W e a th e r: C lo u d y and W arm er High 65, Low 45 The Da® t T exan 4First C o l l e g e D a i l y in t h e S o u t h ’ Latest News On C oaching Situation Page 2 VO L. 56 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER l l , 1956 Six Pages T oday NO. 83 Choral Groups To Sing Carols On December 16 Christmas Music W ill Be Presented O n MB Terrace r n sity C hristm as Carol program , fea turing three University c h o r a l groups, will be presented Sunday a t 6 p.m. on the Main Building Ter­ race. Beginning the program will be a concert of C hristm as music by Dr. E. William Doty, organist. Charles the H unter playing chimes will be next. carols on The G irls’ Glee Club, the A Cap­ pella Choir, and the University Chorus, under the direction of Paul Engelstad, will each sing one num ­ ber. These will be “ Fum , Fum , F um ,” Jubile,’’ and “ In Dulci “ Hallelujah Chorus.” “ O Holy Night” will he sung by Josephine Antoine. Eleanor Page will be accom panist. The H arp Ensemble, composed of Kay Dyche, Janis Grumbles, Pa- j tricia Wentworth, and Linda Potts Yeager, will partiriate in the pro- gram . Joel Andrews is director of the ensemble. Egyptian Guerrillas Hit British Troops PORT SAID, E gypt UP)— Egyptian hostility tow ard with- by a rustle of rooftop activity th a t could be heard even over nmelarn111 f r t draw ing B ritish and French troops crystallized Monday in a the noise of their jeep engines—halted quickly for combat guerrilla a tta c k from am bush on a British patrol in Port against a rain of grenades and machine gun bullets. Said. B ut C airo promised the UN police com m ander it won’t happen again. One soldier was wounded slightly by a grenade frag m e n t The badge of St. A ndrew on his khaki tam o’shanter deflect- Members of the eight-m an Royal Scots patrol-forew arned ed it and shielded him from more serious injury. UN M ay Send Dog to Moscow The British W hether B ritish return fire struck any of the Egyptian attackers was not determined. th* area seven Egyptian* md accused Egypt In an urgent protest to the UN force of violating the cease-fire. cordoned off arrested \Lij. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, Ca­ nadian com m ander of the police, hastened here from Cairo and said he had assurance from Egypt th a t UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. UR — I vention in that country, and recog- India urged Monday that Secretary ninon of the rights of i Tenet a1 i n g Ham m arskjold be garian people. sent to Moscow if necessary by the UN Assembly for direct negotia- to Moscow since becoming secre- allegedly lions with the Sov let Union on with- tary general in 15)53 and was ac- rebellion. He repeated tho Soviet..* draw al of Soviet forces from Hun- corded a plush welcome. He has contention that gary. Ham m arskjold has m ade one trip j United States be condemned for p rer, h task force • ’ ' and Wing the Sov iet forces C mdr. AU Sabry had informad him they had no knowledge of a previ- puppet! under the Warsaw Pact and a t the ous attem pt to smuggle explosive* Sov iet Deputy Foreign M inister there would he no further attacks. the Hun- Vj&ssily V. Kuznetsov answered Bums told Lt, Gen. Hugh Stock­ the with a demand the we::, com m ander of the British- Lodge with a demand that M ai Gen V. K. Krishna Menon, India's permission of Moscow's in Hungary by agreem ent been unable, however, to obtain were the H ungarian Ha nim Amel inciting , / u ' th a t that V. ‘ roving Cabinet m inister, startled government in B udapest to go to j invitation of the Hungarian govern- the UN Assembly with his proposal j the Hungarian capital on D ecem -! ment. her 16 to initiate UN relief work there was some speculation and whether let the R ussians would him return to Moscow on a mission connected with the Hungarian case. sem bly resolution calling on gary to adm it observers by last Decem ber 7 was an “ ultim atum ” which no s#tf-respecting govern­ m ent would accept.. SpeaklnK angrily, he said an As-, u n b o u n d Hun_ gateway and Others participating are Dr. E d­ mund Heinsohn, University Meth­ odist Church, who will deliver the invocation; Dr. Logan Wilson, p r e s - 1 ident of the University, who will : give C hristm as greetings; Lloyd Hayes. Students’ Association presi- as I S Chief Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. and other delegates de­ dent, who will read the Christm as manded the Assembly condemn the story; and Miss Lora Lee Peder­ Soviet Union for what Lodge called son, chairm an of the faculty com­ its “ brutalities” against the Hun­ m ittee on religious life, who will garian people. give the benediction. Students Tardy As Tower C lo c k Has M o n d a y Blues Students relying on the Tower clock for correct tim e were in trouble when they reached their R o’clock classes Monday m orn­ clocks hands pro­ ing. The claim ed the tim e 7 :45 even after that class was dismissed, and by noon they had only reached 9. Lodge com pared Soviet actions [ in Hungary to those of Adolf H itler and Nazi G erm any in World W ar H. Menon refused to go along with 1 Lodge and a 17-country resolution j proposing the condemnation of tile Soviet Union, but he accepted other sections of the proposal demanding the w ithdrawal of the Soviet troops from Hungary and a halt on Mos­ cow's intervention in Hungary. In counterproposals, M e n o n called on H am m arskjold to open talks at the UN with representa­ tives of H ungary and the Soviet Union on the Hungarian case. Ii these do not bring action. Menon UT Drinking To Be Studied in and am m unition to the Egyptian this Sue, Canal that such activity was contrary to Egyptian govern­ ment policy. is Airier the Egyptian a rm y ’* chief of staff. Sabry is President Nasser’s foreign affairs adviser. “ They also said there would ba no repetition or other incidents to disturb peaceful conditions during the w ithdraw al,” Bums said. Stock­ well said he. accepted the assu r­ ances as satisfactory. entirely However, he added that he would change tactics slightly to strength­ en patrols. Bums flew back to Cairo la te r. He is establishing UN m ilitary headquarters Wednesday a t E l Qantara, som e 30 miles south of Port Said. The am bush was not the only incident of the day. British-French authorities de­ clared the Egyptians had fu rth er violated the cease-fire by sending a party of four men behind the UN buffer zone on the Suez Canal in the area of FT Cap. 24 m iles south of P o rt Said. The Egyptians, a sn\ ill boat, were arrested by a British patrol. They described themselves as civilians in search of fresh w ater. British officer* said, however, it w'as established definitely th at they were soldiers. landed by BEAUTY INTERNATIO NAL Sri Detari Socblakto Maria Arora Ramirez, dark­ haired, derk eyed beauties from Indonesia and find Ch^Mmas :n Am erica sqmewhat Mexico, different from what it is back home. But Sri, is many miles away, assures her whose home is not entirely Texas friends th at the holiday d ifferent there since she is one of the few Chris­ tians in Indonesia, and, of course, her family has a Cfmstmas tree. P h o to by Jo h n L Steel Prelims Begin For Speakers Internationals To Have Ball Friday Night The forthcoming Christmas dance < judging of P relim inary The second and third place win- eontestants in the Ed Gossett O ra -1 ners will receive $75 and $50, re­ tori cal Contest will be at 2:30 p.m. spectively. Tuesday In Speech Building 201. honoring foreign students and spon­ sored by the Union Dance Com -1 m ittee will begin a t 8:30 p.m. Fri-j tpeech m ay not exceed I day ta the Main Ballroom of Texas Union. the 23 Kach A typew ritten copy of each ora- j 1,200 words and m ust be original. Lion m ust he delivered to Speech There is no tim e lim it, but each 1 oration will last a p p r o x i m a t e l y ten building 105 not later than noon. Contestants who Will speak are minutes, depending upon the Dean Davis, Roy Mouer, W alter ; livery. Boyd, M artha Valliant. W. Carl I Not more than eight contestants Touch, Robert H ardgrave, M eyer will be selected for the finals in Witt, Paul Carroll, David Reagan, Townes Hall Auditorium, Decem- P atrick Barlow, Broadus Spivey. J o h n R ader, ber 1 8 , at 7;3Q p.m . Also Cam eron Hightower, Geor­ gina Swarz, Keith Power, L arry Ledlow, M arvin Lewis, John S. Bishop, Andre Bacon, Garfield Clark, Marion Schmal, Bill Wright, and Edw ard S. Marquez. The contestants will speak in that order. The w inner of the contest will re­ ceive $100 and will represent the University at the Missouri Valley Forensic League in April a t K ansas State College. Teachers-to-be to M eet Student teachers, elem entary and secondary, who wish to apply for student teaching, should attend one White of torium this week. They are set for I p.m. W ednesday and 4 p.m. Thursday. the meetings Those not able to attend a meet­ ing are urged to see Charles H. Dent at Sutton 214 F riday from 2 to 4 p.m. Vienna Girl Writes O f Russian Cruelty Studies of alcoholic consumption stitution with the purpose of fight- ing alcoholic beverages on the edu­ level. The organization cational places books on alcohol in school U niversity workers were busily J proposed that Ham m arskjold con- Union, Mrs. Claude DeVan Watts, j libraries, furnishes films to schools, stripping the works to find the (sider going to Moscow for talks WCTU state president, said Mon- and m akes scientific studies. The trouble Monday afternoon, and WCTU also recommends legislation in its fight against alcohol con­ they hoped to have the big time­ sumption. piece on the job again soon. am ong University students will he undertaken the Texas soon by W omen’s Christian Temperance designed to bring about the with- day. drawal of foreign troops from Hun- Churches in the University area gary, a cessation of >ovipf intf r‘ called attention to th# consumption | of alcoholic beverages by .students, Mrs. Watts said. foreign Four girls from Hungary Threatened By New Outbreaks lands will be presented. They a re Silvia de- Cuschnir, a graduate student from Buenos Aires; Sri D etari Socbjakto, a graduate student from Indonesia; M aria Aurora Ram irez, a junior accounting m ajor from Laredo who I BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Dec. IO , em inent, hacked by overwhelming will represent South Am erica; and i ^ —The Hungarian countryside was ; m ilitary and police power, threat- ened new bloodshed if the workers reported Monday night to be grip­ Anne-Mefte Ronholt, a sophomore struck. ped by a new outburst of fighting. I language m ajor from Copenhagen, Reports reaching Belgrade said ; Denmark. Budapest w’as encircled by an iron ring of Russian arm or and guns. Vienna reported Monday night all com munications w ith Budapest the again were cut. Hours after The Budapest Central W orkers deadline the Budapest radio m ade floor show by foreign and Am erican students will be one of the feature attractions with John as m aster of ceremonies. Council defiantly stood by its call no mention of the strike. A Mrs. Watts was authorized last week by the WCTU state conven­ to appoint a com m ittee of tion “ qualified women to confer and ro-operate with the University in ascertaining facts and devising con­ ditions’’ on the problem. The committee, chaired by Mrs. H. A. Butler of Austin, is to make its first report in a “week or IO re­ d ay s.” After ports, a plan of action will be de­ cided on, the state president said. The WCTU is an educational in- the comm ittee Aabel Will Speak To Pharmacists Col, Bernard Aabel, chief of the Army Medical Service Corps, will speak to pharmacy students Tues­ day a t I p.m. in Batts Auditorium on career opportunities for them in the Army Medical Service. in B atts Audi-1 Guests w ill dance combo, Tom Arnhold directing. to a student I for a nationwide 48-hour general I strike against the government of Decorations will carry an inter-! Janos H adar Monday. Workers in ; a t national them e. The tables, how­ ever, will be adorned with red and white checked table cloths and drip-bottle candles in French Quar­ te r Style. Another m assacre, the killing of J 80 unarm ed civilian dem onstrators m jning towrn of Salgotarjan in northern Hungary by Hungarian 1 police, heightened the tension. The story of the Salgotarjan I m assacre w as brought to Budapest ; by a three m an m iners’ delegation whirh cam e to report to the Central Workers Council. Cactus Nominees Due Wednesday The deadline for nominating Out­ standing Students and Goodfellows for the Cactus has been set for 5 p.m. Wednesday, according to John Stuart, editor. An advertisem ent in the Daily Texan, Friday, the deadline as being th at same day was in error, said Stuart, An official version of the inci­ dent, contained in a leaflet signed by the Salgotarjan Communist par- ty and brought to Budapest by the -^n*v !)fMSOn or organization may three m iners, claimed provocateurs nominate one or m ore persons. threw grenades a t police, and the fo rm s to do this m ay be picked miners council harbored fascist ele- UP j n Journalism Building 107 ments. announcing Each nomination is to be listed on a separate form, giving qualifi­ cations, activities, and honors. several big factories said they in­ tended to obey the call. The Moscow-imposed H adar gov- UT D riv e r H its H o m e r G arrison on the Associated Press I A m otorist smacked into a fire hydrant here Sunday and then I punched the mouth of a curious resident who come out to see what happened. The driver didn’t know he had just poked at the state’s No. I policeman — Col. Homer Garrison Jr., public safety director. Carri-1 son, who lost a dental plate in the melee, the driver and { subdued Canadian Plane Down With 62 The speaker holds a bachelor of science degree in pharm acy from the University of Minnesota and is VANCOUVER, B. C. ill--A crip- a m em ber of the American Phar- pled Trans-Canada airliner carry - m aceutical Association. He is a Jng g2 persons, a t least eight of m em ber of I Nil r>elta C hi national them Americans, wa* down Mon- is day jn British Columbia's forbid- pharm aceutical fraternity, and associated with the M ilitary Sur­ ding Chillawack Mountain area. geons. V eterans M a y Receive Decem ber Checks Early Late in the day. Royal Canadian Air Force Squadron Leader G. L. Sheahan ordered planes to concen­ trate in the vicinity of Silver Tip Mountain, near Hope, B.C. T hree in of reports have been Veterans who are in school under) flashes sighted in the area Sunday the Korean GI Bill are expected night after the transport presum - to receive their monthly GI allow -! ably w'ent down. anre before the Christmas holidays I The North S tar vanished during begin. Dr. George T. McMahan, ^violent storm shortly after taking m anager of the Veterans A dm ini-! off from Vancouver at 6 p.m. Sun- stration Center in Waco, said Mon- day on a flight to Calgary and east- day. em Canadian cities. turned “ You don t know the Russians. th at Thank God every day for fact.” This was a statem ent in a letter from a girl in Vienna dated Nov­ em ber I, 1956, to P a t P arks, a junior geology student who toured Europe with her family this sum ­ mer. despair.” The letter also included a brief history of the country beginning when Austria and Hungary were united. For m any years the two countries were a bastion against conquering arm ies from the East. “ England, G erm any, and other countries helped us to fight, and so it was always possible to keep our freedom ,” the girl wrote, they are “I know' you dpn’t believe m any of the things you hear about the Russians,” the letter said, “ but we true. in Austria know like They a re like children and animals. 'They will laugh with you, and in the next moment they will kill you. lf you read bad things in the newspapers or if you hear about cruel things over the wire- Through H o lid a y Season less, think always it is only a tiny part of the real fact.” In those days Hungary was a rich country. After World War II m any children w'ere sent to Hun- UT Libraries to Close The girl went on to describe con­ ditions in Hungary', her home be ing aboui 74 mile-; from Budapest, Since the Russians occupied H un- ca ry, it has been one of the poorest dividual units countries in the world, she w r o t e . * ‘I ™ * f “ S’ Now IO y ears later, there is nothing I Re* ^ r The University Library and com­ ponent parts will close at 5 p.m. the Friday, D ecem ber 21, Christmas Holidays for , dates and tim es posted a t the in­ for except . - ' ‘brar? hours «ill re- gary to recover. Then the Russians cam e. “ E v riy minute we are all hoping T o t._ and E ast Gen-1 Monday night the *cxan the UN will really help,” she c o n -lcau 0(j police who changed the driv- ciuded. “ But for myself, I have er Wlth driving while drunk. not much hope. Poland, Czechoslo- vakia, Rumania, many are occupied too. They all want freedom. but it would be a defeat to -Russia if they leave Hun­ gary. A third w ar between East j and West is only a question of I tim e.” tied the motorist as a 20-yoar-old student in the University’s College of‘A its and Sciences. . . , . „ ion Major to Explain WAC Advantages ' L , . M * L “ Iafy , . n .1?Ar, .. McDonald. Vt AC Officer Procurem ent Officer at Fourth Army H eadquarters, Fort Sam Houston, will visit the cam pus December 12-13 to explain the ad­ vantages of an executive career as an officer in the Women’s Army Corps. P at said her Austrian corres­ pondent is an architecture student about 25 years old. “ She is very well educated,” she said. “ Her letters have been very deep and very interesting, but I haven’t actually met her. It vvas through her fiance, Gunther, that we becam e pen pals.” Some students will have as many Gunther accompanied the Parks as two finaP exam s on the same fam ily on a three-weeks tour of, . Austria. He and Pat began to e x - ! * ^ •"« “ * » " « * “ » hypothetical situation when two finals air* sched­ change their uled for the same hour on the same countries, and a t the end of the day. tour he asked P at if she would be interested letters with him and his fiancee. information about in exchanging , . _ , , . , She will describe Exam Conflicts? Here's Your Clue the career fields available and the qualifica­ tions necessary for a commission. interview* m ay be ar- Personal Tf you have an e x a m conflict, you ranged by contacting ihe Student should take your troubles to ‘the ^Employment Bureau, Pearce Hall R egistrar’s Office and consult an assistant registrar. Mat. McDonald, a native of Ty­ ler, h a s a bachelor of arts degree from Ram Institute and a law de­ gree from the University of Texas Law School. * Books an d Glasses Lost Hoyt Williams, assistant regis­ tra r, said the final exam schedule is arranged so that two quizzes at the sam e tim e just doesn’t happen. “ According to our past experi- two notebooks from m anagem ent courses and a pair of glasses were lost on the Intram ural Field at noon. Tuesday, encc. this is very rare and it a!- Anyone finding the missing articles is asked to contact Wally Pistor at most never happens,” said. Two books and Mr. Williams ” ' GR 74446. f r X t r Uvel'aUy ***** “One day this suppressed popu-1 f h a r^ h^ ° ^ s Reserve^Roading Room will Z n n a rv lation began to fight, to fight with : December 21, to Thursday, January the hope that the UN will help. O fte n thev have no arm s and with naked hands against the tanks- It is a fight of 4 checked at the individual units. a t 9 a m - Schedules for libraries remaining running open during the holidays should be they are “ Their letters aren’t personal,” P a t explained. “ Europeans like to discuss more things like contem porary poetry. They just a re n 't interested in the chit­ chat ” intellectual t PRE-REGISTRATION CARDS *or +he spring semester draw a crowd outside The Registrars office -n the Main Building. Cards must be tilled —Photo h> James Et Waihee ou4 and dropped In the box in trout of the office oefo-e January 7. Otherwise, the student will Pe given • late reg statio n date. Phi Delta Theta,' Kappa Sigs Win K appa Sigm a and P hi D elta T heta ca p tu red In tra m u ra l league cham pionships to highlight M onday night's C lass A play. Tom B urke to a 31-21 win o ver Sigm a P h i E psilon by scoring l l points. led his te a m G o Coyofe-tagte Rates Top Billing Bv PYT TRULY Texan Sports staff Sinton. Sinton handed D eer P a rk its first loss in 43 gam es F rid a y / T h ey 're com ing into the stretch in a gam e decided in D ial y a rd a g e , the ra c e f i r high school foot- w h ile B rady w as licking buddings, ; 33-0. S tam ford and T errell play a i­ las. S tam ford rom ped by (ra n ® In sem i-final g am es this week- the other sem i-final gam e in rt! C lass AAAA offers W ichita the next-to-la st , tost week, 39-6 vv uh rell in Abilene s m a rc h dem olishing G ilm er, 6a-6. Wade Sm ith also scored l l to m 3 2 . 2 0 ! ball honors. rp ark P h i D elta T heta to a win over Sigm a Nu, D elta T au D elta beat previously F a ll’s Coyotes as undefeated Phi K appa T au 38-36. roadblock Jess H ark n ess also scored 13 for tow ard th e ir title. Phi K appa T au. A playoff g a m e Abilene finally h ad to work hp a will be req u ired betw een the sa m e sw eat to beat upset-m inded F o rt two te am s to determ in e the league Worth P a sc h a l la st week, 14-0. The j Coyotes dropped unbeaten H ighland cham p. th ird straig h t ATO defeated SAE by a 2012 i P a rk , 19-7. to four In .C lass B. score playoff. force a Cham pionship Down South T ex as w ay, tw o of in te a m s won I the sem i-finals as Baytow n m oves league titles w ith wins. D R E b e a t down the coast to Corpus C hristi ATO 17-13, A EPI downed L am bda to play R ay. T he G anders cam e Chi Alpha 22-20. K appa Sigma beat from behind to elim in ate Houston D elta T au D elta 23-18, and SAE downed PiK A 27-12. ; the "gam e old sta n d b y s" are Ross Wins Crown In Cross Country the U n iv ersity ’s R, D. R oss of L am esa, w inner invitational of cross country m eet e a rlie r this year, won the sta te title h ere Mon­ d ay in rec o rd tim e as Baytow n took ’M u r a l Scores In tram u ral Score* ria** 4 — D elta Tau D elta SS Kappa Tau 36 K appa Sigm a SI, Sigm a Phi Epsilon 21 Alpha Tau Om ega 20, SAE 12; P hi D elta T h eta 32, S igm a N u 29 (’la** B — A i n IE 39. A I 'ROTO 24: SAK 27. PIHA 12: K appa S igm a 23 Delta T au D elta 18 Roberta 24. Brack 21 Alpha Epa 11 on Pi 33 la m b d a Chi Alpha 20; DICE 17, ATO 13 Mullet-—t'lmmt C ases over R eef T ru st b v d efault G rove T rotters 35, Ape* «: Flea gee# lf? H ound D ogs IO: Sw abs 13, G ruesom e G roveler* 8; P urple P a ssio n s 20, S Bar 5. Council Puts Off Revealing Coach H ie A thletic Council’s nom ination for T ex as' coach and athletic d irec­ tor will not be m ade by D ec. 15, the original d ate set for subm ission of a n am e to the board of reg e n ts D r. O. B. W illiam s, c h a irm a n of the council, said M onday th a t the council h ad not finished screening the list of suggested nam es a s y e t and th a t no interview ing h ad be­ gun. L am ar, 28-20, while R a y ’s T exans I the team title, earn ed th e ir spot In th e sun by trouncing Alice, 33-13. Ross covered the two-mile Zilker park course in a v ery good I 15 to Class AAA g am es pit L ittlefield s h a tte r th e old m a rk of 9:466 set and G arland and N ederland a g a in s t! la st y ea r by H um berto A dam e, now a freshm an at the U niversity- The San Antonio Edison. T he Little- first five finishers, in fact, w ere field-G arland clash m ight be a under the fo rm e r record. woober. L ittlefield is rolling fa ste r ev e ry week, and G arland had to push p ast a prom ising C leburne te a m , 20-6, to s ta y in the picture, the scene of a big AA g am e betw een B rady and I and V ictoria fifth. Baytown took the team title with 24 points, C orpus Christi R ay w as second, A ustin M eCallum w as third, San A ntonio L anier fourth, A ustin w ill be WHEN YOU THINK OF LAUNDRY OR CLEANING THINK D R IS K IL L L A U N D R Y PICK UP & DELIVERY SERVICE SUITS— DRESSES TU XED O S EV EN IN G G O W N S D Y EIN G • RUGS • DRAPES FUR AND W O O LEN STORAGE SAVE CASH AND CARRY 411 E. 19th P hons G R-86431 Your roommate s favorite jacket. . . TO NYLFLEECE Tuesday, December lf, 1956 THE DAILY TFXAN Page 2 S I D E L I N E S L A N T S Bowl Fever to Hit In 21 More Days! B y J i m M o n tg o m e r y A*s»clat* Sport* E d itor About this time every year, an Incurable disease begins to Olympic Games: seize millions of Americans. Everyone knows it’s coming, but nobody tries to prevent i t In certain cities of warm climate it is actually encouraged. Bowl fever is the name of the killer, and it has been run­ ning almost unchecked for 50-odd years. On J a n . I, 1902, in P a sa d e n a .* ---------------------------------------------------- C al., bowl fever stru ck the fo o tb a ll; thank you.” •q u ad s of M .ehigan, Stanford, and se v eral thousand people. All w ere in c u ra b ly bitten, although It w as 14 y e a rs to the d a y before the fe­ v e r hit again. H ie W olverines pro m p tly b a rre l­ leaving a ed for another score, in w ake of de-activated Indians i t s ag re eab le th eir to th e S tanford c a p ­ you," allow ed tain. “ w e ’ll call it a d a y .” tra il. “ If And so the first Rose Bowl gam e ended 49-0 although the scoreboard clock show ed o v er IO m inutes re ­ m aining. Tile next Rose Bowl g am e w asn ’t until 1916. but it w as 1933 before som e F lo rid a folks, who ju st n a tu r­ ally h ate to let C alifornia outdo them , sta rte d a bowl gam e of th e ir own in M iam i. The S ugar Bowl w as born in New O rleans in 1933, and the D allas Cotton Bowl began in 1937. down, then stopped the m ighty In ­ dians the rest of the w ay. Colum bia won, 7-0, and w as n ev e r invited back. The following y e a r saw the Vow Rose Bowl Thrillers Sports, Politics Shared Olympics Victories, Rhubarbs, Incidents Reviewed M ELBOURNE UP — H igh spots low spots of th e M elbourne and Out standing Man A th le te -T h re e - w ay tie am ong sp rin te r Bobby Morrow of the United S tates, sw im ­ m er M u rray Rosa of A ustralia, both triple gold m ed alists, and V ladim ir H uts of R ussia, w inner of the 5,000 and 10,000 m e te r rac es. O utstanding W o m a n A thlete— Betty C uthbert of A ustralia, win­ ner of the IOO and 200 m e te r ra c e s and a m e m b er of the victorious rela y team . Biggest R h ubarb The disqualifi­ cation of E ng lan d 's Cliff B rash er, and la te r rev e rsa l of the derision. in th e 3.000 m eter ste e p le c a se - an act which brought a B ritish com ­ plaint of "tarn ish e d gold.” Mo*»t D ram atic \ ietory — Irish Ron D elany's trium ph in the 1,500- j m e ter rac e afte r w orld m ile record j holder John Landy had m ade a j strong m ove and failed. M ost Awkward Incident — The ■ raising of the C om m unist China j flag for th a t of N ationalist O lina I a t th e team cerem onies. H ie I glie'it Incident—The bloody w ater polo m atch betw een H ungary and R ussia, which saw one H un­ garian sent to the sidelines w ith a j gashed head and five R ussians 1 ejected for unnecessary roughness. Most Poignant M oment—The de­ p a rtu re of a giant F re n ch a ir liner te a m , m a n y w ith the H ungarian Instead, th e a irp o rt w aving goodbye to com rades and singing “ God B less H u n g ary .” Boys ra te d as th e n atio n ’s best. J seats em pty and defeating ath letes ! Only M innesota of the Big Ten w as m entioned in the sa m e b rea th , and they couldn’t com e w est because of a conference rule. "u n w o rth y " an o th er te am w as invited. A lab a m a’s C rim ­ son Tide, who featu red Don H ut­ son, D ixie Howell, and B e a r B ry ­ a n t (yep, sam e guy), ca m e to ta k e a cra c k a t the Indians. Most M odest W inner — Charlie Jenkins of the United States in the 400 m e ters, who said : “ I w as just lucky. Lou Jones is a m uch b etter ru n n er than I .” Most D istraught L oser—Ja c k D a­ vis, reco rd holder In th e 110-m eter hurdles, who said a fte r losing to forgotten Colum bia Lee C alh o u n : " I w orked and w aited d id n 't think m uch of the Tide In- for this m om ent for four y e a rs, and then j got b ea t by a IOO to I shot stead, as A labam a took the field, fans chanted "W e vuant M innesota. qUjck; sta r ■* B ring on M innesota ” L e e k G u y — Also Ja c k Da- W hat h a p p e n e d ? ‘B arn s shackled vis who lost the hurd les m edal then h ad an d KF-79, C alifornians, w ho by S tan fo rd ’s g re a t Bobby G rayson sjniilarlv in 1952 and tu rn ed loose Howell to throw to Hutson. The C rim son Tide scor­ ed 22 points in 12 m inutes, trounced the Vow Boys, 29-13. an d A labam a fans chanted "W e w ant M innesota, B ring on M innesota." , . „ B est Looking le arn S. w om en g ym nasts, who took pub chriP .de they j although honors couldn't win a single m edal. __ The -r , The Iron Men of Duke The 1902 gam e, w hich gives P a sa d e n a the rig h t to th e ir “ dad- dy-of-them -aU ” title for th e ir Rose Bowl gam e, w as an odd one. M ic h ig a n * pow erful m achine, m olded by "H u rry -U p ” T o st of point-a-m inute fam e ripped up the Stanford to build a 48- point le ad w ith m o re th an a q u a r­ te r yet to go and only l l uninjured C alifornians left. Indians M ichigan’* captain politely asked the S tanford le a d e r if the Indians w ere tire d out. T he answ er, acco rd ­ “ No, ing to p opular sto ry , w as for squad, T hrough the y e a rs, the 43 Rose Bowl gam es have filled m any a p ag e of gridiron legend. T ake the in­ 1933-55 Stanford stance. As Indians pledged th em selves nev er to lose to U C IA . T hey didn't, and went cm to th re e stra ig h t Rose Bowl a p ­ p e a ra n c e s plus the nicknam e of th e “ Vow B oys.” sophom ores, the tim e The firs t the Vow Boys c a m e to P a sa d e n a , they w ere un­ th ree all-A m ericans, beaten, h ad an d w ere heavily favored over a lightly re g a rd e d C olum bia team . T his w as the 1934 gam e. the kickoff, and R a in dren ch ed P a sa d e n a for it ho u rs before took special pum ps and w orkm en to get th e field re a d y for play. ■Whether it w as the soggy field, the sn e erin g com m ents of the W est C oast p ress, or w hether Colum bia w as ju st m ad, no one knows. At an y ra te , th e y tu rn ed loose th e ir fam ous KF-79, a naked re ­ lad nam ed Al v erse th a t sen t a touch- B a ra b b a s sprinting to a B ut th* g am e w hich m an y Rose Bowl fans ra te as th e g re a te st of them all was y et to com e. The 1938 Blue D evils visited P asa d en a to play S outhern California on New Y e a r’s D ay, 1937. The B lue D evils of th a t y ea r w ere u nbeaten, untied, and un­ scored Ufxm. Known as th e "Iro n Men of D u k e,” the sta rtin g lineup m a d e a h ab it of playing 60 m inutes and playing ‘em speed. S outhern Cal w as an underdog to this h a rd nosed outfit. top a t L ed by G eorge McAfee and E rie J T ipton, th e Blue D evils stopped the , T ro jan s cold for 56 m in u tes and took a 3-0 lead on a second period field goal. a in five With a bit over th re e m in u tes r e ­ m aining, USO sen t th ird strin g Quarterback nam ed S. Doyle stra ig h t hit N ave. D oyle p asses, and the la st one knifed the D uke goal line w hich h a d n ’t been cro ssed all reason. USO won, 7-3. B y th is tim e, bowl fev er w as a nation-w ide epidem ic. New O r­ le a n s, M iam i, and D allas caught It ev ery y e a r, and o th er cities w ere aeon to follow. T exas C h ristian b ecam e a reg u ­ la r v isito r to New O rleans. The F ro g g ie s w ere invited to the 1936 an d 1939 S ugar Bowl p a rtie s and w on both tim es. S am m y B augh's high-sooring ’36 te a m bum ped up a g a in st b ad w ea th er and rugged LSU b u t m anaged to pull out a w eird 3-2 victory. W ildest of all the S ugar Bowl c la ssic s w as in 1945. A labam a, led by an undersized teen -ag er nam ed H a rry G ilm er, m atch ed pow erful D uke sco re for score. The Blue D evils counted la st, how ever, and th e ir la st-m in u te touchdow n won, 29-26. T e x a s’ Longhorns cau g h t bowl fev e r in 1943. Led by Ja c k ie F ield, M ax M inor, and Roy D ale M cKay, T exas stopped a i n t C a stle b erry an d G eorgia Tech, 14-7, in the Cot­ ton Bowl. The S teers retu rn ed in 1944 an d tied an aw esom e R a n ­ dolph F ield outfit, 7-7, a fte r losing to the a irm e n e a rlie r In the season. The 1947 L onghorns ripped A la­ b a m a , 27-7, in the S ugar Bowl as B obby L ay n e outpstched tile te e n ­ ager-grow n-up, H a rry G ilm er of A lab a m a . M a k e Kruger’s your Senior Ring Headquarters "Speedy, you’re quacking up”, snorted his girl friend. "Your appearance is fow l. W hy don’t you w ile up to W ildroot Cream-Oi! ?” So J. Paul marshed right down to the store and pecked up a bottle. N ow he i the sharpest duck in sch ool because his hair looks handsome and healthy . . . neat but never greasy. W hen last seen ha was sipping a chocolate m oulted w ith the prettiest chick on campus ( . . . and she caught the b il l! ) So if the g a ls are g iv in g y o u the b ird , b e tte r g e t som e W ildroot C ream -O il, , . eider e bottle or handy tube. Guaranteed to drive m ost swim min’ w ild ! J * C H A R G E IT — Navar sn interest or carrying charge! I Newel m m sr Ss it n u .,* . KRU 6 E ll’S 2236 G u g d a lu p e 722 Coart**) ♦ a / 131 Se. Harru Hill R d , VT til, am w ilt, S . YI W il d ro o t C r e a m - O i l gives you confidence ( S O O N E R JO E K IN G last year was th e hrghest souring sopho­ more in O U c a g e history. Hi© a v e r a g e d 18.3 points in Big 7 play last y ea r. H e and his Okie buddies will b e sn G r e g o r y G>m W e d n e s d a y night t o take on Texas o r c e - b e a +eo Longhorns,. Kansas Retains Top As 'the Stilt' Shines By T h e A ssociated F i s h W ilt " th e S tilt” C ham b erlain , a 7-foot sophom ore w hiz w ith a 45.5 J A lab a m a (No. 9) and W est Vir- point a v e ra g e in his firs t tw o col- 8*n ia (No. 33) a re en tered in the The council w ill interview its top choices before settling on a nom i- I nation. D r. W illiam s said th a t a h as helped K ansas B irm ingham C lassic T ou rn am en t m eeting of the council would Le to get every- firs t Associ- o ver tbe w eekend and o th e r m e m - 1 5ater 1bis w eek jn t . ttc i lege g am es for second and one for tenth. so on dovvn to J , u hors of the ton 20 faro i rennet ant (2 - 0 4 ......................... r n D allas for the p sst few d ay s attend­ ing the m eeting of the Southwest B ible will step out and Coach E d P ric e s ers Choken Maekawa and Harry s ball w rite rs and sp o rtsc a ste rs cast- 2. San F ran cisco <1 8> (4-0) Cn.itu Sm ith, w ho cam e 12.000 m iles a t a cost of ab o u t $2,000 each, only to fail to m a k e the w eight. F 5 ...................514 ' .I I ' II l i l t 7M ! C o n feren ce, . . . W I I S e n t I 195' th® Mn ing ballots p u t K ansas as the No. I te a m on ea rly victories over N orth w estern and M arq u ette. The Ja y h aw k ers polled 896 points. and p)r W illiam s h av e been resignation is effective D ec. 3L «» a liner hstllrvts nut TOansao j 5. S o u t h e r n M e t h o d i s t (3> (2-0 ) -____n : u i_ jl9 W » 7 ,e a s o n ' ............... 350 ; ...Un J- Kentucky (6> (FU) 4. Louisville ( i > \ i i ) 6. N o r t h C a r o lin a (4 ) (2-0) 7 ...........................................338 (2-01 a. N o r t h Carol',na S l a t e c2> ( 3 - 0 ) . . 271 0. A l a b a m a ...................................... 252 10. C a n l i ! na (4> (4 -0) ............................... 225 I ll in o is (3-0) n # ‘ No one argued th e rig h t of 1947’s Steers to a bowl b erth , b u t when the 1948 T exas sq u ad w a s picked th e O range opposite G eorgia in Bowl, sc re a m s of “ th ir d - ra te r s ” echoed from the land of th e E v e r­ glades. Sportsmanship Puzzle Attacked K an sas h its the ro ad this week to p lay a t W ashington both F rid a y and S a tu rd a y and will be a t Cali­ fornia D ecem b er 18 before re tu rn ­ ing hom e. In 1948. T exas h ad lost th re e and tied AAM, G eo rg ia’s squad and the M iam i press figured th e S teers w e re n 't m uch of a m a tc h for the Bulldogs. T exas got m a d and w ax cd G eorgia, 41-28, settin g a scoring pus le a d e rs ” to discuss sportsm an- knocked oft four opponents, includ-j j G H o n o r L o n q h o m S -------------------- --- reco rd th a t still stands. T he San F ra n cisc o Dons with th eir 59-gam e w inning s tre a k are In second place w ith 18 firsts and I he Dons, m inus Ail- Conference, A thletic D irec to r D ana A m erica Bill R ussell and ma n y of X Hi hi® r a i l e d a meet i nar of “ cam - ^ e ir top sta rs of la s t y e a r , have 1 in. O k l a h o m a C it' <1-51 , 19. O k l a h o m a A AM (3-1) ; 20. S e a t t l e On suggestion of the S o u th w e st, ! 1 ^ Ppnts- ----------------------- ----------- ; C n u n c W , I n t e r t r a t e m i t y L O U n C ll mg S eattle. T hey also ta k e to the * ip a t bask etb all gam es. ................ (3-1) r 11. O h i o S t a t e (2) (3-0) THE SECOND TEN ............. I 12. W e s t e r n K e n t u c k y (2) >1-0) SSO . . . . I SO IS I 33. W e s t V i r g i n i a (3> 14. K a n s a s S t a t e (2 -0) 98 15. La:, ton (2-1» ............................... 62 ........................................ fit 16 N ia g a r a 17. I o w a S t a t e (3-0) ............... 55 .............. 44 45 ............................................. 32 (3-0) ................ ‘ 2 L Cage Scores «t . L a s t # 71, Kentn rkjr 70. TVia# l<*ch 66, T u l s a 67. Klee 37, Louisiana St 73 I nyala 71, Tex** AAM 6f?, Ba % Inr 71. North Texas State SS. Texas Christian 97, Mf Murry 54, Mural Schedule su its in a hurry - C alifornia s Roy j Riegel* w'ho " r a n the w rong w ay ” in 1929 to provide G eorgia Tech w ith an 8-7 win . . . the m oving of the Rose Bowl g am e to D urham , N.C., in 1942 b ecause of the o u t­ b rea k of World W ar II . . . K en­ tucky' b reak in g O k lah o m a’s three- season w inning stre a k in the 1951 S ugar Bowl. A lab a m a’s T om m y Lew is, who to tackle bounced off the bench touchdow n-bound Dick M oegle of Rice in the 1954 Cotton B o w l. . . and go to u rn am en t over the w eekend. B A S K E T B A L L ! Cia** A; 7 p.m . — McCracken va. : B lo c ke r, O a k G r o v e vs. N e w m a n , F G H - S i m k l n s vs. M o o r e Hill. 7:4 5— Y a g e r vs. The m em b ers an d coaches of the ! provVn Nnvv vs. LPH a, Roberts \ s, • trainer. *:» P r a t h e r . 8:510— A m e r y vs. G ee.se, C a m - Texas L onghorns w ill be honored pu, Guild v A F R O T C , T h e l e m e va. I K entucky drew solid support, in- W ednesday ar a testim o n ial d in n e r I R aytow n. 9 i W ednesday a t a te stim o n ial din n er I *Aic7iEUnett* V*’ MaverIcks* a t the C om m odore P e rry H otel g l v - j ' c Im *VB i ft:ii-A m e ry va Midnight*. I to p;av ^ a Cl5<‘a*. » Coach M arshall H ughes, b a s k e t- 1 f laf e, * ith 5ld P °ints ?,n ita p er' on by the In te rfe a te rn lty Council ball re plains R ay Downs and Nor- feet 3-0 rec o rd Louisville despite m an Hooton D ean W. I). Blunk. Sports Puhi ic tv D irec to r W ilbur te h to d E van*, an d Bible spoke _ oup ranking Southern M ethodist. by C a w in u . inc 1956 isn t fa r te am , and especially Coach Lei in fourth place w ith 403; P rice an d A thletic D irec to r D. X. The d in n e r will honor T he conference suggested Among the guests Invited to the C aroU ra, n a - function a r e D r L ogan Wilson, she sportsm an sh ip problem , w hich J* * - N orth C arolina S tate, Ala- presid en t of the U n iv ersity ; D eal! has n o t born som ethin" to boast of I bam a and C a s s iu s In th a t o rd er A m o Nowotny, and D ean J a c k IIol- land. The affair is scheduled for a t a n y of th e schools, be attack ed of from th re e angles -sp o rtsm a n s h ip , conduct, and education. The point standings a re figured 6:15 p.m . on the basis of IO for first, nine to round out the top ten. in the B razos room the Com m odore. 1he pointe, tw o points a h e y ) of « W !-1 Bible. th a t T A B LE T E N N IS o o k va. R a n d o l p h 7 p . m . —C o c k vs, R a n d o l p h , T h o r p e vs S m i t h P i c k e t t va. V a u g h a n H i l l vs. Rev non, F r te s o n vs. P i e p c r , C h a p a vs. Pillager. 7 :1 9 — S h a h vs. F o s t e r D e u p r e e vs. T i n k e r , T u r n b o vs C r u t c h f i e ld , G om e z vs, C o n n o r . W e l l s va. T u r u n g . W i l l s o n vs Gun n, 7:40— G e e vs M a r t i­ nez. D e a r e f a n o vs. J e z e k , M e r r i t t vs. H u d s o n , V a u g h a n vs, K e k h e j a , N o w l i n vs. V e la , K o e t h e r vs. C ook. 8 p . m . — Li a is o n vs. H o l l e y , K o e s t c r vs. H o w - ard. W o o d y vs . J a s o n , H o u s t o n va. (Yliver, D a v i s vs S c h w a r z 8:30— L a n ie r vs. A p p l e w h i t e . B o l t z m a n vs, L u v k e v , H a r p e r v s . W a g g o n e r , C a n e v a vs. M lg - he ll, K tu ddar d vs, Rn**, H o l l o w a y \ s H o w a r d . O ther sp e c ta c u la r bowl fever re-■ R ep re se n tativ es of r T V, *'V L F fra te rn itie s. : road th ,s hnnnrerv ern iim -n rn rit.f.. o th er cam p u s organizations atte n d ­ ed th e m eeting ■’ _ .i,. > W arning to resid e n ts of key I T his m eeting w as p a rt of the ed­ d i e s and to all TV v ie w e rs: E x- a ra tio n a sp e c t of the problem . fev e r j T he Southw est C onference an- p e d an o u tb rea k of howl sportsm anship th ree w’eeks fro m today. The epi- nually aw a rd s a dem ic m ay strik e 48 hours ea rly trophy to the school :h a t m ost ex­ in som e a re a s. T his y e a r m ay see em pliftes the spirit of sp ortsm an- new th a t B E REA D Y ! replacing old ones. ship. T exas has nev er won trophy. th rills , J. Paul Sliced?* Wa* An Ugly Duckling Till Wildroot Cream-Oil Cave Him Confidence and only $25' OO T hey’ll all want to know where you bought it, it’s so smart, so striking, so downright practical. D uP ont nylon fleece light ae a feather, soft as a snowflake, rugged ss granite. Quilted nylon lining . . . vaah-and-wear . , . terrific colors! 86 to 46 U N IV E R S IT Y t X jq w y 2310 Guadalupe A Lot of Bull Pictured In 2 Films Downtown 'Bullfight' Excellent Tab, N atalie Fai Bv BRADFORD DANIEL T*xan Amnvfmcnti Editor “Bullfight,H thp Janus film at thr Capitol Theater, is an excellent documentary that traces the art of tauromachy from prehis­ toric times to the present. Tt affords the viewer a most comprehensive, authoritative, ; and fascinating experience in reality. The art of bullfighting he* ame most firm ly es- I tablished in Spain during the middle ages as a g^n- | tle m a n ’s sport and popular entertainment The I gi eat revolution took place in the Eighteenth Cen- \ tu ry when the gentlemen forsook the art and left the field to professional toreros, who nrlrded Francisco j R om ero (inventor of the m u le ta ', C o stilla™ * (the first to use a sword t, and Pepe Tile (w rite r of the first great treatise on bullfighting ) B y gr.ing a background for each topic, discussed 1 the p ic t u r e c a rr es the audience rapidly alone, edu- j ratin g as it entertains E a c h step is shown and the reason h r it explained in simple term s e W hile most bullfighters nowadays tra ve l un foot Conchita Cintron revived the Seventeenth Century in et pod of fighting from horseback with a sort of ta veil n railed the re for She w as one of the most sensational "box office ’ attractions in the history of the sport. M iss Cintron is unique in still another feat: she Is one of the few m atadors who retired from the ring rath e r than dying from wounds received Tile presentation of her style (illustrated by newsreel shots) is the highlight of the picture Produced m ainly in Fra n ce by the acclaim ed directing team of P ie rre Rraunb ergcr and M yria n . I the film has a complete English com m entary and i tradi- a background of the axnting pasodobles tional bullfight music . It s a movie you should see strong stuff W a rn e r Bro®. Studios just can't take “ noM for an answer, or so it appears. A fte r the dis* appointing showing Tab H u n ter and N atalie j Wood made in “ The B u rn in g H ills.’* it ap-j peared certain that the casting department would quietly abandon this duo— at least re- j fram from co-starring them tog eth er How ever, they didn’t learn and their latest pro-' duct. “ The C irl He Le ft B e h in d .” currently et the Param ount Theater, leaves much to he desired. in In this one Tab leaves the W estern setting he so “ The Burning H ills ” and capably disgraced makes w ay to a modern setting in California . . . a la college student And as a college student (who c a n ’t study because he s in lo ve ), he is again pre­ sented as “ the all Am erican bo y.’’ He must really be they keep telling us over the average Am erican lad and o> cr' th a t he i . Complete with his latest model sports ear, a v a rs ity sw eater the also plays football I. his golden hair snipped crew-cut style, and Miss Wood (a v e r­ age A m erican girl working her w a y through college'. M r. Hunter feels secure from the draft. But when he lose*; dear X«atalie 'she of look) hi grades decline, his spirits (of cocktail gla®® and emotional v a r ie ty ' drop, and a letter arrives which “ Fro m the government. Greetings . . . ” says the w an The rem ainder of the film depicts Tab s vv ar w ith the arm y. Although strengthened somewhat by the presence of H en ry Jones. Jim Backus and Je s ­ sie Ro\-ce TJtndis. the picture is still only fair screen entertainm ent, the m ajor strength of the entire cru­ sade lying in its delightful dialogue Had M r. Hunter been able lo “ road ’ h'-s line* well and Miss Wood I prevented from snarling hers. the fan- rating might have been changed to good handled. • INTERSTATE THEATRES v 2 N o w s h o w i n g ! P a r a m o u n t rn T A B H U N T E R ate bo? the barracks bagh N A T A L I E W O O D CHM |4H wrtfc tot wtmcM casa* t e Pine Room Featuring Combo W e d ., Thurs., Fri. N ights ALSO Sunday Afternoon 3:30-7:00 Dancing Nightly 2824 G u ad alu p e G R 7-0555 Two Christmas Films Planned A special Christm as program in eluding film s “ On the Twelfth D a y ” and “ M iracle in M ilan wa!! b# preserved Decem ber 1® in Batts H all Auditorium tree “ On the Twelfth Dav a 22-mm- ute color short, is a film transla­ non of an old English song Beauty and humor build up as the young man presents move and more gifts ph i h with a partridge in a ppnr Producer-Dire ct or Vittorio De Sics calls his film “ M iracle in M i­ lan a fable for grown-ups- a tsle suspended mid-way between fan- tasv and reality Its cast includes Italian stars Francesco Golisano. Em m a G r& m itica, Brunel! Bovo. and "O n the Tw elfth D a y " has E n g ­ in Ita lia n dialogue with lish dialogue, w hile M ila n " has English sub-titles. “ M iracle Showings w ill be at I 30, 3:45. 6 Bf' and 8 45 p rn be There w i l l charge. no admission r n I I j II STATE Entertainment D i b r I mi •I ail tim**.' DOORS t ' ( F A f n X f y T : V*© V c /Cfi,-- 'm MMtt-MAIM' G E E I M O PE r f L E A D S 1 6 - M U J I M I - M A l f VR Left Behind 5TH WEEK! ✓ rn rn rn © • rn rn #1 rn rn rn rn © % © © ! © © STGEORGE /J / S TEV EN S Mtootjamo* fom rut rn« t Cr EDNA FEFBEP' •> w Bnoa. ~Wa*»*c*Coco» ROCK JAMES HUDSON • DEAN Mal. ’til i p m JJS L tp c h u b stir 1 Moil*- D iiro tal Milt. :»(» i.vr ro ELIZABETH T A Y ] iM llA JI v VARSITY AUSTIN «:OO PM Tuesday, D ecem ber I I , 1956 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page I A Texan Views Ja zz From Past to Present B y B F N ' S I F ,GAL Turn staff writer idea on the Am erican public and m ental or swing type which has remained to become an also a form of jazz1? Is this not In an attem p t ( E D I T O R 'S N O T E : The popular even greater appeal of relaxation The an-we 5 are hard to come tty of jazz in America is lucre**- than previously w as the devouring by. In the old days, people referred • to anything that w as aw ay from trig each d a s . the norm as “ jazzy,'' T oday they explain this growth, Ben Siegal, j The jazz age started in the back- ! refer to it as “ cool." Tom orrow— Texan staff w rite r, ha* made a rooms of New' Orleans, Chicago, well tomorrow rem ains to be seen. and N ew York. The jazz story study of the subject, H e re a re his Yet there bes some of the answer* started in the cotton fields of the view s ) . SO the question. The age of jazz has come and , deep south to of ’look*. gone, some believe. B u t the a> tua truth is that jazz plays a fa r m ore: important life rn A m erican in foreign countries today, even in the so called jazz than it did age of the roaring twenties. role Attribute this to w h a tever you m ay. But the fact still stands that jazz records are sold- be­ more cause of better 'echniques and facilities: more people a re listen­ ing trios, combos, and band- because of better playing and general acceptance by the pub­ lic than ever before jazz to “ A H U I IO! S XRT” W ebster defines music as “ The science or art of pleasing, expres­ sive. ->r intelligible combination of tones W hether it be Dixieland pop rhythm and blue-, progressive, or rock and roll, form of jazz 1 muMc a vivacious art to some is a ilia! centers en a new found philo­ sophy of the Twentieth Century, that It was here the colored slaves, having no other outlet of expression - going hack to pre- Am erican days — revested to the basic, tribal musical heals pius the combination of the “ then ' modern music which is now known as pre- trnditional New-Os leans jazz. True, if compared the sound was slow to present day but is the es­ it sence of today's * */./.. The Negro music inns in the early part of this cent my of m iracles, the 20th. introduced a new concept of music into the annals of the world's musical history. Jazz was bom and the white musicians picked .; up and improved some­ what on r until we have the present \ ersion J VZZ \s D F U N Q l E N T Jazz in its infancy was regarded rn the same w a y that we currently j classify juvenile delinquency. Ye- today, is th? toast of intellec­ tual--;; ii is taught in some schools. it i I? is basically an emotional out-: and it is accepted as an art R (K K ’N' R O L L VS J VZZ Rock and roll by the addicts to individualize sty ie of N e w Orleans the Them Influences on F cm h jazz have been man.’ Creole Spanish turn’* from Louisiana, and African rhyihn - MI pul*;1 ted -it© one to individual style so brine out the Still other factors popular today the p o l k a s , included involved marches spirituals, songs of the slaves and other and older forms of m usical expressions. They ail evolved into the N e'* Orleans traditional \nd from this came the two schools of jazz or "ta*.®" as it was sometimes called, in a contemptible manner. sometime* firs’ school, The list* 'he Negro prim ary, called these perform ers as pioneers: King O liver, K id O ry. Sidney Bechet, Bunk Johnson, Je lly Roil Morton, and the one some say is the great­ en of all, Louis Armstrong, The other school ti the one of the white musician who tried to copy the Negro sty le “ Papa ’ Ja c k sometimes refereed to as la m p The F a th e r Of W hite Jazz leads this group Fro m this start came Tom Brow n s Rand from Dixieland, the O riginal Dixieland Jaz z Band. and the New Orleans Rhythm Kings Them men and groups w e r t th* pioneers in their field. J VZZ VS AMERICANA Today with the advent of much improved technique* and a demand bv jazz connoisseurs the m usicians of old ha - e been brought back on fa r* can enjoy re orris so that the sounds of tru ly basic A m erican music this People want jazz today not be­ cause it is something u n u s u a l- but he ause it satisfies their need for a ha*ie form of Am erican music, which it IR- JA Z Z IS T BARRETT D EEM S a drummer in King Armstrong s court M a l i Si Photo rn h Laguna G lo ria to G iv e Program of Arf, Music I .aguna present a music for ma At t pp Chi 1 rn a lle ry will of art. and Season A collection of 22 scroll paintings by C h i P a l Sh th. foremost living Chinche painter, w ill be exhibited on 1 he first floor. Included w ith the exhibit w ill be a number of M an­ chu Court robes and selected tex­ tiles of the M ing and Ching D y ­ nasty These w ere lent by M iss A lice Boney of N ew Yo rk C ity a collector for leading museums in boe Ea st and Canada. The Marion K©ogler M- Nav G a lle ry of San An­ tonio has lent several e arly v ase ’' for this exhubd T h irtv large and small drawing* UT’s Orchestra To Play Sunday b ren t of M usic win The De pa U n iversity Sym phony present the Alexander von K re isle r, Orchestr wa th June Stokes B a n ­ conduct* ti lion, piano soloist:, in concert Sun­ in Hogg Auditorium . day at 4 p m ’Hie program w ill include “ Suite from the music for tile R o ya l F ir e ­ w o rk s,” by' Hanriel-Harty; Prelude to Third Aet from “ M eistersinger? von Nurnherg " by W agner, and "T h e W a lk to thp Pa ra d ise G a r ­ r s Beeth by Delius. dens.” the “ Concerto No. 4’ w ill conclu pp »'forrn an ce T here w ill is sion ado no I ch a rg e for the concert be Celina W a Id rn an wail lie exhibi- in the large g allery on the sec­ id ond floor. Miss W a Id rn an a grariu- ate of the U n ive rsity, has had a number of exhibitions and has won distinction in this medium. for her w’ork A third exhibition of Jap an ese j art objects has bren lent to the g alle ry by D r. and M rs. Archibald R . Lew is. D r. Le w is is head of the U n iv e rs ity ’s history department The collection w as assem ble ! by hts father and mother, D r and M rs. Burdett G . Le w is w hile Dr. Lew is was with the occupational forces in Jap a n th** M any of items on exhibit came from the private treasures of the Im p erial F a m ily and Ja p a ­ nese nobility. One cern is a black lacquer tra y presented M rs Lew is by the D ow ager Em p ress from her personal wardrobe Tile collection includes gold inlaid lacquer boxes e arly porcelains from long-guarded Sam urai treasuries, and kimonos of unusual w orkm anship and de­ sign lei for the person who needs some­ thing stronger than the forms of ‘ music that had been predom inately I thrust upon the A m erican scene j for years and years. 'This fact we know is as Am erican as the Stars and Stripes jazz 1920 * B R O U G H T I A Z Z The direct clim ax of 1920 s wild times women, men booze, and even w jd e r gangsters projected the I United States’ true and original | music on the Am erican public jazz This form of expression— viewed by some people as prim itive might have died as suddenly a* it started, except for one essential fact Anytim e something is banned, there are curious people around who are ready to ask w hy. Behind the locked and secretive doors of speakeasies there ap­ peared the curious, looking for the booze of prohibition days; finding that and much m ore; discovering jazz m u sic; and upon the discov­ ery it served as an emotional outlet of Hie kind found only* rn th:* sensationalized type. This w asn't the start. This was the anti-climax which projected the finding that Jazz today as a form of A m e ri­ can art and culture, ha* become on* of the hest selling points for ! the showing of Uncle Sam over­ seas. The State Departm ent has s e n t goodwill ambassadors to foreign countries in thp form of jazz perform ers Eve ryw h ere they go. their music is recognized a* the music of Am erica this idiom back College st jdents can he thanked — by m ustnans and public -- for bringing into prominence they who If was cracked the do-' shell of the late for­ fort if'- when gotten and wiped off the product until the old ba-ic style of New Orleans traditional rides as lung again Teenagers prefer rock and Is this not a form of jazz? roll The older people prefer tile senti- ii wa® almost G regory Sings Dec. 19 John Cunningham, R 'is.* ell Gregory, accompanied by instructor in music w ill sing the Ba ch Con­ tam No. 82 and songs by Brah m s. Wolf, and Vaughan W illia m s on Decem ber 19 at l p m rn the R e ­ cital H all They wall be assisted by a ®mall cham ber orchestra A d­ mission is free Tickets for 'M oth er C o u rag e' Now Available at B o x o ffic e Tickets play of the Music for “ M other Courage ” rector Francis Hodge and John which opens Wednesday night and L. M urphy, a graduate student in through Saturday , are the dram a department, continues currently on sale at Building Box Office "M o th e r Courage” is a chronicle the T h irty Y e a r s ’ W ar. Tickets are 40 rent® for students with so m e 15 scene* covering the taxr® and children 12-year period. 1524-36. It is a mod- in a historic a] setting. ern play depicting the degenerating quali­ ties of w ar with blanket and 80 rents for adults. Reserva­ tions may be made at th» Box Office between 9 a.rn and 4 pm . through Fridav, and 9 a rn. to 12 noon Saturday. The Fine Arts fighting or Since one does not stay tidy traveling with while the an army assignment of m aking their cos­ tumes look “ lived in ” the plavero ha* e production of Bertolt Brecht.'.* play will be held at Hogg Auditorium starting Wed­ nesday through Saturday at 8 p m The perform ance* of hi* works in Mansfield Last August, Brecht, a B a v a ria n dram atist who was at the peak of hi* career as a playw right, stage experim entalist. director, poet and novelist died the United States are rare, and Southwest audience* seldom have an opportunity to see a Brecht play. P a u l Dessau composed the mu­ sic, w hich is v e ry important to the play. Teaching the actors to sing •a® opera singer* mu.*© be taught 'n act i ha® been the task of Di- Mansfield in Car Wreck her daughter P A L M S P R IN G S , C a lif p An automobile carrying actress Jay n e Ja y n e M arie, and M ickey H a rg ita y hit a telephone pole near th if resort town Saturday. All escaped with minor in ju ries None requited ho*pifal treat­ ment. H arg itay, who holds the M r. U n ­ i® an escort of iverse Title and Miss Mansfield, was driving You'll think we gave your car a paint job instead of a wash job.?; O ur modern car wash system get* your car clean all over. Your tires will be spotless, your interior clean and dust tree. Your Paint will get that new car look for only i v 150 C A M P B E L L & F L E T C H E R 'S A U T O W A S H A C R O S S F R O M TH E N IG H T H A W K N O . 2 1914 G U A D A L U P E DON'T J M T C C J K I A A# Aw THIS DATE • KOSHER CORNED BEEF SANDWICHES.. . . . King-size and delicious! Try our axcI uI ' v*. hom*-m*d* CHEESECAKE , . it rriftlfj, in your mouth, to discuss a permanent future with proven advancement potentials* Diversified opportunities for Individual initiative and talents KOSHER DELICATESSAN to t«ir« out —■——• Superb MEXICAN FOOD Open Every Night til I? TH E P ER SO N A L INTERVIEW S GRADUATES & UNDERGRADS E.E., M.E., PHYSICISTS f*r Positions as 905 CONGRESS DESIGN, D E V E L O P M E N T 3 Convenient Locations: • 3221 Red River 3515 Jefferson 5th and Neches WE SERVE A DELICIOUS 6 5 ' LUNCH EVERY DAY Dine under the stars in our garten 1607 San Jacinto M erry Christmas ..x^rxr'iSr1 w^w \ s,ar,in,;i /« l jtk Z _ - ig ^ iA J L I , M #■' 1 ■" .... d 11 jf a k SHE DARED TO LOVE - HER O W N W A Y ! The Sou I-Deep m J f Truth Of A Shocking love Affair! MICHELE M O R G A N GERARD PHILIPE, i T h e P r o u d a n d t h e B e a u t i f u l t n ^ . e e n h J von Rod Sort** • Dir«wd by A *tngtl«y InWrrwrHorwrl R*!*©** Si, S i . . . Es M u y M a t 504 EAST AVE. GR 7-7023 El Toro 1601 GUADALUPE GR 8-4321 M onroe's “ Mexican Food to Take Homa' 500 EAST AVE. G R 7 - 8 7 4 4 P R O D U C T I O N & FIELD ENGINEERS W« will answer questions vital to your future also outline the records o f ad van cem en ts and offer you similar opportunities. A IR B O R N E IN S T R U M E N T S L A B O R A T O R Y - Founded •od managed by engineers is a team effort in research and de'dopment in the fields of general electronics, automation, medical electronics and nuclear physics; for industry, com* mumcation, applied sciences not merely the military. Com­ pany policy which places special emphasis on individualism, o\er the years has seen many advancements from within the ranks to top managerial positions. Liberal tuition refund policy encourages furtherance of engineering studies. R E G IS T E R W IT H Y O U R U N IV E R S IT Y ' P L A C E M E N T O F F IC E T O D A Y - they base a complete file of information on A I L I s Writ• for booklet "freedom for Initiative AIRBO RN E ISO OLO COUNTRY ROAO INSTRUM ENTS LABORATO RY im*. M I N I OLA, I. I., M I W TORM BURNING C H I L I S C imefiviaS c o PE: rn rn Merry Christmas A furl with a questionable past *' l.-r.i prevails I ONCWASCaPf, X M E G I 1 Power Prize A N D T H E — A L S O ! CATT!E QI o r MOVTAN R«rhar BE D I F F E R E N T P TH EV IS A U . W H ITE ? K U H ? DO YOO EVER SEE ANY GREEN ONES?H U H ? LAx ’SdMfcIe LI 7 V V * • ? * J o - O ti cli . X t j ■f O • } . ° l a I i 0 • ii - G J I © * a • * Physics Better'll Davy B y D O N BOTT T exan S taff W rite r D avy C rockett and his tru s ty shoo?m ’ von 6V Retsy, can t com ­ p a re w ith the m odem physicist and h « eel i onic gun, Davy, 'tis said, could pot-shot a sq uirrel n the eye a t a hundred y urt*, p h y sic ists are m uch m ore a c c u ra te sharpshooters with bul­ bus the size of practically nothing, they bang aw ay at and hit in­ finitesim al the nuclei of ta rg e ts, a om s, I Deuterium, consisting of a p ro ­ ton in com bination with a n eutron, Is rho bullet used by U niversity re -e a rc h physicists to blast nuclei. At B alcones R esearch C enter is located the N uclear Physics l a b o r ­ ato ry u n d er the direction of D r. E m m e tt L, H udspeth professor of physics The lab boasts a m achine known as the Van de G raaff cener- ato r. ft’s th e m odern-day ol’ B etsy of the P hysics D epartment "Shake I Target Tile g e n e ra to r accelerates d eu ­ to velocities terium p article s up Russia Is Having Doubts About Its Ruthlessness Bv J . M. ROBERTS 4 *•'•acinic*! I’rf nu Mf Hx Anal> ti R ussia seem s to lie going through som e unusual doubts as to just how ruthless she w ants to be in putting down the H ungarian revolt, At f rs t she hesitated to the point w h ere tile w orld w as beginning to believe the reb els had a chance of in succt ss. T hen R ussia moved ruthlessly, though she It w as as m ight have been w aiting for* th e rebels to re v e a l them selves fully, sn that the deportation trains m ight be p ro p erly loaded R e-establishm ent of a puppet gov ­ ernm ent. how ever, wa® the sig n al for p utting on a show of n egotiat­ ing with the rebels. The H u n g aria n puppet rep rese n ­ tative® to th e c N seem ed to think for a m om ent th a t S ecretary G en ­ era! H am m arsk jo ld would bo ad- m ifted to Buda pest This dido t p an out but R ussia h as not com m itted h er full stre n g th since world o u t­ ra g e has been m ade so ab undantly clear. T here is reaso n to believe th a t this is due to a certain am ount of R ussian con* e m ov er the reactio n to her recen t at t* am ong the sm a ll­ e r or vc* tk e r countries. Asia and A frica have expressed first incredulity and then re se n t­ trea tm e n t of ment over R u ssia 's H ungary. Iceland has rea p p ra ised h e r relations w ith the United .States and w ants the m ilita ry force to r e ­ m ain. in is w avering on The C om m m ist party the I ni'!*>! S tate s its loyalty to Moscow, although th e re has been no g re a t w ave of re sig ­ nations from key p a rty posts as there has been throughout Europe. These rea ctio n s are m ore im por­ tant to Moscow than those of the it la rg e r W estern pow ers whom considers from whom it ex p ects nothing. its enem ies and the strength It is am ong the so-called n e u tra l­ ists th a t R u ssia now seeks to ex­ pand. a m a s t.n g to continue h e r contest with the West. The m obilization of the noncom ­ m itted co u n tries against R ussia in the U nited N ations therefore be­ com es an im portant practical fac­ to r in h e r tre a tm e n t not only of H ungary but of all the satellites. In I he la st analysis it did not p rev e n t h e r from cutting down the H ungarian re b e ls when the situ a ­ tion becam e critica l for her. She does not go around letting slip w hat she h as on the m ere chance of g rabbing som ething new. She took serious chances with her fu­ tu re in o rd e r to take no setback in the p resen t. N evertheless, th e re a re signs th a t she does re stra in ts feel ce rtain when they a r e applied by the coun­ trie s she still h as some hopes of im pressing. R u ssia cannot m erely shrug off w h at they have to sa y to h er through the LNN. for a bullet its one-tenth the speed of light, a fan­ to be tastic speed moving w hen ta rg e t N aturally enough, even such sm all p articles used serve to "shake u p ” the targe*. which isn t very large itself. it hits Two rea ctio n s are possible when the d eu teriu m Hullet sm ashes into the nucleus stripping, and its op­ posite. pickup. In the stripping re­ action the neutron ad h eres to the nucleus, and the other p article passes by. In the pickup rea ctio n the deuteron pi* ks un a third p article as it passes by the nuclea­ the proton or e ith e r 'he w orld te hat h appens to the bom barded nucleus se rv e s to give re se a rc h e rs new inform ation about the universe in w hir Ii we live. and The an g u lar distribution of p arti- < Ie* knocked out of ’he nucleus a® shown on photographic plates and bv other m ethods 'ell- som ething of the stru c tu re of the nucleus. Dr. H a s h In terp rets Interpret ng 'he results, c o rre la t­ ing the ex p erim en tal data, is the task of D r. E ugene V. leash , a ssis­ tant p rofessor of physics and one 'h e N u clear Physics L a b o ra ­ of “ Anti­ to ry ’s protons, neutrons m esons from to zeta, and hyperons w ith alpha m asses h ea v ie r than protons — everytim e w e open the ioum al o r go th e re ’s ano th er one said D r h a s h . He had just finished tra n sla tin g a R u s s i a n p ap e r pertinent to the work being done by the U niversity. Dr. I va sh said that is a possibility' th a t the universities and schools of th e southern region in cooperation w ith the Oak Ridge Institute of Nu! lear Studies and the re se a rc h scientists to a m eeting there Oak Ridge N ational La born torle* m ay build a high-voltage acce e a ' tor at Oak Ridge The southern uni­ versities will include Virgin a Duke, A labam a, T ennessee, Rice and A&M, as w ell as The Univer­ sity of Texas. The new accelerator would produce “ b u lle ts” w ith enc*. cie® a thousand tim es as great a i the U niversity ® from five to ten billion volts 1x15 Million Machine Dr. Iva.-h attended a conform er at Oak Ridge d iscussing the pro­ posal this su m m er as the official the U niversity representative of The machine, to cost an estim ated 15 million dollars, would be of great ben* fit to r> se arch e rs at ti « U niversity, who would he allowed lo use it as would other scientists in the South. Study of the newly- discovered p article s, som e of them y r ’ to be accep ted and established in scientific > ir c e - would he m ade i >r R a s h said. possible I’he Van de G ra aff g enerator at Balcones R esearch C enter pre, duces energies from one to four million volts 'Die experim ental work, sponsored by an Air F orce contract, atte m p ts to uncover the nuclear forcer involved when a nucleus is bom barded. Weapon K a o e realizing The An* F o rce th at knowledge is one of the m ore Im­ for portant weapon a large p art of the U niversity re- search at Balcones factors su p rem a cy , ra c e sponsors the in Richard Johnston, a g raduate student of physics, has been doing the principal p a rt of the lab o ra­ to ry ’s experim ental research , and John R ichter is assistin g D r Iva sh ti his theoretical investigations W E S Aid ProgramTD Hopes for Expansion B y P i n EEI" t O F F E E T e x a n S t a f f W r u e r Last y e a r the I Diversity co n trib ­ uted $420 of approxim ately $4 OOO sen? to World U niversity Service* from 25 T exas colleges and univer­ sities This y e a r the University s goal is to double the am ount. WRS has been on this camp-;* since 1939 Until last y ea r it w as under C am pus Chest and al! con­ tributions sent to the international gi'oup cart <■ from ’ii ® source Last y ea r, a fte r interested p er­ sons searched desperately for som e organization to take over the spon­ sorship of th e com m ittee WUS wa* put under a ^spices of United R elig­ ious Council, T ru,er 1 'RC. the com m ittee now consist® of nine students, re p re se n t­ ing cam pus religious groups, and m o advisors M ary Ellen E m b re e is chairm an. , . < ' V V . - , ' C om m ittee leader® hope to m ake the group an independent o rganiza­ tion, su on other cam p u ses, in the fu tu re . But w ith p rese n t lack of function­ ing capacity, personnel, and m e an s of creating student in te rest in the is im possible to solicit a drive contribution co m parable with the relative size of the University'. it ♦ But, w here d o ts the blam e lie"* The av erag e U niversity student ha® no idea th at any organization such as WUS ex ists on the cam pus, Where, typical questions would go, doe® this m oney go, and how can one be sure th a t it actually reach es its destin atio n '’ WRS is pr im arily an internation­ al organization under United Stu- >-> * n>r>ri| m aid stu ­ throughout the world. The dents project or tile gioup is w rit­ Uu ing the U nited S tates, requesting them to to college president® in offer scholarships to H ungarian refugee students. Two hundred a f firm att ve replies have alread y beer received ♦ Ii Educational co n ferences equip­ ment, food and clothing distribu­ tion, student h ea lth cen ters loan funds for students, and student housing a re a few w ays in which last y e a r’s total in tern atio n al con­ tribution wa® distributed. WUS rise re: vsents C MIE and I 'N' ES? Ti <>n the cam puses of the l u re d S t a t e s , is a m utual benefit organiza­ tion in which all countries contrib­ uting. including the U nited State*, also benefit in aid. L ast ’ '’n*- edu­ cational conferences and sem inar* and loan funds an't ref igee scholar­ ships wert* aided bv this group in the United S tates. F unds a re sent to national offices in New York Q ty and then c o o rd in a te d by a n rtc rtm io n a j s e c re ta ria t In Geneva Switzerland. 'H iurday (.Dec 15) j® the day of WUS s m oney-raising drive on this cam pus, The com m ittee will spon­ sor a benefit banquet a? 6 p m . in the main ballroom of T exas Union. < 11<*‘*.® a re U and the cam pus in general is invited. ♦ F la n k W right, executive d irec tly of cam pus "Y " w ill speak on “ Our to the R esponsibility a® Students W orld's Student P ro b le m s.” V ari­ ous foreign stu d en ts will entertain. An international sm orgasbord, coni sisting of foreign foods, will b# se r rd This banquet will be the only bind raising m ean* staged on the cam pus bv WUS com m ittee. To wha? extent the U niv ersity will p ar­ ticipate m the d riv e I* com plete!* rn the student® To the future of the organization fact on this cam pus depend* on p a r­ ticipation in the n e a r future. the hands of T h e D a S a T e x a n n j * I f a r T i i f S s « B ? S t u r t J h,i i S ! j r li!' September through May b y te x a s Student P u b 'lltX m . Inc «.put; holi(lav perlod‘ Y J f \ Job Opportunities -T.-TT-T-— * * • b ito n a l offices,” J. v I_B_j* -y H 247" ' or *' th « ' n Entered as second c lass matter Cmt Texas, under th e act of March 3 1879. is "Tai* TTT! » ~~~ ‘ ----- st 0ff!C« bi Austin l l to A re p re se n tativ e of th e N aw D epart- m ent will be on cam pus Tuesday. De­ cem ber in terv iew Liberal’ Art* and Business A d m in istratio n seniors who m ay b** In tere sted in M anagem ent In tern sh ip P o sitio n s in the Civilian P e r ­ sonnel D epartm ent. A p p o in tm e n t m u st be made for in terv iew s in the S tu d e n t Emplov m cnt B u reau Pearce Hall 106. • A re p re se n tativ e of the Delta Airline* will be on <-*mp,.s Tuesday, December l l to Interview j a n u a r y and Ju n e wom­ en g ra d u ates in am - m ajor who m ay he in ter* vted In a position as airline stew ­ ardess A p p o in tm en ts interview s m ust be m ade in th e Student Em ploy- m ent B ureau. P e a rce Hall 106. for A re p re se n tativ e of the S outhw estern Investm ent Com pany wilt be on campus i hursday. D ecem ber 13 interview B usiness A d m in istratio n and Libera! A rts seniors vv ho ma v be interested in positions as M anagem ent T rainees. Ap­ pointm ents be m ad» in S tu d e n t E m ploym ent Bureau, P earce H all 106. interview s must for to A re p re se n tativ e or th e W om en* Army Corps w ill be on cam pus W ednes­ d ay and T h u rsd ay . Decem ber 12 and IS to interview m ajo rs in anc fp-'d who in direct com m is­ m ay be sions as 1st and 2nd L ieutenants in th e W o m e n s Arm y Corps A ppoint­ m ents for in terv iew s m ust be made in E m Plo> m ent Bureau, Pearce in te rested H all 106 e le m en tary in • W eldon Gibson D irector of Perann­ um f a r pus Christi Independent School D istrict. C orpus C h risti. Texas will in­ terview secondary teachers th e T eacher Placem ent Service Office on T h u rsd ay . Decem ber Id from 8:30 a rn. until 5 p.m. Ap- n'T h* 'n K made in Su tto n Hall JOA A pplicants vs ho have not re g ­ istered with 'le a c h e r Placem ent Service to be eligible for should do so now th e interview s. and ASSOCIATEO PRESS w i l t s s c i l . * * T he Associated Press Is exclusive!v en titled to ♦V!' . all news disp atch es credited in it o r ' not othervvfe» ,.t J*? J 0} ^ P u b lic a tio n o and all local ite m s of spontaneous o r itio mihHeh new spaper of a!! o th er m a tte r h e rein^ also reserved 0ubllsh,?d hcrei»- R ig h ts of nubiicauoi « ,n t i, Represented for national advertising by National Advert l i m • I--------------- 130 Madison * „ C° l,e8» Chica Boston Log Angeles-S an Francisco1*®* Y°rk N' T' I * " * ' _____ h e m h e r Associated Collegiate Press , SUBSCRIPTION r a t e s (Minimum su bscrip tion -T hree Months) D elivered in A ustin Malled In A u s tin ... Malled out of tow n S .75 monti SI.OO mon ti .$ 75 mont) E ditor ................................ M anaging E d i t o r .......... News E d i t o r .................... F e a tu re E d i t o r .............. Society E d ito r ................ News C ouncilors .......... E ditorial A ssistants . . . . ............ S ports E ditor A ssociate S ports E ditor A m usem ents E d ito r . . . . , . t W ire E d i t o r E xchange E d ito r ......... P h o to g rap h ers . . . . . . . . . ................ Book E ditor . ......................*........... PER M A N EN T STAFF ..................................................... NANCY MCMEANS V A l)EN SMIT! ................................. *...................................G reg Old ........................ * Rot McKenna \ ,L, dLLV" V T 7 V.*.......... Ann Abshiei *•• Noe Perez, Bud M im s, G eorge Rung! “ rena Jo -N°cm an , Robb Bur lag! •• N ick jotm soi .................. *.........................*Ln7 Montgomery B radford Dan e ........................................................ Bill Claytor .V.........................J ' J ’ * •'•••• T e rry Stem bridge .................... John Steel, J a m e s E, M ather R o b ert C. Jones LLLLLLU-L?J ..................... * , , , , S N ight M KO..................... 8TA FF rO K JO ,IN HILLJE Desk E ditor .............................. N ight R e p o r t e r ........................... DON BOTI C opyreaders ........................................ *............ Ta ml** r a n ...........V J " ^Iark Smith Night Sports E d i t o r Fillm ore. M a rg a re t Adam- A ssistant N ight A m usem ents E d i t o r A ssistants ................ .. N ight Wire E d ito r ' vi*c k . Johnson lirtin .............. Bradford D arnel Ben S legal Biia Clayton ........................................ ........ d GV V V - " " D o n s *****...................................... ....................... 1 irn Montgomery "oh coif nac-rou know m w eu what: wean w a n ’ok a u x a mmshm* VI): The ‘Closet Cases Are Being Eliminated By LA n m M VPF Trvan Stiff Writer Closets w ere p lo p e r places for w hispered discussions of g eneral diseases a few g enerations ago. I >e (erm ined con vc n lion--hatter- mg public officials have brought culturally tabooed v eneral diseases out of closets and into living room conversation. U sing "know your enem y ca m p a ig n s on m any levels, the distasteful they have broken w all around \ funeral diseases infections. In Texas, And. w ith public enlightenm ent., has com e tho evolution of tr e a t­ ment of v en e ral d iseases w ith w on­ ca m ­ d e r drugs, and p reventive paigns against th* M ass education h as been the in­ strum ent for gaining control of syphilis, gonorrhea, and other ve­ the n ereal diseases. State H ealth D ep a rtm en t, through its V enereal D isease Control Di­ vision. investigates contacts of all v enereal d ise a -e reported. B ecause m o re ea se s a re now re ­ ported m edical w o rk e rs can inter­ view and treat: p atien ts as well as all th eir sexual contacts. With the fear of being co m p letey ostracized erased by g e n e ra l knowledge that venereal d iseases a re m m mon and require im m ed ia te m edical atte n ­ tion, turn m ore readily and quick ly to health offi­ cials. infected persons rasp-' In Texas, g o n o rrh e a affects m o r t people than all o th e r ven ereal in­ fections, bu t in significance it ra te s second to syphilis. L ast y ear, 22,724 venereal dis­ ease case* w ere rep o rted to the State D ep a rtm en t of H ealth. In 1950 . 36,155 v e n e ie a l cases w ere reported in T ex as. H ealth d e p a rt­ m ent officials feel th a t the exten­ sive venereal d ise a se p rogram in T exas is responsible for the d e ­ cline in cases rep o rted . More cases a r e being tre a te d of those infected w ith v.d. because the H ealth D e p a rtm e n t w orkers cover m ore ground than before thev pointed out. And, fewer* cases are o cc u rrin g b ecause the d e p a rt­ ment '* p rev en tiv e has been successful program The State D ep a rtm en t of H ealth is now m a position to plan for eradication of v en e real diseases T exan B ookshelf not m erely control of these infec­ tions, report sta te health officials W orking w ithin the state a re 24 in*eivjevver-inve®t:ga:ors and pub­ lic health nurses who interview venerea! p atients and th eir social contacts. involved a re re fe rre d v ham s of infection are trac ed . and all to th eir p riv a te physicians or public clina - for exam ination and tr e a t­ m ent. I he inv estigations of v enereal co n tacts a r e confidential. Of 22,724 venereal disease ra se s rep o rted la st y e a r in Texas 12,317 w ere tre a te d by ’he sta te health w orkers, v enereal At The U niversity the incidence “ v ery d E e a -e Paul L. Student of sm all, “ W hite d irec to r of H ealth C enter. rep o rted D r. the is “ But, we m a y not see all the v en ereal cases am ong students be­ cause they m ay not w ant to rep o rt it and have it on th eir health re c ­ ord " he sta te d . W asserm ann te sts a re av ailab le to students who w ant them , Dr. W hite said. A W asserm ann test is given in a to check for syphilis blood sam pling. In 1938, nation-w ide attention w as focused upon The U niversity \vhen students voted 3 TTI to begin a for v o lu n tary W asserm ann d riv e tests at 'he Student H ealth Se*-. vice The D aily T exan p rin ted exten­ sive educational sto ries about ve- n ereal d iseases an d edito rially pro­ m oted the te sts Tile B oard of Re­ gents ap p ro v e l the plan and a W as­ serm an n program w as s ta rte d during the spring sem ester, 1938. te stin g C om m endations w ere received by T he D aily T exan from civic, po­ lit''’-al and m ed ical le ad e rs across the nation. Ed Syers T exan editor, ca m paigned to cast aw ay the soc­ ial sham connected w ith v enereal diseases. H ow ever, by M arch. 1938. only 206 student- had taken the volun­ ta ry tests. E nrollm ent at The Uni­ v e rsity w as 10,000 th a t sem ester. te sts w ere ex­ T he W asserm ann the S u m m er se s­ tended sion of response less w as th at y ea r, hut than expected through Jacqiu-s Ba n u n Explores Bases of Todays Culture TH E E N E R G IE S O F VHT. .Im ques B arzun. Published by H arper & B rothers, Say pages. P ric e : SS. In this intellect ta lly stim ulating collection of fourteen essays, Mr. B a r/u n explores the bases of p re s ­ ent-d ay cu ltu re: using such figures a s H enry Ja m e s, Swift, Stendahl. G oethe, Byron. S hakespeare, and o th e rs as reflectors, he focuses his attention the so u rces and developm ent of w hat he calls “ m o d e rn ism .” them on through “ T H E TRUTH IS th a t w hat we a re in the habit of calling m odern today is a m ix tu re of at lea-? tw o conceptions Sym bolist and p rew ar M odernist. Conceptions is w hat they are, not m erely styles within a conception. They differ not only in origin, intention, and effect upon in w hat the senses: they differ to be the re a lity of they assum e the world n atu re of m a n . . . F rom this confusing m ix­ tu re, then. M r. B arzun sees arising the chaos and despond which c h a r­ ac te riz e our tim es. Amid this chaos and despond, Mr. B arzun charg es introduction, history has in his been "All one need know of history is that all previous tim es w ere p referab le to ours ’’ repudiated. and the the c ritic ’s ta sk IN A SITUATION such as this, it is to subdue. to solve, to explain this chaos. It is the c ritic 's job to supply an ans­ w er to the question, “ W hat a re the c rite ria of M odernism , or m ore g en e rally still. Who a re we in the s tre a m and W estern th o u g h t? ” tim e of C learly and forcefully, Mr. B a r­ zun u ndertakes to supply such an an sw er, “ The E nergies of A rt" is an intelligent and intelligible illum ­ ination of the m azed and tortuous c h a ra c te r of the m odern world. —RCJ US Director To Visit UT y B y C Y K E N A J O N O R M A N E ditorial A ssistan t Peyton Short, director of the World University Service regional office in Dallas, will be on the University campus Wednesday through Friday to address religious groups. Groups may arrange to hear Mr. Short by contacting Rev. Jack Carter, chaplain of Canterbury, at GR 6-3589. The reg­ ional director, recently returned from India and a tour of the East, will discus WITS student and projects in different areas of the world. W orld University Service, worldwide inter-racial, inter­ faith organization to aid students, launched its drive at an on- --------------- ;— ------------------- ♦ c a m p u s re tre a t D ec em b e r 7-8, The d riv e will close S a tu rd a y a t a ban- in T exas Union. All proceeds of both banquet and r e tr e a t will be u sed to assist for- elgn students a b ro a d : m ost of it w ill go to national WUS for aid to re b e l H ungarian students. Eight Receive Nobel Prizes i q u e t a t 6 p.m . e ?ht m en W O C K H O L M , Sw eden U P -Amid joy}:.I splendor, of id le r *e received 1956 Nobel prize aw a rd s Monday. F iv e A m ericans, a Briton a G erm an and a Soviet R ussian w ere honored at the an ­ n u s' cerem ony in Stockholm Con­ c e rt H all. the Shockley, B b * science rec ip ien ts w ere: F o r tran sisto r, physics, P ro fs. W illiam John B ird e e n and W alter H. B rittain of the U nited States F o r ch em istry . Sir Cyril N, M nshehvood G re a t B ritain , and P f f. N ikolai Sem yonov, Soviet In ion. F o r m edicine. D r. W erner F orss- nsan, W est G erm an y , and Profs. A ndre G Gourmand and Dickinson W. R ich a rd s J r , o ' the U nited • a t e s , T h e category am ounted to $38,533 and w as split th r e e w a y s a f f o r d in g to tv-' or th e n u m b e r of co-w inners prize each in S peakers from th e WUS com m it­ tee, com posed of rep rese n tativ es individual religious g ro u p s, from will be visiting c a m p u s living units to discuss WUS th is week. S tudents atten d in g the on c a m ­ pus re tre a t h e a rd M iss D orothy G ebauer, dean of w om en; W illiam D. Bonis, ex-H ungarian citizen; an d M ustafa M . Sahtout, Syrian citizen, discuss “ F o re ig n Students a t a panel a fte r a “ s ta rv a tio n ” dinner F rid a y night. T he m enu w as plan­ ned to include th e ty p ical subsist­ ence diet of m a n y E uropean and E a s te rn students. | —T h eir P ro b lem s and N eeds S atu rd ay M iss E lizabeth Single­ ton. WUS regional field secreta ry , spoke on “ WTS -Its W ork and P u rp o se ," at a 7 a rn, b re a k fa st m eeting. Ja c k Sw earingen, a ssist­ a n t directo r of In tern atio n al Cen­ te r , gave the final r e tr e a t speech 1 a t noon S atu rd ay . On Campus with Max S t a t o r (Author of "Bartfoct Boy WHA Ch«*k,m t it . ) H A P P Y T A L K A i we all ljnow , c o n v e rs a tio n is te r r ib ly important cm a d a te . W h e n lulls in the c o n v e rs a tio n run longer than an h o u r o r tw o , o n e’s p a r t n e r is inclined to grow logy — even su llen . W h a t, th e n , d o es o ne do? I f one is w ise , one fo llo w s the b r illi a n t example of H a rlo w T h u rlo w . H a r lo w T h u rlo w p r e p a re s . T h a t is his simple secret. Before the date, he goes to the library and reads all 24 v olum es o f th e en c yclopedia a n d tr a n s c r ib e s t h e ir con­ te n t- on h is cuffs. T h u s h e m a k e s su re t h a t no m a tte r w h a t h is d a t e ’s in te r e s ts a r e , he will have ample material to k ee p th e c o n v e rs a tio n a liv e . T ak e , f o r exam ple, H a rlo w ’s firs t date with Priscilla de G a s s e r, a fine, s tr a p p in g , blue-eyed broth of a girl* lavishly c o n s tru c te d a n d ro s y a s the dawn. H a rlo w w a s. a s a lw a y s, p r e p a r e d when he called for P ris c illa , a n d , a s a lw a y s, he d id n o t start to converse im ­ m e d ia te ly . F i r s t he to o k h e r to d in n e r b e c a u se , as every­ o ne k n o w s, it is u seless to t r y to make conversation with a n u n fe d coed. So h e to o k h e r to a fine s te a k house where he stoked h e r w ith g o b b e ts o f B lack A n g u s and mounds of French f r ie s a n d th ic k e ts o f e s c a ro le a n d battalions of petits fo u rs . T h e n , a t la s t, d in n e r w as over and the waiter b r o u g h t twro fin g e r bow ls. “ I h o p e y o u e n jo y e d y o u r d in n e r, m y d e a r ," sa id H a rlo w , d ip p in g in to h is fin g e r bowl. “ O h, it w'as g ra n d y -d a n d y I” sa id Priscilla. "Now let’* go so m e p la ce f o r r ib s .” “ L a te r , p e rh a p s ." s a id H a rlo w . "But right now, I thought we might have a conversation.” “ Oh, g o o d y , goody, tw o - s h o e s ! ” cried Priscilla. " I b ee n lo o k in g e v e ry w h e re for a boy who can carry on an in te llig e n t c o n v e rs a tio n .” “ Y o u r se a rc h is ended, madam,” s a id Harlow a n d p ulled b a c k h is sleeves and looked at his cuffs to pick a likely topic to start the conversation. Cam pus News in Brief Tuesday, Tf, 1956 TWI: DAILY TEXAN Fag® 5 88 Students Forget 2nd Salk Vaccination Only 87 p e r cent of th® stu d eg ts a re being stressed by P h arm acy j and W illiam Hall la st w eek, and is m aking plans for a din n er a fte r th* the C hristm as holidays who receiv ed initial Salk injections Extension T raining, Jor-e.ph H. Ar- in O ctober and N ovem ber a t the nette, director, said. Student H ealth C enter, re tu rn e d for second shots given D ecem ber 5-7, j g ra n t by Hogg F oundation for Men- j The program is the result of a c lu b ’s m em bers, for Of 702 stu d en ts who got first tai Hygiene. P h a r m a c y A w a r d G i v e n j * H . M. B urlage, dean of the ! Salk shots a t the H ealth C enter, | - 614 receiv ed second shots, rep o rted College of P h a rm a c y , and Ja m e s nrue D r. J. T. P hillips, assista n t direc- R d . Eddy, dean of the Division ’ected to receive the D ru g T ravel- of Extension, a re o riginators of the | le rs Association of T exas aw ard tor of th e center. for 1956-57. Dr. H enry M . B urlage, d ean of the College of P h arm ac y , announced, _ „ ... ' H°llingsw orth One sh o t of Salk vaccine isn i{ program , IS P r a i s e d ‘T r i b u t e was s® . enough to p rev e n t polio, m ed ical officials h a v e stated. A series of three injections is necessary before •the vaccine is effective. at- the belief with which I tended an interim m eeting of th* the N ational H ungarian students stru ck for free- A m erican P h arm ac eu tica l Assocl- 'is all of D e a n A t t e n d s M e e t i n g H, M. B urlage, dean of the Col- P h arm ac y r u n a .m a c y , recAntlv rec en tly U niversity students w ere praised “ Not a single ease of p a r a ly tic 1 T hursday for particip atin g in the in any drive to get funds for H ungarian polio h a s been reported individual p ro tec ted by all he ;spirit in which Btu- chott of S a t v a c c in e " rec en tly dents undertook the drive rem inds ! declared D r. H art E Van R iper, i m edical d irec to r of Foundation for Infantile P a ra ly sis. d o m - Ms TCr Koan r « . ' m an, M rs. W illiam M u rray J r , th re e refugees. ,!? ? f1 But polio cases ported by those who receiv ed only the firs t an d second Salk shots. ! No co n crete reasons have been M rs. M urray said th a t the Red Cross, the national agency officially designated to handle international offered b y students who receK-ed | " » « * * a firs t Salk Injection and failed support fr en a,l p r o p s . to report last tsoek f >r tile other. N “ S atu rd ay , we had tw o o r th re e J M u s j ( . C o u r s e S e t calls fro m students who h a d the j ^ ^ N ext sem ester students will have a ticm house of deleg ates In Wash* « tn^ o n - D C. ^ B a p t i s t s t o H o l d P a r t y T he Hyde P a rk B ap tist Church will have its young peo p led Christ­ m as p arty S aturday a t 7 p rn. The p a rty will be free and will be held Tw o Students Initiated Catholic F ra te rn a l O rganization initiated W alter B a n ak and Mel­ b o urne G ans Sunday a t the CFO H ouse, 705 West Tw enty-fourth. A. J. Carubbi, p resident, acted as installing officer. Investigate C O N S U L A W A R D EES for 1956-57, who w ere chosen from 900 Law stu d en ts fo r making th e m ost sig n ifican t co ntributions to the Law School a re (left to right) fro n t row; Ross Sterling, Ed­ w ard C . H u g h es, R o b e rt H , Alvia, Vernon Neil Caldw ell, Jo h n C . A kard, C , L. Ray Jr., an d Jo h n R. M cFall, * S econd row: C am pbeH A . G riffin, M arvin R. Thomas J r., A lan Ja c k G a re y , Bobby N . C a rn a ­ han, Ramon A . Von Drehle, an d Elton M. M o n t­ gom ery. Back row: G e o r g e A . H um ble, N eal Bonner, Earl G u ita r, Frank G bson, W e lb y K. Parish, and Larry Farness. Students to Attend Mission Congress F o u rteen students from six c o u n -!D ecem b er 27-30, said E unice P a rk re p re se n t tides w ill the U niver- er, in tern atio n al stu d en t w orker. The 14 who m ake up th e In ter Congress in N ashville, T ennessee, ; n ational V erse C hoir w ere invited a t th e Student World M ission to a p p e a r on th e p ro g ra m . The fir'* I choir will give “ The A nsw ers" by just dldn } se e ™ to know v\JK‘n we > tw ice a w eek in a h a rp ensem ble D r p ki!hps sa id * ^ cv ; an opportunity to com bine playing j a t chUrch Law Students To Be Sworn In L ean d er Swann, a poetic v! \ ft Erving D arius d ra m a p o rtray in g m e n ’s m inds betw een com m unists! b e in g considered by officials j and the free w orld an d g ltm g a I solution founded in the C hristian . . th e w a r , m ake for Ulf y I , . of the H ealth C enter is a p lan for the sf (^'Pr| (1 snots so ne sta te d , , . „ p riv ate lessons once a week in a new m usic course, announced Andrews, m usic instructor. }n ; Students enrolling for the class w ill not nlav before a 1urv Those I M arch. S tudents who didn’t s ta r t " ' 11* nui ‘; lriy uylure ® jury. i nose in terested should contact Mr. An- . s p rjr s , , ,, O ctober-N ovem ber .. , geries « lk , th . ,, , , • Sw earing-in cerem onies w ill b e 1 held a t I 30 p.m . M onday in the I i t«ur#»roitv I g the Rio G rande V alley a re a S uprem e C ourt for the t m versity School of L aw students who passed ^ v ‘ ’ ago, rep o rted 336 cases. ta n t churches Sponsored by th e B a p tist Stu- wouW g e t another chance In M arch d rew s- dent Union, the choir is com posed and rec eiv e the second shot in the m em bers from vario u s p ro te a -! spring of 1957, followed by th e la st ; shnt in thp fai, « m „ t e r . shot in the fall sem ester. If an o th er Salk series is offered, in announcem ent will be m a d e 'Hie discase is believed tran sm itte d by m osquitoes. to be ^ a r e x a m ln a t*on given in Octo- I Soloists for th e N ashville, Term., ber, j m ission The students who will be sworn Goosby » congress w ill b i N ancy U , r, Jon V ickers, P a u l V ohra, T . . \ Law Films to Be Shown Two film s will be in Townes A uditorium W ednesday at 7 p m . "T he T exas P riso n S ystem ” , is a new color film showing th* shown n ^ . , Also, d ales when students m a y , , . , . iTOrk| ( receive the third Salk shot will be following , hypothetical prisoner Questionnaire and Bill Lawson. M a rg a re t A dam s. D irectors are Ja n e W ells and printed in a la te r Texan. Choir n u m b e rs ar* M ary Ann P h a r m a c i s t s S t r e s s 4 I Gee, Jennie F ranklin, an d Anthony I H enry represen tin g A m eric a; Tri- venl P opat, In d ia; M iriam M al ai *u I a , P hilippines; H arold Law, Hong Kong; C arlo H abash, P a le s­ tine; and Ignacio C olm an, P an am a. . m i n a m 4 F o u r asp ec ts of m ental h e a lth — m a n ag e m en t, dealing w ith p atien ts and re la tiv e s, dispensing of tra n ­ quilizing d rugs, and the role of the p h a rm a c is t as a public se rv a n t— ‘Earth's M agnetism * Dr. Runcorn to Lecture Series Begin T o d a y in a re Bob Alvis, W illiam Andrew, K ath ry n Barlow , Vernon B erry, Don Bookout, Ja m e s B rew ster, Je ro m e D. Brock, D an A. Bruce, C arolyn Bhsch, G eorge Busch, N ed V. Caldw ell, Bob C arnahan, and C harles C heever. ^ * rr*eoV^% . t i j 5? burn, H oyt Cole, H arold C urtis, E leanor D arnall. G eorge D ay, J a m e s D ale Dowell, L a rry D ru m ­ m ond, Tom E astu s, Ja c k E isen- berg, John F erguson, H artso n D. F illm ore, M erle F lag g , Joseph iii. F ra n k s, John L. F ulb rig h t, Law­ ren ce F u ller. f!1, w e * Also J a c k G ^rey, J a m e s G ar­ re tt, F ra n k Gibson, H a rry H all, Glenn H ausenfluck, B ill B e a n e r, J u ­ lian H elm s, W illiam H ooser, D enny Kip** i Insrram P iiahp JuvrtMl fUrh L H K laevem an Stanley fisch, L. H. K laevem an, Stanley K rysa, A rth u r L am b, Bill L am bert, and R o b ert Lincecum . I L anden L ockett, H eaullan I/>tt, ! John M cFall, R. B. McGowen, Mal- i calm M cG regor, Donald M cNiel II, fcssor of physics, will speak on 1 w as a visiting scientist a t the Do- “ The E a r th ’s M a g n etism ," in O ttaw a, P hysics Building 201 a t 4 p.m . C anada, T uesday. Hob G ray, d irec to r oif tile ^ u n corn> vifiting pro- h a s b een In geophysics. In 1955, he T each er P la c e m e n t Bureau, w as elected p resid e n t of the N ational Institutional T ea ch e r P lacem ent A ssociation a t its m eeting in In­ dianapolis th is w eek. in! m inion O bservatory ------------------------ -- — — * | Dr. Redford Completes A la b a m a Lecture Series D r. G ray, w ho w as vice-president of th e group la s t y e a r, served as c h airm an for one of the sessions and is head of a com m ittee. Dotson G ives Speech D r. R uncorn, who is ch airm an of also le ctu re on “ Paleo-W ind D irec­ t io n /’ a t I p m. T h u rsd ay in Geol­ ogy Building 14. Holt M W O . M arvin M arnock. P au i the p h y .ic s d e p a rtm e n t a t th e U n i-; p M iller Elton versify of D u rh am in E ngland, w ill; M eaders, J a m e s P . M iller, Elton M ontgom ery, T hom as M ontgom ery, j Billy J . M ounce, W illiam Moss. J a m e s Sam M oore, Ben N iedecken. I Welby P arish , L a rry F a m a s s , A rcher F a r r, Ja m e s P erm en ter, D avid P urcell. W ayland R ivers, t R obert Ross, C harles Smallwood John S nedeker, J . B. Sowell, R ich­ ard B Stone, John E , Stubbs, Ben Sudderth, T hom as A T hom as, A r­ th u r C. Troilo, W illiam T u rn er. rec eiv e d degrees from C am bridge an d M anchester U niversities in E ngland. He w as a le c tu re r in physics a t M anchester D rehle, John W ard, Lots W atson, and a ssista n t d ire c to r of rese arch R obert W eather*!!, W illiam Whit- a t C am bridge, field, and C ary Young. | H is principal re se a rc h , how ever, M arvin T w enhafel, R am on Von D r. R uncorn D r. E m m e tte S. R edford, profes- . sor of governm ent, com pleted a T uesday’s physics le c tu re is P a rt | Beriea of six lectures in public ad ­ or a series of talks to he given by rninistration Saturday a t the Uni- D r. R uncorn from D ecem ber 11*21 ; v ersity of A labam a in T uscaloosa, on theories of the e a r th ’s p resen t Aja and p a s t m ag n etic behavior, The g en e ral topic of the six lec­ lechniques and p ro ced u res rn prelim inary rep o rt of th* \d u lt Reading P ro- j s te e r H ere com m ittee w ill be n * i hcge and g ram s w as th® them e of a speech by D r. E lsie Dotson, clinical psy- ch airm an Roy Coffee, chologist, T esting and G uidance ! B ureau, a t a m eeting in F o rt loased “ w ithin two w eeks," says tu res w as "Id e a l and P ra c tic e i n ____ P ublic A dm in istratio n ." T h e Uni- W orth S aturday, v a rsity of A labam a P re ss w ill pub­ lish th<- le ctu res in hook fo rm . Keramos Initiates Three D r. B ed fo rd ’s “ P ublic A dm lnis-i tratio n and Policy F o rm a tio n " w as published e a rlie r this y e a r by the nearing U niversity of T exas P re ss. K eram os, the U niversity engi- initiated i T hom as W elch, J a m e s McAlpin, society club, “ We a re about in the m iddle of o u r first round of inspections," he said. “ There a re about 35 or 40 on th e list," Anyone w ondering if a place is on the inspection list m a y call Coffee a t GR 8-8533 o r Bill M iller a t G R 6-8249, through the daily routine. The second film , “ Th® T errible 'Truth,” shows som ething of the d rug traffic and drug addiction. D ean Warns Green Speaks to TACT A mo Nowotny, dean of student . life, urges U niversity students re­ ceiving questionnaires attem pting to “ ra te your p ro fe sso rs" to in- Dr. Ralph T. G reen, director of vestig ate fully before taking any the Texas Com m ission on H igher Education, spoke to th* Texas As- A sociation of College T eachers, Sat­ u rd ay a t th e YMCA. action. jett r R e p resen tativ es from 15 ch apters of state-supported c®lleges and uni­ versities atten d ed . G ray Elected President accom panying th* questionnaire sta te s th a t th® re­ cipient has been ca refu lly selected to represent his school in a scien­ tific survey and ask s him to rat® h is professors excellent, good, fair, poor, or not a te a c h e r. L ater, the le tte r results w ill be published a booklet, the P ro fesso rs," “ Students R a t e costing $1.50. The stu d en t m ay ob- I tain copies a t prepublication price says, in of SI. D ean Nowotny said such a poll h ad neither been recognized nor approved by th e U niversity. ‘Steer Here’ To Release Report in Two Weeks c q jy a sl FOR Q U IC K A C T IO N O N Texan Classified A d s DIAL GR 2-2473 . Ask for Extension 29 - ITZ.* ,>• NT •' .kl, y s i tfoxkt u t m k l IIM a C o r n e r $010 Speedway J u st South f G regory Gym O h . w oe I Oh, lackaday! T h o se cuffs on w h ic h H arlo w had painstakingly transcribed such d iv e rs e a n d f a s c i­ nating information — those cu ffs w ere n o th in g now b u t a big, blue b la t I For Harlow* —p o o r H a r lo w ! — s p la s h in g around in the finger bowl h a d g o tte n h is cu ffs w e t a n d the ink had run a n d n o t o n e w o rd w a s le g ib le ! A n d H a rlo w b ro k e o u t in a n ig h t- s w e a t an d fe ll d u m b . “ I m ust say," sa id P r is c illa a f t e r s e v e ra l s ile n t h o u r* , " th a t you are a very dull fello w . I ’m le a v in g .” W ith th a t sh e flounced a w a y an d p o o r H a rlo w w a s to o c r u s h e d to p r o te s t. S a d ly h e s a t a n d sa d ly lit a c ig a r e tte . A ll o f a su d d e n P r is c illa cam e r u s h in g back . "W ag t h a t , ” sh e a sk e d , “ a P h ilip M o rris you j u s t l i t ? ” " Y e s ,” s a id H arlo w . " T h e n y o u a re n o t a d u ll fellow I" she c r ie d a n d s p r a n g in to his la p . "Y ou a r e b r i g h t ! A ny b o d y is b r ig h t to sm oke su c h a p e r f e c t doll o f a c i g a r e tt e as to d a y ’s ric h , ta s ty P h ilip M o rris , w h ic h is b rim m in g -fu ll o f n a t u r a l tobacco g o o d n ess a n d f r e s h u n filte re d f la v o r.. . . H a rlo w , tig e r , w a sh y o u r cu ffs a n d be m y lo v e !” " O k a y ,” s a id H a rlo w , a n d did, a n d w a s. CMax Shellman, ISSI T h e m aker* o f P h ilip M orn» Cigarette*, teho brin g you this co lu m n each tceek, are v ery h a p p y fo r H arlow — and fo r all th e rest o f you who have d itc o v e re d the tru e tobacco g o o d n ets o f today'* P h ilip M orn*! A s \ T htt's where the pause that refreshes with ice-cold Coke began. Now it s enjoyed fifty million time* a day. Must be something to it. And there is. Have aa. ice-cold Coca-Cola and s e e ...rig h t now. •OTTLEO U N D E* A U T H O tlrt 0 * T H I CO CA-C O LA C O M P A N Y i t AUSTIN C O C A -C O L A BOTTLING C O M P A N Y * C e k i " h a r*gi**»r*d tro d *-w o rk. €> W k , THI C O C A C O IA CO M M N Y M O N T H L Y C L A S S IF IE D R A T E S S w o rd * * ., 20 w ords ......................... ............. $ fi.oe *11.00 J C L A S S I F I E D D E A D L I N E S T uesday T ex a n ...............................M onday. 4 p.m . W ednesday T ex a n .........................T uesday. 4 p.m . T h u rsd ay T ex an....................... W ednesday. 4 p.m . F rid a y T ex a n .............................. T hursday, I p.m . Sunday T ex a n .................................. F rid a y , 4 p.m . D A IL Y C L A S S IF IE D R A T E S 20 w ords or less Additional words ........................$ . 9 5 . I d a y E ach additional d a y S , 8 5 . . . . .............. $ .01 Classified D isplay .............$1.35 p er colum n inch In the event of erro rs m ade in an a d v e rtis e m ent. im m ed iate notice m ust be given, as the publishers a r e responsible for only one incor* re c t insertion. . 0 2 Typing LET YOUR PRIV ATE secretary do y o u r ty p in g . GR 2-5517, DISSERTATIONS, theses Klectromat- (sym bols). Mrs. Ritchie. U. T. ie neighborhood. GR 2-4943. NEAT. ACCURATE typing Reasonable 708 W est 28th. GR 2-MG2 TY P IN G VvORK to perfection. ta lion s, theses, nlsc GR 6-8413 ACCURATE, REASO NABLE. E lectric. E lite ty p e. Greek ch aracters. P hone GR 7-6779. THESIS, dissertation, F.lectromatlc, UT neighborhood. Mrs. Bohis. GR 7-3749. E F F IC IE N T electrom atic ty p in g Mrs. Moore. GR 6 0691. or GR 6-8636 EXPERIENCED typing; reports etcet­ era. Electric. Mrs. H unter CL 3-3546 ALL TYPES work done by ex ty p ist Eiectromatlc GR ‘ rlenced DELAFIELD sYPING SERVICE The­ themes Notary, dissertations ses GR 2-6569 TYPING of a1! kinds. FUectromatlc, experienced. Mrs. Sanford. GR 2-0134. EXPERIENCED secretary and typist. D orotby Baker. BBA. HO 5-0197. TYPING. ANY kind Reasonable rates, Mr*. Vick. HO 5-1343. EXPERT TYPING and editing Reason- atua price®. Mrs. Bradley, UL 2-L.35. Special Services Lost and Found IC Y ! ADAM S P la y School. E xp eri­ enced child care. A ges 2 to 6. Hot lunch, snacktim e. naps Pre-school in* struction. GR 6-8128, 3211 East Avenue. LOST: GOLD RING w ith ruby sterna Probably Inst in or n ear Union last Thursday. P le a se ca ll W inifred Cojalon, GR 6-0669. TUTORING I H E N C H . Translation Instructress Mile Dupuis. Expert GR 6-2296. 250* Rio Grande FOUND' BLUE raven Japanese-mad® scarf in Gregory Gym night of Sin** Song. Hunter Leg f lu . GR 8-4684. FISH FOR FUN and relax. Boat and cabin *5 dav. W eekend *10. Camp F iat Rock. Box 412. Marble F alls. Phone O xford 3-4602. MOVING? Cat] GR LIGHT H AULING operated by students. Special stu d en t rates. 7-7894. L E A ’S law For Sale oppass id Ext Diamond Exporters Amsterdam. Holland Save 40% to 50% on gem quality diamonds direct from Amsterdam at wholesale price*. AU diamonds furnished with full description and guarantee. For cv-mplete details call call GR 2-1191. After 6 p.m. CL 3-7016. MEN’S HEAVY mounted ring with two diamonds and sapphire *200. Lady s engagement ring. Needs new mounting. 1300 HO 5 5389. CONVERTIBLE 1949 STUDEBAKER, Radm Heater. Overdrive. W hite side­ tires Recently overhauled. Ex­ to operate. wall tre m e r e c o n o m i c a l HO 5-6965, _____________ READ THE CLASSIFIEDS For Rent O NE-H ALF BLOCK CAMPUS Larg* private room , cook in g faculties, liv- ! im; room, Alto small, quiet apartm ent 8-5588. 2618 S p eed w ay. BRAND NEW ROOM. Never occupied. Private entrance, bath Orc block bus line. CL 3-5705 qr OL 3-9290. Ideal BEAUTIFUL NEW FURNISHED horn* on Lake Austin. Five acres woodland; 12 miles from capitol. Scenic view un­ surpassed. c o u n t r y home. GR 2-5959. ___ __ AVAILABLE Nice cottage furnished; 20 miles up on Lake Austin. Private, paved read. $55. Adults or couple. CL 3-8619. FURNISHED alr-conditloned bachelor student apartments. Austin's finest. tile bath. Five blocks west lot. Ell® Carpets of campus. Large parking Leon. ______________ A BAK HOTEL for men Alr-ccxnditlontd rooms a valla ale 26U Guadalupe Phone GR * » & Encephalitis Afflictions O n Increase S tate h ea lth officials have w arn- som etim es encephalitis, cd th a t te rm e d as sickness," “ sleeping will becom e as w idespread as m a ­ la ria form erly w as, if preventive actions a re no t taken. The plains a r e a of W est T exas rep o rted 341 cases th is y e a r, w ith approxim ately 15 deaths. T his is m ore than th re e tim es th e n u m b er of affections in 1955. Twro y e a rs Law Class Plans Social I The F re sh m a n L aw C lass w ill I h ave a C h ristm as p a rty S aturday a t the N orth A ustin Lions Club a t 8 p.m . A dm ission w ill be $2.50 per i couple o r SI 50 p er sta g ticket. EXPERT SHOE REPAIR • Modern Equipment • Keys Made • 10% Off G oodyear Shoe Shop Off The Drag on 23rd Street T U X E D O S f o r r f k t All Sires Longhorn Cleaners $538 Cluad&lope Phone OR 0-S847 -Fast Radio-TV Service- • JETT'S • 3511 Guadalupe HO 5-9801 Radio-TV — Phonograph — Sound Eq uipmant W e O ffer Expert Camera Repair Studtman Photo Finish G R 7-2820 222 W e st 19th I - Western H itt—Shirts Suit*—J<*an» J a c k e t s — S k i r t s Ladies* Bairs Gloves—Belts Shoe Repair CAPITOL SADDLERY 1514 Lavaca m m sm m m m m m m S P E E D W A Y | RADIO,TELEVISION and HI El S A L E S & S E R V IC E G R 8-6609 N o Extra C h a rge for Fast Service at fnflR W H ZW G ' the m ost ta DRY O pen 7:00 e.m. to 6:00 p.m. M onday through Saturday 510 W . 19th St. Corner N u ecef Laundry Service Clothes keep that longer "New Look with TH0R-0-CLEAN Drycleaning Exclusively at B U R T O N S 19th at Rio Grande Phone G R 8-4621 Students Like Tests A t UT Reading Clinic S A N T A C L A U S A N A L Y Z E D A * ' “- a . -Na. 'N * -NS*, N * T * m ' N * --a t 'N * -'N * ’N * H R ' N * ■ % Ps- s- s- t ! Ev e r y Y e a r M o r e a n d M o r e P e o p l e Gi v e J e w e l r y Gi f t s . Ideal H is for Y O U R Man r * % U T x jf r « R t « '•** r * ’ » 'th i :?•»' et t m - f'- fT v 'ii r t if - r z t I : ’ i i i t ' n r . » r v 'H it n . M t ! T’ i ' i n p r ' ■ •- < • ScirYar-f *■ n * r :»• « 1t f H W U It, i a t* u m tm o x a w a n ’SM M * I'iM t******* "Hi* * • « *{r’,rt«R , i » w . * r *./ Hit**.* S tu n *> *» » •! » te m v n *»**<•I I * ***fc hfavwr ar tmerws* jar***/rn* critura* :r n - ' . r m . , ; i r m n w f t J i H *u.: mn; rn** w *Tim« tyt# ret nwnb ».fl-*naYuiY tun im*.;.* ir" jfnwn Ju l .** l f % *m m m SiwBJtm i jussi^tm icf t a i * m h^tsv iiI I * Weather: Cloudy and Warmer High 65, Low 45 T h e D a j § ^ T e x a n 'First C o liege Daily in the South' Latest News O n Coaching Situation Page 2 V O L . 5 6 Price Five C e n ts A U S T I N T E X A S , T U E S D A Y f D E C E M B E R 11 , 1 9 5 6 Six Pages Today NO. 83 I rn y 1 ^ 4 * \ Choral Groups To Sing Carols On December 16 Christm as M u sic W ill Be Presented O n M B Terrace The seventeenth an n u al U niver- j sity C h ristm a s C aro l p ro g ra m , fea- j h irin g th ree U n iv e rsity c h o r a l I g ro u p s, w ill be p resen te d Su n d ay | a t 6 p .m . on the M ain B u ild in g Ter- j ra c e . B eginn in g the p ro g ra m will be a concert of C h ristm a s m u sic b y D r. I E . W illiam D oty, o rg a n ist, C h a rles the | H unter p lay in g c a r o ls on c h im es w ill be next. The G ir ls ’ G lee Club, the A C ap ­ p ella Choir, and the U n iv e rsity C horus, under the direction of P a u l E n g e lsta d , will each sin g one num ­ b er. T h ese will b e *‘F u m , F u m , F u m .” and “ H alle lu jah C h o ru s.’ ’ “ In D ulci Ju b ilo .” “ O H oly N igh t’ ’ w ill be su n g by Jo se p h in e Antoine. E le a n o r P a g e will be a cc o m p an ist. The H a rp E n se m b le , com posed of 1 O thers p artic ip a tin g a r e D r. E d ­ m und H einsohn, U n iv e rsity M eth­ od ist Church, who wall d eliv er the ; in vo catio n ; D r. L o g a n Wilson, pres- j ident of the U n iv e rsity , who will 'g i v e C h ristm a s g re e tin g s; Lloyd I H ay es. S tu d en ts’ A ssociation presi- I dent, who w ill re a d the C h ristm a s lsto ry ; and M iss L o ra L e e Reder- • son, ch a irm a n of the facu lty co m ­ m ittee on re lig io u s life, who will I give the benediction. Students Tardy A s Tower C lo ck Has M o n d a y Blues Stud en ts re ly in g on the Towner clock for co rre c t tim e w ere in trou ble when they re a ch e d their 8 o ’clock c la s s e s M onday m orn ­ ing. The c lo c k ’s h an d s pro­ cla im ed the tim e 7:45 even a fte r th at c la s s w a s d ism isse d , and by noon they had on ly reach ed 9. U n iv e rsity w o rk ers w ere b u sily strip pin g the w’o r k s to find the trou ble M onday afternoon, and they hoped to h a v e the b ig tim e­ p iece on the jo b a g a in soon. Egyptian Guerrillas Hit British Troops PORT SAID, Egypt GT*)—Egyptian hostility toward with- by a rustle of rooftop activity that could be heard even over drawing British and French troops crystallized Monday in a the noise of their jeep engines—halted quickly for combat guerrilla attack from ambush on a British patrol in Port against a rain of grenades and machine gun bullets. Said. But Cairo promised the UN police commander it won't happen again. One soldier w as wounded slightly by a grenade fragm ent The badge of S t Andrew on his khaki tam o'shanter deflect- Members of the eight-man Royal Scots patrol-forewarned ed it and shielded him from more serious injury. UN May Send Dog to Moscow K a y D yche, J a n i s G ru m b le s, tric ia W entworth, and L in d a P o tts Y e a g e r, will p a r tic ia te in the pro- j G e n e ra l D a g H a m m a rsk jo ld be I g a ria n people, g ra m . Jo e l A ndrew s is d ire cto r of sen t to M oscow if n e c e ssa r y by the the en sem b le. P a - U N IT E D N A TIO N S, N . Y . (JPi — I vention in that country, an d recog- In d ia u rged M onday th at S e c re ta ry nition of the rig h ts of the Hun- H a m m a rsk jo ld h a s m a d e one trip U N A ssem b ly for d ire c t negotia- to M oscow sin ce b ecom in g se c r e ­ tion s with the Soviet Union on with- ta ry g e n e ra l in 1953 and w a s ac- d ra w a l of Soviet fo rc e s fro m Hun- \ corded a plush w elcom e. He h a s to obtain g a r y . In d ia ’s p erm ission of M oscow 's puppet V. K . K rish n a M enon, sta rtle d ; govern m ent in B u d a p e st to go to ro v in g C abin et m in iste r, the U N A ssem b ly with h is p ro p o sal the H u n garian c a p ita l on D ecem - a s U S C hief D ele g a te H en ry C ab o t! b er 16 to in itiate U N re lie f w ork L o d g e J r . and other d e le g a te s de- and m an d ed the A ssem b ly condem n the S o v ie t Union for w hat L o d g e called its “ b ru ta litie s’’ a g a in st the Hun­ g a r ia n people. w hether let him retu rn to M oscow on a m ission connected with c a se . there w a s so m e sp eculation been u nable, how ever, the R u ssia n s would the Soviet D eputy F o re ign M in ister answ ered V a ssily V. K uznetsov the IaOdge with a dem an d that U nited S ta te s b e condem ned for the H u n garian alleged ly in citin g rebellion. He rep eated the .Soviet contention that the Soviet fo rces in H u n gary by agreem en t w ere under the W arsaw P a c t and a t the invitation of the H u n garian govern­ m ent. Speak in g a n g rily , he said an A s-, u n d eIS round sem b lv resolution callin g on Hun- S a few a y and g a ry to a d m it o b se rv e rs by la st D ecem b er 7 w a s an “ u ltim atu m ” self re sp ectin g govern- H u n garian which no i m ent would acc ep t. Whether British return f i r * struck any of the Egyptian attackers was not determined. th * seven E g y p tia n * a r e a and a cc u sed E g y p t in an urgent p rotest to the U N force of violatin g cordoned off The B ritish a rre ste d « the cease-fire. r»j, Gen. Iv L. M. B u rn s, C a* n adian co m m an d er of the police, hasten ed here from C a iro and sa id he h ad a ssu ra n c e from E g y p t that there would be no fu rth er a tta c k s . B u rn s told Lt. Gen. Hugh Stock ­ w ell, co m m an d er of the British- F ren ch ta sk force, th at M a j. G en. A bdel H akim and Wing C m dr. All S a b ry h ad inform ed him they h ad no know ledge of a p revi­ ou s attem p t to sm u g g le ex p lo siv e s and am m unition to the E g y p tia n this Suez C an al such a ctiv ity that w a s co n trary to E g y p tia n govern ­ m ent policy. is A m er the E g y p tia n a r m y ’* ch ief of staff. S a b ry is P re sid e n t N a s s e r ’s foreign a f f a ir s a d v ise r, *A m er in “ They a lso sa id there would be no repetition o r other inciden ts to d istu rb peacefu l conditions du rin g the w ith d raw al,” B u rn s sa id . Stock ­ well sa id he a cc ep te d the a s s u r ­ sa tisfa c to r y . an c es a s H ow ever, he ad d ed th a t he would ch an ge ta c tic s sligh tly to stren gth ­ en p atro ls. en tirely B u m s flew b a c k to C airo la te r. is estab lish in g UN m ilita ry He h e a d q u a rte rs W ednesday a t E l Q an ta ra , so m e 30 m iles south o f P o rt S aid . The am bush w a s not the only incident of the d ay . British -F ren ch au th orities de­ c la re d the E g y p tia n s had fu rth er violated the ce a se -fire by sen d in g a p a rty of four m en behind the UN b u ffer zone on the Suez C an al in the a re a o f E l C ap . 24 m ile * south of P o rt Said The E g y p tia n s, b y a j sm all boat, w ere a rre ste d by a | B ritish patrol. d e sc rib ed i th em selv es a s civ ilia n s in se a rc h of fresh w ater. B ritish o ffic e r* said , how ever, it w a s esta b lish ed definitely that they w ere so ld iers. lan d ed Th ey Canadian Plane Down With 62 V A N CO U V ER , B. C. Oh—A crip- pled T rans-C anadti a irlin e r c a r r y ­ ing 62 p erson s, a t le a st eigh t of them A m erican s, w a s down Mon­ d ay in B ritish C o lu m b ia ’s forbid- i ding Ch ilia w ack M ountain a r e a . L o d g e co m p ared S o v iet actio n s I J in H u n gary to those of A dolf H itler I an d N az i G erm an y in W orld W ar II. J M enon re fu sed to go alo n g with | L o d ge and a 17-country resolution ; prop osin g the condem nation of the Soviet Union, but he a c c e p te d other se ctio n s of the p ro p o sa l d em an d in g the w ithdraw al of the So v iet troops fro m H u n gary and a h a lt on M os­ co w 's intervention in H u n gary . UT Drinking To Be Studied In co u n terp ro p o sals, M e n o n ca lle d on H a m m a rsk jo ld to open S tu d ies o f alcoh olic consum ption , stitution w ith the purpose of figrht- ta lk s at the UN with re p re se n ts- j the Soviet a m o n g U n iv e rsity stu d en ts will be I ing alcoh olic b e v e ra g e s on the edu- tiv es o f H u n gary and Union on the H u n garian c a se . If I undertaken level. Tile organization soon by these do noj bring action , Menon Women s C h ristian T e m p e ra n ce p la c e s books on alcohol in school p roposed th at H a m m a rsk jo ld con- Union. M rs. C lau de D eV an W atts, I lib ra rie s, fu rn ish es film s to schools, sid e r goin g to M oscow fo r ta lk s WCTU sta te presid en t, sa id Mon- j and m a k e s scien tific stu d ies. The d e sign ed to b ring ab o u t the with­ WCTU a lso reco m m en d s legislation d ra w a l of foreign tro o p s from Hun­ rn fight a g a in st alcohol con­ its g a r y , a ce ssatio n of Soviet inter- sum ption. the T e x a s I catio n al day. C h u rch es in the U n iv e rsity a r e a 1 called attention to the consum ption of alcoh olic b e v e ra g e s by stu den ts, . M rs. W atts said . M rs. W atts w a s auth orized la st i w eek by the WCTU sta te conven­ tion to appoint a co m m ittee of “ q u alified w om en to co n fer and co-operate with the U n iv e rsity in a sc e rta in in g fa c ts and d ev isin g con­ dition s’ * on the problem . Aabel Will Speak To Pharmacists ta f i f c f v o f w r t its fir st report in a "w e e k o r IO i n l f ) d a y s .” A fter re ­ ports, a plan of action will be de­ cided on, the sta te p resid en t said . The W CTU is an ed u catio n al in- the co m m ittee rvt» ' * i sp ea k to p h a rm a c y students T u e s­ d a y a t I p m . in B a tts A uditorium on c a re e r opportun ities for them in the A rm y M edical Service. Cactus Nominees Due Wednesday The dead lin e fo r n om inating Out­ stan din g Stu d en ts and G oodfellow s for the C a c tu s h a s been set for 5 p m. W ednesday, a cco rd in g to John Stu art, editor. 'rhe sp e a k e r holds a bach elor of scien ce d e gre e in p h a rm a cy from the U niversity of M innesota and is a m em b er of the A m erican P h a r­ m a c eu tica l A ssociation . He is a m e m b e r of Phi D elta Chi, national p h a rm a ce u tica l is a sso c ia te d with the M ilitary S u r­ geons. fratern ity, and The story of the S a lg o ta rja n m a s s a c r e w a s brought to B u d ap est bv a three-m an m in e rs' delegation which c a m e to report to the C entral W orkers Council. An ad v e rtise m e n t in the D aily T exan , the deadline a s being that sa m e d ay An o fficial v e rsion of the inci­ dent. contained in a lea flet signed by the S a lg o ta rja n C om m un ist par- vvas *n prpor, *®»d Stu art, Any P arson or o rgan ization m ay ty and brought to B u d a p e st by the th ree m in ers, cla im ed p ro v o ca teu rs n om inate one or m o re p erson s. threw g re n a d e s at police, and the I*o n u s to do this m a y bt1 picked m in e rs council h arb o red fa sc is t cie- UP niPnt s announcing F rid a y , Jo u rn a lism B u ildin g 107. E a c h nom ination is to bo listed on a s e p a r a t e form , givin g qu alifi­ cation s, a c tiv itie s, and honors. !_____________________ . V eteran s who a re in school under Veterans M a y Receive December Checks Early L a te rn the d ay . R o y al C an ad u m Air F o rc e Squ adron L e a d e r G . L . Sheahan o rd ered p lan es to concen­ trate in the vicinity of S ilv e r T ip Mountain, n e a r H op*. B.C . T h ree rep orts h ave been in of fla sh e s sigh ted in the a r e a Sunday the K orean G I Bill a re exp ected night a fte r the tra n sp o rt p resum - to receive their monthly G I allow- a b ly went down, anee before the C h ristm a s holidays | The North S t a r v an ish ed during begin, D r. G e o rge T. M cM ahan, ^ v io le n t sto rm sh ortly a fte r takin g m a n a g e r of the V eteran s A d m in i-! o ff from V an cou v er a t 6 p.m . Sun- stratio n C en ter in W aco, said Mon- d a y on a, flight to C a lg a ry and east- d a y . e m C an ad ian cities. turned Col. B e rn ard A abel, chief of the B E L G R A D E , Y u g o sla v ia . D ec. IO , ern m en t, back ed by overw h elm in g ; H. A. B u tle r of Austin, is to m a k e | A rm y M edical S erv ice C orp s will The co m m ittee, ch aire d by M rs. IS »nd BEAUTY S o c b ia k to ha ired, d a r k - e y e d b e a u t ie s f r o m M e x i c o , fin d C h r i s t m a s d i f f e r e n t f r o m w h a t INTERNATIONAL S ri D e t a r i M a r i a A r o r a Ram irez, da rk- In d o n e s ia a n d in A m e r i c a s q m e w h a t it is b a c k ho m e. But Sri, Photo by John L Steel a w a y , assures her w hose hom e Texas frie n d s th a t th e h o lid a y is n o t e n tire ly d iffe re n t there since she is on e o f the fe w C h r is ­ tians in in do n e sia , and, o f course, her fa m ily has a C h rist m a s tree. ny tor Internationals To Have Ball Friday Night The forth com ing C h ristm a s d an ce I honoring foreign stu d en ts and spon- j so red by the Union D an ce C o m - 1 m ittee will begin a t 8:30 p m . F ri- j d a y in the M ain B allroo m of T e x a s j Union. Prelims Begin For Speakers The secon d and third p lace win­ n e rs will re ceiv e $75 and $50, re ­ sp ectively . E a c h sp eech m a y not exceed 1,200 w o rds an d m u st be origin al. T h ere is no tim e lim it, but each oration will la st a p p ro x im a te ly ten m in utes, dependin g upon the d e ­ livery . N ot m o re than eight co n testan ts will he se lecte d for the fin als in T ow n es H all A uditorium , D ecem ­ b er 18, a t 7;30 p .m . Teachers-to-be to Meet P re lim in a ry ju d gin g of the 23 co n testan ts in the E d G o sse tt O r a - 1 to ric a l C ontest will be at. 2:30 p .m . T u e sd a y in Speech B u ild in g 201. A typew ritten copy of each era- j Hon m u st bp d eliv ered to Speech . b u ildin g 105 not la te r than noon. C o n te stan ts who w ill sp e a k a re D ea n D a v is, R oy M ouer, W alter B o yd . M arth a V allian t, W. C arl T ouch, R o b ert H a rd e r a vc, M ey er W itt, P a u l C arro ll, D avid R e a g a n , J o h n R a d e r, P a tr ic k B arlo w , B r o a d u s Spivey, A lso C am ero n H ightow er, G eor­ Iutrry g in a Sw arz, K eith Pow er, Ludlow , M arvin L ew is, Joh n S. B ish o p . Andre B ac o n , G a rfield C la rk , M arion Seh m al, B ill W right, an d E d w a rd S, M arquez. TVie co n testan ts w ill sp e a k in that o rd er. foreign F o u r g irls Hungary Threatened By N ew Outbreaks lands frojn will be p resen ted . Th ey a r e S ilv ia ! ! C usehnir, a g ra d u a te student from i Buenos A ire s; Sri D e ta ri So cb jak to , j a g ra d u a te student from In d o n e sia ; M aria A uro ra R a m ire z , a junior accoun tin g m a jo r from L a re d o who will re p re se n t South A m e ric a ; and It® -The H u n garian co un try side w a s | m ilita ry and police pow er, threat Anne-M ette Ronholt, a soph om ore reported M onday night to be grip- m o d new bloodshed if the w ork ers la n g u a g e m a jo r from C openhagen, D en m ark . floor said foreign and I B u d a p est w a s en circled by an iron ped by a new o u tb u rst of fighting. I stru ck . re a ch in g B e lg ra d e t i t t i e m i l i t o m r o n d m l i r * A show by R e p o rts T G « 1 T i i n n n v * t « n t V M l / f t * * A f h r n n t - I i t o Vienna reported M onday night all com m u n ication s with B u d a p est a g a in w ere cut. H ou rs a fte r the dead lin e the B u d a p e st rad io m ad e no m ention of the strik e. the m e etin gs A m erican stu den ts will he one of rin g of R u ssia n a rm o r and gu ns, Student te a ch e rs, ele m en tary and Th e B u d ap est C en tral W orkers the fe a tu re a ttra c tio n s with Joh n se co n d ary , who wish to a p p ly for stu den t teach in g, should atten d one I White a s m a ste r o f cerem on ies, j Council d efian tly stood by its call of s tu d e n tI fo r a nationw ide 48-hour ge n e ral i strik e a g a in st the govern m en t of toriu m this w eek. They a r e set for I p m . W ednesday and 4 p m . T h u rsd ay . Another m a s sa c r e , the killing of 80 u n arm ed civilian d e m o n strato rs D eeoration s will c a r r y an inter- Ja n o s H a d a r M onday. W orkers in | a t the m jning town o f S a lg o ta rja n in northern H u n gary by H u ngarian police, heightened the tension. in B a tts Audi- J G u e sts will d an ce com bo, Tom Arnhold directin g. to a The w inner o f the co n test will re ­ Th ose not a b le to attend a m eet­ c e iv e 5100 and w ill re p re se n t the ing a r e u rged to see C h arles II. U n iv e rsity at the M issou ri V alley F o re n sic L e a g u e in A pril a t K a n s a s D ent a t Sutton 214 F rid a y fro m 2 S ta te C ollege. to 4 p .m . n ation al them e. Tile ta b le s, how-j se v e ra l big fa c to rie s sa id they ev er, will be adorned with red and w hite ch ecked tab le cloth s and drip-bottle ca n d les in F ren ch Q u ar-1 ------ tor Style. The M oscow -im posed R a d a r gov- — ------- tended to obey the call, UT Driver Hits H o m e r Garrison on the A m od ttr< ) f'rrfc* A m otorist sm a ck e d into a fire hydrant here Su n d ay and then punched the m outh of a cu riou s residen t who co m e out to se e w hat happened. tho s t a t e ’s No, The d riv er didn t know he had ju st poked a t I policem an — C ol, H om er G arriso n J r . , public sa fe ty d irector. G a r r i­ son, who lost a den tal p late in the the d riv er and m elee, subdued he con- called police who ch a rg ed the driv- 1 h ave I e r with d riv in g while drunk. M onday night the T exan identi­ fied the m o to rist a s a 20-year-old student in the U n iv e rsity ’s C ollege Vienna Girl Writes O f Russian Cruelty Major to Explain WAC Advantages M a j. M ary G . M cD onald, WAC I O fficer P rocu rem en t O fficer at ‘ Fourth A rm y H e a d q u a rte rs, F ort . S a m Houston, will v isit the c a m p u s J D ecem b er 12-13 to ex p lain the ad- j v a n ta g e s of an e x e cu tiv e c a r e e r a s I an offieer in the W om en’s A rm y J ! C orp s, d e sp a ir .” | g a ry to recover Then the R u ssia n The letter a lso included a brief j cam e. history of the country beginning when A u stria and H u ngary w ere united. F o r m an y y e a r s the two coun tries w ere a bastion a g a in st j conquerin g a rm ie s from the E a s t. j all hoping “ E v e r y m inute we a re the UN will re ally h e lp ,’ eluded. “ But for m ysel not m uch hope. P olan d, C zechoslo­ v a k ia , R u m a n ia , and E a s t G er* ( m any a re occupied too T h ey all it would he n "E n g la n d , G erm an y , and other j want freedo m , but ‘ it w a s a lw a y s p o ssib le to keep our g a r y A thirfl w a r hetween E a st I freedo m , the girl w rote, ja n d West is only a question of In those d a y s H u n gary w a s a tim e .” p a t rich coun try, A fter World W ar II said h cr A u strian c o rre s. m an y children w ere sent to Hun- p o t e n t js an a rch ite ctu re student “ Y ou don ’t know the R u ssia n s. that T h ank God ev ery d a y fa c t .” for T h is w a s a statem en t in a letter from a girl in V ienna dated N ov­ e m b e r I. 1956, to P a t P a r k s , a ju n io r geology student who toured E u ro p e with her fa m ily this su m ­ m er. they a r e like children and of the things you h e a r about the R u s s ia n s .” the letter sa id , “ but we tru e. in A ustria know' T h ey a r e like a n im a ls. They will lau gh with you, an d in the next m om ent they will kill you. lf you re a d had things in the n ew sp a p ers o r if you h ear ab ou t cru el things o v er the w ire­ le ss, think a lw a y s it Is only a tiny p a rt of the re a l fa c t .” « “ I know you don’t believe m any I roun trio* hpIpcd us to fiRh! ’ and so I d e feat to R u s s ia if they leav e H u n -i o f A r , s an d S c ie n c e *. Exam Conflicts? Here's Your Clue c a re e r fie ld s a v a ila b le and the qu alifica- 1 tions n e ce ssary for a co m m issio n . lie a r ­ ! P e rso n al ran g ed by co n tactin g the Student should tak e y ou r trou b les to the ^E m ploym en t B u re au , P e a rc e Hall R e g istr a r 's O ffice and consult an a ssista n t re g is tr a r . l f you h ave an e x a m conflict, you She will d e sc rib e interview s m a y the UT Libraries to Close Through H o lid a y Season for excep t H ie U n iversity L ib ra ry and com- The girl went on to d e sc rib e con- poncnt p a r ts will close at 5 p m the dition s in H u n gary , her hom e be- j F rid a y , D ecem b e r 21, m g about 74 m iles from B u d a p est, i C h ristm a s H oliday s for Sin ce ’ he R u ssia n s occup ied Hun - 1 d a te s and tim es posted a t the in- g a r y , it h a s been one of the p oorest d ivid u al units. co u n tries in the w’orld, she w rote. Now' IO y e a r * later, there is nothing to e a t and d aily the people fe a r for th eir lives. "O n e d a y this su p p re sse d popu­ lation b egan to fight, to fight with the hope that the UN will help. O f t e n they have no a r m s and with naked h an ds running they a g a in st the tanka, it ta a light o f , ch ecked at the individual units. Sch ed u les for lib ra rie s re m ain in g open during the h olidays should be The R e se rv e R e ad in g Room will c h a rg e books a fte r IO a m , F rid a y , D e c e m b e r 21, to T h u rsd ay , J a n u a r y 3, a t 9 a .m . su m e T h u rsd ay , Ja n u a r y 3. lib r a ry hours will R e g u la r a re re­ j ab ou t 25 y e a r s old. “ She is v e ry well e d u c a te d ,” she j sa id . “ H er letters h av e been v e ry ! deep and very h av en ’t a ctu ally m et her. It w as j through h er fian ce, G unther, that . we b ecam e pen p a ls .” interest ing, but I G unther accom p an ied the P a r k s ! fam ily on a three-w eeks tour of j A u stria. He and P at began to ex ­ their ch an ge coun tries, and at the end of the tour he a sk ed P a t if she would he in terested letters with him and h is fian cee. inform ation about Som e stu den ts will h ave a s m an y a s two finaP e x a m s on the sa m e day , but it is alm o st a hypothetical situation when two fin als a re sch ed ­ uled for the sa m e hour on the sa m e day . in exch an gin g “ T h eir letters a re n ’ t p e rso n a l,” Hoyt W illiam *, a ss is ta n t r e g is­ tra r, said the fin al e x a m schedule is a rra n g e d so th at two qu izzes at P a t exp lain ed . “ E u ro p ean s like to the sa m e tim e ju st d o esn 't happen, d isc u ss m ore "A c co rd in g to ou r p ast experi- ! like co n tem p o rary poetry. They ence. this is v e ry ra re and it al- ; ju st a re n 't interested in the chit- m ost n ever h a p p e n s,” M r. W illiam s I ch a* M intellectual things I sa id . \L »i. M cD onald, a n ative of Ty­ ler, h as a b ach elor of a r t s d egree from R ice Institute and a law do­ g ie ? from the U n iversity of T e x a s L aw School. Books a n d G la sse s Lost Two books and two notebooks | from m an agem en t c o u rse s and a p a ir of g la ss e s w ere lost on the In tram u ral F ield at noon, T u esd ay . Anyone finding the m issin g a rtic le s is a sk e d to contact W ally Pastor at G R 7-4446. PRE-REGISTRATION C A R D S for th* spring se m e ste r drew a crow d outside The R egistrar s o ffic e >n the M a r» Sw ipin g. C a r u s must o e filled Photo by Jam es E. W attle* out an d d r o p p e d ie th * box in froo t c f the o ffic e B efo re Ja n u a ry 7. O h e rw se, the Student will u t g ven • let# re g Gratton d a te . Tuesday, December ll, 1956 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 S ID EL IN E S L A N T S Bowl Fever to Hit In 21 More D a y s I B y *1 im M o n t g o m e r y Associate Sport* Editor Sports, Politics Shared Olympics Victories, Rhubarbs, Incidents Review ed MELBOURNE Ut — High spots and low spots of the Melbourne The 1902 game, which gives Pasadena the right to their “ dad- dy-of-them-all” title for their Rose an odd one. Bowl gam e, was Michigan st powerful m achine, molded by ‘'Hurry-Up” Yost of point-a-m inute fame ripped up the to build a 45- Stanford Indians point lead with more than a q uar­ te r yet to go and only l l uninjured C alifornians left. A b o u t th is tim e e v e ry y e a r, a n In c u ra b le d ise a se b eg in s to Olympic Games: seize m illio n s o f A m e ric a n s. E v e ry o n e k n o w s it's com in g , b u t Oats Landing Man Athiete—'niree. . . , , EA . - On Jan . I, 1902, in P asad en a,♦ „„ i n in g a lm o s t u n c h e c k e d f o r 50-odd y e a rs . B o w l fe v e r is th e n a m e o f th e k iller, a n d it h a s b e e n r u n - ! both . j n o b o d y tr ie s to p re v e n t it. In c e rta in citie s o f w a rm c lim a te borrow of "he i 'n itrd ’s" t es swirn- mer Murray Rose Of Australia, it is a c tu a lly e n c o u ra g e d . triple gold medalists, and Vladimir Huts of Russia, winner of the 5 m , nd 10.000 meter races. Outstanding W o m a n Athlete— Betty Cuthbert of Australia, win- Wolverines prom ptly barrel- nor of the PSO and 200 m eter races leaving a and a m em ber of the victorious Cal., bowl f a v « struck the football squads of Michigan, stanford, ann Several thousand people. All were ^ jor another score, Incurably bitten although It « < 14 years l o f t . day before the fe- fte ir v e r hit again of d M c tiv a i , d Indlans in agrMaWe to the Stanford cap­ thankyou." relay team. .... you,” allowed tain, ‘‘we’ll call it a day.” Biggest Rhubarb The disqualifi­ cation of England’s Cliff B rasher, and later r e v e r s a l of th e decision, in the 3.000 m eter steeplecase- an ended 49-0 although the scoreboard aet which brought a British com- clock showed over IO minutes re- plaint of ‘‘tarnished gold.” maining. And so the first Rose Bowl game Most Dram atic Victory — Irish “ No, D in 3937. I T L *11 The next Rose Bowl gam e w asn’t Ron Delany’s triumph in the 1,500-1 until 1916, but it was 1933 before m eter race after world mile record | some Florida folks,* who just natur- holder John Landy had m ade a to let California outdo strong move and failed, ally hate them, started a bowl game of then* Moat Awkward Incident — The the Communist China the Stanford leader lf the Indians was bom in New Orleans in MSS, flag for that of Nationalist China were tired out. The answer, accord- and the Dallas Cotton Bowl began J a t the team ceremonies, ing M ichigan’s captain politely asked own in Miami. The Sugar Bowl raising of i g ii^ t Incident—'Th« bloody to popular story, was n Hose bowl I m il e r s Through the years, the 43 Rose \ down, then stopped the mighty In- gashed head and w ater polo m atch between H ungary and Russia, which saw one Hun­ garian sent to the sidelines with a five Russians Bowl gam es have filled m any a j dians the rest of the way. Columbia j ejected for unnecessary roughness, page Of gridiron legend. Take the won, 7-0, and was never invited Most Poignant Moment—The de- 1933-35 Stanford squad, for gtance. As team . m any rated as 1)16 nation s best. seats empty and defecting athletes pledged themselves never to lose 0 n lY Minnesota of the Big Ten was at the airport waving goodbye to to UCLA. They didn t, and went ! mentioned in the sam e breath, and com rades and singing “ God Bless on to three straight Rose Bowl ap- they couldn’t come west because | H ungary.” pearances plus the “Vow Boys ” tim e Tile following year saw’ the Vow with the Hungarian a 1 UI1f< ens e i*ule. another Instead, tile nicknam e of parture of a giant French air liner sophomores The first Indians back. the In- Most Modest VIInner “ unworthy Jenkins of the United States O lath e in the team was invited. A labam a’s Crim- 400 m eters, who said: “ I was just lucky. Lou Jones is a much better son Tide, who featured Don Hut- son, Dixie Howell, and Bear Bry- ant yep, sam e guy), cam e to a crack at the Indians. take Most Distraught Loser—Jack Da- viS( record holder In the 110-meter Californians, who by then had hurdles who KfVij after losing to and KF-79, Le* Calhoun: “I worked and waited e r this moment for four years, and then I got beat by a IOO to I shot quick sta rt.” forgotten Columbia didn’t think much of the Tide. In­ stead, as Alabam a took the field, fans chanted “ We want Minnesota. runner than I .” the Vow Boys cam e to Pasadena, they w ere un­ beaten, had three all-Americans, and w ere heavily favored over a lightly regarded Columbia team . This was the 1934 game. for R ain drenched Pasadena hours before the kickoff, and it took special pumps and workmen to get the field ready for play. j Bring on Minnesota W hether it was the soggy field, the w hat happened? ‘B arra shackled the West Stanford’s great Bobby Grayson sneering com m ents of Coast press, or w hether Columbia an(j turned loose Howell to throw to Hutson The Crimson Tide scor­ was Just mad, no one knows, At any rate, they turned loose ed 22 points in 12 minutes, trounced ; Ch rit ( 3 -0 ) .. arri I 9. Alabam a (3-0) 252 I IO. C anisius (4* (4-0) ...........................225 ............. TUR SECOND TEN 220 I ........ It. Ohio S ta te <2> (3-0> 12. Western K en tuc ky (2> (1-0) 13. W est Virginia (3) 14. Kansas S ta te (2-0) 15. Dayton (SFI) ............................. !6 N iagara (2-1) 17. I o u a S ta te (3-0) 18, O klahom a City <1-1) I’1 O klahom a A&M ( l l ) 20. Sea ti) a (3-1) OS 62 61 .................................55 . . . . . . . . . . . 4 8 , ................45 32 (3-0) .......... ........ ............ ..............131 I Interfraternity Council To Honor Longhorns The m em bers and roaches of the Texas Longhorns w ill be honored Wednesday at a testim onial dinner I at the Commodore P erry Hotel giv­ en by the Interim fcrnity Council. The dinner will honor tee 1956 I team , and especially Coach Kd Price and Athletic D irector D. X. I Bible. Among tee guests Invited to the function a re Dr. Logan Wilson, ! president of the University; Dean Amo Nowotny, and Dean Jack llol- j land. The affair is scheduled for 6:15 p.m . in the Brazos room of I the Commodore. Council Puts Off Revealing Coach The Athletic Council’s nomination for T exas’ coach and athletic direc­ tor will not be m ade by Dec. 15, the original date set for submission of a name to the board of regents Dr. O. B. Williams, chairm an of the council, said Monday th a t tee council had not finished screening tee list of suggested nam es as yet and that no interviewing had be­ gun. The council will interview its top choices before settling on a nomi­ nation. Dr. Williams said th a t a meeting of tee council would be held later this week “ to get every­ one brought up to date.” Athletic D irector Dana X. Bible and Dr. William* have been in Dallas for the past few days attend­ ing the meeting of the Southwest Conference. Bible will step out Sept. I, 1957, and Coach Ed P rice’s resignation is effective Dec. 31. C a g e Scores Bt. Lout* 71, K e n t u c k y 7* . T c t u le c h 66, T ill-* 6?. IU«*< 37 L ouisian* St 7? I o y o l * TI, I t a v t n r 71 . N o r t h I e * * * S t a t * SS. T e x a s C h r i s t i a n #7, M r M u r r y 50. l u x * # A A M HS Mural Schedule B A S K E T B A L L ria * * A; 7 p.m . — M rO rsrk ert v*. B lo c ke r, Oak G r o w vs. N e w m a n , F C H - : S i n . k i n s vs M o o r # H i l l . 7 : 4 5 — Y a g e r v*. j B r o w n N a v y w L P H A , R o b e r ts vs. P r a t h e r . 8 : 3 0 — A m ery v s . G e e s # , G a m - j im * G u i l d v s . A F R O T C , T h e i s m # v*. B a y t o w n . 9 : 1 5 — B r u n e t t e v s . M a v e r i c k s , ASM K vs A IC HF c i a * * B : 9 : 1 5 — A m e r y v«. M i d n i g h t s . TA R L I T E N N IS 7 p m —C oo* vs Randolph, Thorpe vs S m i t h P i c k e t t vs. V aughan HIU vs. Rev non, F rleeen vt. P ie cer, Chapa vs. P flu g er 7:J0— Shah vs. F oster. TVtiRrre vs. lin k e r , Turn bo v* C rutchfield, Gome* v« Connor, W ells vs. Turung. W illson vs Gunn 7 : 4 0 — Gee vs M arti­ nez, P e s t - f a no vs Je/.ck, M erritt vs. | Hudson. V aughan vs. K e x h e y t, N ow lin vs Vela, Ko# thor vs Cook. 0 p.m. — j Lemmon vs. N olley, K eester v* H ow- ■ ard, W oody vs. Jason, H ouston \ *. O l i v e r , D avis vs Seh w ars 8 IO— Lanier vs Applew hite, Boltrm an vs. L u s k e y , H arper vs, W aggoner. Caneva vs M lg- h eli, Htuddard va. R ose, H ollo w a y vs, Howard. WHEN YOU THINK OF LAUNDRY OR CLEANING T H IN K DRISKILL LAUNDRY PICK UP & DELIVERY SERVICE SUITS— DRESSES T U X E D O S E V E N IN G G O W N S D Y E IN G • RUGS • DRAPES FUR A N D W O O L E N ST O R A G E SAVE CASH AND CARRY 411 E. 19+h Phone GR-86631 lour roommate's favorite jacket. . . NYLFLEECE and only $2 5 00 T hey’ll all warn to know where you bought it, it’s so smart, so striking, so downright practical. DuPont nylon fleece light as a feather, soft as a snowflake, rugged at granite. Quilted nylon lining . . . v ash*and*wear , . . terrific colors I 66 to 46 UNIVERSITY Q C jC j& rif 2 3 1 0 ( l u a d a l u p e Tuesday, December It, 1956 THE D A IL Y T E X A N Page I A Texan Views Jazz From Past to Present B y B E N S I E G A L T***n Staff W riter ( E D I T O R ' S N O T E : T h e p o p u l a r of jazz in A m e r i c a is i n c r e a s In a n a t t e m p t tty in g e a c h d a y . e x p l a i n t h i s g r o w t h . B e n S i e g a l , T e x a n s t a f f w r i t e r , h a * m a d e a s t u d y of t h e * u h j e e t . H e r e a r e his a n d N e w Y o rk v i e w s ) . to of book" in T h e a g e of jazz; h a s c o m e a n d j d e e p so uth, t y p e . I s t h i s n o t th e A m e r i c a n p u b l ic a n d m e n t a l o r s w i n g idea on w h i c h h a s r e m a i n e d to b e c o m e a n a h o a f o r m of j a z z ? to c o m e e v e n g r e a t e r a p p e a l of r e l a x a t i o n t h a n p r e v i o u s l y w a s th e d e v o u r i n g by, In th e old d a y s , p e o p le r e f e r r e d to a n y t h i n g th a t w a s a w a y f r o m th e not rn a s “ j a z z y . ” T o d a y t h e y r e f e r t o it a s “ c o o l . " T o m o r r o w — w e l l t o m o r r o w r e m a i n s to h e s e e n . Y et t h e r e b e s s o m e of t h e a n s w e r ! to t h e q u e s t i o n s t o r y ih e c o tt o n field s of the The j a z z a g e s t a r t e d in tile b a c k - r o o m s of N e w O r l e a n s . Chit a g o T h e a n s w e r s a r e h a r d s t a r t e d ja z z T h e It w a s b e r e g o n e , s o m e b e li e v e . B u t t h e a c t u a l j the c o lo r e d t r u t h is t h a t j a z z p l a y s a f a r m o r e s l a v e s , h a v i n g no o t h e r o u t l e t of ro l e i m p o r t a n t in t o d a y , e v e n t h a n in it d i d a g e of t h e r o a r i n g t w e n t i e s . t h is e x p r e s s i o n A m e r i c a n d a y s r e v e r t e d to th e b a s i c t r i b a l m u s i c a l b e a t s p l u s t h e c o m b i n a t i o n of th e “ t h e n ” m o d e r n a r e m u s i c w h i c h is n o w k n o w n a s p r e - Y e ' s o m e s a y t h a t in A m e r i c a n life f o r e i g n c o u n t r i e s , j a z z t h e so c a l l e d roll tazz a n d to w h a t e v e r you to p r e - b e a t of g o in g b a c k B o c k a n d A t t r i b u t e t h a t Lot of Bull Pictured In 2 Films Downtown 'Bullfight' Excellent Tab, N a ta lie Fai B v B R A D F O R D D A N I E L Texan Amusement* Kdttor ‘'Bullfight,” th? Janus film at th? Capitol Thpater. is an excellent documentary that traces the a r t of taurom achy from prehis­ toric times to the present. It affords the viewer a most comprehensive, authoritative, and fascinating experience in reality. T h e a r t of but h i g h t i n g b e c a m e m o s t f i r m l y e s ­ t a b l i s h e d in S p a i n d u r i n g t h e m i d d l e a g e s a s a g e n ­ t l e m a n ’s sport, a n d e n t e r t a i n m e n t . T h e p o p u l a r g r e a t r e v o l u t i o n to o k p l a c e in t h e E i g h t e e n t h C e n ­ t u r y w h e n t h e g e n t l e m e n f o r s o o k t h e a r t a n d left th e field to p r o f e s s i o n a l t o r e r o s , w h o i n c l u d e d F r a n c i s c o R o m e r o ( i n v e n t o r of (th e f i r s t to u s e a s w o r d ) , a n d P e p e Tile ( w r i t e r of th e f i r s t g r e a t t r e a t i s e on b u l l f i g h t i n g > the m u le t a > Cost) I l a - e s B y g i v i n g a b a c k g r o u n d f o r e a c h to p ic d i s c u s s e d , t h e p i c t u r e c a r r i e s t h e a u d i e n c e r a p i d l y a lo n g , e d u ­ c a t i n g a s it e n t e r t a i n s E a c h s t e p is s h o w n a n d th e r e a s o n f o r it e x p l a i n e d in s i m p l e t e r m s , W hile m o s t b u l l f i g h t e r s n o w a d a y s t r a v e l on foot. t h e S e v e n t e e n t h C e n t u r y C o n e h i ! a C i n t r o n r e v i v e d m e t h o d of f i g h t i n g f r o m h o r s e b a c k w i t h a s o r t of j a v e l i n c a l l e d t h e r e ion Sh* w a s o n e of t h e m o s t s e n s a t i o n a l " b o x o f f i c e ’' a t t r a c t i o n s in t h e h i s t o r y of t h e s p o r t . is u n i q u e M i s s C i n t r o n in still a n o t h e r f e a t : sh e Is o n e o f t h e f e w m a t a d o r s w h o r e t i r e d f r o m the r i n g r a t h e r t h a n d y i n g f r o m w o u n d s r e c e i v e d T h e p r e s e n t a t i o n of h e r s t y l e ( i l l u s t r a t e d b y n e w s r e e l s h o t s ) is t h e h i g h l i g h t of t h e p i c t u r e P r o d u c e d m a i n l y a c c l a i m e d in F r a n c e d i r e c t i n g t e a m of P i e r r e R r a u n h e r g e r a n d M y ria n t h e f ilm h a s a c o m p l e t e E n g l i s h c o m m e n t a r y a n d a b a c k g r o u n d of ( t r a d i ­ t i o n a l b u l l f i g h t m u s i c ) . t h e e x c i t i n g p a s n d o b l e s t h e by I t ’s a m o v i e y o u s h o u l d se* s t r o n g stuff, well W arner Bro*. Studio* just can’t take "n o ” for an answer, or so it appears. After the dis* appointing showing Tab H unter and Natalie Wood made in “The Burning Hills.” it ap­ peared certain that the casting department would quietly abandon this duo— at least r e - j t r a i n f r o m c o - s t a r r i n g t h e m t o g e t h e r . H o w e v e r , t h e y d i d n ’t l e a r n a n d t h e i r l a t e s t p r o - ' d u c t , “ T h e G i r l H e L e f t B e h i n d , ” c u r r e n t l y a t th e P a r a m o u n t T h e a t e r , l e a v e s m u c h to he d e s i r e d . in “ T h e B u r n i n g H i l l s " I n t h i s o n e T a b l e a v e s t h e W e s t e r n s e t t i n g h e so a n d c a p a b l y d i s g r a c e d in C a l i f o r n i a . . . m a k e s w a y to a m o d e r n s e t t i n g a la c o l l e g e s t u d e n t A n d a s a c o ll e g e s t u d e n t ' w h o c a n ’t s t u d y b e c a u s e be s in l o v e ) , he is a g a i n p r e ­ s e n t e d a s “ t h e all A m e r i c a n tr o y .” He m u s t r e a l l y h e t h e a v e r a g e A m e r i c a n l a d t h e y k e e p t e l l in g u s o v e r a n d o v e r t h a t b e i C o m p l e t e w i t h his l a t e s t m o d e l s p o r t s c a r , a v a r s i t y s w e a t e r (h e a l s o p l a y s f o o t b a l l ) , his g o l d e n ' a v e r ­ h a i r s n i p p e d c r e w - c u t s t y l e , a n d M i s s W ood a g e A m e r i c a n girl w o r k i n g h e r w a y t h r o u g h c o l l e g e ! . th e d r a f t . B ut w h e n M r. H u n t e r fe els s e c u r e f r o m he look! h is th e w a n i s h e of (of c o c k t a i l g l a s s a n d g r a d e s d e c l i n e , his s p i r i t s e m o t i o n a l v a r i e t y ) d r o p . a n d a l e t t e r a r r i v e s w h i c h “ F r o m t h e g o v e r n m e n t . G r e e t i n g s . . . ” say® l o se s d e a r N a t a l i e T h e r e m a i n d e r of t h e f ilm d e p i c t s T a b s w a r w i t h th e a r m y . A l t h o u g h s t r e n g t h e n e d s o m e w h a t b y t h e p r e s e n c e of H e n r y J o n e s . J i m B a c k u s , a n d J e s ­ sie B o y c e I^andis, t h e p i c t u r e is still o n l y f a i r s c r e e n e n t e r t a i n m e n t , t h e m a j o r str e n g t h of t h e e n t i r e c r u ­ s a d e l y i n g in its d e l i g h t f u l d i a l o g u e H a d M r. H u n t e r b e e n a h l e t o “ r e a d ” h i s lin e s w e ll a n d M iss W ood p r e v e n t e d fr o m s n a r l i n g h e r s , t h e f a i r r a t i n g m i g h t h a v e b e e n c h a n g e d to good. b a n d i e d . INT! RST ATES NEW MAHOY, THRIfTY^ Two Christmas Films Planned A s p e c i a l C h r i s t m a s p r o g r a m i n ­ c l u d i n g f i lm s th e T w e lf t h “ O n D a y ” a n d " M i r a c l e in M i l a n , ” will finn of a n old E n g l i s h «ong B e a u t y a n d h u m o r b u ild u p a s Ihe y o u n g m a n p r e s e n t s m o r e a n d m o r e g if ts e a c h w i t h a p a r t r i d g e in a p c p a i n t e r , will be e x h i b i t e d on th e first floo r I n c l u d e d w i t h t h e t h i r d e x h i b i t i o n of J a p a n e s e e x h i b i t w ill h e a n u m b e r of M a n ­ a r t o b j e c t s h a s h e e n t h e c h u C o u r t r o b e s a n d s e l e c t e d t e x ­ g a l l e r y b y D r . a n d M r s . A r c h i b a l d t h e M i n g a n d C h i n g D y ­ t il e s of R L e w is . D r . I^ewis is h e a d of t h e len t b y M iss n a s t y . T h e s e w e r e h i s t o r y d e p a r t m e n t . U n i v e r s i t y ’s a A lice B on e y of New Y o r k C i ty T h e c o ll e c t io n w a s a s s e m b l e d bv c o l l e c t o r fo r in l e a d i n g m u s e u m s l i e K a si a n d C a n a d a . T h e M a r i o n h is f a t h e r a n d m o t h e r , D r a n d M r s . B u r d e t t G, L e w i s w h i l e D r . L e w i s K o o g l e r M c N a y G a l l e r y of S a n A n ­ w a s vv)t h th e o c c u p a t i o n a l f o r c e s t o n in h a s le n t s e v e r a l e a r l y v a s e s In J a p a n . f o r t h i s e x h ib i t . le n t to in A T h i r t y l a r g e a n d s m a l l d r a w i n g s it to b u t a n d j a z z t r io s , c o m b o s , t e c h n i q u e s r e c o r d s a r e sold be- a n d m a y . B u t t h e f a c t still s t a n d s t h a t I t r a d i t i o n a l N ew O r l e a n s jaz z . T r u e t h e s o u n d w a s slow*— if c o m p a r e d j a z z m o r e c a u s e of b e t t o r t h e e s- to p r e s e n t da y f a c i l i t i e s ; m o r e p e o p l e a r e liste n - s e n c e of t o d a y s jaz z , T h e N e g r o m u s i c i a n s in th e e a r l y ing h a n d s b e c a u s e of b e t t e r p l a y i n g ( p a r t of th is c e n t u r y of m i r a c l e s , a n d g e n e r a l a c c e p t a n c e b y t h e p u b - ' t h e 20th, i n t r o d u c e d a new c o n c e p t t h e l ie - t h a n e v e r b e f o re . .Jazz w a s t h e w h i t e m u s i c i a n s W e b s t e r d e f i n e s m u s i c a s . “ T h e h ? ™ s c i e n c e o r a r t of p l e a s i n g , e x p r e s - P K k e d i m p r o v e d s o m e - SIVO o r i n te l li g i b le c o m b i n a t i o n of w h a t o n it u n til w e h a v e t h e p r e s e n t t o n e s . . . . W h e t h e r in to w o r l d s m u s i c a l h isto ry “ A \ I \ AC T O I S A R T ” \ s D E I I M H I N T t h e a n n a l s of j of m u s i c it u p a n d v e r s i o n . J A Z Z " nd is it he D i x i e l a n d , po p r h y t h m a n d b l u e s , p r o g r e s s i v e , o r r o c k a n d f o r m of j a z z m u s i c t h a t c e n t e r s o n a n e w fo u n d philo- s o p h y of t h e I X v e n t ie th C e n t u r y . a v i v a c i o u s a r t t o s o m e is a roll, J a z z in its i n f a n c y w a s r e g a r d e d rn t h e s a m e w a y t h a t w e c u r r e n t l y c l a s s i f y j u v e n i l e d e l i n q u e n c y . Yet. in te lle c- to d a y , t u a l s : it is t a u g h t in s o m e s c h o o ls , to a s t o f th e is it It is b a s i c a l l y a n e m o t i o n a l out- a n d it is a c c e p t e d a s a n a r t . t h e let f o r t h e p e r s o n w h o n e e d s s o m e - t h i n g s t r o n g e r t h a n m u s i c t h a t h a d b e e n p r e d o m i n a t e l y I o n e of t h r u s t u p o n f o r y e a r s a n d y e a r s . J a z z to d a y , a s a f o r m o f A m e r i- f o r m s of c a n a r t a n d c u l t u r e , h a s b e c o m e t h e best s e l li n g p o i n ts for t h e A m e r i c a n s c e n e ! t h e s h o w in g of U n c l e S a m o v e r ­ s e a s . T h e * ta !o D e p a r t m e n t h a s s e n t goodw ill to a m b a s s a d o r s f o r e i g n c o u n t r i e s f o r m of t h e in j a z z p e r f o r m e r s E v e r y w h e r e t h e y is r e c o g n i z e d a s t h e i r m u s i c go. the m u s i c o f A m e r i c a . is a s A m e r i c a n a s th e S t a r s a n d S t r i p e s . 1920’s B R O U G H T J AZZ f a c t w e know : T h is j a z z T h e d i r e c t c l i m a x o f 1920 s w ild t i m e s , w o m e n , m e n . b o o z e , a n d e v e n w i l d e r g a n g s t e r s p r o j e c t e d t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s ’ t r u e a n d o r i g i n a l m u s i c on j a z z th e A m e r i c a n p u b l ic - T h is f o r m of e x p r e s s i o n v i e w e d b y s o m e p e o p l e a s p r i m i t i v e m i g h t h a v e d i e d a s s u d d e n l y a s it s t a r t e d , e x c e p t f o r o n e e s s e n t i a l f a r t A n y t i m e s o m e t h i n g is b a n n e d t h e r e a r e c u r i o u s p e o p l e a r o u n d w h o a r e r e a d y to a s k w h y ROC K ’N R O L L AS JAZZ th e r o o t s of ( w i t h t h e b a s i n t h e r e m i n i s c e n t st y l e o f c o u n t r y m u s i c ) a n d s w i n g ( w ith a s m o o t h e r t r a d i t i o n a l s t y l e ) t h e b a s i c p r o d u c t . t h e b a s i c c o r e of is D i x i e l a n d . W h i c h e v e r o f f - s p n n g is jazz m a t t e r s little. s a i d to be t r u e be. i u s e t h e t e r m b r a c e s t h e c o r e a n d t h e its c o m p o n e n t p a r t s , a n d n a i v e , g iv e n to th e r o o t s a r e d o n * to individualize ■o bv t h e m , s t y l e of N e w O r l e a n s th e a d d i c t s t h e t o d a y I n f l u e n c e s on F r e n c h j a z z h a v e b e e n C r e o l e S p a n i s h m a n ) a n d A f r i c a n ru n e s f r o m L o u is ia n a ' n into o n e r h y t h m s nil p u l s a t e d i n d iv i d u a l s t y l e so b r i n g o u t Still o t h e r f a c t o r s p o p u l a r t h e p o l k a s . in v o lv e d m a r c h e s t h e s l a v e s a n d o t h e r a n d o l d e r f o r m * of m u s i c a l e x p r e s s i o n s . T h e y a ll e v o lv e d t h e N e w O r l e a n s t r a d i t i o n a l And f r o m t h i s c a m e t w o sc h o o ls o f j a z z , o r “ l a s s ’ a s it w a s s o m e t i m e * c a l l e d , in a c o n t e m p t i b l e m a n n e r . i n c l u d e d s p i r i t u a l s s o n e s of into th e s o m e t i m e * T h e c a l l e d lis ts t h e s e p e r f o r m e r s a s p i o n e e r s - K i n g school, f irs t t h e N e g r o p r i m a r y . D r y . S i d n e y B e c h e t, B u n k J o h n s o n , J e l l y Roil M o r t o n , a n d t h e o n e s o m e s a y is t h e g r e a t ­ e st of all, lx>uis A r m s t r o n g , i* t h is T h e o t h e r s c h o o l t h e w h i t e m u s i c i a n w h o t h e o n e of C o lle g e s t u d e n t s r a n h e t h a n k e d yo p to t r ie d int0 c o p y t h e N e g r o s t y l e “ P a p a ” J a c k to a* L a i n c , r e f e r r e d l e a d * T h e F a t h e r Of W h it e J a z z t h L g r o u p F r o m t h is s t a r t r a m * T o m B r o w n * R a n d f r o m D i x i e l a n d , th e O r i g i n a l D i x i e l a n d J a z 7 B a n d , the N e w O r l e a n s R h y t h m a n d — b y m u s i c i a n s a n d p u b lic h a c k id io m b r i n g i n g p r o m i n e n c e t h e y w h o It w a s c r a c k e d t h e d u s t sh e ll of t h e l a t e f o r t i e s w h e n f o r ­ it vvas a l m o s t a n d w i p e d off th e p r o d u c t g o t t e n th e old b a s i c s t y l e of N ew until O r l e a n s r i d e * a s k i n g a g a i n T e e n a g e r * p r e f e r r o c k a n d roll j a z z " T h e o l d e r p e o p le p r e f e r t h e s e n ti- T h e s e m e n a n d g r o u p s w e r t th* p i o n e e r s in t h e i r field. th is not a s o m e t i m e s t r a d i t i o n a l f o r m of Is G re g o ry S in g s Dec. 19 a c c o m p a n i e d R u s s e l l G r e g o r y , b y J o h n C u n n i n g h a m , i n s t r u c t o r in m u s i c will s i n g th e B a c h C o n ­ t a i n No. 82 a n d s o n g s b y B r a h m s , Wolf, a n d V a u g h a n W i l l i a m s on in th e R e ­ D e c e m b e r 19 a t 4 p m c it a l H a ll. T h e y w ill h e a s s i s t e d b y a s m a l l c h a m b e r o r c h e s t r a A d ­ m i s s i o n is f r e e J A Z Z US A M E R I C A N A T o d a y w i t h t h e a d v e n t of m u c h i m p r o v e d t e c h n i q u e s and a dem and b y j a z z c o n n o i s s e u r s , t h e m u s i c i a n s of old h a v e b e e n h r o u g h t b a c k on f a n s c a n e n j o y r e c o r d s t r u l y basin t h e A m e r i c a n m u s i c . so s o u n d s of t h a t t h i s P e o p l e w a n t j a z z t o d a y n o t b e ­ c a u s e it is s o m e t h i n g u n u s u a l - h u t b e c a u s e it s a t i s f i e s t h e i r n e e d f o r a b a s i c f o r m of A m e r i c a n m u s i c , w i n c h it is. Y ou'll think we gave your car a paint job instead of a wash job.*; O w m odern car wash system get* your car clean all over. Y ou r tire* will m w be? ■tTb the barracks bag') t a b H U N T E R N A TA LIE W O O D (UM f*1 wrth th# avermtM cts*) S p t § The Pine R o o m Featuring C om b o W e d ., T h u r s ., Fri, N ig h t * ALSO Su n d a y A f t e r n o o n 3:30-7:00 D a n c in g N ig h t ly 2824 G uadalupe G R 7-0555 • I i U * T T I. AST DAT! Box Office Open# 5 tie v i v e la d i f f e r e n c e ! a fa b le f o r g r o w n - u p s P r o d u c e r - D i r e c t o r V i t t o r i o D e S i c s c a l l s his film “ M i r a c l e in Mi­ a t a l e lan f a n ­ s u s p e n d e d mid-way* b e t w e e n t a s y a n d r e a l i t y . Its c a s t i n c l u d e s I t a l i a n s t a r s F r a n c e s c o G o l i s a n o E m m a G r a m i t i e a , B r u n e l! B o y o. a n d “ O n t h e T w e l f t h D a y ” h a s E n g ­ in I t a l i a n d i a l o g u e w i t h lish d i a l o g u e w h i l e “ M i r a c l e M i l a n ” h a s E n g l i s h s u b - t i tl e s . S h o w in g s w ill be a t I TO, 3 45, 6 .30. a n d 8 45 p m be T h e r e w ill c h a r g e . no a d m i s s i o n UT's Orchestra To Play Sunday T h e D e p a r t m e n t o f M u s i c w ill t h e U n i v e r s i t y S y m p h o n y p r e s e n t O r c h e s t r a , A l e x a n d e r v o n K r e i s l e r , c o n d u c t o r , w i t h J u n e S t o k e s P a n - tillo n p i a n o s o lo ist, in c o n c e r t S u n ­ d a y at 4 p m . in H o g g A u d i t o r i u m . T h e p r o g r a m w ill i n c l u d e “ S uite f r o m t h e m u s i c f o r t h e R o y a l F i r e ­ w o r k s . ” b y H a n d e l - H a r t y ; P r e l u d e t o T h i r d A e t f r o m “ M e i s t e r s i n g e r * v o n N u r n b e r g ” b y W a g n e r , a n d “ T h e W a lk t h e P a r a d i s e G a r ­ B e e t h o v e n ’* ■ c o n ti n u e * d e n s . ” “ C o n c e r t o No. 4“ w i l l c o n c l u d e th e c u r r e n t l y p e r f o r m a n c e . T h e r e w ill b y D e liu s . a d m i s s i o n T ic k e t * in no c h a r g e f o r t h e c o n c e r t . he M a n y o f f r o m B e h in d d o o r s o f t h e t h e p r i v a t e i t e m s on e x h i b i t c a m e t r e a s u r e s t h e l o c k e d a n d s e c r e t i v e of th e I m p e r i a l F a m i l y a n d J a p a - a p - ne«e nobility . O n e i t e m is a b l a c k p e a c e d t h e c u r io u s , lo o k in g f o r th e a c q u e r t r a y p r e s e n t e d M rs . L e w i s fin d in g b o o z e of p r o h i b i t i o n d a y s : b y t h e D o w a g e r E m p r e s s f r o m h e r t h a t a n d m u c h m o r e ; d i s c o v e r i n g p e r s o n a l w a r d r o b e . T h e c o l l e c t i o n j a z z m u s i c ; a n d u p o n t h e d i s c o v ­ i n c l u d e s g o ld i n la id l a c q u e r b o x e s , e r y . e a r l y p o r c e l a i n s f r o m l o n g - g u a r d e d e m o t i o n a l o u t l e t of t h e k in d fou nd S a m u r a i t r e a s u r i e s , a n d k i m o n o s t y p e . o n l y of u n u s u a l w o r k m a n s h i p a n d d e ­ t h e s t a r t . T h is w a s sig n. t h e a n t i - r l i m a x w h i c h p r o j e c t e d t h e , th is s e n s a t i o n a l i z e d it s e r v e d a s a n i T in s w a s n ’t s p e a k e a s i e s f i n d in g t h e r e t h a t in Tickets for ‘M o th e r C o u r a g e ' N o w Available at B o x o f f ic e f o r 'M o t h e r C o u r a g e ” r e c t o r F r a n c i s H o d g e a n d J o h n w'hich o p e n s W e d n e s d a y n i g h t a n d L. M u r p h y , a g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t a r e t h e M u s ic t h r o u g h S a t u r d a y . on t h e d r a m a d e p a r t m e n t . “ M o t h e r C o u r a g e ” is a c h r o n i c le 1 s a l e a t in ! B u i ld i n g B ox O f fice , t h e T h i r t y Y e a r s * W a r . T ic k e ts a r e 49 r e n t s fo r s t u d e n t s w i t h s o m e 15 s c e n e s c o v e r i n g t h e p l a y o f t a x e s a n d c h i l d r e n , ' i 2- y e a r p e r i o d , 1R24-3R. It is a m o d - 1 s e t t i n g , j in a h i s t o r i c a l for a d u l t s . R e s e r v a - f>r n p l a y t h e d e g e n e r a t i n g q u a i l - ; t h e B o x , d e p i c t i n g STATE Oh » m jr< •< *11 time#: D O O R * ■ p n e A L ; J I ljl PAPA MAMA "■ MAID a .j rn * 5TH WEEK! N O W ’ a v T I L 5 P . M. 3 Co n v e n ie n t Locations: IN AU ITI c o i o a . . . ITI O I O I Y . . . ITI IU IM N I II • 3221 Red River • 3515 Jefferson • 5th and Neches Merry Christmas 1FIGHX TK# World*! Nom f«m«w! Malodor* AttvoHy tfHod l*lof • Your V#«y ly««t U n i o n # # rn rn o • rn c • GEORGE STEVEN S' **OC* «*—• -V. **EDNA FEPBEP Bm* -VV Aj»*m#Cooo# POCK JAMES HUDSON • DEAN ELIZABETH TAYLOR a* I TA M#t. 'til 4 p m I.Ti* .................. ( HU H Mr Movie Discount 'Int 50 — E tc. AA VARSITY U R S I s n o w t P H AUSTIN F I R S T S H O W A OO P M 0 f w a r . S i n c e o n e d o e s not f i g h ti n g o r w h i l e a n a r m y , a s s i g n m e n t of m a k i n g t u m e s look “ l iv p d i n . ” t id y s t a y t r a v e l i n g w i t h the t h e i r c o s ­ t h e p l a v e r s h a v e be spotless, your interior clean and dust free. Y our Paint will g e t that new car look for only ‘ ISO CAM PBELL & FLETCHER'S A U T O W A S H A C R O S S F R O M T H E N I G H T H A W K N O . 2 1914 G U A D A L U P E w i t h b l a n k e t a n d 80 r e n t s l io n s m a y he m a d e a t O ff ic e b e t w e e n 9 a . m . a n d 4 p m . t h r o u g h F r i d a y , to 12 n o o n S a t u r d a y . a n d 9 a rn. T h e F i n e A r t s p r o d u c t i o n of B e r t o l t B r e c h t * p l a y will h e h e ld af H o g g A u d i t o r i u m s t a r t i n g W e d ­ n e s d a y t h r o u g h S a t u r d a y a t 8 p m L a s t A u g u s t . B r e c h t , a B a v a r i a n dramatist c a r e e r c a r e e r of hi* s t a g e d i r e c t o r , p o e t. a n d n o v e l i s t d i e d a a p l a y w r i g h t . e x p e r i m e n t a l i s t . I ' n i t e d S t a t e s a r e T h e p e r f o r m a n c e s of his w o r k s in ilia r a r e , a n d S o u t h w e s t a u d i e n c e * s e l d o m h a v e a n o p p o r t u n i t y s e e a R r e c h t to p l a y . P a u l D e s s a u c o m p o s e d t h e m u ­ sic, w h i c h is v e r y i m p o r t a n t to th e t o sin g p l a y . T e a c h i n g t h e a c t o r s • a s o p e r a s i n g e r s m u s t be t a u g h t to a c t » has b e e n t a s k of Di- t h e »«« ai th- honk M a n s f ie ld in C a r W reck a s a* h e r P A L M S P R I N G S , C a l i f 4* An a u t o m o b i l e c a r r y i n g a c t r e s s J a y n e M a n s f i e ld , J a y n e M a r i e , a n d M i c k e y H a r g i t a y hit a t e l e p h o n e pok* n e a r t h is r e s o r t to w n S a t u r d a y . All e s c a p e d w i t h m i n o r i n j u r i e s . d a u g h t e r N o n e r e q u i t e d h o s p i t a l t r e a t ­ m e n t . H a r g i t a y , w h o h o ld s th e M r U n ­ is a n e s c o r t of i v e r s e M iss M a n s f i e ld , w a s d r i v i n g title a n d DON'T m ss THIS DATE W E S E R V E A D E L IC IO U S 65* L U N C H E V E R Y D A Y Dine under the stars in our garten 1607 S a n Jacin to KOSHER CORNED BEEF SANDWICHES... . .. King-*iza and delicious! Try ©yr #icluti.M. H O H V R T S Russia seem s to he going through some unusual doubts as to just how' ruthless she w ants to be in putting down the H un garian revolt. At first she hesitated to the point w here the world was beginning to believe the rebels had a chance of success. Then Russia moi ed in ruthlessly. though she lr w as as might have been waititjg for* the rebels to reveal them selves fully, so that the deportation trains might be properly loaded. R e-establishm ent of a puppet gov­ ernm ent. however, w a s the signal for putting on a s h o w of negotiat­ ing with the rebels. The H ungarian puppet represen­ tatives to the U N seemed to think for a moment that S ecretary Gen­ eral H a m m a rsk jo ld would he ad­ mitted to Budapest. This didn t pan out. hut Russia has not com mitted her full strength since world out­ r a g e has been m a de so abundantly clear. There is reason to believe that this is due to a certain am ount of Russian concern over the reaction to her rec ent ac ts am ong the sm all­ er or w ea k er countries. Asia and Africa have expressed first incredulity and then resent­ trea tm e n t of ment over R u s sia’s Hungary. Iceland has rea p p ra ised h e r relations with the United States and w an ts the m ilitary force to r e ­ main. in The Communist p a rty the United S tates is w avering on its loyalty to Moscow, although there has been no g r e a t w ave of resig­ nations from key party posts as there has been throughout Europe. These reactions a re m ore impor­ tant to Moscow than those of the it la rg e r W estern powers, whom considers from whom it expects nothing. its enem ies and the strength It is am ong the so-called n eutra l­ ists th a t Russia now seeks to ex­ pand. am assin g to continue her contest with the West. The mobilization of the noncom­ mitted countries against Russia in the United Nations therefore be­ comes an im p o rta n t practical fac­ tor in her tre a tm e n t not only of H ungary but of all the satellites, last analysis it did not prevent h e r from culling down the H ungarian rebels when the situa­ tion becam e critical for her. She does not go around letting slip what she h a s on the m e re chance of grabbing something new-. She took serious chances with her fu­ tu re in ord er to tak e no setback in tho present. the In Nevertheless, there a re signs that restra in ts feel ce rtain she does when they a r e applied by the coun­ tries she still has some hopes of impressing, Russia cannot m erely shrug off what they have to say to her through the U N. /oh Opportunities l l A rep resen tative of th e N avy D ep art­ m ent w ill Pe on cam pus T u esd ay, D e­ to Interview Liberal Aria cem ber and Busine* A d m in istration seniors w ho ma> be in terested in M anagem ent Internship P o sitio n s in th e C ivilian P e r ­ sonnel D« iMvrlment A p p oin tm en ts m ust be m ade for Interview s in the S tu d en t E m p loym ent Bureau P earce H ail 106. A rep resen tative of the D elta A irlines w ill b e on c a m p u s T u esd ay, D ecem ber l l to Interview Jan u ary and Ju n e wom ­ en grad u ates in any m ajor w ho m ay ba in terested in a p osition as airlin e s te w ­ ardess A p p oin tm en ts in terview s m ust be m ade in the Student E m p loy­ m ent Bureau, P earce H all 106. for A rep resen tative of the S ou th w estern In vestm en t C om pany w ilt be on cam p us T hursday, D ecem b er 1,1 in terview B u siness A d m in istration and Liberal A rts senior* w ho m ay be in terested in p osition s as M anagem ent T rain ees Ap­ p oin tm en ts ba m ade in S tu d en t L m p loyn w n t Bureau, P earce H all 106. interviews, m ust for to A rep resen tative o f th e W om en s Army Corps w ill be on cam pus W ed n es­ day and T hursday D ecem b er l l ’ and IS to Interview m ajors In any field w ho m ay be Interested rn direct co m m is­ sion* ms 1st and 2nd L ieu ten an ts, in the W om en s Arm y C orps A p p oin t­ m ents for in terview s m ust be m ade in Student E m p loym ent Bureau, P earce H all 106 • and elem en tary in W eldon G ibson D irector of P erson - ne Carpus Christi Independent School District. Corpus C hristi. T exas w ill in­ terview secondary b a r b e r s tim T each er P lacem en t S ervice O ffice on T h u rsd ay. D ecem ber until 5 p m Ap- 13 p oin tm en ts are being m ade in S u tton H all 20ft A pplicants w ho have not r e g ­ istered with Peacher P lacem en t S ervice should do >o now to be eligible fur Ut* interview s. from 8 30 a rn for a bullet its one-tenth the speed of light, a fan­ to he tastic speed moving when t a r g e t Naturally enough, even such small particles used serve to "shake up" the target, which isn’t very large itself. it hits Two reactions are possible when the deuterium bullet sm ashes into the nucleus--stripping, and its op­ posite. pickup. In the stripping re­ action, either the neutron adheres to the nucleus, and the other particle passes by. In the pickup reaction, the deuteron picks up a third particle as it passes by the nucleus. the proton or the world What happens to the bombarded nucleus serves to give researchers new inform ation about the universe in which we live. and The ang u lar distribution of p arti­ cles knocked out of the nucleus as shown on photographic plates and by other methods tells .something of the structure of the nucleus. Dr. Ivash Interprets Interpreting the results, correlat­ ing the experim ental data, is the task of Dr. Eugene V. L a s h , assis­ tant professor of physics and one the Nuclear P hysics L abora­ of "Anti­ to ry 's protons, neutrons, mesons from to zeta, and hyperons with alpha m a sses heavier than protons — ev e ry tim e we open the journal or to a meeting there s another go one.' said Dr. L a s h . He had just finished translating a R u s s i a n paper pertinent to the work being done by the University. that is a possibility that the universities a n i schools of the southern region in cooperation with the Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear Studies and the rese arch scientists Dr. L a s h said there Oak Ridge National Laboratories, m a y build a high-voltage accel* a- tor at Oak Ridge. The southern uni­ versities will include Virginia, Duke. Alabama. Tennessee. Rice, and A&M, as well as The Univer­ sity of Texas. The new accelerator would produce "bullets ” with ener­ g i e s a thousand tim es as grea t ag the U n iv e r sity '* - f ro m five to ten billion volts. $15 M illion M a c h in e Dr. Iv ash attended a conference at Oak Ridge discussing the pro. posal this su m m e r as the official the University representative of The machine, to cost an estimated 15 million dollars, would be of great benefit to re s e a r c h e rs at the University, who would he allowed lo use it, as would other scientists in the South. Study of the newlv- discovered particles, some of them yet to be accepted and established in scientific circles, would be made possible. Dr Iva sh said. The Van de ( I r a aff gene rator at Balcones Research Center pro­ duces. energies from one to four million volts The experim ental work sponsored by an Air Force contract, attem pts to uncover the nuclear Involved when a nucleus Is bombarded. forces W e a p o n K a ro realizing Tile Air Force, that knowledge is one of the m o re im­ portant for r a c e sponsor* a weapon large part of the U niversity re ­ search at Balcones factors suprem acy, the in Richard .Johnston, a grad u a te student of physics, h as been doing the principal part of the labora­ tory's experim ental rese arch , and John Richter is assisting D r L a s h in his theoretical investigations. i n , 4 * 1 A V F T T \VLib Aid urogram Hopes for Expansion By P H Y L L I S C O F F E E Texan S taff W riter Last y e a r the University contrib­ uted S420 of approxim ately Vt CKX) sent to World University Service from 25 Texas colleges and univer­ sities. This y e a r the U niversity’s goal is to double the amount. WUS has been on this campus since 1939. Until last y e a r it was und er Cam pus Chest and a1! con­ tributions sent to the international group c a m e from this source. l a s t year, after interested per­ sons searched desperately for some organization to take over the spon­ sorship of the com mittee, WUS was put under auspices of United Relig­ ious Council, U nder URG, the com m ittee now consists of nine students, rep rese n t­ ing ca m pus religious groups, and two advisors. M ary Ellen E m b ree is cha irm an . . ■ ' . ... j. - VV ■ Com mittee leaders hope to m ake the group an independent organiza- ’ w on other cam puses, in the future. But, w ith present lack of function­ ing capacity, personnel, and m eans of creating student interest in the drive, it is impossible to solicit a contribution co m parable with the relative size of the University. ♦ But. where does the blam e l i e ' The ave rage University student has no idea that any organization such as WUS exists on the cam pus. Where, typical questions would go, does this money go, and how* can one he sure that it actually reaches its destination? • ■ WUS is prim arily an internation­ al organization under United Stu- •* C t ’ecil to aid stu­ d throughout die world. The dents project oi tho group is w rit­ la. ing the United States, requesting them to to college presidents in scholarships to H ungarian offer refugee students. Two hundred af­ firm ative replies have alre ad y been received, ♦ E ducational conferences, equip­ ment. food and clothing distribu­ loan tion. student health centers funds student for student#, and housing a r e a few w ays In which last y e a r 's total international con­ tribution was distributed. WTS also represents CARE and UNESCO on the cam puses of the United States. It is a m utual benefit organiza­ tion in which all countries contrib­ uting. including the United State*, also benefit in aid L ast y e a r edu­ cational conferences and sem inars and loan funds and refugee scholar­ ships w ere aided by this group in the United States. Funds a r e sent to national offices in New' York City and then co-ordinated by an "Mornational se c re ta ria t In Geneva, Switzerland. S atu rd ay (Dec 15) Is the day of WUS’s money-raising drive ort this cam pus. The com m ittee will spon­ sor a benefit banquet a t 6 p.m. in the main ballroom of Texas Union. Tickets a re SI and the ca m p u s in general is invited. ♦ F ra n k Wright, executive director of ca m pus " Y ,” will speak on "O u r Responsibility as Students to the World s Student P roblem s.” V ari­ ous foreign students w ill entertain. An international smorgasbord, con­ sisting of foreign foods, will be served, ITiis banquet will he the only hind raising m eans staged on the cam pu s bv WUS com mittee. To what extent the University w’iJl p a r ­ ticipate in the drive is completely in the hands of the students Tn fact, the future of the organization on this cam pus depends on p a r ­ ticipation in the n e a r future. T he D T exan T h e D aily T exan, a stu d en t new spaper o f T h e P niversitv of T exas Is pub- Halted in Austin. T exas, d aiiv excep t S atu rd ay M onday and h olid ay periods. S ep tem b er through M a y by T exas S tudent P ub lication s, Inc N ew s con trib u tion s w ill be accepted by the ed itorial offices. J B 103 or the new s laboratory. J B 102. Inouirie* con cern ­ in g deliver* should be m ade In J B 107 and ad vertisin g J R 111 (GR 2-2730) E n tered a s second cla ss m atter Oct. 18 1943. at the" Post oft ic * lo a (CR 2-2473 > or at telep h one T exas, under the act of March 3 1879 UB* , ^ T h e A ssociated P ress is ex clu siv e ly en titled to the use foi rep u b lication o f ! d isp atch es cred ited to it or not oth erw ise credited in th is n ew spaper and all local item s of sp on tan eou s origin published herein Right* of p u b lication " ig n is or p u b lication o f ail other m atter herein also reserved A T O C IA I U t I'K P S S WI BK N u n IC I R epresented for national ad vertisin g by N ational A dvertising S ervice Inc. C ollege P ub lishers R ep resen tative N>w «• k N _ 130 M adison Ave C h icago— B o ston —l.o* A n g e le s—San Francisco ‘ •45536*. ■ MKHBER Associated C ollegial* Brea* B l RNCHIPTlON HATI N (M inim um su b scrip tion —Three Months) D elivered in Austin Malled in Austin............... M ailed out of to w n ............. . Editor ............................... Managing E d ito r . . . . . . News Editor ........ Feature E d it o r .............. Society E d it o r New s Councilors ........ Editorial Assistants . . . Sports Editor .................. A ssociate Sports Editor Amusements Editor . . . Wire Editor ............ . Exchange E d it o r .......... Photographers ................ .......... Book Editor . ............ $ 75 m onth *................................................................. 31.00 m onth $ 75 m onth ......................................... F t KHANI N I x | \ | | ...................................................... NANCY MCMEANS ............................................................... V ADEN SMITH ............................................................ .......... G reg Olds ................................................................ P a t McKenna * " ' — ................................... Ann Abshier .............. ‘' oe Perez, Bud Mims, George Runge 1........................Cyrena Jo Norm an, Robb B u lla ge ................................................................ Nick Johnson ................................................ ................. .......................................... Bradford Daniel ............................................................. Bill Clayton .......................................................... T erry Stem bridge ............................... John Steel. J a n u s K. Wathen ........................................................... Robert C. Jones ST A F F FOK THIS ISSI F, N ight E ditor ...................................................................................... JO |iV h i L IJ E llexk E ditor ........................................................................................... DON BOTT Night R e p o r t e r ..................................... ........................................... Ma i k Sm}th .................................. Jam es Fillm ore, Margaret Adams Copyreaders ............................................... j im Montgomery Night Sports E d i t o r Assistant Nick Johnson ................... Night Amusements Editor ..................................................... Doris Wilson .................................................... Bradford Daniel, Ben Siegal A ssistants lilll d ei ^ IOO fti£ht V\ ii*# iud I tor Jim M ontgom ery Director To Visit UT \ By CYRENA JO NORMAN E d itorial A ssistant Peyton Short, director of the World University Service regional office in Dallas, will be on the University campus Wednesday through Friday to address religious groups. Groups may arrange to hear Mr. Short by contacting Rev. Jack Carter, chaplain of Canterbury, at GR 6-3589. The reg­ ional director, recently returned from India and a tour of the E ast, will discus WUS student and projects in different areas of the world. World University Service, worldwide inter-racial, inter­ faith organization to ald students, launched its drive at an on- •cam ptis retreat D ecem ber 7-8. The drive will close Saturday at a ban­ quet at 6 p.m . in T exas Union. All proceeds of both banquet and retreat will be used to a ssist for­ eign students ab road : m ost of It 'will go to national WUS for aid to i rebel H ungarian students. Eight Receive Nobel Prizes ‘ STOCKHOLM, Sweden (IV--Am id of splendor,' eight men Joya science received 1956 Nobel prize awn: rig Monday. F iv e A m ericans, a Briton a G erm an and a Soviet R u ssian were honored at the an­ nual ceremony in Stockholm Con­ cert Hall. the Shockley, t h e science recipients w e re : F o r transistor, physics, P ro fs. William John Bardeen and Walter H. Brittain of the United States, F o r chem istry. Sir Cyril N, Hu shelwood. G reat Britain, and Soviet Pr< >f Nikolai Semyonov, Inion. F o r medicine, Dr. Werner F o rss- Itmn, West Germ any, and Profs. Andre G. Cournand and Dickinson W. R ichards J r ., of the United S tates. The category am ounted to $38,533 and w as split tWr’ or three w ays a r cording to (he num ber of co-winners. prize each in Speakers from the WUS com m it­ tee, com posed of representatives from will be visiting cam pus living units to discuss WUS this week individual religious groups, I Students attending the on c am ­ pus retreat heard M iss Dorothy G ebauer, dean of women; William D. Roms, ex-Hungarian citizen; j and M ustafa M. Sahtout, Syrian citizen, d iscu ss “ Foreign Students j —Their P roblem s and N eed s’’ at , a panel after a “ starvation ’’ dinner F rid ay night. The menu w as plan­ ned to include the typical subsist­ ence diet of m any European and E astern students. Saturd ay M iss Elizabeth Single­ ton. WUS regional field secretary'. spoke on “ WUS—-Its Work and P urpose,” at a 7 a rn, b reak fast m eeting. Ja c k Swearingen, a s sist­ ant director of International Cen­ ter, gave the final retreat speech 1 a t noon Saturday. On Campus with M a x S k illm a n {Author of -Barefoot Boy wut/i Chook," tie.) HAPPY TALK A i we all ljnow, conversation is terribly important on a date. When lulls in the conversation run longer than an hour or two, one’s partner is inclined to grow logy — even sullen. What, then, does one do? I f one is wise, one follows the brilliant example of Harlow Thurlow. H a rlo w Thurlow prepares. That is his simple secret. Before the date, he goes to the library and reads all 24 volumes of the encyclopedia and transcribes their con­ tents on his cuffs. Thus he makes sure that no m atter what his date’s interests are, he will have ample material to keep the conversation alive. Take, fo r example, Harlow’s first date with Priscilla de Gasser, a fine, strapping, blue-eyed broth o f a girl, lavishly constructed and rosy a s the dawn. Harlow was, a s always, prepared when he called for Priscilla, and, a s always, he did not s ta r t to converse im­ mediately. F i r s t he took her to dinner because, as every­ one knows, it is useless to try to make conversation with an unfed coed. So he took her to a fine steak house where he stoked ber with gobbets of Rlaek A ngus and mounds of French frie s and thickets of escarole and battalions of petits fours. Then, a t last, dinner was over and the waiter brought tw'o finger bowls. “ I hope you enjoyed your dinner, my dear," said Harlow, dipping into his finger bowl. “ Oh, it was gran dy-dan dy!” said Priscilla. “ Now let’s go someplace fo r ribs.” “ Later, perhaps,” said Harlow. “ Bu t righ t now, I thought we might have a conversation.” “ Oh, goody, goody, tw'o-shoes!” cried Priscilla. “ I been looking everywhere for a boy who can carry on an intelligent conversation.” “ Your search is ended, madam,” said Harlow and pulled back his sleeves and looked at his cuffs to pick a likely topic to s ta r t the conversation. C a m p u s N e w s in Brief Tu««Uy. D»e*mK»r TY, 1954 THE DAILY TEXAN Fag* 5 88 Students Forget 2nd Salk Vaccination Only 87 per cent of the students are being stressed by Ph arm acy who received initial Salk injection* Extension Training, Joseph H. Ar- in October and Novem ber at the nette, director, said. Student Health Center, returned forj Tile program is the result of a second shots given D ecem ber 5-7. j grant by Hogg Foundation for Men- Of 702 students who got f i r s t 1 tai Hygiene. and William Hall la st week, and is making plans for a dinner after tha the C hristm as holidays club’s m em bers, for Pharmacy Aw ard Given i>r One shot of Salk vaccina M Burlage, dean of the Salk shots at the Health Center, Lonnie F . Hollingsworth w as se- 614 received second shots, reported College of Pharm acy, and Ja m e s Dr. J . T. Phillips, a ssista n t direr.- r . dT Eddy, dean of ’ the Division ]ectpd to receive the Drug Travel- tor of the center. of Extension, are originators of the j lers Association of T exas award for 1556-57. Dr, Henry M. Burlage, pi opt am . isn’t enough to prevent polio, m edical officials have stated. A series of three Injections is n ecessary before ►the vaccine is effective. e. of paralytic Thursday for participating in the u e a n A t t e n d s m e e t i n g f c u E L S " C°'lese ° Pharmacy' I U niversity students were praised u niversity students were praiser! ‘Tribute’ it Praised # . . *>* . . . - . polio has been reported in any drive to get funds for Hungarian Col- individual protected bv all three refugees. "T he spirit in which stu- at- shots of Salk vaccin e.” recently dcnts ’undertook the drive rem inds declared Dr. H art E , Van R ip e r ,;115 al1 of the belief with which j tended an Interim meeting of th# * bulgarian students sfnick for ft ce- American Pharm aceutical Assocl- m edical director of the National * s cha!r* adon house of delegates in Wash- Foundation for Infantile P a raly sis. ■ dom ’ In v>asr>- i n v « hppn re- m an . M r s- William M urray Jr . e? p of P h arm acy, H M B “ • Rut nniirt r recently « * • » of .. 15 , . _ ^ ln£ton, D.C. , e the first and second Salk shots. sported by those who received only _ M urray said that the Red “ ie K ,a agency officially No concrete reasons have been; d «iffn ated to handle international relief for w ar victim s, welcomes support from all groups. 8‘ . 1UI ra> gaia ma Baptists to Hold Party The Hyde P ark B aptist Church will have Its young people’s Christ, m as party Saturday at 7 p rn. The party will be free and will be held New Music Course Set _ _________ N ext sem ester students will have _ \ he" we twice a week in a harp ensem ble I , lev ; an opportunity to cornbin# playing : vinS tke se(;? nd shots so e J1, he s?at.c. ~ ' l K ^ r n s w a s the them e of a speech leased The prelim inary report of tho llie n u m m a r y report of S tee r H pre oom m ltte* wU1 b >• ro- The general topic of the six lec­ tures w as "Id e a l and P ractice in Public A dm inistration.” The Uni- A labam a P ress will nub- ill pud* m a I re ss y ‘ , lish * * lpctures in * * * * form * Dr. R adford’s “ Public Adminis­ tration and Policy Form ation” was published earlier this y ear by the University of T ex as P ress. by D r E M . Dotson, el W eal psy- j " h“ i " chologist, Testing and Guidance Bureau, at a meeting in F ort a meeting Saturday. Worth Keramos Initiates Three K eram os, neering society Thom as Welch, the University engi­ initiated Ja m e s McAlpin. club, ••within tw0 vveek s ,” R o y 'c b tfe .,............... are ahout in middle of our first round of inspections,” ha said. “ There are about 35 or 40 on the list.” Anyone wondering lf a place is on the inspection lis t m ay call Coffee at GR 8-S3C3 or Bill Miller at GR 6-8249. G j&Qm JuCl! F O R Q U IC K A C T I O N O N Texan C la ssifie d A d s D IA L GR 2-2473 . Ask for Extension 29 MONTHLY CLASSIFIED KATES * word a ............................................. I 6.00 .9 1 1 0 0 ........... to words I C L A SSIFIE D D EA D LIN ES T uesday T e x a n ............................. Monday. 4 p m. Wednesday T e x a n ........................Tuesday. 4 p m. Thursday T e x a n .........................Wednesday. 4 p.m. Friday T ex an ............................. Thursday, I p m. Sunday T ex an ................................. Frid ay , 4 p.m. DAILY CLASSIFIED RATES 20 words or less Additional words I day ......................................$ 95..................... ,$ .0*2 E ach additional d a y J A ...... "....I .01 C lassified Display ............$1.35 per column inch In the event of errors made in an a d v e rtise ment. im m ediate notice m ust be given, a s th# publishers a ra responsible for only one moor- r e d insertion. Special Services Lost and Found ICYE "ADAMS play SohooL E xperi­ enced child care. Age* 2 to 6. Hot lunch, anacktlme, nap* Pre-«ehoo» In. st ruction. GR 6-6128, 3211 E ast Avenue. LO ST: GOLD R IN c fT lth ruby stonei Probably lost in or near Union last Thursday. Please call Winifred Coition, GR 6-U662. TUTORING I R E N C H . Translation Instructress M il* Dupuis. Expert GR 6-22'je. 2501 Rio Grande FOUND: B L U E rayon Japanese-m ade •carf In Gregory Gym night of Sing­ song. H unter Leggitt. GR §-4684. cabin FISH FOR FUN and relax. Boat and |5 day, Weekend SIO, Camp Flat Rock. Box 412. Marble Falls Phone Oxford 34602. MOVING? Call GR 7-7894 LIG H T HAULING operated by L E A S law students, S p e c i a l student rates For Rent ONE-HALF BLOCK CAMPUS L arga private room, co oking faculties, liv­ ing room. Also small a met ap artm en t GR 8-5588 2618 Speedway, BRAND N E VV ROOM Never ivrupierL Private entrance, hath One blO>‘k b u * I line. C L 3-5704 qr OL 3-9290. For Sale Zlekenoppesser A Cai na E* poi Amsterdam. Holland Save Vie to 50% on gem quality diamond* direct from Am sterdam at wholesale price* All diam ond* furnished with full description and ?;uar*ntee For complete d etail* call call JR 2-l l 31, After 6 C L 3-7016. p m . - RN ISH ED h on # on Ijik e Auetln. Five acre* w oodland; 13 mile* from capitol. Scenic view un- surpasaed b o m a ; GR 2-5959._____________ c o u n t r y Id eal ._____ A V A I L A B L E Nice cottage f u r n ish ed ; 20 miles up on Lake Austin, Private, r<*ad, 135, Adults ox couple. paved I G L 38619 FU RN ISH ED alr-condltloned bachelor student apartm ent*. A u stin * finest, I'iv* blocks west lo t 2213 til# bath. of campus. L arge parking j Carpets Typing L K T YOUR P R IV A T E eecretary do your typing. GR 2-5517. D ISSER TA TIO N S the ie (sym bols). Airs Ritchie, neighborhood, GR 2-4'J45. E lectrom at-1 r~™ U. T NEAT. ACCURATE typing. Reasonable. 708 VS est 28th. GR 2-8402 TYPING WORK Lo perfection tations. theses, nlsu GE 6 8413 ACC! R A I F R EA SO N A BLE Electric. Elite t' pe. Greek characters. Phone GR 7-6779. ______ _ T H E SIS, dissertation. EJectromatle, UT neighborhood. Mrs. Ro his, GR 7-3749 E FF IC IE N T electrom atlc tv ping Mrs Moore. GR 6-0691. or GR 6 863b E X P E R IE N C E D typ in g; report*, etcet­ era. Electric. Mrs. Hunter C L 3--LMS ALL T Y P E S work done hy experienced typist Electromatie. GR 2-6359 D E iX fI E L D * Y P IN G ’ s ERV ICE The- ses dissertations themes Notary CR2-6569 E X P E R IE N C E D secretary and typlat. Dorothy Baker. BBA. HO 5hU19i TYPING ANY kind Mrs. vlck. HO 5 5- 1343. Reasonable rates, Thsr’s where the pause that refreshes with ice-cold Coke befan. Now i t s enjoyed fifty million tune* a day. Must be aoaoethmg to it. And there is. Have aa ice-cold Coca-Cola and a c e ,..right now. •O r r iE O UNDER AUTHORITY OR THE COCA COLA COMPANY IY A USTIN C O C A - C O L A BOTTLING C O M P A N Y •Cell#** It e »#gitter*8 (rode mark. RP BM , THI COCA COIA COMNKt TYPIN G of all kinds experienced. Mrs. Sanford C K 2-0134 I — -------------I engagement ring. Need* new mounting. Electromatie, 11200 HO 5 5389. B1 ~ MEN S HEAVY m o u n t e d ring w it h two j Leon lit* diamonds and sapphire Sat*) Lady * in * v 1949 ST U D EB A K E R . Radio Heater. Overdrive. White side­ tires Recently overhauled. E x­ to operate. wall tremely e c o n o m i c a l HO 54965 r e a d t h e c l a s s if ie d s A BAH HOTEL for tren Alr-condltloned room* available alii Gwed*.up# FLvUe GR I VoxUit/z u itM h a <7 tom Speedway Ju s t South , rebury Gym /\ \ ( )h. w o e ! Oh, lack ad ay! Those cuffs on which Harlow had painstakingly transcribed such diverse and fa s c i­ nating information — those cuffs were nothing now but a big, blue b lu r ! F o r Harlow' - p o o r H arlo w ! — splashing around in the finger bowl had gotten his cuffs wet and the ink had run and not one word was legible! And Harlow broke out in a night-swcat and fell dumb. “ I must say ,” said Priscilla a fte r several silent hours, “ that you are a very dull fellow. I'm leaving.” With that she flounced away and poor Harlow' w as too crushed to protest. Sadly he sat and sadly lit a cigarette. All of a sudden Priscilla came rushing back. “ W a* that,” she asked, “ a Philip Morris you ju s t l i t ? ” “ Yea,” said Harlow. “ Then you are not a dull fellow!” she cried and sp ran g Into his lap. “ You are bright! Anybody is bright to smoke such a perfect doll of a cigarette as today’s rich, tasty Philip Morris, which is brimming-full of natural tobacco goodness and fresh unfiltered flav or.. . . Harlow, tiger, wash your cuffs and be my love!” “ Okay,” said Harlow, and did, and was. CUM Shulmao, 1M« The milker* of Philip Morris Cigarettes, icho bring you this column each teeek, are very happy for Harlots — and for all the re*t of you icho hare discovered the true tobacco goodnese of today's Philip Morris! Encephalitis Afflictions O n Increase sick n ess,” a s “ sleeping ed that term ed will becom e a s w idespread as m a­ la ria form erly w as, if preventive actions are not taken. The plains a re a of West T exas reported 341 c a se s this year, with approxim ately 15 deaths. This is m ore than three tim es the number of afflictions in 1955. Two y ears ago, the Rio G rande Valley area reported 336 case s. The d isease is believed to be transm itted by m osquitoes. Law Class Plans Social The F resh m an Law C a s s will have a C hristm as party Saturday at the North Austin Lions Club at 8 p.m . Adm ission will be $2.50 per couple or $1.50 per sta g ticket. EXPERT SHOE REPAIR Modern Equipment • • K e y s M a d e • 10% OB Goodyear Shoe Shop O ff The Drag on 23rd Street T U X E D O S F O R R E N T AU Sizes Longhorn Cleaners 2538 G u a d a l u p e P h o n e G R 6-3847 -Fast Radio-TV Service- • JETT'S • 3511 G u a d a lu p e H O 5-9801 R a d io -T V — P h o n o g r a p h — So u n d E q u ip m e n t W e O ffe r Expert Camera Repair Studtman Photo Finish G R 7-2820 222 W est 19th Western H a t*— Shirt# S n it * —Je a n # J a c k e t s —Skirt# I.adieu' Rajf* Glove*—Belt# Shoe R erair CAPITOL SADDLERY 1614 Levee* i-M I SPEEDWAY I RADIO,TELEVISION and HI FI S A L E S & S E R V IC E GR 8-6609 N o Extra C h a rg e for Fast Service at « € N o m , fRRRTMtUfK' the most rn WY CHAMM O p en 7:00 e m. to 6:00 p m. M o n d e / through Saturday 510 W , 19th St Corne r N u e te i Laundry Service Clothes keep that longer '’New Look with THOR-O-CLEAH Drycleaning Exclusively at B U R T O N S 19th at Rio G rand e Phone G R 8-4621 Tneeder Students Like Tests A t UT Reading Clinic 'v irw ’V » t; rf T w it Ps - s - s - t I Ev e r y Y e a r M o r e a n d M o r e P e o p l e Gi v e J e w e l r y Gi f t s . by Chester Field S A N T A C L A U S A N A L Y Z E D S*TT>t>* # H i * * * * • » . . » amate* Qhmmmrf*abt «M»Mt far * J' Has Si Ideal G i l l s for YOUR Man '♦ n tin ann*'* X m m t l tank t> a, *«■ (MMI ■