67 Pass French, German Exams Language Requisite M e t on May I I A t 3 :30 o 'clo c k th is a f t e r n o o n th e Lexa* L o n g h o r n s , w ith t h e i r ace, Mel D e u ts c h , on th e m o u n d , will fa c e L e f t y B u m p e r s a n d t h * T e x a s A gg ies a t C la rk F ield . A w in f o r th** S t e e r s will give t h e m c o n f e r e n c e t h e i r th e A g g ie s a r e s a t u r d a y s g a m e w ill t w e n t y - f i r s t ' ic to rio u s, if T h e n a m e s o f s t u d e n t s p a s s in g c h a m p io n s h ip ; th e f o re ig n la n g u a g e e x a m in a tio n s * F i f t y - t h r e e f ,f f : ^ e x a s I m m e d i a t e l y in F r e n c h a n d G e r m a n g iv e n S a t- u r d a y , M ay n o u n c e d . p as sed s t u d e n t s t h e F r e n c h e x a m in a tio n , , , 1 ^ 1 ° + T a c l e a r ti t l e to t h e c r o w n o r m u s t l l , hav e bee n a n - s h a r e th e h o n o r s w ith th e A g gies, t h # t h r e e y e a r . w h ile f o u r t e e n p a s s e d th e G e r m a n ^ - C o n f e r e n c e t h i r d b a s e m a n a n d t h r e e - s p o r t t h e U n i v e r s i t y ’s f i r s t in l e t t e r m a n five y e a r s , w ill be t h e 1940 o u t s t a n d i n g p r e s e n t e d P a ssin g In F r e n c h w e r e D o t t F , a t h l e t e t r o p h y . One o f t h r e e ca n - ' A le x a n d e r , R u a l A skew , P ris c illa d id a te s s e le c te d by t h e T A ssocia- tio n , M oe rs w o n th e h o n o r b y a n j Baum, H o pe B e rd ic h e v sk y , B e t t y Berly, B e t t y B la n k e n b e c k le r , M. o v e r w h e l m in g m a j o r i t y in th e A p - B o b b y H o e r s , ; e x a m in a tio n . p r e c e e d i n g • ; V. Bow les, R a che l D, B r a u e r , 2 s t u d e n t elec tio n . Allied Troops Stop German Drive. Retake Louvain Open Cities Attacked By Nazis and French THE DAILY TE X A N F I R S T C O L L E S 6 D A I L Y I N T H S S O U T H VO L. 41 Z - 7 2 0 Price F ive Cents A U S T I N , T E X A S , F R I D A Y , M A Y 17, 1 9 4 0 S ix Pages Today N o . 193 CrucialAggie Serges Begins 3:30 Today 'Crammed Fads Cam P us Service Makes Him Tops Fail to Educate,' Carlson States Even Break W ill Bring Texas 21st Championship T h a t l o n g - a w a ite d tw o - g a m e *#• ries f o r th e S o u t h w e s t C o n f e r e n c e b aseb all c h a m p io n s h ip is h e r e , By B I L L W H I T M O R E T e x a n S p o r t* S t a f f I.N .S . S p e c ia l to tho T e x a n fo r s h a t t e r e d li g h t n i n g c a p t u r e o f P a r is t o d a y G e r m a n y '* hold d r iv e r e d o u b le d F r e n c h ( P r i d a y ) wa* r e p o r t e d c o u n te r - a tta c k * , a n d G e n e r a l H e n r i G ira u d f l a s h e d w or d t o Pari* fr o m th e S e d a n b a t t l e f i e l d that th e F r e n c h h a v e “ c o m p l e t e c o m ­ m a n d o f th e s i t u a t i o n . ” T h e R eich th ru s t w as “ c h e c k e d e v e r y ­ w h e r e ," said a m i li ta r y s p o k e s m a n . a g a i n s t • • R epublican and D em o cra tic sen a to rs and r e p r esen ta tiv es, struck l a s t n i g h t b y th e r a p id s p r e a d o f th e w a r in w e s t e r n E u r o p e , ( T h u r s d a y ) o v e r w h e lm in g ly e n d o r s e d th e p r o g r a m o f P r e s i d e n t R o o s e v e lt to p r e v e n t t h e s p r e a d o f such c a r n a g e to th is c o n t i n e n t . t h a t Mr. R o o s e v e lt’s p e r s o n a l a p p e a l b e f o r e f o r a d d i tio n a l d e f e n s e s w o u ld be f o r $ 1 ,1 8 2 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 I n d ic a tio n s w e r e C o n g r e s s g r a n t e d speedily. B r itis h tro o p s, f i g h t i n g d e s p e r a t e h a n d - to - h a n d e n c o u n t e r s a n d b la s tin g th e e n e m y w ith h a n d g r e n a d e s , d r o v e t h e G e r m a n in v a d e r s b a c k f r o m L o u v a in . D is p a tc h e s f r o m th e B r itis h f r o n t in B e lg iu m r e p o r t e d . W h e n d a r k n e s s fell on th e -war's b i t t e r e s t f i g h t f o r t h e g a t e w a y to B ru sse ls, th e N azi so ld ie rs h a d been p u s h e d a lm o s t c o m p le te ly o u t o f L o u v a i n ; b u t im m e n se h av o c w as w r o u g h t in B e lg iu m 's f a m o u s u n iv e r s i ty a n d c a th e d r a l city. F r o m B e r l i n F r e n c h a n d G e r m a n g u n s s c r e a m e d a c r o s s t h e R h i n e l a n d p r i s a l b o m b a r d m e n t s w h i c h m i t t e d i n v o l v e d a d e l i b e r a t e a t t a c k o n a n o p e n F r e n c h c i t y. it wa * r e p o r t e d t h a t shell* f r o m b i g l o n g - r a n g e in r e ­ t i m e a d ­ t h e G e r m a n * f o r t h e f i r s t On th e heels o f f r e s h G e r m a n claim s o f t r i u m p h s on th e F r a n c o - B e lg ia n f r o n t , o f fic ia ls c h a r g e d t h a t F r e n c h a r t i l l e r y b e g a n se llin g t h e G e r m a n o p e n to w n o f R a s t a t t , b e t w e e n K a r l s r u h e a n d B a d e n , “ w i t h o u t m il ita ry r e a s o n s . " T h e r e f o r e , th e a n n o u n c e m e n t g u n s o p e n e d f ir e on th e F r e n c h c ity o f H a g e n a u , tw elv e m iles w ith in F r a n c e , j u s t n o r t h o f S t r a s b o u r g . sa id G e r m a n h o r iz o n t a l S t a g g e r i n g a e r i a l b l o w s a t G e r m a n y ’s a r m y , a i r f o r c e , i n d u s ­ t r i a l a r e a * a n d c o m m u n i c a t i o n s l i n e s w e r e c l a i m e d by t h e B r i t i s h a i r m i n i s t r y in L o n d o n . F i f t y G e r m a n p la n e s w e r e sh o t d o w n In t h e c o u r s e o f T h u r s d a y ’* f i g h t i n g by th e R o y a l A ir F o r c e , t h e m in i s tr y 's c o m m u n iq u e a n ­ n o u n c e d . T h e Balkan;- saw d e f e n s e m e a s u r e * bt n g t a k e n h u r r i e d l y on all sides in f e a r t h a t t h e l o n g - d r e a d e d s p r e a d o f t h e E u r o p e a n c o n ­ f lic t is a t h a n d , a c c o r d i n g to B u a d p e s t r e p o r ts . T he T u r k i s h g o v e r n m e n t a t A n k a r a a s s u r e d t h e G re e k g o v e r n ­ m e n t t h a t T u r k e y w ill m a rc h th e m o m e n t a B a lk a n s t a t e is a t t a c k e d by a n y b e l lig e r e n t, a c c o r d in g to r e p o r t s f ro m A th e n s . h e a r i n g t h a t th e f a s t - s p r e a d i n g E u r o p e a n w a r m a y be e x t e n d e d to th e B ritish Isles a t a n y m o m e n t, t h e S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t in W a s h ­ in g to n g r a v e ly w a r n e d A m e r ic a n s in E n g la n d t o r u s h to I r e l a n d a n d e m b a r k f o r h o m e on one o r m o r e A m e r ic a n ships w hich w ill be p la c e d a t t h e i r disposal. * C o n g re s s C h e e rs R o o s e ve lt A c h e e r in g C o n g r e s s h e a r d P r e s i d e n t R o osevelt a s k f o r $ 1 ,1 8 2 ,- 00 0 ,0 0 0 T h u r s d a y to s tr e a m li n e A m e r ic a n d e f e n s e s , to p r o v id e f o r an u l t i m a t e a i r f o r c e o f 5 0,000 p la n e s , a n d to s e c u r e th is n a t i o n a g a i n s t t h e hav oc t h a t h a s s t r u c k E u ro p e . • F o r t h e c o m p l e t e C o n g r e s s s e e P a g e 3. t e x t o f P r e s i d e n t R o o s e v e l t ’* m e s s a g e t o I n o n e o f th e m o s t m o m e n to u s m e ssage ? o f h is c a r e e r , t h e c h ie f e x e c u tiv e told a j o i n t se ssion o f th e S e n a t e a n d t h e H o u se t h a t th e U n i t e d S t a t e s is no l o n g e r s a f e f r o m th e s w i f t a n d d e a d ly a t t a c k o f u l t r a - m o d e r n w a r f a r e . T h e n a t io n m u s t, he said, p r e p a r e f o r a n y e v e n t u a l i t y , p e a c e -lo v in g th o u g h h e r peo p le m a y be. Educator Asserts Modern Teaching Too Mechanical “ E d u c a tio n b y d ic ta t io n r a t h e r t h a n by u n d e r s t a n d i n g " w a s c ite d as th e p r i m a r y c a u s e o f th e s t u p i d ­ i ty o f b o th d o c to rs a n d la y c i ti­ z e n s in th e w o rld to d a y , b y Dr. A n to n J. C a rlso n o f th e U n iv e r s it y j o f Chicago in a le c t u r e a t H o g g M e m o ria l A u d ito r iu m T h u r s d a y I I n ig h t. I t w-as t h e l a s t p u b lic lee-; t u r e o f th e U n i v e r s i t y p u blic lec- ; t u r e s c o m m itte e . D r. C arlson *aid t h a t t h e c h a r ­ in a c t e r o f p r e v a ilin g e d u c a t i o n th e h o m e , c h u r c h , g r a d e school, I high school, a n d eve n in co llege is j a r e m e r e l y ; f a c t s t h a t ' s u c h in to d r u m m e d is n o t e n o u g h c h a n c e t h e s tu d e n t , a n d f o r ; t h e r e him t o f in d o u t t h in g s f o r h i m ­ s e lf so t h a t he will r e m e m b e r th e m a f t e r he fin is h e s t h e c o u r s e . . . . b e g a n by b lo w in g a tru m p et a c tiv itie s. n o w he >• a ca m p u s l e a d e r in most phases o f e x tr a cu r r ic u la r Joe Wilson Is Daily Texan's Choice For Year’s Outstanding U. T. Student L u lin g Boy's Led • J e a n im p o r ta n c e J a n e B r o w n fie ld , E d w a r d B u l l - 1 m a n , A r c h ib a ld C am p bell, T he L o n g h o r n B a n d , u n d e r th # Cockrell, M a r y A. Collins, F r a n k ‘ d ire c tio n o f C o lo n el G e o rg e E. C onley , E d m u n d C rav e n s, F r a n - ' H u r t will p la y b e f o r e th e g a m e . chisea F o r e u s , H o m e r F o rt, L eslie W ith p e r f e c t b a s e b a ll w e a t h e r p r e - t h e E, Powder, J a m e s E. F r a s e r , J a m e s d ie ted, th e R, G re g so n , R ic h a rd G. H a iz e y s , Kame, a n d t h a t W illiam H a n n a , E. P. H a r d i n , s u r r o u n d s a T exas-A .& M . g a m e , C h a rle s C. H ig h to w e r , S a r a h H o e y , offic ia ls e x p e c t t h e l a r g e s t cro w d M. M a r g a r e t H u g h e s , V ir g in ia ° f th e season w ith u p w a r d s o f H u g h e s, S a m R. H u n t e r , M ildre d 5,000 f a n s p r e s e n t. Ink?, J u n e M. J o h n s o n . K a th l e e n M cQ u ow n, J o h n H. Mitchell, V e n o la E. M o r g a n , W illia m C. M o r n s . J a n e E. N e w ­ kirk , V al J e a n A ld r e d N e w m a n , W illie D. O w e n s, C o r n e lia P a p - I la cz k, J e r r y P a u l, D o r o t h y L ee J o e W ilson o f L u lin g , m e m b e r P e r k in s , M a ttie M. P r a t t , N e w to n o f D e lta T a u D e lt a f r a t e r n i t y , R a b e n * b u r g , A llen L. R o b e rts , h as b ee n ele c te d p r e s i d e n t o f t h e f ' T TJ S t o c k e d S u s a n M. S te e r , J a z e l W . T ips, M ’liss V a u g h a n , r I n t e r f r a t e r n i t y C o u n c il f o r 1940- P o r i s v i n e y a r d . F r a n c e s W a r n li, 41* F u ll\ r e s te d fro m t h e i r t e n - d a y r o a d tr i p w h ich e n d e d la s t S a t u r - day, a n d in goo d p h y sic a l c o n d i­ tio n , s h o u ld b« r e a d y f o r t h e in v a sio n of t h e h a r d - right m g A ggies. If th is s e rie s if like p a s t c o n t e s t s b e ­ a n y t h i n g tw ee n T e x a s a n d A.&M. w ith a title a t s ta k e , th e S t e e r s will h a v e to be r e a d y , f o r M a r t y K a r o w 's 1 c re w w ill be s h o o ti n g t h e w o r k s w ith no hold? b a r r e d . Is E le c te d N e w I n t e r f r a t e r n i t y C o u n c il P re s id e n t o f t h e u su a l co lo r th e L o n g h o r n s t m l J a f f c . Irw in a . / - , J . , his alm o s t- c c m - Ms- In his D e lt a T a u D e lta f r a t e r ­ n ity , it w a s n ’t e n o u g h to h a v e th e lik e ab le J o e a s p r e s i d e n t f o r th e f i r s t s e m e s t e r la s t y e a r . In t r u e Rfsoreveltian f a s h io n , h e w as r e ­ e le c te d f o r th e se c o n d s e m e s t e r , q u ite a n h o n o r in a n y c a m p u s o r ­ g a n i z a tio n w h e r e m e m b e r s h ip a n d o ffic e s alik e com e a n d go r a p id ly . to C o w b o y s a s a sopho- E le c te d m o r e , ho m o v e d in to t h e M a r t h a W h ite m a n , J e a n W ood. • Billy M cD ug ald o f A u s t i n , B e ta T h o se p a s s in g in G e r m a n w e r e T h e t a Pi, w as e le c te d vice-presi- S t a m f o r d , M a ry J u l i a A r m s tr o n g , C h a rle s d e n t ; Bob S t r a u s s o f S ig m a A lp h a Mu, w as chosen sec- C a r l Beal, C a rl B ic k e rs J r . , M ilton A llen C a m p b e ll, L o u ise G re e r , re ta r y - tr e a s u r e r - , a n d R u ssell L e o ­ R om a H a f e r m a n n , R o b e r t P, Kei- n a r d o f H o u s to n , P h i D e lt a T h e t a del, R ic h a rd N e w to n L a n e , J o h n is t h e n e w r e p o r t e r . A l f r e d P f it s c h , M yra J o Ray, A n ­ d r e w R. S im p so n , C a rro ll Jam*5? S lu b ick i, J a m e s B e n tle y T hom a* J r . , O rin P e r r y Wilkin*. W ilson w a s listed a m o n g th e eleven boys on th e c a m p u s c o n s id ­ ered by t h e T e x a n to be m o s t o u t- , , , a " d ^ n a m e d rn t o d a y s t h e m o s t o u t s t a n d i n g o f t h e h o rse s t a n d m * p a p e r as a n y s t u d e n t , boy o r g irl, in , . , , . T o d a y ’s g a m e will find t h e t w o b e s t h u r l e r s in t h e c o n f e r e n c e o p ­ posin g each o t h e r f o r t h e se c o n d tim e th is se ason. In th e i r la s t m e e t ­ ing, w h e n T e x a s d e f e a t e d A .& M . 9-3 a t C ollege S ta ti o n a f e w w eek* ago, Mel D e a t s c h g o t th e d ec ision as he p itc h e d s te a d y ball all t h e w ay to sto p t h e A ggies. H o w e v e r , B u m p e r s sto le th e show w ith his g r e a t r e l i e f j o b he t u r n e d in t h a t d a y a f t e r r e p l a c i n g L in d s e y f o r A.&M. a n d p it c h i n g th r e e - h i t , no­ r u n h all f o r s e v e n a n d o n e - th ird innings. D r. C a rls o n w a s b o r n in S w e d e n , a n d c a m e to t h e U n ite d S t a t e s a t t h e a g e o f 16. F i r s t a c a r p e n t e r ’s th e n a p r e a c h e r , he a p p r e n t i c e , j s t a r t e d to s t u d y b io logy, r e c e iv in g his b a c h e l o r a n d m a s t e r o f s c ien c e S t l i r r , d e g r e e s f ro m A u g u s t a n a C o lle g e ! in Illinois, an d his d o c t o r ’s d e g r e e f ro m S t a n f o r d U n iv e r s it y . “ T h e a g e w e a r e e r r o n e o u s l y called living in is t h e A g e o f j S c ie n c e ," Dr. C a r l s o n said. “ T his j te n d s to m a k e p e o p le bla m e e v e r y ­ t h i n g t h a t goes wrnong on S c ie n c e ." H e e x p la in e d t h a t w e a r e living in a n A g e of I n v e n t i o n , b u t t h a t in v e n tio n . : sc ie n c e is m o r e t h a n os . o w n ions a r e ca i ce s. a d d e d . “ T h e ’ d isc o v e r ie s a r e j o f few' p e o p le ." r e a lly f u n d a m e n t a l t h e a c h ie v e m e n ts II I T h i fine I I I n y a H is 5 Y e a r s H e r e By B I L L Y S A N S I N G Texan Feature St af f ! A g ain th e lig h t e d field f u n d w as ra is e d s u b s t a n tia lly , as w ell as I r a isin g th e s u m f o r th e I n t e r f r a - i t e r n i t y C oun cil sc h o larsh ip . T h o se a r e Rm ong t h e W ilson w orks f o r th is y e a r , b u t in a d d i ­ tion to a n y t h i n g he is d o in g th e s e in W h e n I e x a n o ffic e s t a f f m e m b e r s , d a y s is a n a l m o s t u n b e lie v a b le Tee­ la te 0r d o f m e m b e r s h ip s a n d p r e si- fiv e s e a te d t h e o n e n i e h t in e a r l y s p r in g , w e r e j d e n c je , s u d d e n ly q u e s tio n e d a s to , „ opinion on the possible winner of;Ple,ed flv* years of (he Texan>s { irs t o u ts t a n d in g . t h r o u g h t h e i r I , t u . e d e n t a w a r d , f iv e a n s w e r s c e n te r e d on one n a m e — J o e Wilson. t h a t t h e la s t Dr. C a rlso n said A nd in p e r f e c t a g r e e m e n t w ith t h e i r choice w as th e a n n o u n c e m e n t I ti m e h e spoke a t T h e U n iv e r s it y T h u r s d a y n i g h t b y M a x _ S k e lto n , ed ito r, a n d T h e D aily T e x a n of th e se le c tio n o f J o e W ilson, m id ­ law s t u d e n t f r o m L u lin g , as T he j U n iv e r s it y o f T e x a s ’ o u t s t a n d i n g I s t u d e n t o f t h e y e a r . o f T e x a s , t w e n t y y e a r s ag o, th e in a w o o d e n l e c t u r e w a s held sh a ck . H e w e n t on to s a y t h a t , j u s t a s th e U n iv e r s i t y has g r o w n since science e x ­ so h a s p a n d e d in th e la s t tw o de c a d e s. t h e n , . H e believ es m t h a t t h . t h e y e a r ’s in T h u r s d a y ’s th e g r e a t e s t TexaTU it is s i g n i f i c a n t t h a t th is— . o r g a n i z a t i o n f r o m his p o s it io n as • * >»• — t a c tiv e i J t t h . « « * — * t h e a w a r d s ahould b e s t in K th* p i e s e n t school y e a r led t h a t p n i v « s i t v th is v e a r F o llo w in g his choice as one of ^ ' ran^ 8 r a n k .a s t v e a r , a n d d u r - A llie s C h e c k N a z i Forces A f u ll- f l e d g e d wmr o f m o v e m e n t w a s in fu ll s w in g la te T h u r s ­ d a y b e t w e e n N a m u r a n d S e d a n a? th e G e r m a n s s o u g h t to p u s h th e i r a r m o r e d co lu m n s e v e r d e e p e r into B e g liu m a n d F r e n c h t e r r i t o r y , a F r e n c h m il ita r y s p o k e s m a n said. P a r i s c irc le s c o n t e n d e d t h a t the. G e r m a n a t t e m p t s to s p r e a d o u t f a n w i s e f r o m S e d a n w e r e r e p u ls e d a n d t h a t th e N az i f o r c e s t h e r e w e r e b e i n g held in check. T h e y a d d e d t h a t t h e s i t u a t i o n a l o n g th e f r o n t b e tw e e n S e d a n a n d N a m u r is c o n f u s e d a n d se rio u s , b u t t h a t t h e r e is no n e e d f o r a n x i e ty . in t w e n t y a d v a n c e m e n t y e a r s h a s b e e n th e p e r f e c tio n o f : to J o e W ilson. F o r his ac tiv itie s a g a i n s t s m a l l p o x . ' s *nce he f a m e t o th e F o rty A cres, a v a c c i n a ti o n “ B u t p e o p le fail to rea lize th e b e n - i in c lu d in g t h e f o r e m a n s h ip o f C o w ­ e r s t i o n , ” he said, “ T h e y r a t i o n a l i z e ’ 0 ^ t h e i r o b je c ti o n s t i o n . ” d o u b l e - t e r m p r e s id e n t of ? a u D o lta f r a t e r n i t y , and t o e x p e r im e n t * - l*®dership ^of t h e I n iv e rs ity ILan th is v a c c in a - b °y®* d e r iv e d f r o m I l l u s t r a t i n g th is , he r e c a lle d a « n in g B o a rd , p o in t to his b e i n g one o f t h e m o s t v a l u a b le a n d best-liked s t u d e n t s o f bo d y n o t f o r l u s t o n e v e a r b u t f . r five Y es « . « t h e p r e s e n t s t u d e n t ; 1 ye a rs. B usin ess a t t h e coun c il m e e t ­ ing was t h e c o n s id e r a t io n o f r u s h ru le s f o r n e x t y e a r . T h e cou ncil m a d e t h r e e d e c isio n s; A n d i t w as as a C o w b o y t h a t J o e I), g o t his b ig g e s t th r ill, A t I ) All r u s h d a t e s e x c e p t th o se t h e 1939 T e x a s R e la y s J o e w on c o n t r a c te d f o r on 1940 c a r d s a r e th e c o v e te d h o n o r o f e s c o r tin g th e invalid. Old c a r d s m u s t n o t be b e a u te o u s J e a n C r a n b e r r y t o h e r q u e e n th r o n e . Q u ite d i f f e r e n t , he us,ed* *he ,n<4w c a r ' ^ w ill b e avaii- * r cKr c t t i n g l y a d runts, w as t h e jo y o f~l f a d i n L ' ( ? ) t h e 'l i k e w i s e V a n - - ,1 7 -’ ------- 2 > D u rin * c o n v o c a tio n , f r a t e r • I tv, „ of ,>/x* ue invew*?e Deau" n i t . r , » , n ' , . , \ i s i t t o C h in a s e v e r a l y e a r s ago. In o n e city, th e B u d d h is ts h a d o r ­ g a n i z e d a n a n ti- v iv ise c tio n ists so­ to p r e v e n t e x p e r i m e n t a t i o n cie ty on a n im a ls . A lth o u g h t h e r e w e r e m a n y “ m a n g y c u r s ” u n c la im e d in th e s t r e e t s o f t h e city, th e Bud- hists w o u ld n o t le t th e m be killed t h e d ogs m i g h t c o n t a i n b e c a u s e th e s o u l , o f t h e B u d d h i s t , . n e e . ' I t r u m p e t . T h e L o n g h o r n B and w as C0mPJ0Bed o f J * ™ * o r g a n i z a t i o n j ‘ ion de so u ls o f t h e B u d d h is ts an c es- r\ since J o e , J o e D., or J o e D av e n - p o r t, as you w o u ld have it. m a d e w d *on w a s a m o n g t h e o u t s t a n d i n g his f i r s t p u b lic a p p e a r a n c e a t t h e 1— " U n iv e r s ity . M o re t h e n th a n now, he w as b lo w in g his ow n h orn, a i t h a s b e e n lu s t five Years I A n d th p f i r t t r e c i ie n t o f his , e r v i„ s t e o u s ’ m Bull la s t fall. 0Wn w a V* B evo t h e to F r i a r s 1 0 ^ n f l r , if y o u w a n t s o u g h t m o r e ta t T r P r e n t i c e Hill w as also r e - e le c t e d a s v ic e - p re s id e n t by a c c la m a tio n , Bill (.'rain, C l e o r a R o h r b r o u g h , ' • '• Moore, d e a n of s t y - A lU M a r g a r e t P a lm e r , a n d H o r ­ t e n s e Y a r n o w e r e e l e c te d m e m b e r s T o d e s c r ib e J o e is to d es crib e bftat co*<>r d in * t o r on t h e c a m p u s , o ffe n siv e s r e p o r te d by a n y f r a t e r - o f t h e C u r t a i n C lub B o a r d of G o v. s e n io rs n a m e d n a m e a s p r in g of 1939. A s th e U n iv e r s it y P l a n n i n g B o a r d , ! A c o m m itte e u n d e r t h e d ir e r t h e a ^ter th e h e a d o f W e ek . t h e d e n t life, w as p ro v id e d t o j u d g e 1 n i r a m t y M a n n i n g B o a r d . p r e s id e n ts , o f f ic ia ls lim ier m e arnee- IO o clock ^ ° ’c!ock a commi<...e d u r i n g d u r i n g in ,n j on t h 6 n o r t h sidG. h o n o r s , t h e n a m e o f J o g D & v en o o rt ^ ^ i U o 3 1 R j s h ? * te * m l > B.o t be p v , y m e m b e r s m u s t n o t co,ne in to | t h e s q u a re a t H o n M e m o ria l A u- ' C o r i u m , b u t m u s t r e m a i n b e y o n d i. u h ' !d R u s h j r s " See J O E W I L S O N , P a g e 4 S ee 1 N T E R -F R A T , P a g e 3. O'Keefe Elected Curtain Club Head Th# cool, m e th o d ic a l D eu t*e hf p itc h in g his se co n d y e a r o f c o n ­ f e r e n c e bal!, h a s n e v e r lo s t a con ­ f e r e n c e g a m e . A lw a y s t h e r e w ith P a t O ’K e e f e w a . r e - e le c te d pres- J u s t e n o u g h . t u f f to w in. n e v e r p u t t i n g o u t u n t u he g e t s in a hole, rooJt d f p f n d a b l # I ,le n t o f t h . C u r t a i n C lub b y ac- bj(, M e, M ., , he „ , , . , > c l a m a tio n a t a b usine ss m e e tin g p itc h e r in t h e c o n f e r e n c e . T h u r s d a y n ig h t. d e n t o f R u s tle r s , O 'K e e f e has s e r v e d a? p r e s id e n t of la in C lub a n d of A lpha Psi O m e g a , h o n o r a r y d r a m a t i c f r a t e r n i t y , th is r e a d y , B u m p e r s c a n ’t >'e a r * B u m p e rs, lik e m o s t le ft-h a n d ed A m e m b e r of F r ia r s , an d presi- p itc h e rs, is e r r a t i c . I f h e is on, th is f a s t- b a lie r f r o m A lb a n y c o u ld g iv e th e C u r- a n y c re w o f h i t t e r s ' p l e n t y o f i* n o t q uite lo n g . W ith th e A g g ie s h a v i n g a ch a n ce to c h a m p io n s h ip , t h e th o u g h , t h i s h u l k y s o u t h p a w is d u e to be re a d y . In f a c t, if h e w ins to d a y , th e L o n g h o rn s w o u ld n ’t be s u r p ris e d if he d td n ’t t r y a n iron m a n s t u n t a n d p itc h t o m o r r o w ’* g a m e also, e r n o r s a t th e m e e tin g . tr o u b le , b u t if he la st f o r tie G e r m a n s P r e p a re Big A s s a u lt T h e G e r m a n s cla im e d to h a v e c a p t u r e d L o n g w y j u s t n o r t h of th e M a g in o t line a n d sa id t h a t G e r m a n “ B l itz " tr o o p s h a v e w id e n e d th e b a t t l e f r o n t in B e lg iu m a n d F r a n c e a n d c l e a re d th e w a y “ f o r w'hat m a y be o ne o f t h e g r e a t e s t d e f e a t s o f m o d e r n t im e s ." P r e d i c t i n g a n allied co llap s e, p o ssib ly w ith t h e n e x t f e w d ays, G e r m a n m i l i t a r y circ les asserted t h a t R e i c h s f u e h r e r A d o lf H i t l e r ’s 1940 a d a p t a t i o n o f t h e f a m o u s V o n S c h lie f f e n p la n f o r e n c ir c le ­ m e n t o f P a r i s w as p r o c e e d i n g w ith sp e e d a n d p re c is io n f a r e x c e e d ­ i n g t h a t o f 1914. Texan Awards Are Given A t Picnic Thursday Afternoon Ranking Geologist To Be Announced T h e o u t s t a n d i n g g eo lo g y s t u ­ d e n t o f th e U n iv e r s ity will be se ­ le c te d a t th e m e e t i n g o f th e S o u th t h e T e x a s G eological S o c ie ty a t P la z a H o te l in S an A n to n io F r i ­ d a y n i g h t. his voice. H is u n r u f f l e d m o d e s ty is e x p r e s s e d p e r f e c t l y in low, hu sk y to n e , I t is a voice t h a t ca n la u g h , c u r io u s l y e n o u g h . A n d y e t i t is u s u a lly s e rio u s , b e c a u s e J o e W il­ son is u s u a lly se rious. B u t n o t alw a y s, d e f in ite ly . R*- m e m b e r t h e C ow boy -B ev o d u el b e ­ t w e e n h a lv e s o f th e R ic e -T e x i* g a m e la s t f a ll ? T h e f i r s t a p p e a r ­ a n c e J o e m a d e on t h a t field , you r e m e m b e r , he w a s b low in g a t r u m - p et. W ell t h a t Bevo d u e l w a , t o | £ “ S om e o f th e p a p e r s o f o n e o f k an sas, w h e r e h e b e c a m e s p e a k e r I s li p p e r y w ith blood, b u t it le a d s to t h e te m p l e w h e r e L ib e r ty sits C o n f e d e r a t e o f th e H o u se o f R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s g r e a t e s t T e x a s s * • * * > in c lu d ia * t " ’° o r ' K '" a! l e t t e r s f r o m S a m H o u s to n , a r e on as he led th e tu s s le to A rc h ,v e s C o lle c tio n m ,h e L niT C rsitY L i b r a r y 's ' a s so c ia te th is w e e k . to >«42, w h e n o n ly 29 y e a , , old. e n t h r o n e d ." l a t e r he w a s e l e c te d I wo y e a r s A rka n - t h e he b u t r e- ill j u s t ic e j sa s S u p r e m e Cc o f C o u r t, A f t e r L e e ’s s u r r e n d e r Mr. OM- h a m f le d to M exico. A y e a r l a t e r h e w'ent to C a n a d a a n d soon a l ­ t h e ’ o b s t i n a t e bull e i t h e r on 1 h ey haVe b e e n s e le c te d f r o m a j sig n e d in 1848 b ec a u s e of C h a r l e s J o h n L e a v i t t J r . , o f W e s t O r a n g e , N. J . , w on t h e S ig m a ! f o r t h b y th e A m e r i c a n A sso c ia tio n o r o f f t h e field, n e i t h e r ‘ a t t e m p t I i a r g e Coll55,t 1i? n on W illia m s o n h e a U h > w h ic h he s o u g h t to r e p a i r j t e r w a r d w as allo w ed to r e t u r n u n - M o re t h a n ..ovvnty m e m b e r , o f th e e d i t o r i a l a n d b u sin e ss s t a f f s o f ' ^ ' a n n u a l a w a r d is p r e s e n t e d . h i o w i n T ’ B u T n o t T n l u s t I T he D aily T e x a n c e l e b r a t e d th e a p p r o a c h i n g end o f th e 1 9 3 9-40 y e a r to t h e .student w h o m o s t s u c c e s s - : b lo w in g a t th e B o y S c o u t H u t n e a r B a r t o n S p r in g s T h u r s d a y a f t e r n o o n . fu lly f u lf i lls th e r e q u i r e m e n t s set g e t D e lta Chi c u p f o r th e b e s t e l e m e n t a r y r e p o r t i n g s t u d e n t a n d E l i z a b e t h j0^ P e t r o l e u m G eo lo g ists, s p o n s o r s j p r o v in g W h a r to n o f A u stin w o n t h e T h e t a * t h e b e s t S ig m a P h i b r a c e l e t f o r girl s t u d e n t in th e D e p a r t m e n t of J o u r n a li s m , n o t a m e m b e r o f T h e t a S ig m a Phi. S ig m a D elta Chi is th e p r o f e s s io n a l j o u r n a l i s m f r a ­ t e r n i t y f o r m e n a n d T h e t a S igm a Phi is t h e h o n o r a r y p r o f e s s i o n a l jo u r n a lis m f r a t e r n i t y f o r w om en, c o m m itt e e w hich s e le c te d h im w a s v „ .u., c o m p o sed o f J a c k H o w a r d , p re si d e n t ; D e W i t t R e d d ic k , p r o f e s s o r o f m o n s, a l u m n u s , w h o is e d i t o r o f F n d a y th e T e x a s P a r a d e . j o u r n a l i s m ; a n d C h a r l e s ' S i - r t u d v n u »-,.re o f t h e a w a r d . ..... ...................... t o see anf^ fo llo w in g ' c a r e e r . L_ ty t h r e e ...u.. j v i . . . i * j . . . A f t e r p r e l i m i n a r y e l im in a tio n s his b r ie f , b u t to t h e p o in t, s ta g e * nu 1 b y t h e f a c u l t y o f t h e D e p a r t m e n t c a r e e r . I t se e m s t h a t M r o f G e ology , th e v in g a success, H e a g a in lo s t his se rio u s side in I S im p s o n O ld h a m , one T e x a s i® ^ €er) , e f ° * C o n f e d e r a t e ave M a c k “ N a t u r a l l y I a m s o r r y t o c o m p e t e S a n f o r d , s e n i o r ; L ew is H. R o g e rs , s e n i o r ; J* G a r d n e r , g r a d u a t e th e y e a r com e to an e n d , ” M ax : !,tljdpnt‘ P a s 's f o r t h e c o m p e ti tio n B. S k e lto n , e d i t o r o f th is y e a r ’s is p a r t l -v u P ° n Pa P*rs w r i t t e n by T e x a n , said. “ B u t I f e e l h a p p y | th e c o n t e s t a n t s . T h e s u b j e c t f o r in b e in g a b le to give so m e s m a ll tho p a p e r s th is y e a r is “ T h e R o­ to t h a n k s to y o u f o r y o u r w o r k on t h e p a p e r . I t is t h r o u g h y o u r e f ­ f o r t s t h a t t h e T e x a n h a s b e e n s u c ­ c e s s f u l th is y e a r . ” H e t h e n p r e ­ s e n t e d a w a r d s m e m b e r s . s t u d e n t s - f if ty t h e f a c u l t y m e m b e r s s t a f f D e p a r t m e n t o f G e o lo g y will a t ­ t e n d t h e m e e tin g . T h e S o c ie ty h a s : l a tio n s h ip o f U n c o m f o r m i t i e s Oil a n d G as A c c u m u l a t i o n . " A p p r o x i m a t e l y t o e d i to r ia l f r o m a n d S c h o la rs h ip c e r t i f i c a t e s f r o m Sigm a D e lt a Chi w e r e also given J o h n to H a r r i e t C u n n i n g h a m , W a g n e r , B e t t i n e l P hillips, C. O. I le s t ir , a n d Ha! Brow n, B l u f o r d h a d b ee n Bridges. T h e i r n a m e s p re v io u sly th e a n n o u n c e d T exan. in C. O. B r o w n w a s g iv e n t h e m o s t t h e i w a r d as o u t s t a n d i n g wsnior in S ig m a D e lt a Chi. The t h e ( in o f S e n a t o r s , le x a s . H* ,<,u] loves th e Y an kees y exas a.& M . should stage an s UpSet, d e f e a tin g The University x eXas twice at A u stin Frid ay o f th e som etim es sentimcr. alw ays astu n t# Mr. J a c k Doy.e, j p onecj games. who like m a n y b ro th e rs but won t -et in t e r f e r e with his j u d g m e n t w.ien he a rra n g e s his b e ttin g odds. He and S a tu rd a y , the A ggies’ bad the Yank? odds-on -a v o ri.e s .p o stp o n e m e n ts a g a in s t B aylor and a t th e s t a r t o f the season, a n a I S.M.U. m ight be since has ju g g le d th is to the cur- g M.U. could thu s sneak back into *chonl gam es th ird placei r e n t 6 to 5, w ith th e Red Sox a close 3 to 2 and to I. In d ia n s 3 H the C eve,and W ed nesday the Bears w ent ten B efo re played | T h . Baylor B o a r, held . j i m th a n one h u n d r e d team s. By S s ^ e " n’ re c o rn m e n d e d 'th a t’on’ d e - 1 A 170-team pick up in the last three years w ill p u t 784 Inter- ( scholastic football team s in c o m -1 bat with each other n ext fa ll, R.j o f T e x a s 1 J. Kidd, U niversity j League d ire c to r said here today, high , League sponsorship o f school football began in 1921 with in in tr a m u r a l* — ha* b e e n a s k e d ♦“ r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s . to t w o sen d A ll m a n a g e r s i n t r a ­ th e m u ral d e p a r t m e n t w ill b e p r e s ­ e n t, fr o m A change in touch football rules ! suggested which will j has been eliminate p a r t of th e u n n e c e ssa ry te a m m e d a l s f o r w i n n i n g t h e I n t r a ­ m u ra l c h a m p i o n s h ip in b a se b a ll. in c l u d e d F r e d Bar* T h e ric k lo w , C l i f f o r d B o y d , L e ig h t o n C o r n e t t , J a c k J a c k s o n , B u r t o n L a w r e n c e , C l a u d e W a l l a c e , P e r r y H y b a r g e r , M ar vin B a k e r , A lb e r t W a lk e r , O s c a r Hall, a n d V ir g il K e r s h . rights th ey should be losing them. Take W ednesday night, when* "■ 1 1 CHICAGO, May 16.— (IN S) — Judge K. M. Landis, com m ission­ er into Class A, 105 te a m s ; B, 388 ; 0f the line will be p e rm itte d to w iu receive a siiver mecial as t e n - j The Yankee o utfield star appar- C, 121. The 1940 r e c l a s s i f i c a t i o n j c r o s s the line of scrim m age to rush nig Fjng ies champion. Pat L o w r y ,! e n tjy received a sum m ons to L a n ­ revealed 104 te a m s in Class AA; 290 in A; 255 in B; and 135 6- m an te a m s — to ta l 784. the parser. A n othe r ^ pi K appa Alpha, w ill also be given football change will j a gjiVf,r m edal for w inning the prohibit the use of football shoes h o r s e s h o e pitching championship. if the recom m endation is accepted. Sigma. This will elim inate all cleated earnecj a silver medal by winning Jim B ivins, Kappa dis’ office shortly be fo re noon. t h r o u g h M cC arthy Gould has long been a friend of given the L e a g u e ’s e n tr a n c e *w , „ « u into the s ta te schoolboy fo o tb a ll - three picture, Kidd re c a lle d here to d a y , shoes except gym shoes w ith cleats g0]f singles. ^ Tritri . they m anaged to w’in. B eaum ont’s Exporters are on a little spurt o f their own. There doubles by Frank Secory enabled Shreveport them to wallop short Sports 8-4, to sweep the the th e re %vere no eligibility ru le s and and even the coaches played in innings f o r ,ay 1n Y ankees in be a tin g Texas C hristian home games. 5.4^ to wind up victorious in all do.*’ Mr. Doyle | three gam es w here th e two met. T wq factorg are promim>Tlt in blocking or the phenom enal g ro w th o f L eague 1 r e c o t n m e n 1 n p rrh e rsh in . K idd . . i d , O n ,, t h . , >* « « * « . }•«*>. Th* recom m end s- C ro*k*tt. A rn old S th e second stra ig h t m em bership, K idd said. One, the is f o r a introduction of 6-m an fo otball fo r pe n a lty the small school t h a t had n e ith e r m oney n o r a th le te s fo r te n -y a rd pen alty ! tion u n n ec e ssa ry fo r The roughness d u rin g tacklin g or block- I ing shall re m a in f if te e n yards. tackling^ h as been T he _ te a m Odie M in atra. t h e ii, l l W b ’ A change & i in l l I.___ 4 l , A r t f A t i i s r l llsed f o r softball. | M embers of Barlow'*? Boys w a te r silver th e p e n a lty f o r i p 0j0 , x-— ...___ i n falling to the g ro u n d rn th e act ot , m e d a i s f or w inn in g in t h a t sport, includes Sam G ree r J C a i '' L ew is H aenel, C lark H ew ett, Ed te a m will ------- ♦ j* receive a1__ I. t Vl f l v a n f _ _ * * Stengel, a n d 1 Poor supp ort of Ben A bney cost m an •frame. Two, th e b re a k in g up by the Frog? th e ball gam e, they let in the ty in g ru n s on er- i large loops r o r s . ! since of cham pionship m onopolies | with weak team s. fo o tb a ll schools in DiMaggio an d has o fte n him advice, b u t th e r e p o r t t h a t the [ aeries tig h t p r o m o te r received cash from the Y ankee s ta r w as believed in baseball circles to d a y to be im ag- by b e a tin g Oklahoma C ity 13-2, f 0r th e R ebels’ th ir d consecutive inative. Dallas com pleted stay o f the season cessful home its first suc- DiMaggio, in Chicago with th e wip Yankees, virogously denied t h a t he pays a ny p a r t of his sala ry to anyone, and he d eclared t h a t th e re p o rts his pay in g a m a n a g e r are e n tire ly u n tru e . two-gam e triumph Cats. Tulsa com pleted a sw’eep o f the 7-2 series with the Fort Worth over a ------------------------------------- ‘ C I N C Y P R O T E S T F I L E D thirteen-inning NEW YORK, May 16.— (IN S) — President Ford Frick o f the N ational League scheduled a hear­ ing today to discuss the protest filed by the Cincinnati Reds over game T uesday’s with th e Dodgers at Ebbetts Field which Brooklyn won 6 to 5. Manager Bill McKeehzie o f the th a t Charley Gil­ Reds charged bert’s h it in the sev enth inning struck U m pire Bill Klem, a n d t h a t in violation of the rules Leo Du- rocher was p e rm itte d to advance from first to th ird on the blow. H A R S H A N Y R E L E A S E D ST, L O U IS, May i e . — (IN S ) — W ith th e release o f c a tc h e r Sam H a r s h a n y to San A n tonio of th e Ix>ui? St. Texas L eague, Brow ns th e to d a y are dowm re q u ire d tw en ty -five p la y e r limit. the to seen ‘ “ I ’ve the every one of th e ir ju st as I always c onfided, “ and I ’m sorry to say th e y do n’t themselves. T h e y are pressing, fo r one thing, aud* crab bing an d squaw king f o r j a n o th e r. W ho ever heard of the Y an kees th e u m ­ f ig h tin g with pires? look like “ I ’m n o t sure th e y are through, b u t this w e ste rn trip will tell the sto ry . There is a long race ahead ye t, b u t th e y w o n ’t be able to spot the Red Sox a n d Indians any more m a rg in and still m ake it up in the f t r e t c h . ” In the N a tio n a l L eague, the Cin­ c in n a ti Reds a r e 4 to 3 odds on fa v o r ite s to re p e a t, with Brook­ ly n ’s Dodgers second choice* at 2* to I and th e St. Louis Cardinals n e x t a t 3 to I. Hence, i t will be a Cincinnati- Boston W orld Series n e x t fall u n ­ less things begin to happen very it looks as quickly. As th o u g h th e D odgers have a b e t­ in th e ir L eagu e th a n t e r chance th e Y ankees have in th e A m e ri­ can. t h a t, to Valley Links M atch In A d v a n c e d Stages of H A R L IN G E N , M ay 16.— (IN S) Mrs. E. H. W o h lfa h rt of Houston, new ly-nam ed p re s id e n t the T exas W o m en's Public Links As­ sociation, faced Mrs. h . F* Mas­ sey of Dallas to d a y in th e q u a r ­ ter-fin a l ro u n d of her e f f o r t s to r e t a in b er title a t H a rlingen. H o u sto n has been chosen for th e 1941 to u r n a m e n t. W e d n e sd ay Mrs. W o h lfa h rt eas- ly do w n ed Mrs. Lee C hristop her of San A n to nio, 6 and 5, while Mrs. M assey w as w inning over Mrs. R. B. ‘Sm ith of H ou ston by th e sam e score. Miss V irg in ia Rutledge of D al­ las, th e leading challenger, came f r o m behind to elim inate Mrs. P. C. B o m of H ouston, 2 a n d I a n d will tee o ff with Mrs. R C. Stand ish of H o uston today. Mr*. S ta n d is h beat Mrs. Carlos W a t ­ son of Brownsville 3 and 2. Mrs. C. W. R oberson Jr . of T e r ­ rell, who d e fe a te d Mrs. J . E. Po ­ sey of Brownsville 4 and 3, is m a tc h e d to d a y w ith Mrs. H elen Campbell of San Benito. Mrs. Campbe I d rop pe d Mrs. A. J. Lt- f o r t J r . of H a rlin g e n , one up. Southern Association Batters G e t 89 Hits A TL A N T A . Ga., May 16.— ( I N S ) — Southern Association b a t­ te r s c on tinu e i th e ir heavy h t- out tin g W edn esd ay, eigh ty -nine safeties, in c lud in g six horrors, in th re e gam es played in the circuit. ra p p in g th re e N ashville’* league-leading Vol­ Little u n te e r s p ou nd ed Rock h u rle rs f o r n in e te e n hits, in ­ cluding a h om er by Dugas, f o r an 18-7 victory. The N ew O rleans Pelion’ s TBI ped fo u r ( a t ’ar ooga safeties m oundsm en f o r a n d a 13-11 decision. A tla n ta t o u c h ' d tw o B irm ing ham pitchers f o r ten blows and a 5-4 verdict. Memphis and Knoxville were r a i n ­ ed out, tw en ty A s u g g e s t e d c h a n g e a f f e c t s t he scori ng s y s t e m . It has b e e n r e c ­ o m m e n d e d t hat t he p o i n t s m a d e i nd i vi du a l m e m b e r o f by a n y an o r g a n i z a t i o n m a y n o t c o u n t t o war d t he A l l - Y e a r T r o p h y f o r his o r g a n i z a t i o n t ha n t hre e s por t s p e r q u a r t e r . R e ­ as a c t i vi t i e s , c r e a t i on a l ho r s e s ho e s , t a b l e t e n n i s , a nd f o u l t hrow h a v e b e e n e x c e p t e d . O r ­ g a ni z a t i o n m e m b e r s m a y p a r t i c i ­ pat e in e x c e s s i v e sport s in thei r divi si ons as “ o p e n ” c o n t e s t a n t s . in m o r e s u c h Sigma A lpha E psilon’s tennis tea m of H o w a rd Georgi, P e te r : H ennessey, Gene C arrington , an d j ! Dick Lee will receive silver medals ; f o r w inning th e tennis team title. S w i m m i n g m e a t c h a m p i o n s w h o h a v e w o n s ilv e r m e d a l s a re S i g m a C h i, in t r a m u r a l a n d f r a ­ t e r n i t y ch a m p io n* } J o n e s H o u s e , M IC A c h a m p i o n s ; a n d the A s ­ s o c i a t io n o f S t u d e n t A r c h it e c t s , c l u b c h a m p i o n s . In dividual swimmers who have ; Demaret Is Favored In G ood all Tourney F L U S H IN G , N. Y., May 16.— ( I N S ) — .Timmy D e m a re t, Byron Nelson, and Ben H ogan, a trio of Texans, w ere fav orite? to d a y as j they p r e p a r e d to tee o ff in a field i of fif te e n sionals th ir d a n n u a l $5,- j in COO Goodall Round Robin Golf hand-picked p ro fe s­ the To discontinue won medals are Sigma Chi’s m e d ­ ley re la y te a m of M organ N esbitt, Bill N ewkirk, an d F r a n k Yochem;* T ou rn am ent. an d Delta K ap pa E p silon ’s 400- j Only one rou nd was slated f o r the custom of fo o t re la y team of Iv e r Bowles, today, with play scheduled to be- divisional c o m petition in individ­ .Jack Aldred, Ted B elm ont, and j gin a t 2:30 o'clock (E .S .T .). Two ual sports a n d to combine all ent­ rounds will be played tom orrow , Bill Daniels. ities in one la rg e to u r n a m e n t ha? swim m ing S a tu rd a y , a n d S u nday, f o r a total been suggested. Also, the g roup e v e n ts a r e Bob H o ffm a n , D elta j of 126 holes. All holes will he open boxing t o u r n a m e n t a n d trans^ T a u D e lta ; Bill Newkirk, Sigma j played on a m a tc h play basis, with fering the novice to u r n a m e n t (rom c h i ; M organ N esbitt, Sigma Chi; each e n t r a n t m e e tin g each o f th e the fall to th e w in te r q u a rte r. a nd Sigma AL ; o th e r fo u rte e n . The g r e a te s t num - | ber of plus holes a t the finish will I d eterm ine th e w inn er. O th er recom m e n d a tio n s as th e y p ha Epsilon, * G re e r H ardw icke, an W in n e rs of o th e r S f- PRESSBOX ——— - Don Patteson ( B i l l W h it m o r e is g u e s t - c o l u m o i s t to d a y , p in c h - h i t t i n g fo r D o n P a t t e s o n . ) B y B IL L W H I T M O R E T e x a n S p o r t* S t a f f The “p a y - o f f ” comes this a fte r n o o n f o r the Texas Longhorns. T h e re have been suggested to th e i n t r a - ! mural d e p a r tm e n t a re as follows: C o n te sta n ts co m peting in indi­ sp o rts as “ in d e p e n d e n t” is no d o u b t tha t, n ee d in g only one v ic to ry in th e ir tw o-gam e s e r i e s m u st comply w ith the o rganization an d divisional eligibility rules of with the T ex as Aggies to win th e C o nfe re n c e cham pionship, the L o ng ­ the division in which t h e y com ­ horns will “ shoot the w o rk s” a g a in s t M arty Ka row ’s scrapp ers to pete. clinch th e p e n n a n t as soon as possible. vidual in S i g m a A l p h a E ps i l on w a s the i n t r a m u r a l t he c h a m p i o n t r a c k m e e t . Phi D e l t a T h e t a was t h e f r a t e r n i t y c h a mp i o n, C a m ­ pus Gu i l d w o n the M I C A ti tl e, a n d R i n k y Oi nks w o n the cl ub c r o w n . Individual tr a c k w inn ers w ere Besides Nelson, D e m a ret, and H ogan, th e field includes H e n ry Picard, Sam S nead, Clayton H eaf- | ner, Craig Wood, Lawson L ittle, Gene S arazen, Dick Metz, P aul R u ny an, Jim m y Thom pson, H o r ­ ton Smith, Jim m y Hines, and M a r­ and tin Pose, the A rg en tin e E v e ry o n e knows t h a t th e L o n g h o rn s a re re a d y , physically and m entally, to give out w ith all they've got to whip the Aggies. With Mel Deutach, the best pitch er in the C onference, on th e m ound, and with th e h a rd e st h ittin g club behind him t h a t a Texas team has had in several year®, the L ong ho rn s should win. B u t w h e n T e x a s m e e t s A A M. in a n y a th l e t i c e v e n t it take* mo r e than a bi l i t y o f t he p l a ye r s or j u s t t e a m spirit to wi n the ( a m e . R e ­ m e m b e r t h e 1 9 3 8 L o n g h o r n - A g g i e f o o t b a l l g a m e ? • All of this is m entio ned to emphasize the p le a t h a t Uncle Billy Disch, a c tin g Coach Bib Falk, and the entire L o n g h o rn te a m has m ade t h a t th e T exas s tu d e n ts get behind th e ir te a m this a fte r n o o n a n d yell as hard as th ey can, fo r the S te e rs will need all the su p p o rt t h a t : th e y can g et to b e a t A .AM. F o r m a n y years th e r e has t r on m uch talk a b o u t th e p oo r s p o rts­ m anship of th e Aggie students a t th e gam es betw e e n th e two te a m s in College Station. Some < f it m ay be true, a lot of it is pro b a b ly false, and m o st of it is undoubtedly e x a g g e ra ted . B u t t h a t is n o t th e point. The im p o r ta n t thing is th a t the A ggies back th e ir te a m one h u n d re d p e r cent. Anyone rn.ll te s tify to t h a t a f t e r seeing a gam e a t College S tation a n d hearing the Aggi e s keep up a c o n s ta n t yell all the tim e th e Texa® team is in the field t h a t th e A ggie te a m fa n s certain ly w a n t th e ir team? to win. in the rul e book* F j o m a p e r s o n a l s t a n d p o i n t , I do n o t c o n s i d e r t ha t g o o d s p o r t s ­ m a n s h i p — to t r y and r a t t l e t he o pp o s i t i o n , e v e n t h o u g h t h e r e Is n ot h i ng t h a t p r e v e n t * s uc h c h e e r i n g . H o w e v e r , I do thi nk t hat the T e x a s f a n s c an do a lot mo r e a n d l o t l o u d e r y e l l ­ ing at t he r i ght t i m e s at basebal l g a m e s t ha n t h e y h a v e d o n e in the pa*t. A n d don t t hi nk it doesn t hel p the t e a m a l ot w h e n t h e y h e a r a g r e a t r oar f r o m t he c r o w d as t h e y t r o t out on t he f i el d to b e g i n the g a m e , or that a pl a y e r will no t t r y j u s t a l i tt l e h ar d e r to g e t a hit i f he r e c e i v e s a big hand as he s t e ps to t h e p l a t e . P e rh a p s th e Long ho rns themse certain t h a t th e L on gh orn fans rea th e re is no do u b t t h a t th e I spirit in histo ry d u rin g the d ate th e L ong ho rns h a v e n ’t le t the f a n s have loose.” W hen the S te ers h t h a t p ra c tic a lly clinches t thusiastic su ppo rt. os are resp onsib le f o r this. I t is lly like to see the te a m win, an I u versity has developed th e best school ast few years, b u t in hom e g am es to ‘c u t a big lead in th e f i r s t fe w inning? ?. th e r e is no need o f a lot of en- et the fa n s have a chance to really ; ’ j B u t this a f t e r n o o n t he s i tu a t i on is g o i n g to bo d i f f e r e n t . T o d a y ’s g a m e it n o t l i ke l y to be o n e of t h o s e 2 6 - 7 or 16-4 m a s s a c r e s , a l ­ t h o u g h we w o u l d c e r t e i n l y like t o s e e t h e S t e e r s roll up a big m a r ­ gin l i ke t h a t . This is g o i n g to b e a bi t t e r , h a r d - f o u g h t b a t t l e f r o m the s t a r t t o the f i n i s h , a n d t h e r e is a c h a n c e t hat t h e g a m e will be cl os e e n o u g h so o f d e t e r m i n a t i o n p r o m p t e d b y an o v e r f l o w c r o w d o f y e l l i n g Texas f a n s c a n p r o v i d e e x t r a - o u n c a l i t t l e t h a t t hat t he m a r g i n o f v i c t o r y . So h e r e ’s hoping t h a t every s t u d e n t in th e U n iv e rs ity will go o u t th e ir to C lark Field a t 3:30 o’clock and r o o t the Longhorn* into tw e n ty - f irs t C on ference cham pionship. Add horseshoe doubles to th e lim iting a n y o rg a n iz a ­ to five fro m Reduce horseshoes points. th e v ictory points for th re e golf doubles fro m six team s p e r org anization . program , tio n ’s e n trie s to fo u r team s. Lev. !, F o x t a i l , K appa Alpha ; B a - , Fren c h ch>mpion, y a rd McMahon, Kappa S igm a; J _________________ Jim Tolleson, Sigma Alpha Epsi­ lon; E lm e r Finley, P.E.M. Club; Noble Doss, J o h n W estm orelan d, In crease th e limit on e n trie s in J a c k C rain, a n d H o w ard C orb ett, to eight m e m b e r of R inky D ings’ 440-yard 1 re la y t e a m ; G ra d y Jo r d a n , Web- P e rm it softball players to u*e s te r Bishop, B obby Scott, a n d Clair re g ulation softball shoes with rub- G annon, m e m b e rs of Phi D elta ; T h e t a ’s 880 -yard rela y te a m ; H a r ­ b er cleats. old Ju n g m ic h el, Rinky Dinks; Jack F a n t, Sigm a A lpha Epsilon; Billy M ark ette, C am pus Guild; a n d R. B. P a tric k , Sigma A lpha Epsilon. Lim it th e organization to th r e e en tries in each e v e n t in tr a c k and swimming. (Jj 5 y ? i ? 0 i r j ^ O t he r s u g g e s t i o n s m a y bo m a d e f r om t he f l oor . T h e i n t r a ­ mural o f f i c e d e s i r e s an e x p r e s ­ sion f r om t he t e a m m a n a g e r s on the s c h e d u l i n g g a m e s on S a t u r d a y a f t e r n o o n s . q u e s t i o n o f T he Pow Wow ends all i n t r a ­ th e y e a r. A f o r m ural ac tiv ity modified is c o nd ucted d u rin g the fir s t te r m of su m m e r school. in tra m u r a l pro g ra m In tra m u ra l to I N D I A N A P O L I S W I T H D R A W S J u n io r m a n a g e r , w ere Joe C o r - ' sw ea te rs will be given this y e a r ’s se n io r and ju n io r m a na ge rs a n d to th e tw elve highest fre sh m a n m a n ag e rs, an d n e x t y e a r ’s senior and ju n io r m a n ­ ager? w ill be announced. Senior m a n a g e rs f o r this y e a r have been F r a n k Singer, T a u D elta Phi; Chile Lipscomb, in d e p e n d e n t; and H a r r y Goodman, T a u Delta Phi N E W YORK, May 16.— (IN S ) — E. R oland H a rrim a n , pre sid e n t of th e G ran d Circuit, to d a y was a tte m p tin g to find a n o th e r city to re p la c e Indianapolis which w ith ­ d rew a n d cancelled the two weeks t r o t t i n g rac in g scheduled for of and the In d ia n a tr a c k in the Se p te m b e r. R efu sal M arting gate o rd e re d bin. Delta T au D elta; Max Gold- by th e c ir c u it w as b e l i e r . d t o h a y . with- field. T au D elta P h i; R en nie Ba- p re c ip ita te d Indianapolis ker, Phi Delta T h e ta ; T h u rm a n _____________ _____________ B a rre tt, D elta T au D elta; Lewis Levinson, T au Delta P h i; J a c k R A B B I G O O D M A N T O S P E A K Michelson, T a u D elta P h i; F ra n k - “ The Dykes Have B u r s t” will be lin Hicks, in d e p e n d e n t; Joe Davis, I the s u b je c t of Rabbi A b ra m Vos- Delta T au D e lta; and B. R. Rey- sen G oo dm an ’s address a t th e F r i­ day even in g service a t Tem ple nold?, in dep en den t. B eth Israe l, E le v e n th and San Ja c in to S tre e ts. H is talk will be on th e E u r o p e a n crisis. J u n e to use r The org a n iz a tio n w in ning be the All-Year T rop hy will a n ­ nounced, a nd th e individual high scorer fo r th e y e a r will be given an award. All o th e r a w a rd s which have n ot a lre a d y been m ad e Will be given. The B l o m q u i s t S w e d e * r e c e i v e t e a m will bal] b e t e - go l d K L I P K L U B P L A N S P I C N I C The Klip Klub will e n te rta in gu ests a n d m em b ers with a picnic S u n d a y a f te r n o o n fro m 3 until 5 o’clock a t B a rto n Springs. CASH FOR RYTEX-HYLITED WEDDING INVITATIONS or A N N O U N C E M E N T 25 FOR $3 Te x a s Book Store At#* 0*S rgASiTY 2 J % < * O C A D A L l PL S t DRAWING INSTRUMENTS A T T H E CO-OP MAK! MAY Q U IT LOS A N G E L E S , May 18.— ( I N S ) — T aisto Maki, F in la n d ’? w orld charr? ion distance ru n n e r , ha? a ‘h e a r t m u r m u r ” and may n o t ru n again, it W'as le a rn e d t o ­ day. The little F in n , in Lea Angeles to race in a F in n ish b e n e fit p e r ­ fo rm a n c e S u n d a y night, was to be given a n o th e r ex am in ation at cot elusion of a tu n e -u p r a c e t o ­ day. New Slack Suits 1.95 and 4.95 M A N ’S S H O P Te x a s Bookstore G O B Y K A T Y $3.00 to Dallas and Ft. Worth Also Special Fares to Other Points On Sale Daily Phone 7202 or 2-3141 O u r B u tto n E x p e rt p o p s up w ith th is I A 2 8 - p o u n d p u ll w ill a * , yank the bu tto n s from m o st shirts. Takes twice th is m u ch on Arrow shirts. A small detail, perhaps, b u t i f s small details all along the line th a t make A r r o w s A m e r i c a ’s b e s t ­ selling shirts. $ 2 up. The TO GGERY 2310 G uadalupe H o w m uc h of life are y ou m i ss i n g BECAUSE YOU CAN 'T SEE WELL! Correctly prescribed glasses will make the fu­ ture look brighter, and your days more pleasant. Just g o t o .............. ... ^ ^ T R E A B M S y [sirs o ? t o J C A S H F O R BO O KS T O P P R IC E S P A ID F O R B O O K S U SE D H E R E A G A I N Te x a s Bookstore A t m O S S AAOM u N i e t t i i r v 2 2 4 4 G U A D A L U P E S t ' c A MILE AHEAD STYLE AR R O W has its ear to the g ro u n d » s , catches every new q u irk in shirt styling here and abroad. T h a t’s why we sell Arrows! And all Arrow' Shirts have flawless tailoring p lu i Mitoga shaping-to-fit. T h a t ’s why they n e a r better end fe e l better! $ 2 Sanforized Shrunk 616 CO NGRESS AUSTIN'S LEADING STORE FOR MEN A n O x f o r d E d u c a t i o n for s2 rrow oxford cloth i* A " ' A basket w e a v e effect on a distinguished by a rough heavy fabric. I t s the m ost durable of all shirtings. G o r d o n D o v e r i s t h e name of A r r o w ’s famous oxford shirt with the roll collar are so buttoned to effect an outward roll at t h e t i e k n o t . A g r e a t favorite for w ea r with tw eeds and sports cloth­ ing. M a k e sure it’s an Arrow' — they’re Sanfor­ ize d - Shrunk w ith fabric shrinkage less than I %, In white or colors, $ 2 up. ARROW SHIRTS See the Smart New Ideas in A R R O W S H I R T S at R M M U H I D A U S T I N — D A L L A S ------------ f ront, button-dow,n soft collar. T h e points on this rtTO'AT, MAT IT, 1949 m i n , i » » Thont 2-247S— =—THE DAILY TEXA N ^*—Phone 8-2478________________The The First College Daffy bt the Fovtk An the College P AGE T W ^ President Asks $1,182,000,000; 50,000 Annual Airplane Production Calls for Revised | How About a Picture, Mister? Defense Thought Council w , * c t « It, o f f i c e r , by and f r o m i £ r m “ toti' " ' ,o f Ru, h w ” k r u l e . sch olarsh ip ! fa ith — stro n g In fa ith in ou r w ay j o f livin g. I which is made up o f two repre- i its own membershi p. The main ac- a wa rd , a nd similar a c t i v i t i e s f ra t er n i ty , | t Wt l ea o f the council con cern tha .Tentative ap p oin ted by Wilson as en\ n t e r f r » U m f i S i n g - S o n g plans, V * Council,,; f r o m each * ent a t i v es Pr^ - A* its i- I I, too , p ra y f o r p e a c e — that the wa y s o f a gg re s s i o n and f or c e m ay ; be banished f rom the e ar t h— but I am determined to f a c e the f a c t | real i stical ly t h a t this nation r e ­ quires a t ou ghnpss o f moral and physical I am convinced, the A me r i c a n peo- ; pie hold to a high d eg ree . fiber. T hos e quali ti es take | mu s t Our task is plain. The road we. indicated. is clearly Our d ef en s e mu s t he invul nerabl e, j our se c uri ty absol ut e. B u t our d e ­ fense a s it was y es t e r d a y , or even as is today, does not provi de sec uri t y a g ai ns t potential d e ve l ­ op me nt s and d a n g e r s o f the fu - it j t u re . • and ; tion and o f its res ol ut e will D e fe n se can n o t be sta tic . D e ­ f e n s e m u s t g row c ha ng e f ro m day to day. D e f e n s e m u s t be d yna mi c and fl exibl e, and e x p r e s ­ sion o f the vital f o r c e s o f the na- to mee t what ever c hal lenge the f u ­ ture m a y hold. F o r these r e a s ons , j I need hardly a s s u r e you that a f ­ ter the a d j o u r n m e n t o f this s e s ­ sion o f congres s, I will not hesi­ tate to call the c o n g r e s s into a special session if at a n y ti me the situation of the nat ional def ens e i r e q ui re s it. The c o n g r e s s and the chief executive cons ti tute a t eam where the de fense of the l and is concerned. Our ideal, our obj ecti ve, Is still j p eac e— peace at home a nd peaco abroad. Neverthel ess, we s t an d rea d y not only to s pend millions for d ef en s e but to give our ser- lives f o r the : vice and even our ; m a i n t e nanc e of our A me r i c a n lib­ erties. Our security is not a m a t t e r of a r m t hat we a p on s alone. The .strong, the wields them mus t be eye t ha t gui des them clear, the will t h a t directs them indomitable. T he s e are the c h a r a c te ri st i cs of a f ree people, a people devot ed to themsel ves the have built, a people willing to d e ­ fend a w a y o f life t hat is p rec i ous to them all, a people who p ut their faith instituti ons they in God. nter-Fraf ( C ont i nu ed f r o m P a g e 1.) nity. Me mber* o f the commi ttee will c o n s i s t of D'-’an Moore, Wil­ son S f raus«, and nne other repre- ■FOR WORK'FOR P tM Spun Royon Sh a rk Skin M E N ’S SP O R T S E TS 4.98 H e re 's sn outfit styled to be seen a^’d adm ired! Bright summery colors with p enty o f spiriti Free- and easy cut with a spruced up a :r— notice the sm art drape lines, the pleated slacks, the open collar, the short s'eeves and the pleated pockets! A n d ?n the m ost com fortable fabric y o u 'v e ever seen or worn— spun rayon shark skin! i+ brings you alf the re ease from oppressive weight, all he c o d porousness you could want! Slide Fastener Fly Front! MEN’S SMART! SWIMAWAYS * 1.98 3a s+r; g c ?e o ' j +’c " -the s’ide fas+ener fly front! H e re ’s the on and off In ricH rayon satin with "Lastex, with c c itra stin g side s+ripes and belt. W it h S :de fastener poc- ets and built-in sup port. *R’ t rea chero u s by use o f the " f i f t h which persons sup po s ed be p eac ef ul visitors were actual l y a p a r t of an ene my unit of o c c up a­ tion. L ig ht n i ng a tt ac ks , capabl e of d es t royi ng ai rplane factories and munition work s hundreds of miles behind the lines, are part o f the new technique o f modern war. in w a r f a r e has The c lement of surprise which imp or t a nt t a c ­ the the has ever been an tic become more d a ng er o us because of a m a z i n g speed with which modern I equi pment can reach and a t t ac k the enemy' s country. Our own interests than ever vital are the w i d e s p r e a d More protection of the whole Ameri can hemisphere invasion or j a g a i n s t control or domination by non- A m e n o a n nat ion* has the united support of the twenty-one A me ri ­ can republics, including the Uni t­ ed S tates, More this protection calls f o r ready-at-hand w e a p on * capable of great mobility bec ause o f the potential speed of modern attack. than ever and T h e Atlantic Pacific Oc ea ns were r e a s o n a b l y a de q ua t e defensi ve barriers when f l ee ts u n­ der s a d could move a t an a v e r a g e speed of five miles an hour. E v en then by r s udden fora y it was p o s ­ sible f or an op p onen t actual l y to burn our national capitol. Later, the oc eans still g av e s trength to our d e f e ns e when fl eets and con­ voys propelled hv s t e a m could sail the oceans at fi ft een or twenty miles an hour. But thp new' e l e m e n t — air navi­ g a t i o n— s teps up the spee d o f p os ­ sible at t ac k to to three hundred mile* an hour. tw-o hundred, F ur t h e r m o r e , it bri ngs the new possibilities of the use of n e a r e r bases f r o m which an att ac k or a t ­ t ac ks on the A me r i c a n conti nents could b<» made. F r o m the f i ords of Greenland it is f ou r hours by air to New F o u n d l a n d ; five hours to N o va Scotia. Ne w Brunswick, and Que b e c ; and only six hours to New Eng l and. A u s t i n ’ s J u n i o r C h a m b e r of C o m m e r c e o p e n e d it« t i c k et ( a l e * W e d n e s d a y f o r the c h a r i t y ball g a m e to he p l a y e d a t H o u s e P a r k M a y 29 b e ­ t we en t he l oca l city nine, t he 7 - Up B o t t l e r * , a nd the G r a n d P r i r e B r e w e r * f r o m H o u i t o n . O f f i c i a l * the c h a r i t y hall l o o k i ng p a * t g a m e , too, in the h o p e * t ha t a new ci t y b a se b a ll a r e Sh own p a r k m a y he buil t in A u s t i n soon. in the p i c t u r e ia C. M, B a r t h o l o m e w , one o f A u s t i n ’ s l e a d i n g b a s e b a l l f a ns , b u y i n g the f i r s t J o h n s o n , U n i ­ f r o m Mi s s D o r o t h y v e r s i t y co-ed. S t a n d i n g n e x t to Mr. B a r t h o l o m e w is J o e K i n g a nd Bill Ri cks , J u n i o r C h a m b e r of C o m m e r c e o f f i c i a l s . t i c k e t * the trai ni ng of addi­ guns, and these w e a ­ tional personnel f o r pons. This would be in addition to the direct e s ti ma t es f o r these purposes in the other items re ­ quested. The proposed detai ls o f the a p ­ authorizati ons p ropri a ti on* the to asked f o r will he given c ommi ttees of the congres s. The se e s t i mat es do not, and and avail able to mee t any light- A meri can- mad e p lanes to forei gn ning of f en s i ve a ga i n s t our Amer- nat ions which might have ordered them, or seek to purc has e more ican interests. It me a ns also that facilities f or production m u s t be the point of planes. That, f rom ready to turn out muniti ons and vi ew o f our own national de f e ns e, equipment a t top speed. would be extremely shortsighted. Du r i ng the past y e a r Amer i can f o r war capacity production has planes, risen f r om a pp r ox i ma t el y 6, 000 planes a year to more than double t hat number, due in g r e a t e r part to the placing of forei gn orders. We h a \ e had the lesson before u s over and over a g a i n — nations that were not r ea d y and were u n ­ able to get r ea d y t he m­ selves ove rrun by the enemy. So- called f or t if ic a ti o ns no longer exist. A def ens e which to consolidate allows an enemy hi* a pproac h without hi ndrance will lose. A d ef en s e which makes no eff ec t i ve e f f o r t to destroy the lines of suppl i es and c om mu n i c a ­ tions of the enemy will lose. impreg nabl e including engi nes, fo u nd Our see to An e ff e c ti ve d e f e ns e by its very nature r e qu i r e s the equi pment to a t t ac k an a g g r e s s o r on his route s trong before he can of bas es within Ameri can vital interests. t erri tory establish the to is immediate problem increased addi- a g re a t l y capacity. I production like nation this up to the ability to turn of course, dupl i cate any item now in the pendi ng war a nd n a v y appro­ priation bills f o r the y e a r 1941. su p er i mp os e on this production ca- Nor do they include suppl emental pacity or defici ency e s t i m a t e s which tional may become ne c e s s a r y by reason should of pending legislation or shortage g e ar e d of fund s under e xi s ti ng programs. • out a t l eas t 50, 000 planes a year, j F urt hermore. this j s o m e nation should plan at this time a propram ... d em o cracy cannot c o p ' with the with 50, 000 military and naval new technique of g ov e r nme n t de­ veloped in recent y e a r s by a few' planes. countries countri es— by a -bn. w u lr t provide I believe that , a v . , T h p r p f ew w h n a r e t h a t * , Loose tal ki ng and thinking on the require the immediate s peeding up o w n 1 „e o f last winter s p ro g r a m to pro­ the part o f some may give f al se a r m y a nd navy are r o t f irst-rate, or that money has been Tvasted on c u r* equipment of all kinds, rhem. The ground f or c e* o f the army . impress ion t hat our ^ i t , . Nnthing could be f u r t her f rom tillery, the truth. 1 In rec ent year s the d efens i ve power o f our army, navy, and ma- ; rine corps has been very g re a t l y . improved. The nav y is s t r o ng er t od a y than at any ti me in the n a t io n’s history. l arge p r o g r am of T o d a y also a new' constructi on is well under way* Ship f or ship, ours are equal to, or be lt e r than, the vessel s of any fore i gn power. is likewise The a r m y its a t great est peace-time s trength. Its | equipment in quali ty and quanti ty has been g r e a t l y increased and im­ proved. The national g u a r d and the re serve s t reng t h o f the two services better are better equipped than duri ng any other prepared and | peace-time period. On the other side o f the picture we must visualize the o u t s t a n d ­ ing f ac t that since the fi rs t day of S e p t e m b e r , 1939, every week that has p a s s e d has brought new lessons l earned f r o m ac tual c om­ bat on land and sea. • inrluding , in- j eluding motor t r a n s p o r t and ar- anti - a i r r r a f t guns a nd ammuniti on supplies. It had been planned to sp re a d these req ui rement * over the next three or fill them a t once. f o u r years. We should A t this time I am a s ki ng the im­ mediate appropri ati on by the C o n ­ g re ss o f a large sum of money l or f our p r i mar y p ur p os es : First, to procure the essential equipment o f all kinds f o r a l arg er and thoroughly rounded-out a r m y ; Second, to replace or m o d er n ­ ize all old a r m y and navy e q u i p ­ ment ; Third, faci li ties f o r the a r m y and navy tional defe nse. We require ability finitely g r e a t e r suppl i es ; to increase production f o r everything needed f o r n a ­ the in­ turn out quickly to F our t h , to speed up to a 24- hour basis all e x i s t ing a r m y and navy c ontr ac ts, and all new con­ t rac t s to be awa rded. • I ask f or an immediate a pp r o ­ priation o f $8 96, 000 , 00 0, divided a p p r ox i ma t el y as f ol l ows: 1. F o r the army, $6 46, 000, 000. 2. F o r the navy and marine if B e r m u d a The Azores are only 2, 000 miles s e a ­ f r o m p ar t s o f pur eas ter n board and into fell hostile hands it is a m a t t e r o f less than 3 hours f o r modern bo mbers j a t t a c k was increased. All nations the to reach our shores. ant i -a i rc raf t are hard a t work F ro m a base in the outer We s t need o f additi onal I cite e x a mp l e s . Where naval ships have operat ed without a d e ­ q u at e protection d e f e n d in g 3. To the president to provide a i rc ra f t , their vulnerability to ai r f or e me r g enc ie s a f f e c t i n g the na tional security and defense, $100,- 000 ,0 0 0 . corps, $25 0, 000, 000 . st ud yi ng by The And Pa ra, Brazil, in two hundred min- j Indies, she c oa s t o f F l or i da could protection. be reached utes. S e ve r a l months ago the use o f a j now type o f magneti c mine mad e islands o f f the west c oast ma ny unthi nki ng people believe of A f r i c a are only 1,500 miles that all s u r f a c e ships were doom- fr om Brazi l. Modern planes start- I <*d. Within a f ew wreeks a success- ful d efensi ve device a ga i n s t these ing front the Ca p e Ver d e I sl ands can be over Brazi l in seven hours. in o p er a t ion ; mines wa s placed is but f o u r and it is a f a c t that the s inkings fl yi ng hours to C ar a c a s , V en e z ­ o f mer c ha nt ships by torpedo, by uela, and Ve ne z ue l a but two and mine or by ai rpl ane are defini tel y the one-half hours to Cu b a and much lower than during the simi­ l ar period in 1915. Canal Zone; and Cu ba and the Cana l Zone ar e twro and one-quar­ Co m b a t conditions have c h a ng ­ ter hours to Ta mp i c o , Mexi co; ed even mo r e rapi dl y in the air. and T a m p i c o is two a nd one-quar-J With the a m a z i n g p r ogr e s s in the ter h o u r s to St, Louis, K a n s a s I design o f p l a ne s and engi nes, the ai rplane o f a y e a r ag o is out o f j City, and Omaha. On the other *ide o f the conti- j date now. It is too slow, it is im-j nent, Al a s ka, with a white pop- p rop er l y protected, it is too w'eak illation o f only 3 0 , 0 0 0 people, is In types o f planes, we are not within f ou r or fi ve hours of fly- ing distance to V a n co u v e r , S e a t - behind the other nations o f the tie, T a c o m a and Portland. The Is- j world. Ma ny o f the planes o f the l ands o f the S ou th e r n Paci fic are belligerent p owers are at this m o ­ not the l at e st models. ment not of the west c oa s t o f S ou t h A m e r i c a to not B ut one bel l igerent p ower becoming only has ma ny more planes than p revent ba se s o f e no r mo us st rat eg i c a d ­ all their op p onen t s combined, but v a n t a g e to a t t ac ki ng forces. al so a p p e a r s to have a weekly p r o ­ duction capac i ty a t the mome n t that of that is f a r g r e a t e r than their opponents. in gun power, removed f r o m them f r om too f a r S ur e l y the d evel op men t s of the p a * t few weeks have m a d e it clear to all o f o u r citi zens that the pos­ sibility o f at t ac k on vital A m e r i ­ can zonv s ought to m a k e it e s ­ sential that we have the physical, the r e a d y ability to meet those a t ­ t ac ks and to prevent them from reac hi ng their objecti ves. This means military implements — not on p ap er — which are ready F r o m the point o f view' o f our ow n defense , theref ore, g r e a t ad- | ditional production c a p a c it y is our principal air requisite. F o r the p e r ma n e nt I a s k the C o n gr e s s not to take any in any way acti on which would the delivery of ha mp e r or delay record, In addition to the above sum, I ask f o r authorizati ons f o r the ar my, navy, and marine c orps to make c ont r ac t obli gations in the f u r t h e r sum o f $ 1 8 6 ,000 , 00 0. And to the president an ad di ­ tional authorizati on to make c on ­ $100, 000, - t ract obli gations f o r 00 0. The total o f authorizati on is t he r e fo r e $286, 000, 000 . It is my belief that a l arge p a r t of the r eq ue s t e d ap p r op r i a t i o n of $ 1 00, 00 0 ,0 00 , and the req u est ed authorizati on o f $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 to [ the p resident will be us ed princi­ pally f o r the increase o f produc- | lon a n t i - a i r c ra f t ai rplanes, o f THE CO-OP PAYS CASH FOR YOUR USED BOOKS the CO-OP which deny the f r e e d o m s w'hieh we maintain are essential to our dem-j ocratic way o f life. This I reject. 1 I knowT that our t r a i ne d offi cers and men know more a b o u t fi ght­ ing and the we apons and equip­ ment ne ed e d f o r f g h t i n g than any of us l a ym e n ; and I have c onfi­ dence in them. I know that to cope with p r es ­ ent d an g er s we m u s t be s t ro ng in in our* he a r t and hand; s t r o n g Is Y o u r H o b b y Phot ogr aph y f S e e O u r C o m p l e t e S t o c k o f C a m e r a s , S u p p lie s an d E q u ip m e n t H o rn * M o v ie E q u ip m e n t. ELLISON’S 818 Congress ■JEST P " - u U K t S A L U 1 G E T »» * ' l v k e s h i s s l o w e r t A R E " F A S T E S T PL AN E off the production line today!" That's how Homer Berry' describes the amazing new Bell Airacobra. This vet­ eran test pilot started flying in 1 9 1 3 . . . started smoking Camels the same year. " N o other cigarette ever gave me anything like the pleasure of a Camel,” he says. "They burn slower, smoke milder and cooler. In 26 years, that slower burning has given me a lot of extra smoking.” Try Camels. Enjoy Camel ’s slower-burning costlier tobaccos. Penny for penny your best cigarette buy! TEST PILOT HOMER BERRY SAYS: " N o fast burning fo r me in m y cigarette. I ’ve sm oked C am els ever since there have been any C am els. They burn slow er and give me m ore pleasure per p u ff and more puffs per p ack . ’ I ’d w alk a m ile for a slow-burning C a m e l!’ ” MORE PLEASURE PER PUFF ...M O R E PUFFS PER PACK! Cop7Tl*bt, 1940, R J. Reynold* Tobacco Co., Winstar fesiem, N 01 ::V ' A In recent laboratory tests, C A M E L S b u r n e d 2 5 % slcu er than the average of the 15 other of the largest- se l l i n g b r a n d s tested — slower than *ny of them. That means, on the average, a smoking plus equal to EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! r R A V O R PXGF FOUR D k « T in t Contg*Dotty th I South Phone 1-2478 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-2478 PRIDAY, MAY 1 7 ,1 9 4 0 Today'* Crossword Puzzle „ J U E P O E T ' S R E L E A S E ♦ 100% O . K. V f R . ROOSEVELT’S addres* to Congress met with approval not only on the part of the gentlemen making up that or­ ganization but also the entire citizenry of tfaa United States, When Mr. Roosevelt asked for $896,000,000 for the national defense the proposal was cheered. And a much larger sum would have been favor* ably received. For this country has seen the fate which comes to those countries not prepared to fight for their existence. Roosevelt was right in saying t h a t “we In this country want peace,“ but he was alto right in saying we were willing to fight to maintain our independence and civil liberties. His speech was strong and emphatic and indicates the solidarity in ■which this country has been united due to the present world crisis. this type to amounts already In 1939, the U. S. spent more than a billion dollars on national defense. The ap­ propriation asked for Thursday is in a d ­ dition legally pro­ vided. But the amount in figures is not im­ portant in itself. The only criterion for a in the matter of amount necessary, lf Mr. Roosevelt had deemed it necessary to ask for more, he would have been entirely justified. Our problem of national defense must be solved as quickly as possible and Congress can do no less than to move with the utmost *peed. If this country is not now adequately protected, such necessary- protection should be detailed and provided. lies purely Most outstanding of the lifted items for ■which Roosevelt asked appropriations was for aircraft. The staggering sum of 60,000 warplanes a year ■was what the President told the Congress our productive capacity fhould be. When one realizes that at the beginning of 1939 there were not more than 30,000 warplanes in the entire w-orld, one sees that the President has thought it necessary to go forward with long, long strides. Since the beginning of last year there has been great activity in the mak­ ing of planes, but losses also, and it may be that even today there are but 30,000 warplanes available for fighting purposes. Thus it would seem that with such pro­ ductive facilities, the U. S. soon would be­ come the greatest air power in the world. to the ap­ im portant angle propriations is that most of it is intended for the army. Our army at present con­ sists of some 246,000 men and officers. With the national guard units, U. S, troops number less than 500,000. To have soldiers, however, you must be able to supply them ■with arms and ammunitions, besides be­ ing able to transport them with easy f a ­ cility. It is because of this t h a t money was needed to provide supplies. It has been long recognized t h a t this was a crying need. Another Mr. Roosevelt has asked for w ha t is an extremely reasonable appropriation. Con­ gress should pass it as quickly as possible. 75" TS" 3 2 3S> 5 2 55 A Shaken Confidence TS" IT 21 D T F ! 6 IT 3 3 22 I 2 6 2 8 3 © m H 2 3 6 37 IMO m Ut HI I % 5 0 55 5 ? HORIZONTAL I —tree of • pple family 5— mineral apring 8—instead 12—musical instrument 13— weight measure 14— calm 15— very re­ spectful 1 1 —deer 18— sight organ 19— having lived longer 21—indian in Colorado 22—erase 23—belonging to us 25—toothed wheel 28— classifier 32— apprehend 84— herb allied to chicory 85—outlook 37—frosted 38— employ 39— pay a tte n ­ tion 41—lived 43—arrange hanging* 45—near the •tern 48— seed covering 50—capable of being placed by itself 62— term in mathematics 63— by means of 54— equal 55— summon 66— before 67—paradise VERTICAL 1—painful 2— submit 8— range 4— insect 6— resembling a s ta r 6—meditate 7—poker stake 8— w atering place in P ru ssia I M A D 77 C A D E % L A 5 H Isl T O A L E C , O N R E C A P » T Ll L A T E S S T A" T Ll T EL I N E P T Ty, D O T Al H E N < 5 T A G VZ, R A V H O N E S T T E R E T E V* i T A P E 77 A I. E 0 Y El T //, C R E E ■ /// 5 O R A * ' ’ A B A R E 6 A T E P O E T 5 E X P O S T U L A T I V E V O VV O R A 5 R E E k : E N E /A E E N K N E E Aver*** tim* af (alation: 2* minute*. Piitrtbuttd br Kiel Bettor** Smiled*. La*. 9—pertaining to public prayer 10—thin, nar­ row strip 11—verge IO— European deer 20—color of horse 22— attire 24— untied 25— breach 26— blunder 27— awakening 29—colony- forming polyzoan 30— wife of Adam 31—a color 33—hurried 36— pu rsuer 40— food fish 41—stinging insect 42—melody 44— seasoned 45— in bed 46— run away 47—bird of gull family 49—opposed to stoss 51—imitate O F F IC IA L N O T IC E S W y H E N WAR BEGAN, most Americans, including those in high places in the government, were confident of an Allied victory. Today t h a t confidence has been considerably shaken. The stunning Allied d e f e a t in Norway, coupled with the de­ veloped fact t h a t Nazi Germany has a war machine of almost unprecedented effic­ iency, has brought with it the grim specter of possible Allied loss of the war. Today, most competent authorities seem to regard the European struggle as a toss-up, in which neither side has any decisive edge. They think t h a t anything can happen. And t h a t situation is forcing America to con­ sider w h a t steps must be tak en against the event of a sweeping victory by the dicta­ tors, which would put all of Europe firmly under the heels of Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin. in It is a pparent that sentiment this country is heavily in favor of expanding our armed forces, especially the navy, as rapidly as possible. At the same time, it Is equally a p p a r e n t that we have no fixed military policy, and that no one really knows just how strong we must become hi the light of the strength of possible enemies. One school of thou ght holds t h a t lf Hiller wins, America will be faced with the potentiality of immediate military and ecbnomic invasion. This school of thought h led, so far as the publicists are concern­ ed, by Walter Lippman, who observed in THE DAILY TEXAN T h* Daily T m e , s t u d e n t n e * sparer o f Th* Uni varsity of T « x a s ta A u stin by th* Texas S t u d e n t Publication *. Inc., *v«ry m orn ­ in g e x cep t Monday. is published on the campus of the Ur.;varsity E n t e r e d aa • • c r c d c l a s s m a il m a t t e r a* Austin, Texas under the act cf C egress March I, 1H79. th* P o s t o f f i c e , Editorial office*. Jou rn a lism Building 103, ICI, and 201. T e le ph o n e 2- 2478 t n t t o t . P hone 2-247? A d v e r t i s i n g and Circulation Dep artment—J o « m a l ia m Build- S U BS C R IPT IO N £ ATES By C c-vie r I Month I S e m e s t e r U H m o.) I S em e st e r s (9 mo.I ................ —...... ■■■■ $ .60 ................... — 2.78 S.OO ------------ - By M ail t -60 2 60 4.00 R E P R E S E N T E D FOR N A I ION AL ADVERTISIN G BT National Advertising Service, Inc. College P ut.'liners R ep res en te d * * 420 MADISON AVR., NEW YORK, N Y. CHICAGO - BOST ON - LOS ANGELES • S A N FRANCISCO 19 3 Q M e m b e r 1940 Associated Co: eclat© Press E ditor-in-chief ...................... Associate E ditor ■ ...........:r T om m e Call, Vernon E dito rial Council Childers Jack Dolph, P a t Holt, E r n e s t S harpe, Boyd Sinclair. Editorial Assistants MAX La Verne Bryson, - . B. SK E L TO N ________La Verne Bryson Ja c k Dolph, Jack Howard. - ... ------------------ Bob W h itten Leslie C a rp e n te r st* E d ito r ----- ----- ----------- — J a c k Dolph A lonso Jam ison A m u sem ents E d i t o r S p o rts E d itor __ ______________ Clyde La M otte A s s o n a te Sports E d i t o r -----------------------Don P a t t i s o n Society E d itor ............ ........... ............A nita Cook Associate Society E d ito r CRr e f in e Evans T elegrap h E ditor — Associate T elegraph E d ito r An As Ka A? Fe As Ex As f *Atur* Editor .................. F M i _ . . . . . ------ N ella Mac Steussy ....... . F l o r a Gordon E d i t o r .... ...Bill Newkirk — -------J a c k H ow ard — ...................... Radio E d ito r - E d ito r .... •JHor C, Ben Kaplan O. Brown a recent column t h a t the gre at conquerors of the past have never stopped— t h a t they have gone on until, like Alexander, they dominated the world, or, like Napoleon, came to a Waterloo. Their p a r t successes, in other -words, breed future campaigns. And the very fact t h a t their people are hungry and exhausted makes it necessary for them to force their armies on, in search of new resources and new- victories. The other school of thought pooh-poohs this theory about IOO per cent. It believes t h a t the victor in the present European w a r will be so worn out t h a t it will take generations before its energies can be suf­ ficiently renewed to make more campaigns possible. Ex-President Hoover has sub­ scribed to this theory in several magazine articles and speeches. And John T. Flvnn, isolationist one of the foremost of columnists, recently wrote an article in which he scathingly decried the interven­ tionist position, and observed tha t the Eng­ lish and Germans alike found it exceed­ ingly difficult to move any considerable number of into Norway, a few hundred miles from English and German ports, and used th at fact to illustrate what he believes to be the impos­ sibility of moving a large invading army across either the Atlantic or Pacific. troops with equipment the Irrespective of who is right in this con­ troversy, it seems certain that military ex­ pansion will go on here, It is rumored t h a t the Japanese navy is dangerously close to parity with ours, and that Nippon has new battleships of a type superior to any we possess. Late reports from the European front indicate th at Germany has new fight­ ing planes against which our best planes, such as we have supplied to the Allies, are inadequate. And there can be no question as to the weakness of the American army. It woefully lacks anti-aircraft guns, tanks, and other essentials, according to the army high command itself, as well as lay com­ mentators. And the new G ar ra nd rifle, of ■which so much was heard a ye ar or two ago, seems to have fallen short of expecta­ tions— testing experts have lately rep or t­ ed that it tends to w a r p and overheat, and is otherwise faulty. The t r o u b l e s t h a t we have not decided upon any fixed defense progra m — and it is obvious to anyone t h a t the kind of army and navy and air force needed to defend our own territorial shores is vastly dif­ ferent from the kind we would need to de­ fend the far-flung Philippines, or to again send an A.E.F. to Europe. In an election year, with both parties trying to win the voters by any possible means, there is little chance of a program being defined— in all probability, it will remain as vague and indecisive as it is at present. The subject is too full of political dynamite to appeal to the office-seekers— it is easier and safer to simply talk in general terms of national defense. SOME SU G G EST IO N S s tu ­ d en ts: Before this session closes you should think a t least a little a b o u t y o u r f u tu r e plans. to 1. Discuss with a m em b er of the d e p a r tm e n t in which you a re to m a jo r th e courses you should ta k e n e x t year. 2. Check up to see if you have to the the needed p re re q u isite s If not, courses ahead of you. h a d n ’t you b e t te r in tak e th® Su m m er Session or by cor­ respondence b e fo re S e p tem b er? them 3. Please observe t h a t the re g is­ tra tio n fee this su m m er will be $17.50 each term , b u t if it is paid on the f ir s t or second day a r e ­ b ate of $2.50 will be allowed; if paid on the th ird day the r e b a te will be $1.00, a n d if paid t h e r e ­ a f t e r th e re will be no rebate. 4. If you wish to t r a n s f e r to Business A dm inistration or Law n e x t fail, check c a re fu lly to see t h a t you will have all th e r e q u i­ I t m ay be some su m m e r sites. w ork (bu t no pre-law by c o rre s ­ pondence) would come in h a n d y n e x t fall. 6. I f you plan to t r a n s f e r a t th e opening of the S u m m e r Session fro m one college or school of th e U niversity to a n o th e r (e.g., fro m A rts and Sciences to Business or L a w ), you should make ap p lic a ­ th e Regis­ tion t r a r ’s Office so you can be checked up before the ru sh of re g is tr a tio n day. imm ediately a t 6. The new re q u ire m e n ts fo r to th e School of Law admi?' on will not be in o p e ra tio n n e x t S ep­ tem ber. The last chance fo r a d ­ mission on the p r e s e n t minim um basis of sixty se m e s te r hours as specified in the c a ta lo g u e will be the fir s t term of th e 1941 S u m ­ S tu d e n ts p la nn in g m er Session, the to do two- y ear pro g ra m th e m eantim e. in Those ente rin g Law in Septem b er, 1941, and t h e r e a f t e r m u s t p re se n t the th re e -y e a r pro g ram . th a t will follow to take I. To 7. If you have a condition or postponed e xa m ina tion ta k e , consider which of these o p p o rtu n i­ ty * you p r e f e r : it with the class in th e finals this is being sem ester given, the class in the fin a ls of e ith e r te rm this su m m e r if th e course is o f­ 3. To tak e it in the spe­ fered. cial series If to begin J u ly 5. you do, see t h a t y o u r in s tru c to r the course ta k e if 2. To it with CASH FOR DRAWING S T A F F F O R T H I S I S S U E ~................... ................Don P a t t e r n , L. W. Brooks, nkirst, L a v e r n e Bryson, Elizabeth C h a rles L e a v itt J r . E d itor................................. PA T H OLT I. -....Bob Hobbs, Hi I tor N i g h t E A#1* i Bt a n M ary W bari N ig h t S] Af - stun Mom: M arcus Night St t t y E d ito r......... N ight T e le g ra p h Editor...., t«-r N .j."' A s sista n t ........... . ............ Night J tad lo Ed «t cr A n no un c er ................... —. ufeet cr.* E ...— • E. Clark C o lleg iate Review INSTRUMENTS — ...Louise C a r tm a n .Fred E w in g Laverne Bryson G e n e Ba r n we l l H e n ry Z inmerman ............... Ben Kaplan B y A sso c ia te d C o llegia te Prats Columbia U n iv e rsity is building a th e a t e r a rts building. • S ixty-three scholarships to ta lin g $35,000 have been a w a rd e d by Colum bia U niversity f o r 1940-41. AT THE C O -O P is to be in Austin or ask him to leave th e questions w ith the Reg­ istrar. 4. To take it in the series In any to begin Sep tem ber 16. case have you r pe tition the in least one R e g i s tr a r ’s Office a t week in advance. 8. If you expect to go to su m ­ m e r school please b rin g y ou r “ com plete Record of W o r k ” book­ let to have to date. You will need it on reg istra tio n day. the R e g is tr a r ’s Office it b ro u g h t down to I . J. M A T H E W S, re g istra r. final exam R E V IE W FO R in Chem istry 801 has b e g u n along w ith special equations in organic t h a t will rn m e e t ev e ry n ig ht in the Y.M.C.A. a t 7 room 7 of o’clock. All stu d en ts are welcome. th e coaching class this w eek JA M E S Y E TT , instructor. te rm of the U niversity I N T E R D E P A R T M E N T A L T r a n s ­ f e r s : S tu d e n ts who an tic ip a te t r a n s f e r r i n g from one college or to a n ­ school of o th e r f o r th e firs t the S u m m e r Session should file f o r ­ mal application t r a n s ­ f e r a t the R e g is tr a r ’s Office im­ m ed iately. Such t r a n s f e r applica­ tions m u st be checked carefully to th e a p p lic a n t’s eligi­ d e te rm in e it will expidite bility, and the m a t t e r if th e stu d e n t makes his application well in advance of the opening of th e S um m er Session. f o r such A pplications made late may e n ­ c o u n te r delay due to th e pressure of details incident to the closing of the L ong Session and the open­ ing of the S u m m e r Session. When I think, tho teardrops w hile; LOVING COUNSEL A ngels placed the sw eetness in GOOD NEWS My heart keeps singing, My head keeps ringing, N ature sealed the freshness Send out the gladdest new el O your sm ile, on your lips, N ightingales lent their music for your laughter, Eden sen t her own fair fe l­ lowships. Require m y sym pathy h ereafter, Unclasp m y tenderness m ean­ Truth tells o f pleasure-boats and battleships, My lungs h alf bursting, My mind all thirsting, Could he thia poor on# choose? O Go fill the inn— Resound the din— Rejoice with me, rejoice! Bring out the town— Bright deck the down— Sing clear with gladdest Have courage for the dark de­ voice I O file. — ALLEN BROWN. Texan - - (Continued from Page I.) year by Editor Pat D aniels, and tokens of bone-head plays or fa n ­ tastic achievem ents were given to Pat H olt, Elizabeth W harton, La­ v e r n e Bryson, Anita Cook, V er­ non Childers, and Jack Dolph. Skelton him self was aw ard e d a special ed ito r's gold aw ard. Fourteen gold a w ard s were made. They w e n t to Pat H olt, J a c k Dolph, L avern e Bryson, Oma Ray W alker, Clyde LaM otte, A nita Cook, Boyd Sinclair, J a c k How­ ard, Tomme Call, E r n e s t Sharpe, Billy Sansing, Ben K aplan, Bob W hitten , and Elizabeth W h arto n . T h irty -th re e silver aw a rd s w ere made. T hey w e n t to Don P a tte so n , Christine Evans, Alonzo Jam iso n, V ernon Childers, Bill N ew kirk, C. O. B row n, Leslie C a rp e n te r, Nella Mae Steussy, F lo ra Gordon, I. E. Clark, Al Landers, Billy C u n ­ ningham, L. W. Brooks. H erschel K o m b la tt, C larence La Roche, Bob Owens, Bluford Hestir, D ry d e n P re n tic e , Louise C a rtm a n , J a n e G racy, H enry Z im m erm an, John W ag ner, Charles L eavitt Felix McGivney, Garth A ustin, Ira La vin, Bob Al­ te rm a n , H a r p e r J o h n Hicks, Leiper, J a c k Adkins, C lifford Snowden, M ary Elizab eth S u th e r ­ land, and F re d Ewing. Jr ., F o rty -tw o bronze aw ard s w ere made. T hey w e n t to Bob M artin, Tom Davison, Dick T arpley , Bill Bill W hitm ore, Hal Rosamond. Bridges, Mac Roy R aser, H arold H aben icht, Gene Barnwell, M a r­ th a W ord, Joseph in e T aylor, Polly Smith, A nn Wilkins, M ary R uth H u n tin g to n , Mary H ankins, Mil­ dred Inks, E stin e D orw ard, M artha W h itm an, Bettinel Phillips, Low- rey B urleson, F re d Ramsdell, D oraine Geiger, Louis E ngelke, Ralph F re d e , Kendall Mullin, R uth Minter, Bnf* H ilto n , J o e Ball, Harold Gook, Donald Shield, Billy Neville, Claude Scruggs, A rth u r C arithers, W allace M asters, Bowl­ ing Byers, Joh n S an dstedt, Jo h n Stephen, E d g a r D itte rt, J a c k Hest- ilow, R og er N uhn, F re d Ellison, and Joe Jam es. H O S P I T A L L IST St. Davi d' * Ho s pi t a l Joh n Mannix, W. H. Gibson, Maxine Cow sar, A nita M atlage. S eton Ho*pita! L urline B rady, Lum Twilligear, Frederick W untch. Ut at H om e E dm ond L. Smith, M ary Cris- sey, H arold I. A dams, Louise M. Orlando. To me said he I care for rhea, And nothing can w ithstand; L et’s sail rem ote the bridal float, Be happiest in th# land! O — THE BLACK SW AN. i • T E M P T A T IO N ( T o the dem on In the d ei!) In demon-land I m et a girl All gleam ing white in glisten in g pearl; nig h t light, Across the star-masked faca a f She sp re a d a gay, mad, carefrea And over flow ers fields of broken Moth-like sped the happy houri. Is it n o t tr u ly sw eetest kiss W hen tw o souls touch in blind­ ing bliss? the fife life. f a te ! l a t e ! Then beat the drum and sound W hile flam es a f a r th e candle Come, d rink the very dregs of Come, laugh and sing ere it’s toa — A L L E N BROW N. Joe Wilson - - (C o ntin ued from P a g e I .) Jo e Wilson, man. th e y said, was th# And so it goes. E v e ry place t h a t needed good w ork from a good man, t h a t was w here you could find Joe Wilson. The Texas Re­ lays this y e a r needed a heavy ad ­ vance sale of tickets, because a bad day would ruin all chances fo r holding th em the f u tu r e . Jo# said the Cow-boys could do it. They did. in W o rk in g with Clyde L ittlefield, director, and m em bers of N.U .T.T., Joe organized a successful advance Relay ticket sale. Sure enough, on Relays Day, th e rains came and the crowd# d id n ’t. B ut th a t sale had insured n e x t y e a r ’s m eet. C red it Wilson with a n o th e r successful job. is Tt f o r tu n a te t h a t he has planned to follow the legal pro­ fession a f t e r he gets his bachelor of laws d egree in Ju ne . 1941. T h a t degree r e q u irin g six y e a r s ’ work, Joe has y e t a n o th e r y e a r to serve the U niversity. All in all th e r e could have been no o th e r choice. P e rh a p s he a p ­ peared in the yearbooks of 1938 and 1939 as be has re a lly been. The f ir s t of those y e ars he was nam ed a Goodfellow. L a s t ye ar, the Cactus called him an O u ts ta n d ­ ing S tu d e n t. And today, The Daily T exan nam es him as The U n i­ versity of T e x a s ’ most o u ts ta n d in g s tu d e n t of the year. r n I £ I , Pi ' v s rn » M m v I i i u . • " /}& v ufeJMv ‘ NEVER FAR AW AY You are gone— y et you are here; You are never fa r away From m y thoughts, my dreams, ray heart— N ear alw ays, as today. You aro near, y e t so far For I can never reach your Now th at you valuo another heart* love— start. W hy was I so foolish? I’m sure you loved m s then. Could it be that by mere chanco You could learn to love again? — CALLAWAY. • GONE W ITH MY H EART Th« seasons come— the seasons The wind becom es untam s. L ife drifts by as it must do; B ut my heart remains the The heart o f an Infant— silly Afraid to fa ce life's tide, A fraid o f being an adult— Afraid of shattered pride. But what is pride? And what are And what is Cupid's Dart? For you are gone and life drifts And with you w ent my heart, — CALLAW AY. go, ssm e. child! te a rs ? on, IF EVER FEELINGS RUSH UNFAIR I f ever feelings rush unfair To tra m p le on thy right, O r my poor soul wields such de­ As pales thy beauty bright, A nd make* of thee a lass f o r ­ sp air lorn, D eprived of jo y fu l smiles. T h y t e n d e r h e a r t so dearly t o m , T hy w ay such endless miles, O pard on me w hen I do w rong And d ream of quick release, thou a r t em blem of the stron g F or A nd full of glad surcease. On th y clear gayness u n a fra id Does my w orn mind depend, On thy p u re goodness i n t e r l a p I tr u s t my b e in g ’s end. — T H E BLACK SWAN. Aggie— (C on tinu e d from Page I .) s te a d y ball player with pow er a t the plate. lots of Sam D oran, c a tc h e r— only a v ­ e rag e p e r f o r m e r behind the plate, b u t a good man a t bat. H a rd m an to g e t out in the clutch. Red K irkpatrick, righ t f i e l d - j u s t a so-so p la y e r against o th e r team s, K irk patrick never fails to in a g r e a t game ag ainst tu r n Texas. Got two hits in la s t gam e w ith Texas, driving in a ru n . A da n g e ro u s man when the chips are down. M arland J e f f r e y , second b a se — alth o u g h not as good in baseball ss he is in football, J e f f r e y is a good player. Made a costly e r r o r and failed to hit in the last gam e, b u t has th e ability to come th ro u g h if he is needed. M arion Pugh, firs t base— a n ­ o th e r football player, Pugh has been m ore or less of a d isa p p o in t­ m e n t this season because of an e x te n d e d b a ttin g slump. He packs a lot of power, however, and m ay g e t s ta rte d a g a in st the Longhorns, O th e r p lay ers who may s t a r t in place of these m en or m ight b re a k into the line-up are Jack Lindsey, second basem an, who drove in a r u n with a long double in the o th e r gam e, Bill H enderson, tall basketball player, who plays f ir s t b ase; and Rice, a sub outfielder. the F o r T exas the linc-up t h a t has played to g e th e r all season, except w hen broken up in the early se a ­ son gam es by injuries, will s t a r t : field; Jack Charlie Haas, Ston e, base; C larence second Pfeil, ca p ta in a n d c e n te rf ie ld e r ; J o h n n y Hill, f i r s t base; P ete Lay den, le ft field; Bobby Moers, th ird b ase; Les Croucher, s h o rtsto p ; F r e d E v e re tt, catcher, r ig h t a ss ista n t r e g istra r MAX FIC H TEN BAUM, HOW TO START YOUR SUMMER YAC , g E » _ Just p h on e R a i l w a y E x p r i s s . W e ’ll call for your trunks, bags, boxes and bu nd les. W e ’ll deliver them quickly and eco n o m ica lly direct to your h om e, w ith o u t extra charge in all cities and principal tow n s. O ff your m i n d ... out o f your w a y ...a n d you can sink in to your train seat w ith peace o f m ind. l f you are returning ro sc h o o l, m erely repeat. Rates ere low . aft Confidential: Y o u can send your baggage h o m e ‘’c o ll e c t ” by convenien t R a i l w a y E xP R F SS...and the same with your weekly laundry. Just as fast, just as sure. 111 L a s t 9 t h St . ’Phone 2 24 25 Depot Office: 3rd & Colorado St*. ’Phon* 7 3 3 9 A u stin , Tex** PAHWA a g e n c y 'm r i n c . u-tta N A T I O N - W I D E R A I l - A I R SER V I C I jilI 0 0 UBUOM11 and even ly* Enjoy „ I W « , - . W M ' — FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1940 Phone 2-2473 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-2473 The First College Daily in the South PAGE FIVE Band to Form Chapter O f National Fraternity Saturday night at 7 o’clock in the Driskill Hotel, an Installation team from the University of Oklahoma will present a charter to the Longhorn Band for a chapter in Kappa Kappa Psi, national honorary band fraternity. The following officers have been elected for the new chapter* Van Newman Club To Give Awards A t Breakfast Officers of the Newman Club for the fall semester w ill be in­ stalled at a communion breakfast Sunday morning at 10:15 o'clock in the Crystal Ballroom of the Driskill Hotel. Kirkpatrick, president; R a n d le * Tankersley, vice-president; Ernest Ludwig, secretary; Philipp Dieter, treasurer; Lloyd Roach, petition editor; and Jim m y Newman, ser­ V ; geant-at-arms. , I , , tx' v, The installation team will be , headed by W illiam W ehrend, pro- f.M o r at th* University of Okla- L horns, and Herman 7.,omen Qua_i- d ^cation, for membership ,n are fraternity standing and band membership. the scholastic : high Winners of the Judge Tarlton and Father E llio t Ross scholar­ ships, given to club members on the basis of merit and financial need, will be named by Father Vincent Holden, chaplain. Delta Sigma Pi To Award Wednesday A t Farewell Banquet I Delta Sigma Pi, professional Uaggerty, president of St. Ed- Paul Holt, t w , (ln(£ county attorney; Dr. Carlo, Ca,- librarian federated tM eda, U tin-A m erican of th . Unhr.ra.ty; Dr. Leo Hughe., j instructor in English; Alvia Horn, lalcolm \ aughan ; jnstructor jn music; anci Mr. and administration fraternity ward's U niversity; ]d ils fa „ w rll b nj h(. gt thg T Guests w ill include Father Pat de ai masters c|ub BuiIdi • H. J. Lutcher Stark, member o f an'1, R o .. Brown were awarded ; M r, rh8rIp, Z iy, Fath(.r Hag(r,.rty snd M r. Holt, the Board of Regent, and many years benefactor of transportation ar- j : a f ormer member, will make short band, will be given the first hon- j industry. Lam er Cox, assistant J talks which will be followed by orarv membership in the U n lfe fH P r business a w ill summarize club to improve cooperation work within the college and be- i ° ar- tween colleges. in band ; mem” *r fraternity this eVents of the year. Tickets for the breakfast are J The following officers for next 50 cents each and can be obtained , The following members of the semester were installed: Lon Nu- at Father Holden’s office. Longhorn Band will be charter son, headmaster; members of Kappa Kappa Psi: Van K ir k p a tr ic k Lynn An derson Oliver I.eppin R**n B«n E r n e s t E. Lu dw ig ohn R in n io n Rober t Miller ieorsrr P!*v>ns Fra n k M urra y nn eth B ro w n i i Frank B a in , ! --------- ---------------------- e t a A l l I a i l Alpha senior warden; Ea rl Dennis, junior I warden; Alvin Gratzel, scribe; Clarence Isensee, treasurer; Ron- j ald Baethe, chancellor; B ill Hun- Pl ans G a r d e n Party son, historian; Travis Thompson, •' Kappa chapter of Zeta Tau editor; Carl Rode, senior guide; Ed Ney, junior guide; and John Alpha Roron*ty wiU have its an- Mack, Delta Sigma correspondent. An open house wras held at the I . ! nual garden party . • a s , j , ’ . . Randolph F n st e r J r . Timmy New man Philipp Dieter J r . Jo e F l i g h t Jo h n G a lt Stanley R C ru p p G e o rg e K H u r t C it r e n e * Is e n ie # ■Waller* Jo h n s o n Stanley .Tong Billy Owen* T.Iovd R o ach V. JI. S t e v e n * J r . R a n d le T a n k e r s le v Rohert, T e aa d a le J r . Roy S . T h o m p so n F r a n k W a d le y G rad o n W illa r d home of Mr. Cox after the ban­ quet. for seniors Sunday night from 7 to 9 o’clock at the home of Mrs. R. Niles G ra­ ham, 6 Niles Road. ‘ D.A.R. Chapter Plan* Picnic for Seniors Austin High School The Andrew Carruthers chapter To Have May Fete Invitations have been sent to members of the faculty and of fraternities. A r ­ sororities. and rangements are being made by I Margie Gurley, social chairman. Graduating seniors are Carlie Barnes, Blanche La Verne Bryson, Sara Frances Con­ nell, Flossie Crow', M ary Frances Crow, B etty Ruth Curtis, Suzanne Approximately five hundred stu- Dunning, Ann Harlan, Irene Jack- of the Daughters of the American Revolution w ill have a combined An old-fashioned M ay Fete will business meeting and picnic for bp the setting for the coronation senior students of the University of the king and queen of Austin Friday afternoon at 5 o’clock at High School in House Park Frid ay Barton Springs. Charlotte Boeck, night at 8 o’clock. senior, will be the honor ^oest. I Mrs, Beulah Straus and Miss the program, son, Shirley Kerr, Peggy Locke, Mercy Ramsey w ill be the host- w'hich w ill portray the four sea- Helen Patton, Jean Patton, Dor- sons of the year. A king and queen othy Perkins, Sara Nell Savage, esses, j dents w ill be on Broderick, in Jane gree requirements Officers who will be installed of the year appearing last. Sports, Billie Smith, and February ! The king and queen were elec- j are Anna Abney of Marshall, Mrs. Stroud, are Miss Lucy M . Moore, regent; dances, and games typical of each . Three girls W’ho completed de- Mrs. Charles Joe Moore, first vice-! season will be included. president; Miss Elizabeth Ann OH- phant, second vice-president; Mrs. ted early in Ap ril, but their names I Eleanor Dumble Heard of Hous- Banks M cLaurin, recording sec- will not be revealed until the cor- i toh, and San Antonio, and Mary retary; Mrs. Fred J . Adams, cor- onation night. The nominees for Lee Kenley of Austin. responding secretary; Miss Georgia , king were Johnny Lucous, W ind y ; treasurer; Miss Boeck, Winn, Travis Raven, George Keith, W alker, registrar; Mrs. A rthur Merchant, and Pete Lewis. The queen nom- librarian; Mrs. H. B. Armstrong, inees were: Em ily Busby, Mar- genealogist; Miss Anna Simmons, gnret Ann Clements, Nellie Grif- curator; Mrs. A. M. Woolsey, chap- fity, Dorothy Richey, and Betty lain. — U P i c n i c a t B a r f o n a r B a r t o n * , . J>*«" 'formed to aid women students in its social program to i l J rug Store st iv e ,.t h and Rio Drer)ar:nir for _ business career Ii a clos* for the season, the U n i- 1 Grande Street,, and the Univer- preP»™>K for . b u n n ... c.reer. It is open to all women students en- varsity Club will have a picnic Sat- J j rolled in the School of Business ttrday at Barton Springs. j Administration. Beta Beta Alpha, new profes­ sional organization for women in the School of Business Adminis- . . . met at Barton Spring* r«- Ellison Photo Company at 615. ' “ r „ ngrCTS Avenue, Eldridge Moor- , Th’’ r A . , , , u " r w l Tickets for the M ay Fete are on at Baker, University, Allen, „ nd Fulmore Ju n io r K iFh School,! Bela Beta Alpha Has Picnic at Bartons /-M D i v e r s i f y Club Plans Jane Slaughter. j " 7 ,or * picnl,c' Bringing , >>« Co-Op. . tv. — — . « '± nl „ . I . . . Dr. and Mrs. J . C. Holley and Z E T A S P L A N C O N V E N T IO N and Mrs. W . H. Irons w ill be The organization will have no About fifteen members of Kappa regular meetings but Will’ follow « hosts at me picnic, which begins chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha sot- a p]anned program of activities. « ©clock. L. Then Bellmont is ority are planning to attend the Members of Beta Beta Alpha are I ; bi-annual convention of Zeta prov- making investigations preparatory I Reservations must be made be- inca in Shreveport. La., Ju n e 14- to becoming affiliated with a na- fore IO oclock this morning with to-16. M ary Anne Stedman, pres!- tional professional organization for eitner Mrs, Doney or Mrs. Irons. dent, is the official delegate and business girls lr, c ,a?ge of entertainment Alpha Tau Omega A L P H A T A U O M E G A E L E C T S Billie Aderman, vice-president, I Officers elected recently are ; he alternate. Headquarters will Geraldine H ill, president; Mary ;-se ' np M ashington-Ury Hotel, fraternity McLain, first vice-president; Lu- cille Smith, second vice-president; osected new officers at their meet-1 J M ary Elizabeth Harris, secretary; big Tuesday night. They are Ray- G A R D E N C L U B TO D A N C E mend Harrison, worthy m a ste r;! The W inter Garden Club will m d Eloise Ligon, treasurer. Other Albert Bevil, chaplain; Lawrence have a ninner-dance at the Avalon officers and committees w ill be Wood, scribe; John Armstrong, Dinner Club on the Georgetown j elected next year, house manager; and Lew Wooden, road rush captain, Saturday night at 7:30 i o’clock. " “ Childhood Educators Plan Tea Saturday for State President The University branch of the Association of Childhood Education will have a tea fo r Miss Mildred Haines, state president of the as­ sociation, Saturday afternoon in the patio of the Women's Gymnasium from 4 to 6 o’clock. Miss Hope W ilder of the Southwest Texas State Teachers College in San Marcos and five other members of the San Marcos branch will be guests. — ■ ........ —......... ♦-........- — Miss Haines will speak about the national convention of the Asso­ ciation in Milwaukee, Wis., from which she has recently returned. A musical program by Archie Heap and Frank Gardner, U niver­ sity students, w ill be presented during the afternoon. Guests will be Mrs. Corrie A l­ len, Miss W ilm a Ervin , Miss Ger­ trude X . Mooney, Dr. Clara M. Parker, Mrs. Connie Brockette, Dr. and Mrs. J . G. I'm stattd, Miss Miriam Dozier, Dr. and Mrs. J . L . Henderson, Dr. and Mrs. B. F. Pit- tenger, Dr. and Mrs. C. T. Gray, Alpha Chi Omega Mothers’ Club Has Party for Seniors The Alpha Chi Omega Mothers’ Club had a garden party Thurs­ day afternoon on the lawn at the Ellio tt, home of Mrs. J . M iller The ten 1700 T alk Boulevard. graduating seniors who were guests are Muriel Ayres, Marian , Miss Anna Hiss, Dr. and Mrs. Fred- McFarland, Jo Anne Pittenger, ' erick Eby, Mr. and Mrs Loren Ann Pittman, Ruth Pittm an, Ruth M o il ay, Dr. and Mrs. Homer P . l Thomas, B it t y Treadway, Carol 1 Rainev, Dr. Annie Blanton, Miss I " agenschein, Anna Marie Heiser- ! Dorothy Gebauer, Mrs. Kathleen I man» Willelene Adkms, and Bea- j Bland, Dr. Leigh Peck, and Miss trice Stenberg. Margaret Brady. Officers for' next year will be are Mrs. Theodore ; Officers of the Mothers’ Club Stenberg, elected during the tea. Miss Hun- president; Mrs. H arry Reasonover, the I viee-prssident; Mr*. L . R. Binaon, tice Evans, president secretary; Mrs. rangements. She is assisted by I L- A. Gobies, recording secretary; Miss Gene Lee, social chairman. Jones, treasurer; ------------------------------- and Mrs. J . A. W arren, reporter. I club this year, is in charge of a r - corresponding I Mrs. James C. of Today — On the Campus 12:30— M eeting and luncheon of member* of Texas League Texat of W om en voters, Federated W o m en ’* Club Build ing , 12:30— M an K N O W . on the Drag. 12:50— Tow er chime*. 5— Fin al meeting of Andrew of the C arruther* D .A .R . at B a rto n Spring*. chapter 5— Newcom er's Club picnic at 5— Rho Chi, Chem istry B u ild ­ Z iik e r Park . ing 218. 6:45 — B ill N ew kirk broadcast, K T B C . sports 8— A ustin High School M ay Fete at House P a rk . 8— Rabbi Goodman speaks on The Dyke* H ave Burst, Tem ­ ple Beth Israel. 12:25— D aily Texan of the A ir, K N O W . 6:30— Social Science Club, Queen* Anne Room of the Texas Union. S O C IA L S C I E N C E C L U B The Social Science Club w ill hold its last meeting of the semester Frid ay night at 6:30 o’clock in the Queen Anne Room of the Texas Union, There will be an address by Mr. W arren Scoville, instructor in economics. Local Women Attend Fort Worth Meeting Delegates from the Austin and the Travis County chapters of Daughters of the Republic of Texas left Austin Tuesday morn­ ing to attend the state D.R.T, con­ vention in Fo rt Worth. The convention began Tuesday evening and ended Thursday. The W illiam B. Travis chapter was represented by Mesdames W alter P. Webb, Ralph E. Cloud, Paul Goldman, A. S. Trube, M ary Kennerly Cloud, and M ary G ran­ b u r y Hamer. Mrs. Eugene How ­ ard represented the Stephen F. Austin chapter, and Mesdames Tom Kluge and J . T. Cox w ill rep­ resent Reuben Hornsby chapter of Hornsby Bend. Mrs. Webb and Mrs. Cloud are state officers and Mrs. Kluge is a member of the state board of directors. Z E T A E L E C T S C A P T A IN S Zeta Tau Alpha sorority has elected the following girls as sec­ tional rush chairmen to work with Alice Beakley, state rush captain, during the summer: Jan e Stroud, Austin; Ruth Ann Low ry, San A n ­ tonio; Virginia Bowyer, Dallas; Ja n e Taylor, Fo rt W orth; Doraine Geiger, Corpus Christi and Soutn Texas; M arjorie Dodd, East Texas; and Rosemary Pearson, Houston. R H O C H I W I L L M E E T Rho Chi, honorary pharmaceu­ tical society will hold its last meet­ ing of the semester in Chemistry Building 218 at 5 o’clock Friday, M ay 17, M IS S W E S T E R IM P R O V E D Miss Lillian Wester, instructor in Romance languages, who has been ill at her home the past week w’ith influenza, is better and expects to return to school short­ ly. eds/ t in th e G R O O V E ! e carefree, casual sports groove . . ifs time for fun . . . summer fun, and w e’ve just the p'ay clothes to suit the occasion. . PLAY SUITS 98c and $1.95 Colors in the col­ age stride! M a te ­ rials — a i r condi­ tioned! H J \CCZ1 ^ ' x em* match 'em, dance in 'em, or pie- I rj M ti n ic , in v ( I* ern • • • sScVfs and blous- ^ es are the cool. com fort a b I e gar­ ments to wear for sum- mer. • lf - BLOUSES SI.OO SKIRTS $1.95 J o -Ed shops 708 C O N G RESS Kwill Klub to Celebrate Silver Anniversary The Austin K w ill Klub w ill cele­ brate it* silver anniversary with a breakfast at the Texas Federat­ ed Wom en’s Club Building Satur­ day morning at 11:30 o’clock. The program will be under the direction of Mesdames Adolph Baugh, Annie S. Koch, Irvine, M. L. Shepard, and W . T Decherd. J . H, Recently elected officers of ti e club are president, Mrs. Adolph Koch; vice-presidents, Mrs. Molly Connor Cook. Mrs. Paul Gold- mann, and Miss Rena Reynolds; secretary, Mrs. Charles H. Brown, lee, and treasurer, Miss Sarah Dodson, W O M A N S C L U B E L E C T S The Austin Womans Club re­ elected Mrs. George H. W ells pres­ ident at the annual business meet­ ing this week. Others chosen were Mrs. R. A. Buford, first vice-pres­ ident; Mrs. W , R. Long, second vice-president; Mrs. S. B. Rober- deau, third vice president; Mrs. Leslie M cKay, recording secretary; Mrs. James Hart, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Fred Nagle, his­ torian. M oth er's D a y is M a y 12 Send H E R F lo w ers from 140S L a va c a 44Your Florist for more than 50 Years” O R C H ID S A N D G A R D E N IA S D A I L Y C o r s a g e s 5 0 c up D ay Phones 2-1147 a n d 2-114S N ig h t Phones 2-3S25 a n d 2-2843. Flame vs Telegraphed to All Parts of the World M em ber of F T.D. SENIORS! Hurry and Make Arrangements for Senior Invitations Dutch Fold Beautifully designed white vellum folder with engraved announcement inside. ................each I Oc Cardboard Booklet Finer, heavier texture, tied with orange cord. C o n ta’ns 26 pages, 4 pages of frustrations, announcement and list of candidates. each 25c Leather Booklet .................... Finished in handsome white leather, f e d with leather cord of the same color. Contains engravings of Pres’d e rt Rainey, University Tower, and the Union Building . in addition to the invitation :*srlf and list of candidates. . . each 50c . * « and Dont Forget m VISITING CARDS ............. IOO for 85c To enclose w:th your invitation*, with your name H Y LIT ED on each card. • SENIOR RINGS (Official) Men • Solid Gold $ I 5.00 $ 8.50 , $9.95 • Salver ............. .. $ ! 5.00 • Applique . W om en • Solid G e ld • $ Iver # A p p ' que $ 15.00 $9.00 $9.00 Texas Bookstore Engineers Nave M ay Banquet The following were guests of Phi Lambda Upsilon, chemical en­ gineering fraternity, at its annual May banquet recently at the Aus­ tin Country Club: Sara Files, John R. Hodson, Gloria Randolph, H. A. Holcomb, Louise Nickel!, Charles Holder, Martha Harris, Dr. H. R. Henze, Bruce Jones, Mildred Metz, John Kasch, Lady Katherine L e ­ noir, Vernon Larson, Ann H ar­ rell, Ed Lewis, Inez Wood, Ben­ jamin Dailey, Ernest Ludwig, Guy T. McBride Jr., Rebekah Jane Bush, Roy McCutchan, Elizabeth Woolfolk. Also present were James Mc­ Kee, Helen Draper, W illiam W . McLean, Bettp Schutze, Aubrey May, Barbara Chadwick, Doug­ las Mayfield, Robert Michael, f a ­ mine Koberg, B illy Morris, Alice Smith, Morris Morrow, Martha Whiteman, Sam Muery, M ary Stone, Oscar Ney, Vivian Whites, Erie Vansant Painter, Mrs, E. V. Painter, Andrew Patterson. John B. Pope Also present were Elizabeth Chambers, II I , M ary Ju lia von Blucher, E . D. Redding, Louise Cartman, Doro­ Smith, thy Nell G riffin, R. H. Phoebe Smith, W . H. Tonn Jr., Jeanne Runge, Charles Van Berg, Agnes Sandidge, C. A. W alker, Sarah Hoey, George Wash, Ja n os A. Watson, Yveline K err, Dr. G. W . W att, Mrs. G. W . W att, E. P. Whitlow. Also present were Hcartha Nielsen, Drew Mayfield, Edith Hardy, W alter B. Howard., Mar­ tha Gibson, Herschel Cudd, Mrs. C. H, Kollenberg, C. H, Kollen- berg, Dr. H I,. Lochte, Mrs. H L. Luckie, Dr, H. J . Ettlinger, Mar* tin Ettlinger. P H I S IG M A D E L T A B A N Q U E T Phi Sigma Delta fraternity will have its final banquet F r d a y , Ma;. 31, at 6 o'clock in the Dris- Lambda award kill Hotel. Th' will be made to the most outstand­ in g member of the fraternity. The ‘‘best pledge” award w ill also be 1 , given. M O T H E R S C L U B E N T E R T A I N S The Alpha X I Delta Mothers' d u o entertained fifty-four guests Wednesday afternoon at a fam ily picnic at Barton Springs. Three new members and their families were a o presented. They included Mrs. Nick Linz, Mrs. R. R. H a r­ rison , and Mrs. W , H. Davis, - - FOR CAMPUS AND COUNTRY Striped Ginghams b y Make it a more glorious summer wlfR H O PE REED favored classics— those famous young fashions that have the ' earmarks" of expensive models, yet are price-marked with a figure to f i t your collide budget. See our choice col ec+ion of striped ginghams in pas­ te' cologs . - . a’so checked ginghams, and zephyr-iight rayon crepes in sum­ mer pastels. $69 5 Exclusive in Austin With J. H. WILLIAMS Congrest at Fifth H o u se m o th e rs: STUDENTS ARE LOOKING For Cool Summer Rooms BEFORE FINAL EXAMS W it h so m any more room* a v a ila b le this year, d o n ’t be disappointed by w aitin g until it’s too late to fill those v a c a n c ie s . Call 2-2473 Today! T h e e a rly use of the advertising columns of the Classified A d S e c­ tion w ill give you an unusual o pp o rtu n ity to rent a ll of your va ca n t In order to aid rooms. t h e Housem others Texan m akes these spe­ cial rates to those w ho w an t room ers fo r the summer session. A ll ads w ill be cla ssi­ fied under “ Rooms for Bo ys,” and “ Rooms for G irls ,” unless otherw ise Courteous specified. messengers w ill c a ll for your ad. T h is service is as near as your te le ­ phone. Phone 2-2473 Before 4:30 These Rates Will Save You Money (M axim um of 20 Words) D ate A d A p pears No, Tim es A d A p p ears Cost M a y 18 IO .............. $1.70 19...... ........ . 9 ............. .. 1.55 " ” 21...... ............ 8 .............. .. 1.40 ........... 7............. ” 22 . 1.20 ” 23 .......... . 6............. . . 1.00 .90 .80 .70 ” 2 4 ...... ............ 5 ............. .. ” 25 .......... . 4 3 .............. . » 26...... ...... . The Daily Texan Classfied A d D ep artm en t Jo u rn a lis m B u ild in g 108 Call 2-2473 Before 4:30 for Messenger Service PAGE SIX The F irst College Daily in the South Phone 2-2473—=—TEE DAILY TEXAN-^—Phone 2-2473 FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1940 Tropical Movie ★ ★ Today's Movies ★ R A D I O , , . , T .aan A m u a e m **t$ Sta ff P A R A M O U N T . — “ S a t u r d a y ’. E d i t e d b y L A V E R N E B R Y D O N ^ C h ild ren .” With John Garfield and A n n e Shirley. F ea tu r e starts at l l , 1 :1 0 , 3:20, 5:30, 7 :40 , and 9:50 o’clock. (L ast tim es to d a y .) Bob R ip ley w ill present t o lis­ ten er s o f his A m erica F irst tour S T A T E . — “ 2 0 M u le T e a m . ” With W allace B eery and Leo Ca- rilo. F ea tu r e starts at 11 :22, 1:09, 2:56, 4 :43, 6:30, 7:17, and 10:04 J o n e s o f o ’clock. ( F i r s t tim e s to d a y .) Q U E E N . — “ F o r g o t t e n G i r l . ” W ith D o n a ld W o o d s a n d L o uise P l a t t . F e a t u r e s t a r t s a t 1 :3 2 , 3 :1 2 , 4 :5 2 . 6 :3 2 , 8 :1 2 , a n d 9 :5 2 o'clock. < R e view ed in t o d a y ’s T e x a n .) C A P IT O L — “ G r e e n H e l l . ” Wit! Joan B e n n e tt and D ouglas Fair the stage, B obbj banks Jr. On C lark , 14-ycar-old world champioi stai ju n io r co w b o y and m ovie (F irst tim es to d a y .) V A R S I T Y — “ S h o p A r o u n d th e! C o r n e r . ” W ith Jam es S te w a r t and! tim esi M argaret Sullivan. to d a y .) (F irst T E X A S .— “ A d v e n t u r e , o f Tons S a w y e r . ” W ith T o m m y Kelley* (F ir st tim es t o d a y . ) 1st Class Actress Entertains In 'Forgotten Girls'at Queen N a m e s can be deceivin g, and the n am e o f the picture a t th e Q ueen certainly is. L ou ise P latt, whom m ost o f you last saw in a picture with M elvyn D ouglas, is certain ly above m o st o f the Class B heroines. D onald W oods, a stock class B player, is ad eq ua te in his role. The plot is c e rtain ly n o th in g n ew , but it serves as an ad eq u a te for the progress o f th e* ....................... .......... — *------------------------ vehicle f!lm* # .. w s n o r i g i n a l Q u e r n . S c r e e n p l a y b y J o s e p h M s r c h a n d F . H u b e r t . F r o m s t o r y b y R o b e r t N o r t h . D i r e c t e d b y P h i l R o s e n . A R e p u b l i c p i c t u r e . T h e c a s t ................ J u dy W i n g a t e D a n D o n o h u e _____ . . F r a n c e s W i n g a t e G r o v e r M u l l i n s G o r n o _ ________________ E d u a r d o C i a n n e l l i E v e ________ f o l l o w s : L o u i s e P l a t t . D o n a l d W o o d s W y n n e G i b s o n R o b e r t A r m s t x u n g B a r b a r a P e p p e r . Short Story Contest i Winners Announced W inners in the T e x a s Book Store Short S tory C ontest have bee n announced by Dr. A n n ie S. o f Ir v in e , E n g lish , a n d c h a i r m a n o f the j u d g i n g c o m m itte e . a s s o c ia te p r o f e s s o r I f a n y special m e n tio n o f a c tin g F i r s t p riz e o f $ I f> w as a w ard ­ to J o h n H. F a u l k , 8 1 7 W e s t w e r e g iv e n o f t h e f ilm , i t w o u ld L ive O ak S t r e e t , A u s tin , f o r his c e r t a i n l y go to W y n n e G ib son , w ho sto r y , “ Old Man M oss.” S e c o n d t h e b lo n d in e d s te p - m o th e r . P*ias® o f $10 w as a w a r d e d to Al- plays T r i n i t y f o r “ B o y S eco n d m e n tio n w o u ld no to also- i lp n . ?,r 0 " " ' L o s t.” H o n o r a b l e m e n t i o n w as J o h n F GaUie> Sc(,ni(. I . , , b lo n d in e d B a r b a r a P e p p e r , a . th e , _ ed _ ,. , , w o m a n p r i s o n e r w ho f i n d s it h a r d D riv e, A u s tin , to le a v e h e r p l e a s a n t p r is o n s u r- S n o w S w irle d .” r o u n d in g s . A lth o u g h she o v e r a c ts q u ite a b it, she does do c r e d e n c e to t h e c h a r a c t e r . O t h e r in j u d g e s c o n t e s t w e r e M rs. C le o ra R o h r b o u g h , t u ­ t o r in d r a m a , a n d H. C. B a k e r , in E n g lish . i n s t r u c t o r t h e “ A n d f o r t h e ton igh t a t 8:30 o ’clock over Col­ um bia a v ie w from the south rim and the bottom o f the G r a n d C a n ­ yon. G overnor R. T. A rizona; L in d a Lee, rhythm s i n g ­ e r , and B. A. R o lfe a n d a t w e n t y - f iv e p ie ce a l l- In d ia n b a n d w ill be heard from the south rim . 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'S n . X'-i > ;-A ‘A v .-.v. c iv X . \ : t a . v.$ fev S . & W ;.< v C v » * -5 p 8. h? : ’ ' m w M p J • W a U r p e I e x a n C l a s s i f i e d A d : Announcements Announcements Thesis Drafting Rentals r n WIL J e a n B e n n e t t is s h o w n wi th G e o r g e B a n c r o f t “ Gr e e n H e l l , ” j u n g l e f i lm s h o w i n g F r i d a / a n d S a t u r d a y at in a s c e n e f r o m the Capi tol T h e a t e r . V B O O K S « % t h a t a u t h o r 's a m b itio n s to e s ta b l is h A n y one w ho h as e v e r s tu d ie d u n d e r J . F r a n k D obie, l i s t e n e d to J . F r a n k D obie o r r e a d J. F r a n k D obie k n o w s t h a t it h a s lo n g b e e n one of t h e w r i tin g ? o f J o h n C. D uv al in th e co n sc io u sn e ss o f S o u t h w e s t e r n e r s , M r. D o b ie does n o t q u it a n y c a u se he c h a m p io n s , so it w a s n ’t s u r p r i s i n g l a s t D e­ c e m b e r w h e n a b o o k a u t h o r e d b y * him a n d e n t itle d “ J o h n C. D uval, F i r s t T e x a s M an ro lle d o f f t h e U n iv e r s it y P re s s in D allas. of L e t te r ? Two Texas Artists Display Paintings W e t h in k t h a t y o u will f in d th is show e n t e r t a i n i n g , n o t h in g b r il­ lia n t b u t s a t i s f a c t o r y . — J A C K A D K IN S . Ruggles of Red G a p ’ To Be Shown at Union “ R u g g le s o f Red G a p ’ w ill be th e M o n d a y e v e n in g th e la s t of p ic tu r e s to be sho w n a t t h e U n io n d u r i n g th e L o n g S essio n . I t will be sho w n M o n d a y n i g h t a t 7 :3 0 o’clock in th e M ain L o u n g e o f th e U n io n . T he s h o r t will be “ M usic I in th e M o rg a n M a n n e r ” w ith R uss T h e new boo k m ig h t be con­ s id e re d a p o s th u m u s D uval v ol - 1 um e. 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( N o A d v a n c e i n P r i c e s ) T H E B I G G E S T V A L U E I N E N T E R T A I N M E N T E V E R B R O U G H T T O A N A U S T I N T H E A T E R For furthe* information address T H E E X T E N S I O N T E A C H I N G B U R E A U D I V I S I O N OF E X T E N S I O N LITTLE C A M P U S A U S T I N T H E U N I V E R S I T Y , O F T E X A S of fe r s t hrough the Extension Division A A 261 Courses by Correspondence Gi v e n by 5 Faculty Members T H E S I S D R A F T I N G , L E T T E R I N G F r e e h a n d D r a w i n g b y u r o f e s a l o n a l , 8 8 H . G a rage Rooms Typewriters T Y P E W R I T E R S — B o u g h t - S o l d - R e n t e d R e b u i l t . A l l m a k e . - . F o r b e s t b a r g a i n s s e e T Y I’ KW -K IT F R S E R V I C E C O M P A N Y , 1 2 6 W e s t 5 t h S t r e e t . P h o n e 8 4 1 2 . V V T y p e w r i t e r . / A i S T E C K S - P H S 3 S 3 t h c b b s t r em r m a c h im e s i n a u s t in Typing E X P E R I E N C E D — N e a t , f a s t . H e l e n a S t r o n g . 1 9 0 3 - A N u e c e s . 8 - 1 2 3 0 . a c c u r a t e , T Y P I N G — C h e a p , H u m p h r e y . a c c u r a t e , q u i c k . M r s 2 - 8 6 7 4, 2 0 0 6 W h i t i s . * - 3 3 2 7 . T Y P I S T , N o t s r y . M u r r a y . 2 2 6 4 G u a d a l u p e . 2 - 0 0 8 8 . S t e n o g r a p h e r , Mac T Y P I N G — N e a t . A c c u r a t e . R e a s o n a b l e . J o h a n n a H e y , 6 .vt W e s t 6 t h . 2 - 0 6 2 0 . E N P I E L I ) — C o o l . t il l f a n , r o o m s , t w i n b e d * , s e r v i c e . M r s R a t h e r , 7 6 1 7 . s h o w e r b a t h , c o m f o r t a b l e . C e i l i n g t w o d r e s s i n g f i v e w i n d o w s , j a n i t o r S A N A N T O N I O . 2 2 1 4 — R o o m * w i t h p r L c a m ­ IT, T a y l o r , a t E y e l e s s E d e n . T . o n e b l o c k w e n t s h o w e r * v a t e p u s C a ll 5 t o 7 p . m . S A N G A B R I E L , 1 9 0 S — L a r g e r o o m , s t * w i n d o w s , t i l e s h o w e r , V e n e t i a n b l i m i * . m a i d s e r v i c e , u s e o f r e f r i g e r a t o r , g a r a g e , P h o n e 2 - 8 8 w5. Houses for Sale F R A T E R N I T I E S . S O R O R I T I E S , C L U B S , — D i g n i f i e d b o n n - w o r t h c o n s i d e r a t i o n . I n q u i r i e s r e . f u r t h e r s o l i c i t * . A d v a n t a g e * . S p e c i a l o f f e r . s tartled c o n f i d e n t i a l , n o ! l i o n O w n e r , P . O . B o x 6 4 6 , A u s t i n . Light Housekeeping ^ \ I .YR I M f N G A R A G h a p a r t ­ m e n t s , r o o m * a n d h o u s e k e e p i n g r o o m a. s l e e p i n g p o r c h e s . A l s o g i r l s ’ a p p r o v e d h o u s e 8 - 2 2 8 3 , f r o m c a m p u s . 2 - 4 . ' 4 * I 1* b l o c k s h er W anted to Buy Rooms H I G H E S T C A S H P r i c e s paid f o r y o u r o ld G o l d . L. L a v e s . 2 1 7 E. « t h . 9 2 2 8 . G U A D A L U P E S T R E E T , 2 6 0 3 — B u m m e l s t u d e n t c o u p l e s a n d t e a c h e r s , n i c e l y f i n n i c h e d r o o m s . S p e c i a l s u m m e r r a t e s . C A S H f o r S c r a p W a t c h e s , e t c . 8! G o l d . R i n g s . C h a i n s , I C o n g r e s s . 2 - 7 7 1 2 . S A N G A B R I E L . 1 9 0 6 — M e n o r w o m e n , C o o l , q u i e t , m o d e r n P r i v a t e h a t h * a* Cla ssi fi ed A d v e r t i s i n g RATE CARD READER A D S 20 W ords— Maximum ................... I , ......... - ....- ....... ..................... t i m e t i m e s 8 t i m e s 4 t i m e s ____________ — 6 t i m e s times 6 . 4 0 . 5 5 . 7 0 . 8 0 ........................ .9 0 .. .................- .................... 1.00 . - .— - I , Re ad e r A d s A r e To Be Run On C onse c ut i v e D a y s We C harg e fo r C o p y Change D ISPLAY A D S column wide by I inch deep 60c per insertion A L L A D S C A S H IM A D V A N C E further Dial 2-2473 information on messenger service. for W e r e s e r v e t h e c o r r e s p o n d w i t h t o T h e D a l l y T e x a n . r i g h t t h e t o c o p y e d i t s t y l e u s e d b y R e s p o n s i b l e f o r o n e i n c o r r e c t i n s e r t i o n o n l y N o r e f u n d s f o r c a n c e l l a t i o n s . M e s s e n g e r S e r v i c e u n t i l 4 : 3 0 p . m . w e e k - d a y s . C o u n t e r u n t i l 6 p . m . s e r v i c e H A Y R I D E S . P I C N I C T r a n s p o r t a t i o n . C a l l C h e s t e r W h e l e s * . D i a l O p r . 46 . Cafes Coaching E N G L I S H 1 2 b y e x p e r i e n c e d t e a c h e r w i t h M a s t e r ’s d e g r e e . P h o n e 2 - 1 3 8 3 . U N I V E R S I T Y C O A C H I N G B U R E A U C o m p e t e n t C o a c h e s a i l c o u r s e s . 2 - 6 0 9 0 E N G L I S H , E x p e r i e n c e d t e a c h e r . G i l l i g , 7 0 8 W e s t 2 3 r d . P h o n e 3 4 1 1 . G O V E R N M E N T C h a r l e s T a y l o r . I L A ., M . A . , 1 1 1 W . 1 9 t h , A p t . C o a c h i n g . IO D „ 8 - 3 2 9 0 . M A U D E R O O S E V E L T W O O D S O N ) M a t h e m a t i c * . P h y s i c s , C h e m i s t r y . 2 4 0 8 R i o G r a n d e C a l l 9 8 6 5 S P A N I S H , F r e n c h . L a t i n . T y p i n g , M r s. H u m p h r e y . 2 0 4 - B W . 2 0 . 2 - 8 6 7 4 8 - 3 3 2 7 H I S T O R Y 9, 4, e t c . G o v t . IO. E x p . t e a c h e r . E a s t o n , 1 9 0 5 P e a r l . 8 - 3 3 7 0 M A T H — E x p e r i e n c e d t e a c h e r . R a n d l e A l s o t y p i n g . 2 3 0 9 S a n A n t o n i o . 8 - 1 1 5 8 S P A N I S H . F r e n c h . G e r m a n , i t a l i a n . E x p t e a c h e r . 1 7 0 1 C o n g r e s a . 2 - 7 1 0 4 . A. M . 2 0 4 , 8 0 8 . I S a , G r a d u a t e . 2 3 0 9 S a n A n t o n i o , 8 - 1 1 6 8 . I Sh, R . W . F a r r , E F F E C T I V E C O A C H I N G in M a t h . M. A . D e g r e e . Y’o u w i l l b e s a t i s f i e d . M a r s h a l l , 2 - 9 5 7 5 . F R E N C H . G E R M A N , L a t i n . G r e e k : r e ­ v i e w , c o a c h i n g , t r a n s l a t i n g , 2 - 0 8 9 2 . Dressmaking H I G W E S T S C A S H P R I C E S P A I D F O R s e c o n d - h a n d c l o t h i n g , W e a l s o b u y m u s i c a l . S c h w a r t r . P h o n e ? - 0 l 8 4 . A . s h o e * , a n d s u i t i n s t r u m e n t s . D R E S S M A K I N G . T a i l o r i n g , f o r U s e d S u i t s . S p o r t , E v e n i n g D r e s s e s . 1 7 1 0 L a v a c a . C l o t h i n g a n d S h o e * 4 0 7 F a s t 6 t h 8 - 0 2 * 6 . a l t e r a t i o n s . M A L K I N P A Y S M O R E ; — r —::— r r r r ~ - ----------- — -——— ...■ J : -■ 2 - 7 6 4 5 . For Sale Rentals e n t r a n c e s . R u n n i n g S u m m e r r a t e s . 8 7 1 7 . i c * w a t e r . S p e c i a l T W O B L O C K S N O R T H C a m p u s . P e r i l r o o m , s t u d y , t i l e * b o w e r , p r i v a t e c d a » * t ie t S u m m e r r a t e s . P h o n e 2 - 1 7 4 0 . U O Y > ! n r i 1! . ! N -1 e , ' r o - m t * f i e f t r i e f a n s f u r n i s h e d . B i l l * r a i d , SSd r a t e s , C a R r a d i o . S u m m e r f o r c h a r g e 2 - 0 6 1 * . Furnished Apartments Room & Board F O R S A L E — F u r n i t u r e . t h r e e b e d s a n d S t u d i o c h e s t s d e s k , c o u c h . t h r e e I s t u d y t a b l e * , s t o v e , e l e c t r i c r e f r i g e r a t i o n . C a l l 8 - 3 * 2 0 . Laundries Trust Your Duds To Our Suds DRISKILL H O T EL L A U N D R Y 8 Hour Service 119 East 7th Phone 6444 P o m e l a u n d r y I P H O N E 3 7 0 2 i i Lost and Found R I O G R A N D T . , 2 * 8 0 — S o u t h e a s t , , n e w l y r o o m s , r e f r i g e r a ­ d o w n s t a i r - , d e c o r a t e d e l e c t r i c f o u r s l e e p i n g p o r c h . h a t h , t i o n , w a t e r , l i g h t s p a i d . # 4 5 . 8 - 3 8 2 8 . 5 A B I N E , 2 1 0 7 - A — L o v e l y F o u r b o y s o r s h o w e r , h i g h , c o o l , s u m m e r , f a l l . 2 - 8 5 1 “ . f a m i l y . AH n e w b r i c k . t i l e h a t h , s o u t h e a s t e x p o s u r e . S A N A N T O N I O . 2 2 0 6 — B l o c k p i * . # 1 6 . S I S , $ 2 0 . L a r g e c a m ­ f u r n i s h e d r o o m , h a t h , k i t c h e n , l o n g c o u t h e r s t s l e e p ­ i n g p o r c h , F r i g i d a i r e , g a r a g e . 2 - “ 1 0 s . o f WE T c a s t 2 4 f o u r r o o m * . 7 1 0 — J I t h i n . H a * e v e r y t h i n g . i ms h i r s t . S o u t h - l e a l l o c a - s u m m e r B i l l s p a i d . 7 7 5 7 . D E L I G H T F U L L Y c o o l e r y c o n v e n i e n c e . C e i l i n g k i t c h e n , b a t h . B l o c k f i v e r o o m d u p l e x . P h o n e 8 3 7 3 . f o u r r o o m s . E v ­ t i l e f a n , A l s o U n i v e r s i t y . E X T R A L A R G E f o u r c l o s e t s , t i l e l i v i n g r o o m , h e d r o o m , s h o w e r , p r i v a t e e n - c o o l . r a t e s . S u m m e r e x p o s u r e , q u i e t , t h r e e L O S T — S e v e n j e w e l , w a t c h , l e a t h e r b a n d , r e w a r d # 5 5 0 0 E a s t 2 4 t h , p h o n e 8 - 4 5 3 1 . f o r r e t u r n . K g o l d E l g i n w r i s t c r y s t a l . P . F l e m i n g . c r a c k e d s o u t h e a s t I r a n e e , A c c o m m o d a t e 2 - 1 7 4 0 , L O S T — J o h n K e a t s U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s a n d b e t w e e n ' A a g g e n e r H a l l . l f f o u n d p l e a s e r e t u r n t o W e s l e y S a w y e r . R e w a r d . P h o n e 2 - 9 8 0 7 . ............................. t e x t b o o k F U R N I S H E D OK U N F U R N I S H E D a p a r t ­ m e n t t h r e e b l o c k s f r o m U n i v e r s i t y , h a l f f r o m R i o G r a n d e . A p p l y 2 3 0 0 R i o b l o c k G r a n d e . P h o n e 2 - 2 7 2 7 . GI A D A H P F ’ — R *m f o r m e n . S u m m e r r a t e s , a n d h e a r d I 2 l i m o n t h . S l e e p i n g p o r c h . O p p o s i t e c a m p u s . P h o n e W E S T 1 7 t h , 2 0 0 — R o o m a n d b o a r d m e n b e t w e e n U n i v e r s i t y a n d C a p i t o l . 6 0 W E S T 17 t h , B o h o u s e h a * v a c a n c i e s « l e e p i n g p o r c h . E x p e n $ 2 1 p e r m o n t h . P h o n e C o - O p e r § t i v d | ■a o r s u m m e r , f s s a p p r o x i m a t e l y 1-96 6 2. 2 0 t h , W E S T b o a r d 2 C 4 - B — R o o m f o r f i v e g ria m n e w b r i c k a p a r t m e n t o n e b l o c k s o u t h r n m p u i . R e a s o n a b l e . M r s H u m p h r e y , 4 - 3 3 2 7 . a n d W H I T I S . 2 8 0 0 — B o y s , c o u p l e s . N e w r o o m s o r a p a r t m e n t * . I n n e r s p r i n g t h r o u g h o u t . g i r l * , m a t t r e s s e s . C i r c u l a t i n g a i r T u b s a n d s h o w e r * . 8 - 1 0 6 0 . G I R L S A T R A N S I E N T S — R o o m s . 2 b l o c k s w e s t U . 2 2 0 8 N u e c e s . 2 - 1 0 7 4 , I H E C O P E L A N D H O U S E w i l l b e o p e s f o r S u m m e r S c h o o l , t w o f o r b o y s 1 9 0 5 , 1 9 0 7 *3 U n i v e r s i t y , o n e 1 9 0 7 U n i v e r s i t y . f o r g i r l * . M R S . r a t e s . R o o m s L I N D L E Y ’S H O U O S E — S u m m e r f o r c o u p l e s , w o m e n a n d b o y s . Spe c ia l 1 2 a n d I o ' c l o c k m e a l s . 1 1 2 W e s t I n t h , 1 ^ 0 3 C o l o r a d o . 2 - 0 1 9 4 . ____ Furnished C o lla g e s Rooms for Boys s u l a t e d W E S T A V E N U E . I n ­ s l e e p i n g p o r c h . E q u i p p e d f a r s i x o r l e s s . A v a i l a b l e a l s o n e x t 1 4 0 2 - B — M o d e r n , r o o m s , l o n g s e s s i o n . 6 9 9 7 . ______________ c o t t a g e . S i x C O N G R E S S . 17 '7 T a r g e , a i r y , p l e a s a r * h i g h - e e i i i n g . p l e a s a n t d o w n s t a i r * r<» rn l o c a t e d m i d w a y U n i v e r s i t y c o n v e n i e n t l y a n d c a p i t o l . S u m m e r r a t e * . 8 - 3 2 1 9 . Professional D R . E E . H A R R I S D e n t i s t I SI 4 N o r w o o d B l d g P h o n e 8 - 4 B 6 1 Real Eslale Renlals W H Y E X P E R I M E N T ? t o b u y o r s e l l a b u s i n e * * , I f y o u w a n t f o r r o o m i n g a n d b o a r d i n g h o u s e * e e u s d e p e n d a b l e s e r v i c e . W e a r e s p e c i a l i s t s in h a n d l i n g b u s i n e s s o p p o r t u n i t i e s . E s t a b ­ l i s h e d y e a r s . I N C O M E S E R V I C E A I N V E S T M E N T C O M P A N Y L a r g e s t B u s i n e s s B r o k e r a g e in t h e S o u t h 2 0 8 - 2 0 9 N a l l e B l d g . P h o n e 2 - 9 8 4 1 Records G a rage Apartment L E O N , 2 3 0 4 — C o o l a p a r t m e n t a. N e w f u r n i t u r e , p r i - « t e h a t h , m a i d s e r ­ in h o u s e , p r i v a t e e n ­ g a r a g e v i c e , A l s o t r a n c e . P h o n e 2 - 0 6 8 1 . r o o m S A N A N T O N I O . r o o m , b e d r o o m , b a t h . S w e d i s h m o d e r n f u r n i ­ i n n e r s p r i n g m a tt r e j = H e ‘u V e n e t i a n 1 9 3 2 - B — L i v i n g t u r e , b l i n d s . $ 2 5 f o r t w o b o y s , 3 7 2 0 . 2 9 t h . W E S T 1 4 0 4 - B — C o u p l e s o r m e n s t u d e n t s . F o u r r o o m g a r a g e a p a r t m e n t , ( t i l e b a t h , p i p e w a l l * , k i t c h e n , k n o t t y J e l e c t r i c r e f r i g e r a t i o n . 2 - 3 8 8 3 b e f o r e 7 :30 I a . m . " N O N A M E J I V E ” — G l e n n G r a y A H i * O r c h e s t r a . “ S i e r r a S u e " — B i n g C r o s b y w i t h J o h n S c o t t T r o t t e r A Hi*- O r c h e s t r a . R e c o r d s o n s a l e a t J . R . R e e d M u s i c C o . 8 1 7 C o n g r e s s . G A R A G E A P A R T M E N T S n e a r c a m p u s . E l e c t r i c r e f r i g e r a t i o n , V e n e t i a n b l i n d s , t i l e b a t h * . 6 r o o m s , c o m p l e t e k i t c h e n s , $ 4 0 , 4 r o o m s , $ 3 0 . 3 7 2 0 . S L I G H T L Y U S E D P h o n o g r a p h R e c o r d s : V o « a ! n n , f o r 2 5 c . F e t e s V i c t o r , B r u n s w i c k , M e l a t o n e . 1 0 c e a c h o r 3 p a c k a g e S t o r e . 1 0 8 E a s t 5 t h D e c c a , E X C E P T I O N A L L Y C O O L , c o u p l e s o r b a t h , d r a i n , u t i l i t i e s p a i d . S u m m e r r a t e s . 4 7 9 7 . t w o s t u d e n t s , t i l e s h o w e r , E l e c t r o l u x , g a r a g e , i d e a l f o r f o u r r o o m * , Plumbing F O R e l e c t r i c b o x , s i n g l e b e d - . S U M M E R o r w i n t e r t e r m s . S h o w e r , $ 1 2 . 5 0 e a c h . A l s o a p a r t m e n t f o r ' w o , $ 2 5 B il l* p a id . 3 1 j b l o c k s U n i v e r s i t y . 2 - 0 9 6 8 o r 2 - 2 9 0 7 . G U A D A L U P E S T R E E T . 2 bo 3 — S t u d e n t *, t e a c h e r s , y o u n g b u s i n e s s m e n . S p e c i a l s u m m e r r a t e s . C o m f o r t a b l e r o o m s , s h o w e r b a t h s . f o r R I O G R A N D E . 2 8 2 6 — C o o l r o o m e n ­ t r a n c e . G a r a g e . S u m m e r r a t e s . C o n v e n i ­ e n t t w o b o y s . P r i v a t e b a t h a n d t o c a m p u s . _____________________ _ s o u t h Rooms for Girls S A B I N E . 2 1 0 7 - A L o v e l y s o u t h n e w brjck b o n e t i l e h a ' b . h i g h , c o o l , s o u t h e a s t e x p o s u r e . B o a r d d e s i r e d . 2 - 8 5 1 8 . r o o m , s h o w * r, if o p e n W E S T A V E N U E . 1 8 0 3 — A l p h a D e l t a P l t o w o m e n s t u d e n t s d u r i n g s u m ­ m e r . S l e e p i n g p o r c h . M e a l * o p t i o n a l . A D o g a r a g e a p a r t m e n t . 8 - 1 6 3 9 . W H i l l s , 2 0 0 7 I ;• Hon P h i o p e n f . . r w o m e n b o t h t e r m * s u m m e r s c h o o l . s o u t h s h o w e r s . H a l f b l o c k A l p h a C o o ’ r o o m s , S u t t o n H o i ) . 2 - 7 2 4 9 . W H I T I S A V E N U E . 2 0 0 9 - A l p h a XI D e l t a f o r g a r a g e * i s o p e n t o w o m e n s t u d e n t s s e m e s t e r . A l s o H o u s e s u m m e r a v a i l a b l e . 2 - 8 7 5 8 . t h r e e W I C H I T A , 2 5 0 4 — R o o m # a v a i l a b l e a t C D p h o u s e f o r s u m m e r a t m a x i m u m < $ 1 5 t e r m P h o n e 8 - 4 1 4 1 . w a t e r B. R A V E N — S i n e s 1 8 9 0 — P l u m b i n g , p i p i n g , g a t r a n g e s , b e a t e r s c o n n e c t e d , s i n k s , s e w e r s u n s t o p p e d . 1 4 0 8 L a v a c a . P h o n * 6 7 6 3 r e p a i r i n g , h e a t e r Rug Cleaners R U G S C L E A N E D G E O . W E S L E Y 1 8 1 8 S a n J a c i n t o P h o n e 2 - 9 1 2 1 G a rage Rooms D U V A ! * 8 1 2 6 , G a r a g e r o o m , b a t h , m a i d , s u m m e r r a t e s . N i c e , i n v e s t i g a t e . P r i v a t e d o u b l e . s i n g l e , g a r a g e , L A V A C A . 1 8 0 6 — S u m m e r - w i n t e r t e r m * , b r i c k g a r a g e r o o m s , t i l e s h o w e r s . A l s o a p a r t m e n t r o o m s , b u i l d i n g . U t i l i t i e s , p o r t e r s e r v i c e . 8 6 4 3 , s h o w e r * , b r i c k t i l e Unfurnished Houses f ii n e w W A S H I N G T O N S Q U A R E . I O U — B e a u t i f o u r r o o m C o l o n i a l J u n e I n t , 1 3 6 b i n e i g h b o r h o o d M tat s e e n - t o b e a p p r e c i a t e d . L. T . B e l l m o n t 2 - 8 3 0 6 . F a c u l t y I SUMMER ROOMS FOR STUDENTS S T U D E N T S are looking for coo! summer rooms now before Final Exams and many of them ara hunfing apartments for their families. Use the only medium that will reach all of them to advertise your vacancies. C a !i 2-2473 B E F O R E 4:30 T O D A Y F O R M E S S E N G E R S E R V IC E . 14-Year-Old To Be on Stage Champion Cow boy A t Capitol 2 Days T o u n p B o b b y C lark , 14-year- eld w o r l d ’s c h a m p io n j u n i o r co w ­ b oy a n d movie Ma t , will m a k e p e r ­ so n a l a p p e a r a n c e s on t h e C apito l atajfe F r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a y . B obby, a t t h e ape of seven, w as a w a r d e d t h e ju v e n ile tr ic k r id in g c h a m p io n ­ ship of O k lah o m a, in c lu d in g wild c a lf a n d tr ic k ro p in g . F o u r y ea r? later he b ec am e a w o rld 's c h a m ­ pion. “ T he S a g e b r u s h H is sc re e n c a r e e r in c lu d e s five f e a t u r e p ic tu r e s to d a te , th e la te s t b e i n ? F a m il y T ra ils W e s t , ” in w hich be s ta r r e d . T h e y o u n g “ c h a m p ” h a s se v en m o r e p ic tu r e s o f t h e “ S a g e b r u s h S e r ie s " t o c o m p le te a f t e r f i n i s h ­ ing his p e r s o n a l a p p e a r a n c e t o u r o v e r t h e c o u n t r y . T h e sc re e n p r o g r a m to b e show n w ith t h e sta g e a t t r a c t i o n w;ll be “ G r e e n H ell.” s t a r r i n g J o a n B e n ­ n e t t a n d D ouglas F a i r b a n k s J r . , th e sp ecial, “ T e d d y , h is t o r ic a l sh o r t t h e R o u g h R i d e r . ” w i t h S id n e y B la c k m e r . English 13 Pupils Win Co-Op Prizes T h e U n i v e r s i t y Co-Op has a n ­ its a n ­ th e w i n n e r s o f c o n te s t n o u n c e d n u a l s h o r t - s t o r y w r i t i n g f o r E n g lish 13 s tu d e n ts . F i r s t p riz e o f $15 w a s a w a r d e d t o T a i n te r M cK inley, a " t u d e n t of W . B. G a r d n e r , w h o w r o t e “ F a ­ t h e r L e a r e s . ” S e c o n d p riz e of $10 w as given B e t t y J u n e S h e p a r d a s t u d e n t o f D r. C. L. C line, who w ro t e “ J u s t S lee p L a t e , My D e a r ," R u t h P e a s e , a n o t h e r s t u d e n t o f Mr. G a r d n e r ’s, w o n t h i r d w ith th e story> ‘A lb e r t, On G a r d e n i n g . ” T h e fo llo w in g t h r e e s tu d e n ts o f r e c e iv e d h o n o r ­ J. M. F o r s m a n a b le m e n tio n f o r sto r ie s : G e o r g e G o n za les J r . , w ho w ro te “ B lo w in g U p a T r a i n ’': R o b e rt R o g e r s , a u t h o r o f “ H e a t e d A r g u ­ m e n t ” : a n d F r a n k W . S a r t a m , who w r o t e “ Me a n d Ma P a r k e r . ” t h e ; r J u d g e s w e r e Miss M a r g a r e t L ee W ile y , B. B. C a r s t a r p h e r . a n d Miss S a r a h D o d so n , c h a ir m a n . Physics Halls Hold Camera Exhibit A n e x h ib it o f o v e r f o r t y p ic ­ t u r e s ta k e n by th e A u s tin C a m e r a C lu b a r e on d isp la y e n th e f i r s t f l o o r o f th e P h y sic s B u ild in g , f r o m to s c en ic s tu d i e r a n d a n i m a l life. th e y r e p r e s e n t th e o u t s t a n d i n g w o r k of t h e t w e n t y - f o u r m e m b e r s o f t h e c lu b . p o r t r a i t s H a n g in g O r e p i c t u r e c * p a r t i c u l a r In ­ t e r e s t is a shot o f t h e r e c e n t a n ­ t a k e n by A. D. n u l a r ec 'ipse. - r e e x p o s u r e s G lo v e r. I t shows • it t h e p r o g r e s s o f to e m o o n a s p a s s e d Y etw >: cr t • e » a r t h a n d th e s u n . H u m o r ie - rir • e p i c t u r e r T w o arf p o r t r a i t o n e is a c t eke* lin g s t a g e , " M; a r e d isp la y e d ’n; a n d o th e rs. The o p e n Jo] th e m * o f J o e t h r e e ( o lth o rp . of N e g r o e s , a n d t h e " u g l y dumb­ ly t r a v e l s c e n e s P. W . B a r k e r , e x h i b it will be Tri ore w ee! T E X A S A l w a y s 15« Ti ll 7 P.M. T O M M Y K E L L Y J A C K I E M O R A N IN ‘The Adventures of Tom Sawyer’ W I T H M A Y R O B S O N CIN T E C H N I C O L O R ) DUGHI ? AST i IMES TODAY STARTS SATURDAY! D u v a l ’s s to rie s in th a r e e v e r y o n e r ic h v H is T e x a s w e a t h e r Ste in g em s of f r o n t i e r d is e a g g e r a tio n . E v e r y p e r - ' w ou ld g e t a ch u c k le s t o r y o f m u s t a n g g r a p e w-hen d u m p e d th e R iv er killed all th e fi u p as th e m o u th of Bul as f a r dow-n a# L a Gra Mr. Dobie sa y s Johi w-rote f o r f u n . T h e r e d o u b t o f it. T h e se Jal a r e th e b e s t f u n t h a f f r o m T e x a s N E L L A M A E S TE in N.Y.A. Work to Close M a y 2 I , Says Moore Oklahoma University President Resigns D e a n V. I M oore a n n o u n c e d T h u r s d a y t h a t N .Y .A . w o rk closes M a y 21, a n d t r a t ail w -.-k e r ■ s h o u ld c o m p le te t h e i r ’ ..-ne by t h a t d a t e . M a y 22 h a s d e a d l i n e a n d s .< • A ■ . t h e B; to e n a b le m a k e uj f o r all J ;> th e th e J . D r. W illia m B. Bizze id e n t o f t h e U n i v e r s e b o m a , h a s h a n d e d h tio n to th e B o a r d in bec om e e f f e c t i v e Dr. a tte r n Bizz* Ii -school h e r e in 1903, B efore b e c o m in g (J, U. ir p r e s id e n t lege f o r e le v e n L AU RE L ' ^ H R R D Y / O R R 0 ‘S F I G H T I N G L E G I O N STATE