New Band Steps High The Da T exan First Co liege Daily in the South Vol. 55 Price Five C e n ts AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, O C T O B E R 7, 1955 Six Pages Tod ay NO . 38 A “grand old gang” will step onto the Cotton Bowl field at half-time Saturday with a new kind of tempo, designed to eventually place the Longhorn Band among the fore­ most college bands in the nation. The OU game show, a tribute to the “fair sex,” will be a polished continuation of the new look that already has drawn laurels for the band in its two m arching perform ances this season. The new tempo that will reach a high m ark this week is a combination of band production factors, ranging from a faster, snappier cadence to a fresh set of policies and spirit th a t have been developed after three weeks of high-stepping rehearsals under D irector Vincent R. Di Nino, who took over the band helm September I. th e new look S a tu rd a y will b e the w hite trim m in g s ad d ed to th e b a n d ’s tra d itio n a l cowboy u n ifo rm s, u sed only on sp ecial o ccasio n s in re c e n t y e a rs. T he m o st a p p a re n t elem en t of T he 150 top-ara rte Stetson h ats, cu sto m -m ad e for th e L onghorn B an d a t a cost of $1,.>00, a rriv e d a t th e B and H all th is w eek in tim e fo r b an d sm en to sp o rt th e m in th e ir h alf-tim e p e rfo rm a n c e w ith th e riv a lin g “ Big R e d B a n d ” from O klahom a. Tile w estern h a ts w ere p u rc h a se d for th e b an d by the A thletic Council on the in sisten ce of D. X. B ible, a th le tic d ire c to r, who m a in ta in e d th a t th e L onghorn B and should be as s m a rtly o u tfitted a s th e foot b all squad. to trim m e d In ad d itio n the T ex as-sty le h a ts, b a n d sm e n th e ir cow boy u n ifo rm s w ith w hite h av e ties, and belts. M r. D i Nino, a n ativ e of shoes, th e cow boy ou tfits a r e M in n eso ta, sa id he th i n k s m o re re p re se n ta tiv e of T ex as th e m ilita ry u n ifo rm s th a t th e b an d h a s w orn in the p ast. T he d re ss w ill be w orn a t o th e r football p e rfo rm a n c e s tlris y e a r. T he th e w o m a n 's w orld will open to the stra in s of “ IA d y of S p ain ” w ith th e hand m a rc h in g into a fo rm atio n to honor T e x a s ’ s is te r s ta te of O klahom a. telev ised h alf-tim e sa lu te th a n to B e rth a, th e la rg e s t bass d ru m in the w orld, is tw irlin g w ill he spotlighted again e sco rted into a sp ecial fo rm atio n by the T ex a s S ta rs, p recisio n drill te a m for th e b an d . tie s w eek w hen she Tile fo rm atio n w ill shift to a sk irte d stick fig u re to the tune of “ W h atev er Bola W ants, I o la ('.cts,” B an d sm e n w ill d ance a rh u m b a ste p as “ L o la ” sh a k es h e r sk irt and a p p e a rs to b ea t on Big B e rth a. H ie lo n g h o rn Band will p ay a m usic an d w o rd s trib u te to “ The Yellow Rose of T e x a s ” as May mc rte Shirley queen of the T y ler R ose F e stiv a l, is esco rted the b a n d ’s outline of th e I^one S ta r S tate to to See H A LFT IM E, P a g e 3 Weather T he w ea th er in D alian In e x ­ pected to he fair, m ild, and a little co o ler Saturday the O klah om a-T exas fo o tb a ll g a m e p red icts the local U nited S ta tes W eather B ureau. for T he high In D allas S atu rd ay is e x p ected ta b e around HO w ith the low S aturd ay m orn in g of fit*. fo r e c a st Is The Austin fair and co o ler with a high of HO ex p ected F rid a y . T h u rsd a y ’s high w as St and the low* w a s Ti. Lovett's Desire: 'SIGO a Month' Satirical C a m p a i g n Planned by C an did ate J im L ovett, who filed W edn esd ay for the S tu d en ts’ A ssociation p re s­ idency, say s he w an ts th e job sole­ ly for the SIDO m o n th ly sa la ry . indicate D eta ils of his p la tfo rm , rele ase d T h u rsd ay , l/> v e tt‘s c a m ­ paign will be on a n on-serious n a ­ tu re. b ased h eav ily ii[x>n sa tire of the p re se n t cam p u s po litical con­ fusion. He said both his o p p o n en ts * Ro­ land D ahlin and M a ry D annen- baurrri a r e w ell-qualified a n d would do a good jot), but " I h a v e a b e tte r re a so n - sh o rte r w orking h o u rs w ith a g r e a t in c re ase in p er h o u r p a y .” ; At p resen t L ovett w o rk s 48 hours w eekly as night c le rk in a n /Austin m otel. “ I d o n ’t see how the stu ­ den t p resid en t could w o rk th a t m u c h ,” I/Ovett said He ex p ressed hopes th a t both D ahlin and M iss D an n e n b au m wall d ra f t p la tfo rm s th a t “ h a v e n 't a l­ re a d y been w orn out d u rin g p re ­ vious elec tio n s.” L ovett also m ad e a fra n k hid for th e v e te ra n s ’ b o a st: “ I serv ed eleven doing g ru elin g m o n th s RO TC d rill on W h itak er F ie ld .” he d eclared . ! No p a rty su p p o rt w ill he sought by L ovett, nor did he in d ic ate he w ill ca m p a ig n ex c essiv ely . “ If I can g et off w ork, I m ig h t do som e c a m p a ig n in g .” he said . 1 “ O therw ise, I w on’t be in te rru p t­ ing your m eals, hull sessio n s, or stu d y in g ,” he p ro m ised . Integration Situation Revealed in UT Report By ( AKL B I RGEN and MEDA M IL LE R to th e S tudent A ssem bly T h u rsd ay n ig h t in d icated . No in su rm o u n tab le b a rrie rs the four social in teg ratio n of N egro stu d en ts m o n th s 0 f w m k by th e A ssem bly exist on th e U n iv ersity cam p u s, a C om m ission on D eseg reg atio n , w as to A ssem b ly m e m b e rs by detailed sta tistic a l re p o rt p resen ted re a d T he co m p re h en siv e rep o rt, th an end p ro d u ct of m o re to M aul ie Sm ile. com m ission ch air* ' a t th ese e v e n ts would not. be av ail- ab le until a fte r the Southw est Con­ m an. along w ith reco m m en d atio n s fe r e nc e m e e t s to set its policy. for fu tu re w ork to be c a rrie d on by a proposed H um an R elations Com m ission. D uring the su m m er 27 stu d en ts w orked on ’he com m ission. the com m ission An interview ing system w as used by to “ find out facts, not feelings, for the rep o rt. D etailed sta tistics showed reactio n s of student groups,, p ro p rie to rs and m a n a g e rs of housing units, re sta u ­ r a n t o p era to rs, and th e a te r m an ­ a g e r s to d eseg reg atio n on the un­ d e rg ra d u a te level T h re e re s ta u r a n t ow ners of six­ teen w ho w ere interv iew ed said they w ould ad m it N egro stu d en ts in th e ev e n t of d eseg reg atio n a t level. Two of the u n d e rg ra d u a te th ese owmers said , how ever, th a t re stric tio n s m ight be placed on them . Five re s ta u ra n ts w e re undecided about th e ir policy. ★ th a t in te rv iew ers the m a jo rity of T he finding - included survey re- doing,” The The p re v a le n t a ttitu d e am o n g re s ta u ra n t ow ners, th e re p o rt said , w as “ w ait and see w h at o th e rs a r e found th e o w n ers p o rts on how m any d o rm ito ries, c o - o p s , room ing and b o ard in g d esired a m eetin g at. w hich th e y hot I sf*s w ould alinit N eg ro es: how could m ake a decision re g a rd in g m an y ath letic and social functions a g en eral policy, would be open to both i : how m a n y clubs and organ izatio n s w ould id rn it N egroes to mem Lier- ship. Student o rg an izatio n s not m ain* tam ing houses seem ed m ore lib e ra l .bom a d m i” mg N egroes th an m ost in terv iew ed . of “ T he D eseg reg atio n C om m ission Of 47 organize*ions con tacted . 44 of The U n iv ersity of T ex as has said they w ould ad m it N eg ro es m et m a n y b a rrie rs h o rte - zrega- who could m eet all m e m b ersh ip lio n 1 w hile a t th e sa m e tim e they tw o re m a in e d h av e found th at som e of th e b ar- undecided. h e r s h av e a lre a d y been crossed o r a r e re a d y to he c ro sse d .” rep o rt said In terv iew ers found th a t N eg ro es the w ere a lre a d y p e rm itte d to a tte n d -dl-1 d iv e rs ity d an ces sponsored by req u irem en ts, an d the o th e r groups H ousing units seem ed m ost un- the Social C a le n d ar C om m ittee. w illing of tho groups co n tacted to The T exas Union B oard of Dire©* ad m it N egro stu d en ts. O nly eleven d o r s rep o rted that N egro stu d en ts now atten d U nion-sponsored social of 131 con tacted said d efin itely that ‘urn ' ins and th a t all a re a s of th e N egro stu d en ts would be ad m itted . Union a re open to N egroes. F iv e of these units w ore co-ops, W om en's units g en e rally took a N o g r o stu d e n ts a r e a lre a d y m o re lib eral view tow ard ad m ittin g atten d in g C u ltu ral E n te rta in m e n t th an m e n ’s units, and C om m ittee p ro g ra m s, th e ro m rn li­ Nev rex . m a ny w o m e n s houses w ere unde- *pe rep o rted , w ithout restric tio n s * id cd on w h eth e r they would ad m it as to seatin g . N egroes * i P re sid e n t L ogan W ilson sa id sev- In ter­ im ] d vs ago th at die B oard of view ed said th a t N e g r o e s a re now R eg en ts m a y de. ide w h e th e r ra c e s acco m m o d ated only a t sp ecial p er­ es iii be m ixed in U n iv ersity dorm i- fo rm a n t es. N e ith e r m a n a g e r w as to rie s a t its next m eeting. definite ab o u t fu tu re policy. th e a te r m a n a g e rs T w o T hese w ere am ong cam pu s find- T he com m ission found th a t an- svvers to th e questions of w h eth er N egroes • -ould p a rtic ip a te in in te r­ collegiate sp o rts and w h eth e r th ere w ere anv restric tio n s as to seatin g tngs: H O U S IN G : Of d ire c to rs of eleven privately* See COMMISSION, P age3 M RS. M A R C U S D U R H A M and M RS. C H A R L E Y B L A N T O N . , . visiting science teachers Aims Called Twofold In Science Education Science ed ucation should be tw o -J foid: v o catio n al and cu ltu ral, a sp e a k e r from the O ak Ridge Insti- who h av e vision and told a lute of N u c le a r Studies statew id e science of asse m b ly te a c h e rs a t the U niversity T hurs- “ The re a l v o cation al opportuni- ties in science a re open to those in sp iratio n laid on a firm tech n ical founda­ tio n ,” D r. R a lp h O v erm an said in an a d d re ss b efo re the T ex as Work th e A dvancem ent Conference, for of Science T each in g an d Science F airs. “ The votes I a ra seek in g a re from ap a th e tic stu d e n ts w ho wan? to sta y a p a th e tic and a r e tire d of day. being told a p a th y is b a d ,” L ovett '-aid. “ A pathy is good, sin ce if no one then you n ev e r h av e a c r is is .” is in te reste d , 42 Candidates rile for Office 3 Austin Youths Beat UT Student i T hree A ustin y o u th s w ere c h a rg ­ e d w ith a s sa u lt e a rly T h u rsd ay lifter Louis Stout. 20-year-old U ni- j v ersitv stu d en t, w as b eaten while w alking along T w enty-sixth S treet. None of th e youths ch a rg ed w ere A to ta l of 42 c a n d id a te s filed for U n iv ersity stu d en ts, police said. th a t he w as offices in the S tu d en ts A ssociation by th e 5 p.m . d ead lin e T h u rsd ay , j w alking along Twentv-xi.xth S tre e t F ilin g for p re sid e n t w e re M ary whftn a co n v ertib le pulled up be- D ajnncnbaum , Jim L ovett, and Ro- sjdp him . Follow ing him down to Seton A venue, se v e ra l of the occu- land I 'ahiin. C an d id ates w ith no opposition pa n js jum ped out an d beg an beat- Slout 1o]d poi,ice p reviously elected h u t la te r dis- to h re a k aw a y qualified, filing a r e Bob Siegel f o r ; vice-p resid en t, J a n e t Holder fj-om the g an g an d g et aw ay a fte r se c re ta ry , and J im R ic h a rd s for ^ i n g stru c k se v eral tim es. Ile w as tre a te d a t th e S tudent H ealth Cen- C actu s E d ito r. t(?r and r p jeased him Wlth 1hpir fis ts . stout m a n ag e d f o r i C a n d id ates for A rts an d Sciences A ssem b lem an w e re B a rb a r a D avis. J I P a tsy M orrow . N an cy p o lice o ffic er I>en Rohe a rre s te d thrf>e of tho boys in thp 5600 block P au l C arro ll. M a lin e S uttle. J e a n | of N ofth L a m a r sh o rtly a fte rw a rd . S chw artz, Speed C a rro ll, and Bun­ iioys an d a girl who Two o th e r ny F ennell. had been w ith the gang had left the city. (loosby, the A fter being questioned by the police an d identified by Stout, two I ion s confessed and w ere of th ird ch arg ed w ith a ssa u lt, The boy, the e a r, w as the d riv e r of ch arg ed w ith dru n k en n ess. is “ H im p o rtan t th a t even a re m a rk a b ly in tric a te g ad g e t is not stu d e n t’s for a glim pse of th e la rg e r w orld,” he said. su b stitu te th e T he m eetin g s will continue at 9 a.m . F rid a y in B atts Hall Audi­ torium w ith a panel discussion on “ The Science F a ir E x h ib it,” m od­ e ra te d by W illiam G. M assier, d i­ re c to r of the F o rt W orth C h ild ren 's M useum . At 10:30 an o th er panel will co nsider ty p e s of science fairs, and the aftern o o n will be devoted to plans for co-ordination of such activ ities. The m e etin g s will end S atu rd ay with a n u m b e r of “ how to do it” sessions and rep o rts. Con­ final fe r en c e p a rtic ip a n ts a lre a d y have taken guided to u rs of U niversity lab o rato ries an d A ustin in d u stries. * To supplem ent the fo rm al pro­ g ram s, science te a c h e rs m a y visit a collection of ed u catio n al d isp lay s in the Scout H all of the U niversity r e ­ ’ M ethodist C hurch T his w ill m ain open th ro u g h S atu rd ay . Booths co n tain te ac h in g devices to m ake science courses as p l a n n e d m ore well as portance of and the outlook for th e ir fu tu re. to students, th e v ario u s sciences today p rese n tatio n s of in te restin g Assembly Vetoes One Election Bill ula ke an y su b stan tia l ch an g es in the election law s T h u rsd ay night, th e p assin g of th e dead lin e law s w hich w ould go into effect before the com ing election. The Student A ssem bly failed to election law disq u alified th e c a n n ­ d ates of an e n tire political p a rty . This, even though th e ca n d id a te s m ay have had no know ledge of the violation, and had given no con- sent to it, an d h ad not in an y w ay p articip a ted in it. for A m a jor d efe at for the A ssem ­ b ly ’s C am pus A ffaite C o m m ittee w as the failu re to p ass an am en d ­ m ent the S tu d en ts’ A ssociation w hich would h av e pinpointed responsibility for election law violations. the C onstitution of to The first hill p assed p ro v id es th at, ex cep t for in tra -p a rty com ­ mu n i ca t i on s , all funds used in be­ half of its ca n d id a tes by a po litical p a rty m ust he d ra w n eq u ally fro m the exiiense a c c o u n ts of the ca n d i­ d ates whose n am es a p p e a r on such m a te ria l an d w ho a re opposed in the election. the election one The A ssem bly did, how ever, [lass two hills that will have som e effect re la te d on to But the bill th at w as supposed to c a m p a i g n expenses, the o th e r to r e g i s t r a t i o n and responsibilities of provide a distinction betw een p a r t y individual violation violation and political p a rtie s and p a rty officers, tw o the n e c e ssa ry failed to get The d efeated bill would h av e pro­ th ird s vol*' of the A ssem bly. B y vided I h at an election law violation the tim e th is bill cam e up, only by a political p a lly o r an isolated sixteen, the req u ired tw o-thirds of individual would not disqualify the the A ssem bly, w ere still p re se n t. ca n d id a tes su pported by the p a rty liv e n D evore sounded the d e a th o r individual, unless th e can d id ates knell of th e am en d m en t w hen he g ave consent o r au th o rity to it, announced he would oppose it. Since ex actly the n u m b er of As­ sem blym en need ed to ap p ro v e th e am en d m en t w ere p resen t, it w as n ec essary th a t each vote for it. the a m en d m e n t is a sa fe g u a rd ag a in st i m - j w holesale disqualification such as followed la st sp rin g 's election. In th a t election a violation of an W hat w’as a tte m p te d in T W IR L E R LIBBY M U L L E N IX . . . as seen by the Longhorn Band UT's bassing W ave Hits Du's Fleet Feet Jo in in g C lem ents in a re W alter Font Iren, m ack, and Jo e Youn co m p rise one of the fie ld W o De gblood. They iglu est Steer in history', av e rag in g B t JO H N KNAGGS Texan 8 p«rt« Editor Blue chips a r e dow n on the in­ th e m a ie bed a g a in st the p assing arm of Jo e C lem en ts and i 'icky M iller. Bud W ilkinson’s Sooners have th e ta b le as a v e ra g e d 380 y a rd s ru sh in g in tw th e O klahom a Sooners. And nation in ru sh in g . te rse c tio n a l football Ivonghom s re s t on th e eve of th e ir • g am es and th e ir ace h alfb ack , Tom- J foursom es 60th ren ew al of th e ir b itte r riv a lry m y M cD onald, ra n k s tw elfth in the but 172 pounds p er m a n . w ith fo r th e D allas stu d e n ts h av e p u rch a sed tic k ets to c e m e n t cro w d o f 75,000 in th e Cotton Bowl. I ents th rew only one p iss a g a in st tra d itio n a l ca p ac ity ents, and M iller ra n k s th ird . Clem - G ray, an d Bob lu r k e r , ing p a s s e r in the co n feren ce, ( lorn- tri-ca p tain s Joh n n y invasion, 7,300 U T j E d P ric e co u n ters w ith the le ad - j Up fro n t th e L onghorns will un- ed by H erb leash a 200 pound p lu s line la tu m A lthough th e S tate F a ir will be Southern C al, an in com pletion, b u t s p lit- 1’ pow er for OI consistent is q u a rte rb a c k m a n on th e OU g a m e ; his p e rfo rm a n c e s ag ain st T exas i Jim m y H arris, going wall be the m a in a ttra c tio n and a !T e < h and T u lan e w ere enough to J e ith e r sta rtin g junior from T errell, T exas, w eighs only ro u sin g g a m e is a n tic ip a te d . Tw o keep h im th e n u m b e r five flinger 167 pounds an d M cD onald is sm all, th e n ation. T ex as h a s gained p e rfe c tly opposite b all clubs will ta k e th e tu rf S a tu rd a y w ith O kla-i 471 y a rd s th ro u gh th e a ir in th ree I as college p lay ers^ g o , at 169. Bob B u rn s and B illy P r ic e r c a rry the h o m a 's beef in th e OU b ackfield and. like T exas, field a the Sooners will line av e rag in g o v er 200 pounds p e r m an lightest te am . The pow erful ★ S p earh ead in g g am e g am es. full sw ing, ground die in Bevo to S e e O U G a m e A f t e r N igh t in Dallas m asco t T E X VS K elly T u ck e r Sneed T atu m H erb G ra y L ennon Sell n e w e r fo r j C lem ents tri-c a p ta in s H e rb : F o ndren and Bob A p p ro x im ately will Cowboys w ere on h an d B evo an d s e \e r a l stu d e n ts he Bevo will he esco rted to D allas by a m o to rc ad e of S ilver Spurs. stu d en ts, Longhorn b an d sm en . Spurs, and the­ farm south of [c a m p u s p ep ra lly T h u rsd ay night th o u san d of th e re p re se n ts will leav e F rid a y afternoon for th e OU w eek end in D allas. T he U n iv e rsity ’s be sta b le d on a D allas until tim e for his a p p e a r-j in an ce at th e S tate F a ir an d Cotton Bowl S atu rd ay , b u t m o st G ra y , of the stu d e n ts a re ex p ected to con- T u ck er. vene fo r an official I I p ep ra lly j H arle y C lark , h ead c h e erle ad e r. in fro n t said th e c a m p u s pep ra lly w as l l p .m . effective an d u rg ed all T ex as fans in D allas to atte n d F rid a y n ig h t's rally . fro n t of M oore-H ill H all the B a k e r H otel at Jo h n n y T atu m , th e sp eech es Youngblood W om ack 500 for by of Forty Acres KTBC to Broadcast See OU. P a g e 2 T he lin eu p s: OKLAHOMA S tiller L E ET W oodworth Bol rig o r LG T ubbs U KG Morris RT RE QB LH M cD onald RH I B Ed G ra y Bell H a rris B u rris P ric e r UT Enrollment Figures Approach Record M ark R e g istra tio n fig u res h ad sp iraled upw ard to a total of 17,432 by Wed­ nesday, E dsell R ittiek , assista n t re g is tra r, rep o rted , “ Only excep­ tional cases a r e b eing re g iste re d now .” he said. “ R e g u la r re g istra - ,'on ceased a f te r four d ay s a t G reg o ry G ym . w hen 16,- 139 h ad signed up fo r c la ss.” first the Highlights of O U C a m e T h an k s to J a c k H olm an in the “ F o rty A cres B ox” in the U nion: g am e in one of A counselor d o rm s re m a rk e d to a frien d c o n - j w ill d escrib ed by K ern Tips. ce rn in g th e fre sh m a n and tr a n s f e r [S a tu rd a y a t 1:45 p.m . o v er K I LC- g irls : “ ITI be glad w hen th e new w e a rs off so I can get m y boy R ad io b ro a d c a stin g of frien d b a c k !” A. live telecast, o. the OI th e g irls ’ j TV, A ustin. th e g am e J will begin S a tu rd a y a t 4:50 p.m . o v er KTBC, w ith D ave R ussell , I a n a Alec C h esser announcing th e j 4l ut A rad io -telev isio n m a jo r ’s p et peev e is th e ever-loving public w ho j actio n . th in k s of h im a s m e re ly a tr ie - H ig h lig h ts of th e OU g am e will p re se n te d T uesday, O ctober l l vision set re p a irm a n . Bob \a u g h t , so phom ore fro m E a stla n d , h a s jo in - [ a t 7 .3 0 p m on T ex as in R eview ed th e ra n k s of peeved ones. Bob o v er kTB C -TV , h a s a m o rn in g p a p e r route. F in d -j ing o u t his m a jo r, la s t w eek th ree to of h is cu sto m e rs asked h im com e in an d ta k e a look a t th e ir television se ts. ‘-how p ic tu res of th e g a m e T u esd ay a t 12 p.m . in the M ain Lounge. u n jon w ill ★ C o u rtesy Tile T ex an R ep rin t D e­ p a r tm e n t: a 27-year-old, b u t a d ­ m itted ly ch eru b -faced senior, w as shocked last w eek w hen a sa le s­ g irl in a dow ntow n d ru g sto re r e ­ fused to sell him a pack of c ig a r­ e tte s —ev en w hile his w ife and two ch ild ren looked on. It se e m s one m u st he 17 to sm oke in T ex as. H e found few who w ould sy m ­ is a Dr. Eby to Speak O n Integration Today D r. F re d e ric k E by, noted p ro ­ fesso r of h isto ry and philosophy of ed u catio n a t th e U n iv ersity , w ill a d d re ss T ex a s school b o ard inom - th e j h e rs an d su p e rin ten d e n ts a t D riskiU H otel in A ustin F rid a y m o rn in g a t 10:30. p ath ize. how ever, since he b a rte n d e r in a local ta v e rn and is le m s of In te g ra tio n in T ex as P ublic 7—Science F ictio n Club, Union 301 is a fe a tu re of th e 1955 j 7 :30- D r. R alph O v erm an of Oak notorious fo r refu sin g to sell b e e r i S chools,” R idge to a d d re ss B ap tist Stu- to anyone who looks u n d er 21. j d en ts, BSL —BUD MLM* sociaU on of School B o ard s, an n u al m e etin g of the T ex as As- H is topic, “ The Issu es an d P ro tv Union. ^ On the sla te fo r BBA A ssem ble­ m a n w ere Stephen B u tte r. J , B ruce B a rk ley , E lle an o r W alk er, J e rry P re w it, E ddie S h arp , an d L a rry S teinberg. C an d id ates for E n g in e erin g place w e re Lynn E v an s, G a ry Woehr- m an n , D avid C ornell, an d L o u is ' H ouston. R unning fo r I^aw A sse m -1 h lem an w ere R o b e rt T re v is, Guy C. Ja ck so n , J a c k G a re y , B. D. M cKinney. Roy J. R aw ls, a n d J a m e s Coburn, Loyd “ G u m m y ” J a r y and Ruben R ivero filed for A rc h ite c tu re . M ar­ jo rie B elike and T obye F ra m w ere the ca n d id a tes for E ducation. M ark ( ’ Noble will ru n for P h a r­ m a c y re p re se n ta tiv e a n d P a t Sie­ m ens for F ine A rts. P la c e One w e re A. J . C arubb; and Bill R afkin N ed C aldw ell and L eo n ard Von D ohlen a r e the r a c e for A ssociate J u s tic e P lace in Man s Can’t Best Live IU MARJORIE MI ONO “ Je a n e tte h as deep, d a rk blue eyes, a tin y nose and m outh, and sighed Milton thing p re ttie s t Stern “ S h e’s i ve over* s e e n .” the Friend in Dorm balls, esp ecially w hen rea ch in g for a delicacy ice cream cones. I h alf-eaten like B ecause no fem ales a re allow ed in the San J a c in to D o rm s w h ere lives, he keeps his costly Milton , pet w ith h e r sibling, Jocko, and i ,.n air n10t|ie r, N icolette, the hom e of M rs. A. IL Benny. M rs. B en n y 's hobby is raisin g poodles. a t tw elve-w eek-old llp an unusual an d costly L isted for A sso ciate Ju stic e w hite, silky h a ir ,’ W ednesday’s re g istra tio n n u m ­ b er lack s 56 of eq u allin g th e Uni v e rsity ’s a stro n o m ic a l all-tim e highs Two. N ancy M oody filed for A s - * Hlnd_an d _a _half , not his girl No, it s nor m s gun m e n u u*"’’ * th e ir , • , frien d th at . Milton w as m ooning o v er, hut h i s 1 .o f stu d e n ts: 17,488 in fall of 1947.1 so ciate fal l -s to ta , hl1 th e 16 0g4 m a rk , ( One Ju stic e W om en’s P l a c e r ” for ^ an d N ancy M cM eans oy poodle, o r 1.348 less th an this fa ll’s sum . W om en’s P la c e Two. II Im J e a n ie w ith th e w h ite silk y fur is v ery a m ia b le. She lo v es to ride in c a r s, e sp e c ia lly when sitting on M ilton’s sh o u l­ der. What Goes Hen FRID A Y 9 — T ex as A ssociation of School B oards, D r,sk ill H otel. 9-12—F re sh m a n B eau ty C ontest en-; trie s, U nion 307. ‘ 110-1—S tu d en t A ssociation C o n * titu -1 tional ex a m in a tio n s, Student As- se ria tio n Office. j ; 3-5 — R e g istra tio n for “ Ten M ost B e au tifu l,” Jo u rn a lism Building 305. 15-6— R e g istra tio n for ballroom d anc- 7 :30-10 C o -recreatio n , W om en’s * / "I, (7 :30- R e g u l a r S erv ices, F oundation. bo‘f* * J e a n n ie ’s fond of people, too. an d ; to A N Y O N E : playfully scam per s .( h e r m o th e r n e v e r w arn ed h e r ) . H illel ^ llton s a Ys 5hat ev ery o n e w an ts to 315 7:30 D uplicate B rid g e a u h , Union Mi Ton’s Je a n ie is v ery in tellig en t, the zoology m a jo r b o asts. A lread y legs. (He did ad m it th a t poodles stan d like seals b alan ce on hm d v ersify Club on “ A lcoholism ,” YMCA 8—N elson Brow n to a d d re ss Uni- sh e can sta n d on h er hind togs 8:15~-“ P itfa lls of P a u lin e ,” ACT SATURDAY I — W esley F o u n d atio n r e tr e a t to F acu lty M eetin g Postponed R ockledge. 1:50—Texas-O U g am e. KTBC-TV. 6-9 The first se m e ste r m eetin g of the G en e ra l F acu lty , o rig in ally ached* , S upper m e etin g fo r S W T S C : uied for Tuesday, O ctober l l , h as I*‘en postponed until a later d ate, w o m en ’s ph y sical tra in in g facul- ihc tv W om en’s G ym . I E u g en e Nelson, se c re ta ry of {G eneral F aculty, said Wednesday. I 8 .1 5 --” P itfalls of P a u lin e,” ACT. One c a n of clog food, pin* an eyedropp er of v itam in su p p le­ m ent, a r e se rv ed to J e a n ie by the B ennys e a c h da y . With this diet, the cod d led poodle w ill e a s ­ ily m a tu re th e ex p ected into three and one half pound*, w hich M ilton is really sm a ll for her breed. Like ail toy poodles, J e a n ie is ex trem ely sensitive. No one h as ev er yelled a t h er. In fact, sn* shys aw ay from loud voices, Mil­ ton says. One of Jen n ie s fav o rite an tic s is d ru m m in g a w a te r bow l's su r­ face to s p a tte r the liquid. She loves in the w a te r until h e r to splash w hite coat tu rn s g ray . Ariled w hat hi* p a r e n t s thought of his s j lending so m uch (o v er SJ'te) for a dog, M ilton replied, “ Urn 3*2 and my parents d id n 't *ay a th in g ’. ” **■ f y . _ S Si* r i N I a "IT 'S Y O U R LICK, JEANETTE," Jocko m igh t be gallan tly saying *0 ll:s Ester toy pc rn e. W hen he discovered Jeanette outfielding u>- w hat c oi • he on b m chivalrously w a :t h s tu rn ? Jeanette i* th o ’ s A nn £ kin $ hand boloing rn# ow en by M ’on Stern, b ut melting ^.e-creanz SrWay, O e + o W 7 , 195? T H ? D A IL Y T E X A N Pag# ? ' ------------- T E X A S O V E R S O O N E R S ----------------------- ★ O ut on the Limb B y J O H N K N A G G S T exan Sport* Ed itor Black Friday come* again with this corner riding a happy .ROC) percentage, preserved on last week’s ten picks. We missed the upset of the week on SMT and went dcmn swing­ ing with Jess Neely’s Owls. The rest of the ticket came out close ’em sliding in closer than the new World Champion*. to home with some of Bending the week ? schedule lim b h a r d , the T exas over O klahom a. Not based on personal sentim ent. The ou t­ com e can easily depend on how m uch su b stan ce to Bud Wilkinson s crying towel. It s been wet all w eek over J rn m y H a r r i s ’ that should h a m p e r injured hand the jun ior q u a r te r b a c k consider­ ably. th ere ss schedule a f te r How ever Wilkinson likes to e m ­ phasize the Texas c a r r* in every possible m a n n e r . And well he the Sooners' g rav y should with the T exas train g a m e ; K ansas. Colorado. K ansas State Missouri. Iowa S tate Ne­ If b ra sk a . and O klahom a A&M th e re a re an y co n ten d e rs rn that they v e n t out w ith pro­ group, hibition. BUD W ILK IN SO N . . . pa it th e cry in g to w el season eon I* be charm er dim a r e re a d y p h y sic ally an d m e n ially he m ore than slightly fired up, T ex as by a toy hdow r. F o r the L onghorns a potentially victory o v e r O I'. The p la y ers rid will they need th is one badly w it h a TCC over A labam a. Qu ‘kly taking over the favorite spot for the conference crown, the P urple powerhouse should ram ble a1! oxer the Southerners. In a well-dcscrvf ! brest < r. the** touchdow ns o r b ever. the O ' spans by Arkansan over Bay S*-»r. Another grift} , edi nor., but we')! hog since another acute re nee cham pion Porkers The R azorback? lr a squeaker. loss would virtually elim inate the defend re T « a * AAM o ver N ebraska. B a rrin g fum bles R ear B r y a n t’s ground g a m e should continue ** c h a r r e a g a in st A ggie schedule A B I by two TTT, the w eake -t opp»-*nent on the R ic e o ver C lem son . A football phenom since R ice w a s not in the n a tio n s top tw enty while Clemson with a 3-0 rec ord, num ber fifteen, The odd«’^-''ker< however, or b e tte r and so do we ra te d ranks favor Rice by a touchdown SM I' over M issouri. Should be the chance ‘or the % ;**arc* to p ok Bp th eir first win of the cee.son. The team th at scared M aryland badb m ight scalp th* fkwrsies hut D allas and Woody Woodward should he happy with a +wo-tou-hdowr victory Army over M ichigan. A toss-up game any w ay you look a* it w *h two of the n a tio n ’* top clubs b a rlin g to g e th er. D 'e Wolverines have had two close calls an d w ith a b r e a k me C adets should c h a r m the third try. A rm y in a close one G eorgia Tech over LSC. A traditional battle f a* usually finds the T igers ra te d underdoes but battlin g to the f nish T e h by a touchdown for J rn M aryland over Wake F o rest. Shouldn * be any trouble T atum '* terrific T err* The r t tor's num ber one team n a rom p Southern Cal o v er M ashie?ton. West Coast rn--, **y won ' h u t’ die I'SC by th u n d e ro u s attack that ground over the Longhorns last week two touchdowns. O th er G a m e s : Mich ; .r Stab over St mford T ilar-e oxer M s i ssi ppi t>uke o v er W illiam a n d M ary . and A uburn over K en n irk v . OU 7 Point Favorite™! (Continued fro m P a g e 11 HERB G RA Y BOB TUCKER H a rris is re p o rte d ly favoring a left hand but will probably b a d be the sta rtin g m a n u n d er F o r the L onghorns it will he th e ir first d ay g a m e of the season a f te r playing tw o at hom e under th e a rc s and CSC a? C alifornia F rid a y . to o ffset M any eyes will hp on C lem ents to see if he will be as affective a s he w as in C T ’s w in o v er Tulane two w eeks ago. C le m e n ts’ strong an d a c c u ra te right a rm a re tieing the counted on h eavily soo n ers trem en d o u s ground gam e, Although O k]ah >ma is cu rren tly a seven po.re choice to take th eir the 50- fourth stra ig h t g a m e \ ear-old se rie s fro m the I .orghorns m any o b serv ers still believe I T to h a \ e an excellent ch a n ce of play­ ing the Big lie d on even m rm s. p erh a p s oven tu rn in g rn a su rp rise 1 in ♦ victory. Entrance C h a n ce s In c re a sin g — Sa d le r F O R T WORTH O ct. 6 GE D r. | M. E. S adler, p resid e n t of T exas C hristian U n iv ersity , said T h u rs­ d a y night he w as “ g re a tly en ­ c o u ra g ed " o v er the possibility of T ex as T ech becom ing * m e m b er of the Southw est C onference as the result of a m eeting held h ere r e ­ cently. D r. S adler called the m eeting of college re p re se n ta tiv e s w ith the specific topic of conferen ce ex-1 pansion to ta k e in T ex a s Tech and he said th a t contrary' to n ew spaper re p o rts he found g e n e ra l sentim ent w as th at (tic big college sn West T exas should lie invited. R ep o rts concerning the m eeting, to have been th a t w as supposed and w ithout publicity, inform al w ere th a t if it w as decided expansion e v e r w as considered, O klahom a p ro b ab ly would he the first school to rec eiv e an im ita tio n , j ★ th a t Bear-Hog Game Tons SWC Slate Bx I hr A ««itf isle d felt that “ Som e of incidentally. I those p rese n t m en­ tioned O klahom a and U n iv ersity of “ but Houston ’ Dr. S ad le r said the only g eneral sentim ent of the m eeting that T exas T ech should be invited and since then I hav e r e ­ letters from virtually all ceived the m e eting saying the} thought the m e eting w as most la rg e s helpful. They said they thought it would be good to h a v e T exas Tech in th e c o n f e r e n c e pass de- who attended ioh J a c k B ay lo r and A rkansas, clash in a c ru c ia l conference test set a t W aco w as S a tu rd a y m the only SWC ca m e The defending cham pion P o rk e rs h av e been w orking on le n se and offense a* G Mi told his Ozai tha B aylor proha hi} would he just tough as T C I'. The H orned gs beat the Hogs 26-0 I tsr w eek. F n ll m m V I JO H N N Y TATUM it des rr 'si O is a 6 0 - m in u t e g a m e s h e h a s h e r p a s s i n g o r ». That s c l o s e et by the I 4 v 938, w h e n h e ? a n d p a s s e s st it lim Co hurt- Cotton B o w l A w a it s Sellout Grid Battle mowing in Bow] t h e Ok the Lon - ’,.ri nu. T h e r e ll be a n ov< of 75,501 in th e Cot d a y a f te r n o o n w her S o o n e r s t a n g l e w i t h t Al Lund st od t repo: that the 8.000 h o k e I n tx c r s i t y s t u d e n g o n e . " H e s a i d at o u d ? a r ­ ena rn*, d a y 'n m g it e s ha* i I . md? id- to gain ai ! th mis? S H phern M< ihod ist a i r g a m e , too, A scout M is s o u r i ' s T i g e r s , S M U ’s n ig h t o p p o n e n t s in the Cot: w e r e w e a k on p a s s d e f e n s .toho R o a c h and f c r h n c k s A m o i I di - p a yet I p a s s i n g for th e U r n ’ m g s SMT e n d * w e r e h a v i n g w i t h ' l i c k f in g e r s and hole? e s s e d t h e -•port s a i d s F r i d a y >n B o w l, \ Q uar - ('h a rl ie >f f e e f i v e but d ie t r o u b le in 'heir s o m e nou s-.rn . Boa ch J e s s N e e l y ;od his lin e ip rn p r e p a r a t io n ie g a m e t h e r e S a t u r d a y night st u n d e f e a t e d C l e m s o n . N e e l y e n t l y w a s g i v i n g t h e so p h o- s ex i ry c h a n c e to b r e a k into he Ow Coat- in ext Pl I clown ga in*t up. lint AI u Martin o f am b feat od sa id led T e x a s C h r i s t i a n ht his b o y s w o u ld b e r e a d } a ca in*’ A l a b a m a , b u t he if>out m i s s e d o f f e n s i v e a s- f e a r a a f t e r t w o s p ir it e d s t a r t s T e x a s T e c h and A r k a n s a s . F r o g f o l lo w e r s B o w lin g Workout M le a - W D a hoe b e g u n w o r k o u ts i T a r m a c ! s e a s o n , t c r e s t od rn r > *- u s n a r e r e q u e s t e d t o lr .a* the M ie a -W ie i U n io n 30? B e g i n ling tea >r t h e e Indepor l g on i • a v e th* h a v e mg in­ in- tl Is ’The T e x a s A g g i e s , w h o m e e t N e b r a s k a in their w e e k e n d * It, had fo u r q u a r t e r b a c k s c a ll i n g s i g n a l s a n d n o n e looked bad B e s i d e s , full­ b a c k J a c k P a r d e e s h o w e d i m p r e s ­ s i v e w o r k and C o a c h B e a r B r y a n t s a d h e xx cs p l e a s e d w i t h the C a d e t s ’ p r o g r e s s . D r, S a d l e r rove that every thwest Con­ the n e m b e r o f ed either bv f e v e n c e w a s repro the president r e p r e ssn ta - f a o u i t five, athletic tru ste e or directs twenty I or e ig h t e " T h e r e w ere persons h e r e ," h<- said, " a n d we m e t for two hours a t luncheon to discuss the m a tte r . " He said tile m eeting w as derided upon when he co nferred with Tom Sealy, c h a ir m a n of the Boa rd of Regents of The U m \ ersity of Texas. Texas C hristian and T exas have favoring T e x a s T ec h 's ad- been conference for s e r ­ m i s s i o n to e r a ! Y e ars t h e ic m u c h “ I am v ery T e x a s Tech " “ This is not be ti ca I ne i ■ onomh it ca u se g r e a t should le ade rs and re p re se n te d in the co n fe re n ce." in favor of Dr S adler said iu se of the D i­ ll as pc * s but he­ reat v.. bool with i ie * a g rea t si it th a t D r S ad le r said the se nti­ ment of ti e rn e e t i n g prob ably would be ex pressed at the w in te r session of the Southwest Confer­ ence faculty com m ’tee in Dallas ,n D ec em b e r. T ex a s Tech h as long been an the applicant for n e m b ersh :» conference S everal is- tim es *ue h a s eon p lo a vote but Tech h a s not vet obtained the v ote neces- *a rv. in the A Campus-to-Career Ca^se History Clements Fifth In National Rank 3 C I Basted on Hit .lf T exas don s pi le ad e r a in p ass offense sued Th Cl erne h ea d rn la st we S outheri Stat list Se tv ice B enham bia quai Assoria tee! Pres* Clements, a n d the na- : to t a l o ff e n s e ago, dropped to fifth total net sex onth is- ding to s t a t i s ti c s rn . as ifte r just sidelined by a two p la y s T exas' g am e w ith orm a in Los A ngeles. least I by the NCAA iii show that t, laude t-8, IT '-pound Col urn- ck, is the m a jo r col- I in Like Hie tie n se. Si veal a s Chi mb mi he- and anoth< • sm a ll s t a r D ax c v O Br.ion of d u ra bib tx is one ■ >1 assets. Benham , 1who pi Columbia s <‘flense player, and in txx o handled the ball- o running o n to hi*’' reconti r a te pound O B n a v e r a g e d K p er gam e. racked it s the In two g rn Kin Yiitvi/vr* fi ll Dux JUD JOI h as up 39 plays. His I59 p as completions and 361 the a i r a r e I nigh fo rl oto ’ c 3 i cie!ie* n e s t prompted, a1[so hic e m It w as a losing . ' <7* CNI B enham to ■[he top UCw inc — tho 1ndividi hrgh for the y e a r — w as losing iia Print M ea nxx bile Art Ll na. who nex er pat the rushing leader? hut one week last > gained 129 y a r d s against total of 361 y ards, .Tim Fix ink of J last w eek ’s rlashing to second pla ce wit! he scored 13 points o a tie C5cCC lead w i t h Solithern i Arnett F.a< h h as Ida! M a r c ia n o Far In H e a v y w e ig Yearlings Face Cubs ' In Jinx’ Battle Tonight By E D D IE It! (illE S T exan Sport* S taff A standing long-tim e jin x of n ev e r h av in g v o n an opening gam e ag a in st the B aylor Cubs faces the T exas S ho rth orn s in Tem ple F ri­ d ay night when Hie two freshm en te a m s with potent passing a tta c k s invade Woodson Field, Since 1950, the Shorthorns have opened with the Cubs and have yet in five trios. Only in D D to xx in the Y earlings com e up with did that a victory over Baylor, c a m e in the m iddle o cason, I F re s h m e n conch ‘baize, re the if sir-;- e 11 est d last lait the tin j T he Cubs, u n d er th e lead e rsh ip of coach Bob B arfield, h av e com e up w ith Buddy H um phrey, a tall from Kil­ gore. w hose p asses h ave given th e trou ble j B aylor v a rsity plenty of i 185-pound q u a rte rb a c k in sc rim m a g e sessions this fall. in ! u n d e r slot O th er than M atthew s in the m arv the Y e a rlin g ’s T- formation, John M assev of Incle- side and Beeville s Billy B a k e r xviii prob ab ly s t a r t at the left an d right halfback spots respectively. I M aurice B a u m g a rte n , 195-pounder b o m Houston, will probably ii# Dntinned a t the fullback D M , lie ss the scheduled Y earlings top p u n te r and kick-off man also be to P J q u a m he pa ssi infer qu taking over Y earlings for th Ed Kelley d e p a r posses one of tho f a tta c k s in m a n y \< son lies in tho effo h a c k Vince Mat thee whiz who xxii- one sought-after school T exas high schc M a tthe w ’s pa- based entire)} < passing rec o rd ir he led his Class total offense, for i or has proved with his perro n Backing up 5 oth e r fine pass* r of Yoakum a w Daingerfield. Ms as aho lid se night the No, 2 lent’ In the line, trouble brew s, for com petition is rugged, and p r o b ­ able sin lie r s a r e uncertain. How­ ever, D anny Myo* - will most like­ ly he at left end, Bill Stohlhand- ske at left tackle. Bill C a rric o af left guard, Arils P a r k h u r s t at r e n ­ right g u ard , ter, J o e Winter at L a r r y F u n d e rb u rk at right tackle, and eo-captain Bill Brock at right end, M atthew s and Brock w e r e .selected to be co-captains fot tho Cub encounter. Th. t "good ob B ay lo r line" m a y the different e F rid a y , as m ean inc ( ' hi s line a v e ra g e s som e 205 pounds p e r ma n, as 198 for the Y earling s, a t e somewhat file sam e. Ravine ag a in holding the edge, 1,86 to fat b ackfield s rho A complete selection or V A N H E U S E N A i "EASY SHOPPING* ENFIELD SH O PPING CENTER 12th and LAM AR M EN S W E A R CHARCOAL gets some extra fuel that se n t md s i n g l e - g a m e lie C o l u m b ia rn. 20-7. ino o f Ai i/o- u r e c l a i m e d he h e ld all mn. L u p p m o 16 c a r r i e s th r e e-ga m e a s ( h n s t san. >ader, s lip p e d HS y a r d s , but ;an- sa ins- Ar •in : »r th e sen n lif o r n i a ’s ll points. In M u r a l P la y Rain Steals Show From Close G am e s B y B O B G R E E N B E R G T e x a n I ii tram?) rat Ca-ordinal or A b lu sterin g , rain y n o rth e r hit W h itak er F ield T h u rsd a y to cause a postponem ent on all th re e > p rn. g a m e s. T he ra in and cold ra m # a f te r ten m in u tes of p la y in the final g a m e s of tho rig h t S igm a A lpha E psilon squeaked n the B p assed P h i D elta T hat le ag u e , on p en e tratio n s in th e clos­ e st g a m e played SAI s Wen de B ra y connected w ith B uddy No > for a fifteen y ard sc arin g p ■ ■ J a m e s b ro u g h t the Phi D elta b a rk l r th e g am e w ith a 4d-yard pass to P h ilip Cecil. A cacia d efe ate d Phi D elta T heta 14-13. Tom P rirn m p assed to Bob C rate tw ice for A cacia touchdow ns. bi Den % Corbin Snow hit Je ri> to com e K yle on a 20-yard p ass within on* point before bow ing out. t x E d Luski passed A lpha E psilon P i to a 13-6 v ic to ry o ver a d e te r­ m ined D elta K appa E psilon te a m to R ich a rd Luski s p asses w ent B e rg e r for .Terr} P lan t os ky for 30 \ ards. On from the stre n g th of a b ad pass passed for tw o of the th re e Sigma r e n te r ending In a sad e n V l scores. 17TS\ Hold* d a b Tryout* UTSA, woman’s a th le tic o rg an i­ zation held try o u ts V od rn sday, for its various club- R e p ea t will be held next W ednesday. tryouts onP 8nd p a ^ d D eh s touchdow ns. league ten y ard s and M ILW A U KEE dp g a m e B a rc la y Rvali ^ WO Of the thro* S igm a Nu scored a 21-13 vic­ tory o v er D elta Upsilon in a class B Heavyweight cham pion Rock}- M a rc iano has pounded a big g ap between h i m ­ self and the rest of the division with his h a m m e r-lik e fists, a c r o r d - to T hu rsday s q u a r te rly r a ti n g s ' B o x i n g Association. "M arcia n o b a s punched his way­ out of good o p p o n en ts," said F r e d In a lopsided contest D elta T au Sad dy, c h a ir m a n of the NBA R a t- sta te m e n t, "W e a r e Ii**mig Bob B aker, Nino Valdes and H u rric a n e Jackson a* th e oust md mo boxers rn the heaxy- weight division ’ D elta b reezed passed Pi K appa *ntT C o m m ittee Alpha, 34-0. Ken Voelkel ra n for the of of ti1f> in a two for Newest fabric conception of the Charcoal idea TA I L O B E D B Y 3-(?appS£$'Q ns.~C tcL Dark Tones are the latest word in imart •tiling. See our Stained Glass fabrics that incorporate many new colors into the Charcoal idea. They're all available in a •core of new fabrics with various surface patterns. Our selection is complete, take time out to see them. $65.00 i i I represent 30,000 people” T h at’s the population of the Mason Citv. Iou.*, arca where Jack Mac A Mister ( Iowa I ’50) is Manager for North­ western Bell Telephone Company. How would you like this kind of jo b ? • • • \ s Telephone Manager I represent Mason City to my company, and vice- versa. Among mv customers are hank­ ers, farmers, housewives, m erchants . . . each with different questions and prob­ lem* alK>ut telephone s e n ice. Through public information and good business office service, mv people and I do our hest to furnish the answers. 44My assignment rails for varied ai tjvi- ties—sales, public relations, offire super­ vision. One minute Tm describing a new c o n s tr ^ tion program to a group of businessmen . . . the next explaining a new service to a rural customer. 44I t’s a job with lots of variety and r e ­ sponsibility, and I enjoy every day of it. My supervisor is 75 miles aw av,” says Jack, “ and that puts me prettv much on my own —which is the way I like i t . ” * Jack MarAUister g r a d u a te d with a B .S . in Cnm- m r r c r and started with N o r th w e ste r n Bell a b o u t five years ago. As t e l e p h o n e M anager at the age o f JR, he is ty pical o f the m a n y y o u n g m e n w h o are b u il d in g careers in t e le p h o n e w o r k . S im ila r o p ­ p o r t u n it ie s e x ist to d a y with o th e r Bell t e le p h o n e c o m p a n ie s . . . a ls o wi th Bell T e l e p h o n e L a b o r a ­ t o r ie s, W estern E lectric and S andia C o r p o r a t io n . Your P la c e m e n t Officer has all the d e ta ils. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM T ile R u e s * P . S. S in ee th I* case h isto ry teas prepared, Jack has bren prom oted. S o u a manager at Des M oines, Iowa, he has increased responsibilities. mI K » m em & i r n * u . ■ - p rs o u rn Lf— . Sh>-tr«, $1.33 V A N H E U S E N Stripe-it-Rirh”.. sophisticated new striped wardrobe designed for new charcoal suits Van Heusen dug deep into today's trend tow ard charcoal suits for the perfect shirt to do them justice. Result: a gusher o f st)Ie . . . bold rich-colored stripes alternating with ch a rco a l The effect is so great we've striped a whole rich wardrobe that you can own even if your Pop owns not a sharo of oil stock. Shirts, $3.95; M atching Tics, $1.50. VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS at 2516 Guadalupe W e H a v e A Variety O f Van Heusen Shirts In Smart C o lo r Styles. I Friday, October 7 , 1955 THE D A ILY T E X A N P a g . 3 Commission Report... B v G 7 H O L L IN G S W O R T H , j v ... IT an | the cold w ..r ? are prohibited from leat mg the city man Relations Commission on po*- M i vs Subtle pa I special tribute owned dormitories who were inter- si bl® integration in regard to trails-b efore making the report to David J Soviet Zone border, West Berliners viewed, two said they would con- p o r t io n pcffltics, fraternities and Cornell and Carter Rochelle for the work ’hey did as sub-commit- sororities, th* work th ™ did ^ mih-rnmmit- < bident placement and use of com- tee chm men within the comrm*- munity facilities. sider an application from a Negro campus employment ^ n i m „ ™ n t 'Continued from Page I ) I sion. T 8 Year* of Suprem acy Dana X. Bible Brings Harriers Meet \Scholar A&M, Oklahoma i Berlin's Outlines Problems a m a r — m m ■-rn f V f * I Golden Athletic Era He took the University’s football] matched the efforts of football. Texas’ eros1? country squad w ill face Texas A& M and Oklahoma F rid a y at College Station in a . on A&M> new . lowest ebb anti fortunes at t a raised them to a place of national ' years ago as athletic director and : cross country course, prominence. He started a highly* head football coach, successful plan for enrolling pros* Bible, During that lime, the I. ni- from last year s SWC pective athletes. installed e,E htecn is Dana X . That man. versify athletic teams have captor- 1 squad, w ill he a heavy favorite Texas A&M , with six lettermen A i M When big-time football was being ed approximately ISO team titles.; OVPr the i.m lv rriHHrPrt .round 3951. bel M r. Bib le has a number of gaudy universities. sharply criticized around 1951, he staunchly defended the game, lie saw that other Longhorn sports sunn< r-up __ ____ ___ _____ ___ speaking prior to the organiza- airlift, Berlin would be in Russian two neighboring state Uon o{ 1he new Geography C u b ,; hands today. West Berliners are outlined the m ajor problems facing very, very grateful for the Ameri- “ In 1948 Russia tried to incorpo tlon at the ttndergraduat have made Bertin politically o n e j except with permission to travel, student in the event of‘ tesegri- of the most interesting places in ! the world today,” Dr. Klaus rate Berlin entirely within the Sov- Of four directors of privately Schroeder, visiting Fulbright scho- let Zone by the blockade,” he said, owned women s dorms interv iew- I “ If it hadn’t been for the Allied ed. one said that the master would la r from Berlin said Thursday. ' have to be decided by the do mn s board of directors; one said that her dorm w ill aid in integration in any way that it can because o! its church affiliation; a third said that her dorm would accept Negro stu­ that her dorm dents; a Negroes be nuse foui'th Ie Cadets lost only one man Berlin. Seventy-five per cent of all can help they have received.” b ootbali s U avored to take the crown. Verlon ed or damaged during the war, he and the generous help of Ameri c w w a tm n of n»rm a titles to which he can lay claim : However, the latest is a feature prQm 3 9 5 4^ crack outfit that was* dwelling units were either destroy-1 Hard work by Berlin's residents spot in a new book, ca Greatest Coaches. ’ She book foa- tye^tmoreland the Federation 'o f Germ any lures 28 of Am erica's greatest ^ the Bonn government) are giving coaches and is dup on the news- but over 200,000 new units are still Berlin the assistance it needs to- stands October 17. day, D r. Schroeder explained. The needed. " In the eight weeks following the Ford Foundation s grant of two mil- the Conference rnqet as heavy war, 75 per cent of Berlin's indus- lion dollars enabled the Free Uni- favorites only to fall to Texas and tries were dismantled and carried j versify to be built, for example. Inocencio Cantu who went on to to Soviet territory,” D r Schroeder I He said that the Free University the national meet in Ann A rter, said. "O f the four major indus- symbolizes free Berlin today, One of the best coaching records in the nation backs up the selec­ tion of M r. Bible. In his 29 years of senior college coaching, his teams have won 209 games, lost only 64, and tied 19. rest are all back to make another try for the SW C title departed via graduation. T h e ; the rate of 15,000 to 20,000 a year, is the onlv Aggie said. New units are going up at and Last year the Aggies went into ,, , Mich. B ack in 3913, M r. Bible, at 22. became football coach of Missis­ sippi College mostly on the en­ couragement of his parson. Dana Bible was gtx>d at quoting Scrip­ ture, conducting chapel, and teach­ ing Latin. The qualifications were not much Texas will field a young team faces. dominated by sophomore the eight harriers are F ive of I sophomores, in varsity running competition for the first time. W a l­ ter McNew, Bob Crawford, Jim 1 Holt, Keith Pipier, and Paul Wa I for football, but he was willing to lace are first year men. learn. He gained knowledge from such scholars of the game as M ich­ igan’s late Fielding Yost arui C hi­ cago’s Amos Alonzo Stagy making the trip will be Halon Hale, tile only senior on the squad, George Foerster, and Bob Hanson. Others (;errnany ’s capital." D r, Schroeder moved from the tries in Berlin before the war. only electrical engineering has recover-j Soviet Zone of the cit> to West ed. Only new industry can glee • Berlin in 1948. Several of his rela- jobs to the hundreds of thousands tjves still live in the Soviet Zone. of people out of work. A special the problem is finding employment for the many government workers left jobless when Berlin ceased to be He w ill return to Berlin and Free University in May. Officers elected for the Geogra- , phy Club v ere B ill Lichty, pres- A lecturer in the government de- ljdenf; Magna Ammundson, vice partment of the F re e University of president; and Joan Moore, sec- West Berlin. Dr. Schroeder is visit- rotary. Jan e Heber, R ay Harding, Hall were appointed as a ing this country to study tb.e econo and mic and cultural aspects of the low- publicity Monthly er Rio Grande valley. He is doing , meetings are planned, and club research work at the University li- to anyone ! brary before traveling to the v al- I Icy. I "O v e r two and one-half million! ! refugees from the Sox le t zone have , into West Berlin s in ce! : poured 1948.” he said. " I t is not at all I unusual for a thousand refugees j to come over the border in one I day. Most of diem have to be j I flown to West Germ any since Ber- ; Gin has neither employment for; Halftime Show Planned by Band membership interested in geography. (Continued from Page I ) committee. is open them nor die money to feed them ." I conclude the show. Dr. Schroeder told of many prob- (he hand 'ms involved in living in Berlin loons involved in 3i\ing in Berlin in a special formation today. Although West Berliners wi t h the Texas Stars, led by co- may enter the eastern Hector, he captains Beverly Birkel and Mar- said, they have to go mostly on tha Roundtree. tha Roundtree. industry — rf ’ it* I Ail — In time trials last Saturday, M c ­ New turned in the top performance covering the 1hrco-mile distance in 16 50. Second was Pitner and Crawford. Other finishers in order were Hanson, Hale, Holt, W allace and Foerster. F rid a y ’s meet w ill be the first for the Texas squad. $17,500 Eastern Open Ends ’55 Golf Season B A L T IM O R E P — Travelers of professional golf s tournament trail were shooting for the season’s last big bundle of prize money as the $17,500 Eastern Open got under­ way Thursday at M L Pleasant Public Course. I In regard to intram ural Mhle- i tics, directors of the programs for I men and women said that no re­ strictions other than those place I r* *' o “ • P 1'-* v * ‘ w l l pay respects to the on white students w ill be required . . . of Negro students for particpa- t’on. v» ow 4V < awa WUU I * * ^ . . . ,,„ 1E Tho field of 127 was lined up In foot or by subway. People driving Th(, nw ny new event, final date over the border . tee the prospect a r 's Longhorn Band „ of this the 72-hole medal left have on a tie s calendar of 43 touma- of having their ears conf,seated unchanged the U|t o[ 1radlUons meets regulated And that have developed since the band ; since the city limits also term the was organized in 1900 by Dr. E , P . sional Golfers’ Association. people a police the Protea- by the by - , Any change in the present policy would come from the University itself, they said. The commission recommended further study by the proposed Hu- Abolufions By Alra j1\n 1 / urea tost m o m e n t y o u r ami veil’ll 11 '• a n ut 5 ^ rinjis forever. Selected n o n o f f e r i n g ex* b v fou r g e n e r a t io n s ol b r i d e s , a m c i t i n g new fa s h io n s in so lita ire s , full-je w e lle d r i n g s , a m i in t e rl o c k in g b r i d a l p a i r s . O r a n g e B lo ss o m as* a u re s y o u the finest to m a l k y o u r r o m a n c e . Convey* lent credit. / / SE FRON LY A Dv S I R S VARSITY STORE 2236 GUADALUPE SWC Grid Attendance Passes ’54 Standard By the Associated Pre** Southwest Conference football at­ tendance is up better than 20 per cent with every school showing a gain except Southern Methodist, which hasn't yet had a home game. A survey after three weeks of play shows that 90.000 more pct*-, soh, have paid their way into the' stadia than for the same period last season. The average per game has been 30 750. test year it was 25,363. This knowledge began paying off when M r. Bible moved to Louisiana State University in October, 1916 Of the sis games remaining on I L S U ’s schedule, the team won five Texas’ grid fortunes were dismal when Mr. Bible accepted a then- undeard-of $15,000 a year contract in 1937. In tw o ‘previous seasons, Texas had finished in the confer­ ence cellar Afterwards, things hogan to lk . M r. Bible can point with pride to the three Solidi-! west Conference championships his teams won before his retirement as head coach in 1947. AUSTIN’S SUPER SERVICE — 10 Convenient Stations — 3200 Guadalupe 2400 East Ave, BIO ! No. Lamar Blvd. 409 East Seventh 5411 Burnet Road 2004 So. Lamar Blvd. I IO I So. Congress 3 l l So, Lamar Blvd. 1135 Airport Blvd. 2314 East Seventh Reg. 24 9/10 lf It Makes A Noise Record It! w ith the Pentron Clipper tape recorder Parties— Recitals— Speeches ★ easiest to operate ★ true - f i d e l i t y plays In any position Specia Washing & Greasing 79c Save 5* on ALL Major Brands Oil SPECIAL $99.50 regularly $129.50 -'VIL TK SCHOW* 4-IMf ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ H M M LOOK AT A L L THE C H E C K E R E D F L A G S C H E V R O L E T ’S COLLECTED.' Drive with co rf... EVERYWHERE! of a policy set by its sponsoring group. Of 68 directors of men’s room­ ing houses, one said that his house would application from a Negro student; eight re­ mained undecided. consider an Of two directors of women’s rooming houses interviewed, one said the house would now con­ sider an application from Negro student. The balance of the numbers In each set of answers were negative. BO A R D Of directors of sixteen men's boarding houses interviewed, none said that they would accept Negro boarders, tint one said that lie was undecided. Of 24 directors of women's boarding houses who were inter- I viewed, one said that a Negro j boarder would be accepted and six remained undecided. I < O O P S Of six co-ops interviewed, five ! said they would consider Negro I students on the same basis that they consider white students. A T H L E T IC A H an d W ash ed , Vacuo n Cleaned C a r W.+h Tira* Steam C 'eaned A L L IN 7 M IN U T E S AT JOE'S QUICK CAR WASH J 2th & San Ja c in to Texaco C ourte*y C ard* Honored UD DINE IN INS IN AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT . . . Just a few blocks - t i e . .a off Campus at • - EL TORO —FINE MEXICAN FOOD— 8-4321 1601 Guadalupe ' v * .* , w k rn SPEED W A Y R A D IO & TELEVISION SALES & SERVICE P h . 7 - 3 8 4 6 1010 S p e e d w a y Ju st S o u th ol O re g o ry Gym m sm ; ■ m m **81 Schoch, professor of chemical en- ■ gineering, The band has its own newspaper, lettering; awards and senior rings, and song, "W e 're a Grand Old G ang." Band freshmen, including Director Di Nine, must go through an initiation period that will in­ clude decorating the chartered buses that w ill take the band to Dallas early Saturday morning. Approximately half of the 110 men who will march in the Cotton Bowl show are freshmen. Serving as drum m ajor for the third year is Ja c k Gilbert, sopho­ more radio-tele vis Ion major. Ma* jorrffes are Margie Smith and Charlotte M abry with Libb y Mul- ; lenix as featured twirler. R ill Whitt cd, president, heads j the band council composed of John Sanders, Je r r y Wise, Byron Lind­ sey, and David Walter. This year, for the first time, all junior and senior bandsmen will be presented tuition scholarships each semester. The scholarship program, coupled with new day-* time practice hours, is expected to recruit many new members, j " B u t actually, we’re just getting started," Mr. Di Nino said. “ W e I have lots to do y e t." SPORTS N O T IC E F. ti t r I p * for th« mixed volleyball tournament n ill be due Thursday, Octo­ ber 13, at the Intram ural Office in the W om ens la scheduled Tuesday at j p.m. In room 13. (iym Captain’^ meeting* Alt intramural manager* are remind­ ed to turn iii membership lists. A meeting of touch football captains w ill be beld Monday. October IO. at 5 p m In Women * < j m 5. Team coaches are incited. Tantalus of tennis -ingles will meet Holiday et S p.m. in Vt omen's Gym 6. •\ NEW F LU tD LE SS U , CORNEAL riCONTACT LENSES 2 S ire of a Dim e! • e C a n be w o rn in co m p lete com fort 8 to IO h o u rtl TEXAS STATE OPTICAL MINH MAN AUTO WASH 221 So. Lamar * A uifin ’i large*) end best equipped Auto W ash FREE INSTALLATION MUFFLERS (Stock or H ollyw ood) DUAL EXHAUST SYSTEMS FOR ALL MAKES OF V-8 CARS CENTRAL AUTO PARTS " A book o f verse* ’rea+h the bough, " A jug o f wine, a loaf o f bread, and thou "B e sid e me on a blanket C le a d e d at San Jacin to Lau ndry & D ry C 'e a ’ier* $ -a we » pro d o1 * * *■ - ? et procet * * » e "c 0/ la i ,~derinq and dry c'aae’ng your c as, And ‘wa re #q * >y proud cf our experienced ab'Gy in deflr'ng tho** offer et / 1 ed e n e-o ,-d tee room . . . ec apart"-’* **, o r home. - a * B anlet*, tup coven, draper et b» :............... Bach additional d a y Classified Display ....... $1.35 per column inch In the e ve n t of e rr o rs made* in an a d v e rtis e ­ m ent, im m e d ia te n o tice m u st be given , a s tile p u b lish ers a r e re sp o n sib le fo r o n ly one in c o r­ rect. in sertio n . $ -UL Tuesday Texan ...................... * Monday, 4 p.m. Wednesday Texan ............. Tuesday, 4 p.m. Thursday Tex ui ........ Wednesday, 4 p.m . Friday Texan ....................... Thursday. 4 p.m. Sunday Texan .......................... Friday, 4 p.m. For Rent Board K O R R U N T : T elevisio n *12.50, ’ p<- vvriffrx *5, adders $6. fan* *-). ro u i.'is ST calculators $8.50, phonographs SS, tape recorder* $150 M o n th ly rate*. Rt rkm an's, 2234 Guadalupe, 6-352 • S IN G I.K RG O M for gentleman instruc­ to r or grad.uat# student P riv a te hftih, separate entrance, $23. 301 West 2tRh. J ‘hone 2 -8719 , LO V F L Y ROOM In privat e home In A ld! idge Place. P riv a te bath. N e a r U n iv ersity . Id eal for Kraduate student. 6*8454. Lost and Found cooked M E AI ~S F O R men F a r excellent home- food trv Mrs. P a in e '*. 2006 W h it is H ot ro lls and pies a sp ecialty. Phone 6-8862 Help Wanted W A N T E D — Stud ent experienced In hand - set typesettin g for afternoon Phone P re fe r underclassm an. work. 2-7431. G R A D U A T E P H A R M A C IS T or chemist to supervise production in chem icals and pharm aceutical*. Part-tim e. C. M a rtin and Sons. 8-8713. J . Special Services A " O I o x ;•; \}i ■ iF R > lop, 2502 Guadn- ■ - ais ? ! KL A ppreciate student trade’. I f S T F R SSM -.KING and alteram ing day or n igh t V- • • >\ - bv m ature woman. Phone 6-3487. S i 1 K R Rf ID S . nit,-; ’ >! ' ■' raking---'W eddings. a sc- laity. Mr*. 1 W est 3 mile* reduced price * Ja g u a r, M u , o r Austm -Healy. Phones I D IS S E R T A T IO N S , thebes E h v tro m a tie (sym bols' Mrs. Ritchie. E T ntegh- 7-5103. tra.- typewriter. 8*8113. G I. E Q U IT Y . Bargain buy ideal for student Interested in owning a home Two bedrooms, .North Austin, $1,200 equity. $54 per month. Call 6-4396, Garner-Good n Igh t - Bo went, realtors. — — I bor hood. 2-4945, --- • — ..... — ----- E X P E R T E L E C T R U M A " !F typing. R e ­ Reasonable. W a lk in g dis­ visions. tance. 8-8113. P E R F E C T P E T S . Cute, play fill Siamese kitten* Reasonable 1422 C o t o n a Drive. 53 40‘ift weekends and evening*. Nurseries & Kindergartens Special Services R ID E S P E C IA L bus to game Saturday. Leu ce Co-Op 7 « rn. Get tickets at Co-Op. $4 40 round-trip, , W O U L D L I K E to do student* laundry -"nahie. tx* In my home, Very * penenced. 2110 Chicon. 7-371 J, M O D E L S W A IS T E D W e need mode.* to register with or ageren Good pay for part-time Cashion shows, television. VV. v photographic, and floor modeling. A USTEN 3 F IR S T AND O N L Y L IC E N S E D M ODEL'S A G E N C Y SOL I E T Y O F C H A R M Suite B-8 Tel. 9683 Business A rcade Commodore P< try Ho*el Bldg. I to 7 pm . weekdays — 9 to 4 Sat. Patroniie Texan A d v e rfiitri DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. COLUMBIA, S.C. YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO ATLANTA, GEORGIA JERSEY CITY, N J. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS PITTSBURGH, PA. TORONTO, CANADA BELMAR, N.J. CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA BALTIMORE, MD. WINSTON-SALEM, N C. FLOYD, VA. GRAND FORKS, N.D. MINOT, N.D. LYNCHBURG, VA. CANFIELD, O. MILWAUKIE, W IS. CINCINNATI, O. FLAT ROCK, MICH. JEFFERSONVILLE, IND. DARLINGTON, SX . HAMMOND, IND. DETROIT, MICH. The tafe r car w in * . an d Chevrolet’* the w in n in g car Great Feature® b ack u p Chevrolet Performance: Anti-Dive B ra k in g — B a ll-Race St err inn Out­ rigger Rear S p rings-B ody by Fisher-12-VoU Electrical S ystem -N in e Engine-Dnvt Choices. Fvsry checkered Bag sigmas a Chevrolet victory In official 1955 stock car competition— not only against its own Beld but against many American and foreign high-priced cars, too! L et's translate these victories into your kind of driving. Y ou’ve gcA to have faster acceleration to win on the tracks. A nd that means safer passing on the highways. Y ou’ve got to have better springing and suspension. F or you: safer and hap­ pier motoring. Y ou’ve got to have big, fast-acting brakes and easy, ac­ curate steering. More that m ake your driving safer! Com e rn and drive a Chevrolet yourself. things N O W S THE TIME TO BUY I LOW PRICES— BIG DEAISI ENJOY A NEW CHEVROLET A Your C A R W A S H E D in 5 Minute* inside end out W I L L T H E person wiio left car k**', s at registration please call for them at Journalism Building 107? Typing * Rate*— $1.50— Seve— U*e our C ar Wa*H Book— 5 wa*he» $5.50 For Sale ✓ See Your Chevrolet Dealer Rkaea 1-1303 3212 F !*♦ $♦■ 1508 E N F IE L D . 7-9333, 6-2091. Nursery —Kindergarten—Ut Grade. Friday, October 7, 1955 THE DAILY TEY AN Page 4 ftPjpPH 11 |p lf IHI The Till Tragedy Blanket Accusation Has Created Hatred TH E TR IA L O F EMMETT TILL, 14-year-old Chi­ cago N egro w ho w as murdered in the Mississippi delta last m onth, has been exploited to the point of satura­ tion. T i e case w as indeed tragic. E very conceivable effort should have been mad? to convict the tw o alleged killers. The prosecution, plagued by inadequate funds and a sm all investigative staff, was deplorably weak. lasting aspect of the w hole case, how ever, w as the blanket accusation m ade by N ortherners and pressure croups of all decent M ississippians. For guilt, after all, is of an individual— not a collective— quantity. The m ost regrettable and, unfortunately, Hodding Carter, the liberal G reenville (M iss.I editor accepted by m any as spokesm an for the so-called N ew South, editorialized W ednesday: u Last w eek four young Memphis N e rot s ravished a white wom an. Ordinarily w e should no* speak on such an unspeakable outrage. Bi t the thing that sets this beastly crim e apart is that they attem pted to justify them selves by referring to the Em m ett Till murder case. “Since the N A ACP w as so ready to blame all of Mississippi and all w hite M ississippians with the ''lay mg of the Chicago N egro w ho w as impolite to a Money, is Miss., w h ite wom an, w e w onder if fho N A A C P ready to take th e blame for inciting these four young N egroes to com m it rape? “It is certain ly as logical. The atm osphere of hatred created by the N A A C P against w hite people could very well have precipitated this crim e in Memphis. And th e logic that the young crim inals used, in taking ‘revenge' on an innocent person just because she hap p en ed to be w hite and Southern, goes right along w ith th a t of the NA AC P. " r Hurrah A Cordial Welcome for b e ltin e science Tong It re e ta " de** 1 native — W a l t W h i t m a n 1 WE WELCOME to our cam pus the teachers and practitioners o f science, here this w eek for a work conference on the advancem ent of scientific teaching. Today, the number of bachelors of science w ho want to teach in high schools falls sharply each year. Those w ho get through the four-year course find ’hat indus­ trial or governm ental grants to continue dec per into science lead them to horizons far beyond humdrum classroom s. This is the challenge facing the teachers in Austin this w eek. To m any, th e wonder of science, so conspicuously absent in the mind of one of the arts, finds em bodi­ m ent in the E xperim ental Science Building, that m ag­ nificent, m ysterious structure at the northeast co m er of the campus. And the lights that burn within the building into the endless night som ehow represent ’bm “ im m ense spirit of loneliness’ which Robert Oppen- heim er calls th e supreme requisite of young scientists. Our hope is that, here on the cam pus and elsewhere, the men of science and the men eg* th e arts will a wa .vs rem em ber that only unselfish co-operation will serve the U niversity, the nation, and the world best. The Democratic Cosmos FROM TH E PEN of a recent American novelist: " The place w as a dem ocratic cosm os-—seething with political interests: national, regional, collegiate. “The cam pus had its candidates, its m anagers, its bosses, its machines, as had the State. A youngster developed in college the political craft he was later to exert in Party af f ai rs. . . . B y his junior year, if lie was successful, a boy had a political m anager, who engineered his campus ambitions; he m oved with cir­ cum spection from meet inc to m eeting, and spoke with a trace of pomp nicely weighed with cordiality: “ ‘Hello, men. How are y o u? ’ “The vast campaign of the world stretched out in lim itless wonder, but few w ere seduced aw ay from the fortress of the State, few ever heard the distant reverberations of an idea And th e w ay to glory— the w ay to all power, highness, and distinction w h at­ ever— was through the law, a string tie, and a hat. law schools, debating societies, and Hence politics, * speechm aking. And the applauds of listening senates to command. ” % ro u n d -U P B y W ILLIE MORRIS T e x a n E d ito r IRV EN DEVORE, an an ­ thropologist who debates, digs uranium, runs for office, and reads Playboy, offers a som e­ what new approach to aca­ demic living. is of c u lt u r e , M a n , h e sa,v* in h e r e n tl y a n o c tu r n a l a n i m a l T h e a g g r e g a t e h o w e v e r, p r e s s u r e * c o e r c e h im into a p r e d o m i n a n t l y d a y t i m e e x is te n c e F r o m c hildhood le a v e s for col­ u n t i l the le g e h e le s s th e s e p r e s s u r e s . u n c o n sc io u sly ti m e he r e s p o n d s m o r e o r to In his co llege e n v ir o n m e n t c u l­ t u r a l r e s t r i c t i o n s slight iv d is s o h e. P r o g r e s s i v e l y h e Fever1 - to m a n th e n o c tu r n e , Hp fin ds h im s e l f s p e n d in g m a n y of his a f t e r n o o n s s l e e p i n g ; h ;* a c ti v e , c r e a t i v e h o u r s a r e la te af n ig h t a n d e a r l y in h ie m o r n in g . an d w ith C o m e s g r a d u a t i o n it an in tru s io n of th e se lf-s a m e c u l­ t u r a l d e m a n d s . T he r e m a i n d e r of his i n t e r r u p ­ tions. life. With o c c a s i o n a l to d a y lig h t is g e a r e d A n th ro p o lo g y m a y find no suh- it s o u n d s stanc e in th e thing , but r e a s o n a b l y v a li d at 3 in th e m o r n ­ ing. ★ F .D P I E . o ur p e r a m b u l a t i n g r o o m ­ f r e s h m a n d av * , w r i t e s m a t e of f r o m M u n i c h : is fa r. l o t h s e e m is b e a u tifu l, the g ir ls tall, ’he " T h e c o u n tr y th e p e o p le friendly', look b e e r s t r o n g . A t s u n s e t you e a s t a n d th e n th in k of M o sco w , you look w e s t a n d th i n k of A u stin , f a r a w a y . a n d M o s c o w a n d c lo s e r, s o m e of th e little in c o n s e q u e n t! als yo u w o r r i e d y o u r d a m n silly h e a d o v e r w h e n y o u w e r e a c a m p u s h*g w h e e l m a k e y o u r c o n s c ie n c e p r i c k w ith a k in d of i n t e r n a l l a u g h ­ t e r T h a t s w h e n yo u feel y o u ’ve got a p r e t t y good s t a r t on g r o w ­ in g u p ." th o u g h , Ii in e n m e n u ’> ’ pills political would dope w , U hen poi Hits ahi erin the livelong day, I Uk e t a ('an a pu r, t h i n k ah auf t h e star 5c jar, so hat away. — O liver W e n d e ll H olmes F o r a m o d e r a t e fa c s im i le of s t u ­ d e n t po litics on the T e x a s c a m p u s , tw o telev is io n sets. T u r n one get th e o t h e r to C h a n ­ to C h a n n e l 3. nel 7. T h e n go ro o m th e nex t in a n d t u r n on t h e v a c u u m c le a n e r . ★ T E N M O S T H A T E D , a on ce w e ll­ f r a t e r n i t y of c a m p u s vil­ is b e in g k n o w n lain s a n d d e m a g o g u e * , r e v i v e d b y T h e T e x a n . T im e o n ce w a s the o r g a n i z a ti o n w a s e lite a m o n g the c a m p u s ' lo a t h ­ e d g e n t r y . A n e w p le d g e w a s a p ­ p ro v e d caf h m o n th t a p p e d w ith a b lack ba ck, a n d sw orn to a h ig h ly s e c r e t c re e d . D ip f r a t e r n a l r e j u v e n a ti o n m u s t s t a r t s o m e w h e r e . T h e e d it o r (w ith th e a d v i c e of j u s t a b o u t e v e r y b o d y ) th e m o s t h e r e w i t h c a ll s h im s e l f h a t e d m a n o n - c a m p u s . H e h a s m i s ­ q u o te d a n d c o n n iv e d . W o rs e , he h a s t a k e n e d it o r i a l s t a n d s . I l e h a s p e r s e c u t e d s t u d e n t p r e s i d e n t s , m a u l e d politicos, b a d g e r e d a d m i n ­ i s t r a t o r s He d o esn t w r it e h o m e , l a u g h s a t k ind v e t e r i n a r i a n s , r e a d s T. S, Eliot, a n d v o te s for N o r m a n T h o m a s . H e h a s a b o li s h e d P o g o a n d to s s e d a y e a r ' s su pp ly o f c r o s s ­ w o rd p u z z le s th e g e o g r a p h i c a l c e n t e r of W a ll e r C ree k . He c h e a t s on a p t i t u d e te s ts . in O ther nom inations will b e ta k e n P r o f e s s o r s , t r a n s c e n d e n t a l i s t s are begin n in g F r i d a y d ea n s, and not elig ib le. **«#l J A M E S P . H A R T , f o r m e r c h a n ­ c e llo r of th e U n iv e rs ity , still r e ­ m a i n s u n c o m m i t t e d on h is g u b e r ­ n a t o r i a l in ten tio n s. B y J . C . O O I L D F N T«*\an Managing Editor F l.A M I N O Y O U T H h a s nu a I f l a re -u p th is w e e k e nd . its an- A d o r m a n t p e a c e -lo v in g U n i­ v e r s ity T o w n , stifled u n d e r a clo a k of in te lle c tu a l goings-on 51 w o r k e n d s a y e a r , h a s to s h a k e th e m o s s f r o m sis c o lle c tiv e h a i r s o m e t i m e o r co n u ts . T h a t s for T h e OU th e w h y G a m e . Beli foe a w e e k e v e ►thai I end w rit it o r n * it s e e m s fo r a T r i- D o r m a (w h a t do you call it n ow t h a t B la n ­ ton H a ll to w a lk ju s t to d r y o u t a few th in g s. in m in d . A fte r all long d i s t a n c e t h e r e ” ) girl is Ex c e r p t s — N o . 2 Wilson Advises Tax Increases In Near Future IEV conti nue our series o f e x ­ I IU! ton t cerpt' \l njday speech in f'tai,as. f r om President is S e le c tiv e a d m i s s i o n s m a y solve the p r o b l e m of n u m b e r s for on e it will not w o rk in s titu tio n , b u t in s titu tio n s u n less e d u c a ­ for all tio na l o p p o r t u n it y to b e d r a s ­ tically cut dow’n. L im it in g enrol!- in c r e a s e s m o o t E v e n th e th o u g h facilities a t in s titu tio n s a r e n o t m a n y T e x a s 'h e th ey a r e at fully u tilized a s U n i v e r s i t y <>f T e x a s , soon wull be. W h at t h e n ? in on e p r e s s u r e th e p h y s i c a l in s titu tio n e ls e w h e r e th e y to p r e p a r e AS YOU r a n set-, th e q u estio n of h a n d lin g i n c r e a s e d n u m b e r s is no t the s t a te if a n e a s y one. E v e n facilities for d o u b led its p h y sic a l h ig h e r e d u c a t io n for d o u b le d stu d en t e n r o l lm e n ts , th e r e is still the problem, of r e c r u i t i n g c a p a b l e te a l h ers . T o u se tr y ow n In stitu tio n a s a n e x a m p l e a g a in , w e a r e a l r e a d y up a g a in s t th e d iffic u lty of find ing q u a lifie d sci­ to h a n d le e n ti s t s an d e n g in e e rs th ese b u m p e r a r e a s . We w a n t 'h e s a m e kin ds of t h a t b u sin ess e x p e r i e n c e d an d th e j c a n b ut an d do ou tbid us n e a r l y e v e ry ti m e ta le n t Indus?r> w a n t r e g i s tr a ti o n s —in it looks a s I n brief, if w e shall h a v e to m a k e s o m e h a r d d e c is io n s abo ut w ho should go to college if w e a r e ar all c o n c e r n e d ab o u t b ow well th e y will b e ta u g h t a f t e r they t h e r e . We c a n n o t w att until get to m a k e up o u r LAU, P o te n t ia l co lleg e s t u d e n ts m i n d s th e s e y e a r s a r e a l r e a d y in o u r g r a d e schools. F u r t h e r m o r e , Sev­ ern] y e a r s m u s t e la p s e b e tw e e n th e b lu e p rin t s t a g e a n d th e a c t u a l c o m p le tio n of bu ild ing s. ’65. o r ’70 th a t re lie f lo w est . . j u s t 'hi* point I’ p r o b a b l y o c c u r s to you . s t u d e n ts a t o ug ht 'n b e a r a h i g h e r p ro p o r tio n of th e cost of t h e i r e d u c a tio n . T u i­ tion c h a r g e s in o u r s t a t e - s u p p o r te d co lle g e s a n d univ e rs iti e s a r e a m o n g th e to b e found a n y w h e r e in th e U n ite d S ta t e s . Y e t w e c a n ­ not e x p ect v e r y m u c h in th is d ir e c ti o n w ith o u t d e n y in g la r g e n u m b e r s of bo y s a n d girl* of high lim ite d m e a n * th e o p ­ a b i l i t y hut p o r t u n it y for a college e d u c a tio n . M o r e o v e r, m a n y of o u r p r i v a t e l y su p p o r te d in s titu tio n s a r e a l r e a d y c h a r g i n g all th e t r a f f i c will h e a r , a n d I k n o w of n o colle ge o r u n i­ v e r s i t y w o r th it* s a l t w h ic h does not h e a v il y s u b s id iz e th e cost of the in d iv id u a l s t u d e n t 's f o r m a l In­ s tru c tio n . IN T H E fin al a n a ly s is , if we a r e not to r e t r o g r e s s , th e r e is no e s c a p i n g th e f a r t th a t h i g h e r e d ­ u c a ti o n in T e x a s is g o in g to h a v e to r e c e i v e a g r e a t d e a l m o r e fi­ n a n c i a l s u p p o r t in the f u t u r e th a n it h a s the p a s t , in ' T o h e c o n c lu d e d T u e s d a y ! T he San J a c i n t o d o r m bo ys m a y be co n fu s e d by st* lo catio n. Cloth ca­ line* a r c u s u a l ly con fined to b a c k ­ in out-of-sight p la c e s , b u t y a r d s S an J a c i n t o a n d T w e n ty -fo u r th is not e x a c t ly th e U n i v e r s i t y 's b a c k ­ y a r d , e s p e c ia lly on a football w e e k ­ en d. S ince “ w h ite e l e p h a n t , ” th e b o y 's clo th e slin e bo- a th# c a m e e a s ie s t th in g to do w a s to follow th e old r u l e of “ c o v e r u p , ” a n d th a t a n d the g r o u n d s p eo p le h a v e p la n t e d wish t e r i a by e a c h pipe. b u ild in g is w h y You w o u ld n e v e r k n o w t h a t th # b e a u ti f i c a ti o n of W a ll e r C r e e k w a s a p ro je c t b e g u n by n a t u r e lo v e r s w h o w a n te d to c le a n up a n d not c o v e r up. B u t o n c e th e m otion h a d th # b e e n i m p r o v e ­ U n iv e r s ity d efin ition of m e n t a s r e g u l a ti o n a n d c o n tro l set in. a n d p a s s e d , se c o n d e d We got r e t a i n i n g w a lls , d a m s , s t r a i g h t e r c h a n n e l s , n e w b r i d g e s , a n d w i d e r stre e t* . A nd we a ls o got t h a t u n g o d ly c lo th eslin e, an d a ll in th e n a m e of b e a u ti fi c a ti o n . T h e D a Fl y T e x a n T h e e d ito r ia l v ie " .* o f T h e D a ily T e x a n a r e th o s e o f th e n e w sp a p e r , an d n o t n e c e s s a r ily o f th e U n iv e r s it y a d m in is tr a tio n . ~ T h e D a ily T e x a n , s tu d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f T h e U n iv e r s it y o f T e x a s , I* p u b lis h e d In A u stin d a ily e x c e p t S a tu r d a y , M o n d a y , a n d h o lid a y p e r io d s , S e p te m b e r t h r o u g h M ay, b y T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b lic a tio n s , In c. N e w * c o n t r ib u t io n s w ill b e a c c e p te d b v te le p h o n e (2-2473) or a? th e e d ito r ia l J R 102. I n q u ir ie s c o n c e r n in g d e liv e r y o f f ic e s s h o u ld be m a d e in J B 107 an d a d v e r t is in g J B 111 (2-2750). .IB 103 o r th e n e w s la b o r a to r y E n te r e d a s s e c o n d -c la s s m a tte r O c to b e r 18 1943 a t th e Post. O ffic e a t A u s tin , T e x a s , u n d e r th e a c t o f M arch 3. 1879 ________________ ___ A S S O t T A T KI) P R E S S W I K E SE RV ICF, T h e A s s o c ia te d P r e s s a ll n e w s d is p a t c h e s c r e d ite d p a p er and a ll p u b lic a tio n o f a ll o th e r m a t te r h e r e in a ls o r e s e r v e d . is e x c l u s i v e ly e n tit le d to th e u s e fo r r e p u b lic a t io n o f th is n e w s ­ it e m s o f s p o n ta n e o u s o r ig in p u b lis h e d h e r e in . R ig h t s OI it o r n o t o th e r w is e c r e d ite d _______ lo c a l to in R e p r e s e n te d fo r n a tio n a l a d v e r t s iin g b y N a tio n a l A d v e r tis in g S e r v ic e . Ina. C o lle g e P u b lis h e r s R e p r e s e n ta tiv e 120 M a d iso n A ve C h ic a g o — B o s to n L o s A n g e le s — S a n F r a n c is c o N e w Y ork. N . Y. am* ■ Issocistcd C o lle g ia te P r e s s M E M B E R A l l - A m e r i c a n SI R 8 C R IP T IO N B A T E H (M in im u m S u b s c r ip t io n — T h r e e M o n th s) ..................................................................................................... D e liv e r e d M a ile d M a ile d o u t o f to w n in A u s tin in A u s tin m o n th $1,00 m o n th $ .75 m o n th P E R M A N E N T S T A F F .............. Editor M anaging E ditor . . . . . N e ffs Ed ii or ................... E d i t o r ia l A s s i s ta n t s . . . A s s i s t a n t N e w s E d i t o r s S p o r t s E d i t o r ................. . . . . . . W o m e n s E d i t o r A m u sem en ts Editor P ic tu r e E ditor F e a t u r e E d it o r ................... .................................................................. E x c h a n g e E d i t o r ................................................................................. R o h b B u r la g # W ire E d it o r ................................................................................. A rnold R o se n z w e ig ................................................ IV I Ll J E M ORRIS ................................................................ I. C . G O ULD EN ............................................... ............................. C a ro l Q uerolo, C a ro l S u th e r la n d .............................................. F r e d K a s s e l ! , P a t P u r c e l l .................................................................... J o h n K n a g g s ................. ................................................. B a r b a r a R a y R o ily W e s t e r .................................. ............................................................ . . ST A FT' FOR THIS ISSI E MHM Editor ............................................................ NANCY V, MEANS A ssista n t N ight F.dltor .............................................................. M ARJ A s s i s ta n t s ................... B a r b a r a F r a n k e l , D e r r o E v a n s , M i c h a e l B r u n n e r W. B. W a ll a c e Jr.. J. C. G ou ld en , J i m m i e M c K in le y C o p y r e a d e r s G . Z. H o llin g sw o rth , B y ro n L in d se y , P a t P u r c e l l, N ig h ' R e p o r t e r s C a r l B u r g e n , J o h n R o g e r s N ig h t S p o rts E d i t o r ............................................................................. O- L. M oore A s s i s ta n t s .................................... B e c c a O r c h a r d , G r e g O lds, J o h n K n a g g s , E d d ie H u g h e s, N ick J o h n s o n ................................................................ P h illip H all N ight A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r A s s i s t a n t s ..................................- ................................ P a t G o rd o n , Roily W e s t e r N ight W ir e E d i t o r ................................................................... C la r e n c e C a ll a w a y N ig ht S ociety E d i t o r ......................................................................... S hirley I n s a l l A s s is t a n t .......................... .................................................................... Barbara Ray S tud en t p a r t i e s a r e the only w a y la r g e the ballot w o r t h th e v o te r s W hat if y ou ti) go th r o u g h lists of n a m e s to to m a s s a g r o u p of v o te s en o u g h to m a k e c o n s i d e r in g by w o u ld yo u do as a v o te r, h a d e v e r y m a r k a b allo t? th a t yo u w a n te d ti m e P o litic a l p a r t i e s w e e d out the u n q u a lifie d a n d s u b s tit u te s o m e of th e b e s t m i n d s of th e U n iv e rs ity s t u d e n t b o d y a s c a n d id a te s see S T U D E N T P A R T I E S s e r v e a s a s t i m u l a n t f<>r* s o m e s t u d e n ts who, o th e r w i s e , w o u ld n e v e r the U n i v e r s i t y a s if r e a l l y is a great, p r o v i n g g r o u n d for fu t u r e l e a d e ’ * the R ecen t p a r t y m a n e u v e r s on c a m p u s , a c c o m p a n i e d bv ir r e g b a r ­ flies a n d p r e s s s t a t e m e n t s , should h a v e c a u s e d s tu d e n ts to sta n d b a c k a n d e v a lu a te . fo r th e e lec tio n A ecu s;1, t ions a n d “ q u o t e s ” in th# D a ily T e x a n d ie p a s t w e e k a r e s a y i n g th a t the S tu d e n t P a r t y a n d n e w l y ' " e s t a b l i s h e d ’ U n iv e r s ity P a r t y h a v e f o r m e d a c o a litio n to the U n i­ tie u p v e r s i t y P a r t y ' s c a n d i d a t e for p r e s ­ ident of th e S t u d e n t s ’ A sso c ia tio n . IF’ T H IS IS T R U E , m o r e p o w e r to the s t u d e n t p o litic ia n s w ho h a v e th e p o w e r of a g r e e ­ r e c o g n i z e d m e n t s a n d n u m b e r s . A m e r i c a n poli- tu ian s sine e the b ir th of o ur natio n h a v e b e e n w o r k in g u n d e r the ta b le to hest th e o p p o site p a rty at^ the polls T h e only d if f e r e n c e rn a g r e e ­ th e d a y s of m e n t s W a s h i n g to n a n d J e f f e r s o n the is n a m e a p p lie d to d a y a n d in If is g oing th e U n iv e r s ity to allow s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t to fu n c ­ tion, w e h a v e to h a v e political p a r t i e s to re v ie w th e m e r i t s of Ane in d iv id u a ls s e e k i n g office, a n d su p ­ port l i t e r a ­ t h e m w ith s p e e c h e s , tu r e a n d p r o p a g a n d a . it P O L I T I C S , a* we see to d a y , is h e r e to s t a y ; a n d w h e n the r i g h t of o r g a n i z in g in to g r o u p s to gain s t a m p e d p r e d e t e r m i n e d g oals f r o m th e th e U n iv e r s ity c a m p u s , s t u d e n t s will c e a s e to fun ctio n a* the p eople b u t as n im b le f i n g e r s of mer, in h ig h e r positions. robot* u n d e ’1 is R I T C A N N O T a p o litic a l p a r t y b e e l i m i n a te d a n d still be i n t e r e s t e d in c a m p u s a c tiv itie s , rn r u n n i n g fo r c a m p u s offices, an d c a m p a i g n i n g in c a n d i d a t e s ' ' s u p p o r tin g s t u d e n ts a n d Y et little is Im p o r ta n t w h e n the r e a l is su e a r i s e s T his is sue is one of ob ligatio n. Should stu d e n t, s a y r u n n i n g t<>r p re s id e n t o r T e x a n ed ito r, b e n o m i n a te d by a po litica l p a t t y ? a SH O U LD F O R . IN S T A N C E , the p r e s id e n t of th e s t u d e n t I xxiv bo o b li g a te d to a political p a r t y ? A fter all, this is a possibility. to O r is b o u n d Or, th e C hief J u s t i c e ta k e th e D aily T e x a n e d ito r. Should a c a m p u s n e w s p a lte r policy b e c on fin ed b e c a u s e the e d ito r feels th e p rin c ip le s of h e his p olitical p a t t y ? Ile j u s t m ig h t, c o n s i d e r in g th e y got h i m e le c te d . I m p a r t i a l ­ ity th in k in g a r e q u a lific a tio n s fo r C hief J u s t i c e o r is an a n y officer,. H o w e v e r, fxvhtical e n d o r s e d m e m b e r o f a p a r t y a n d a suit c o n c e r n i n g th# c a m p u s ' s po litical p a r t i e s c a m e up, tight be m i g h t be p u t sq u e e z e . inte llige nt if he into a n d a LOO KING AT T H E situ a tio n id ea lis tic a lly , it w ould be a g a i n - ’ " e t h i c a l s t a n d a r d s " fo r th e c a n d i ­ in flu en ced b y a s m a l l d a te ’n he g ro u p of " p a r t y d i r e c t o r s . ' ' Y et, r e a l is t ic a l ly , th is is po ssib le its b a s i c o v e r- a ll p u rp o s e A n o th e r f e a t u r e in p o litical p a r ­ tie s on ’he c a m p u s a n y issu e < an rn jose th e m u l t i - e m p h a s i s on in s ig n ifican t b ig s t r e s s e d m a t t e r s . Tile e le c te d o ff ic e rs should feel c o m p l e te l y fr e e to the s t a n d b a c k a n d o b s e r v e i m p a r t i a l l y . T he q u e s ­ U n i v e r s i t y tion w o uld be t h e r e f o r e : Could th e y if e le c te d b r a s tu d e n t p a r t y ” T H IS IS N O T to s a y we should ab o lish c a m p u s p o litic a l p a r t i e s . C a n d i d a t e s for v ic e - p re s i d e n t, s e c ­ h e a d c h e e r l e a d e r , a s s e m ­ r e t a r y b ly m e n ju stices a s s o c i a t e sh ou ld h a v e th e h e lp o* a po litical p a r t y d u r i n g th e c a m p a i g n if th ey ne ed it. Rut it is to sa y th a t c a n d i d a t e s should n o ’ he bou nd to * political p a r t y T h e r e f o r e is one a c t u a l l y n e e d e d ? and Scanning the Pundits Nuclear Weapons Out-pace Strategy ( T o d a y n e p r e s e n t exes rpl s f r o m "Strategy Hi t s a D e a d T a d ' hy Bernard Brodi e part of a thr e e - ar-ic Ie series t n t Hied " H o w IY ar Became A b s u rd " in the latest issue of Har pe r' s Ma g a z i n e E d . ) is th e c o m m o n e s t s l o g a n s On# of in s t r a t e g i c t h e one l i t e r a t u r e in h e r i t e d f r o m J o m in i , t h a t " m e t h ­ o d s c h a n g e h u t p rin c ip le s a r e un ­ c h a n g i n g . ” U ntil y e s t e r d a y th a t t h e s is h a d m u c h to ju s tify it, sin c e m e t h o d s c h a n g e d on th e w h ole not too a b r u p t l y an d a l w a y s w ithin d e fin ite th e m o s t limit* A m o n g i m p o r t a n t limit* w a s the f a c t t h a t th e co sts of a w a r, e v e n a lost one, w e r e s o m e h o w s u p p o r t a b l e . E v e n the tw*o w o rld w a r s d id not go b e y o n d th e lim it, d e s p i te t h e i r h o r r e n d o u s m a g n i t u d e . . . . be could, T h e r e th e r e f o r e , a r e a s o n a b l e cho ice b e tw e e n w a r an d p e a c e . T h e r e cou ld a lso be a r e a ­ s o n a b l e c ho ice a m o n g m e t h o d s of fig h tin g a w a r , o r " s t r a t e g i e s . " H o w e v e r u n r e s t r i c t e d th e y w e r e in­ te n d e d to be, w a r s w e re in e v i ta b l y li m i te d by th e lim itin g c a p a b i lit ie s f a s w’e n o w see i n of e a c h bellig­ e r e n t fo r h e a p in g d e s t r u c t i o n on t h e o th e r . . . T H E F I R S T d e c a d e of th e a t o m i c a g e h a s s e e n the c o lla p s e af th e A m e r i c a n m o n o p o ly , of th e m y t h of in e v ita b le s c a r c i t y , a n d of i n t e r n a t io n a l r e a s o n a b l e h o p e s fo r d i s a r m a m e n t Since w e a t o m i c h a v e b e e n living w ith th e fissio n ty p e of a t o m i c b o m b for a d e c a d e , it m i g h t a p p e a r :o s o m e ' h a t th e fu sio n ty p e in t r o d u c e s n o th in g e s ­ s e n t ia l ly new o th e r th a n a g r e a t e r e c o n o m y of fo rc e . T h a t, u n f o r tu ­ n a te l y , Is no t th e c a s e . . . . A m o n g t h e q u e s tio n s t h a t th e r e u p o n b e c a m e o b so le te w e r e m o s t of those c o n c e r n i n g th e s e l e c ­ tion of s t r a t e g i c t a r g e t s . Since a t h e r m o n u c l e a r b o m b could not be u se d on a n i n d u s t r i a l c o n c e n t r a ­ in o r n e a r a city w ith o u t tion d e s t r o y i n g t h a t city an d s i n c e o n e s u e h b o m b wall e ff e c tiv e ly e li m i­ in d u s t r y a s s o c i a t e d n a t e all th e r e is not m u c h w ith t h a t c ity point i n d u s tr i e s in w h a t o r d e r . sh ou ld be hit o r W h e th e r we th e it o r not, like t h e r m o n u c l e a r b o m b u se d strate­ gically is a "city buster.” in a s k in g w h ic h th e . . . Most of w h a t I h a v e so f a r s a i d im p lie s th# j u d g m e n t th a t i m ­ th e p r o s p e c t s a g a in s t p r o v e m e n t for s ig n ific a n t d e f e n s e of s t r a t e g i c th e b o m b i n g d e c a d e o r s o a r e n o t b rig h t in n e x t . . . . . in . d e v e l o p m e n t s let u s n ote th e f a c t F i r s t , sin ce th e c o m i n g of th e A- th e b o m b s t r a t e g i c b o m b in g o ffe n se h a v e o u t­ p a c e d to a f a n t a s t i c d e g r e e th o s e of th e d e f e n s e —an d th is m o v e m e n t ha* by no m e a n s r u n its c o u rs e . Second, th e g ro w th of n a ti o n a l n u ­ c l e a r sto c k p ile s is i r r e p r e s s i b l e . . . F in a l ly , t h a t th e r e a r e e n o r m o u s i m p e d i m e n t s - p sy c h o lo g ic a l, political, e c o n o m i c an d let us a d m i t, d o c t r i n a l to th e a d o p tio n of r e a l l y d r a s t i c m e a s u r e s fo r d e fe n s e . T H E R E s i m p l ic i ty ab ou t a n u n r e s t r i c t e d n u c l e a r w a r it to b e s u m ­ t h a t a l m o s t e n a b le s m e d u p in o n e s h o r t s t a t e m e n t ; Ive q u ic k on th e d r a w an d th e t r i g ­ g e r sq u e e z e , a n d a i m fo r th e h e a r t . One th e n h a s to a d d : but e v e n if you shoot first, y o u will p r o b a b l y die to o! s t a r k is a to e ff e c t In a w o rld still u n p r e p a r e d to r e l in q u i s h th e use of m i l i t a r y p o w ­ e r, w e m u s t t h a t l e a r n use th r o u g h m e t h o d s th a t a r e s o m e ­ th i n g o t h e r t h a n se lf-d e s tro y in g . , . W h a t w e n ow m u s t in itia te is the c o m p r e h e n s i v e p u rs u it of th e n e w i d e a s a n d p r o c e d u r e s n e c e s s a r y to c a r r y u s th r o u g h the next, tw o o r t h r e e d a n g e r o u s d e c a d e s . We've Been Asked What a re the hours of the U ni­ v e rsity Post O ffice? T h e U n i v e r s ity S ta tio n is o p e n M o n d a y th r o u g h F r i d a y 8 a . m . to fr o m 8 4:45 p .m . a n d S a t u r d a y s a m . to 12 noon. M ail is r e c e i v e d a n d p la c e d in the post office b o x e s on h o lid a y s a n d S u n d a y s , a n d th e lo bb y th e c o n v e n ie n c e of Box h o ld e rs. is o p e n 24 h o u r s fo r W here serv a to r y ? im the U n iv e r sity ’* ob­ the is on T h e o b s e r v a t o r y top floor of the P h y s i c s B u ild in g . T h e pu blic to o b s e r v e on W e d n e s d a y n ig h t s 7:30 to IO p .m ., depending on th# visibility. is» invited Hart** s t a t e a r n h im h is o b lig a tio n to ru n. f r ie n d s t r y i n g to th r o u g h o u t the i m p r e s s u p on O n e T e x a s w r i t e r , d o ing a sp e ­ cial s e r ie s f o r T h e T e x a n , c a ll s H a r t " a s t a t e s m a n a n d not a poli­ ti c i a n . ” U n f o r t u n a t e l y , th e boys a t th e b e n d in the r o a d d o n 't v o te fo r s t a t e s m e n . O u r ho p e is th a t H a r t w ill g ive It a t r y . ★ SAM P E R R Y , m a n - a b o u t - c a m - pu.x, th o u g h t a b o u t it this s u m m e r a n d find s h im s e l f fa c in g a philo so­ p h i c a l d i l e m m a . H e s a y s he s too b ro k e to be a c o n se r v a tiv e and too lazy to be a lib e r a l. ngs Vt HAT IS M I SIC? M u sic is A soul s ilh o u e t te d A p a r t i c l e of light in a d a r k w o rld A p a r t of s o m e c o m p o c r ’s h e a r t . T reat it n o t lig htly Its grace A nd b e a u ty A re m a n . th e p u r e s t tilings kn o w n to —P E T E G U N T E R Official Notices R e -e x a m in s t io n s an d P o s tp o n e d an d A d v a n c e d S t a n d in g E x a m in a t io n s w ill be g iv e n O c to b e r 21-28 fo r th o s e s t u ­ d e n t s ho h a v e p e tit io n e d to t a k e th e m p r io r t o O c to b e r 7 T h e s c h e d u le fo r t h e e x a m in a t io n s It s s f o llo w s F r id a y , O c to b e r t i — I p .rn. A n t in .p. d o g y . A r c h ite c ­ A d v e r t i s i n g t u r e A n B a c t e r i o l o g y Bible,* B o­ t a n y , B u s in e s s W r itin g , * M a th e m a tic * . M o n d a y . O c to b e r '.’I — I p .m . B u s in e s s L a w , c h e m is t r y C o t t o n M a r k e tin g . D r a m a , E d u c a tio n . T iu - 'd a v . O c to b e r —-I p .rn D r a w in g , E n g in e e r in g , E n g lis h , F in a n c e , In su r a n c e , I n t e r n a ­ tio n a ! T r a d e . recom b ines » W e d n e s d a y , O c to b e r SR— I p m . AU F o r e ig n L a n g u a g e * , G e o lo g y , G o v ­ e r n m e n t, H o m e E c o n o m ic s, J o u r n a l­ ism , M a n a g e m e n t T h u r s d a y O c to b e r 27— I p rn. A c c o u n tin g M a r k e tin g . Music. P h a r- m a c y . P h ilo s o p h y , P h y s ic s , P s y c h o l­ ogy R e a l E s t a te . R e s o u r c e s , R e t a il­ in g . F r id a y , O c to b e r 28— I p.m . B io lo g y . H is to r y , S e c r e ta r ia l S t u d ie s , Sot o lo g y . S p e e c h S t a t is t ic s T r a n s p o r ta l ion Z o o lo g y , a n d O th e r S u b ­ je c t s . A il S p e c ia l E x a m in a tio n * to b# g iv e n in G a r r is o n H a il I. O n ly o n e e x a m in a t io n a d a y m a y b e ta k e n ! an d e x a m in a t io n c o n flic t * m u s t be r e p o r te d to th e R e g is t r a r 's O ffic e o n O c to b e r 13 WF B Shipp, R egistrar a AI! u n d e r g r a d u a te w o m e n w h o a r e n o t Jivin g ;n s t u d e n t r e s id e n c e s <>n 'b e o f f ic ,a l ! 'n: v e r s o-. h o u s in g lis t an d w h o h a v e n ot clearer! liv in g a r r a n g e ­ m e n t s W ith t h e D e a n o f VV o m e n s O f­ fic e a r e a s k e d to c o m e b y th e D e a n o f W o m e n s O ffic e Spec h B u ild in g I i i . a t th e ir e a r l ie s t c o n v e n ie n c e . th e ir t ' k \ L ( A u O W S U V C a rl B u r g e n J o h n R o g e r* I F, MI DNO Friday. October 7, 1955 THE D A IL Y T E X A N Page I man Bv R \ K R Y R \ R A Y Tpun Women** F.dltor Campus Organizations Announce Cavel Pounders for Fall Term | New officers for P i Tan Sigma jfor the fall semester of 1955 are M a r k Mason, president Lynn Evans, vice-president; E ric Jones, corresponding secretary; Charles secretary; Stalmach, recording and W alter Melton, 1- tive. treasurer: New A I E P IU I officers are Fred Vogt, chairman Wendell W orley, [first vice-chni r a r L 1 r teti [Jenness, second r ice - ch in man; [Paul Law, secretary; Robert Pflu- ger, treasurer; Vernon Sturdivant, A I E E corresponding secretary; < < ■ pond­ Robert McC ing secretary; Gene Crocket, re­ corder, and Robert Q Lee and John IT. Lind, Student Engineering I Council represent itives. Sigm a D e l t a fau pledge class of­ ficers are Sally Riefler, president; I )eutser, vi« e - president; Jeanne \rla Edleman, treasurer; Patsy Silberstein, secretary: Dana Iginde, historian; Jo y W illiam s, rift i hair- song man: and Ethel M o r a n The S i l v e r S p u r s , University so ice organization, has anno mi the following officers for the First Degree for Laymen Theo Polasek, corres iretary; Rudy Mueller I-con Cort, cat a and Offered at Austin Semir Ly d a pr<" president; jseerctary ponding si treasurer; loger. Indians to rian Celebrations For N 0 w Year A special business meeting of the Indian Student’s Association vail j be held Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Bible classroom of the Baptist Stu- [ dent Center. The purpose of the meeting is to plan celebrations for | Indian New Year, j Diwali, which falls on November 15. the Translated into English. “ D iw ali” means Festival of Ligh . Last year; the association had a banquet and floor show to celebrate the ocea- ‘ sion, and secretary' of the club | ; Viiah Parekh said even more fes- tivifies are being planned for this) The group of Indian Students, called by international student ad­ visor Joe Neal one of the most active campus groups, has in­ creased its membership by half since its formation last year, from 21 to 36 student'. Recently elected officers are Mrs. Trivani Popap, chairman of the executive committee; Vi,jav Pa- r^kh, secretary; P . S. Murti, treas­ urer; and Harkishan Singh, chair- man of public relations. Recently el< cted o: «’*.*rs of the American Society of * i ' II I agin ©era are Georg.o M eriwether, pr« >i- John G ary, vice-president dent; The A i'Uin Presbyterian The ical Sem inary w ill offer a de for laymen for the first time year, Dr. David L Stitt, presi an noun I cd. The degree offered to lay is a master of < hristian educ ln the past Sem inary classes Fall office rs of the Interm ediate Club are Mrs. Raphael Levy, presi­ J . Frank Elsass. first dent; M rs vice-president; M rs Ja c k W. Cash­ in, s* oond vie c preside) t . Mrs, Ro­ bert C. Cotner, secretary; Mrs, Charles W» Larkam , treasurer; and M rs. Jam es P . Hart, sponsor, New fall officers of tbp Thefa Triton pledge class of Phi Sigma Kappa are Louis W a r n n, presi* MEXICAN FOOD AT ITS BEST . . . f j Served 7 Days a Week Prom S A.M . to 2 A.M . - ' . V ‘ I'-''’i ' " i 1$ Ot.-.v . ; • ■ C l t L M A T A M O R O S S04 East Are. Phone 7-7023 Newcomers w ill gre< i n< vcome; Friday at 3:39 p m when the New­ comers Club entertains ten foreigs English tearhers studying Ameri can th U niversity at an informal 1ea i; Barke r History Center 197. techniques at teaching The Duplicate Bridge Clu ' Frid a y at 7 15 p.m. at Union. Students, faculty a students from beginner leve invited to the free, s< * ntif . petition. Standings are reler night of the meet. Evening meetings are held by jllille l Foundation each Friday at | 7:30 p m. at 2105 San Antonio. Th- meetings, organized by students feature faculty members or visit­ ing rabbis as guest speakers The services are followed by an Oneg Shabat, a social p< iod. W ® Gureante® You W ill Lose Inches! Regular Course 15 Treatments $25.00 Anniversary SPECIAL 20 Treatm ents $25.00 O c t. 2 SP O T R E D U C IN G means we reduce you in inches where Y O U want to reduce N ib l c c k S t u d io Enfield Shopping Center Methodists Plan W e e k End Retreat Wanda Frank and J a y Rubrecht. U niversity recently ex-students, in Adamsville. They are residing in Dallas. The Wesley Foundation will hold Fiizabeth Lockhart Mays, Lhi a week-end retreat at the founda- Mu, Alpha Lambda Delta, Can tion's L a k e Travis lodge, Rock and Gown, an I C la rie s Lem ly Ledge, Saturday a* 1 p m Rogers m Austin, October 1. After activities will include * swimming and a general get-to- Carol June Foust Zeta Tan Al- gether program. A nominal charge pha, and Travis Eckhart, Delta Tau Delta, T Association, in Aus- will be made for supper, George Paris, d •ector of the tin. October 1, activities program, is scheduled to load t h e evening discussion on “ What on E arth Is G od ?” * Ju d y Johnson, Alpha Chi Omega, Ranger Staff, Reagan Literary So- Students planning to attend may eiety. and State Representative in Lubbock, No- sign up m the student’s office at Truett Latim er ihe foundation. be obtained by calling 2-3838. Information may v ember 26. --- Raehlin D irects in Chicago Johnaon, Delta lib rary employe, and Ezra Rachlin, director of the Aus-j Sylvan Turner Jr . , November 19. j Zeta and * M arjorie Lois tin Symphony' Orchestra, W ill ap- pear as the guest conductor of the (Tiicago Symphony Orchestra in the city ’s famed Orchestra Hall Saturday night., in Austin, G erry Webb Chi Omega, and Jam es F. Struhall. Kappa Alpha, in Austin, December 16 Are Your Glasses Up-To-Date LOVELY FRAME DESIGNS I to every personality D A L L A S H O L F O R D O P T IC IA N T W O C O N V EN IE N T LOCATIONS 100 East I9lh a* W ichita; Ph. 7 1885 301 Capital Nat'f Bk Bidg; Ph. 7-7942 When y o u ’ve worked pretty late A n d the issue looks great... W hy not celebrate! Have C A M E L ! It’* o psychological fact: Pleasure helps your disposition. If you're a smoke- re­ member — more people get more pure pleasure from Camels than from any other cigarette! No other cigarette is so k w h-tasting, yet so mildl M R S. D E A N and M A R Y M IL L E R women s council advisor and president M rs Margaret Warnken Ryan and Robert Clarence McQueen, September 30, University Presby­ terian Chun h rvice Science Fiction M eet Set Fridc Scienc e Fiction Club w ill hold an informal organizational meeting Friday at 7 p m . in Texas Union >01. said Chad Oliver, anthropo logy the group sponsoring instructor reading, writing, or Mr Oliver said the club is for any University student interested m talking about fiction as one type of litera­ ture. He is the author of three sci* <>ncp firt on hooks, "Shadow in the Sun.' “ Mists of D aw n,” and ‘ An­ other Kind.” “ Science fiction writers range all the way from Dr. Isaac Asi­ mov. who has a doctor of philoso­ phy degree to R ay Bradbury, who barely finish­ ed high school.” said M r Oliver. “ Readers come in the same sizes,'* in biochemistry, So cial C a l e n d a r loth and ban JactnTo Open 7 Days A W eek Registration N O W A ccep ted tor University Students. 25 Years in Austin an d Central Texas k \ f Classes in Ballet and Ballroom Mrs. B. Idan Payna, Taachar of Ballet Classes To Register: Phone M ornings and Sunday 2-9086— 7-8505 Afternoon 8-3951— 6-5856 University Branch Studio, 2000 Guadalupe An evening of fun is guaranteed by Co-rec every F rid a y night at the Women's Gym from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Co-rec, under the direction of Mrs. is es­ Josephine Chapman. pecially designed for married stu­ dents and dates. Among the activities offered are badminton, volley-ball, swimming, and diving. All equipment is fur­ nished except bathing suits. Plans are being made for a vol­ ley-ball tournament in October. A tournament w ill be table tennis st heduled later. its Hiliel Foundation w ill have first Sunday Supper at 6 p.m. Sun­ day. Reservations for the supper ran be made a* Hillcl or by calling 6-2695. Shlomo Efrat, graduate gov­ ernment s t u d e n t who visited Europe and Israel this past sum­ mer, will describe his trip by- means of picture slides, BUYING A DIAMOND? Then you should have the protection of A R E YO U S A T IS F IE D W IT H Y O U R F IG U R E DO YOU F I T Y O U R F A L L W A R D R O B E . . . Lose up to 5 inches in 3 short, u-eeks at. K A Y S N I B L A C K S Y S T E M ' now located near the University at 213 E . 26*2 St. block off San Jacinto.) S P E C IA L this week dui mg K A Y ’ S First Anniversary in Austin KF.fi I U K 15 one-hour treatments for $25 . . . NOW 20 one-hrur treatments for $25 call for your complimentary’ treatment “ Results Guaranteed” jK 2 2 2 j}L JM The only nationwide Perm anent V alue Plan to ptove diamond vakie L ram about ft mdary UGtfc’S Use The Classifieds FREE ESTIMATES 2268 Guadalupe inia ELECTRONIC TIMER USED Q U E E N Dallas Doings Friday, October 7, 1955 TH? DAILY TEXAN Page « »m- ut runt iTrjprnjpriTi 'Focus' Renews With Review This school year’s first produc­ tion of “ Focus on the Fo rty A cres" w ill he presented by the U niversity of T e x a s Television workshop, F rid a y from noon to 12:15 over K T B C - TV. This week’s program will review the highlights of events of last y e a r’s campus activities that are of interest to the people of Austin as 'veil as U niversity students. Student members of the U n iver­ sity television workshop produce, direct, photograph, g a t h e r and write the material for the program under the direction of Ly le Hen­ dricks. the studio supervisor. Jam es W eir and their assistants Jo e Tita. G il Gilstrap, and E a r l W arren. Student director is B arb ara D ia ­ mond of Houston, assistant direc­ tor, W alter E v a n of Dallas, Floor manager, Tom Red of Austin. The members of the floor crew’ are; R a y Campi of Austin, and B ill Dietz of Texarkana. Publicity C r e w : ; M arilee Dunstan of Orange and B ill B e r ry of Arlington. Film s iii Review “ Interupted M e lo d y ’* | “ W e ’re No Angels' W ith a cloud of dust and a hearty aria from a grand opera, "In te r­ rupted Melody,” now at the Texas Theater, to unfold M-G-M’s newest thrust at an opera star since “ The Great Caruso. ” literally gallops off This time it is singer M arjorie Lawrence who is singled out for this questionable honor. M iss L a w ­ rence was a star with the M etro­ politan Opera Company for sev­ eral years. The flesh and blood M iss L a w ­ rence does not appear in the mo\ ie nor does she have a voice in it. ♦ in an Such is the way some movies are made. This one, I understand, was entered international film festival by M-G-M when the studio y a n k e d out its controversial ■’Blackboard Jung le” at the last minute, "Interrupted M elody” won t acti­ vate any controversy nor w ill it win any prizes It has its moments hut they are stolen moments from pas sa ties in novels by Fannie Hurst, Kathleen Norris, and other alumnae of the Proctor and G am ­ ble school. - L L P "W e 'r e No Angels” —and neither are you if you laugh as hard as most at this movie now showing at the Texas. Three tough and droll comics — Humphrey Bogart (forger), Also R a y (m urderer),! and Peter Ustinov (safecracker'— ; bring a merry' and murderous Christmas in tropical climate to a normal fam ily on D evil's Island. I But this is not slapstick, More than half the more lasting humor the play from comes methodically proves its point — there is a better class of people in prison than out. Terse dialogue does the job. the w a y "Good heavens." exclaims an lad on noticing idealistic their striped uniforms, "Y o u men are thieves!” Bogart explains condes­ cendingly, “ No, I'm a thief. These gentlemen are murderers.” The “ tria l" scene is one of the best, as is the "w arn in g .” Yet the show drags in spots and there is some confusion about the status of convicts on Devil s Island. But good dialogue and inspired casting make this a superior and refresh­ ing comedy. — M E D A M I L L E R A i let r th e K a n e WORLD PREMIERE MONDAY NITE AA PARAMOUNT On The Stage In Person CHARLTON HESTON md GOV. ALLAN SHIVERS REFRESHMENT TIME O P E M 24 HOURS fine for dining or a coffee break vistaVisioh wot*** mcvum * fun-we tim j T E C H N IC O L O R THELMA CLAIRE T R E V O R « RITTER ^ i A N Y T I M E ! and Presenting 19th & San Antonio GOV. ALLAN SHIVERS V i d o r Mature Exits London In G r a n d Huff LONDON, im — Victor M ature left the cast of a movie in the making Wednesday night and; flew off to New York in a huff because nobody had booked h im ’ a hotel room with a bath. acting Tile movie tough guy played his part in real life ar London Airport only six hours after ar-| riving from Africa where he had been t h e movie in “ Safari.” Ten days of filming, remained to he done in London. "W hen I arrived in London I found there was no room book­ ed for me, I was pretty angry about the whole business, The others have got their homes all right somewhere decent with a bath. and " I thought m y room was book-; ed. I He" in tired out and what s doing? N idling, no bed No bath. So ibm. can have the whole deal.II “ I couldn’t care less." One Day Service At No Extra Charge Longhorn Cleaners C'S <■ i i t il.Uupe Phone 6-3847 I DANCING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT C L U B ”81" formerly Cinderella Club 5000 San Antonio H ighway CHEROKEE LAWSON and the Bar S-2 Boys C over Charge 50c Person - FOK PICN ICS r a WEST LAKE BEACH * v In Beautiful W est la k e H ills* , TX ’* : ; " S P I* ■ an I o k* Austin ; Crest Low Wster Bride* below Lait* Auth* to West Lake Drive. Ltm /lqSr, • foi*o« West Lake Drive to West Lake Besan r Wimf i DAN McRAE Owners STAN LIY O IPW E ” ‘T*'•■****" " FISHING S W IM M IN G BOATING PICNIC S Watch the Texa$-OU C a m e on TV at Scholz Garten Friday Menu Swiss Steak or Shrimp Creole with Rice or T H E ST VTI LAIR O F T EX A S iX’ot to be missed is the greatest photographic exhibit of all time, “ The Fa m ily of M an,” shown free daily in the Museum of Fine Arts after IO a in. I Exhibits by governments of nine nations are on display in the In ­ ternational Center General E x ­ hibits Building. France's represen­ tatives haven t walked out y e t , 1 Furnishings and art objects from these countries should be seen. F re e food calculated to please the delicate palates of University students m ay he found in the Foods Building, where a giant foods show is being held. Opens 9 a.m. daily, An agricultural Big Top, an elec­ tric show, an automobile show, in fact two of them, a farm imple­ ment display, and a natural gas ’-how are guaranteed to keep visi­ few tors busy. Then museum tie* thoughtful Teasip c a n browse around and pick up samples. there’s a displays where FOOTE ALL GAM ES SM U trays Missouri University in the Cotton plays Oklahoma at 2 iv at 8 p m. Frid Bow' p.m. aturda' Laguna Gloria j Shows UT Art p. ags of seven faculty mem- j * hers of the I University Department < of Art are now being exhibited by J the Texas Fine Arts Association J i at Laguna Gloria. J On display w ill be the works of i « Donald L. We is rn ann, E v e r e t t J S p r u c e W illiam Lester, Luis j 4 1 E a d e s, M ichael F r a t y, John J Guerin, and Hiram Williams. 4 Tile exhibitions include a colleo-; | lion of watercolors and prints by! «•- I Rudolph von Huhn of Washington, " I n ; a group of paintings by Frank Gonzales of G u a d a la ja ra ,: Mexico; and the annual mid-sum- m er exhibit of the Men of Art. THE FAMOUS COFFEE SHOP At 319 East 2nd G ives You A Choice O f A M e a t Selection W ith Three Vegetables For O n l y . ........ C A C 5 0 ' Drink and Dessert in­ Tenderloin of Trout closed Sundays with Tartar Sauce Open 6:00 a m. to 7:00 p.m. Cream ed New Potatoes ONE HOUR MARTINIZING The Most In Dry Cleaning ONE HOUR SERVICE At No Extra Charge O p en : 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. M onday through Saturday 610 We** 19th st. C o rn er Nueces Combination Salad English Peas and Squash Pineapple Pi® H o t Rolls or Corn Breadl C offee or Tea 6 5 * Scbolz 1607 San Ja c in t o W h e r e You A re A lw a y * W e lc o m e ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Dixieland Tonight ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Open Dancing Tonight a Every Friday 9-12 $1.50 Couple • • Tables by Reservation • • 2400 Seats • • 4-Acre Parking Lot T O N IT E : Bob W hitford Band “ Tops in Dixieland” SP O R T S CENTER 501 Barton Springs Road Owen Davis, producer 8-3071 T H E PA I \M V G A M E M id wi This Broadway musical corned' j they an for yo ■if what ' I VG NOLLA SHV U t V I E hit sitars F ra n W arren at the State Daredevil aerial acts, 2 and F a ir Auditorium nightly at 8:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday mat* 7:30 p.m. daily, Magnolia stage at ' And they’re inees are at 2:30 p.m. The aud;- “ Top of the M id " «> torium's air-conditioned, too. f-r-e-e. IC E ( A PA I) b s comedy, “ Wish You W ere H ere,” a mu­ and Gershwin's sical in P a n s " hailer are "A m erican main events of this ice show. Catch it Frid a y and Saturday nights at 8 30 p.m.: catch it at 2:30 p m . on Saturday, and at 1:30 and 5 30 p.m. on Sunday. It costs to catch cl every show, though, \\ J O I E ( H ITW O O D VI TO T H R IL L SHOW Guaranteed as terrifying as fi­ nals. Nightly, 8 p.m.; matinees, * 2:30 p.m., Saturday and Sunday ^ M IL L IO N 'D O L L A R M I OM AY ’ .- "D ancing W aters" and Wheels” are anomalous nomens plied to two big attraction on II J A Z Z T I M E " K N O W 1490 11:00-11:30 P lf. MOX, 7.17' Presented by SP EE D W A Y RADIO COLOR T E L E V IS IO N Better than having nightmares in Technicolor. See this at 7:30 p rn. nightly in the General E x ­ hibits Building PLA N ET IR K Af This star-studded show has the approval of the censors. Showing in the Museum of Fine Arts, DR. P E P P E R T H E A T E R iat’N right, these ‘ rec tit os « an be seen at IO, 2, ar *y re at IO a.nu, 12 noon 2, 4, and 6 p m. Extra shows weekends. W on, C IN E R A M A H O L ID A Y Cinerama makes Andrews dor­ insignifi­ ?ry ev nd Su into mitory views fade cance Friday, 2 p.m.; < ning, s 30 p.m.; Saturday day 2 and 5 p rn. B I R L I .NQI E Girls. Red Ford, and th? on the agenda at Lounge; the show starts < and 12—and that ain’t a The 9, It The Pioneer Drive-In 829 Barton Springs Rd. Phone 7*0235 Welcom e to N e w and Old Students Sirloin S t e a k .............. S e r v e d w it h s a la d . < hot*-** o f 1 'rrm h fr P 'd o r b a ke d , p o ta to an d o u r d e lic io u s F r e n c h B r e a d S *|0 0 STUDENTS S P E C IA L E FR!. ONLY Iatidb • v a r ie t y a c t s • BEVERAGES Friday & Saturday— Curtain 8:15 P itfalls of Pauline ' or "Prid e, Passion and P e ril" A D M . 51.50 — 29th at G U A D Phone 6-0541 for Reservations I TODAY at Interstate Theatres Paramount f B | •I IMH h i CB f t HILARIOUS BOGART OkO» QV if " T e c h n i c o l o r w l r RE No A n g els wits JO A N BENNETT • ALDO RAY PETER USTINOV / ^ D O C ^ B l u e D O G G O N E C A T " fMu? Blue Ribbon Cartoon V • I ml V A R S I T Y FIRST S H O W 5:30 P.M . Adults 50c Child 20c THI ROARING, H A Z IN G , COLORFUL TW IHJILS! J A C K c x W E B B TWAf^MrtLGcictL'' MTf KIUY ............. i f M „ r n * S f c ' X - > JANET LEIGH • EDMOND O'BRIEN • PEGGY IEE • amdt dtvinc ut m aim • n u im am .* / Mm A U S T I N NOW! FIR ST S H O W 2:00 P.M . BIG TECHNICOLOR MUSICAL— N O W ON W ID E S C R E E N ! -'the WIZARD OF OZ I JUDY GARLAND - 7 TZF/-* AK MCY VAST f RPIfCf Rf PRINT A SS r r y t *• S\mA PLUS! 4 CARTOONS rn * rn rn rn rn rn * rn rn rn rn rn rn » # rn • rn rn rn rn rn rn CAPITOL N O W ! A T P O P U L A R FIRST R U N P R IC E S ! THE £ TRU! U F I fr STORY W U AMERICA’S MOST DECORATED HERO’ MURPHY A M TO HELL C I H k m a S c O PC I TECHNICOLOR fug AUDIE MURPHY ADULT* Me CHILD 18e T E X A S N O W ! O P E N 1:30 iii BOX OFFICE OPENS YEAR'S SUPREME THRILL' THIS ISLAMI! E A R T H ! I TECHNICOLOR JEFF MORROW FAITH DOMftGUC — F L I S — G UN SM O K E Starring A U D IE M U R P H Y with JOY PAGE • KENDALL CLARK • ISABEL BONNER fin e ry by JOSE FERRER • Screw play by KETT! FRINGS • on th* play by JOSEPH KRAMM • Produced by AARON ROSENBERG ewearv TMW* u»G hqmcm cs# th* Am W 67 M.LLKW XX DONALD OCONNOR ¥HPTHS HYER At £ 9 . A IM I. T S S te ( m u i v Starts TODAY! First Show 12:00 STATE 11 flare M m m tm i s ■ mrn mHmm ----------- P L U S ! ------- ‘BARNYARD ACTOR’ cartoon JO E McDOAKES NEWS & FOOTBALL New Band Steps High T h e D a T e x a n First C o l l e g e D a i l y i n t h e South Vol. 55 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955 Six Pages Today N O . 38 A “grand old gang” will step onto the Cotton Bowl field at half-time Saturday with a new kind of tempo, designed to eventually place the Longhorn Band among the fore­ most college bands in the nation. The OU game show, a tribute to the “fair sex,” will be a polished continuation of the new look that already has drawn laurels for the band in its two marching performances this season. The new tempo that will reach a high mark this week is a combination of band production factors, ranging from a faster, snappier cadence to a fresh set of policies and spirit that have been developed after three weeks of high-stepping rehearsals under Director Vincent R. Di Nino, who took over the band helm September I. th e new look S a tu rd a y will be the w hite trim m in g s added to the b a n d ’s tra d itio n a l cowboy uniform s, used only on special occasions in re c e n t y e a rs. T he m ost a p p a re n t elem ent of T he 150 to p -g rad e Stetson h a ts, custo m -m ad e for the Ixm ghorn B and a t a cost of SI .500, a rriv e d a t the B and H all th is w eek in tim e fo r ban d sm en to sport th em in th e ir half-tim e p e rfo rm a n c e w ith the riv alin g “ Big R ed B a n d " from O klahom a. Tile w estern h a ls w ere p u rc h a se d for the band by the A thletic Council on the insistence of IX X. B ible, a th letic d ire c to r, w ho m a in ta in e d the L onghorn B and should be a* s m a rtly outfitted as th e football squad. th a t to trim m e d In addition re p re se n ta tiv e of T exas the T exas-style h a ts, bandsm en th e ir cow boy u n ifo rm s w ith w hite have shoes, ties, and belts. M r. Di Nino, a n ative of M innesota, sa id he thinks the cow boy outfits a r e m o re the m ilita ry uniform s th a t th e band h as w orn in the p ast. The d re ss w ill be w orn a t o th e r football p erfo rm an ce s th is y ea r. T he the w o m an 's w orld will open to th e stra in s of “ I-adv of S pain” w ith the hand m a rc h in g into a fo rm atio n to honor T e x a s ’ s is te r s ta te of O klahom a. te lev ised half-tim e sa lu te th a n to Big B e rth a , th e la rg e s t bass d ru m in the w orld, is tw irling will be spotlighted again esco rted into a special form ation by the T exas S ta rs, precision drill te a m for the band. this w eek w hen she D ie fo rm atio n w ill shift to a sk irte d stick figure to the tune of “ W hatever IvOla W ants. Lola G e ts.” B a n d sm e n w ill dance a rh u m b a ste p a s “ L ola” sh ak es h e r sk irt and a p p e a rs to b ea t on Big B e rth a. Tile L onghorn Band w ill p ay a m usic and w o ld s trib u te to “ The Yellow R ose of T e x a s ” a s M ay m erle Shirley, queen of the T y le r R ose F e stiv a l, is escorted to to the band s outline of the Lone S ta r S tate See H A LFT IM E, P a g e 3 Integration Situation Revealed in UT Report to th e S tudent A ssem bly T h ursday night indicated. B y C A B L B U R G E N and M E D A M I L L E R in surm ountable b a rrie rs insurm ountable b a rrie rs No the four social integration of N egro students m onths of w ork by tho A ssem bly exist on the U n iv ersity cam pus, a C om m ission on D eseg reg atio n , w as to A ssem bly m e m b ers by d etailed sta tistic a l re p o rt p rese n ted re a d co m p reh en siv e rep o rt than end pro d u ct of m o re to them . the com m ission w orked on the com m ission. I.airing the su m m er 27 student? F ive re sta u ra n ts w ere undecided M au rie Suttle, com m ission c h a ir - ' a t th ese events would not be avail- m an, along w ith recom m endations able until a fte r the Southw est Con­ fer future work to be ca rrie d on forence m e ets to set its policy. by a proposed H um an R elations C om m ission. * T h ree re s ta u ra n t ow ners of six- teen who w ere interview ed said they would adm it N egro stu d en ts in th e event of d eseg reg a tio n a t An interv iew ing system w as used the u n d e rg ra d u a te level. Two of by to “ find oui facts, not feelings, for the report, these ow ners said, how ever, th a t D etailed sta tistics showed reactions restric tio n s m ight be placed on of student g ro u p s., p ro p rie to rs and m a n a g e rs of housing units, res tau- ra n t o p era to rs, and th e a te r m an- about th e ir policy, a g e rs to desegregation on the un- d e rg ra d u a te level. * The p re v a le n t a ttitu d e am ong re s ta u ra n t ow ners, the re p o rt said, w as “ w ait and see w hat o th e rs a re found the m a jo rity of th e ow ners ports on how m any dorm itories, c o - o p s . room ing and boarding desired a m eeting af w hich they houses would adm it N egroes; how could m ake a decision re g a rd in g m a n y ath letic and social fu n c tio n s' a g en eral policy, Student o rganizations not m ain- would be open to both ra c e s; how rn a n y clubs and organizations tam ing houses seem ed m ore lib e ral would adm it N egroes to m em ber- 3 bout ad m ittin g N egroes than m ost in terview ed. skip. of “ The D esegregation Com m ission Of 47 organ izatio n s contacted. 44 of The U niversity of T ex as has said they would ad m it N egroes m et m a n y b a rrie rs (to descgrcga- who could m ept all m e m b ersh ip lion) w hile a t the sa m e tim e they req u irem en ts, an d two re m a in e d h av e found th a t som e of the bar- undecided. In terv iew ers found th a t N egroes n e r s h ave alre ad y been crossed. o r a r e re a d y to be c ro sse d ,” the w ere a lre a d y p erm itted to a tte n d all-U niversify dances sponsored by re p o rt -.aid. The findings included survey re- doing.” The the o th e r groups in terv iew ers that H ousing units seem ed m ost un- the Social C alen d ar C om m ittee, w illing of tho croups co n tacted to The T exas Union B oard of D ir e o ad m it N egro students O nly eleven tors rep o rted th at N egro stu d en ts of 131 co ntacted said definitely that now attend U nion-sponsored social N egro students would be adm itted , functions and that all a re a s of the F ive of th ese units w ere co-ops. Union a re open to N egroes. W o m en s units g en e rally took a N e g r o students a r e a lre a d y m ore liberal view tow ard ad m ittin g atten d in g C ultural E n te rta in m e n t N egroes than m en ’s units, and C om m ittee p ro g ra m s, th e com m it- m any w om en's houses w ere unde- tee rep o rted , w ithout restrictio n * cided on w h eth er they would adm it as to seating. N egroes. * th e a te r m a n a g e rs inter- P re sid e n t Logan Wilson said sev- T w o era I d ay s ago th a t th e B oard of viewed said th a t N egroes a re now R egents m ay decide w h e th e r rac es accom m odated only a t special per- xx ill be m ixed in U n iv ersity dorm i- form an ces. N either m a n a g e r wa* to rie s at its next m eetin g . definite about, future policy. T he com m ission found th a t an- T hese w ere am ong cam p u s ftnd- Weather T h e w e a th e r in D a lla s is e x ­ p e c te d to he fa ir , m ild , and a lit t le c o o le r S a tu r d a y for th e O k la h o m a -T e x a # fo o tb a ll g a m e p r e d ic ts th e lo c a l L n ite d S ta te # W e a th e r B u r e a u . T h e h igh In D a lla s S a tu r d a y is e x p e c te d to he a ro u n d KO w ith th e lo w S a tu r d a y m o r n in g o f fit). f o r e c a s t I# T h e A u stin fa ir an d c o o le r w ith a h ig h of HO e x p e r te d F r id a y . T h u r s d a y ’* h igh w a s 9 t and th e lo w w a s 7‘i . Lovett's Desire: '$100 a Month’ Satirical Cam paign Planned by Candidate Jim L ovett, who filed W ednesday for the S tu d en ts’ A ssociation p re s ­ idency, say s he w an ts the job sole­ ly for the $1(X) m onthly sa la ry . D etails of his p latfo rm , re le a se d T h ursday, indicate L o v ett's c a m ­ paign will be on a non-serious n a ­ tu re, based heavily upon s a tire of the p rese n t cam p u s political con­ fusion. He said both his opponents **n Sport# Editor B lue chips a r e down on the in- I m a tch e d a g a in st the p assing arm Qf Jo e C lem ents and D icky M iller. Bud W ilkinson’s Sooners have th e a v e rag ed 380 y a rd s rushing in tw o Joining C lem ents in the backfield a re W alter F ondren, D elano Wo­ m ack, and Jo e Y oungblood. They co m p rise one of th e lig h test S teer av e rag in g in history, ta b le as te rse c tio n a l football I>onghom s re s t on th e eve of th e ir g am es and th e ir ace halfback. Tom - i foursom es 60th renew al of th e ir b itte r riv a lry m y M cDonald, ra n k s tw elfth in the but 172 pounds p e r m a n . w ith the O klahom a Sooners. And nation in rushing. for the D allas invasion, 7,300 U T stu d en ts h av e p u rch a sed tic k ets to ce m e n t crow d of 75.000 in the Cotton Bowl. end* threw only one p ass a g a in s t; S p earh ead in g Up front the L onghorns will un- E d P ric e co u n ters w ith die lead- J leash a 200 pound plus line led by tri-ca p tain s Jo h n n y T atu m , H erb c a p ac ity ants, and M iller ran k s third . Clem - G ray, an d Bob T u ck er, ing p a sse r in th e conference, Clem - tra d itio n a l th e the 42 Candidates File for Office consistent A lthough th e S tate F a ir will b e I S outhern Cal, a n incom pletion, b u t: split-T pow er for OU is q u a rte rb a c k lightest m a n on th e OU g a m e j his p e rfo rm a n c e s ag a in st T exas j J im m y H a rris, going full sw ing, w ill be the m a in a ttra c tio n and a ; Tech and T u lan e w ere enough to ! e ith e r sta rtin g jun io r te am . T he ro u sin g g am e is an ticip ate d . T w o; keep him the n u m b e r five flinger j from T errell, T exas, w eighs only the nation. T ex as has gained 167 pounds and M cD onald is sm all, p e rfe c tly opposite ball clubs w ill a s college p la y ers go, at 169. Bob ta k e th e tu rf S a tu rd a y w ith O k la - 1 471 y a rd s th ro u g h the a ir in th ree C an d id ates w ith no opposition B u rris and Billy P r ic e r c a r ry the g a m e ! gam es. h o m a ’s la te r d is­ previously elected hut beef in the OU backfield and, like qualified, filing a re Bob Siegel for field a T exas, tile Sooners will pounds! v ice-president, Ja n e t H older f o r line av e rag in g o v er 200 | se c re ta ry , an d Jim R ich a rd s for p e r m an. A to ta l of 42 ca n d id a tes filed for offices in the S tudents A ssociation by the 5 p.m . deadline T hu rsd ay . F iling for p resid e n t w ere M ary D an n en b au m , Jim L ovett, and Ro­ land D ahlin, pow erful ★ ground in ★ See OU. P a g e 2 C actus E ditor. 3 Austin Youths Beat UT Student T hree A ustin youths w ere c h a rg ­ ed w ith a s sa u lt e a rly T h ursday a fte r Louis Stout. 20-year-old U ni­ v ersity student, w as beaten while w alking along Tw enty-sixth S treet. None of the youths ch arg ed w ere U niversity students, police said. Stout told police that he w as w alking along T w enty-sixth S treet when a convertible pulled up be­ side him . Follow ing him down to Seton Avenue, se v e ra l of the occu­ pan ts jum ped out and began b ea t­ ing him w ith th e ir fists. Stout m a n ag e d to b rea k aw ay from the gang an d g et aw ay a fte r being struck se v e ra l tim es. He w as trea ted a t the Student H ealth Cen- is “ It im portant th a t even a re m a rk a b ly in tric a te g ad g e t is not stu d e n t’s for a glim pse of the la rg e r w o rld ,” he said. su b stitu te th e T he m eetin g s w ill continue at 9 a.m . F rid a y in B a tts H all Audi­ torium w'ith a panel discussion on “ The Science F a ir E x h ib it,” m od­ e ra te d by W illiam G. m assier, di­ re c to r of the F o rt W orth C hildren's M useum . At 10:30 an o th er panel will consider types of science fairs, and the afternoon w ill be devoted to plans for c o o rd in a tio n of such activities. Bevo to See O U G am e A f t e r N ig h t in Dallas Bevo and se v e ra l tho u san d of re p re se n ts will th e stu d e n ts he le av e F rid a y afternoon for th e OU w eek end in D allas. th e S tate F a ir and T he U n iv e rsity ’s m a sc o t will be sta b le d on a fa rm south of D allas until tim e for his a p p e a r­ ance a t the Cotton Bowl S atu rd ay , but m ost of the stu d e n ts a re expected to con­ v ene for an official U T pep ra lly th e B a k e r H otel at In l l p.m . front of Bevo will be esco rted to D allas I by a m o to rc ad e of Silver Spurs. 500 A ppro x im ately students, j Longhorn b an d sm en . Spurs, and Cowboys w ere on h an d ca m p u s pep ra lly T h u rsd ay night for front of M oore-H ill Hall in speeches tri-ca p tain s H erb [G ray , Jo hnny T atu m , and Bob T ucker. for by the ■ the ca m p u s pep H arley C lark , head ch e erle ad e r, rally w as I said I effective and u rg ed all T ex as fans I in D allas to a tte n d F rid a y n ig h t’s I rally. Forty T hanks to Ja c k H olm an in the “ F o rty A cres Box” in the U nion: A counselor in one of the g irls ’ d o rm s re m a rk e d to a friend con­ cern in g the fre sh m a n and tra n s fe r g irls : “ LII be glad w hen th e new w e a rs off so I can get m y boy friend b a c k !” *■ A radio-television m a jo r’s p et KTBC to B r o a d c a s t H i g h l i g h t s o f O U C a m e A live te le c a s t of the OU g am e will be d escrib ed by K ern Tips, S atu rd ay a t 1:45 p.m . o ver KTBC- TV, Austin. R adio b ro ad c astin g of the gam e will begin S a tu rd a y a t 1:50 p.m . J o v er KTBC, w ith D ave Russe ll and Alec C h e sse r announcing the tele- peeve is the ever-loving public who j aitio n . thinks of him as m e re ly a H ighlights of the OU g am e will vision set re p a irm a n . Ikvb V aught, I be p re se nted T uesday, O ctober l l ■nphom ore fro m E astlan d , ha* jo in - 1 a t 7;30 p m on T ex as in R eview of peeved ones. ” 1 ed th e ra n k s of peeved ones. Bob has a m orning p a p e r route. F in d ­ ing out his m a jo r, last w eek th ree of his cu sto m e rs asked h u n to com e in and tak e a look at th eir television sets. The U nion w ill show picture s of the g am e T u esd a y a t 12 p .m . in the M ain Lounge. ov e r KTBC-TV, Dr. Eby to Speak C o u rte sy T he Texan R eprint p a rtm e n t: a 27-year-oid, but ad- On Integration Today w as m u te d ly cheru b -faced senior, last w eek when a sa le s­ shocked girl in a dow ntow n d ru g sto re r e ­ fused to .sell him a pack of c ig a r­ ette s even w hile his wife and tw o child ren looked on. It se e m s one m u st be 17 to sm oke in T ex a s. Dr. F re d e ric k Eby, noted pro­ fessor of h isto ry an d philosophy of education a t th e U niversity, will ad d re ss T e x a s sc I loo I board m e m ­ bers and su p e rin ten d e n ts a t the D riskill H otel in A ustin F rid a y m orning a t 10:30. ✓ Ile found few w ho would sy m ­ path ize, how ever, since he is a b a rte n d e r in a local ta v e rn and is notorious for refusing to sell b eer to anyone who looks under 21. His topie, “ Tile Issu es and P ro b ­ lem s of In te g ra tio n in T ex as P ublic Schools.’’ is a fe a tu re of the 1955 annual m e etin g of the T exas As- —BUD M L \li s o d a hon of School Board*. Tlte lineups: T E X A S K elly T u ck e r Sneed T atu m H erb G ra y Hermon S chriew er I C lem ents F ondren Youngblood W om ack OKLA HOM A Stiller L E LT Woodworth Bolinger LG C Tubbs B G Morris R T H E Q B LH McDonald R H F B Ed Gray Bell Harris B u rd s P ricer i te r and released . C a n d id ates for A rts and S ciences A ssem blem an w ere B a rb a ra D avis, Police officer I-en Rohe a rre ste d P a ts y Morrow', N ancy G oosby, th ree of the boys in the 56(X) block P au l Cai roll, M am ie S uttle, J e a n | Gj N orth L a m a r sh o rtly a fte rw a rd . S chw artz, Speed C arroll, and Bun-1 Two other Vx)ys a n d ’a girl wbo ny Fennell. h ad been w ith the gang had left the city. On the sla te for BBA A ssem ble­ m an w ere Stephen B u tter, J . B ru ce Booths contain te ac h in g devices B arkley, E le a n o r W alker. J e r r y I ,x 'bce and identified by Stout, tw o planned to m ak e science courses I rew it, Lddio S harp, and Lhm y J ^ to students, as S teinberg bovs confessed and w ere m ore A fter being questioned by the C andidate for E ng in eerin g p la ce boy, I charged w ith a ssau lt. The th ird the d riv e r of the c a r, w as I chai *ged w ith d runkenness. UT Enrollment Figures Approach Record M ark R e g istra tio n figures had spiraled upw ard to a total of 17,432 by Wed-1 jo rie nesday, E dsell B ittiek, assista n t I re g is tra r, rep o rted . “ O nly excep­ tional cases a r e being reg istered I now .” he said. “ R e g u la r re g istra - ! .*on ceased a f te r four i d ay s a t G regory G ym . when 16,- ! 139 h ad signed up for c la s s .” first the W ednesday’s re g istra tio n num- i bor lacks 56 of equalling the Uni- I v e rsify ’* astro n o m ical all-tim e high of stu d e n ts: 17.4SS in fall of 1947. I L ast fa ll’s total hit the 16,084 m ark . or L348 less than this fa ll’s sum . w ere Lynn E v an s, G ary W oehr- m ann, D avid Cornell, and Louis Houston. Running for I^aw' A ssem - ) blom an w-ere R obert T revis, G uy I C. Jack so n . Ja c k C a re y , B. D. j M cK inney, Roy J. R aw ls, a n d Ja m e s C oburn. B eilke Loyd “ R u m m y ” J a r y and R uben R ivero filed for A rch itectu re. M ar- and Tobye Fr a rn I w ere the can d id a tes for E ducation, j M ark C. Noble will run for P h a r- i rnacy re p re se n ta tiv e and R at Sie- ! m ens for F ine A rts. , L isted Ju stic e J. C arubbi J P lac e O ne w ere A. I and Bill R afkin N ed Caldw ell and the i rac e for A ssociate Ju stic e P la c e Two. N ancy Moody filed for A.s- Ju stic e W om en’s P la c e for i sociate ( One und N ancy M cM eans L eonard Von Doh Ion a te for A ssociate in W om en's P la c e Two. F it ID A Y 7 :30-10 — C o-recr e a lion, W om en’* 9 - T exas A ssociation of School B oards, D riskill Hotel. 9-12 F re sh m a n B eauty C ontest en­ trie s, Union 307. 10-1 S tudent A ssociation C onstitu­ tional ex am in atio n s, Student As­ sociation Office. 3-5 — R e g istra tio n for “ Ten Most B e au tifu l,” Jo u rn a lism Building 305. 5-6 - R e g istra tio n fo r ballroom d an c­ ing, Union. 7 Science F iction Club, Union 301, 7:30 Dr, Ralph O v erm a n of Oak to address B ap tist Stu- Ridge | dent*, RSU 7.30 R e g u l a r S ervices, Hillel 7 30 D uplicate Bridge Club, Union G ym . 315 Foundation. 8 N elson Brown to a d d re ss U ni­ versity Club on “ A lcoholism ,” YMCA. 8:15 -“ P itfa lls of P a u lin e ,” A C I. SAT! B D A Y I — W esley F oundation r e tr e a t to Rockledge. 1 :50~ Texas-O U gam e, KTBC-TV. 6-9 S upper m eeting for S W T S C w o m en 's physical train in g facu l­ ty, W om en’* G ym . * . 1 5 - “ P itfa lls of P a u lin e ,” ACT. Mans Can’t Best Live Friend in Dorm Bv M A R J O R I E MI O NO “ Je a n e tte has deep, d a rk blue eyes, a tiny nose and m outh, and w hite, silky h a ir .” sighed Milton thing Stern. “ S he's I ve e v e r se e n ,” the p re ttie st No. it* not his girl friend th a t, Milton w as m ooning over, but his tw elve-w eek-old 1 pound-nnd-a-half, toy poodle, an unusual and costly ' pet. HU J e tu d e w ith Hie w h ite fur in v e r y a m i a b l e . S h e -silk* loves to ritle in t a r s , e s p e c i a l l y w h en s ittin g on M ilto n’# sh oal- der, j Je an n ie s fond of people, loo. and playfully s c a m p e r to ANYONE ih e r m other nev er w arned her*. Milton says th a t everyone w ants to hold her. Milton s Je a m e is very intelligent, the zoology m a jo r boast#. A lready legs. ^h»* can stan d on h er hind rile did adm it th a t poodles sta n d like seals balance on hind legs Fat uity M e e tin g P o st p o n e d The first semester meeting of the G eneral F a c u lty , originally sched­ uled for T uesday, O ctober l l , he# Peen postponed until a later date. E ugene Nelson, secretary of the j General F acu lty, *aid Wednesday. lialls. especially w hen reaching for a ice delicacy cream cones t half-eaten like B ecause no fem ales a re allowed in the San Ja c in to D orm s w'here Milton lives, he keeps his costly pet w ith h er sibling, Jocko, and th e ir m other, N icolette, lh* hom e of Mrs, A. lf. Benny. Mrs. B enny’s hobby is raisin g poodles. a t th e O ne can o f d og food , plu s ail e y e d r o p p e r of v ita m in su p p le ­ m e n t, a r e s e r v e d to J e n n ie by Hie K en n ys e ach d a y . W ith thi* d ie t, the c o d d le d p o o d le w ill e a s ­ ily m a tu r e e x p e c te d Into th ree and on e h a lf pound*, w h ich M ilton s I# r e a lly sm a ll for a h e r breed. Like all toy fxxxiles, Je am e is extrem ely sensitive. No one has ev e r yelled at her. In fact. sh* shy* aw ay from loud voices, Mil­ ton says. One of J cam e s fav o rite antic# I# d rum m ing a w a te r bowl’# s u r­ face to sp a tte r the liquid. She love# to splash the w a te r until h er in w hite coat tu rn s g ray . Asked w hat Ilia p a r e n t # thought of hi# spending no m uch (over XI.VI) for a dog. M ilton replied, “ I ’m X'! and my parent# a th in g !” d idn’t IT S Y O U R LICK, JEANETTE." Jocko might be gallantly say rig ^ered Jeane+t* outHclsing p o o d '* W hen he dis he do o u t ch «a:rou y w # *■ h 5 turn? J e a n e t t e ti . Cut t h a t s A nn t>.ri'» hand hoid.ng the '‘re? OTO! to s ’ster toy Hat could by Milt© rn*.re g 4 i*creanr O U 7 Point favorite W S H (Continued from P a g e 1) H a rris is rep o rted ly favoring a left hand hut will p robably b ad be th e sta rtin g m an u n d er. F o r the L onghorns it will he th e ir first d ay g a m e of th e season a fte r playing two at hom e u n d er ihe a r c s and USG at C alifornia F rid a y . to offset A lthough O klahom a M any eyes will be on C lem ents to see if he will be as affectiv e as he w as in I T ’s win o v er T uiane tw o w eeks ago. C lem e n ts’ stro n g an d a c c u ra te right a rm a re being counted on heavily the Sooners trem en d o u s g ro u n d g am e. is c u rre n tly a seven point choice to ta k e th e ir th e 30- fo u rth stra ig h t g a m e year-old se rie s from the Longhorns, m a n y o b se rv e rs still believe UT to have an excellent ch .m e of p lay ­ ing th e Big R ed on even to rm s, p erh a p s even tu rn in g in a su rp rise t in ♦ v ictory. HERB GRAY BOB TUCKER "“Wk, Yearlings Face Cubs " In 'Jinx Battle Tonight Bv E D D IE lit GII ES Ti»* *n S p o r t s S t a f f A stan d in g long-tim e jin x of n ev er h av in g won an opening g am e j a g a in st th e B aylor Cubs fac es the in T em ple F ri- J T exas S h o rth o rn s d a y night w hen Hie two fre sh m e n j te am s w ith p o ten t p assin g a tta c k s ! invade Woodson Field. Since 1930, th e S horthorns have opened w ith th e Cubs and have vet to win in five tries. O nly in 1949 the Y earlin g s com e up w ith did a v icto ry o v er B aylor, b ut that ! cam e in the m iddle of the season. J F re sh m e n coach Bob Schulze, the taking o v e r Y earlin g s for the first tim e since E d K elley d e p a rte d last y ea r, will posses one of th e fiercest passing a tta c k s in m a n y y ea rs. The r e a ­ son lies in the efforts of q u a r te r ­ b ack Vance M atthew s, the p assin g i whiz who w as one of so u g h t-after school boy stars T exas high school last year. th** mo t in reig n s of th e M a tth e w s p assing h a s n ’t b e in based e n tire ly on his s e n s a tio n a l! passing re c o rd in high school w h ere 1 he led his C lass 3-A co n feren ce in total offense, for the 6-1, 175-pound­ e r has p ro v ed him self q u ite ab le vvith his p e rfo rm a n c e s in drills. The Cubs, u n d er the leadership of coach Bob B arfield , have come up w ith Buddy H u m phrey, a tall 185-pound q u a rte rb a c k from Kil­ gore, w hose p asses h av e given the B aylor v a rsity plenty of trouble in sc rim m a g e sessions this fall. in O th er than M atthew s in the man- th e Y ea rlin g ’s T- u n d er slot form at ion, Jo h n M assey of Ingle­ side and B eeville S B illy B ak er will p ro b ab ly s ta r t a t the left and rig h t h alfb ack spots resp ectiv ely . M au rice B a u m g a rte n , 195-pounder from H ouston, will p ro b ab ly lie statio n ed at th e fullback post. He the is Y earlin g s top p u n te r and kick-off man. scheduled to Fie also In th e Ime, tro u b le brew s, for com petition is rugged, and prob­ able s ta rte r s a re u n ce rtain . How­ ever. D anny M yers will m ost like­ ly he nt left end, Bill Stohlhand- skc a t left tackle. Bill C a rric o a t left g u ard . A rils P ark h u rst. a t re n ­ rig h t gu ard , ter, Jo e W inter at L a rry F u n d e rb u rk af right tackle, and eo-eaplain Bill Brock at right end. M atthew s and Brock w ere selected to lie co-cap tain s for tho Cub en counter. B acking up M atthew s a re two o th er fine p a s se rs Bobby M anning of Y oakum and P ick Woods of D aingerfield, M anning is w orking the No, 2 q u a rte rb a c k , and as should see p lenty of action F rid a y night. T hat “ good n l’ B a y lo r line” m ay m ean th e d ifferen ce F rid a y , as th e C u b s’ line a v e ra g e s som e 205 pounds p er m an , as 198 for the a re Y earlin g s. The som ew hat th e sam e, B ay lo r again holding the edge, 186 to 184. b ackfields A com plete selection of VAN HBUSEN A i “FASY S H O P P IN G " & f j a & i MEN S WEAR ENFIELD SHOPPING CENTER 12th and LAMAR RC0AL Entrance Chances Increasing— Sadler FO R T WORTH G et. 6 GW Dr. I M. E. S ad ler, p resid en t of T ex as C h ristian U n iv ersity , said T h u rs­ d ay night he w as “ g re a tly en ­ co u ra g e d ” o v er the po ssib ility of T ex a s T ech becom ing a m e m b e r of th e Southw est C onference as the re su lt of a m eetin g held h e re r e ­ cently. D r. S ad le r called the m e etin g of college re p re se n ta tiv e s vvith the specific topic of co n feren ce ex-! pansion to ta k e in T ex as T ech and he said th at c o n tra ry to n ew sp a p er re p o rts he found g en eral sen tim en t w as th a t th e big college in W est T ex as should be invited. an d w ithout R e p o rts co ncerning the m eetin g , to have been th a t w as supposed publicity’, I inform al w ere th a t it w as decided if th a t expansion e v e r w as co n sid ered , O klahom a p ro b ab ly would bo the first school to receiv e an invitation. ★ that I felt “ Som e of incidentally. those p rese n t m en- j ! tinned O klahom a and U n iv ersity o f 1 H ouston,” D r. S ad ler said , “ but only the g en eral sen tim en t of th e m eetin g w as th a t T exas T ech should be invited and since then I h av e re ­ from v irtu a lly all ceived le tte rs who atten d ed the m eetin g say in g they th ought the m eetin g w as m ost helpful. T hey said they th ought it would be good to h av e T ex as Tech in th e co n fe re n ce.’’ Dr. S ad le r rev ealed th a t ev ery m e m b e r of the S outhw est Con­ feren ce vvas rep rese n ted e ith e r by the p resid e n t, faculty’ re p re s e n ta ­ tru ste e . tive, a th le tic d ire c to r o r “ T h e re w e re eighteen o r tw en ty p erso n s h e r e ,’’ he said, “ and w e m e t for tw o hours a t luncheon to d iscu ss th e m a tte r.” He sa id the m eeting w a s decided upon w hen he conferred w ith Tom Sealy, c h a irm a n of th e B o a rd of R eg en ts of The U n iv ersity of T ex as T exas C h ristian and T ex as h ave been fav o rin g T exas T ech s a d ­ m ission to th e conference for sev­ e ra l y e a rs . ★ “ I am very’ m uch in fa v o r of T e x a s T ec h ,” Dr. S ad le r said “ T his is not b ec au se of th e poli­ tic al or econom ical a sp e c ts b u t be­ is a g re a t school w ith ca u se it should be g re a t re p re se n te d in thp co n fe re n c e .” it le a d e rs and D r. S ad le r said th a t th e senti- {m en t of th e m e e t i n g p ro b ab ly would he ex p re ssed at the w in te r the Southw est C onfer­ session of ence fa c u lty co m m ittee in D allas in D cro m b e r, Bear-Hog Game Tops SWC Slate By th** A s s o c i a t e d P r r * s B a y lo r and A rk an sas, clash in a cru c ial co n feren ce te st set a t Waco S a tu rd a y in th e only SWC g am e. The defending ch am pion F o rk e rs h av e been w orking on p ass de­ fense and offense as Coach Ja c k told his O zark ch a rg es M itchell th a t B ay lo r probably would be just a s tough a s T C I7. T he H orned F ro g s b e a t the Hogs 26-0 last week. S outhern M ethodist stre sse d the a ir g am e, too. A scout re p o rt said M isso u ri's T ig ers, SM U 's F rid a y night o pponents in th e Cotton Bowl, w e re w eak on p ass defense. Q u ar­ te rb a c k s Jo h n R oach and C h arlie Arnold d isp lay ed som e effective p assin g for th e M u stan g s, b ut the 1 SMU en d s w ere hav in g trouble with slick fingers and holes in th eir hands. At H ouston, Coach J e s s N eely shuffled his lineup in p re p a ra tio n for the g am e th e re S a tu rd a y night ag a in st u n d efeated C lem son. N eely a p p a re n tly w as giving th e sopho­ m o res every’ ch an ce to b reak into the Owl lineup. Coach Abe M a rtin of und efeated , un ex ten d ed T ex as C h ristian said he thought his boys would he rea d y to p lay a g a in st A lab am a, h u t he fretted ab o u t m issed offensive as­ sig n m en ts. F ro g follow ers fe a r a letdow n a fte r two sp irited s ta rts a g a in st T ex as T ech and A rk an sas JO H N N Y TATUM * Cotton B o w l A w a i t s Sel lout Gr i d Battle the 8.CKX) T h e re ’ll hp an overflow ing crow d of 75.304 in the Cotton Bowl S a tu r­ d ay aftern o o n w hen th e O klahom a Sooners ta n g le w ith the Longhorns, Al L u n d sted t re p o rte d T h u rsd ay th a t to U n iv ersity s t u d e n t s “ w ere all go n e.’’ H e said a t le a st 7,300 of th ese w ere sold to stu d en ts w ith the re m a in in g d u c a ts going to A ustin­ first-serv ed first-com e, ites on a basis. tick ets allo tted L u n d ste d t said stu d en ts needed a B-Tax and th e ir re se rv e scat stub high for the lead- to gain adm ission. Rowling W orkouts Begin M iea-W iea how ling te a m s have begun w orkouts for the com ing in­ tra m u ra l season. In d ep en d en ts in­ te re ste d in bow ling on the te a m s a re re q u e ste d to leave th e ir n am es a t th e M iea-W ica office, T exas Union 307. T he T ex as A ggies, w ho m eet N eb rask a in th e ir w eekend tilt, had four q u a rte rb a c k s callin g signals and none looked bad B esides, full- ap p lican t b ac k J a c k F’a rd e e show ed im p res- eo n feren cc sivp w ork and Con rh B e a r B ryant said he w-as p l e a s e d vvith the C ad ets' p ro g re ss. T ex as T ech has ir m e m b ersh ip tim es Several long b een an the is- sue h as com e to a vote b u t T ech h as not y et obtained the vote n eces­ sa ry . in the gets som e extra fuel A C a m p u s - t o - C a r e e r C a . s e H i s t o r y PrWay, O c t e ts 7, ! to com ? a postponem ent on all th re e 8 p m . g am es. T he ra in and cold < am e a fte r ten m in u tes of play in the final g am es of th e night Kyle on a 20-yard p ass within one point before bowing out Clements Fifth In National Rank th e n a ­ to ta l offense tio n 's passing and le a d e r a w eek ago, d ropped to fifth in p assin g and sev en th rn total offense according to sta tis tic s is­ sued T h ursday. t h e A s s o c ia te d P r e s s Jo e C lem ents, B a ite d o n T e x a s' C lem ents w as sidelined by a in ju ry a lte r ju st tw o play s h ead la st w eek in T ex as' g am e w ith Southern C alifornia ;n Los A ngeles. S tatistics released by the N C A \ Serv ice B u rea u show th a i C laude ’ B enham , 5-foot~8, 170-pound C olum ­ bia q u a rte rb a c k , is the m a jo r col­ lege in le a d e r both p a ssin g and total offense. Like an o th e r sm all s ta r of 16 y e a rs ago, D av ey O 'B rien of T ex a s C h ristian , d u rab ility is one of B enham '* best asse ts. individual B enham , who p ro v id es m ost of C olum bia s offense, is a 60-m inute p la y er, and in tw o g a m e s he has handled the bail e ith e r passin g or ru n n in g on 79 p lay s. T h at s close to the reco rd r a te set by th e 148- pound O ’B rien in 1938, when he ru sh es an d p asses a v e ra g e d p e r g am e, IG In two g a m e s th e stubby Colum ­ b ia ju n io r from P o rtsm o u th . Va., rack ed up 397 y a rd s on 79 h as 1 pia.vs. His 39 p ass a tte m p ts, 27 com pletions and 363 y a rd s through the a ir a re high for the season to d a te . H e’s h ad seven p asse s m- tero ep ted , a e rs. Ii w as a losing g a m e that sent B en h am to th e top. H e acco u n ted for 239 y a rd s by ru sh in g and p a ss­ ing individual sin gle-gam e hrgh for the y e a r w hile Colum bia w as losing to P rin c eto n , 20-7. the M eanw hile A rt L uppino of Arizo­ na, who n ev er p asses, rec laim ed the ru sh in g le ad ersh ip he held all but one w eek la st seaso n : Luppino in 16 c a rrie s g ain ed 129 y a rd s ag a in st th ree -g a m e to ta l of 361 y ard s. for a Idaho J im Swink of T ex as C h ristian , la st w eek ’s ru sh in g le ad e r, slipped to second place w ith 315 y a rd s, hut he scored 13 points a g a in st A rk an ­ sa s to go into a tie for the scoring lead w ith S outhern C a lifo rn ia ’s Jon A rn ett. E ach h a s 44 points. Sigm a Alpha E psilon squeaked p assed P hi D elta T het a in th e R leag u e, on p en e tratio n s in the clos­ est g a m e played SAE s W end' B ra y connected w ith Buddy Nolly fo r a fifteen y a rd nearing J • J a m e s brought the Phi D ells back l r the g am e w ith a 40-yard pa*1- to P hilip Cecil. On the stren g th of a had pass from c e n te r ending In a safety UTSA Hold* Club Tr> t*uta IT S A . w o m an ’s ath letic o rg a n i­ s t ion, held try o u ts W ednesday, for its vario u s clubs R< peat tryout* w ill be held next W ednesday. E d Lusk! p assed Alpha E psilon P i to a 13-€ v icto ry o v er a d e te r­ m ined D elta K ap p a E psilon te am to R ich ard Lusk! s p asses w ent B erg er for ten y a rd s and J e rry P lantosky for 30 y ard s. Sigm a Nu scored a 21-13 vic­ tory o v er D elta U psilon in a class league g am e. B arclay R yall B p assed for two of the th ree Sigm a Nu scores. In a lopsided contest D elta Tau D elta breezed p assed Pi K appa A lpha, 34-0. Ken Voelkel ran for one and p assed the Delta touchdow ns. two of for M a r c i a n o Far A h e a d In H e a v y w e i g h t Division M ILW A U K EE '.?> H eavyw eight cham pion Rocky M arcian o has pounded a big g a p betw een h im ­ self an d the r e s t of th e division w ith his h am m er-lik e fists, a c c o rd ­ ing to T h u rs d a y 's q u a r te rly ra tin g s of th e N ational B oxing A ssociation. “ M arcian o h a s punched his w ay o u t of good o p p o n en ts,” said F re d Saddy, c h a irm a n of th e NBA R a t­ ing C o m m ittee sta te m e n t. “ We a r e listing Boh B ak er, N ine V aldes and H u rric a n e Ja ck so n as th e o u stan d in g b o x ers in the h eav y ­ w eight division ” in a Newest fabric conception of the Charcoal idea TAILORED B T 3*ffappss$»ons. Bd. Dark Tone* ire the latest word in *m«rt Styling. See our Stained Glass fabric* that incorporate many new color* into th® Charcoal idea. They're all available in a Score of new fabrics with various surface patterns. Our selection is complete, uke taut out to soc them. $65.00 lite K a e s inniniiMiiiiB " ii nT'Wiii r La__ "I represent 30,000 people" That’* the population of the Mason (uty, Iowa, area where Jack Mar Allister (Iowa I*., ‘501 is Manager for N orth­ western Bell Telephone Company. How w’ould you like this kind of job ? k Ss Telephone Manager I represent Mason City to my company, and vice- versa. \in<>ng my customers are hank­ er*, farmer*, housewives, merchant® . . . each with different questions and pro b­ lems about telephone service. Through public information and good business office service, my people and I do our best to furnish the answer*. 44 My assignment calls for varied ac tivi­ ties—sales, public relations, office sujier- ▼ i*ion. One minute I’m describing a new construction program to a group of businessmen . . . the next explaining a new service to a rural customer. 46It’* a job with lots of variety and re­ sponsibility, and I enjoy every day of it. My supervisor is 75 miles aw ay.’ * *avs Jack, ‘ Cand that puts me prettv much on my own —which is the way I iike i t . ” * Jack >1 acA llister g r a d u a te d with a ft.S. in C o m ­ m e r c e and started with N or th w e ste r n B ell a b o u t five years ago. \ s t e l e p h o n e M anager at the a g e o f 2H, he is typical o f the m a n y y o u n g m e n who are b u ild in g career* in t e le p h o n e w ork. S im ila r o p ­ p o r t u n it ie s exint today with o th e r Kell t e le p h o n e c o m p a n i e s . . . a lt o wi th Bell T e l e p h o n e l a b o r a ­ to r ie s, W estern E leetrie and San d ia C o r p o r a tio n . Your P la c e m e n t Officer has all the d e ta ils. r j r 'e y BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM * P . S. Since this erne h istory a as prepared. Jack has been prom oted. .\o u a manager at Des M oines, Io n a , he has increased responsibilities. ■’n i i I I I i i i i i I f i i i I I i I t I i i i i I I I I i i i I I I I I i i i i i i I I i I t i t I i I i i i i i i t I I i t I It • Ii I I• t • i i i i i i i i i i » i i i i i Shorts, J I . 3S V A N H E U S E N * “Stripe-it-Rich”. . sophisticated new striped wardrobe designed for new charcoal suits V an H euscrt du g deep in to today’s trend toward charcoal suits for the perfect shirt to d o them justice. Result: a gusher o f style . . . bold rich-colored stripes alternating with charcoal. T h e effect is so great w e’ve striped a whole rich wardrobe that you can own even if your Pop owns not a shara o f oil stock. Shirts, $3.95; M atching Ties, $1 50. VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS at f a s h i o n s f o r m e n 2516 G uad a lu p e W e Have A Variety O f Van Heusen Shirts In Smart Color Styles. Friday, October 7, 1955 THE D A ILY T E X A N P a g . 3 Commission Report... (Continued from Page I ) owned dormitories who were inter­ viewed, two said they would con­ sider an application from a Negro student in the event of desegri- tion at the undergraduate level. man Relations Commission on pos-, Miss Suttle paid special tribute sible integration in regard to tram-; before making the report to D avid potation politics, fraternities and Cornell and Carter Rochelle for sororities, campus employment, the work they did as sub-commit- student placement, and use of com- tee chairmen within the commit* triunity facilities. I sion. T 8 Year* of Supremacy Dana X. Bible Brings Harriers Meet Scholar AUM, Oklahoma I Berlin's Outlines Problems Golden Athletic Era its He took the U niversity’s football fortunes at lowest ebb and raised them to a place of national prominence. He started a highly- successful plan for enrolling pros­ pective athletes. matched the efforts of football. That man, installed eighteen years ago as athletic director and is Dana ,\. head football coach, Bible. During that time, the Uni­ versity athletic teams have captur-j Texas* cross country squad will face Texas A&M and Oklahoma F rid a y at. College Station in a triangular meet on A& M 's new cross country course. Texas A&M , with six lettermen from last y e a r’s SW C runner-up squad, w ill he a heavy favorite neighboring state When big-time football was being j ecl approximately I.>0 team titles, over the two sharply criticized around 1951, he I staunchly defended the game, lie saw that other Longhorn sports Bible has a nom >er of gaudy universities. titles to which he can Jay claim However, the latest is a feature H ie Cadets lost only one m a n : Beriin. Seventy-fiVe per cent of all can help they have received.” Greatest Coaches.,” The book fea­ tures 28 of Am erica's greatest coaches and is dup on the news­ stands October 17. One of the best coaching records in the nation backs up the selec­ tion of M r. Bible. In his 29 years of senior college coaching, his teams have won 209 games, lost only 64, and tied 19. from 1954 s crack outfit that was : dwelling units were either destroy- favored to take the crown. Verlon ed or damaged during the war, he i Westmoreland is the only Aggie said. New units are going up at I that departed via graduation. The the rate of 15.000 to 20,000 a year, j rest are ail back to make another but over 200,000 new units are still needed. I try for the SW C title. Last year the Aggies went into I the Conference moot as heavy favorites only to fall to Texas and; tries were dismantled and carried Inocencio Cantu, who went on to the national meet in Ann Arbor, Mich. B y G. Z. H O L L IN G S W O R T H ‘World W ar IT and the cold w a r ' have made Beriin politically one of the most interesting places in today,” Dr. Klaus the world Schroeder, visiting Fulbright scho­ lar from Berlin said Thursday. .Soviet Zone border. West Berliners prohibited from leaving the city except with permission to travel. “ In 1948 Russia tried to incorpo­ rate Berlin entirely within the Sov­ iet Zone by the blockade,” he said. for the Allied “ If Speaking prior to the organiza- j airlift, Berlin would be in Russian lion of the new Geography Club, hands today. West Berliners are ; outlined the major problems facing ; very, very grateful for the Ameri- it hadn't been iza- Hard work by B e rlin ’s residents and the generous help of Am erica and the Federation of G e rm a n y I (the Bonn government) are giving Berlin tine assistance it needs to­ day, Dr. Schroeder explained. The Ford Foundation's grant of two mil- “ In the eight weeks following the war, 75 per cent of Berlin's indus- lion dollars enabled the Free Uni- j versify to be built, for example. Jim _ indus- symbolizes free Berlin today, to Soviet territory,” D r Schroeder j lie said that the Free U niversity! said. "O f the four major tries in Berlin before the war, only j Dr> Schroeder moved from the electrical engineering has recover- soviet Zone of the city to West ed. Only new industry can give Berlin in 1948. Several of his rela- jobs to the hundreds of thousands j tives stilj )ive in the Soviet Zone. of people out of work. A special j He will return to Berlin and the problem is finding employment for the many government workers left jobless when Berlin ceased to be . Officers elected for the Geogra­ phy Club were Bill Lichty, pres- A lecturer in the government de-! ident; Magne Ammundson, vice partment of the Free University of president; and Joan Moore, sec- West Berlin, Dr. Schroeder is visit- j retary. Jan e Heber, R a y Harding, ing this country to study the econo- and Bob Hall were appointed as a Monthly mic and cultural aspects of the low- j publicity committee. er Rio Grande valley. He is doing meetings are planned, and club research work al the U niversity li­ membership to anyone is open brary before traveling to the val­ interested in geography. ley. Free U niversity in May, jerrnan> s capi a . B ack in .191?., M r. Bible, at 22. became football coach of Missis- Sippi College—mostly on the en-' dominated by sophomore the eight harriers are couragement of his parson. Dana Five of Bib le was good at quoting Scrip- sophomores, in varsity ture, conducting chapel, and teach- competition for the first time. W a l­ ing Latin. Texas will field a young team running faces, tor McNew, Bob Crawford, The qualifications were not much Holt, Keith Pitner, and Paul Wal- for football, but he was willing to lace are first year men. Others learn. He gained knowledge from making the trip will be Hulen Hale, such scholars of the game as Mich- the only senior on the squad, igan's late Fielding Yost and Chi- George Foerster, and Bob Hanson, Ume lr U ls )as, Satllrday, M c. eago’n Amos Alonzo Slagg. . knowledge began paying off *,.ew turned in the top performance covering the three-mile distance in 16:50. Second was Pitner and Crawford. Other finishers in order were Hanson, Hale, Holt, Wallace, and Foerster. when M r. Bible moved to Louisiana State University in October, 3916. Of the six games remaining on L S U 's schedule, the team won five. Texas’ grid fortunes were dismal when Mr. Bible accepted a then- undeard-of 515.OOO a year contract in 1937. In tw o ‘previous seasons, Texas had finished in the eonfer- Friday's meet w ill be the first for the Texas squad. $17,500 Eastern O p e n Ends 55 G o lf Season DANA X. BIBLE S W C G rid A tte n d a n c e Passes 54 S ta n d a rd B v th e A s s o c ia te d P re s s Southwest Conference football at­ tendance is up better than 20 per cent with every school showing a gain except Southern Methodist, which hasn't yet had a home game. A survey' after three weeks of »eliar. play shows that 90,000 more per-1 Afterwards, things began to look sons have paid their way into the brighter. Today, M r. Bible can stadia than for the same period P ° int with pride to tile three South- last season. The average per game west Conference championships his won before his retirement bas been 30,750. Last year it was 25,363. as head coach in 1947. I AIKTIkl'C CIIPFP ^FPVIPF M U J I I IT J JU ! L I I J U I t 4 I — 10 Convenient Stations — I 3200 Guadalupe 2400 East Ave. I ' I R 5101 No. Lamar Blvd. 409 East Seventh 541 I Burnet Road 2004 So. Lamar Blvd. I 101 So. Congress 311 So. Lamar Blvd. 1135 Airport Blvd. 2314 East Seventh f s ' J c ^ ^ x J . ^ la v e . f Reg. 24 9/10 S a v e ! Ii I I I Special! Washing & Greasing 79e I I Save 5e on A LL Major Brands Oil ^ Ethyl 25 9/10 || / I “ Over two and one-half million refugees from the Soviet zone have poured into West Berlin since 1948.” he said. " I t is not at all unusual for a thousand refugees to come over the border in one day. Most of them have to be flown to West Germ any since B e r­ lin has neither employment for nor ^ e money to feed them B A L T IM O R E '.P Travelers of; professional golf’s tournament tra il' were shooting for the season's last 0 Eastern Thursday Open got at Mt. Pleasant D r. Schroeder told of many prob- as the I lems involved in living in Berlin under- i today. Although West Berliners may enter the eastern sector, he said, they have to go mostly on The field of 127 was lined up in ! foot or by subway. People driving e 72-hole medal event, final date I over the border face the prospect ( I a 1955 calendar of 43 toum a-’ of having their cars confiscated ents regulated by the Profes- by "people’s police.” And ; since the city limits also form the onal Golfers’ Association. the lf It Makes A Noise Record It! w ith the Pentro n C lip p er ta p e recorder Parties— Recitals— Speeches ★ easiest to operate ★ true fidelity ★ plays in any position S P E C IA L $99.50 regularly $129.50 *004 OUAOAi mtTMOMC (-IMI LOOK AT A L L THE C H E C K E R E D F L A G S CH EV RO LET 'S COLLECTED! Ortva wfTh cor* . . . EYfRTWHHfl y Of four directors of privately- owned women's dorms interview­ ed, one said that the matter would ; have to be decided by the d o'rubs board of directors; one said that her dorm will aid in integration in any way that it can because of its church affiliation; a third said that her dorm would accept Negro stu­ dents; a ihat her dorm would not accept Negroes because of a policy set bv its sponsoring group. fourth Of 68 directors of men's room­ ing houses, one said that his house application would from a Negro student; eight re­ mained undecided. consider an Of two directors of women's interviewed, one rooming houses the house would now con­ said sider an application from Negro student. The balance of the numbers in each set of answers were negative. BOARD Of directors of sixteen men’s boarding houses interv iewed, none said That they would accept Negro boarders, but one said that he was undecided. Of 24 directors of women’s boarding houses who were Inter­ viewed, one said that a Negro boarder would be accepted and six remained undecided. CO-OPS Of six co-ops interviewed, five said they would consider Negro 1 students on the same basis that they consider white students. A T H L E T IC In regard to Intramural nthle- | tics. directors of the programs for j men and women said that no re­ strictions other than those place I on white students w ill he required I of Negro students for participa­ tion. A H i ”>d W ash ed , Vacuu ti Cleaned C a r W ith Tire! Steam Cleaned A L L IN 7 M IN U T E S AT JOE'S QUICK CAR WASH 12th & San Ja c in to Ta«aco C o u rte jy C a rd i Honored . « > » x A PM DINE IN AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT . . . ' I • ■ . Just a few blocks , . . 'ri i;j- ■ ■ i t off Campus at EL T O R O — FINE M EXICA N FOOD— 1601 Guadalupe 8-4321 ■I SPEEDWAY R A D IO & T ELEVISIO N SA LES SER V IC E Ph . 7-3846 1010 Spe e dw ay J u st Sou th ut G re go ry G y n amani m s m w h m m h b h m D A Y T O N A BEACH, F U L F A Y IT T IV IIL I, N C. C O L U M B IA , S.C. Y O U N G S T O W N , O H IO ATLANTA, G E O R G IA JERSEY CITY, N J. C H IC A G O , ILLIN O IS PITTSBURGH, PA. TORONTO, C A N A D A BELMAR, N J. CEDAR RAPIDS, IO W A BALTIMORE, M D. W IN ST O N -SA LE M , N C. FLOYD, V A . G R A N D FORKS, N O. M IN O T , N.D. LYNCHBURG, V A . CANFIELD, O. M ILW AU KEE, W IS. C IN C IN N A T I, O. PLAT ROCK, M IC H . JEFFERSONVILLE, IN D . D ARLIN GTO N , S.C, H A M M O N D , IN D . DETROIT, M IC H . The safer car win* . and Chevrolet’s the w inning car G reat F eatures b a c k u p C h evrolet Perform ance: A nti-D u * Braking S to r in g —Out­ rigger Bear Spring*—Body by Fisher—12-Volt Electrical System —N ine Engine-Dr ive Choices. Every checkered flog signets o Chevret! victory in officio! 1955 stock cor competition—not only ogoinst its own field but ogoinst mony Americon and foreign high priced cars, tool Let*! translate these victories into your kind of driving. Y ou ’ve got to have faster acceleration to win on the tracks. And that means safer passing on the highw ays. Y ou ’ve got to have better springing and suspension, bor you: safer and hap­ pier motoring. Y ou’ve got to have big, fast-acting brakes and easy, ac­ curate steering. More things that make your driving safer! Com e rn and drive a Chevrolet yourself. N O W S THE TIME TO BUYl L O W PRICES—BtG DEALS! ENJOY A NEW CHEVROLET See Your Chevrolet Dealer Halftime Show Planned by Band (Continued from Page I ) conclude the show. In its pre-game performance, the band w ill pay respects to the oil industry in a special formation with the Texas Stars, led by co­ captains B e v e rly Birkel and M ar­ tha Roundtree. r - The many new aspects of this left year's Longhorn Band have unchanged the list of traditions that have developed since the hand was organized in 1900 by D r. E . P. Schoch, professor of chemical en­ gineering. lettering awards and senior rings, and song, "W e 're a Grand Old Band freshmen, including Gang. Director Di Nino, must go through an initiation period that will in­ clude decorating the chartered buses that will take the band to Dallas early Saturday morning. Approximately half of the HO men who w ill march in the Cotton Bowl show are freshmen. Serving as drum m ajor for the third year is Ja c k Gilbert, sopho­ more radio-television major. M a ­ jorettes are M argie Smith and Charlotte M abry with Libby Mul- lenix as featured twirler. B ill Whetted, president, beads the band council composed of John Sanders, Je r r y Wise, Byron Lind­ sey, and David W alter, This year, for the first time, all junior and senior bandsmen will lie presented tuition scholarships each semester. The scholarship program, coupled with new day­ time practice hours, is expected to recruit many new members. “ But actually, we're just getting started,” M r. DI Nino said. “ W e l l have lots to do yet.” SPO R T S N O T IC E R n I r I <■ I f o r j t o i l e t h n l l l h * I t n u r n H m r u t w i l l h * d u e T h u r s d a y , ( t r i o - t h * ; b r r 13, u t I* r o n m W o m e n ’s G y m s c h e d u l e d T u e s d a y ut J p rn. t h * I u t u t iii it r n I O f f i c e i n < u p t u r n ' * m o o tin g r n i s e d iii j IS. A ll int ram u ra l m a n a p * ™ a r * rcinlnd- *d to t u r n iii m e m b e rs h ip lis t* , i A rn ** t i iin of touch fo o tb a ll c a p ta in * n i l l Ii* held M o n d a y , ( l r t o l i * r IU, at 6 p. m. I n W n n r n ' i G y m 5, Tram c o a c h * * a r* t * n n i * s i n g l e s w i l l m e e t M o n d a y at 5 p .m . in A V o m * n ' « G y m Ii. In v ite d . t Br i t a i n * o f CORNEAL IN TA C T LEN! • V t Si i e of a Dime! • C on be w orn na complete c o m fo rt 8 to 10 h o u r* ) TEX A S STATE OPTICAL H I N H MAN AUTO WASH 221 So. Lamar A A u ttie 'i largest end best equipped Auto W e th A Your C A R W A S H E D in 5 M inute! imide end out t Sr Ret#*— $1.50— Se*#— Use our C er W e ili Boot— § w aihei $5,50 FREE INSTALLATION MUFFLERS (Stock or H ollyw ood) DUAL EXHAUST SYSTEMS FOR ALL MAKES OF V 8 CARS CENTRAL AUTO PARTS PH*** I DOI S i l t I. M $♦ . , . anti you’ll treasure? \ Atli*'tin forever. Selected bv four generations of brides, and now offering; ex­ citing new fashions in solitaires, full-jewelled rings, ami interlocking bridal pair*. Orange Blossom as­ sures you the finest to mark your romance. Conven­ J ient credit. y C H O O S E F R O M N A T IO N A L L Y A D V : c VARSITY STORE m b GUADALUPE Any change in the present policy would come from the University itself, they said. The commission recommended further study by the proposed Hu- Aboluiions By Alra “ A book of verse* 'neath the bough, " A jug of wine, a loaf of b'ead, and thou "Beside me on a blanket Cleaned at San Jacinto Laund-y Sc Dry Cleanest 5 <•« we're pro d of *'-e 6 • et ■ * 1 *r prom ts* i a t - p ' j y la !aundaring and dry c a s i n g ye..* c • as, A -d w ere aq - !y pr~..d e f r ,r a»p«r'«ncad ab bf in d i n i n g t ole o ffe r es !y sd ad •,e r i a - o . - d * • room . . . •* apartment, or Fon-e. B anket*, d ip covert, d ra p e ' es, bedspread* Jacinto entre* *bat wa e m p ’ vy 'n 'a nder'ng A n d q -'*, before you tale that new mater a H in d e r or d 'g c'ean It f'rst to be lure. - *9 recede Ae Hire San d r-y c *af 'I ye .' c'oAe*. rd?' - a*er, 'et ut to FO R TH AT EXTRA SER V IC E SAN JACINTO LAUNDRY 600 San Jacinto Phone 2-3166 G ive Joy a jingle . . . . at 2-2473 CLASSIFIED KATES F O R Q U IC K A C T IO N O N D A IL Y T E X A N C L A S S IF IE D A D S CLASSIFIED D EAD LINES 20 words o r less Additional words I day ...................... ............S .9 5 ...,........... . J .02 Each additional day ....... $ 85...................$ .01 Classified Display .......... $1.35 per column inch In the e v e n t of errors made in an advertise­ ment, immediate notice must be given, as the publishers are responsible for only one incor­ rect insertion. Tuesday Texan .................... Monday, 4 p.m. Wednesday Texan ................. Tuesday, 4 p.m. Thursday Texan ............... Wednesday, 4 p.m. Frid ay Texan .................... Thursday, 4 p.m. Sunday Texan ........................... Friday, 4 p m. For Rent F O R R U N T : T elevisio n f b i Si w rit* !* $5, adtli r* Btl fan* Si 57. calculato r* Vt, phyiiogri recorders ST 50 Monthly tape B erg m an *, 2234 Guadalupe, 6-2 i. type- fooler* ph* $5. rate*, S I N G L E R O O M for gentleman to r or graduate student B r ive separate *ntranee. $23. 3t*l VV* Ph on e 2-87It) , bath. 2t)t h. L O V F L Y RO O M In A ld rid ge Place. P riv a te bath. N ear U n iv ersity . Id e al for graduate student. 6X454 In p rivate horn* work. 2 743 J Lost and Found Board Special Service* cooked M F A US F O R men F o r excellent he food t r y M r* W h it!* . Hot roll* and pl** a appel* Phone 6-8862 B a m * *, Help W a n te d Stu d en t e\p< W A N T E D set for typesettin g hand - set P re fe r undercfas.sni. ■rlenoed In afternoon Phone in. A R N O L D S Ii iupc. A il I student tradi ' Y R S lop. 2302 Guada- * $1 OO A p p recia te I N K S T o Im Hon Ais mn lu r* - M A K IN G end alter*- da • r B ig h t rn Phone 6 .3487 IF R R O D fox * YUI I IS Wmt a S I alter Mi H I VI* --making- W edd in g*. a sLK'clalty. M n , *i M ,* t Smit on corn er hone 2-5&T4. G R A D U A T E P H A R M A C IS T i to supervise production in and pharm aceuticals. Bart-tn M a rtin and Sons. 8-8713, B O D Y due ii C. J. ,p fr. land re­ gaining, m it ruction R e ­ weeks mem ber- i.J M u rd o cks B a rb e ll 9S34. W I L L T H E person who left car k*^* at reg istratio n picas* call for them at Jo u rn a lis m B u ild in g 107." Typing For Sale T H E S I S T Y P F D P a ts y D arb y, Bn*-A Fast 30th. 7-5911 rocker, D R E S S E R B A S E , rocker tw o chairs booki cabinet, re frig e ra to r and so ti Antonio H ig h w a y . Ph on e 8 I plat form desk. ii. T H E M E S . Sp ellin g T H E S KS, D I and gram m a 2 6»tf lets than 3 F O R E IG N M A K E sports car • roll** red*. Ja g u a r, MYJ, o r Awstin-Hea 7 -510.1, rice one S ' GI EQUITY. B a rg a in buy: Ideal for student interested in ow ning a house T w o bedrooms, .North Augen, 51,A*) equity. $54 per month. G all 6-4398, (.arner-Yiuodnight-Bower*, realtors. P K R F F T T B u r s Cute, pla> f ut Ria tm se kittens Reasonable H22 C o r o n a Dr is*. 53 4056 weekends and evenings. Nurseries & Kindergartens ISO* E N F IE L D . 7-9.333, 6-2090. Nursery —K in d e rgartefi—ikt Grade. M A N U S C R IP T S , T H F S B K dll lions. Experienced Reasonable, trie ty p e w rite r 8-8113. D I S S F R T A T IQ N 3, these* (aym b o isi M rs. R itch ie bor timid, 2-4945. t r< talk ugh- E X B F R T F I.F U T R O M A T C * visions. Reasonable. VA tv ping lik in g Re diS- ta m e 8 8U3, Special Services K l DF: S B CCI A L bus lo ga Ja-av* Co-Op 7 a rn. I, Co-Op 84 40 round trip at W O U L D L I K E to do students isupdtv in mv home V’ery reasonable, fcx*. ‘ pericnced. 2410 Chicon. 7-iTIA O C T O B E R S Su p er delu Phone 2-‘3334 Lam er. >! T A L Steam bath* f t . -age $3. M urdock a. v ti r * r k w » y . 12th a t I M O D I J_S W A N T E D W e need t id* s to register with i .... ii pay for part-time la sh mn shows, television, floor modeling. w o ik c * in Ce rid At S T IN 4 F I R S T A N D O N L Y L IC K .N S L D M O D E L S A G E N C Y SOC! F T Y O F C H A R M Su ite B K Tel, 2 9683 us mess Aread* Commode2 r« P e rr y I l a ’ el Bldg. I to 7 p m. weekdays — 9 to 4 S a t Patron^* Texan Advertisers The Texan’s D e b a te o f the W e e k 'H'l r o u n d - U P Are Student Political Parties Needed? Yes Bv DOYLE HARVILL Of The Texan Staff A R E UNIVERSITY STUDENT political parties necessary? F irst, let’s say th a t alm ost an y th in g on th e campus, on the student level, can be elim inated, except the students th em ­ selves. Indeed, th e A cres would be a p retty d reary place w ithout the students. - O urs is a world of politics, regardless of how we like to look a t it. In o rd er for a student to live a realistic life w hen he leaves Austin, he will have to play some knowledge of th e intricacies of politics. T he best positions in the world today *----- are filled by the people who know someone on the inside. U n i v e r s i t y l o w n STU D EN T PAR TIES, in conjunc­ .student g o vernm e nt a t tion with the U niversity, a c t as an ex p e ri­ m e n t station for future le ad e rs of our com m unities the sla te and nation. throughout Big D H o sts U T's Annua! Cain-raising - No B y C A R O L S I T H E R L A N D O f T h e T e x a n S t a f f W ITH OCTOBER ELECTIO NS coming up—w ith the ro u n d ­ up mess of last spring and this sum m er— with cam pus political parties in general, we ask ourselves: A re cam pus political p arties necessary? If it is necessary for politically interested students to band into a group, then political parties are necessary. If a potential candidate definitely needs a group to help support and cam paign for him, then a cam pus political p arty is well called for. If it is necessary to stim ulate politics on the cam pus, and this is one of the political p a rty ’s fundam ental E x c e r p t s jobs, then we do need cam pus political parties. N o . 2 Friday. O c to b e r 7, 1955 THE DAILY TEXAN P ag e 4 The Till T r a g e d y Blanket Accusation H as Created Hatred THE TRIAL OF EMMETT TILL, 14-year-old Chi­ cago Negro who w as murdered in the Mississippi delta last month, has bern exploited to the point of satura­ tion. T ie case w as indeed tragic. E v ery conceivable effort should have been made to convict the tw o alleged killers. The prosecution, plagued by inadequate funds and a small investigative staff, w as deplorably w eak. The most regrettable and, u n fo rtu n ately , lasting aspect of the whole case, how ever, w as the blan k et accusation made by N o rth ern ers and pressure groups of all decent Mississippians. F or guilt, a fte r a1), is of an individual—not a collective—quantity. Hodding Carter, the liberal G reenville (Miss.) ed ito r accepted by many as spokesman fo r th e so-called N ew South, editorialized W ednesday: « Last week fo u r young M emphis N egroes ravished a white woman. O rdinarily we should not speak on such an unspeakable outrage. B ut th e thing th at sets this beastly crime ap art is th a t th e y attem pted to justify themselves by referring to th e Em m ett Till murder case. “Since the N A ACP was so re a d y to blame all of Mississippi and all w hite M ississippians w ith the slaying of the Chicago Negro who w as im polite to a Money, the NA ACP is Miss., white woman, we wonder if ready to take the blame for inciting these four young Negroes to commit rape0 “It is certainly as logical. Tile atm osphere of h atre d created by the NAACP against w h ite people could v ery well have precipitated this crime in Memphis. And th e logic that the young crim inals used, in taking ‘revenge’ on an innocent person just because ^he happened to be white and Southern, goes rig h t along with th a t of the NAACP. • ' A Cordial Welcome H urrah f o r p o s i ti v e s c i e n c e ’ L o n g l i t e exact d em o n -ration ' —Walt Whitman WE WELCOME to our campus tho teachers and practitioners of science, here th is w eek for a w ork conference on the advancement of scientific teaching. Today, the number of bachelors of science who w an t to teach in high schools falls sh arp ly each year. Those who get through the four-vear course find th at in d u s­ trial or governmental grants to continue deeper into science lead them to horizons far beyond hum drum classrooms. B y WIT.H F M O R R I S T<»xan Editor IRV EN DEVORE, an an ­ thropologist who debates, digs uranium , runs for office, and reads Playboy, offers a some­ w hat new approach to aca­ demic living. is culture, Man, he says, inherently a nocturnal anim al, The a g g re g a te p re ssu re s of however, coerce him into a predom inantly d ay tim e existence. F ro m childhood the time he leaves for col­ until lege he less responds m ore or to these pressures, unconsciously In his college environm ent cul­ tu ra l restrictions slightly dissolve. to m a n P rogressively he re v e rts finds himself the nocturne. H e spending m a n y of his afternoons sleeping; his active, cre ativ e hours a r e late a t night and ea rly in the morning. it Comes graduation, and with an intrusion of the self-same cul­ tu ra l dem an d s. The r e m a in d e r of his life, with occasional in terru p­ tions, is g e a r e d to daylight. Anthropology m a y find no sub­ stance in the thing, but it sounds reason ably valid at 3 in the m o rn ­ ing. ★ ED D IE , o ur p e r a m b u la tin g room ­ fre s h m a n days, w rites m a te of from M u n ic h : is far, se em is beautiful, "T h e country the people friendly, the girls tall, the look b ee r strong. At sunset you e a s t and then think of Moscow, you look west an d think of Austin, f a r aw ay. an d both Moscow and closer, some of the little inconsequentials you w orried y o u r d a m n silly head over when you w e re a c a m p u s big wheel m a k e your conscience prick with a kind of internal laugh­ ter. That s when you feel you've got a pretty good s ta r t on grow ­ ing up." though, ★ This is the challenge facing th e teach ers in A ustin W h en men with pills political this week. To many, the wonder of science, so conspicuously absent in the mind of one of th e a rts , finds em bodi­ ment in the Experimental Science Building, th a t m ag ­ nificent, m ysterious structure a t th e northeast c o m e r of the campus. And the lights th a t burn within th e building into the endless night som ehow represent th e “immense spirit of loneliness” w hich Robert Oppen- heimer calls the supreme requisite of young scientists. Our hope is th a t, here on the cam pus and elsewhere, the men of science and the men of th e arts will alw ays remember that only unselfish co-operation will serve the University, the nation, and th e world best. The Democratic Cosmos FROM THE PEN of a recent A m erican novelist: " The place was a dem ocratic cosm os—seething w ith political in terests: national, regional, collegiate. “The campus had its candidates, its m anagers, its bosses, its machines, as had th e State. A y oungster developed in college the political cra ft he was la te r to exert in P a rty a ffa irs .. . . B y his junior year, if he was successful, a boy had a political m anager, w ho engineered his cam pus am bitions; he moved with c ir­ cumspection from meeting to m eeting, and spoke w ith a trace of pomp nicely weighed w ith cordiality: “ ‘Hello, men. How' are y o u ?’ “The vast cam paign of the world! stretched out in limitless w onder, hut few w ere seduced aw ay from the fortress of the State, few ev er heard the d ista n t A nd th e way to g lo ry — reverberations of an idea the way to all power, highness, an d distinction w h a t­ ever—was thro u g h the law, a strin g tie, and a h at. Hence politics, law schools, d eb atin g societies, and speechmaking. And the applauds of listening sen ates to command. •• w o u l d d o p e u u IX'hen politics absorbs the h t e l o n g I day, to l i k e Canopus, think about the star So far, so tar away. — O liver W e n d e ll Holm es F or a m o d e ra te facsimile of stu ­ dent politics on the T exas ca m pus, get two television sets. Turn one to Channel 3, the other to C h a n ­ nel 7. Then go in the next room and turn on the v ac u u m cleaner. TE N MOST HATED, a once well­ fra te r n ity of ca m p u s vil­ is being known lains and dem agogue*, revived by The Texan. T im e once w as the organization w a s elite a m o n g the c a m p u s' loath­ ed gentry. A new’ pledge w as a tv proved each month, tapped with a blackjack, and sworn to a highly secret creed. The fra te r n a l rejuvenation m ust s ta rt som ew here. The editor pnd. a Since "w hite e le p h a n t," the boy’s clothesline b#- c a m e th* easiest thing to do w a s to follow the old rule of " c o v e r u p ," and that and grounds people have planted wis­ te ria by each pipe. the building is why You would n eve r know that th* beautification of W aller Creek wa* a project begun by n a tu re lovers who w anted to clean up and not cover up. But once the motion had been the seconded and p arse d , im prove­ U niversity definition of m en t as regulation and control set in. We got retaining walls, d am s, str a ig h te r channels, new bridges, and w ider streets. And we also got that ungodly clothesline, and all in the n a m e of beautification. W ilso n A d vise s Tax Increases In N e a r Future ll V continue our series o f ex­ ll ’ ti son's cerpts from President M 'inday speech in Dallas. is Selective adm issions m a y s o h e the problem of nu m be rs for one it will not work institution, but for all institutions unless ed u c a­ to be d r a s ­ tional opportunity tically cut down. L im iting enroll­ increases m ent E ven the though facilities a t institutions a re not m a n y T exas fully utilized as they a r e at the U n iv ersity of Texas, sn will be. What then? in one p r e s s u r e the physical elsewhere. institution they if to p re p a re AS YOU can see, the question of handling increased n u m b e rs is not a n e a sy one. Even the state its physical facilities for doubled higher education for doubled student enrollments, there the problem of recruiting is still c a p a b le teachers. To use my own Institution a s an exam ple again. we a r e a lre ad y up against the difficulty of finding qualified sci­ entists and engineers to handle these b u m p e r a r e a s We w ant the sa m e kinds of that business experienced and they can and do outbid us n e a rly every time. industry want, but registration s —-rn talent In brief, it looks as if we shall have to m a k e some h ard decisions about who should go to college if we a r e at all concerned about how well they will be ta ugh t a fte r they get there. We cannot w ait until I960. *65, o r ’70 to m a k e up o u r minds. Potential college students of these y e a rs a r e a l re a d y in o ur g ra d e schools. F u rth e rm o re , sev­ e ral y e a rs m ust elapse between the blueprint stage and the actual completion of buildings. it just that relief this point . . . It probably occ u rs to you at students ought to h e a r a higher proportion of the cost of their education. Tui­ tion ch a rg e s in our state-supported colleges and universities a r e am ong the lowest to be found anyw h ere In the United States. Yet we ca n ­ not expect v ery m u ch in this direction without denying large n u m b e rs of boy* and girls of high ability but limited m e an s the op­ portunity for a college education. Moreover, m a n y of our privately supported institutions a r e alre ad y c h a rgin g all the traffic will hear, and I know* of no college or uni­ versity w orth its salt which does not heavily subsidize the cost of the individual stu d e n t’s formal in­ struction. IN T H E final analysis, if we a r e not to retro g ress, there is no escaping the fact that higher ed­ ucation in T exas is going to have to receive a g rea t deal m ore fi­ nancial support in the future than it h as the past. in i To he concluded T uesday) T h e D aily T e x a n T h e editorial view s of T h e P a tly T e x a n are those o f the newspaper , and not n ecessa rily of the U n iversity ad m in istr ation ____ T h e D fly Texan, stu d en t n ew spap er o f T h e U n iversity o f Texas, ^ p u b l i s h e d , p eriod s, S ep tem b er „ . In Austin d ally excep t Saturday, Monday, and holiday th r o u g h May, by T e x a s S tu d en t P u b lica tio n s, Inc N ew s co n trib u tio n s w ill be accep ted by telep h o n e (2-2473) or at fhe ed ito ria l In q u iries co n cern in g d eliv ery o ffices, .IB lOft. or th e new* lab oratory J B 102 sh ou ld he m ade in J B 107 and H dsertising JB 111 <2-2750). Entered as second cla ss m atter October 18 1913 a t the P ost O ffice at A ustin. Texas, under the act of M arch 3. 1879 A S S O C I A T E D P R E S S VV I KF. S E R V I C E T h * A ssociated P r o n Ss e x c lu siv e ly en titled to th e use for rep u b lica tio n o f in th is n ew s­ local Item s o f sp o n ta n eo u s o rig in p ublished herein . R ig h ts o f all new* d isp a tch es cred ited t o paper and all p u b lication of all o th er m a tter h erein a lso reserved. it or not o th e rw ise .[ e d ite d Represen te d for national a d v ertsiln g by National Ad vertising Service. Ina. Co llege P ub lishers R ep resen ta tive 120 Madison Ave N e w York, N, Y, Chicago Boston I,o* Angele San F ran cisco A s s o c i a t e d C o l l e g i a t e T r e s s A l l - A m e r i c a n MEMBER SI HSC Kl PT ION HATEM Minimum Subscription — Three Month*) Delivered In Austin Mailed Mailed out of town in Austin . % 75 m onth ............. SI OO m onth A .75 m onth I* FRM A N K NT ST A I F ................................................................... >1. Editor ............................................................................................ IV H U F MORRIS Managing Editor OOI LOEN Neffs E d ito r .......................................................................................... C arl B u r g in Editorial A ssistants ............... Carol Querolo, Carol Sutherland .................................. F re d K asson, P a t P urcell Assistant News E d itors Sports E ditor ......................................................................................... lohn K nagg s Women » Editor ............................................................................... B a rb a r a Ray A m usem ents Editor ................................................. P ic tu re E d i t o r ............................................................. F e a tu re F.ditor ................................................................................. D anee Miller E xch a n g e Editor ............................................................................. Robb Burlap* Wire Editor ..................................................................... Arnold R osen/w eig Roily W ester John Rogers STA FF FOR THIS ISSI E Night Editor ........................................................................... N A M \ MCMEANS Assistant Night Editor ......................................................... MARTIE MUGNO A ssistants .................. B a rb a ra F r a n k e d D e r m Evans, Michael B ru n n er C o p y rea d ers . . . . . . W. B. Wallace J r ., J. C. Goulden, J im m ie McKinley Night R e porters . . . . G. Z, Hollingsworth, Byron Lindsey, Pat Purcell, Carl B urgen, John R ogers Night Sports E ditor ................................... O. L Moore A ssistants .................................. Bocca O rc h ard , G reg Olds, John Knaggs, Eddie Hughes, Nick Johnson Night A m u se m en ts Editor ................ ...................................... Phillip Hall A ssistants ................................................................... P a t Gordon, Roily Wester C larence Callaw ay Night Wire Editor ................................... Night Society E ditor .............................................................. Shirley Insall Assistant ................................................. Barbara Ray S tudent p arties a re the only way to m a s s a group of votes large enough to m a k e the ballot worth the voters. W hat considering by would you do as a voter, if you had to go through lists of n a m e s e ve ry to m a r k a ballot? that you w an te d tim e Political p a r tie s weed out the unqualified and substitute som e of the best m in ds of the U niversity studen t body as candidates. S TU D E N T PA R T IE S se rv e as a s tim u la n t for some students who, otherw ise, would neve r see the U n iversity as it really i s —a g r e a t provin g ground for future le ade rs. R ecent p a r ty m a n e u v e rs on the ca m p u s, ac com p anie d by ir re g u la r ­ ities and p ress sta te m en ts , should have caused students to stand back and evaluate. A ccusations and " q u o te s " in the D aily T exan the past w eek a r e saying th a t the Student P a r t y and n e w I y "e s ta b lis h e d " U n iversity P a r t y have form ed a coalition to tie up the Uni­ the election for v ersity P a r t y 's candid ate for p re s­ ident of the S tud ents’ Association. I F THIS IS T RU E , m ore power to the student politicians who have the power of a g re e ­ recognized m e n ts and num bers. A m eric an poli­ ticians since the birth of our nation h a v e been w orking und er the table to best the opposite party’ at the polls. The only difference in a g r e e ­ the d a y s of m e n ts today and W ashington and Jefferson the is n a m e applied. in If is going the U niversity to allow student g o v ern m e n t to func­ tion, we h a v e to h av e political p a r tie s to review the m e rits of the individuals seeking office, and su p­ port lite r a ­ th e m with speeches, ture. and propaganda. POLITICS, as we see it today, is h e re to sta y : and when the right of o rganizing into groups to gain sta m p e d p r e d e te r m in e d goals from the the U niversity ca m p u s, s tud e nts will cease to function as the people hut as nim ble fingers of men in hig her positions. robots u n d e r is BUT. CANNOT a political p a rty be elim inated and .students still be interested in ca m p u s activities, in running for ca m p u s o f f i c e s , and in cam paigning and c a n d id a te s 0 supporting Yet little is im portant when the r e a l issue arise s This issue is one student, of obligation. Should a sa y running for president or Texan editor, be nom inated by a political p as ty ? SHOULD, F O R /IN S T A N C E , the president, of the student Iwxly be obligated to a political p a r ty ? After all. this is a possibility. is bound Or. take the Daily T ex a n editor. Should a ca m p u s n ew spa per policy be confined bec ause the editor feels he to the principles of his political p a r ty ? He just might, considering they got him elected, Or. the Chief Justice. I m p a r tia l­ thinking a r e ity and qualifications for Chief Ju stice or any officer. However, if he is an endorsed m e m b e r of a political p a rty and a suit concerning the c a m p u s's political p arties ca m e up, tight he m ight be put squeeze. intelligent into a LOOKING AT T H E situation Idealistically, it would be a g a inst "e thic al s ta n d a r d s " for the candi­ date to be influenced by a sm all group of " p a r t y d ire c to rs," Yet, realistically, this Is possible Another feature in political p a r ­ ties on the c a m p u s any issue can lose its basic over-all purpose in the m ulti-em phasis on insignificant but stressed m a tte rs . The elected officers should feel com pletely free to stand back and observe the im partially. The q u es­ U niversity tion would be, th erefore: Could they if elected by a student p a rty ? THIS IS NOT to say we should abolish c a m p u s political parties. C andidates for vice-president, sec­ reta ry . head ch e erle ade r, a s s e m ­ blymen, justices should have the help of a political party du rin g the c a m pa ign if they need it. as sociate and But it is to say that cand idates should not he hound to a political party. T h erefore, is one actually needed? S c a n n i n g t h e P u n d i t s 2 _________________________ Nuclear Weapons Out-pace Strategy ( T o d a y tie present excerpts from “ Strategy Hits a D ead E n d ’’ by Bernard Brodie part o f a three- article series entitled “ H o w War Became A b turd" in the latest issue o f H arper’s Magazine B d.) is On* of the com m on est slogan* the one literatu re in stra te g ic inherited from Jomini, th at " m e t h ­ ods change hut principles a r e un­ c h a n g in g ." Until y e s te r d a y that thesis had m uch to justify it, since m ethods changed on the whole not too ab ru p tly and alw ay s within definite the most limits. Among im p o rta n t limits was the fact th a t the costs of a w ar, even a lost one. . w ere somehow su p po rtable E v en the two world w a rs did not go beyond the limit, despite their horrend ous magnitude. . . lie could, T h e r e therefore, a re a so n a b le choice between w ar and peace. T h e re could also Ik* a r e a ­ sonable choice am ong method* of fighting a w ar, or " s t r a t e g i e s . ’’ H ow ever u n restric ted they w ere in­ tended to he, w ars w ere inevitably lim ited by the limiting capabilities ( a s we now see it) of ea c h Iielhg- e re n t for heaping destruction on th e o th e r . . . . . T H E FIR ST d ec ad e of the ato m ic age has seen the collapse of the A m eric an monopoly, of the m y th of i n e v i t a b l e sc arcity , and of rea so n a b le hopes for international atom ic d is a rm a m e n t -Since we living with the fission h a v e l>een type of atom ic bomb for a decade, it might a p p e a r to so m e that tile fusion type introduce* nothing es­ sentially new other than a g r e a te r econom y of force. T hat, unfortu­ nately, is not the case. . Among that thereupon b ec am e obsolete were most of those concerning the selec­ tion of stra te g ic ta rg e ts Since a th e rm o n u c le a r bomb could not he used on an industrial c o n c e n tra ­ tion in or n e a r a city without destroying that city and since one s u c h b o m b will effectively elim i­ industry associated nate all there is not m uch with that city point industries in what order. should the it or not W hether we th e rm o n u c le a r bomb used s tr a t e ­ gically im * "c ity b u s te r.” tie hit or like in asking which the questions the . . . . in . developm ents defense In . Most of what I have so far said implies the judgm ent that im ­ the prospects for significant against of p ro v em e n t the next s tra te g ic bombing dec ade or so a re wit bright . . . First, since the coming of the A- bom b the strateg ic bombing offense have out­ paced to a fantastic degree those of the defense and this m ovem ent has by no m e ans run its c o u r s e . Second, the growth of national nu­ c lea r stockpiles is irre p ressib le . . . Finally, that there a r e enorm ou s im pedim ents - psychological, political, economic and let us adm it, doctrinal to the adoption of really drastic m e a su re s for defense. T H E R E sim plicity about an u n re stric te d nuclear w ar that alm o st enables it to Ik * s u m ­ in one short sta te m e n t; m ed up lie quick on the d ra w and the trig­ ger squeeze, and aim for the heart. One then has to a d d : but even if you shoot first, you will probably die too! let us note the fact sta rk is a In a world still u n p rep a re d to relinquish the use of m ilitary pow­ er, we m u st learn to effect that use through methods thai at e so m e­ thing oth e r than self-dexlroyfng . . . What w e now m ust initiate is the c om p re hensive pursuit of the new* ideas and procedures necessary lo c a r r y us through the next two or th ree dangerous decades. We re Been A sked W h a t a re the h o u r* <#l the U n i ­ v e r s it y P o s t O f f ic e ? The U niversity Station is open Monday through F rid a y 8 a rn. to 4:45 p.m. and S atu rd ay s from 8 a rn. to 12 noon. Mail is received and placed in the post office boxes on holidays and Sunday*, and the lobby th* is open 24 hours convenience of Box holders. for W h ere * e r \ u t o r x ? I* Ih e U n iv e r s it y ’• ole is on T he o b se rv a to ry top floor of the P hysics Building. The to observe on public W ednesday nights 7 30 to IO p.m., depending on th* visibility. is* invited the Campus Organizations Announce Gavel Pounders for Fall I erm Eleven campus organizations an-(dent; D ave Sellers, vice-president; W alter Bowm an; secretary-trea.s- ju rer; and B ill Hodshire, sergennt- ! a I-arm s. trounced the election of officers this week Charles | chosen. New officers for P i Tau Sigma for the fall semester of 1955 are M a r k Mason, president; Lynn Evan s, vice-president; E rie Jones. corresponding secretary secretary; Stalmach, W alter Melton, and F ra n k Zimbelman, S E C representa­ tive. treasurer; recording Nev. A IE E - IR E officers are Fred Vogt, chairman- Wendell Worley. first vice-chairman: Emmett T. Jenness, second v ice- ch airm a n ; Paul Law secretary; Robert. Pf la­ ger, treasurer; Vernon Sturdivant, A I E E corresponding secretary; Robert McClure, I R E correspond­ ing secretary’; Gene Crocket, re­ I .cc and corder, and Robert Q John H. Lind. Student Engineering Council representatives. * Officers for the senior, junior, , and the in School of Ph arm acy have been sophomore classes Senior officers are Langford Sneed, president; W alter Maloney, Bel vice-president; and M urlyn la my, seeretary-trea.surer. Junior officers are Don Cooke, president; M arvin Kuehner, vice­ president; and Semi Cronfel, sec- retary-treasurer. Sophomore officers are Bob Eng­ land. president; Tommy K yler, vice-president; and M arta Rangel, seeretary-trea surer. ★ The Silver Spurs, University serv­ ice organization, has announced the following officers for the fall semester. They are Lee Dittert, president; Ken Miles, vice-presi­ dent: and Je r r y Prew itt, secretary. The Executive Council is composed of John Page, Sam Pe rry, and Dave Williams. ★ F a ll officers of the Newcomers Chih arc Mrs. W illiam Muehl- : berger, president; Mrs. Robert first vice-president: Mrs. I Morin, I Howard Rase, second vice-presi­ dent: Mrs. Frank Bass. third vice- president; ivies. Daniel Weber, sec­ r e t a r y ; and Mrs. David Van Tas- j sci, treasurer. ★ S igm a Delta Tau pledge class of­ f ic e r s are Sally Lief let-, president; Jeanne Deutser, vice-president; Aria Edleman, treasurer; Patsy Silherstein, secretary; Dana Bande, historian; Jo y W illiam s, gift chair­ man; and Ethel M o r a n , song leader. Officers for Tau Beta Pf are Carl Lyd a, president: Don Kobe, vice­ president; recording Ja c k Lacy, secretary; Thee Polasek, corres­ ponding secretary; Rudy Mueller treasurer; and I .eon Cert, rata loger, ★ * Recently elected officers of the A m erican Society of C ivil Engin­ eer# are George Meriwether, presi­ dent; John G ary, vice-president; Neil Murphy, secretary; Bryan Henderson, treasurer; and Herbert M urray, Student Engineering Coun­ cil representative. i F a ll officers of the Intermediate Club are Mrs. Raphael Levy, presi­ dent; Mrs, J . Frank Elsass, f ir s t vice-president; Mrs, Ja c k W. Cash­ el, second vice-president; Mrs. Ro­ bert C, dottier, secretary'; Mrs. Charles W. Larkam , treasurer; and Mrs. Jam es P. Hart, sponsor. ★ New fall officers of the Theta Triton pled ge class of Ph i Sigm a Kappa are Louis W arren, prest- MEXICAN FOOD , AT ITS BEST .. . Served 7 Days a Week From 8 A.M. to 2 A M. " ' • Ais at EL M A T A M O R O S 504 East A ve . . Phone 7-7023 First Degree for Laymen I- Offered at Austin Seminary The Austin Presbyterian Theolog­ ical Sem inary will oiler a degree for laymen for the first time this year, Dr. D avid L. Stitt, president, announced. The degree offered to laymen is a master of christian education. In the past Seminary classes were eel h ic Newcomers will greet newcomers F rid a y at 3:30 p.m. when the New­ comers Club entertains ten foreign English teachers studying Am eri­ can the University' at an informal tea in Barker History Center 107. techniques at teaching lay workers for open to church credit, but no degree was offered, D r. Stiff explained. Dr. Jam es I. McCord returns to ihe Seminary this fall after spend­ ing thi' summer in Europe. Dr. M c­ Cord spent considerable time in Germany' doing research toward the projected publication of works by- John Calvin, the ‘'father" of P res by t er i ani sm . He is chairman of a church committee to publish C alvin’s un­ published works. Eight volumes of Calvin papers are to be published in Germ any this fall. Two guest professors have join­ ed the Seminary' faculty this year. They are Dr. Ernest Best of B e l­ fast, Ireland, who will teach Bib­ lical Theology, and the Rev. W il­ liam I. Boand of Dallas, who will be an instructor in English Bible. The Duplicate Bridge Club meets Frid a y at 7 15 p.m. at Texas md non­ Union. Students, faculty beginner level up are F r i O 0 V Deadl ine students from free, scientific com- invited to the petition. Standings are released the night of the meet. ★ ' 'Ten Most' For Evening meetings are held by Hillel Foundation each F rid a y at 7:30 p.m. at 2105 San Antonio. The meetings, organized by students feature faculty members or visit­ ing rabbis as guest speakers. The services are followed by an Oneg Shahat, a social period. indians to Pl an Celebrations For N ew Y e a r A special business meeting of the Indian Student s Association will be held Thursday at 8 p m. in the Bible classroom of the Baptist Stu­ dent Center. The purpose of the meeting is to plan celebrations for j Diwali. Indian New Year, I which falls on November 15. the Translated into English, "D iw a li" means Festival of Ugh . Last year j the association had a banquet and j floor show to celebrate the orca-1 sion, and secretary of ihe club I Vi.iah Parekh said even more fes­ tivities are being planned for this I year, The group of Indian Students, I called by international student ad­ visor Joe Neal one of the most active campus groups, has in­ creased its membership by half since its formation last year, from 24 to 36 students. Recently elected officers are Mrs. Trivani Popap. chairman of the executive committee; V ija y Pa- rekh. secretary; P. S. M urti, treas­ urer; and Harkishan Singh, chair­ man of public relations. Alcohol Topic Tonight at 'Y 1 The Unitarian Club will begin a series of five objective discussions on alcoholism F rid a y at 8 p.m. at the " Y . " Speaker at the first session will be Nelson Brown, graduate of Y ale Summer School on Alcohol­ ism, former secretary of Texas State Commission on Alcohol, Tex­ as representative to t h e State Board on Alcohol, and rehabilita­ tion consultant for Texas State Hospital Board. Other topics scheduled for the public discussions a r e "B o d y Chemistry and Alcoholism,” " P s y ­ chological Characteristics in Pre- Alcoholics." "The General P ra c ­ titioner's View of Alcoholism," and "A r e Y’ou Susceptible"’ " in " A ll the discussion leaders are recognized their authorities fields. They have volunteered their services as discussion leaders be­ interest cause of their personal rn the public," said W ayne Herron, club officer. "Club members feel the only w ay to at­ tack current problems is to place pub- informing Frid ay is the last day for regis- tration in the Ten Most Beautiful I Worn before an enlightened Contest in Journalism Building 305. I he. Entries will be accepted from 3 to 5 p.m., said Rose Janda, con-j . tost co-chairman. M e t h o d i s t s --------------------- _., P l a n .. , ^ ---- preliminary' Contestants, known only by a number will appear in school dress! at preliminary' judging Thursday afternoon. Twenty-five finalists will be selected Thursday night. P ic ­ tures of the top 25 girls will he sent to a Hollywood star, who will select his ten favorites. H ie "Ten M ost" will be presented at each performance on "T im e Staggers On.” Are Your Glasses Up-To-Date LOVELY FRAME DESIGNS to fit every personality D A L L A S H O L F O R D O P T IC IA N TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS IOO la it 19th ut Wichita; P E 7*1885 F r i d R s f P G a f The Wesley Foundation will hold a week-end retreat at the founda­ lodge, Rock tion s Lake Travis Ledge. Saturday at I p.m. After include activities will .swimming and a general get-to­ gether program. A nominal charge will be m ad e for supper. George Paris, d o c t o r of the activities program, is scheduled to lead t h e evening discussion on "W h at on Earth Is G o d ?” Students planning to attend may sign up in the student s office at the foundation. Information may be obtained bv railing 2-3838. Raehlin Directs In Chicago Ezra Raehlin. director of the Aus­ tin Symphony Orchestra, will ap­ pear as the guest conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in the city's famed Orchestra Hall Saturday night. R E D U C E W e Guraantee You Will Lose Inches! Regular Course 15 Treatments $25.00 Anniversary SPECIAL 20 Treatm ents $25.00 O c t . 2-8 SPOT RED UCIN G meads we reduce you in inches where YOU want to reduce N ib la c k S tu d io Enfield Shopping Center Phone 7-5095 University Deans Dean Start Round-Up Friday, October 7, 1955 THE DAILY TEXAN Page I 17 Churchman O f All Faiths Plan N ew Club Seventeen professional religious workers representing almost every faith in the University area met for three hours Wednesday to or- B v B A R B A R A R A V T m n Vt nmnn'* F.dltnr A student who helped organize ganize the Religious Worker s As- the first Round-Up some twenty- s t a t io n . T„ . odd years ago is back at mo bm- varsity, working ut ilia W om ens office, while working on re fe re n t a master s decree in guidance and cedurp anf, Their purpose is to makp avails- „ roligioU5 organization that ,n to administrative pro. I v a n of can approarh the U niversity that r(,|at(, counseling. John ) into the office of activities of the various organize- tions. *‘v ' the Ex-Students' Association. I ^ Mrs. Dorothy Dean, new assis- tant to the Dean of Women, re- members being called along with ™ ln's,fl Allan .Shivers and a dozen other students evident McCurdy, then executive secretary , IF F T * ! . ,rln 01 of Bertram Mitier, Congregational J 1ur,'d. was elected president, is the Rev. Tom r°/ estminster U m veisity Pres­ byterian Church, and seoretary- Mr. McCurdy felt the University | treasurer is Mrs Suzanne Reid, needed a real homecoming, some- associate director of Canterbury thing more than an every-tither-1 Club, year football week end. Alumni At the next meeting of the Reli- had been gathering only when the gious Worker s Association at the Texas-A&M game was played in Baptist Student Center October 26. Austin. the members w ill hear a oommit- leaders tee rpP ° r{ an(i proposal on the responsibility of the organization in connection with the International Student Center. U r help. They responded, and or* of the University's major tradi­ tions was born. He asked the campus Mrs. Dean said she could hardly believe her eyes when she saw extrava­ last ganza. year's Round-Up "B u t "T h ere was no parade when I was here," she said. the houses were beautifully decorated. I particularly remember a contin­ uous the Kappa Alpha Thetas staged. The girls performed in the yard all afternoon.” circus The vivacious mother of a teen­ age daughter and an 8-year-old j son returned last year to Austin, I her original home, to teach at Uni­ versity' Junior High. She joined the I Dean's staff in September. "The girls I see on campus now are so much more comfortable and attractive than we were,” she said, “ We wore high heels and silk It was all so I dresses to class. "The Religious Worker's Asso­ ciation hopes to encourage a pro­ gram International Student Center open during the evening hours," M r. M iller said. to keep the Science Fiction M eet Set Friday Science Fiction Club will hold an informal organizational meeting F t id;, v at 7 p m . in Texas Union IGL said Chad Oliver, anthropo­ logy the group. sponsoring instructor reading, writing, or Mr Oliver said the club is for any University student interested talking in about fiction as one type of litera­ ture. He is the author of three sci­ ence fiction books, "Shadow in th# Sun,” "M ists of Dawn,” and ' An­ other Kind.” "Science fiction writers range all the way from Dr. Isaac Asi­ mov. vv ho has a doctor of philoso­ phy degree to Ray Bradbury', who barely finish­ ed high school,” said Mr. Oliver. "Readers come in the same sizes,” in biochemistry, Social C a le n d a r " I enjoyed counseling with stu­ dents at U JH last year,” she said, I ‘ and most of their problems could 6-12 be worked out. But do you know what my own daughters pet phrase is? ‘Mother you just don’t I 2-8 Czech Club picnic, at H arris understand m e !’ ” party, at the Alhambra Co-op. Alhambra Co-op informal SU N D A Y F R ID A Y Park. Mrs. M argaret Warnken Ryan and Robert Clarence McQueen, September 30, University terian Church. F lesh y- 1 artificial." j x- T Miss Virginia Edwards . r> .. ,. V tit UC* I i of Beilemead. N, J., former phys-: ical training instructor at the Uni-1 versify, and George W . Pool of I T.r ‘.’ng^ t. Fort Worth, October 3. / lf dress has changed, activities 1 and problems of co-eds have not, 1 and Mrs. Dean is qualified to cope with both. She was a member of Jackets. M ortar Board, * .u Delta Delta Delta sorority, and the " Y ” while working for her history degree. tx u ■* MRS. DEAN and M A R Y MILLER . . . women's council advisor and president WEDDINGS Nellie Jo Adams a n d D avid, M ayo Herring, both University graduates, September IO in Rock-1 port. Jo Ann Dickerson, former Tex­ an managing editor, and William Griffith in Austin, October 17. ★ -★ ★ ★ ★ * it it Patricia Lynn Sullivan and I-eo Doyle, September 15 in Granger, ★ j Phyliss Ann Phillips. Kappa Kappa Gam m a, and Jam es Steele Moore, Kappa Alpha, September! 23 in Austin. I-ela Owens and Jim m y Wright, University business majors, Sep­ tember 4 They are living in Aus­ tin and plan to continue their ed- i ucation, Wanda Frank and Ja y Rubrecht. recently ex-students, They are residing University in Adamsville. in Dallas. Elizabeth Lockhart Mays, Phi Mu. Alpha lam bda Delta, Cap I and Gown, and Charles Lem ly Rogers in Austin, October I. C h lire h O ffe rs Bus Service The Rev. Robert Lovell of the University Baptist Church has an­ nounced that the church bus serv-■ ! ice has been well received by Bap- I list students. The service is designed to afford j free Sunday ; School and church for students in transportation to Carol June Foust. Zeta Tau A l­ remote parts of the campus. pha, and Travis Eckhart. IX d ta : Tau Delta, T Association, in Aus-1 tin, October I. Ju d y Johnson, Alpha Chi Omega, Ranger Staff, Reagan Lite rary So­ ciety. and State Representative in Lubbock, No­ Trued Latim er vember 26. The .schedule is as follows; 9:10, I Robert E. Lee H all; 9:12. Roberts I H all; 9:14. San Jacinto Dormitory; 9:16, Simpkins H all; 9 22, Scottish Rite Dorm itory: 9:25, K irb y H all; 9:28, Grace H all: 9:31. Ca rot hers; 9:35, U niversity Baptist Church. The bus returns students to their I dorms after services. M arjorie Lois Johnaon, Delta Zeta and library employe, and Sylvan Turner Jr ., November 19, in Austin. Co-rec Designed For Couples' Fun G erry Webb. Cid Omega, and Jam es F . Struhall, Kappa Alpha, in Austin, December 16. When you ’vc worked pretty late A n d the issue looks great... W hy not celebrate! Have a C A M E L ! p u re f t a & ir e f B's a psychological fact: Pleasure helps your disposition, lf you're a smoke' re­ member — more people get more pure p/eosure from Cornels than from any other cigarette! No other cigarette is so rich-tostmg, yet so mild! a . i . ILM IX ,I** Urn- O '— — ‘ -■-HI. M , % An evening of fun is guaranteed by Co-rec every Frid ay night at the Women's G ym from 7:30 to IO p.m. Co-rec, under the direction of Mrs. is es­ Josephine Chapman, pecially designed for married stu­ dents and dates. Among the activities offered are badminton, volley-ball, swimming, and diving. All equipment is fur- ■ nished except bathing suits. Plans are being made for a vol-j ley-ball tournament in October. A tahle tennis tournament, will be I scheduled later. ! Hillel Plans Su n d a y Su p pe r Hillel Foundation w ill have its I first Sunday Supper at. 6 p.m. Sun- day. Reservations for the supper J ran be made at Hillel or by calling i 6-2695. ShJomo Kfrat, graduate gov- ! ernment s t u d e n t w ho visited Europe and Israel this past sum- trip by j mer, will describe his means of picture slides, BUYING A DIAMOND? Then you th ould have the protection of The only nationwide Pcrmooent Value Flan lo peum diamond value I-earn about it todev •Trode mart a m rn tm tt i m Authorised ALUJLJSJ .A U G E R 'S JE Use The Classifieds Registration N O W Accepted for University Students. 25 Years in and Central Outlet in Bullet «nd Ballroom B. Mort Payna, Toucher of Ballot Clonos Mn To Rugiitort Phono Morning! and Sunday 2*9086— 7-8505 Afternoon 8-3951—6-5856 University Branch Studio, 2000 Guadalupe A R E VO! S A T IS F IE D W IT H Y O U R F I G U R E ? DO YOU F IT Y O U R F A L L W A R D R O B E ? . . , Lose up to 5 inch** in 3 short weeks at K A Y S N IB!-A C K S Y S T E M i now' located near the University at 213 E . 26>, St. 14 block off San Jacinto. I S P E C IA L this week during K A Y ’ S First Anniversary in Austin REC* 11-AK 15 one-hour treatments for 125 . . , NOW 20 one-hour treatments for $25 call for your complimentary' treatment "Results Guaranteed" 213 E. 26Vt Ph. 7-5097 SCIENTIFIC WATCH REPAIR C .rn U It atchmaher No. 3680 FREE ESTIMATES 2268 Guadalupe ELECTRONIC TIMER USED Friday, Ocfofc'w 7, 1955 THE DAILY TEXAN Page* n h k mm Big J a n ^ i Session! | Sunday 2-5 m b r | k Q U E E N 'Focus' Renews With Review This school year’s first produc­ tion of "Focus on the F o rty Acres" will be presented by the University of T e x a s Television workshop, F rid a y from noon to 12:15 over K T B C - TV. This w eeks program w ill review the highlights of events of last year's campus activities that are of interest to the people of Austin as well as U niversity students. Student members of the U niver­ sity television workshop produce direct, photograph, g a t h e r and write the material for the program under the direction of L yle Hen­ dricks, the studio supervisor. Janies W eir and their assistants Jo e Tita. Oil Gilstrap, and E a r l W arren. Student director is B a rb a ra D ia­ mond of Houston, assistant direc­ tor, W alter Evan of Dallas, Floor manager, Tom Red of Austin. The members of the floor crew are. R a y Campi of Austin, and B ill Dietz ! of Texarkana. Publicity C r e w : M arilee Dunstan of Orange and B ill B e r ry of Arlington. Film s iii Review “ Interupted M elo d y’* J “ W e ’re No Angels’* With a cloud of dust and a hearty aria from a grand opera, "In te r ­ rupted M elody,’’ now at the Texas Theater, to unfold M-G-M's newest thrust at an opera star since "The Great Caruso.” literally gallops off This time it is singer M arjorie Lawrence who is singled out for this questionable honor. Miss L a w ­ rence was a star with the M etro­ politan Opera Company for sev­ eral years. The flesh and blood Miss l a w ­ rence does not appear in the movie nor does she have a voice in It. ★ in an Such is the way some movies are made. This one, I understand, was ! entered international film festival by M-G-M when the studio I its controversial y a n k e d out "Blackboard Jung le” at the last minute. “ Interrupted Melody*’ won t acti­ vate any controversy nor w ill it win any prizes, It has its moments but they are stolen moments from passages in novels by Fannie Hurst, Kathleen Norris, and other alumnae of the Proctor and G a m ­ ble school. - L L P “ W e're No Angels” —and neither are you if you laugh as hard as most at this movie now showing at the Texas. Three tough and droll comics — Humphrey Bogart (m urderer), (forger), Also R a y and Peter Ustinov (safecracker)— bring a m erry and murderous Christmas in tropical climate to a normal fam ily on Devil s Island. But this is not slapstick. More than half the more lasting humor the play comes from methodically proves its point —- there is a better class of people in prison than out. Terse dialogue does the job. the way lad on noticing “ Good heavens,” exclaims an their idealistic striped uniforms, ‘’You men are thieves!” Bogart explains condes­ cendingly, "No. I'm a thief. These gentlemen are murderers.” The “ tria l” scene is one of the best, as is the “ warning.” Yet the show drags in spots and there is some confusion about the status of convicts on D evil's Island. But good dialogue and inspired casting make this a superior and refresh­ ing comedy. - M E D A M I L L E R Ai I et Jv th& Gxcne WORLD PREMIERE MONDAY NITE & PARAMOUNT On The Stage In Person CHARLTON H E S T O N GOV. ALLAN SHIVERS md CAPITOL N O W ! A T P O P U L A R F IR S T R U N P R IC E S ! REFRESHMENT TIME - ’-J v » t h e f i n e f or d i n i n g or a c o f f e e b r e a k ANYTIME! and Presenting 19th & San Antonio GOV. ALLAN SHIVERS K IT T ™ YEAR'S SUPREME THRILL! THIS ISLAND EARTH rn T t C H M I C O l O * tiff MORRO* f AITH O O M iR O U f — P I, I K — G U N SM O KE Starring A U D IE M U R P H Y wtti J O Y P A G E • KENDALL CLARK • ISABEL BONNER A ie riH by JOSE FER RER • S t i l l y bv KETH FR IN G S • <* On * * y by JO SEPH K R A M M • Produced by AARON ROSENBERG ILF OOH AID OCON NOK MAftTHI MVI ft l “ “ ' TM***. 1W . M X I HI 0» TM* CMI Al A l i i I T K M r < till.ll IV Starts TODAY! First Show 12:00 STATE -------- PLUS!----- ‘BA RN YA RD ACTO R’ cartoon JO E M cD O A KES N E W S & FOOTBALL far. "if. - ^ ^ f • v ^ C \ V i d o r Mature Exits London In G r a n d Huff LO NDON, ■?> Victor Mature left the cast of a movie in thap making Wednesday night and flew off to New York in a huff because nobody had booked hi m f ! a hotel room with a hath. acting The movie tough guy played his part in real life at I Lindon ,1 Airport only six hours after ar-fl riving from Africa where he had'; been t h e movie in “ Safari.” Ten days of filming ] remained to be done in London.I “ When I arrived in London I found there was no room hook­ ed for me. I w’as pretty angry about the whole business. Til® others have got their homes all right somewhere decent with a bath. and “ I thought my room was book-1 ed. I flew in tired out and what s doing? Nothing, no bed No bath.|| So (hey can have the whole deal. “ I couldn't care less.” One Day Service At N o Extra Charge Longhorn Cleaners *338 (iuaiialu pfl Phon e B-3847 DANCING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT C L U B "81 l l form erly C in d erella C lu b 5000 San A n to n io H ig h w a y CHEROKEE LAWSON and the Bar S-2 Boys C o v e r C h a rg e 50c Person N e I L O -Ow e . . Dallas Doings T H E PA I VM V L A M I. This Broadway musical comedy hit stars F ra n W arren at the State F a ir Auditorium nightly at 8:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday mat­ inees are at 2:30 p.m. The audi­ torium's air-conditioned, too. IC E ( A P AD E S comedy, “ Wish You Were H ere,” a mu­ and Gershwin's sical “ Am erican in P a ris ” ballet are main events of this ice show. Catch it F rid a y and Saturday nights at 8:30 p.m.; catch it at 2:30 p m . on Saturday, and at 1:30 and 5:30 p.m. on Sunday. It costs to catch every show, though, J O I E C H ITW O O D AUTO T H R IL L SHOW Guaranteed as terrifying as fi­ nals. Nightly, 8 p.m.; matinees, 2:30 p.m., Saturday and Sunday. M IL L IO N DOLINAR M ID W A Y “ Dancing W aters” and “ Sky Wheels” are anomalous nomens ap­ plied to two big attraction on the " J A Z Z T I M E " K N O W 1490 1 1 : 0 0 - 1 1 : 3 0 P M . M O N . - S A T . P r e s e n t e d b y SPEED W A Y RADIO M idway. Go see for yourself what I they are. M A G N O LIA SHV K IA I E D aredevil aerial acts, 2 a n d ; 7:30 p.m. daily, Magnolia stage at "Top of the Midway ." And they're f-r-e-e. C O LO R T E L E V IS IO N Better than having nightmares in Technicolor. See this at 7:30 p.m. nightly in the General E x ­ hibits Building, P I A N E T V K I I M This star-studded show has the approval of the censors. Showing daily in the Museum of Fine Arts, l l a.m., I, 2, 3, and 4 30 p.m. D K . P E P P E R TH E A T E R That's right, these free magic, shows can be seen at IO. 2, and 4. Starring M ark Wilson, they're at IO a.m., 12 noon, 2, 4, and 6 p.m. Extra shows weekends. C IN E R A M A H O L ID A Y Cineram a makes Andrews dor­ mitory views fade insignifi­ cance. F rid a y, 2 p.m.; every eve­ ning. 8:30 p.m.; Saturday and Sun­ day, 2 and 5 p.m. into B U R L E S Q U E the agenda at Girls. Red Ford, and girls are on the Theater Lounge; the show starts at 9. 10:30, and 12—and that ain’t a.m. The Pioneer Drive-In 829 Barton Springs Rd. Phone 7-0235 W elcom e to N e w and Old Students oin S t e a k ........... $*100 Sirl S p ic e d w it h s a la d , c h o ir * o f F r e n c h frie d o r b ak e d , p o tato and o u r d e lir io u s F r e n c h B r e a d STUDENTS S P E C IA L -^ FRI. ONLY I H E S T A T E F A IR O F T E X A S Not to be missed is the greatest photographic exhibit of all time, "The F a m ily of M an,” shown free daily in the Museum of Fine Arts after IO a m. Exhibits by governments of nine nations are on display in the In­ ternational Center, General E x ­ hibits Building. France's represen­ tatives haven t walked out yet. Furnishings and art objects from these countries should be seen. F ree food calculated to please the delicate palates of University students m ay be found in the Foods Building, where a giant foods show is being held. Opens 9 a.m. daily. An agricultural Big Top, an elec­ tric show’, an automobile show, in fact two of them, a farm imple­ ment display, and a natural gas show are guaranteed to keep visi­ few tors busy’. Then museum the thoughtful Teasip c a n browse around and pick up samples. there's a displays where F O O T B A L L G A M E S SM U plays Missouri University F rid a y at 8 p m, in the Cotton Bowl. T e x a s plays Oklahoma at 2 p.m. Saturday. Laguna Gloria Shows UT Art Paintings of seven faculty mem­ bers of the University Department of Art are now being exhibited by the Texas Fine Arts Association at Laguna Gloria. On display w ill be the works of Donald L. Weismann, E v e r e t t S p r u c e . W illiam Lester, Luis E a d e 5, Michael F r a r y, John Guerin, and Hiram W illiam s. The exhibitions include a collec­ tion of watercolors and prints by Rudolph von Huhn of Washington, D. CU; a group of paintings by Frank Gonzales of G uadalajara, Mexico; and the annual mid-sum­ mer exhibit of the Men of Art. THE FAMOUS COFFEE SHOP Af 319 East 2nd G iv e s You A C h o ic e O f A M e a t S election W it h Three V e g e ta b le s For O n ly .................. O U C A C Watch the Texas-OU C a m e on TV at Scholz Garten F rid a y M enu Swiss Steak or Shrim p C re o le with R ice or Drink and Dessert Tenderloin o f T rout Closed Sundays with T a rta r S a u ce O p e n 6:00 a m. to 7:00 p.m. C re a m e d N e w P o ta to e s . ■- V. « ' _ T O D A Y S Interstate Theatres Param ount Humphrey BOGART FROMM HILARIOUS STAGE PLAY! ’ * i ONE HOUR M ARTINIZING The M o st In D ry C le a n in g ONE HOUR SERVICE At No Extra Charge O p e n : 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. M o n d a y through S a tu rd a y AK) Weal I Nth st. C o rn e r N a c re s C o m b in a tio n S alad English Peas and Squash Pineapp le Pie H o t Rolls or C o rn B read C o ffe e or Tea 65* Schulz Garten 1607 San Ja c in t o W h a r a Y o u A rs A lw a y i W e lc o m e IJ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ D ix ie la n d T o n ig h t ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ C O LO * MV ™ T e c h n i c o l o r W e r e no a t m « • mmmmmmm wWfkmm -» JOAN BENNETT • ALDO RAY PETER USTINOV 0 " D O G G O N E C A T " Blue R ib bon C a rto o n V A R S I T Y THI MAUNG, HAZING, COLOR HJL Mi HT! IS I J A C K W E B B i c* J Pill Kl UY r.ytfti Ort aw... * * D w W O R L D W I D E N E W S Ll F IR S T S H O W 5:30 P .M . A d u lts 50c C h ild 20c ★ ★ ★ Open Dancing Tonight & Every Friday IMDDB k : -T U JANET LEIGH • EDMOND 0 BRIEN * PEGGY IEC • amoy kviw • ih tuivm * ms iHzsusib A U S T I N NOW! F IR S T S H O W 2:00 P .M . B IO T E C H N IC O L O R M U S IC A L-NOW OM WIDE SCREEN! 9-12 $1.50 Couple • • Tables by Reservation • • 2400 Seats • • 4-Acre Parking Lot T O N IT E : Bob W hitford Band “ fops in Dixieland" " t is WIZARD OF OZ 3 JUDY GARLAND ZD - ! » / % AN M G M M A1 11 R P IIX ! Rf PRINT . x s s s s SPORTS CENTER 501 Barton Springs Road PLUS! 4 C A R T O O N S O w en Davis, producer 8-3071 I