-day period. “ This was less than one tenth of wha! we should have h ad ," Dr. White the com m ented and added H ealth C enter had planned for ten to tw elve thousand shots. th a t The second inoculation of the vaccine will begin in four to six that w’peks, but Dr. White said th ere m ust lie a dem and by the students before the H ealth C enter will ag ain consider giving the first series of shots. The Game at a Glance SMI Tex. 15 F irs t Down* ................ 14 120 Net Y ards Rushing . . 154 Y ards G ained P assing 102 131 P a sse s ............................7-10 14-22 0 P asses In tercep ted by 6 ........ P unts (num ber) Punting a v e r a g e ..........37 3 37.5 F um bles L o s t ............... I ......................9-55 2-23 P en alties I 6 0 c a rrie s, fum bled to SMU on the five, how ever. The stubborn, fired-up Longhorn* still w e re n ’t through. A penalty nullified a M ethodist com pletion on U T ’.* 30, put the ball on the Pony one-yard line, and forced a punt. Eldon M oritz retu rn ed to SMU * 31. On first down. C lem ents hit B ry an t, whom SMU could seldom -cover on pass plays, a t the Pony 18. C l e m e n t * D r i v e * O v e r Welch slashed to the seven on a d raw play, and Clem ents then took over. The slender S teer q u a rte r­ stra ig h t keepers, back ra n two scoring on the second one from five y ard s out. as the Ponies clutch­ ed vainly a t hi* low-running, h ard- driving form . A fter Fondren m issed the goal, J. T. Seaholm reco v ered Moritz* on-side kick a t the SMU 48, and (See SMU-TEXAS, P ag e 5> U n d e r a g e ? Vote A n y w a y Judi Reeves Chosen As Most Beautiful The student presidential poll will he T uesday, as U niversity students - of voting a g e or not will have their the opportunity p referen ces for President, to express Judi R eeves's selection a* th© Most Beautiful F resh m an girl w as announced the Hom ecom ing D ance S atu rd ay night. at Miss Reeves, an E nglish m a jo r, | was very surprised at winning th© Mica contest and said. “ I ’m so happy I have no words to expres© it." She wa* presented w ith a neck- inscribed “ I T ’S ' la- © which was Most Beautiful F resh m an . ’56" on the front and h er nam e on th© back. She also received a 15-hour j ch arm course. Miss Reeves is an Alpha G am m a is a Spookier and D elta pledge, it on the F lash C ard com m ittee. She w as a d rum m ajo rette a t Angleton, w here she atten d ed high school. Hail Reported D o i n g Fine After In tram ural Injury in tram u ral p ractice T om m y Hail, Sigma Alpha E p­ silon president, who w as injured rn an footbalL gam e Thursday, is reported to t>« doing fine in B rackenridge Hospi­ tal. Forty Acres And then the would-b© th e re ’* Rom eo who was giving a p retty T ri-D orm coed the line all leading up to asking for a d a te for Satur­ day night But midway in his spiel, the phone for her. Yep, you guessed it — another “ How ’bout Saturday night?" guy. rang “ Why no, I ’m not dofng anything S aturday night," she said into the receiver. “ Why, yes; i d love it. Ifs a d ate." Then she turned to the sheepish Rom eo on the couch. * And you w ere saying . " —BUD MEMS Sunday, November 4, 1956 THE DAILY TEXAN Page I T E X A a; I: w s m s In Headlines • S u n d a y : BIG 3 CALLS URGENT U.N SESSION; FIGHTING RAG IS ON IN BUDAPEST - Fort Worth Star-Telegram • Monday: RUSSIANS TO LEAVE BUDA­ PEST —San Antonio Express • Tuns day: ISRAELI INVASION ROCKS ARAB WORLD; NEW FACE OF I AST EUROPE SHAPES I P - The Christian Science Monitor • Wednesday: POWERFUL BRITISH FORCES SPEED TO SUEZ — San Angelo Standard Times • T huradav: ANGLO-FRENCH FORCE HITS SHIPS, AIRFIELDS —The Daily Texan • Friday s INVASION FORCES MOVING ON SUEZ —The San Antonio Light • Saturday: BRITISH, FOR SUEZ ZONE INVASION FRENCH POISED —The Austin American —dk P A A O A IV1 Britain, France Move U N Pleads for As to called back G lo b u s- Focus The General Assembly was into session Friday night to m eet the threat to the in­ ternationally rec­ ognized right of a country to decide tis own form of governm ent without intervention by a foreign power. While an unprecedented m eeting ' As action in the UN was taking of the United Nations General As- place, the Russians "-ere moving their forces back toward Budapest sembly drafted a to encircling all Hungarian airports meet Isra e li-Egyptian fighting, the them Wednes­ Russians steathily moved forces back into rebellion-torn Hungary. after withdrawing day. resolution to be thought Action was the result of President Im re Nagy's announcement that Hungary was pulling out of Kremlin-dominated W arsaw Pact and claiming neutral freedom from any government carrier- and French based, as well as Cyprus-based, the a ircraft pounded airstrips the UN to take notice of the an- Canal area as well as airstrips in nouncement of H ungary's neutral- Egypt proper. President Nagy' Thursday asked British the area to protect issuing from England and France, in disre- and rumblings ly cut off the Caza strip, encircling : William F. Know land 'R ep Cal’, f I \ Edward R. Murrow, news analyst; a large force of Egyptian troops. the that this move of gard to the tri-party agreem ent of White House, 1990 with the US, moved ships into Israel is but a pawn move, King and queen in the play are the a re t, claiming they w ere going to land troops in the Suez Canal in represented by B ritain and France from vs*ho are using this as an excuse to order being tied up in the arm ed conflict occupy the Suez Canal, so vital in between Egypt and Israel. their economic and political lives. Evidence to support this x iew is that the United States was not con­ sulted in the move of the British and French when naval vessels and aircraft of the two countries were moved into the canal. This is in absolute violation of a tri­ party the United States, Britain, and France of some five to six years standing that if any aggression is taken in the Mideast that the three power* the will move in concerted action with * steps which will be taken to avert any war. the southern outlet of Sea, canal agreem ent between in Egyptian naval vessels were a t­ tacked by aircraft and reportedly one of the warships was sunk in the northern straits of the canal blocking traffic through the canal. British warships have been re- EevDt rushed ^ ported by the Egyptians in the Red The General Assembly voted 64-5 with 6 abstentions for an im ­ m ediate cease-fire between the Israel, In a world shot king move fighting countries. It also included | Wednesday, moved across E gypt's a statem ent to England and France border and, without the support of asking the two powers to abstain aircraft, moved to within 18 miles from landing troops in the Suez of the Suez Canal, vicinity. troops Israeli to sources—Egypt silent—claimed by Friday evening they had complete- troops from Egyptian territory. Israel was asked the area, but to withdraw Campaign End Nears W ith Foreign F o lia Debate As T w o for Top' Pull Election Plugs The great issue a t the end of tion. Thunder of events In the Middle J Stevenson claimed the series of, campaign speech Thursday in Con- E ast echoed back to the United “ failures" were in great p a rt the vention Hall, Philadelphia, holding States in speeches of the two prest- result of ill-considered and mis- out the hope of a "bright new day" I taken policies of this adm inistra- of peace and justice in the world, dential contender*. despite gunfire in the Middle E ast Stet enson climaxed his cam paign S a t i r d a y \\ ith a homecoming parade in Chicago and a hationally televised rally and speech in Chi- —dh cago Stadium. the 1956 the And, he said, “ this adm inlstra- D w i g h t Eisenhower AdminUtra- tion . . . has withheld the conse- tion s foreign policy been a su e -j quences from the American pro­ cess or a failure?4’ cam paign: I pig.** "Has ’Twas a H ot W eek Here However, m The US, in view of the a g g re s-. sion shown by Israel, has suspend- ed any and all m ilitary ald to Is-. rael until a cease-fire is negotiated. ! the 1950 declaration which Secretary Dulles reaffirm ed a t the outset of this week to go to the aid of the country which w a s' the victim of any arm ed a g g re s-; sion in the Mideast, has not been acted upon. Secretary Dulles stated th a t the United States policy will be to act through the United Nations to ob­ tain a withdrawal of Israeli troops. 9 It is the consensus, expressed by French and British who are pledged to uphold the United Na­ tions and for peace, i|s desire nevertheless,*ignored its process of mediation and intervened. Israel, Britain, and F rance all stood to gain by deposing N asser whom all hated. The situation could not have come at a more inopportune tim e for Russia. Russians found them­ selves faced with rebellions of their satellites Blood i* flowing. Unfortunately most don’t think m uch about it un­ til it turns out that it is their own! —na ^ x: *n !?° The President discussed happen- ^pt ^ ‘e What will be the effect of the I h e b o r t y Middle East and Middle E ast crisis on the election & F i g h t fe ^ an(^ ! Tuesday? Dem ocrats were hoping H u n g a r y on a t0 ga jn an advantage from the I i world-wide radio and television a d - 1 turn of events, but among Repub- dress (carried by Radio Voice of Roans the consensus was that it | America) Wednesday evening. The i could pot drastically im pair Eisen- I speech was billed as non-political hower's position during the short . tim e rem aining, and it might even I by Republicans. Democrats, claimed ; strengthen it. however, The Republicans, in fact, were that Eisenhower's talk was polit!- J cal, and demanded and won equal trying the " d o n 't-j • free radio and television tim e on ‘ change-horscs-in-mid-stream" id e a .; the m ajor networks the next night, j Vice-President Richard Nixon ex- the statem ent, pledged there would he “ no United -T his is not the moment to replace in the Middle I State* involvem ent" * j E ast fighting. the President pressed to put over speech, In his this in He said Britain and the decision to send troops Egypt s Suez zone was “ taken in erro r.” into However, he said, “ it is the pur­ pose of your governm ent to do all in its power to localize the fight­ ing and end the conflict." Speaking of the events in Poland novice . . . President Eisenhower emerged from his head-to-toe pre-election medical in W alter last week happy. Reed Hospital The team of physicians who exam ­ ined him had issued a favorable examination Alert ion, Resignation, W ar Speed Ordinarily Busy University Pace the greatest com m ander - in - chief w®«k, student newsmen adm itted School) and all but one on America has ever had in w ar or having never seen another week Representative P arty slate (facing Management Association. the vention of the Texas Personnel and F rance's peace with a jittery, inexperienced quite like it. Events afar of wide no organized opposition thi* y e a r ) .; Revival of one At the Daily Texan offices this j candidates (in Law and G raduate Alumni Conference, and the con­ tradition wa* local interest vied for space with Top vote-getter among new Assem- coupled with talk of modifying an­ icca! event* of interest far and blymen was Liz Ellisor, A&S, bene- other. The Central Round-Up Corn- ficiary of Chi Omega’s flapper-age m itt ce named a subcommittee to wide. Wednesday night’s staff alone ballyhoo. The Election C om m is-, consider some other events to re» juggled t h r e e sion’s lim it of campaign serenad- place the spring Round-Up Parade. stories, all m erit- > ing to groups of five, though, was The Council of F raternity Fresi- inK display; upheld by an Appelate Court ruling dents voted to discourage’ particle Coach Ed P rice’s Tuesday. The Student Court earlier pation by their groups. C a m p u s ( I v t I c a d e - I i i i I __ ; i . . * t............... t _ ly norm al in every respect for a Hungary, he said, if Russia report, describing him as m edical-5 resignation, student elections, and had declared it illegal A the "world ; his recovery from his heart attack pected but hardly surprising. Mid- publicity gimmicks * rn follows through with its promise to consider withdrawal of troops m an of 66 years and reporting that I The coach’s action was unex- fanned out from such countries, will witness the greatest forward and abdominal operation had been way through what bids to be the stride justice, toward understanding among our generation." for next ini Eisenhower gave his last m ajor sons for the Longhorns, their head w eeks bigger battle of the ballots m entor was held personally and saw a strange alignment of U T* exclusively responsible in the eyes Young Dem ocrats and Young R e -1 j publicans. They petitioned the A d -1 of m any fans. poorest of three less-than-best sea- A prelim inary event trust and satisfactory. nations j Student efforts for Amendment 3 * U _ 11’ «»« the Middle E a st War. mr onH ™ n e t , ™ ------------------- * ------ and L l J L _ 11** Cultural E ntertainm ent devotees trekked twice to Gregory for Fred simultaneously, with Waring’* music and the NBG Opera ready- Company’s English-language “ Mar- w ritten letters to the home folk. : r i*ge of F igaro." *m a^, dem and for Salk anti- nf TTT-- P°lio vaccine disappointed Student _ , r ... . . _ ' 1 ° U (ia S‘ r ............... f f V: And denying plans for making an “ all-out attack " on Adlal Ste­ venson in his cam paign for Eisep- In his reply to President Eisen­ hower Thursday evening, Demo­ cratic standard-bearer Adlai Stev* rs said he probably j enson the President’s anything very' oomph- foreign policy has “ failed," and as because “ I a result, the Soviet Union has been claimed ' . llarde- Although called “ inadequate arid m an is now a Stevenson cam paign lnai cess.hie," the Camp Hubbard aide. location was considered by most takes Shivers from meeting m em bers to b f suitable, early Piney Woods "obscurity and being waterproof, air-conditioned and under constant guard. sem i-povertv," asserted ram rod politics over k>b- byists and their backers to force State Representative D. B Bar- md on program s, to h s switch to deman, form er Daily Texan editor, Eisenhower n 1952 and up to Ins- j 1js article the • through days of Vy. ,uldn’t E U M ? ! T h e DA&y T exan Th#* Dally Texan a student newspaper of The I’mversUv of Texas l i t h * d Sn Austin T« >*■. daily except Saturday. Monday and h o i ids v sHBtejraber through May by T exas S tu d en t P ublications. Inc ls pub periods. News con trib u tion s w ill he sw e p t cd by editor!* offices la g d e liv e r should r>« m ade in J mn th e n* -vs IHI rat or the #•> J ii. KT and ad vertisin g J B 111 (LR 2*2750>, t otophone RIH 2 2173) or st inn I - I* r 1 Entered as second cla ss m atter Ort T ex a s, unde r tho act ut Mart h 3. 19T9 t i , 104.1 a i the P ost O ffice lr A ustin. S'* s o n AT I. It IMU.SS U I Kl St Ii I It I Th# Associated Presa is exclusively entitled to th** use ’or republication of git news d 'pat-t ea * fen ie I to if r n ’ 'el 'n tr * it* ■- * paper, and ail oral items of ss - ntaneou* orig n oubl s»r 5 hi r n Rights of publication of ai! other matter herein also reserved. • ■ - R e p r e s e n t e d fo r n a t i o n a l a d v e r t i s i n g by N a t mal A d v e r t i s i n g S e r v i c e J no. College Publishers fit prison latish UU Madison A t New Yr rk N. Y. Chicago-- Boston—I-os Angeles Kten* •>eo Mi via t It Assai iat»4 I nllegtste RI RT ION Ii \ r f s b l (M inim um su b scrip tio#—T h ree .Months) H t f i v e r e d In Austin M aii e d in A u t t . n . . , . M all e d o u t of town. Editor .................. M a n a g in g Editor PFIRMAN RENT NT AI I , , , . } 75 m o n th ........................ ............ $: OO month -i m o n t h 5 morn n ................ .................. I f NANCY McMI ANS . . . \ IDEN SMITH panoram a staff hud minx* editor ............ a ssista n ts . . . . . . . . . . . . rex new m an. dotty hall, p ele Hickm an, jim m ie raekmley, don knowies STAI V FOK I HIN INS! R Night E d ito r ................................................. Desk Editor .............................................................. Assistant Nigh* E ditor ................................................................... Glenn K'ein Arnold Rogen/weig A ssistan t .......... Night Sports Editor ............................................. Assistants ....................... Night A m usem ents E d it o r Night Wire E ditor ............................................... Night Society E d it o r Assistant ............................................................. Nick John con. Bob G reenbefgj Bradford Daniel .............................. ........... I REH HAMELE JIMMY THORNTON Joe Sanders Bill Clayton Marion Simon ' Ann Ab^hier STATE cowpokes. On October 20, W'hile being un­ loaded at Melvin Johnson’s Hill­ side Farm, I^ady Domino kicxed up her heel:? and frisked off into the boondocks, Richard Johnson, 12, who brought the $500 heifer to start a Hereford herd, was broken- j hearted, but had to wait until last j Sunday to organize a search party. Lady Domino ducked every lari­ at, and went deeper into the brush- I land in Cranston's western border, j • If an IMwmb w ere set off in the i right place, Mount Bonnell could possibly lie th* site of a ski run. I Senator Estes Kefauver recently asserted that hydrogen bombs could ) "right now blow the earth off its axis by 16 degrees, which would affect the seasons." Governor Folsom of Alabama says that the fish have stopped biting since the nuclear bomb tests were started And out in Los An­ geles they a e blaming their smog on the H-bomb. • In Berchtesgaden, Germany, Adolf Hitler was officially declared dead more than l l years after he comm itted suicide and hi* body burned in the garden of Berlin's Reich Chancellory. —4k SN00PV NEVE® BE A HUNTING DOG ." A l- WEEDS G*VE h!A‘, C-AUS’ ftOSMOBA! CAMPUS • • THE 44th WEEK OF 1956 • NATION • GLOBE A Campus Election. Biillol Box mul Ballyhoo . . Photo by John L. Steel Bowling, Bennis, Football Scheduled in Intramurals Captains of Wom en s Intram urals in basketball w ill meet at 5 p m. M onday in W om en’s G ym 5, M anagers w ill not meet Monday, but any questions ran be answered in the In tram u ral Office. Because of rain, an extra day w ill be allowed for tennis matches. T hey must be played and the scores reported to the Intram ural Office by Wednesday. The P h ysical education M ajors club won the second place trophy in tourna­ ment. the mixed volleyball silon P h i, K appa. P i Phi, Sigma Delta Tau. Alpha P h i I, and Theta I I w ill howl. Thursday Alpha Chi Omega, The­ ta ll, New m an Club, ChiO I I , Tri- Delt, G am m a Ph i Beta. Alpha Phi T. AD P^ I, and A D P I IT w ill howl. Touch football games scheduled for 0 7 G u a d a lu p e G R 2-2523 O p e n 12 noon to 8 “ Adam and Fallen M a n ” w ill he the topic of the lesson-sermons at the Fir*.t Church of Christ, Scion Hat. D r Edm und Heinsohn w ill speak on “ God As H ost" at the worship services Sunday at thp I n h e rslty Methodist Church. The Sacram ent of the Lo rd 's Supper w ill he ob­ served at each of the morning services The Rev G reg ory Rob­ ertson w ill speak on “ Bring ing and ADS Honors Pledges fraternity, held Alpha Delta Sigm a, professional advertising its pledge banquet Thursday night at Cedar Crest I .edge. Speaker for the occasion w as Al H alting , vice­ president in charge of public re la ­ tions for Southwest Airomotive. Another feature of the banquet was the presentation of aw ard * to the AD S teams who sold the largest number of student directories • • • • F O R Q U I C K A C T IO N O N Texan C la s s ifie d A d D IA L GR 2-2473 Ask for Extension 29 MONTHLY C LA SSIFIED RATES * w o r d s ......................................... * OO 20 words ................................ .....S ll.o o C L A S S I F I E D D E A D L I N E S Tuesday T ex a n .................. .....M o n d a y , Wednesday T ex a n ..................... Tuesday, Thursday T ex a n ....................Wednesday. F r id a y T ex a n ............... Thursday, Sunday T ex a n .............................. F rid ay . 4 p.m. 4 p m. 4 p.m. I p.m. 4 p m . DAILY CLASSIFIED RATES 20 words or less Additional words 1 day ..................................S .95.................. $ .02 E a c h additional d a y % .85....................S OI Classified D isplay ........... $1 35 per column inch In the event of errors made in an advertise­ ment. im m ediate notice must he given, as the publishers are responsible for only one incor­ rect insertion. Loaf and Found For Rent Typ ing R E W A R D *5 H or r e tu rn nf g ig u e s , Jo u r n a lis m Build - p la s tic fra m e to I le g 111. C la s s ifie d S e c tio n . For Rent N e w H o lly w o o d beds U N I V E R S I T Y M E N R ig h t at cam pus. t ile show ers. M a id s e rv ic e 710 W e s t 221» S tre e t, t’ hem- G R 8-1157 M A L I V 5 T U D E N T S T w o room s R e d e c­ o rate d W a t e r and gas paid. W a lk in g distance. $35. H G 5-8.50 A C C U R A T E I B M t y p e w r it e r 25c dou- b lesp ace, .TV’ s i n g l e U R 2-5517. E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T C a ll M rs D, D. H u tc h in s . H O 5-0987 E X P E R I E N C E D t y p in g : re p o rts, e tce t­ e ra E le c tric . M rs H u n te r. U L 3-3546. M O D E R N g a ra g e a p a rtm e n t on bus ne a r c o m m u n ity c e n te r $50 704 W e s t 2 8 'v S tre e t. O R 6-3057 B E D R O O M w it h r e fr ig e r a t o r A lso ga- N e a r U n iv e rs ity rag e a p a rtm e n t A d u lts U R 8-2438 B O Y S T H R E K - R O O M fu rn is h e d ap art re d eco rate d B lo c k U n iv e rs ity m en! P r iv a t e hath. A lso $22 50 s in g le a p a rtm e n t, p riv a te bath, b ills p aid . G R 0 9441 e n tra n c e c o n tra c t , M A L E S T U D E N T w a n te d to ta k e o ver room , Alr-eondi- t Inned D e p o sit paid T h re e b locks fro m cam pu s. U R 6-4569, fo r su ite FURNISHED air-conditioned b ach elo r finest t»ath. F i v e bioeks west stu d e n t a p a rtm e n ts . A u s tin 's tilt* i-am pui L a r g e p a rk in g lot. 2215 % C a rp e ts o f Leo n. I N O T I C E : E f f ic ie n c y A p a rtm e n t — tw o o r th re e boys Q u ie t neig hb o rho o d lo s iu d v . M o d ern L o c a tio n x tu d yro o m , b edroom , bath l>arge e ld in d u c t*# I trie T a ll re frig e ra to r. . R e a so n a b le I U R 2-9345 o r R e a lt o r G R 2-6201. 1^> ra te d botte B e lle v u e P la c e U P S T A I R S T h r e e rooms, hath w ith I n iv w s itv , r e fr ig e r a t o r N e w tu b hut* *42 SO. G R 2-1636 A P A R T M E N T S F O R M E N to L a r g e m o d e rn u n its th re e m en. B lo c k n o rth e a s t S t a ­ d iu m fo r one * j Special Services T ( " P O R I N G U R E N O H . T ra n s la tio n in stru ctre ss M ile D u p u is. E x p e rt G R 6-2296 2506 R io G ra n d e M O V I N G ? ( a i l G R 7-7894 L I G H T H A U L I N G o p e ra te d by students. S p e c ia l stu d e n t rate s L E A S law E X P E R I E N C E D * ^ L A D Y w ill do y o u r la u n d ry . W i l l pick up G R 6-9237 J U D O C L A S S E S F O R M I N G In s tru c tio n * hy S g t S t a lk Kodok- vs an g ra d u a te R e g is t r a t io n a t A U S T I N H E A L T H C L U B b b W e s t 13 T e l G R 2-9334 J . R . ’S G A R A G E 21-Hour S e r v ic e F re e P ic k u p and D e liv e ry . B ra k e s Tune-ups. S t a r t e r s A G e n e ra to rs A il W o r k G u a ra n te e d S E E M A N A G E R R e a r o f 405 W e s t 39th S tre e t SOS E a s t 23 » (a t Red R iv e r ) P h o n a H O 6-5533 T H E T E X A N M en blocks fro m ca m p u s A ir c o n d it io n e d room s T w o 1**5 Nueces P h o n a G R A S A R H O T E L fo r m en A ir- co n d itio n e d room s a v a ila b le 2612 Guadalupe Phone GR Top H at 4600 so Congress “ J A M S E S S I O N ” S t a r t in g 3 30 P M S P E C K H I C K S C O M B O Jimmy Jo r d a n ( S a x ) A lb e r t D u rs t (V o c a ls ) E v e ry Sunday Afternoon A L L 'f Y P K S w o rk d one by exp erien ced I ty p is t E ie c t r o m a t ic . G R 2-6359 T Y P I N G W O R K to p e rfe c tio n >1 ♦*.•»- j tat ions, these*, m is' U R 6-8413 enced. F O U R B L O C K S fro m e ie c tro m a tic e d itin g D is s e rta tio n s Mr- Bo rtour U R 8-8113. I m on ty p ist theses E x p e r i­ M in o r reports. D I S S E R T A T I O N S theses ii (s y m b o ls ! M rs n eig h b o rh o o d ( I R 2-4945 F.loctrom at R itc h ie . U. T. T Y P I N G D O N E in my home M rs T o w n se n d I K J 5-6179 D E L A F I E L D H Y P I N G S E R V IC I T h e m s d is s e rta tio n s them es. N o ta ry G R 2 6569 T H E R E S d is s e rta tio n s , e x p e rtly typed M r* W y r i c k a G R 2-2455 betw een * and 5 U R 6 t » l a ft e r 5 o r we. ki nd* R E P O R T S le tte rs theses g u a ran te e d F ree p icku p d e liv e ry U R 6-5810 P u b l i c s t e n o g r a p h e r a u * 1 1 n home E x ce lle n t. U R 6-4.361 H o te l U L 3-2330 E X P E R T T Y P I N G T e r m paper* re* 91b W e s t 21st A p a rtm e n t I the­ For Sale T A P E speed R E C O R D E R . (ra c k dual R e ve re , p lu s 2 OOO sing le feet re co rd in g tape P h o n e G R 7-3335 I X J W C O S T C L A S S I C . 1935 P ie r. e- Arrow* fo rm a l sedan s tra ig h t e ig iK E x c e lle n t co n d itio n e n g in e , rin g M as le rp ie ce P h o n e H O 5-6025 a fte r 6 p m j I j E N G L I S H B I C Y C L E S , B o y s $60, G ir l s $30. 2008 W h lt is . G R 7-0729 U N B E L I E V A B L E B A R G A I N S m u f-j P e r * d ual* m a n ifo ld *, fend er * k irt* block* m ir r o r . A u ‘ n I I H L a m I *t fie s ta hu b cap* accesso ries an ten na*, lo w e rin g T e x a * CASH for GUNS B U Y * * S E L L * * T R A D E LAMAR SPORTING GOODS 913 lam ar holiday glamour, our wonderful cover-up in billowy chiffon and wool |ersey its skirts have just /ards and yards of flowing whiffon . . , 29.98 cocktail glamour in shoes M f , in so many fabrics our lovely DE L U C A springalafors . . high heel 19.98, medium h e e l. . . ^18.95 r i g h t , f h t s pa r kl i ng A n g e l o * , in g l i t t e r y gold O' silver v in y lite Patronize Texan Advertisers • Perk free et Chenerd* # Use your charge account TCU 'Out Muds' Bears. 7-6 Colorado Scares OU But Loses, 27 By ED DIE HUGHES T exan Sport* Staff 19 Sunday, November 4, 1956 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 Arkansas Falls Bow to Rice, 27-0 To A&M. 27-0 COLLEGE: STATION, lF Brutish head of the Southw est C onference ground pow er under the pounding football race. fr e t of Roddy Osborne, John Crow tx * a This w as and Jack Pardee and the p assing hitter stru ggle hut A rkansas never fin e sse of Osborne and Jim Wright ca r v e d a 27-0 victory for unbeaten T exas A&M over A rkansas Satur­ d a y night was tim es hit into A ggie territory dur­ ing the night, being foiled by a fum ble once and p ass interceptions 'the other tim es. Osborne w as in the g a m e and only three 1 The A g g ie s, the n ation ’s team . rem ained at fifth the supposed rank ing to FORT WORTH — Deter­ HOUSTON (J*1—B uddy D ial, 175- pound sophom ore end, m ad e a pair mined Texas Christian offset of beautiful ca tch es Saturday w hile a driving rain and 50-degree taking two touchdow n p a sse s from q u arterback King Hill a s the R ice w eather here Saturday with O wls took a 27-0 in tersection al foot- hard-charging Ruddy Dike ball victory from Utah and Baylor m istakes to nudge the Bears 7-6. The win kept the Froggies in the running for the Southwest Conference football title. D ial ran his touchdow n recep ­ tions total for the season to five by taking a 47-yard the first quarter and an other for three yard s in the third. H alfback Ken later W illiam s A rain-soaked crow d of 20.000 w ith an eight-yard scorin g run, and quarterback F rank R yan cli- saw both team s fail to g e t their m axed a 73-yard to any d rive by passin g five yard s to end grea t exten t, a s B aylor suffered its second C onference d efeat. The D avid M antor for the final score. prove, loss, as F ullback Jerry H all kicked the knocked the B ea rs out of the title first two extra points and H i l l con­ running. verted after the third touchdow n. fourth quarter pow erful offen ses rolling follow ed m in u tes record s far as toss in field three the O w ls A crowd of 22.OCK) sa w D ial re­ c eiv e five p a sses fob 113 yard s and team s saw that on d efen se p reven ted the Sky­ line C onference team from m oving inside the R ice 26-yard line. A light rain fell rn the first quarter and the w eather h e il tile h om e crowd to R ice s sm a llest in six years. R ice threats failed on the Utah 35 in the first period and a field goal attem pt by Hall from the l l , . rn the second w a s w id e. A fum ble n il^ in the end zone ended a 4-yard Owl threat in the third. „ J U ., . D ike, returning to th e gridiron this season after a layoff la st year, w as the only man a great B aylor forward w all couldn't contain. The 195-pound fullback w a s the d a y ’s leading hall carrier with 64 yards in nine ca rries, and w as personally responsible for TCU 's lone score in the fourth period. That score ca m e I :12 deep in the final period a lter B aylor had sud­ denly broken the scoring ice just hriore h alftim e to go ahead, 6-0 D ike recov ered B obby J o n es's fum ­ ble on TCU ’s own 33 in the third period, then kept the 67-yard w in­ ning touchdow n drive a live w ith a 31-yard scam p er to the B aylor 25. Curtis Scores _____ EAST LANSING, M ich. Spartans Batter Wisconsin, 33-0 F rom there Jim m y Swink and Jim Shofner m oved the ball to the one in three p lays, w here Q uarter­ back C harles Curtis w ent over to score. Harold P ollard kicked the M ichigan S tate’s resourceful Spar- extra point w hich e ven tu ally won tans took out a reven ge upon VV isconsin s B ad gers Saturday, hauling out their , onee-in-aw hile p a ssin g strength for during the first half a 33-0 Big Ten before 53,64* fans. sh ofn er booted 54 the B ears Striking back w ith a furious five- got 49. 46 and 45-yarders off the inept; T he continuous drizzle didn’t keep I punters from having their day I and 50-yarders, w hile football triumph full m easu re of for the F'rogs. T C U -S Jjm Illinois that sent I from L arry H ickm an, toe of D el Shofner and a 58-varder ■ touchdown a ssa u lt a fter last w eek s 20-13 upset at them spinning off the top of the j B eca u se of the trem endous kick- i co llegiate heap, the Spartans com - j jng both clubs either found them - ^ *"♦ Vl'T- territory', ^ « ^ M elding d efen se an i nearly ran : or m an agin g to kick their w ay out the ragged B ad gers out of M acklin Field; a n « r i r i ^ MlVM Jones Connects of danger. r ^ i n M ichigan State m arch ed 68 yards ! A C urtis fum ble on a pitchout the top ground- gaincr w ith 90 yard s and he also , passsed touchdown and scored one. Crow scored the other two touchdow ns. for one P ardee, the great A ggie full­ first half. back. played only the He line w ith his bull ru shes and played a m ighty d efen sive gam e the A rkansas terrorized The field w as h eavy after day ' long rains and a chilled crowd of 27.000 w atched the A ggies win their sixth g a m e again st one tie : and project a showdown for the conference in a battle with lead Southern M ethodist at D allas next Saturday. SMU heat T exas 20-19 Saturday to rem ain undefeated in conference play but the M ethodists have won the A ggies have taken three. tw o ga m es w hile SCORES SOI THU EST SMI' 20, T ex a s 19 TCC 7. B a y lo r 6 R ice 27, I iah 0 A&M 27. A rk an sas 0 o r HI KS B ates J3, B ow doin 12 I t LA 14 S tan ford 13 O regon 28, C alifornia a W yom ing 21. Vtah S tate 0 G eorgia 16 Alabam a 13 Tulnne 20, M iss S tate 14 Florida 20. Auburn 0 Howard P a v n e IO. McMurrv T T exas Tech 13. Okla A&M 13 SF Austin 9, Sui Ross 7 H ouston 41. W ichita 16 Tulsa 14 C ollege ut Lie P acific 13 Cincinnati 33 D etroit 7 M innesota 9, P ittsb u rgh 6 Illin ois 7, P urdue 7 K ansas 20 K ansas S tate 15 M ichigan 17, Iowa 14 Iowa S ta te 39. Drake 14 O klahoma 27. C olorado 19 Brigham Y oung 33, New M exico 12 Oregon S ta te 28 W ashington 20 Idaho S ta te 27. Colorado Mines € M ontana S ta te 33, Montana 14 Southern Cal. 28 W ashington St 12 Enter "Lucky 7" Football Contest C A S U A L S L E E V E L E S S C A R D I G A N B Y T o w n e a n d K i n g Wear it open . . , w e i r it b uttoned . . . you'll wear it a lot and like i t ' F r o m * T ech to State, i f s c a u g h t on, and now it's h ead ed yo u r way. 100 % A u s tralian lambs* wool, in the m o st-w anted colors, four leather b u tto n s; t w o pockets Sizes S - M - L - XL B O U LD E R . Colo. i,T> — T railing : ter four m in utes o f p la y w hen 19-6 at halftim e, O klahom a's top- guard John Wooten blocked Okla- rated football team struck for two hom a fullback B illy P ricer's at- third period touchdow ns the tem pted third down quick kick on brilliant running of halfbacks T om ­ the Sooner IO. The ball bounced m y M cD onald and G endon T hom as into the end zone w ith Colorado to d efea t underdog Colorado 27-19 fullback John B ayuk recoverin g. Saturday. on the first The unranked C oloradans scored in four m inutes on a blocked punt and sailed for tw o second quarter touchdow ns with a furious single wi ng assau lt. The touchdow n trips covered 55 and 70 yards. T hat shocked the Sooners., favor­ ed to w in b y four touchdow ns, for only a period. T hey c a m e roaring back after the h alftim e rest on touchdown d rives of 80 48 yards. M cD onald and T hom as de­ livered the key gains behind the charged up O klahom a and line. M idw ay in the fourth period the Sooners w rapped it up w ith a m a g ­ nificent 91-yard m arch capped by quarterback J im m y H a rris’ 17-yard p ass to T hom as in the end zone. Colorado bolted to a 7-0 lead a t­ O klahom a struck back late in th* first q uarter w ith a 45-yard touch­ down m arch clim axed w ith a 35- yard scoring p ass from H arris to M cD onald. SPEED W A Y RADiO,TELEVISION and HI FI SALES & SERVICE GR 8-6609 2010 Speedw ay Just South of G regory Gym L O O K —L O O K ! OO 5-Minute Car Wash -■ Only S1 on Mondays, Tuesdays & Wednesdays each w eek YOU HAVE BEEN W A N T IN G A FAST CAR W A S H FOR S ' O O . . . N O W HERE IT IS! W E MUST HAVE A BIG VOLUME TO KEEP THIS OFFER U P . . . IT IS UP TO YOU N O W . MINIT-MAN AUTO WASH 22! SOUTH LAMAR Typewriter Specialists Can Do the Job Better Free Delivery and Pick Up GR 8-4360 University Typewriter Exchange 2542 Guadalupe S c C O N D - Q U A R T E R p a s s in g try by S M U goes aw ry as Tommy G e ntry (82), w h o caught t w o TD passes during t h e gam e, and C h a r­ lie Jackson (74; fail to g e t hands on C harlie A r n o ld 's 'pass. Jim m ie W e 'r h (IS ) ana Sonny Baum garten (36) are down defending for the Longhorns. Photo bv John Steel UT Takes Double W in In Cross Country Run T exas sw ept to a double w in— the high school division in 30:07. In the schoolboy c la ss, B aytow n v arsity and fresh m a n - in its own Invitational here won w ith 34 points and others in C ross Country Saturday m orning and B aytow n order included M cC allum , Port e a sily won the high school division. Arthur, R ay of Corpus Christi, The Longhorns w on four o f the R eagan of Houston, l i n i e r of San first five spots in the v a rsity divi- Antonio, and SF' A ustin of Austin. five of the first seven sion and in order in the to e a sily defeat runnerup Houston. v arsity division w ere, <3) Maro T exas had 19 points, Houston 39. G arcia, Houston, (4) G eorge F'oer- i ster, T ex a s; T e x a s’ W alter M cN ew won the S avage three-m ile event in 14:42 and team - T exas; <6> T erry Long, Houston, m ate Joe t7> Keith P itner, T ex a s; (8) Bob in 1 4 :54, Crawford, T ex a s; (9> Leonard P en ­ ny, H ouston; (IO) Jack MncRob- erts. Houston. Other fin ish ers V iilareal w a s (5) K en second the In freshm an division the T ex a s team d efeated H ouston by just tw o points even though Hous­ ton runners sw ept first, second and third places. C harles R osam ond No Extra Charge for Fast Service at n ^ ^ o r^ T e x -? * " 16 t0° k j ohn M acy of Houston won the in 9:23 R oss of L am esa won tw o-m ile freshm an division tw o-rn lie iresnm an envision __________________________ _ H OUK fflfiRTm m - m ost I 9 9 5 other! et $6.95 Hundreds of Lovely Frame Designs! /\ M E N ' S W E A R 2332 Guadalupe DALLAS HOLFORD OPTICIAN Two I onvenient Location* IOO f*M 10th at Wichita: (.It 7-18*5 SOS Capital Natl Rid*; GB 7 7942 M ore than h alf the yard ag e rn sev en plays to score after thp with 1:09 left in the second period Tigers Beat Brown, 21-7 opening kickoff, on the 1 W isconsin flurry and then w ent 65; TCU 32, then Q uarterback B obby I yard s touchdown, Jones found R ight End Jerry Mar- g a v e the B ears the hall stopped a brief secon d for a n a p first-half touchdow ns four .spurts pound end caught the ball when ca m e from the p assin g of q uarter-i TCU ’s O ’D ay W illiam s just" m issed interception. M arcontell w as h acks P at W ilson and Jim Ninow- an I open to the goal ,the rest of the ski. y ^a r ,s in i cornell on the F rog 23. The 200. 1150-Pound squad, pulled P rinceton s stuttering offen se togeth er and led the T igers to a hard-won 21-7 v ic­ tory o v er Brown Saturday. E ach p assed for a touchdow n and w ay. W ilson’s pin-point a eria ls to end I With 55 secon d s left B a y lo r w ent Tony Kolod/.ioj set up the other out ahead 6-0 but Arthur B eau 's two scores. M ichigan State passed | com * sion attem p t w ent w ide. oniy six tim es in the first half hut for 143 com pleted yard s. ten tack les and five of them 34 Ba lm 's Guard B ill G lass w as by far the outstanding linem an with his a ssists. B lockin g and tack lin g as a w hole w as rugged, and injuries occurred frequently. SPORTSM AN S SPEC AL! First 50 Men only HO per month . . , absolutely free o f ch arge: S w ed ish m assa g e, stea m room , sw im m in g pool. OmC-TFAB FBEE u n d erw eig h ts—if you d o n ’t gain lb s—H u” on arm s, 3” on 12 ch est and sh ou ld ers in 60 days o v erw eig h ts— if you d on 't lose 15 lb s.—I V off w a ist and 3 ” o ff hip* In 60 days. SOPHOMORES! THURSDAY November 8 Is the Deadline for Making Your Class Picture Appointment for the 1957 CACTUS Mate your appointment and pay $1.25 fee in JO U R N A LISM BUILDING 107 Office Hours Week Days — 8-1 & 2-5 RESERVE YOUR COPY OF THE CACTUS N O W IF YOU FAILED TO DO SO AT REGISTRATION Western Hats—Shirts Suits—Jeans ■Isl Lets—Skirts Ladies' Bags Billfolds Glove*— Belt* Shoo Repair C A rn O L SADDLERY 1614 Lavaca D o t y Hcu t\ ace a C a U e l Plan! On* of th* moat interesting and profitable c a r e e r s In which a y o u n g American can Invest his future is FO R E IG N T R A D E FO R E IG N S ER V IC E Th* American I n s t i t u t e For Foreign Trad* offers you tor graduate-level a satisfying and lucrative career abroad. Advanced degrees offered. training Arrange through your Placement Office to talk to cm AHT representative on Priddy, Nov. 9, 8.30 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. College of Busi­ ness Adm instration Placement Office, W ag g eenr Hall 115. V S . BAYLOR FOOTBALL SPECIAL TRAIN TO WACO Saturday November IO Lv. Austin Ar. V/aco From Katy Station, 3rd and Congress 9:30 A.M. Lv. Waco I 1:55 A.M. Ar. Austin 5:30 P.M. 7:55 P.M. Purchase tickets now so adequate equipment can be provided Round trip coach fare — $4.79 including tax F O R F U R T H E R IN F O R M A T IO N C A L L : G R 8-8871 — Katy Station G R 2-3141 — D. B. Foster, Dvn. Sales Rep. "A d iv ertin g perform ance of con tri­ in g en io u s an osenfield , vance." — John D allas New* sta g e ” . . . a fine sam p le , . . one w hich could ea sily com pare w ith th e hest the A ustin theatre group has ever o ffer ed .” —John Dustin, A ustin Statesm an SENIORS AN D GRADUATE STUDENTS IN ENGINEERING, PHYSICS AN D MATHEMATICS T h e Douglas Aircraft Com pany invites you to O N CAMPUS INTERVIEWS NO V. 7, 8 and FEE. 20, 21 Kind out about the interesting position?, assistance in fu rthering your education and outstanding prom o­ tion o pp o rtu nities with tile w orld ’s largest m a nu fac­ turer o f aircraft and missiles. Get facts on liv con ditions, research fa c ilities and opportunities a d v a n c e p r o f e s s i o n a l l y at th e v a r i o u s D o u g location s. mg to as Reserve your career der ision until you have talked with the D o u g la s representative. It may he the most im portant interview o f your life. SEE YOUR EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT, ENGINEERING- SCIENCE PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR YOUR INTER­ VIEW APPOINTMENT s Mustangs Rearing To Go After A G M B y D O X ( 'L A R K Texan Sports Staff Cries of “ G et an Aggie” were heard in the S M U dressing room Saturday, but the Ponies w ere also relief after breathing squeaking by Texas, 20-10. sighs of The S M U players all agreed on one thing they w ere playing a dif­ ferent. Texas team in the second half than in the first. E n d Tom m y G e n try summed up his team m ates’ feelings when he said, “ Texas played up to its cap- Ga. Tech Wins, 7-0, Over Tough Duke finally broke D U R H A M , N. C. (.P Pow erful the G eorgia Tech shackes against, a stout Duke de­ fense Saturd ay with a fourth-period touchdown to defeat the inspired B lu e Devils, 7-0, and m aintain its undefeated record before a cheer­ ing crowd of 38.000. Fullb ack D ickie Mattison of A t­ lanta plunged o ver from the one e a rly in the fourth quarter to pro­ vide in a the winning margin skintight game. Q uarterback Wade M itch ell converted, It was the ninth consecutive v ic ­ tory for Coach Bobby Dodd's team, ranked second in the nation in the current Associated Press football poll. It was D uke’s fourth loss in seven starts. ANNOUNCER: ''M u sic to Sw eat the D raft Board B y , " d a ily over I K T B C radio in Austin. 590 on your radio dial abilities in the second half, and proved them selves a terrific ball club.” H alfback Eon .Slaughter, a Junior, rem arked that it "su re feels good to beat Texas, and that one point is worth a m illion.” Coach Woody Woodward w as ob­ viously pleased at beating Texas, for the first tim e since be took over as head coach at SMET, Wood­ w ard said that he w as disappointed in his team 's second half p lay but that “ Texas w as responsible for the poor showing, and they played a fine ball game. We couldn't rush the passer (Clem ents) enough and they w ere completing too m any short passes on us.” A ll of the Ponies w ere high in their praise of W a lte r Fondren. Jack so n said, H alfback C harlie “ You almost have to p lay Fondren man-for-man when he goes out for a pass. or he’ll eat you up.” As for themselves, the Ponies looked upon the game as a team victory. T h ey their offense that w asn ’t moving in the second half, but, as C harlie Jackso n said, “ W e couldn't move after the first half because of the Texas defense." felt The main thing 1hat the Mus* tangs had to say about Texas, is that the ‘Horns acted m agnificently as a the second half, something the Steers have been trying to do all season. team in Syracuse Takes Squeaker S Y R A C U S E , NEY. LB— S yracu se ’s three alert defense gobbled up Penn State inter­ fumbles and cepted three passes to come from behind w ith a 13-9 victo ry Satur­ day ____ ! -af< p l Prime Steaks Charcoaled to your taste (also serving Austin's finest seafood, 9:00 p.m. an epicure s delight and only one of our many delicious treats! Closed Mondays Harris' W a y s id e Inn Two blocks west of Lamar on Barton Springs Road SHSSSfK' i m &3M KMMI Sunday, November 4, 1956 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 5 tile c a s u a l good l o o k s . . . th e e a s y s t e p ... o f th o r o u g h b r e d s bv True classics, from the tip of the doi'ble-thick, flex­ ible leather soles to the handsewn vamp and kicker. Oidmaine Trotters are fashioned from the finest, heart- c f the hide leathers . . . constructed, Indian style, in one piece for smooth, glove-like fit. The concealed steel shank cradles your arch, assures you that your favorite shoes w ill keep their shape. Try on a pair, today. Texas-SMU. . . (Continued from P a g e I ) Longhorn hopes rolled high with 2 30 left. The Ponies foiled three pass at­ tempts by Clements, however, forcing him to run each time and eventually setting up fourth and IS on Texas' 40. Fro m deep punt form ation, Fo n ­ dren took the snap, hesitated, then kicked. Orange chances died as the ball spiralled off his foot and J a c k ­ son made a fa ir catch on S M U 's 25. The Ponies killed the rem aining 50 seconds on R a y M a s te rs’ line huck, and the S M U band played ’ “ P e ru n a ” for the zillionth tim e of the afternoon. Jack so n 's running and the pass­ ing of Arnold and C lick were spot­ in the S M U victory, but lighted none of the M ustangs did much after the first half. F o r Texas, Wilson, Seaholm, and B ry a n t in the line and Clements, Welch, and Fondren in the back­ field w ere genuine stars. The entire Orange squad w as nothing *-hort of tremendous in the last half, how­ ever. The Injury toll w as light on Texas and rough on the Ponies. W ayne Wash, with a cut forehead, and G arland Kennon. w ith a bruised upper arm w ere the only Ix>ng- homs hurt, outside of M ike T ra n t’s re-injury of his knee. Statistics were alm ost as c lo se as the score. Texas had 15 firs t downs and 251 yard s to S M U 's 11 first downs, 256 yards. Last Quarter Touchdown Nullified as Pitt Loses, 9-6 M IN N E A P O L IS LA Ailing Dick B o r s t a l s dram atic field goal with less than three m inutes left, his second game-winning kick of the season, brought unbeaten M inne­ sota a nerve-jangling 9-6 victor;, over hard-luck Pittsburgh Satur­ day. Seconds after the injured Gopher fullback cam e through with a bad- angle boot from the 23-yard line. Pittsburgh’s brilliant end. Jo e W a l­ ton, almost broke the hearts of Minnesota’s Hom ecom ing crowd by speeding 77 y a r d s into the end zone with the Gopher kickoff. B u t Pittsburgh w as caught clip­ the play and Walton s for a P itt victory ping on last-gasp bid went down the drain. R A Y M A S T E R S (44) lays key block on Texas’ Clair B-anch (42) as Lon ‘Slaughter (43), with an­ other assist from Smitty Keliar (62) goes wide for a Pony first down with 6:30 gone in the first quarter. First down was one of series culminating Photo by Jam es E. W a ld e n in SM U score a few minutes later. Tommy G e n ­ try (82) is down after having thrown a block, and Louis Del Homme (5) is coming up to help corral Slaughter. Steers Now Have Something They Can Tie Onto- P r i c e m ake a ball club; that bring them , for G arlan d Kennon. He missed around to a realization of what j the second half of play', j W ayne they can do,” he said. receive “ E m proud of them, that’s num -; asuai quota 0f stitches. This his tim e I ber one. And second, they now have he w as cut between the eyes. L a s t : tie onto, week he w as cut above his something left ! for them- eye and the week before he was ! something they’ve done selves.” W ash w ill they can cut on the leg. W hat re a lly happened at half­ The Texas dressing room was tim e? W h at w as it that turned a cheerfuj ( despite the scoreboard, losing ball club, behind three touch- They had lost one game this day, downs, into a winning one? No one an(j won another. The could re a lly explain it. loss w as I j 20-0, the wan was 19-0. Coach P ric e said it was the boys j themselves. He said he thought they just took inventory and de­ cided to go out there and try to win. “ I made a few rem arks, hut nothing that wall go into the his-, tory books.” ho said. ' They jus. | decided that to f a ll, they'd fall fo rw a rd ." In ju ries wrere light, hut c o s tly .: Texas got some good breaks, and ■ had some bad ones. The best o fI the good ones was Don W ilson's catch of a loose forward pass for first Texas score. He said i the . A i w a , Just lu ck y; happeood I • * t > u I “ would * * called back' he sald' j rules, however, sa y The that the hall has been touched) if they' w ere g o in g !! ° be to the ris h i Place ;;i th o u JM B v N IC K JO H N S O N Texan Sport* E d ito r Coach E d P ric e talked at some length after his team lost to S M U by just one point, 20-19. He couldn’t explain the reason for T exas’ com eback but said that I he wished he could. Ile praised quite a few of his own players and wouldn’t say what he told them at halftime. B u t He had lost his sixth game this season. lie was somewhat j pleased. W h y ? Because he saw something this this game that he hadn't seen before. 1 He saw his team come back. He saw his team come from under a 0-20 count to score three tim es, team in in j The pressure was off now'. His team is not trying to wan a confer­ ence title. He is not trying to save his job. W h a t he is now' attem pt­ ing cam e into being in the second half of Sa tu rd a y’s game. His team is alive. It proved that. Can it go on? W ill this comeback mean anything in the long ran g e? Coach P r ic e it would. [ “ Those are the type things that thought he injured his knee against j hy an V irg in ia, started this game j touched it) anyone is eligible to eligible receiver (Bob B ry a n t | i f p l a y e d when M ike T rant, who hasn’t since W e s t and left three m inutes later. It was j catch it. the sam e knee and he m ay not see I And next action again. The only other serious injury Was a contusion of the upper arm a taste of it now.” Ja c k Hobbs is right. "Those bears better w atch it,” he yelled. “ W e ’ve got w eek? M aybe ANNOUNCER: "O n the Drag." 11-1 OO n m. n ig h tly over K T B C radio- T h e best thing to ID Of Bo ob y La y n e . 590 on your radio dial 2343 G u ad alu p e — On the Drag Enter " L u c k y / ' Fo o tb all C o n te s t I 17* j, In ebony-color hard f. Serving Tray 121 j in stain-proof and aits we I under normal plastic, uses. Available in M oney Tree design with hand- inlaid coins, at shown, or in Tidepool, Com, Key, Fishnet, or Cocktail Time patterns. Perfect for mod­ ern jiving, indoors and out, $10.00. C hrism a* W ill Be M errier lf You S H O P N O W • W id e r Selection • Avoid Crowd* • Fetter Service • Le** Traffic g. Serving Trey 101 j * 15*2- 81 above, available in Red Lobster or Cocktail Tim* design*, a* shown, or Coin, Tide- poo!, Key, or Four eat C o v e r. A contemporary favorite, $8.25, I5L0 of heavy, h. LeHer Opener No. Its an-imported brass, nine inches long, with handles of Cherub or Napc'eon, as shown, cr Hercules. .Brilliant cr #n- tmque finish, $1.35. I09/R-30, 1 ands erne a. Book End* No. alabaster in Dot e design, five inch** high end very heavy, W , ta or grey, tne pa r, $5,00 V- kiL'* * ^ ft d. Book End* L r contemporary decor, made of bro',s. heavyweight e-d highly polished, with felt pad bates. a. Century, ( .e -che* high, th* pa'-, $5. b. Vogue, fi-e Inches high, the pair, $5. Keynote, *'* 'mc e* Eg h , the pa , $5. m \ / L ! sire b. Candlestick* of e 'e g a rt h'gh and tarnish-rejijtanf Germ an brast, with white candiel and p'asi.c drip c-p ho'd- ert included. e. G raceful styling No. 11476, 15 nchet high with candles at p c.lured, $8.95. Pair. $17.00. tripod b. Unique V*l*m bda design No. 11474, 11-inch#* high with candies as pictured, $9.60. Pail1, $18.50. a. W o rld G lo b * No. 1249 by W e b * ' C 's t* - en h ,9,'k l e g * -de, a background, with semi-meridian to figure a * ,g* t ‘or st.dents young end cid. Ta* .e-inci diam­ eter, • es high en c ;,ro n * rn a, $12.95. C r cr s set a so avis.ab e. i $ I • B o h !* O p m t r No. I8 R D C , • p o d * * ■'?• Import fOar merci high, w,tn enkq .* bran * k I i i1 ¥ 7 2 ¥ V I'J C t c. p THE STECK C O M P A N Y NINTH AT L A V A C A — PH O N E G Reenw ood 7-4411 PARK FREE AT PIGEON HOLE PARKING I. C igareH * Bo* No. N20I of smoot'- D * V wain t * -h whit* p attic lm#r #-d mo dad p ast ii inset cov*r ct co orful Watchmaker, Zo- a ac. or B .B a rfly design, hold* a L H pack of mg- ar or k-g i i * c-gerett**, $10.10. I CigareH# Bo* No. NI353/3 th gen- vm * aether finish m rad, b ro**, or green, end hand tooling in go d, hinged coyer end varnished ner, A c ’asjic im­ port from ita y, $6.65. $. Salad Service No. C Y 126 of g 'f awn­ ing ».:y*r plated fork and spoon. each rmd of e*tr« aavy 15 ** jht lh# from b ; i J, pa r, $8.15. on g sported i n c a ! Sunday. Novem ber 4, 1956 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 6 Union Displays Art Collection 28 Illustrations Sh o w in Novem ber N ationally Illustrations famous by contem porary Am erican artists are on exhibit in the M ain Lounge of the Union, The collection, con­ taining 28 illustrations, is from the La d ies’ Home .Journal. The works of 13 artists are in Jo e de the exhibition. They are Mors. Jo n Whitcom b, Goby W h it­ more. Al P a rk e r. Alex Ross, H a rry A n d e r s o n . W a lte r Biggs, Jo e Bo w le r, P a u l Burns, Pru ett C arter, Robert H arris. Morgan Kane, and Haddon Sundblom. the A m o n g Storeroom " by illustrations are j “ G ia n t" by Joe de M e r; “ In the Jon W hitcom b; | " Je n n y Kissed M e ” by Al P a rk e r, and "B la ck b o a rd Ju n g le " by Alex Ross, The collection of paintings is be­ ing exhibited through N ovem ber 30 from 9 a m. to 9 p m. on w eekdays and 8 a m. to 12 noon on Saturday. DANCING N A M E D LA ST W E E K b- Midw estern film critics as the most promising s c r e e n new­ comer (for 1956) was P a tty M c ­ Corm ack, shown here in a scene in which from The Bad Seed, she co-star-ed with N a n c y Ke y- ‘ THE CLUB WITH THE PURPLE DOORS” • 1515 It C O N G R E S S • J A M S E S S IO N S U N D A Y — BILL T U R N ER C O M B O — FROM 5 8 PM . DROP IN AND PLAY OR LISTEN! A N N O U N C E R : Music to Dissert a Pickled Frog By each afternoon at 3:35 over KT BC radio In Austin 590 on your radio dial This is the fourth such collection Anna Jackson, Alfredo de Saint- placed on tour by the Curtis Pub- Malo, H orace B ritt, and John Mc- lishing Co in response to m any Q rosso w ill be presented by the art requests schools, and art institutions. The paintings in lh . current col col,on w ere selected as representativ e of j good examples of art illustration. first program of the faculty con- i cert series Sunday at 4 p.m. in the B u,ldins R ecital H all. Miss Jackso n, pianist, is a grad- from universities, . . . 'TH E BEST O F ST E IN B E C K ' Bennett, Andrews, McHugh, Strauss Cha mber M usic Series Begins Today at 4 p.m. The University of Texas College of Fine Arts 15th Anniversary of the FINE ARTS FESTIVAL N o v e m b e r 11-18, 1956 N O A D M IS S IO N C H A R G E W IL L BE M A D E FO R A N Y FEST IV A L EVENT EX C EPT T H E H O U S T O N S Y M P H O N Y O R C H E S T R A A N D D EPA R T M EN T O F D R A M A P L A Y "T H E IN N O C E N T S " Because of limited seating in Recital Hall tickets of admission must be drawn at Box Office, Music Building for the Hungarian String Quartet, November 12; Fior Peteers, Organist, November 13: and Soeieta Corelli from Rome, Italy, November 16. r ~ W ill P r e s e n t 'Bes! O f Steinbeck' / . rn in Starring Tile “ Best of Steinbeck ” a series Hollywood in 1929, played the part free-lance artist with Bing of excerpts from the works of John of a Steinbeck arranged for the stage Crosby the Academ y Award- by Reg inald Lawrence, w ill be pre- winning picture, “ Going M y W a y ." Rented Novem ber IO, at 8.15 p.m. He has appeared the playa in G reg ory G ym by the Cultural “ Uncle Tom 's C abin,” “ Ten Nights Entertainm ent Committee, in a Bar-Room , fhe Two O r­ phans,” and m any others. in the production are Constance Bennett, Ted Andrews F r a n k McHugh and R o b e r t Strauss. Ellio t Silverstein is direc­ tor Tod Andrews, Hie “ tall, dark, and handsome” in M ae W est's stage play. "C om e On Up, Ring T w ic e ,” is probably best from Sicinbee k s j reniembot ed as Ensign P u b cr rn books w ill be taken from “ G rapes the stage version of “ M r . Rob­ of W ra th ,” “ Pastures of H e a ve n ,” erts," After his success in “ Mr. "O f M ice and M en,” tho in Bright,*' and others. Also “ A G irl Can w ill be a few short scenes when | Tpl, .* and then look over lhe Jo _ the soph Cotten role in “ Sabrina F a ir .“ the four stars w ill perform Tickets Ipr “ Best of Steinbeck" specialties which have given them m ay bo drawn by blanket lax and ^a m e - Constance Bennett, who has been seHSOn ticket holders at the F in e the M usic Sin Building Monday through F r id a y to 4 p m,, and from “ Burning '"Roberts.“ there Broadw ay he appeared comedy, in such A rls B o x ' O ffice J he excerpts leading man from 9 a m in 80 films, has played stage successes as Bought, Takes A H oliday,’* "T h e Easiest W a y ,” " T a il­ spin. ” “ After Office Hours,” and the “ T opper" series. to 12 noon Saturday. in Lo v e ,” "L a d ie s 9 a m. in IN TERSTATE THEATRES Now s h o w in g ! Paramount D O O R S O l 'K N 1.15 F >1. lovable oaf Robert Strauss, who played the the big, in IT " has appeared with role of “ Stalag Dean M artin and J e r r y L e w is in, the serv ice comedies, “ Sailo r B e -1 w a re ” and "Ju m p in g Ja c k s .” Also Strauss, described as one of the most versatile actors in the the­ ater, has appeared in “ Om nibus,” where he played a comedy part with Helen Hayes. Fra n k McHugh, who went to • rn rn • rn rn 9 Ex’s W ork Shown on TV The Department of D ra m a last week had a chance to view two of its products on the U S Steel Hour, “ W etback R u n .” ZSA ZSA Dress Contest T as a U n iv e rsity student, approve of M iss Gabor w ear­ ing her $17,000 Las Vegas gown when she appears in Austin: Y E S .............. N O .......... (Check One! No signature required Deposit in the in boxes Union. M ain Building. Rnd Journalism Building un­ til Wednesday at noon. Enter Zsa Zsa Contest Today! liatp of Texas State College for Wotnen and h a s done advanced study in New York and at The U n ive rsity of Texas, Saint-Malo, violinist, was aw a rd ­ ed the P re m ie r P rix from the N a ­ in tional Conservatory of M usic P a ris. He has served for 12 ye a rs as director of the National Con­ servatory of Panam a, which he founded. B ritt, cellist, has also heen awarded the P re m ie r P rix He has in Europe, appeared as soloist North and South Am erica. M c G r o s s o. clarinetist, has studied af Eastm an School of Music and Northwestern U niversity. He from a ye a r's recently returned study at the National C onserva­ tory in P a ris . N o w H e ’s a R ain m aker’ Burt Lancaster, who stars with Katherine Hepburn in Ha! W a llis ’ “ The R a in m a k e r'’ at Param ount. was once a in the ladies' lingerie department at M a r­ shal Field s in Chicago. floor w alker Five of UT Staff Win Art Awards Five U n ive rsity faculty members r e c e i v e d prizes at the D D. Feld­ man exhibit of contem porary art now showing in D allas. M uralist Seym our Fogel, ex-staff member, took the “ triple crown of the painting w orld” in Texas w h e n his “ Symbol of B e lie f” won Sl.,500 first purchase prize. "T h e K eeper,” painted by Luis took the second purchase I iades prize of $1,000, and D avid Adickes’ “ The P o e t” took an award of m erit, along with K e lly F e a rin g ’s “ The P la c e of the and “ The Y o g i” M i c h a e l F r a r y s “ Transfigured N ig h t" Also receiving awards of m erit were Dr. Donald L . Weis- mann s “ Sic T ra n s it” and Hiram W illiam s' "W a lk in g Figure “ Fishes ’ TWIN OAKS CAFETERIA "A u stin's Finest F o o d ” serving Hours a.m. — 8 p.m. The teleplay was w ritten by Theodore Apsiein, ihe first man to U niversity students w ill decide get a doctor of philosophy in play- vvhether Zsa Zsa Gabor, Hungarian w riting here Apstein wrote m any actress, w ill w ea r her controversial J Plays that were produced by the $17,000 in her j dram a department w hile he w as appearance here next Thursday at a student at the I niversity. the Vote “ Y e s” or “ N o " bv filling in the following entry blank The leading character in the tele­ play. Jacinto, was played by R ip Torn, who also studied dram a at the U niversity. I .as Vegas dress Param ount Theater. R A N S ★ I E X A S rn rn rn rn rn rn rn rn rn DD E T W E E M CD E A V E M a n d C H E U L R S n S 5 = 5 S = S il CCX.OS br o. Im- Robert WAGNER Terry MOORE B r c d e n c ^ R A W F O R o S T A T E ■ ■ Wm V D O O R S O F F N 11 4ft A ML I I A T I K F S s i A H T 12:20 —— 4 JO — 0 15 " A SPECTACULAR M O V tf I " to. Fo'O-rOwr* ^ w m rn T E C H N I C O L O R F R I C K S T O D A Y A D I I T S ( I t l l . D K F * .......................... .................. MOV l l D IS C O ! N T K V F 30 I N T U . 8:30 I ?» AO KS S T A R T S T O D A Y ! 1:45 F.5HL TIMS BACK! ...that loveable little boy c4 "M AJO R BENSON* fame! Cco n ce A s Sunday Afternoon, Nov. I The University Symphony and Chorus Alexander von Kreisler, Conductor Paul Engelstad, Associate Choral Dircetor Soloists: Josephine Antoine, soprano Floyd Townsley, tenor; Douglas Stott, bass- Fernando Laires, piano — Hogg Auditorium baritone 4 p. rn Monday Evening, Nov. The Hungarian String Quartet Recital Hall, Music Building — 8:15 p.m. Tuesday Evening, Nov. 13 Flor Peeters, Belgian organist Recital Hall — 8:15 p.m. Faculty Exhibit of Sculpture Paintings, Ceramics and W eavings November 5-30. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday Loggia, Music Building TWIN OAKS CAFETERIA 2300 S. Congress Enter "Lucky 7" Football Contest PLL) "The Innocents" by W m . A r­ chibald Mouton Law, Director November 9, IO and 13-17 X Hall Theater THE T IM E HAS C O M E FOR 1 ► «ham nom nooucrx* . t cam*'* mm S T A R T S T O D A Y ! O F F . Si 1.30 a m u m PILLARS OF ■SKY'S I THE Q , r ST G E O R G E ~ STEVENS1 **O O U C T K > * r n * * * * * CONA FERBER J e t t Rink w a s m ade to get to the top--so he could have the fun of falling all the w a y down. J e t t R in k is played by J A M E S D E A N . sr j ■ U T I W FIRST S H O W IN G 6:45 T r e n t t .V A d a ti* OOe R id * F re e Wed. Afternoon, Nov. 14 Faculty Chamber Music Concert Alfredo de St. Malo, Alfio Pignotti, violins Albert Gillis, viola; H orace Britt, Phyllis Jo an Templar, flute; Joseph Blankenship, John McGrosso, clarinet; Jam es Burton, Young, celli oboe bassoon Recital Hall — 4 p.m. Thursday Evening, Nov. .The Houston Symphony Orchestra Leopold Stokowski, Conductor G regory Gymnasium — 8:15 p.m. f\ctc/io- 01 e vt A to ti Wednesday Evening, Nov. Two Broadcasts Selection from Series "The Minds of M en” * Decem ber" by Henry Brant Recital Hall Music Building— 8:15 p.m. Friday Evening, Nov. 16 The Soeieta Corelli from Rome, Italy Recital Hall — 8:15 p.m. 14 Sunday Afternoon, Nov, 18 The University Symphonic Band J . Frank Elsass, Conductor John McGrosso, Clarinet Soloist Hogg Auditorium — 4 p.m. A R S L O N G A V I T A B R E V I S THURS. NOV. 8 and E L IZ A B E T H T A Y L O R ie L e s lie Lynnton a n d R O C K H U D S O N ie B i c k B e n e d ic t . W a r n e r B ro s. presen t it in W a rn e rC o lo r. / STATE i * rn* MW UMI rn M I M a ado « WfMTl • IWW* ai ' Ina, rn HW* **'*» %»< rn <-ne to Mf : \ ; M .f » U KAU TO N»-M • ie. ' Hew P l I S TH E N IG H T HO LDS TER R O R I n k Kalif ‘ zr** A 'IfelVCttAt * ,G i I > JEFF CHANDLER LARAINE DAY TIM HOVEY ■ HUM.** S T A R T S T O D A V < > « UM tv f$ Ute* rn ,t f i i Plus “ H O W TO BE VERY. VERY P O P U L A R ” r k t t y k h a k i .k S l i t R I K N O R T H A d u lt* MS' F I R S T S H O W 6 (3 T**«*n* 15r R id * E >••»* ^ .Hi—'* ..nj— . —u ' H U M P H R E Y ! B O G A R T THE HARMS IREY FAU Personnel-Management Group Elects Dr. Edwin Mumma General Chairman Dr. Edwin W, Mumma, associate professor of management at the University, was elected general chairman of the Texas Personnel and Management Association F r i­ day. Other officers chosen during the chairman of the conference, pre­ sided. Dr. Logan Wilson, president of the University, welcomed the as- j sociation to the University, and B ill Williams, Austin city mana- | ger, welcomed the group to the confer- city. association's 18th annua! “ Responsibilities of Higher Edu- ence were Hay H. M arianl of the Union Carbide Corporation, vice-1 cation" was the topic of an ad- chairman, and Dr. Norris H. Hiett, dress before the general assembly associate dean of the University's Thursday morning by Dr. E . N. Jones, president of Texas Tech Division of Extension. The conference began Thursday College, Lubbock, the University and general with a general assembly in Hogg That afternoon, the conference Auditorium. M, S. liegeman, pro- divided into special meetings con­ fessor of mechanical engineering cerning business and industry, edn- cation, and government. Panel dis­ at cussions were held in each group. In an address before the special meeting for business and industry. ; C. E . Leach, director of industrial- relations, Texas Butadiene and Chemical Corporation, Channel- ’ viewr, discussed the “ Self Develop-, ment of Foremen and Directors" i : in Hogg Auditorium. Twenty Groups Enter Sing-Song cussion on tile topic, “ Meeting the panel discussion concerning gov- Needs of Society for Scientists and eminent. The topic of the discus- Technicians.” Members of the panel were Dr. j H a rry H, Ransom, chairman and dean, College of Arts and Sciences; Dr. R. C. Anderson, chairman of the University Scienee-Education Committee; Dr. Glenn E . Barnett, associate dean, College of Educa­ tion; Wayne Taylor, assistant pro­ fessor of curriculum and instruc­ tion; and Dr. Jones. John W. M acy, executive direc­ tor of the United States Civil Serv- the ; ice Commission, spoke on aion was “ Careers in Public Serv- 1 Incentives and Obstacles.” Dr. Ian Forbes Fraser, director On tho panel with M r. Macy °J the American Library rn Paris »P-Ak on - I tench and were R, L . Phinney, district direc- tor of the Internal Revenue S e r v .; A m .n can R e s p o n sib ility in North t V T A « - . A h ' i a o ” r s i i h l i e » Africa” at a public lecture, Mon ice, Austin, and Charles W. Shoe- day at 8 p.m. in Batts Auditorium. make. deputy director of person- Dr, Fraser will present an analy­ nel. Oklahoma City Air M ateriel sis of the problems of Morocco, Arca, Tinker A ir Force Base. Tunisia, and Algeria. I a o t i i t * * ♦-» v es Panel chairman was W. V. Gill, director of the Eighth U S Civil Service Region, Dallas. Presiding over the panel was Errtmette S. Redford, University professor of government. Executives Discuss Business Problems Jestival to be held December 8. Registration opened for Sing-Song at 9 a m. Thursday, and Phi G am ­ ma Delta immediately signed up sing “ Oklahoma” in the song Questions regarding human rela- i lions problems were discussed by a panel consisting of T. W. Moore, director of training, Humble Oil & Refining Company, who served as chairman; David Johnston, assist- day. Others entering Thursday were ant superintendent, Humble; I. J . j Speaking of executive develop­ ant superintendent, Humble; I. J . j c;mjth, general foreman, Electron- ment, Dr. Virgil Jam es, co-ordina- ics Department No. 75, Convair; i tor of management development Z. D. Ward of the Tennessee of Chance Vought Aircraft, Inc., in Gas Transmission Company; and Dallas, said that “ management. de- George II. Thompson, maintenance j velopment is an attitude and a phi- engineer, Carbide and Carbon losophy of life.” e d t Omega with ^ Lope Bo^nes^ j Delta Gamma with “ Snow White Medley,” “ Alpha Omicron P i with “ Tribute to Romberg Medley,” P i Beta Phi with “ Wizard of Oz Med­ ley,” and Kappa Kappa Gamma with Christmas in the A ir Med- J cjiem icajs Division, Union Carbide ley.” Evaluation of business, executive development, profits, and advertis­ ing were discussed at the sixth an­ nual professional meeting of the Alumni Business Conference Fri- Speaking of ✓ Also Alpha Delta P i and “ South Pacific Medley,” P i Kappa Alpha and “ Grandfather's Clock,” Delta Upsilon and “ Medley of Harm ony,” Ph i Sigma Kappa and “ Stephen Foster M edley," Alpha Chi Omega and “ Skip-to-My-Lou," Kappa A l­ pha Theta and “ Baubles, Bangles, , and Beads,” and Delta Delta Delta and “Syncopated Clock.” Corporation. Mr. Marianl, assistant to the superintendent department, Car­ bide and Carbon Chemicals D iv i­ sion, Union Carbide Corporation, presided at the meeting. He added, “ W e have 54 per cent of the top management source be­ tween the ages of 55 and 65. M an­ agement has appointed executives 46 per cent faster in postwar per­ iods than in prewar periods.” incen­ Potential, drive, attitude, tive, and leadership were brought us,” a special meeting on educa- out as requirements in the execu­ tion was opened with a panel dis-1 tive development. Agreeing that “ the crisis is on Also, Alpha Gam m a Delta and Artist’s Work Displayed “ Mother Goose Suite,” Alpha Phi and “ Medley of Railroad Songs,” , Work by Antonio Ruiz, Mexican Gamm a Phi Beta and “ Irish Med- artist, is on display in the loggia ley,” Delta Zeta and “ The Twelve of the Music Building. Days of Christmas.” Delta Tau “ Ezekiel Delta 'heel,” Beta Theta P i and “ B a t­ tle Hymn of Republic,” and Phi Kappa Sigma and “ Jum p Down, Spin Around.” First in the fall-winter series of the exhibitions presented by the Uni- Saw and Carl J . Thomsen, vice-president, control and finance. Texas Instru­ ments, Inc., in Dallas, spoke on evaluation of profits. An evaluation of advertising was given by Dr. M elvin Hartwick, di­ rector of advertising of Continental ditorium and a dinner meeting in the Cry st:: I Ballroom of the Dris- kill Hotel conference concluded activities. Eisenhower Tops Interstate Poll The Interstate Theatres’ presi­ dential “ straw vote” shows Presi- I dent Eisenhower leading in Texas, j He received 59,8 per cent of the ' total votes. Adlai Stevenson re- | ceived 43.2 per cent, W. E . Hel- ' Iums, city manager of Austin In­ terstate Theatres, announced Sat- : urday. Interstate's 1952 poll was only a fraction of one per cent off in fore- i casting the general election results | in Texas. Tile results of the poll and the j 25 towns in which it was taken i were: W a y , Nov.m Ur 4, 1956 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag. T Fraser to View Fine Arts Festival French US Duty Opens November ll In North Africa the direction of Leopold .Stokowski, will appear in Gregory The College of Fin * Arts will j under celebrate its fifteenth anniversary of the annual Fine Arts Festival Gym. November 11-18. Each year the festival provides a week of emphasis on the arts with the departments of art. drama, music, and radio-television participating in the event. The calendar this year includes faculty exhibit of sculpture, a paintings, ceramics and textiles at the Music Building Loggia, Novem­ ber 5-30. November 9-17 “ The Innocents” by W illiam Archibald w ill be pre­ sented at X Hall. wow On November 4 radio-television will broadcast a selection from the radio-television series, “ Tile Minds v‘ of Men,” together with the presen­ tation of the first annual distin­ guished service award of the Col­ lege of Fine Arts by Dr. Ixigan Wilson. The acceptance and re­ sponse will he given by Sylvester L. Wea\er Jr., chainman of the U weaver Jr., chainman of the hoard of the National Broadcasting ' Company. The second broadcast w ill be "D ecem ber" by Henry Brant, win­ ner of the P rix Italia for 3955 for thr best original radio musical composition. Concerts, beginning November l l and continuing throughout that week, w ill include the University Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Alexander von Kreis- ler. Fernando Laires, piano soloist, 1 will be featured with the symphony J November l l . On November 12 the Hungarian Quartet will perform In Recital j Hall. An organ concert series will I be given in the Recital Hall by Flor Peetcrs of Malines, Belgium, beginning November 19. The faculty chamber music con­ cert w ill be given in Recital Hall November 14 and the next evening j I the Houston Symphony Orchestra, The Societa Corelli from Rome. Italy, will present a concert on November 16 and the week will be climaxed bv a presentation of the University Symphonic Band November 18 at Hogg Auditorium, under the direction of J . Frank Elsass. A Song to Remember* To Be Shown M onday “ A Song to Remember,” * tarring Cornel Wilde and Merle Oberon, Main Ballroom Tt n n r .t »n. of Texas Union at 7:30 p m. Mon­ , S a is ONE'S Ifcoos, I M GOING T£ R A N D Y ’* day. Admission is free Film ed in Technicolor, “ A Song to Remember” is the life story of Frederic Chopin, French-Polish classical composer. The picture features many of the s hest known compo- sitions played by pianist Jose B u r­ in. Wilde, as Chopin, executes the finger-work to coincide with the music. 3 Convenient Locations: • 3221 Red River • 3515 Jefferson • 5th and Neches Inn y "Delicious Italian Foods in a Friendly Candlelight Atm osphere" , aa* n _ j 806 R ad River STUDENT-STYLED PRICES River A # *' J .•*’ ' Ph. G R 7-0665 Use The Classifieds THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS Cultural Entertainment Committee Announces The Third Event of the 1956-57 Series versify’s art department, the Ruiz Oil Company in Houston. collection includes 15 oil and tem­ pera works. It is expected to have considerable popular appeal be­ cause of subject matter and be­ cause the style is “ readily” per­ ceptible. A talk and discussion on business evaluation with D r. C. Aubrey Smith, professor of accounting, as moderator, was given, A business meeting In Batts Au- What Coes On Here SU N D A Y IO—Dr. Edw ard Taborskv to speak “ Is Soviet Russia Coming on Apart at the Seam s?” at U nitar­ ian Church Forum, Twenty-third and San Gabriel. 10—Tape recording of “ The Study J 7 : 30— Charles F . Herring to address I Newman Graduate Club, New- j man Center. M O N D A Y 8-12—Filings for Business Admin!-1 stration sweetheart. 8-12—Drawing for Baylo r tickets. of Montgomery, A la.,” Quaker Center. Friends 9-9—Illustrations from Indies Home Journal, Texas Union. 11- Newman Club, St. Austin's. 1:30—-Boat races, Bar-K Ranch. 2—Delta Sigma P i picnic, City 2—Czech Club meets at Littlefield Fountain for picnic at Harris Park. 2—Alphl Phi Omega. Texas Union Park. 305. 2:30—Interscholastic League Advi­ sory Board, Driskill Hotel. 4—Chamber Musio concert, Music Recital Hall. 5 -Business meeting and *upper. Gamma Delta Center. 5—Sunday supper, Lutheran Stu­ 3:30—P a t Wolf to talk on “ I t ’s E le c­ tion Tim e," Lutheran Student Center. 5:30-Talk by Miss Jane Dowell at W S F supper, University Presby­ terian Church. 5:30—Talk by M errill Hutchins at Wesley Foundation supper, U ni­ versity Methodist Church. 6:15- Professor Witherspoon to ad­ dress Newman Club, St. Austin's. 6:30-Talk by Miss Edleen Brgg at D S F supper, University Chris­ tian Church. ONE HOUR CLEANING — KO EXTRA CHARGE — LO NGHO RN CLEANERS GR S-3H17 SS3K Guadalupe 94—"B ird s and Trees of North I Am erica." R are Book Collections, Main Building. IO—Coffee and discussion, Hillel Center. IO. l l and 3— Freshman Discussion Groups, YM CA. 3 4 :30—Drawing for Baylor tickets. 3—Effective Citizenship Group, 4 Race Relations Committee, Y M ­ 4—Panhellenlc Council, Alpha E p ­ YM CA. CA. silon Phi, 4—Public lecture by Dr. Jose R. Chiriboga on “ The Charter of the Organization of A m e r i c a n States,” Batts Auditorium. 4-5—Closed circuit K U T V , Chem­ istry Building 319. 5 Women's Geological Society, Ge­ ology Building 108. 5:30•-University Bowling League, Tower Bowlingside. 6 R. W. Gregory to talk on “ Ope­ rations of the Stock Exchange,” H ills . 7—Baptist Student Choir, Baptist Student Center, 7—Free movie, “ Song to Rem em ­ ber,” Texas Union. 7 Dr. M errill Hutchins lead theological discussion on Nicho­ las Berdyaev, Gregg House. to 7:45-Longhorn Sports Parade, K V E T . 8—Dr. Ian Forbes Fra ser to speak on “ French and American R e ­ sponsibilities in North Africa,” Batts Auditorium. C f t f C T C - R l f l 2425 EXPOSITIO N FOR DELECTABLE FO OD AT ^ L IG H T F U L PR IC E! Each group will also sing a frat­ ernity song. So far there have been no dupli­ cations. Pat Cox, secretary In the Dean of M en’s office, said. EXPERT SHOE REPAIR # M o d e m Equipm ent # Key* Made # 10% Off Goodyear Shoe Shop Off The Drag on 23rd Street J U far a i g r e OUR SPECIAL SUND AY DINNER 'Ii BAR B O CHICKEN From 2 Pound Chicken served with our Famous Tennessee Bar-B-Q Sauce English Peas & Potato Salad G arlic Bread Ice Cream & Cookies C offee or Iced Tea $1 . 0 0 FILET STEAK W ra p p ed in Bacon Served with Shrimp Cocktail Combination Salad Baked or French Fried Potatoes Ice Cream & Cookies G arlic Bread %lced Tea or C offee $1 . 0 0 Dine under the stars in our garten 1607 San Jacinto Serving from 11:30 a.m. dent Center. until 9:30 p.m. rf 'A Constance Frank MCHUGH # Robert STRAUSS Directed by Elliot SILVERSTEIN • Adapted for the stage by Reginald LAWRENCE Saturday Evening, November IO GREGO RY GYMNASIUM FREE To $15.85 Blanket Tax and Season Ticket Holders $ 15.85 Blanket Tax Holders must draw a ticket at the Box Office, Music Building, beginning Monday, November 5. Hours: 9-4 P.M. Monday-Friday, 9-12 Saturday. A charge of 25 cents w ill be made for all tickets not drawn before deadline, 12 noon, November IO. ***** i Room for parties Box Office Music Building — GR 6-8371, Ext. 444 C A I I I Serving the finest Chop Suey, Chow Mein and other fine Chinese delicacies. G R 8-7641 223 Congress Cloud ow Monday Single Adm. - Adults S2.50 Children Under 12 - SI .OO No Advanced Sale No Reserved Seats Gregory Gym Box Office Opens 7:15 AM. In an earlier meeting at 3 p m. in the University Rare Book Col­ lections, Dr. Fra ser will describe the program of the American L i­ brary in Paris. In Dr. Fraser, who was horn Scotland, received his bachelor of arts, master of arts, and doctor of philosophy degrees from Colum­ bia University, While at Columbia, he was an assistant to the dean and director of Maison (French House! from 1930 to 1917. He has been director of the American L i­ brary in Paris since 1947. Francaise A lieutenant colonel in the U S Air Force during World W ar II, j Dr. Fraser organized and com- j manded the American M ilitary U ni­ versity in Paris in 3945-46, While in the Air Force, he was awarded the Bronze Star medal and six campaign decorations. Department of Romance uages The lectures are sponsored by the Lang­ and History, Graduate I School of Lib rary Science, and the , Public Lectures Committee. 12 Reach Finals n Poetry Reading Twelve students qualified for the finals in the Oratorical Associ­ ation’s intramural poetry-reading contest Thursday night. The finalists are Martha Valliant, Bion McDowell, M ary Herron, M ar­ cia Rogers, M eryl Boernstein, Col­ leen Mathews, Ken Erwin, Helen Plummer, Stephen Liu, David Rea­ gan, M arvin Lewis, and Lucia Romberg. D ie finals will be held Thursday at 7:30 in Speech Building 201. Have you heard KHFI-FM? . u ■ , .-.ii' ■’ ■ J 98.3 M C * .« •’ dc. i K ' ' I k - *. The Pine Room &In Featuring Combo rn W ed ., Thurs., Fri. Nights AL-SO Sunday Afternoon 3:30-7:00 Dancing Nightly 2824 Guadalupe G R 7-0555 smmr rn I K E Dallas ........ 64.7 F t. Worth .. 64.3 Houston . . . . 61,9 San Antonio 63.0 Austin .................... 56.8 G a lv e s to n .................53.9 Arlington ............... 73.5 Abilene .................. 51.3 A m a r illo .................. 65.3 Brow nw ood 57.1 C o rsica n a.................56.9 D enison.................. 53 9 D enton.................... 54.7 Eastland .................52.4 E l Paso ............51 4 Paris ..................... 47.3 Temple .................. 49.2 Tyler .......... .......... 67.7 Vernon .................. 54 8 Waco ..................... 613 54.6 Wichita F a l l s B ro w n s v ille 54 4 H a rlin g e n ............... 50.9 Mercedes ........ . 45.2 McAllen ................. 62 8 W e O ffe r Expert Camera Repair Studtman Photo Finish G R 7-2820 222 W est 19th A Welcome Change Y ou rt fo r 4 w elcom e chan di w hen you dine at T h e Martha!ten. in F or that som ething d ifferen t that your fade has been crating, try our truly delicious K osh er style fo o d . (A n d i f you mention you taw this ad, you'll be serted T h e Mankato ten's exclu site and d elig h tfu l h om e- m ade cheesecake fo r desert.) O fferin g in addition, g o o d Mexican fo o d arni a 1 delicatessen to soon. DLie K O S H E R D E L IC A T E S S E N R E ST A U R A N T 905 Co n g r a t s Si, Si . . . E s M uy Deliciosa! fM ‘ ^ • V .:y‘. . * . vt* * * - El M a t 504 EAST AVE. GR 7-7023 El Toro 1601 GUADALUPE GR 8-4321 i , - # i, j *v •, * V • .lr vV ' a ■A M on roe ’s "M exican Food to Take Hom e’ ' J- * it SOO EAST AVE. GR 7-8744 B u n d tr* * > ll:- !* *1 t M hr* m r u m » t i m M f r o w n f o e »« «>■■•! f ,e'/i« -,t t e a M in d ia * fi*h!«*§, t»i c u t * • p •»«»'*'!* fit «■ «»'•• M ie. ae r * « . } I M I •< lf ,• » •'<•/» l r 44 t o r - *» ,»!•«»* I * * * » ! * « Mi E e k j A r f ft* I.-* * « I" r 1 1 *v( J ( h o i l f lr WI V K A*..*. 4 Th l i m ! * *„a»#vr #•»* *i Th* * I e l I 4 l i n t ll Oft A f M U T OH I b f * #>/■,«..«»: e ; n n rl » * !* |l < V.*» r t i l l t l / * f u t ti . l l * a r t t t - 1 -I Ie . n i l * i f f / w - » f n r n e ft *, r * l.#,/<*,. f ie , Il'iK ) th* • * f l|* * l ' i n * T WI ) t a t i l . t m *1 T I A * i n * b i a i i m » n m * t i n ar-tve; ■ / Cwt i’l e f **■ .a i>* »•■* TI i . i » * i * n**i *T l f * a- ■*-•* I f’ un <•■ r «•*■* h u n - l r e - l a H u m p i»* T 'f» f A , 1 f t f t r f t f i M i h ' . f t , - v h e / a *nA f l u. *-* "‘e * - l pi * ' TATS h e l p .I *..■• *# ' t- i i - 1 1 '■ * ll (■".(»/ . 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I II - in M o l d * J-.lll* Amt T Al ti AM I r ..I. a 1 I MI I R M i M I A T T IIT I W ill' I* All Ti. a n t i ARUM. *# ), M ) i * < l Ut ti Ii dr) «t .‘it i s tyf I t <«» r a h t ot* i t «j «t « • ! » ai Al a m A S Al V* I* M H M I B l I Ii Itll . i n u i t (Alf 11 ail III I I r u t l A p l i t a l a lh* 111A ll f . p i f i p i n * *»»* I t \ j l . G M t i n M I OM I M IV 4 ?»f fh * it•**i*t n i t n i fi i nu t IM'’# m ' t i t TV iii iH'i-f.t i m rn*?n m v l 0 v t-nS* h o r n sa* rn- st I > >«i t h r «tfo f «*f ft ft ti m # rr* t»U'» < I i # t # I . l h # I Hr M Ip t»m r »Mf ih» h i i l l M t i sm r f *»ml t m m m i * p h y » | h i # 0 # »* »r* WlU«. l f * I W f T i HT I ? #«!' 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A » a i In t i l l Ii * • a l a I t 1*1 A IT WK O f S u p e r b n o a t a t a b r u t . a t AT Af t e p o n l n . fi r m a Jo V i R ' i a i i t P A R I S b l M a n t i . * t v .h o l a m ' u - a i k * IT s t * n e t a f T n u n I t AS I I AATI N I O T IAN I I Ms t o h o Hi t a n d t h e s t e p s a l g i A . e f u t t h e t h i s e s . t o n g I AA a n i i w a l h s i t Ne t I P s ' a f T V M I MU AN I . ‘a e t e *« l o » » u i i n . N A H I M , I t t M h t m s g w t l t t e a t , I I H I I . e n t u i * *U«i< a s i t i a t i u s m i ' . M In I u h af ' ( t i M a t a e t VA * I T ' « P u b a i s * a e »> I M I! I l l * ATHN I (t AM I ft I s i I N I a t s t } rn I Iv I H I M i l Ne! M I A ( I N ( , T U N a MI ( Iv s n I N S I a f a i l l A* A I H t H I M ( . H O M Na I tin rn N I MXI MV P M IN I x a f * s V a t e i . i t f t s I It e g ( h e a * M e r ' ft.' p l , x»( « | M I A ll I ' I* n a * r n i t Mi XT! a v h. . . V a,tv # | SA LE S T A R T S Promptly at 8:30 a m. M O N D A Y ! 3 C O N V E N I E N T L Y LO CAT ED STORES 109 East 21 st St. GR 8-8715 2501 GUADALUPE GR 6-6316 2242 GUADALUPE GR 7-6141 NOT AT NO. 4 STORE P A R K I N G LOTS AT E A C H STORE 79 T W E N T IE T H C E N T I RY M E N T A L R Y G H NE by M S h o re . S tim u la tin g , e d b y I? n o te d t e x v a r i a n t s , g ie n e in P u b . a t $k (Hi i n f o r m a tiv e a rtic le * a u t h o r i t i e s —p s y c h o s o m a tic m e d ic in e , th e R o r s c h a c h m e th o d , m e n ta l h y ­ th e A r m s , e tc U lm S a le — l l 9* i n d u s t r y , M T H E G E O G R A P H Y C a s tr o . C o g e n t, o f m a n p o p u la tio n . p o r ta n t P u b , s t a r v a t i o n o n s t $5.66 f i r H I N G E R s e a r c h in g a n a ly s is o i tw o - th ird s of B r i ll ia n t ly - w r itte n , t im e ly bv .! de th e e ffe c t* th e w o r ld ’* i m ­ a n d S a le — I i.4 9 6 !. N IN K O r c h a r d . U n c le V a n y a . T h e S e a G u ll, m a s t e r p i e c e s o f P L A T S BY C H E K H O V . T h e C h e r ry s ix o t h e r t h e m o d e r n t h e a t r e . S p e c ia l—I I M 92. N IN E P L A T S BV f a t h e r of th e w o rk * of c lu d e * An E n e m y o f P e e r G y n t, H e d d a C a b l e r a n d o th e r s IB S E N . T h e th e m o d e r n d r a m a . be st-k n o w n In ­ th e P e o p le A D o ll's H o u s e , S p e c ia l—9t 9$ ie G : . .n ' te r m * to to t r a d " tim e s in s id e a c tin g l a y m a n . a t $4.25 a t $5.00 a t $.1,15 a t $10.Oft to b a ll e t, f r o m e a r l ie s t r e v e la tio n s of la w o f f ic e r a n d I n d iv id u a lly a n d e x p la i n e d —d r a m a to k ill H itle r , etc A u th o r ita tiv e , d e ta ile d s tr a n g e r - th a n - f ie f io n p lo t 699 th e p r e s e n t th in k a n d a c t a s w e d o , T H E A T R E D IC T IO N A R Y , bv W t e c h n i c a l , c o llo q u ia , a n d S a te —9.1 9* th e fo re ig n a n d d o m e s tic m a k e * a* w e ll a s a of B o d y D e s ig n . t a T h o u s a n d * of s u c c in c tly s ta g in g , K ale— *2 9* P u b p a g e * BC T H E ADN P A P I N M E M O IR S O v e r of s e n s a t io n a l th e N a i l w a r m a c h in e a n d it* c a m p a i g n s . S p ie s a n d s e c r e t a g e n ts , th e , e tc . H is to r y a t its m o s t f a s c i n a t i n g —d o n ’t m ix* t h i s ’ P u b . a t $ ti,5# S a le — l l 49 BS. S o c ia l P s y c h o lo g y — E M E R G E N T H IM A N NA T I R E . by AV. C o u tu . S tim u la tin g a n a ly te s of w h y w e in g ro u p s — f a c t s o n p e r s o n a l it y , m o tiv a tio n , e tc . P u b . * a le —$1 9$ 86 AN O U T L I N E O F M T E N T H IC C R IM IN O L O G Y , by N. M o rla n d . T h e b e s t i n tr o d u c tio n to th e s u b je c t fo r b o th S a le — IS 9$ P u b . *7 H i i t o r r of O b s te tr ic * — TH E E T I RN AL T A E B y H a r v e y G r a h a m PR gf a c c o u n t Iliu * . P u b BB At T O 1955. C o m p le te s p e c if ic a tio n s of a1! le a d in g D s c i n a t i n g .WO p h o to s P u b . a t 17 5# 89 P R A C T IC A L T IS M . B y M. R u b in . t r o s t a t i c s , d i a g r a m s . 356 p a g e s . P u b . a l $7.Mf 90. I n tr o d u c tio n b y A. S ilc o c k . 51 of a ll C h in e s e p e rio d . P u b 9! M IL IT A R Y A N A V A L D IC T IO N A R Y . t e r m s d e f in e d , on g u id e d m is s ile s , a t *6.00 P u b . 92 A m e r i c a * G r e a t e s t S c ie n tis t— JO S IA H AA ll I ARD life a n d w o r k of G IR B S , b y L . P . W h e e le r. T h e o n e of th e p o s t C iv il W a r p e rio d G ib b s a d v a n c e d c o n c e p t* o f p h y s ic * a n d th e t w e n tie th c e n tu r y , P u b , 93. E m it L u d w ig 's S to ry of J e * u * — TH E. SON O E M A N . A b r il li a n t i n te r p r e t a t i o n b y a m a s t e r of b i o g r a p h y W ith R e m b r a n d t d r a w in g * . P u b . S a le — I t 9* lo C H IN E S E ART A N D H I S T O R Y , t h is s tu d y c r a f t s —e a c h p h a s e a n d E L E C T R IC IT Y A N D M A G N E ­ e le c ­ 2B2 7 ."OO l a t e s t u n c la s s if ie d d a ta a n d u s e of a n d m a g n e t is m . th e m a j o r c r e a t i v e m in d s o f r a d a r , e u S a le — * 1 9 * illu s tr a tio n * e n h a n c e i ll u s t r a te d H ig to ry a to m i c w e a p o n * , p h o t o e l e c tr ic i ty t r a n s f o r m e d t h a t h a v e S a le —$1 49 S a le — I! 9* S a le —I i 98 S a le — $3 M c h e m i s tr y in c lu d in g a t $5.06 .Science a t $4 OO a t $3 50 s in c e a r t s a n d b y M . F . K 94. T H E A R T O E E A T IN G , in o n e v o lu m e ! F i s h e r . F iv e c o o k e ry c la s s ic s 400 c h o ic e to d e s s e r t* , b e a n s to c r e p e s g u s e tte . A m e r i c a n , C h in e s e , F r e n c h a n d G e r m a n d i s h e s , e tc , 750-pp P u b . r e c i p e s — e n tr e e s ... S a le — $5.9* a t $ * 0 0 a t a l g ift Illu s . 93.0# $7.50 l u x u r y . s u t u r e th e g r e a t m o d e r n b y M O. W h itto n t e x t b y C, N e w s w a n g e r . 60 95. D IC T IO N A R Y O E A M E R IC A N M A N D IS , e d . b y D K in . 597 p a g e s o f w is d o m a n d w it— B e n F r a n k ­ lin . M a rk T w a i n . J o h n D e w e y , t h o u s a n d s o f o t h e r s . S a le — $2 9* P u b t r . b y I.. G . 96 D a n te s T H E D IV IN E C O M E D Y , W h ite . f u ll-p a g # 69 e d itio n w ith 8 ’ ” x l 0 l V ’ P o r e e n g r a v i n g s , A m a g n i f ic e n t v o lu m e . P u b . a t $6.5# S a le — *3 91 97. B e r tr a n d R u s s e l l « D IC T IO N A R Y O E M IN D , t h a n 1.000 d e f i n i ­ M A T T E R A N D M O R A L S . M o re s c ie n c e , tio n * r e lig io n , a n d o p in io n s o n p o litic s , t h in k ­ h is to r y a n d p h ilo s o p h y b y e r A l p h a b e ti c a l l y - a r r a n g e d . S a le — $1 98 P u b 98, K IR S T K IR S T L A D I E S : T h e Aglee* of O u r E Jarly P r e s i d e n t* , I n t i m a t e , a n e c d o te -f ille d m u d ie * o f M a r th a W a s h in g to n , R a ­ c h e l J a c k s o n . M a ry L in c o ln , e t a1. H ale— $1 98 Pub. at $5.00 d r a w in g s b y K ie h l A C h r i s t ia n 99 AA 1ISH LA N O s u p e r b N ( w s w a n g e r . d r a w in g s th is c o lo r f u l p e o ­ th e e s s e n c e o f p le — t h e i r r e l i g io n , q u a in t s p e e c h a n d d r e s s , f a r m ­ in g , s c h o o lin g , e tc . P u b . a t $5.00 100 P E N N IN G , c d . b y R A. L y m a n . F r o m s c r ip tio n m a c i s t s , l e a c h e r s , s tu d e n ts . P u b . a t $6 5# N o w —$! 9 ) in t. n o w T O R E A D H IS T O R Y , b y A R o b e r ts o n H o w h is t o r y s e c u l a r a n d p r e s e n t . P u b . a l $3 75 T R A S t I'.-IL L I NYR A H O N — S p e c ia l C h r i s t m a s IO. 1955. T h e w o r ld -f a m o u s T r e n c h a r t a n n u a l! Iv su e tip p e d u t — f u ll-c o lo r p l a t e s , 19 S c o r e s of b r il li a n t 1 G 4 « "* !4 ". e tc , R e m b r a n d t , M e m lin g , M a r c h a n d , P u b . a l 93 *9 S a le — $ I 49 i n . W M T h a c k e r a y ’s T H E E N G L IS H H I A H I R . i s i s . B r i ll ia n t tim e s o f S w if t, P o p e , H o g a r th , S t e r n e , o t h e r s —d e lu x e e d . P u b . a l 12.65 I n — E A R T H S G R E E N 104 M A N TLE!, c o m p r e ­ h e n s iv e a c c o u n t o f th e p l a n t c o v e r in g o f t h e e a r t h , i ts e v o lu tio n , s t r u c t u r e a n d u s e f a s c i­ n a ti n g . b a s ic b o o k a l $3.75 P u b . P H A R.Af A C E ! T IC A L CO M P O I N D IN G A DIN- t h e p r e ­ f o r p h a r ­ S a le — l l 4$ AA T H E ADAT N I I R T S O E A B A L I E T ( Kl TH to p r ic i n g —t h e s t a n d a r d w o r k i t m a d e a n d J u d g e d - a g u id e b y S id n e y M a n g h a m . C l e a r , T h e W o rld W e L i t e r e c r e a ti o n of to m a n . A N e w — $1.98 S a le — I ! 98 liv e * a n d r e lig io n s lh * a n d S a te —l l e v e n ts p a s t Illu s t h e t h e o f to t h a n f a m o u s t h r o u g h S h e U e ? , M o r a r t, 48 U lus a l $5 25 t h e e y e s of t r a v e l l e r s M a r k T w a in , H a w th o r n e , by R . B u c k le F a s c in a t in g p a n o r a m a of t h e d a n c e w o r ld , w ith p e n p o r t r a i t s of B a l a n c h i n e . F o n te y n , e tc P u b . S a le — t i 98 106 T H E G O L D E N A G E O E K R A A K !.. K i l te d b y H e i r s B. M o rr is o n . E u r o p e ’* h is t o r ic crU e* a n d p . c t a r e s q u # b y w a y s , a s s e e n 80 m i r e D ic k e n s , B y r o n . C he p m , a n d m a n y o t h e r s P u b . S a te —~$I M 187 T H E R O M A N T IC ATW H R L ! A M A N S , by R T a l la n t . C o lo r fu l •R d A n t o in e 's , e tc P u b . 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K l A I A l l V I A i l l i t s V M I I V I I OIC A I I O N S i TMI h ia ta l > s P i t h e > ' s A t l i a« R u b , c a g e s i d iiliiat to P e a t y , a s I d . w i t h m i l l s til IT Od t h e a l t e K I P VAN VT IN tv I I J u s . o h J e f f r r a . m A v iv id in t h e . a n l> . . o l e s . p k v s , e t . U lus P u t . a t t i A* I H I MIR I I t o l d bv t h e e v p to r e r * (iv A M e i a n s K . u i r y e w t l n p s a A r . a u n t s of ( . S i l t i n g , I a m o n * voy a g e s of d i s r o v e i v . ( ro m t h e m IM m a p s N a t e - f t A* of t h e A m e n . s t a t * , a ' a g e a im - fig u re * l l * m a Air tm h c e n l u r v a n e of b> t h * A utu m n al a p i o t m r a t t on o f R a l e — l f A* IN TH I s M O N N A N H A N SW I M N . A K a r i a k a t O n e v o lu m e e a u I v a le n t l i b r a ! ' o f c o m a t d a n c e * a n d c o n i t h * to o n q u e a t I o n a a n d a n s w e r s a t s o i t 't a m th e V m . " . s n a n d H S A VV bv Rev oi a n PMM l o n e ti m l a r t a i H id "I i si .m e a t t * « b . i t P W I ' l l I HI N At t V O I t i H u m * K a a r r P H I I (Vn O P H A t r i m , b l e a b e n th o u g h t v ir a l tv a n d a u t h o r it .v I ( a aly fu ll l a . * , a c h i . ,.l P u b in fo r m a l Iou a l TA UC bv s a t e — Ti H l i n g " r d a n d a n t r i n a f r ta ltn a d . w ith AAU R I ! A r d I H M H O H A I " It R 11 I s l ! N e v m s U l t A rn* h e r s d e s r f l h # A l W e r t r a * d r v e t i ' p n i e i v l , A h e big v a m I l l s N*la—• ? A* An T f i i l k W IT W N ate by P . 11 9$ I,. P H K t HIN AHA PSA I H O I HUA it tn t a n N e w , at! in c lu s iv e > IV IMI «( r e f e r e n c e w a rk V VV I N I A P A I N T ! R N A N D H O W t* lllw s tr a lle n * , v t Av .vt s a n , ic tv. vt- k tv . VIV I t P lw le* h i F i l l AT a g n W in n il.' i ll u s t r a te d al s tu d io s ?<’ th e in. Io d in # B o u c h e . Mv'Kev b a le I t 9* I M I ! 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HK I ION ARA', ed t e r m * u* ed th e i n d u i l r i a l a r t s . m e - . h a r t * , ta b l e * , d i n a r ., in S a le — 12.91 I I H O P I AN H IS T O R V . b y Indi*- a n d f ig u re * B a r n e s by H a r r y th e w o r ld ’* g r e a t I- S a l e — I t »* LAW hi t h e s . i e n . e u t S e a g le AliK orlilng h ts t o r v A m e ric a n b e g in n in g s a t IS M P u b . to I n e l f l r i r o e y . bv W illia m R o m a n a n d A ngia* Im la y '* p r o b le m * . S a l e — t i TS n i s i HI M O H F H o A I T h e c r e a m of m o d e r n B r itis h h u m o r I t i l l AA C o le o v e r UM) s e le c tio n * , a ll of " N e w P u t. l u r k e r * ’ c a lib e r S a le —Ai 9* a t AS.MI P l VI l l cd by P a r e th o u g h t I n c lu d e d r e c o r d e d r e n o w n e d IT IIIO N O P H A T R I AM RA HK th e w h o le p rn d lg io u a t.Jtno p a g e * c a v e r in * p h ilo s o p h ic a l b y l l t h e w h ole a n d t h in k e r s th e th e T .rc e k a n d H o m a n p e r io d s s s w e ll a s c h u r c h f a ­ lin e o f m o d e r n It ct! a . s s a n e e to th e s c i e n ­ I a c h e n tr y b e g in s w ith a b io g r a p h ic a l th e list m g h is m a j o r w a r k * a n d s ta t e m erit of h ts th e h i s t o r y of p h il­ KH R u n e s N e a t Iv of s p a n w r itin g o f th e o u t s t a n d in g H e b re w th e r * a n d p h i lo s o p h e rs f r o m th e tif ic e t a s k e tc h p h ilo s o p h e r * I m h id in g p la c e a n d os.. phv P u b life , a c o n c is e , s ig n i f ic a n t e v e n t . .i r e f u l In i m p o r ta n c e N ate— >3.9} s c h o la r I , a t H S HO c o v e rin g t h e in 7!, T i l l B A T H R O O M R I M U R W ith in tro - d u c tio n b y K a r l W ilson. A s p a r k l in g c o lle c tio n of s to r i e s , p o e m s a n d s k e tc h e s b y th e g r e a t h u m o ro u s P a r k e r , w i d e r * . a n d m a n y B e m e lm a n * . M e n c k e n , O g d e n N a s h o t h e r s . H ila r io u s P o r e lm a n , D o r o th y i ll u s t r a ti o n s . B e n r h le y , a n S p e c ia l—*1 AS 72 T h e H e a r t of II H U N R Y . b y I). K r a m e r . H is fo r y o u th . I m p r is o n m e n t, p r o lific N .Y . y e a r s , a n d lo v e d th e S a le —J! Alt P u t. t im e - th e s to r y of JU OO t h e w o m a n h e fir s t al 71 N lo tm . K u r n a r e v A h i A R T H , b y J . H . P i e r c e . T h e o f h o m e h e a ti n g d e v ic e s t h r o u g h o f e n te r ta i n in g a n e c d o te s a n d 145 d e lig h tf u l t r a t i o n s of r a r e a n d p o p u la r P u b . a t I i r r p l a r e s — M R K O N T H E r o m a n t i c s to r y fu ll a g e s , t h e I llu s ­ t y p e s t h e w o r ld o v e r . S a le —$1.99 t t . i O f o r a b e t t e r u n d e r s t a n d in g of 74 H A N D B O O K OK M T K R A R Y K IR V IN p e n s a b le a n d m o d e r n h e li c a ll y - a r r a n g e d t e r m s r e l a t e d i ll u s t r a te d w ith a p t q u o ta tio n * . B y P u b , a t I n d is ­ l it e r a t u r e a lp h a c r i t i c i s m —o v e r b a s ic e x p la in in g lo f ic tio n , p o e tr y , d r a m a , e t c . , a n d lf Y e lla n d . h a te — $1.9$ 600 t h e lit e r a r y a r t i c l e s $3.56 75. TU T O R lfilN M ATK le a d in g 5*9 p la te s . P u b a t $4,3# a n th r o p o l o g is t 's AR T. b y G e n e W e ltfis h A a c c o u n t. c o m p r e h e n s i v e S a t e — $1 ti* f ' a n e i a e D i r t i n n a r e by 76 P . G . W ood ct e d b e t i c a ll y - a r r a n g e d e n t r u e v e n ts , a t t , s c ie n c e , et IS TNI P u b . a t T h o u s a n d s »( A N O I N T H I S T O R Y . 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