T he Da T exan T h e F i r s t C o l l e g e D a i l y i n t h e S o u t h VOLUME 45 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1943 Six Pages Today No. 77 There Are Eighteen Co-Eds W h o W ould Be Varsity Queen Gone> Aides A Motor Robinson Brings Fortress Home One Plane Battles Enemy In Spite of War Theta Sigs' Time Will Stagger AthletesToSee Cabaret Revue Al T Banquet Prized Football Goes With $100 Bond Purchase Prayers and Gas Worked Together recently of In a brief, censored message from England, word came to the U n iversity the ad­ ventures of a 23-year-old ex, Cap­ tain Laek Lero y Robinson, pilot of a F l y i n g Fortress. Cap­ tain Robinson was a student in the U niversity fo r three years prior to his enlistment in the A ir Corps in 1941. A n engine of his F o rt was knocked out in a raid over K a s­ sel, deep in Germ an territory, and Captain Robinson’s plane was forced to straggle W ith o u t the protecting fire of the other Forts in his formation, his ship was prey to the usual swarms of enemy fighters. In the ensuing battle, the F o rt was badly damaged and two of its crew seriously injured. Captain Robinson managed to bring the plane back to England, landing at an airdrome near the coast with just enough gas left for a few more minutes in the air. Tyler Airdrome Named After Ex Pounds Field Is Tribute to Aviator The A rm y a ir field a t T y le r has been named Pounds Field in honor of Lieu ten an t Ja c k W in d ­ ham Pounds, student in 1935-38 and first T y le r aviator to lose his life in this war, the W a r D epart­ ment has announced from W ash­ ington. Lieutenant Pounds was killed in a plane crash in C alifo rnia M arch 4, 1942. H e enlisted in the A ir Force in 1941, and was serv­ ing as an instructor at Lemoore Field, Calif., at the time of his death. This is the third A rm y air field to be named fo r an ex-student of the U niversity. M ajors F ie ld i n Greenville is named fo r L ie u ­ tenant T ruett J a y M ajors, student in 1938-40, who was killed in the Philippines in December, 1941. Payn e Field one of the w o rld ’s fields, was named in Cairo, Eg yp t, largest a ir in honor of See A I R F I E L D , Page 3 'W hat QoeA O h eMzte F R I D A Y M o r n i n g IO -A u ctio n of U niversity oil leases, Stephen F . Austin Hotel. 9-12— Texas a rt exhibit, Academ ic Room, M ain Building. 11:15— Music Is Yours, W O A I. A f t e r n o o n 1— A ir W A C recruiter speaks at 2-6— B en e fit sale, P i B eta Ph i K irb y H all. house. 2-5— Exhibit in Academic Room. 5—-Lieutenant Jam es R. W’ebb w ill interview girls interested in the A ir W A C S, Texas Union. 5— G irls’ Glee Club, Texas U nion 401. Night 6;30— T Association banquet, main lounge, Texas Union. 7-8:30— T ri D elta Open House. 7:30— Open house for Y -12 boys of Little Campus, Brackenridge Nurses’ Home. g— G irl Reserves’ dance, Y .W .C . A ,, Tenth and Brazos. S A T U R D A Y M o r n i n g g.12— Texas a rt exhibit, Academic Room. A f t e r n o o n I — Zeta alumnae luncheon and bridge, chapter house. 3:30-5:30— Delta Kappa Gamma j tea, T .F .W .C . Building. 5— Board of Regents of Grace H all meet at the hall. Night supper at W esley 6— Mexican Foundation. Jf>— Bridge party, U niversity Club. * 8-12—-R.O.T.C. and Glee Club dinner dance, N ew Scout H ut, Zilker Park. 8:30-11:30— M IC A - W IC A dance, main lounge, Texas Union. 8:30-11:30— Dance and play fo r soldiers, Gregg House. 8:30— Gamma P h i Beta form al, T .F .W .C . Building. 9-12— Grace H all form al at the dormitory. “ Time Staggers On” w ill be pre­ sented again this year, it was de- i tided Thursday night by Theta Sigma Phi, women’s honorary journalism fra tern ity, which spon­ sors the annual musical show every year. The date was not d efinitely set, but it w ill be some time in the spring. Begun in 1937, “ T.S.O .” has been an annual event for .six year*. Last year the musical com- j edy was built around the theme of a good w ill conference of inter- Am erican co-educational schools) in which jealous Aggies masquer-1 aded in skirts in an attempt to sabotage the good w ill measures. “ Two of Y ou ,” Songs “ You’re Out of M y M ind,” “ Apache A lice,” “ As Time Goes On” — Jim m y love song which Lunceford asked for an arrange­ ment o f; “ Shah-Ru,” and “ Now Y o u ’re Gone.” included * “ Time Staggers O n’’ was also re­ sponsible for the picking of t h e I ten most beautiful girls o f the U n iversity by K in g Vidor, H o lly ­ wood director. These girls were presented in the last act o f the revue. Scrip t and song writers have not been decided upon yet. Let Women Work, Says Dr. Moore Girls’ Proficiency Defended at ‘Y’ “ Women are now working in nearly every industry and profes­ sion and w ill continue to do so to a great extent after the w a r is over,” said Dr. Bernice Moore in a speech addressed to the Sopho­ more Upperclass Club in the Y . M .C .A. Thursday night. Speaking on “ W om en’s Status and M en’s A ttitud e,” Dr. Moore is said that the average man’s a tti­ tude that the woman’s place is in the home largely responsible fo r the fact that many women are reluctant to go into in d u stry W hen women lose their feeling of in ferio rity and are no longer discriminated against because of their sex, they w ill become as pro­ ficient in professions as men. * Stressing the fact that women should be allowed to work if they need the jobs, D r. Moore suggest­ ed that shorter shifts should be created for women who need to supplement the fam ily income and still have time to take care of do­ mestic duties. law is passed drafting “ I f a women for labor, I believe that college girls, so long as they are in college for something more than a ‘debut,* w ill be exempted, as w ill women with children under a certain age,” Dr. Moore ob­ served. Dedicating one special number to a winning football team, the Curtain Club’s “ Cabaret Revuers” w ill dance and sing for the ath­ letes, their dates, and guests at the inform al Ex-Students* Associa­ tion banquet F rid a y night from 7 to 12 o’clock in the Main Lounge of the Texas Union. W ith the dances and songs will be the beautiful girls, laughs, and corn called by the reviewer “ some­ thing for the boys” — the athletic boys this round. And after the dinner and the awards and the introductions of the coaches by Claude Voyles, toastmaster, and introductions of the boys by the coaches, solo num- the Bergstrom A .A .F . Band in- bers w ill be given by members of eluding Sergeant Paul P fie fe r, piano, Corporal Bernard Berman, accordion and pantomime, and Sergeant J e r r y Holesevosky, violin. Ja c k Ream directs and em­ cees fo r the band. ♦ And fo r the purchaser o f a $100 w ar bond, w ill go the football used in the Aggie-Texas game, signed by players and coaches, A fte r the dinner, which John M cCurdy still promises to finish cooking if enough other cooks aren't found— and the program, fo r the dancing. orchestra w ill play E a rlie r in the year, Coach D. X . Bible and W a lte r Bremond, chair­ man of the program committee, contacted s e v e r a l outstanding sports personalities over the na­ tion, but none of them were able to accept his invitation to speak at the banquet. About fo rty of the invitations sent to ex-members of the “ T ” association had been accepted by Thursday night. Some few other tickets have been on sale, but be­ cause of the food shortage, not as many were available as have been in the past. T Needs $410 To Meet Goa W ith its membership and fin a n ­ cial drive ending today, the Y .M . C.A. finds itself $410 short of its $1,600 goal. W . A. “ Block” Smith expressed the belief that the drive w ill still “ go over the top.” The “ Y ’s” total budget fo r the year exceeds $16,000, but the stu­ dents only have to pay one-tenth of this. About $700 will be spent on programs here on the campus, such as regular meetings, open houses, special Christmas and E a s ­ ter services. P a rt of the $700 will go to maintain the “ Y ’s” lib rary and pay fo r subscriptions to cu r­ rent magazines which the “ Y ” makes available fo r student use. Some of the money goes to the W orld Student Christian Fed era­ tion, which continues to serve stu­ dents all over the world, on cam­ puses, or in prison camps. Some of im portant speakers to the campus, and some goes fo r publicity purpose. to bring it goes Boys for Draff, Girls Against Poll Finds Students Split Boys answer “ yes,” girls “ no,” to the question of whether there should be a program of compulsory m ilitary training after the w a r for boys 17 to 21 years of age, accord­ ing to a survey made public by the Institute o f Student Opinion in Scholastic Magazines. Forty-seven per cent o f the boys questioned expressed approval, 45 per cent were opposed, and 8 per cent had no opinion. The girls ex­ pressed their disapproval by an opposition vote of 59 per cent. Thirty-one per- c<'nt favored com­ pulsory training, and IO per cent had no opinion. The combined boy and girl vote was 52 per cent against, 39 per cent for, and 9 per cent of no opinion. The question refers to the bill proposed by Chairman Andrew J. M ay o f the House m ilitary affairs committee. Commenting on the poll, Representative M a y said he thought the results were sig nifi­ cant and the showed amount o f support fo r the pro­ posal. clearly High school opinion is somewhat at variance with that of adults, according to the Institute's poll, which showed that girls are almost as strongly in favor of the plan as boys. Those in favo r of the compul­ sory training state among their reasons that it is good training and if there should be another w ar we w ill be ready; it also helps build strength and character, they say. Some fo r not reasons given wanting it are that a free country has no place fo r the word “ compul­ s o r y .” The world needs more edu­ cation and less drilling, opponents believe. The survey showed that boys of the Middle A tlan tic states favored post-war compulsory m ilitary serv- j ice; all other regions showed a de-: cided opposition in both boy and 1 girl votes. O f those who voted | against compulsory training the m ajority were in favor of vplun-i tary service, stating fo r their rea­ son that you put more into any­ thing done of your own free w ill > and that it is more democratic, S h a d e s of the Past Gregg Players End Inaction B y P A T F O W L E R like “ I t was a dark and stormy night when my Nellie went away, and IT I never, see the ’til my dying day.” Although the Gregg Players hope it won’t be dark and stormy Satu rd ay night, their au­ dience w ill probably feel they have “ never seen the like,” if “ Nellie the F a rm e r’s Daughter,” or “ True Love A lw ays W in s Out in the E n d ,” is half as riotous as one of their old productions such aa “ Ten Nights in a Barroom .” Satu rd ay night w ill mark the end of a three-year period of for the oldest drama inactivity group on the campus, the Gregg Players of A ll Saints’ Chapel, who have furnished some of the most popular entertainm ent on the cam­ pus the years they functioned and carried aw ay m any dramatic hon­ ors. The organization was founded over twenty-five years ago by a professor. Stark Young, the au­ thor of “ So Red the Rose.” They have been inactive fo r the past three years “ because of the con­ tinuous changing of rector# and therefore a leadership,” lack of the Rev, Joseph H arte, sponsor of the group and author of the play, said. leave. L a te r The opening in Gregg House at 8:30 w ill be fo r service men on the campus, in nearby camps, or on furlough or in the season they w ill stage one production fo r U niversity stu­ dents, and they hope also to make some trips to service centers. A f t ­ er the performance the usual Sa t­ urday night dance for service men w ill be held. And, incident­ ally, it ’s all fo r free! The cast includes: Nellie, M ar­ tha Rose: Reginald Drinkw ater, George Muse; Squire Cheatem, Steve V an C leve; Farm er Cy, A l­ Jones, Steve vin H a rt; Parson C arte r; Sh e riff, Bob Patterson; Chillum Helen Hughes, Ann Re­ born, B e tty Adkisson, and M ary Lu th er; Lizzie, Ruth Tiner. M ar­ jorie M arek is in charge of pro­ duction and make-up, and Je a n W hite and Carl Cumbie, manag­ ing sets and costumes. Perhaps the Players’ most suc­ cessful season was in 1936. In this year they produced three one-act plays w ritten by Stark Young, “ A t the Shrine,” “ M adretta,” and “ The Tw ilight Sain t.” They also presented Zona G ale’s Pu litzer Prize play, “ Miss Lu lu B e tt,” and two plays by Eugene O ’N eill, and “ Ile ,” They “ Highness.” closed the season with Anton Chekhov’s “ The L o rd ’s P ra y e r.” In the program of “ M adretta,” I Ja n u a ry 14-15, 1937, the follow- ; ing was w ritten in the introduc- ! lion: “ Approxim ately tw enty years j ago Stark Young, adjunct pro­ fessor o f literature at the U n i­ versity, took time o ff from his scholastic duties instigate a to drive for dram atic organization on the college campus. Today M r. Young, playwright, novelist, poet, critic, member of the editorial board of the New Republic maga­ zine, one-time associate editor of Theater A rts M onthly and dra­ matic critic for the New Y ork Times, is having his plays pro- See G R E G G P L A Y E R S , Page 5 MARGARET COUGHLIN Your Old dollies Wanted, Girls ‘Visit Every Room’ Is Goal of Council That old BW eater you never wear and the dress hanging in the closet that you haven’t worn fo r two years w ill come in handy this week when you are contacted to contrib­ ute to the drive fo r discarded clothing and raga which began on the campus December I and w ill continue through December 7. A ll girls who serve as house chairmen on the House Council agreed Thursday to make a con­ certed drive before M onday by making a house-to-house canvass and going to each room in every residence. Three clergymen, t h e Rev. Charles A. Sumners, Rabbi N ew ­ ton Friedm an, and F a th e r Joseph M cAllister, organized the drive. A t Thursday’s meeting Rabbi Friedm an spoke to the courted of the need for clothing in devastated foreign countries, where it is now so d ifficu lt to obtain necessary wearing apparel. * Students who are not contacted but have clothes or rags to turn in are asked to place them in the barrel in the lobby o f the Texas Union, or a t the “ Y ,” where they w ill be picked up. A t the U niversity the drive is being directed by Anne Burkhart, chairman o f the campus w ar effo rt committee, and Sara Dalkowitz, co-chairman of the drive. Manag­ ing the drive fo r the fraternities is B ill Eklund, and heading the drive for the co-ops is Laverne M illican. Other collection centers are at the churches, fire stations, and theaters, the A .W .V .S . Building at Ten‘ h aud Brazos, and the Public W e lfa re Build ing at F ifteen th and Lavaca. W hen the drive is complete, all clothing w ill be cleaned at local dry cleaning and laundry establish­ ments. Ten per cdr.t cf the cloth­ ing w ill be distributed locally and the rem ainder sent abroad. W orkers have been cautioned to turn in only clothing that w ill not be worn again. Future WACs Meet Lieutenant Webb Today Potential W A C s w ill be inter­ viewed by Lieutenant Jam es R. Webb F rid a y afternoon at 4 o’clock in the Texas Union. G irls inter­ ested in entering one of the 155 positions open as A ir W A C s were urged to come. Applicants must be between the ages of 20 and BO, and must meet height and weight requirements. The salaries are the san! as those of men doing the same type of work. Lieutenant W ebb w ill speak at K irb y H all F rid a y afternoon at I o’clock. Sickness on Decline, Says Health Service E ith e r the student? are getting i more sleep, sunshine, and vita- i mins, or they are just naturally healthier the Health Service asserts. There has jbeen less sickness this year than there was last. they were, than The cases thus fa r have been mostly cases of infection of the upper respiratory section (com­ monly known as f lu ), and a few cases of pneumonia have been re­ ported, Dr. Jo e Gilbert, director j of the U niversity Health Serv ice, j i has announced. Coughlin, heman, Munguia Complete Candidate List Eighteen pretty girls, no more, no less, are in the race for V arsity Carnival Queen, as three more candidates filed before the deadline W ednesday at midnight. L atest asp iran ts are K a p p a A lph a T h eta M a rgare t Coughlin, and two independents, Rose Ann Iseman and Alice Munguia, making a total of fourteen can d id ates from sororities and four independent candidates. ------------------------------- M argaret is a sophomore from San Antonio anti a transfer from Eighteen Hockaday at Dallas. ! years old, five feet, five and one- half inches tall, with blue eye# and black hair, she’s m ajoring in business administration, is presi­ dent of the Kappa Alpha Theta 5 pledge class, and a member o f the San Antonio Club, Hockaday Club, Y .W .C .A ., and FO O . MICA-WICA Dance Together I Attending 'm odeling school in Cleveland, Ohio, where she lived M IC A and W IC A are joining before coming to the U niversity, hands again this year with their | Rose Ann, independent, is a mem- annual dance Satu rd ay night in j ^er ° [ " I G A . the Home Eocnom- ics Club, and the C urtain Club. in , Texas U nion .rom 8:30 antu | she>J five fpet fiy e w ith dark 12 o clock when they w ill swing brown hair and brown eyes, and and sway to the music of Charles j went Sa in t Joseph’s Academ y F rez ia’s N a vy band. f or Qjr is summer. TT . ... _ 0 - Admission will be by M IC A or , i j z ti i . , ... Alice, known on the campus , Wallace Emcee For Intermission Si b. ’ th* M Il-V I enUUed to bring . n y ^ h . c k w - p i,,; . Time' S t t „ er, 0 n " pro- «• T ic k e t, cen be bought e t t h . dnction>i and 0[h„ campu3 enter. a • a " a * " A r m * A t the IO o’clock intermission tainment, was a Bluebonnet Belle nominee and a member of the Club the following campus artists w ill d Mexico, the Latin Am erican perform : M argaret Ann George, vocalist; Stan ley Crawford, “ spe­ cial effect#” ; M arjo rie Darilek, __ Club, and the U niversity M usi­ cians. Serving as ambassador of srood w ill of the League of U nited ie pianist, and Ja c k ie Hempel, tap ^ U n - A m e rica n C itiz e n s , she \ 1 n r c y u r o t j t u A n n . , i s t __ . I _ . j v... * Geneva P re stir! ire M IC A sweet- a aoPhomore from Austin. W h en she was in high school she wa# . heart, and B illy Andrews, “ M r. 1 awarded firs t place in state and W IC A of 1943 ” w ill be intro­ national voice contests. duced. Mac WTallace, social chair­ man for the dance with B e tty Gibbs, w ill be master of cere­ monies. Although no printed m atter w ill be allowed fo r campaign purposes, verbal campaigning has already begun and w ill continue until the night the students cast their vote# for their candidates at the Var- _ Carni val Saturday, December # . _ . _ . , Guests are Miss Dorothy Ge- bauer, sponsor of W IC A , Miss Anna Hiss, Dean and Mrs. A m o Nowotny, Dr. and Mrs. H a rr y . .. Moore, and M r. and Mrs B e rry j W hitaker. Expressing concern over Education Control Worries Frat Men Plans fo r the carnival are ad­ vancing, Ted Strauss, representing the Inter-fraternity Council, an­ nounced. Judges fo r the booths at the carnival w ill be Dean A rn o Nowotny, chairman, Mrs. K athleen Bland, and D r. W illiam E . Doty, dean of the College of Fin e Art#. Cups, which w ill be awarded to the winning booths, are on display in the window of the U n iversity Co-Op on the Drag. The largest cup w ill be given to the most un- ique entry among both sororities /rateJ n iti„ . tw0 sma, , „ h(1 awarded t0 the fannieat f um ;itst ex- aororUy skit; and another cup w ill tho iw n fo r the f irrt time the possibility that government-subsi­ dized education fo r returning serv­ ice men may mean government- influenced education, delegates to . . . . . . the National In t vr-fratenm y Con- f e r r i c , at the Hotel Commodore in N ew T o t* parsed a resolution j fra tern itv skit and the approving pressed the the g rant,. but the men be idea that . T . „ .. , , “ Her.d school, "o f their cn try making the Kreatest profit> own choice.” Sororities and fraternities which A New \o rk Times report of bave no^ t u r n e d in their skits to It Wasn't Moses, But Yucca Bushes Burst in Flower Shades of burning bushes! The yuccas on the northwest corner of 1 j the campus across from Lockhart’s i were all lighted up Thursday night. No one knows how the fire j started, but some students saw the blaze and called the fire de- j partment. A fire truck came clanging out J to extinguish the blaze and a crowd gathered. There vvas all the excitement o f a three-alarm fire. There was even a c a su a lty ; Ned H earn was hit by the pole one of the firemen was using to pull out the burning yuccas. Dr. Webb, History Prof, To Speak in Dallas Dr. W a lte r Prescott Webb, pro­ fessor of history, w ill be the prin­ cipal speaker Satu rd ay in Dallas the annual meeting o f at the Philosophical Society of Texas. Dean Chauncey Leake of the U niversity Medical School and Miss W innie Allen, archivist in the U n i­ versity library, have to membership in the Philosophical Society. N o L o n g h o r n R o o m Till After H o lid a ys There w ill be no Longhorn Room until afte r the Christmas holidays, which begin December 21, Miss Dorothy Olson, Union director, announced Thursday. the conference, which was at- be approved by Dean Now otny tended by representatives of fifty- should give them to him fo r ap- eight national fraternities, told of pr0val before Thursday morning, a report by the conference s w ar December 9, Strauss said, committee revealing that 360,000 fraternity men are serving in the i armed forces. This is more than a t m tho f ' been elected third of the living members of the Queen Aspirants Spur . national fraternities’ membership. It is estimated that there are more than 150,000 undergraduate fr a ­ tern ity members services. in Bond Sales Over Top One of the largest sale# of the the armed w ar bond booth in front of tho Texas Book Store was Thursday when the V a rsity Queen candi­ dates helped sell $338.55 in w ar bonds and stamps. The W eather forecast W eath er fo r today: Mrs. C. F« Arrowood, member of the A .A .U .W ., who has been cloudy with scattered showers and . , . . thunderstorm , early in the morn J M p i n * the C °-E d ' ,Ct0ry Cor!” the booth, expressed her with ing. Decreasing cloudiness and gratitude fo r the work done by lower temperature during the day. the girls and fo r the spirit of co­ faculty each Thursday, ., „ !Americas Hold Minor R°le in Doctrine, ’ Hackett Funds B Bonds Band Fraternity I L . . i . - - ■ t- J ^ 1 . I _ A , a I I ~ I h o Y i A n f A A M The Monroe Doctrine, pro claimed 120 years ago yesterday, was not directed at Latin-America then, and it means nothing to our Latin-American relations now, be­ lieves Dr. Charles W . W . Hackett, professor of history and director of the Institute o f Latin-American Studies. “ W henever Ae have intervened in our ‘Good Neighbors’ * a f f a i r s , it has been under some other policy.” Question Dr. H ackett further about this doctrine whose princi­ ple has ever been one of the most vital to our national safety, and he would explain this w ay: Wrhen, on December 2, 1823, President Monroe read as a part of his massage to Congress the in­ sertion, really written by Secre­ tary of State John Quincy Adams but which later came to be known as the Monroe Doctrine, he was j thinking of South Am erica indi­ rectly if at all. W h a t precipitated J the Monroe Doctrine was the Rus-j sian czar's threat in regions south j of Alaska and the fe a r that a weakening Spain would give Cuba! to France in return for aid in sub-: duing her colonies in revolt. The real essence of the Monroe j Doctrine, which is at the same time all of the original not now invali-j dated, is contained in one prin- “ The Am erican continents, by the free and independent condi­ tion which they have assumed and maintained, are henceforth not to be considered as subjects for fu ­ ture colonization by any European powers.” I Kappa Kappa Psi, national hon­ orary college band fratern ity, has given its chapters a furlough for the duration, according to a state­ ment by Colonel George E . H urt, director of the Longhorn band. Funds fo r the U niversity chap­ ter are being used to buy w ar bonds. This fra tern ity, founded in 1910 at Oklahoma State College, is on# of the oldest in the country. Its p rim ary purpose is to encourage good fellowship, leadership, schol­ arship, and musical ability among college member bands. Requirements fo r membership are sophomore standing and nine hours during the preceding semes­ ter with a C average or above. Pledges are judged on their music ability and scholarship. Phon* 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 PAGE TW O 'With Vvs Ring... Mary Burdette, Assistant To U nion Director, Is Married W illiam H. Arnold of Syla- lege. H r is a navigation in stru cto r’ Cnctrlmnn Shiv* W O m o n - i n i V e r S flying cauga. Ala., and M ary B u rd e tte -at field near San the o f Falfu rrias, assistant Texas Union director, were mar­ ried November 24 in the Austin Seminary’ Chapel. Dr, Conway T. W harton read the ceremony. to Miss Dorothy Je a n Owen was maid of honor and Conway T. W harton J r . served as best man. th a i Marcos. | Nanay M a t S h iv t n was married Miss Eugenia McDonald w ill be to Gene Goodman, student in the the bride’s attendant, and S cr- j I University 1938-41, in Dallas on geant Jam es Davidson w ill be best November 25. Goodman was a member of Sigma Chi fratern ity man. and is now in midshipman’s school st Notre Dame U niversity. Matlock-Hughes — A reception at the home of Mrs. "George D. Neal followed the cere­ mony, In the receiving line were the bride and bridegroom, Dr. and Mrs. Wharton, and Mr. and Sirs. Neal. Miss Jean Ann Neal was in charge of the guest book. ried to Lieutenant Joseph Dixon Am y Jennings, student in 1941- Matlock in Dallas on November 42, was married to Lieutenant IO. Lieutenant Matlock received E llis Colvin, student in 1941-42. his bachelor of arts and master of I October 6 in Houston. Lieutenant n . h n r i^ n n n , » -t w i n * i i , . I a r t! degrees from the U n iv e rsity ! Colvin was a member of Sigma T,.e bridegroom is amending the in 1 9 3 1 , and later returned to take Chi fratern ity. Co Ivin-Jennings Miss M ary Lou Hughes was mar­ Presbyterian Theological Sem in­ ary. The couple's home is at 2628 Wooldridge D r vc Burget-Callahan his bachelor of science and doctor of philosophy degrees. He was ^ - associated with the Department of Merarland-Holt History before entering the Arm y. . ju t _ * Mrs.' M atlock is a graduate of _ Tht> Sou th ern M ethod ist University. T h e couple w ill be at home in New- se port News, V a. M isl V irg in ia H olt to Ensign Howard Rus- an- M cFarland has been nounced by Mrs. M cFarlan d ’s par TT-b A n te ents, Mr. and Mrs. W illiam Holt of Flatonia. ** n n 4 Yf **« Mrs. M cFarland did graduate Miss B e tty Callahan, B B A. stu­ dent in the U niversity from 1939 to 43. w ill be married to Ueuten- ant John R. Burger. of Portland, KarabanOWski-HuSer Or*.. December I . . at t e A nna Gamma Delta sorority house. The ceremony w ill he informal. Miss w Miss v allahan is the daughter of . came the bride of Sergeant Ed- M r, and Mrs. Dies Callahan of mond Karabanowski at the Evan- Carrizo Springs. W h ile in the Uni- gelical U n ity Czech M oravian versify she was a member of Alpha Brethren Church in Granger No- Gamma Delta sorority, Garden I vember 2 1 . Sergeant and Mrs. Karabanow- Club, and Y .W .C .A . - Lieutenant Burget, son of Mrs. ski w ill make their home in San (G. E , Burget of Portland, Ore., Antonio. The bridegroom is sta- greduated from T w ill am ette Col- toned at K e lly Field. G a mma PhiIS , Grace Hall Dance Dec. 4 Actives, alumnae, and pledges of Gamma Phi Beta w ill give their formal at the Texas Federated W om en’s Club Building. Decem­ ber 4. Program (lancing w ill begin at 9 o’clock, with Moton Crockett’s Orchestra playing from 8:30 until I 2 o’clock. Palms will be used for decora­ tion, and punch is to be served in the anteroom. Chaperones w ill be Misses Dorothy Gebauer, Dorothy Ann Olson, Ann H ill, and Lorena Bak er and Mesdames Perdy Ler- bland, and Leo Bla ck co ck . Carolyn Carleton, social chair­ man, is in charge. H or committee is composed of M artha Ann Brow n, Jo y ce M urrell, Alice W a l­ ker, and M ary Katherine Cowsert. Grace H all w ill give its Christ­ mas formal Saturday, December 4 , at 9 o’clock. Honor guests w ill be members of the V-5 Naval unit, with Lieutenant M. J . Grove and Ensign W ayn e Yarnuni in charge. Pictures w ill be taken of guests against a background of a Christ­ mas tree, and Santa Claus. cia Huscr of Granger, and is a member of Pi B eta P h ’ work in the U niversity in 1941-42, Cr r i A „ ‘»u Y ‘ U niversity student in 1934-37, be- j .o ra lity . Ensign M cFarland, of the United States Naval A ir Corps, was graduated from the U n iv e r­ sity in 1942 with a degree in phys­ ical education. He is a member of Beta Theta P i fraternity. They were married in Jackson­ ville, Fla., on November 16. Belt-Duckett V irg in ia Nell Duckett and W , E. j Belt J r . were married on October 29 in Houston. Both received their bachelor of science degrees in 1943. Abie Duckett, U niversity student, attended her sister. Dr. Ikin, form er professor of geology at the U niversity, was best mar,. Pi Phis to Sei School Handiwork From Tennessee Articles handmade by the moun­ tain people at the Settlem ent School iii Gatlinburg, Tenn., will be for -ait at the Pl Beta Phi Settlem ent School tea at the chap­ ter house from 2 until 6 o’clock Friday afternoon. 1 to Tho proceeds wilt be contrib­ uted the sorority's physical therapy fund. From the fund ten scholarships, each amounting to $400, will be made available to in the United j qualified colleges Club Notes Freshmen Women Drink Tea With University Ladies FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1943 Social Calenda*. Dec. 8 Is Date 7-8:30— Delta Delta Delta open house, chapter house. Friday it Saturday For Dames’ Xmas Party F resh m en w om en w ere honored w ith a tea given by the U n iv e rs ity L a d ie s C lu b W e d n e s d a y aftern oo n from 4 until 6 o 'clo ck a t the home of P re s id e n t and M rs. H o m er P. R a in e y . Hostesses w ere M esdam es C o m e W . A lle n U - T V 'i'T U W H o lm e s ^ H u b e r t Jo n e s . K e n n e t h K o b e ! . W ' A 8 -1 2 — N aval R.O.T.C. and Glee (Tub dinner-dance, New Scout Hut, Zilker Park " ‘ in* n * <■ w ife * * . c i! b « . & . » ! I r ’ J ' . 4 V ,P T \ J -,C ----------------------------------- Buil.tins K , t h e r i n e K e l l e r , I 8 :3 0 -1 2 — M I C A . . G . M c A l I i . t . r , C h a r le s P a t H o n to n > - W I C A f o r m , ! , Jo e Moore. David M il Rolfe, E . M. Siegel, Sm ith, E . E. Snell, Misses Eldeen j t i B egg, Charlotte DuBois, Dorothy Gebauer, and Anna Hiss. E M jT ll I D uring the first hour Mrs. J . L. Mecham and Miss Lilliam W ester poured; during the second hour Mrs. A m o Now otny and Mrs. Kathleen Bland poured. Cake, cof­ fee. and candy were served from both ends of the table. Lucia Logan, K itty McCabe, Mar- M cKean, M argaret Man-, Mahler, Porn' Matton, M ary Hall. Main lo u n g e of Texas Union. :'*1~— Grace H all formal, Grace Lou Mills, Sarah Ruth M organ, 1 ^ 2 ~ Lo n g h o rn B e tty Sanies, M artha Tillery, M ary W heoles, and Sarah Zimmerman* Union Main Lounge. Room, Texas + Sunday Sigma Delta Tau open Sigma Delta Pi will meet Thurs­ day, December 2 , at 7:30 in Texas Union 309. 2:30-5:30 house. The U niversity Dames w ill hold their Christmas party Wednesday, December 8 , at 3 o’clock at the I home of Mrs k < n*vt»ar~««i£ 2 3 1 6 ^ ^ M . J o n . , bm. b « n ..l.c t - ed chairman of the following host­ esses fo r the p arty: Mesdames DeBusk, Mac Allen F arley, R. L. Coltharp, M. M. Noble, L. L. Grossnickle, and R. H. Helvenston. Membership in the U niversity Dames is still open. •1-6-— Pi Beta Phi open house, chapter house. L ia u ta n a n t Lea “ P ie ” San d er, | who played basketball two years | for the Longhorns as center and ! captain, is now a director of Phyl- j I,, addition to the h o ,te « e , I F rid iy the receiving line stood Mrs. Mot- 4() j to d ]V u ,s plans B, „ Callaw ay lr, president of i h . j c ^ M 7 o T c ^ S T * * i « n on' S T & m l U n ive rsity Ladies’ Club, Mrs. December 14. Homer P. Rainey, and M argaret M cKean, president of the Fresh­ men girls. Ilion A v i.tio n C .d e t Ed d ie G a rd n e r : L it u te n a n t S a n fo T fo 'c n a c h o f t h t t S * T f ^ d ^ l T Z Z v £ £ of arts degree in 1942. ' sity in 1942. F o r ty members of the club as­ sisted as part of the house party. A hayride and barbecue supper will be held by members and guests of the Newman Club i t 4 o’clock Sunday afternoon. They w ill meet on the steps of the Club before I ; going in wagons to the Boy Scout j H ut at Zilker Park. Preceding supper w ill be various entertainments, including singing and game*. The wagons will leave : for the return trip about IO o’clock. There will he a reasonable cost, as yet undetermined, adds Pat Nolette, reporter. ] Newman Club at l l o’clock Sun- I day morning will hear a talk by Gene P. Watson on Cardinal New- man, for whom the club is named. M ary Louise Shun- is in charge of the entertainment. ★ Ti e W e*t Tex** Club elected T H E D A I L Y T E X A N CLASSIFIED ADS f Phone 2-2 4 7 3 for A d Taker ? * P P -- I V ■ CLASSIFIED INDEX Announcement* I — A uto * (or Z—- A u t o m o t i v e T r a d e * l — W an te d A uto m o bile* 4—- S e rvice S ta tio n * 6— Bu * L in e * •— D iin n g and D ancing 7—-Lodge end F r a t e r n it y N otic e* •— L o * ! end Found J— Prof«**!onai I 0 — Per»onei» 10-A-—Sch oo l* end College* Bunnell Service* 8— Lost and Found .. Sit, For Sale L O S I nam e on B ro w n S h « e ffe r pen w ith m y L o t t i t — E m m a W a lla c e . j£* ?JX*ham Kner' Bld*’ REWArT- I !Pi««.*r.n7mp ? ^ , i e r R . 2 f i . h-P* C al! Jim m y C a ra w a y , 2- L O S T : * B lack zipper-typ e w allet w ith F O R S A I K : N E A P H A N T O M P - SO m odel a irp la n e m otor. ( o m e le t* w ith coil, condenser, at one-fifth ». - 9481. cards I l i t Lout in boc. gym. t a l l R o b e r t ; keyboard Id e n tific a tio n j R o y * ! -an<1 portab le I 12.Sd G reen, 2-0006 or 2-8826 R E W A R D . w r ite r Co. Ph , fiOho. L O S T O re y, A ri nam e pies -<• n o tify rf. Loon on I f Idabel L e o n — 5820 J I 4, notebook with found. ro v e r. 32— Coaching Sp an ish S t udent«»—-On«* tv j S p an ish r ife r . cath. Wilson Type- L O S T : T h re e ke y* on a blue I f 2-7718. found ca ll M r*. ribbon. Jn e t Taylor at ENGLISH 12— Experienced <«*r-h*r with P h o n e 2 . 1 3 * 3 l e r ‘ d *g r e «* Business Colleges A eeniP I? .R M 2809 S a n A nto nio , l o °* h!rig-Pur* ""4 Ph. 11188, Mrs, B e lt has returned to G al­ veston where she is attending the include hand- sets, Medical School. Mr. B e lt is con-, brooms, baby clothes and blan- tinuing his work at a U. S. re- keta, purses, baskets, doll chairs, search project in Alabama. and head si arf*. • I made luncheon towels, Items States and Canada. for sale officers and made plans for com- 1 n — Barbet shop* ing activities at the ing held Wednesday night. Of- fifers elected are as follow's; pres- ident, Charles G raham ; v i c e ­ president, Georgia Lee Jones; sec- retary-treasurer, Anne Templeton; corresponding L o i s W hiddcn; and reporter. P a t Brad ­ bury. These officers will serve as a committee to plan the various be held December 8 at the activities of the club including a first meet- 1 I •ZuMnV’r#* Hs tur*. Tailor* }*— Laundries 18—-Fix It*’ 17— F u r n i t u r e R e p a i r i n g 1 I — Lo eksm lt h» 10—-M o vin g , H a u lin g and S to ra g e 20— P rin tin g . O ffic e E q u ip m e n t 1 1 — S e w in g 2 3 — 6 h o * R e p a ir in g 28— C afe * 24— H elp W a n te d M al* 28— .salesm en W an te d 28— H e lp Wanted Female 2 7— Mal # W o rk W a n t e d lectr cal Service secretary, E m p lo y m e n t ★ ^ au w ‘‘ie ma(-B tov thv Alpha Omicron Pi Founders’ Day ban- ♦ I XA/’ll Ji y- voray-willrodt Joyce W illrod t, student in 1942- 9ue^ 43 from Columbus, was married to! Driskill Hotel, at an alumnae j Carl A lfred Gordy of the United meeting Monday night at the home States N a vy and from Houston in of Mi*- Elizabeth Tarpley. I the St, Anthony Catholic Church in Columbus on November 24. ! elected: ‘ oc Helen W illrod t, now a freshman chairm an; Kathleen G regory, sec- luncheon on December 23 at the *4-A—Cenermi in the U niversity, wa a the maid of fetary; Je a n Beshell, city Panhel- f ^ t u a Hotel honor, and Jo Anne Pei?, senior in San Angelo for 45_ Rocmt i'n iv e rs ity students hvin(p in that 46— Room* Unfurnitb* secretary; August Broll, Frances Carrington, president, was ' Xpa" d in i D * n* ’ C ' “ b clected 1 1 '<*,»'«<•"» Wednesday dent, Louisi Hemphill, secretary, treasurer; Jack N eff, historian; elected at the first meeting. the Coral Sea, heeled Thyfault, Earlayn e ,S , r » del' Black, T h ' -k the the P ARROW’S THE ANSWER! can be mire the beet-groomed men on a' -irk Dorothy L in n a rd S a ra h Thomac v. L . Holm* How ard Lo w a H arold Ham blen Pember J . R Steel Charles C. U tle y V-12 V - s S JR D. M a rio n K Bridge* E m ily J . Bole* Mary France# Pa yn e M a rg are t A n n George M a ry CIU* Maedgen Iii at H om e Detar ’ . L . W illia m * I* by ilia L . Tim m A lfred S. L o w re y F m ily W . Bro tt G race M argh ret B arto n H ogarth Paul HeiSixentha! S ie v e L . Killebrew L in n e ll Bru t# o B e ry l Bro w n *'irg!f!;» H arria Je a n K trk p a irie k Itt ri* I, Walker Dolly Ffce .Je ffre y <,liber! Rod B e tty Ja n * More and f>»’# La s e n y o r! O g g y J. C t nnon E le a n o r L a a a te r R uth K e rn L e a trir* Cohen Jo e n Ro** Stern i anehon Sch w a rte M a ry Ja n * P ric e M a ry Elisabeth Je a n F Ranker Rru«** f iommnn* R W T hacker D o n * Smiter R ow land D. P a ttlllo D arre ll E . Conover J turn F He abet h T e m p i* F u rrh B illie Ja n e F a r r M ildred C. C a tlin F ra n ce* I.o rrian * Ellr.abeth Same- K e th en n e Lindkley A11 ae M W CKrfieock Robert Le * B ra d le y Josep hine 8. R alsto n Dorothy L in n a rd B e tty K. < apron E ama Beth Anderaon B e rth a Louie a A ng el M a ry I^auUe S h a rp y f> rj|* A ly* P e r r y K u rhn e BUSINESS C O LLEG ES -5AN A SrrpN lQ - FT W ORTH - HARLW uaEM 23—Cafes A N N E T T L D U V A L D A N C I N G S C H O O L I b u rs.— 8 to 9:36 P M in stru ctio n and d a n c in g — 60o C ia * * * * — Mon,, IQ S W . 14th. Phone 29088. I ‘a hr*, S tu d io Stocks, Bonds, Notes Typing 1 Y P I N G D O N K tn m y home. T h e m e * . fcyp- *tu- in one day. So per cheet, m g d en t* w ork flo re n c e Jo h n s o n . 4808 A vn. G. theaes, etc. F o u r y e a rs ’ * e v * ra l experience. Can do tio tti, E X P F RI E N C L D 2-9444. T Y P I S T a t t e l e p h o n e 45— Rooms Furnished F O R R L N T i N ic e ;? fu rn ish e d bedroom w ith p riv a te b *!h . P r# f« r *tu d e n t or Telephone 808 W # *t teacher. 12nd. L A R G E SOUTHWEST ROOM- P r iv a t e p riv a te entrance. S in g le n o m . bath N e a r cam pus, 2884 P e a r l. P h . 2-8423. 47— Room and Board R O O M A N D B O A R D fo r for engineering student*. Tile b«th. nicely furnished Family #*vle meal*. 8 tim e* d a ily . 2816 O ldh am . Ph o n e 8-608". S a f e t y 51— Rooms for Boys D e p o s i t B o x e s T O P R O T E C T Y O U R W A R BO N D S C H O I C E R O O M '! fo r b oy*. Q u iet place fo r p rofe»»ora. G arag e . Ph o n e 2-8616. 216 E lm w o o d P la c e . V A C A N C I E S at M-*. W 'ooda’ H o n ** for Roy*. T h ro * m eals ce rv ed d a ily . Ph o n e *•4101. 402 W * * t 2 «th S t . And O th er V a lu a b le * No A v a ila b le at THE C A P IT A L N A T IO N A L BA N K WftMftN e - • mmmmmmm. mmmmm I *-m». „ 52— Rooms for Girls \ , I D E A L R O O M S F O R 12 G I R L S : U r g e . cool and elven. N ew tw in bede. M aid fro m cam pus. PA. se rvice . S ty b lock* 4 7— Room and Board *8— Fu rn ish e d A p t* 4 8 - A — U n fu rl! !• bed A p a rtm en t* M e r c h a n d i s e Je w e lr y R epair SS— B ic ycle s e n d M o to rc y cle* 14— Food and Food Pro d u c t* 88— F u r n it u r e and K o u **b o)d Good* 88— M u sica l end R adio* 87— W a tc h * *, J 8 — M itce lia neou* For S a le 89“ » G a ra g # A p a rtm e n t* 60— G arag e Room * 61 — Room * for B o y * 62— Room * for G ir l* 19—“ Swap” I d — W a n t e d M e r c h a n d i s e 40-A — L iv e s to c k ^ ap p lies F i n a n c i a l 41— A u to Lo an * «2— B a n k Lo an* 48— B u tin e * * O p p o r t u n i t i e s 14— Bu tin .***** W an te d 8— Lost and Found L O S T : Z ip p *r Sch o fie ld Bib le , name «n in R e n t a ! H a ll of M u aic I-rant* C o n cert. R e w ard . ro v e r R id a , at N o rm a Bre co n , S . R D. L e ft the Y O U can use the Wa nt Ads for Pro fit to Y O U R S E L F lf you have anything to sell and went to *e0 it quickly and economically, you can find a buyer through the W an t Ad Columns ot the Daily Texan. iver throua Buyers and sealers are brought together through these inexpensive advertisements. Anything of value can be sold to some one who needs it. Look around and note the things you no longer reed. Then advertise them tor sale. — advertise that you want it. lf you need something and want to buy it economically JUST WRITE YOUR AD ON THE BLANK BELOW AND PHONE NOW EQR OUR AD-TAKER W R I T E O N L Y O N E W O R D I N E A C H S P A C E Parents or grandparents who The cadet nurses will entertain forty-five V-12 boyg from Little 'a m p u l Frid a y night from 7:30 would like children from the ages It * 10:30 o’clock at the N u nes of tw'o to twelve invited, should It phone their names in Mrs. Lem Sponsor is Mrs. J. Scarbrough, 6263, Mrs. R. Holmes, 2-9887, or Mrs. Spurgeon Bell at 2-6129. Home, Brackenridge Hospital. will be informal. M. Thiers, R. N. Chaperones will be Iv * Cary and Mrs. Ivan M ayfield. Naval officer present will be L ieutenant Lewis Scheir. Lieutenant E llis Colvin, student the U n iversity 1940-42, was at commissioned completing aftor navigation school, October 6 . Lieu­ tenant Colvin is a member of Sig- pu a Chi. Jo h n M u n s o n , ev- S e r g e a n t Hudent and in 1929-31, has been sent to officer candidate school football player j N A M E Daily Texan Austin, Texas Enclosed find S U N . ( ) — to cover cost of m y a dvertisem en t for — -days. T U E S . ( ) W E D . ( ) THURS. ( ) F K L ( ) A D D R E S S ♦ / \ v FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1943 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 P A SE THR Cairo Reports "Big Three" Map Final Move CAIRO, Dec. 2.— (I N S ) — W ide­ spread reports circulated in Cairo ton igh t that the A llied “ big three" — R oosevelt, Churchill, Stalin— are even now in session in The- ran, m apping plans for the final o ffe n siv e crush Nazi Germ any and m aking vital post­ w ar decisions. that will F ollow in g their m om entous con­ feren ce with G eneralissim o Chiang K ai-Shek in E gyp t’s an cien t capi­ tal, these reports said, the A m eri­ can P resid en t and British Prime M inister sped on to Iran to m eet R ussia's leader. Cairo was o ffic ia lly silent on the reported history-m aking ses­ in T eheran, but the close­ sions mouthed secrecy o f Allied officials was more than m atched by the flood of rumors pouring in on the city. fla tly The N azis seized the opportuni­ ty to go on the air with their in­ terpretation o f the reports, and claim ed that Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin w ere m eet­ ing in the Iranian capital. The Berlin broadcasters obviously were jittery over the im plications in the epochal conversations betw een the leaders o f their three m ost power­ ful enem ies. If the sam e security m easures are taken at Teheran as in Cairo, the con feren ces will not be dis­ turbed, correspondents rem aining here agreed. “ G ate-crashing” the forbidden city w here the three-pow er m eet­ ings w ere held am ong R oosevelt, Churchill, and Chiang was a phys­ ical im possibility. Fully aw are that A dolf H itler might order a desperate suicide raid on the con feren ce area, the A nglo-A m erican authorities took every precaution. They overlooked nothing in the 3ea, air, and land approaches on ; the ju stifia b le grounds th at the Nazis espion age net m ight have location ferreted out j o f the m eetings, and relayed the inform ation to the W ilhelm strasse. The con feren ce radius was stud­ the ex a ct ded with ackack guns, and R.A.F. pursuit squadrons in con ven ien t fields w ere poised to take o f f at a m om ent’s notice to tackle any suspicious planes. Only on ce did shivers prick the spines o f the con feren ce. That was near the conclusion when the earthquakes that killed a thou­ sand or more persons in Turkey injured many hundreds rat­ an d tled in the seism ograph needle Cairo. The en tire region w as blanket­ ed by sw arm s o f Am erican G-men and British security offic ers, one of whose f ir s t ac ts was to r o u n d “ u n d es ira b le s.” T h ey w ere up the fact aw are o f that all o f North A frica is leaded with refu- grees, am idst whdm Nazi agents m ight easily m ingle. fercn ce in 1908, said it would have been harder to approach the three principals here than the A xis lead­ ers in those other m eetings. Even prom inent d elegates had a tough time leaving and en ter­ in g the con feren ce are a , fenced by barbed wire and heavily fo r­ tified . C orrespondents who had been at H itler and Mussolini dem ­ on strations, and the Munich Con- Two T exas exes, William B. Howell, s t u d e n t in 1942, and E u ­ gene O. B e ard, s tu d e n t in 1940-42, are now enrolled as aviation ca- ; dets in th e A.A .F, pre-flig h t school a t Maxwell Field, Ala. Airfield (C ontinued from Page I) L ie u te n a n t Colonel Jo h n Howard P ay n e o f A ustin, s tu d e n t in 1931- OS, who w as killed when his plane was sh o t dow n over N aples in J a n u a r y , 1943. L ie u te n a n t Colonel P a y n e w as the son o f L. W. P ay n e J r ., p r o fe s s o r o f E nglish, an d was a m e m b er of the g olf te a m while in the U niversity. World News at a Glance SaM d . Their ce n t, but it wr« hoi in vain, b e ­ c a u se the flay is soon c o m in g w h e n the Y ello w Cobra and th e A r y a n Hound wi l l seek r e f u g e in the dark abyss o f their o w n n o m e n c la tu r e , and. y e s, th en w e ’ll h a \ o o ra n ge lig h ts ag a in and again and again . P Y T . J A C K H. D U N N . A S X 3 8 5 5 4 9 2 7 , Co. C 6th Bn. I RTC F o rt M cC lellan, Ala. j a tlo id A tttU jO i! E stim a d o s s en o re s : D esd e hare alg u n tiem p o sa v i e n e n otan d o e n tr e el Clemen­ t e l a t i n o a m e r i c a n o un m ov im i- e n to en pro de una fra to rn id a d latina. Nada podria ser mas v e n ta j o s a para n o so tr o s Ior la t i­ nos que una ea«a ad orn ad a con las e le g a n t e s le ir a s del a lf a b e to lu g a r s e n # g r ieg o . En prim er m u y “ c h ic ,” y en S e g u n d o , a u m e n t a r ia n u estro “ p r e s t ig e .” el cual no anda m u y a lt o per la sim p le razor! de que e a r e c e m o s de fratorn id ad . A dem a* una in­ s t i t u t io n greo o-latina de esta natu ra leza se ria un im pulso c u l­ tural de p r o p o r tio n s* g ig a n te* - cas. pues se gu n nos d ice la h is­ to ric. los greco-laturns siem p re ban hecho co n li ib u c io n es m uy la c u l­ im p o r ta n te s en pro de ly ca v del P rogreso de la hu- manidad. letra s con Claro que sp p r e -e n t a n difi- cu lt a d e s m u y se r ia s para rea- liza r este pro.vecto, e in du d ab le- m en te el m as scrio se relaciona con e s c o g e r las las m a l e s se d c sig n a ria a nuestra fratornidad. En prim er t i r m in o se p r e se n t a el s i g u ie n t e prob le­ cli a n ta s letras usariam o*, m s : dos o t i e s '’ T e n g o e n te n d id o que las o p in io n es estan muy di- v id id a s so bre es ta c u e s t io n ; y o m e a b s t e n g o de in dicar rni pre- fe r e n c ia , va que no q u iero qu e se me hcusc de parcialidad. Y ^ eu ales letras u sa r ia m o s? El a l­ fa b e t o grig o , corno u ste d e s sr. ben, e« n u m er o s o ; y por lo ta n to d a n m a r g e n a d is c u s io n c o n ­ sid e r s blo. P e r e la eertid um b re que si nos urn mo# to d o saldra s e g u n n u estr o s defect*. Latino*: voteinos poi- una fra tern id a d y 4 botapem os mejor. Me permit© suscrib irm e - st* te n g o A tto. y S. S., P E P E P E R E Z P. On D ecem b e r 6, 1941 , who w ould have th o u g h t t h a t Joseph this n a tio n ’# Stalin w ould be “ U n c le J o e ” on D e c e m b e r 7, 1943'’ My, my, how' peop le do c h a n g e ! M u ssolin i is ★ ill a ga in. L e t’s "BUT I'M R E A S O N A B L Y C O N F I D E N T , MATER, T H A T EMILY POST W O U L D APPROVE N O W 1 ” 7a Se Continued B y ELI R OB IN SO N w e w ou ld like to sa y j u s t three little w o rd s those b en ig n to souls, th e A u stin la n dlords and la dies w ho r e f u s e to rent th eir d in g y te n e m e n t s to c o u p le s w ith child or children. J u s t nin e little le tte r s that sim p ly m ea n “ W E H A T E Y O U ?” W e hope you have to g o th ro u gh lif" ch ild less, th a t yo u r children hav e to go through life ch ild less, and y o u r ch ild ren ’s ch ild ren, to th e se v e n th son o f th e s e v e n t h son. . . . T H E BIG D AY Over the river and th rough the woods, To G r a n d m o th e r ’s house we g o ; W’ish travel to d a y , Involved on ly hay, F o r our g a s is d istressin g ly low. Over th e river and through the w ood s. And G rand m oth er s fa ce I sp y ; “ Hurray for the fu n , Is the b u tter done? A nd lots o f w h ip ped cream fo r th e p i e ? ” W ho w*as it that said th a t the d if fe r e n c e b e tw e e n a bachelor and a married man is th at the his fo r m e r can ch o ose own n eck ties and w ea r those he likes? T he man ab ou t tow n a lw a y s ab o u t is fl ir ti n g w ith bein g broke. C O R N Y H A B IT in his T o n y has j u s t o u tw itte d a wh ole cordon o f Nazi a g e n ts as th e y w ere a b o u t to stick red hot e y e b a lls and n e ed les dashed a t g r e a t personal risk over th e Parisian r o o ft o p s to the ch a r m in g little seco n d sto r y room on the L e f t B ank— with its bay o f w in d o w s w h er e th ey had first lo v e d . S o m e t h in g d rew him back to th e sp ot w h er e o n ly la s t n ig h t (a b e a u te o u s British a g e n t ) had a ccu sed him o f c o m p licity in the murder o f her m other (w h o w as a h o a s e ­ cr e t British a g e n t ) r e ­ tu rn ed his fr a t e r n it y pin. J u st as the N azi a g e n t s sw arm ed in, laid v io le n t h a n d s on him , and revealed th e f a c t that all a lo n g he had b een a s e c r e t B ritish ag en t. and sh e T h ere had b een no Ump fo r ex p la n a tio n s. A s she tu rn ed in horror a t th e horrible m ista ke she had m ad e, th e y w e r e d r a g ­ g in g him th ro u g h the door. T he lic e n tio u s P russian o f f i c e r clicked his h eels, bowled s t i f f l y , e x e c u te d a brisk a b o u t- fa c e and l e f t th e room . The f a d e o u t rev ealed th e la sciv io u s leer o f the Nazi p riv a te sta tion ed a t le e r tha t u n ­ th e d o orw a y, a q u e st io n a b ly p u t our h e r o in e ’s virtue in je o p a r d y . t h a t f r o m And w h a t h a p p en -? R ight dow n b e sid e us sits a w o m a n w i t h a b a g o f popcron as big as a parach u te. C ca­ unch, cra-u nch , r r a - u n c b , she cru nch es all t h r o u g h th e c lim a c ­ tic ^cene t h a t fo llo w s, the one the in which he e n t e r s g u t t e r on t h e r o o f thro u gh the bay window' and fin d s her sob- the bcd. All through bing on t h e ten der e m b r a c e f o l ­ lows, in,*-lead o f t h e s o f t , m oist s o u n d s o f t h e i r fren z ied kisses, all we hear ri cra-unch, c r a - u n c h . cra-un ch , c r a c k l e , c r a c k l e , c r a c k l e as h er b i g f a t h a n d p lu n ges into th e big fat bag for a n o t h e r big f a t l o a d o f big f a t p o p c o rn f o r b e r big f a t f a c e . W e t h i n k w e ’ll g o m a d . W e e n ­ t e r t a i n s u d d e n death. W e have a plot all w o rk ­ ed ou t in w h ich w e s e c r e t l y slip som e rock c y a n id e in to h er bag o f popcorn. S im p le. In the dark­ ness. W e g et st o r y all to a ti t le — w o r k e d o u t e v e n “ M a y h e m W ith Y o u r Mo v i e. ” And j u s t a? w e ’re a b ou t to co l­ lect m a teria l f o r our b o ok, the show' ends. t h o u g h t s the o f W e can c o n c e iv e o f no death blow e n o u g h f o r th a t s o c ie ty o f m o ron s w h o m a s tic a t e popped in m o v ie houses. T h eir corn ta s te th eir m o u th s. is all T h er e o u g h t to be a law! in c o n f e s s e d Oh, y es, in c a s e you w on dered how' it all tu r n e d o u t : a f t e r th e y had 'h eir u n d y in g lov e fo r one a n o th e r , com e hell, high w a t e r , or H itle r, it tu rn e d o u t th a t she had a B-25 Mitchell b om b er w a i t i n g the n e x t room to w h isk th em o f f to L o n ­ d on a n d t h e n c e t o his c h i c k e n in C h ic ag o. W here th ev farm raised egg s. T h e r e s t o f their lives. On one a n o t h e r ’s heads. in t h a t A b o u t lasc iv io u s N azi private l e f t t o g ua rd th e door. T he p lo t had a u n iq u e tw is t a t the end. Hr tu r n e d o u t to be a s e c r e t British a g e n t , i I I ll I 3 tiA 13 y /A //A AAA/ V/A r n i t ib I 2 2 •8 i 4 23 i 33 30 3 4 MAA// 37 5 6 7 8 IO ii 9 14 A // AAA // / A / / / a n 2 0 Wa 2 4 W/ 31 rn' / / / ...— - I I S 2 6 VA m 17 A y s 35 AA// 38 J } / J / / / a 39 ■ / / / 7 7 7 7 4* 4 2 4 3 A a a r n 4 7 W /i 4 4 4<* 4 8 'A A , J4 5 S o I 21 2 8 i i 3 6 AO 54 5+ r 53 52 4 6 II I 51 ■Jbb I s 4 11*14 5b I 58 tan talum H O RIZO NT A L 44 symbol for I. beast of burden 4. feminine name 9. lick up 12. cav ity 13. departure# 14. n ote of the Guido acale 45. dweller 47. gait 50. melody 51. ancient 54. past 5 5 . sharp aches 56. discern 57. protuberance on skin , 58. nautical term 59. sea-eagle V ER TICA L 1. im itate 2. title of respect 3. assa ssin ate 4 demons 5. life 6. falsifies 7. neuter possessive 10. w ing-like part 11. cushion 17. com petitor 19. note of the scale 20. equality 21. worship 2 2 . defies 24. prancing# 8. like 9. sheltered side 25, Revolution- ary patriot - A n sw er to y e s t e r d a y ’s puzzle. ( D jJ jtc io .1 N o t i c e * . W H A T TO DO? For tw o y e a r s we have been urged by e v e r y know n m eth od J o f c o m m u n ic a tio n s — p r e s s , radio, p a rty lin es, and book m a tch es— to “ R e m e m b e r P ea rl H a r b o r !” N o w a lo n g c o m e s D e ­ ce m b e r 7, 1 9 4 3 , th e v ery day w e ’ve been urged to rem e m b er, and the P r e s id e n t tells us to f o r g e t it, H e re a so n s t h a t th a t day o f should be fo r g o t te n . like a s k in g T ex an # to in f a m y R ather f o r g e t the A la m o . ★ T H R E E L I T T L E WO RD S W ith th e milk o f human k in d ­ n e ss co u rsin g th r o u g h our veins, 15. epoch 16. rival# 17. peruse 18. rapture 20. Jumbled type 21. public notice 23. high: muaic 2 4 . curvet 28. split pulse 30. dividing apparatus 32. native metal# 34. aiesta 35. capital of Peru 36. th o u g h t 39. c y st 40. one* property 41. mark w ith 43 symbol for ridges neon p | a C T s i ’r R •a W L 3 K I13 i N E RT L. rn H D L rn LG A N PA L I S L SI a s t a ES aam aa b MBK) B a t a t a B B H BOUIE?! H Ha EJQ HIS t a n Apersee tine et salHtioa; 29 minute* Dint bv Kina Feature* Sjndtcite, Inc. 53. lair 55 father ii i* 26. style of type 27. trail 29. remaining 31. gentle blow 33 list o f can ­ didates 37. Greek letter ?8. shed 42. exist 45. moon goddess 46. fragran t flower 47. foot o f an animal 48. grow old 49. peruse 50. Hebrew' letter 52. Gaelic aea-god er ed in th e s t a te each year. hope i t ’s n o th in g trivial. T H E A l . P H A E P S I L O N D E L T A Cue- tu* pic tu re will bs mud* on S a t u r ­ d ay , D e ce m b er 4 ut 2 o'cloc k in front o f the I n ion. T h e r e will he a b u s i­ n e s s m e e t i n g o f th#- fr ate r nit y Frid ay, D e c e m b e r ’I, a t 7 AO o ’c lock sn B io lo ­ gy L ab oratory 21. S T A N L E Y C R A W F O R D , P r e s i d e n t. A N D R E - E X A M I N A T I O N S PO ST - PO K ED A N D A D V A N C E D S T A N D - ING E X A M I N A T I O N S will he g iv e n D e ce m b er 6 l l for th o s e s t u d e n t who had pe tit ion ed to take th em prior to N o v e m b e r 29. The s c h e d u le for the e x a m in a t io n s , in G e olo gy th r o u g h D e c e m b e r to be g iv e n w hic h are Bui ld in g 14. is a* f o l l o w s ; Mon da y. D e c e m b er 6, 2 p.m .— Art. E ngli s h, Greek, and speec h. T u e s d a y , D e ce m b er 7. 2 p. m .— A n ­ th ro p o lo g y , drama, e n g in e e r in g , p h y t ­ ic*, g o i e r n m e n t , p h il o so p h y , and p s y ­ chology . W ednesday, D e ce m b er 8, 2 p . m . — B u s i n e s s jo u rn a li sm , and m a t h e m a tic * . ad m in is tr a tio n , ed ucati on , T h u r s d a y , D e ce m b er 9, 2 p.m.— C sa eh, Frenc h. German, Italian. Lat­ in. Sp a n is h , p h arm acy, and Bible Fr id ay, D e ce m b er IO, 2 p .m .— B ot­ c h e m is t r y , economic.*, g e o lo g y , any. m u s i c , a n d Sociology , S a t u r d a y , December Hi* tor y, ho m e and o th e r subje ct* . eco n o m ic * , l l , 2 p m — zo o lo g y , E. J. M A T H E W S , R e g is t ra r . W I L L T H E F O L L O W I N G S T U D E N T S t h e R e g i s t r a r ’s O f - i n f o r m a ­ p l e a s e c o m e b y i m m e d i a t e l y f u r n i s h t o fie* t i o n n e c e s s a r y f o r t h e D i r e c t o r y ; C l e m e n t C h a r l e s G i b b s M a r y O r i e a n L e w i s D o r o t h y C. P o r t e r S h i r l e y L. P u r d u m I v a n P a u l R o g e r s J r . M a r t h a J a n e S m o l k a A lv in W h it le y Harold R a y m o n d W i l i e r E . J. M A T H E W S . R egistrar. \ FRID A Y, D E C E M B E R 3, 1943 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N Phone 2-2473 PAG E FIVE T e a m Southwest Conference Chart Final C on ference Standing* Pct. 1 . 0 0 0 .800 ,400 .400 .200 .200 W T e xa s 5 A. & M ............. 4 S. M. U ....................... 2 Rice .......................... 2 T. C. U ......................... I Arkansas .. I Ops. 20 2 7 56 103 02 92 Pts. 185 81 44 33 2 0 21 ................. T 0 0 0 0 0 0 Te am ...... Texas A. & M. .. Rice ............ T. C. U. s . m . r . .. Arkansas .. T 0 Se ason’s Standi ngs W . 7 . 7 . a 2 * 2 9 I 0 n o 0 Pct. .875 .833 . 3 0 0 . 2 5 0 .222 999 Leading C on ference Scorers t TI* P l aye r, Team, Pos. Ral ph Park, Te xas, hb ............................... 8 J. R. Cal ahan, Te xas, fb 5 S. Turner, A. & M., fb ........................................ 5 Bob Rados,, Te xas, hb ......................................... 7 Jim Hall mark. A. & M., bb ............................ 0 A. Bal dwi n, Ar kansas, e .................................. 5 Jim Lucas, T. C. U „ qb ........................................ 4 J. Burditt, A. & TM., hb ........................................ 4 I L E l l s w o r t h . T e x a s , h b 5 Itobbv Gov Lee, Texas, fb M. F l anagan, A. & M„ qb ............................... 3 B. Jones, Ar kansas, hb B. She ffi e l d, Rice, hb .............................. D. Carter, T. C. U.. fb ......................................... 3 C. D. Allen, S. M. U., fb ................................. 2 ................................ ........................ 2 3 0 0 1 0 0 96) 0 0 0 0 I 3 TP 60 52 ‘ 45 42 36 j 30 25 24 24 20 1 8 18 18 1 8 12 Pts. 270 1 7 0 6 0 71 6 0 1 0 5 P A T 12 4 1 5 0 Thrilling 'Mural Games! O n l y t h r e e g a m e s w e r e p l a y e d y e s t e r d a y , h u t a ll o f t h e m w e r e m a r k e d w i t h t h r i l l i n g p l a y s . T h e M ic k H o u s e r an u p t h e b i g g e s t s c o r e o f t h e d a y in d e f e a t i n g S h e l ­ t o n H o u s e , 3 1 - 0 . W i l l i a m S o u r - j l o c k s t a r r e d f o r t h e M ic k s , s c o r i n g IR o f t h e t o t a l . H e a ls o m a d e t h e j l o n g e s t run o f t h e d a y w h e n he J d a s h e d 6 5 y a r d s f o r a t o u c h d o w n a f t e r i n t e r c e p t i n g a p a s s d e e p in l a s t t e n in t h e j h is o w n t e r r i t o r y I m i n u t e s o f , t h e g a m e . T . L .O .K . b e a t in a b a t t l e t h e H u t c h i n s o n f o r t h e H o u s e , 1 3 -0 , c e l l a r o f t h e M I C A d i v i s i o n . Billie B o b T i n k le r e t u r n e d a p u n t f o r a 4 0 - y a r d r u n f o r t h e d o w n i n t h e f i r s t h a l f . H is p a s s to lin e j H o w e l l A r n o l d on w a« g o o d f o r tho o t h e r t o u c h d o w n , j P i e r c e H o u s e p l a y e d a h e a d s - u p f i r s t t o u c h - 1 t h e g o a l g a m e , m a k i n g f o u r p e n e t r a t i o n s , j bu t l a c k e d t h e f i n a l s c o r i n g p u n c h I a n d l o s t to t h e F e a r l e s s F o s d i c k s b y a 1 2 - 6 d e c i s i o n . Intramural Schedule____ TO UCH FOOTBALL .1, 1 9 4 3 F r i d a y , D e c e m b e r 5 :0 0 — F i e l d I : 8 th C o ., N a v y D o r m D vs. 7 t h C o ., N a v y D o r m S. r ,;00—~F ie l d 2 : 1st C o . , A n d r e w s vs. 6 th C o., N a v y D o r m k . 5 : 0 0 — F i e l d 3 : l i t h C o ,, O a k G r o v e vs. 1 2 t h C o, B a r r a c k s . 5 ;00— F ie l d 4 : 1 3 t h C o., L .C .D . vs. 1 5 t h Co., L .C .D . 5 : 0 0 — F ie ld 5 ; I U h C o ., L .C .D . vs. ; 3 r d C o., C a r o t h c r s . PACKAGES for SH IP M E N T and Ship Same Day 15c - 25c - 35c and othrr* according ti* at:* and material required Texas Bookstore Atman roo*# i/w/r**a/rv a a « < * QUADAUUPt Sports Review W om en’s Intramurals B y B U C K B R A D L E Y By G E O R G E R A B O R N Texan Co-Sport* Editor Basketball at T. C. U. Is Big Question M ark is n o t e x p e c t e d f e r c n c e c a g e t e q m . t o f i e l d a een- W h e n w e w a t c h e d C o a c h B u l l y G i l s t r a p ’s s u r p r i s i n g y o u n g L o n g - , , h o r n c a g e r s r o m p o v e r t h e tall, e x p e r i e n c e d C h i l d r e . , n t a r a . 5 7 - 3 1 . n p , q u , , e u p , , p a r T u e s d a y n i g h t , w e c o u l d n ’t h e l p n o t i c i n g t h e r e s e m b l a n c e b e t w e e n th e S t e e r s a n d t h e s t a t e c h a m p i o n s h i p t e a m s J e f f D a v i s o f H o u s t o n T h e r e s u l t s o f r„ , . . . ,. . . Ops. 47 46 1 8 9 146 115 IDI h a s a w a y o f t u r n i n g o u t e a c h y e a r . B o t h t e a m s h a v e a l o t in c o m m o n . In th e f i r s t p l a c e , T e x a s n o w h a s S l a t e r M a r t i n , D a v i s ’ a l l - s t a t e g u a r d f o r t w o y e a r s , in t h e s t a r t i n g is l in e u p . M a r t i n t i r e l e s s h u s t l e r an d a r e a l hall h a w k , w h o is a h i g h l y v a l u a b l e d e s p i t e h is h e i g h t o f o n ly 5 f e e t IO i n c h e s. B u t t h e w h o l e T e x a s s t a r t i n g l in e u p is sh o r t, as b a s k e t b a l l p l a y e r s g o . D o u g l a s S t e w a r t a n d J e f f K e m p , t w o “ t a l l ” r e g u l a r s a r e o n l y s i x - o n e . T h e s e t w o r e l i e d on p i v o t s h o t s f o r t h e m o s t p a r t in the t h e C h il d r e s s g a m e s , a n d K e m p m a d e i h e o n l y t ip - in T e x a s s c o r e d all n i g h t . R o y C o x , w h o s t a r r e d s s a S t e e r su b in t h e n a t i o n a l c o l l e g i a t e lot, R u t t h e 5 - f o o t t o u r n a m e n t l a s t s p r i n g , 7 -i n c h r e d - h e a d w h o m h i s h i g h s c h o o l c o a c h a t L a m a r ( H o u s t o n ) c a ll e d " t h e b e s t s h o t I ’v e e v e r c o a c h e d ” w h i p p e d 19 p o i n t s t h r o u g h s p e c t a c u l a r o u r - t h e h o o p a g a i n s t C h il d r e s s , s e v e r a l o f is t h e s h o r t e s t o f t h e t h e m o n h a n d e r s f r o m f a r t o t h e s i d e . T h e f i f t h r e g u l a r , l e f t - h a n d e r J o e C r o w l e y , l o o k e d g o o d a t t i m e s , j b u t a s u b s t i t u t e b y t h e n a m e o f B oh ( l e a r y w a s e v e n b e t t e r a n d j s h o w e d d e f i n i t e p r o m i s e o f b r e a k i n g in t o t h e s t a r t i n g l in e u p . C r o w l e y , j K e m p , a n d C l e a r y a r e all V - 1 2 b o y s . A n y w a y , w h a t w e s t a r t e d o u t t o s a y w a s t h a t th e L o n g h o r n s had in c o m m o n w i t h J e f f D a v i s ’ c u s t o m a r y b a l l - h a w k i n g q u i n t e t s l o t s lo t, a n d do B o t h t e a m s b r i n g t h e ba ll d o w n fa«t, p a s s p l e n t y o f d r i b b li n g . A n d w h e n a p l a y e r on t h e o t h e r t e a m h a s the hall. t h e y h e c k l e h im t o d e a t h , s t e a l t h e h a ll fr o m h im , or k n o c k it a r o u n d a i t o u t o f h is h a n d s . I f T e x a s h ad j u s t o n e t a ll p l a y e r in t h e r e g u l a r l i n e u p , t h e S t e e r s t a l l p l a y e r w o u l d h a v e a s t r o n g q u i n t e t . T h e y n e e d a t t o g e t r e b o u n d s o f f t h e b a c k b o a r d . A t p r e s e n t , t h e o n l y s u c h m a n o n ! t h e s q u a d is W a l t e r B r e m o n d , w*ho is s i x - f o u r a n d p l a y e d f o r A u s t i n ' s l e a s t o n e r u n n e r - u p q u i n t e t l a s t y e a r in t h e s t a t e t o u r n a m e n t . T h e r e ’s a c h a n c e t h a t t h e S t e e r s w i l l p l a y a g a i n t h is S a t u r d a y n i g h t . C o a c h G il s t r a p h a s b e e n t r y i n g t o g e t R a n d o l p h F ie l d d o w n f o r a g a m e , b u t n o t h i n g is c e r t a i n y e t . T h e R a m b le r s do c o m e to t o w n , h o w e v e r , o n D e c e m b e r 1 0 - 1 1 , a n d t h e n ti e S t e e r s g o t o S a n A n t o n i o f o r a r e t u r n s e r i e s . J o h n Hargis a n d T e am — 89 Points Per G a m e e x c i t i n g . T h e r e w a s T o d a y ' s v o l l e y b a l l g a m e s w e r e G o l f f i n a l s w i l l be p l a y e d t o d a y v e r y t h e m u n i c i p a l g o l f c o u r s e at e x c e l l e n t p l a y i n g b y s o m e o f t h e 1 2 o ’c l o c k . T h e c o n t e s t a n t s w i l l be i t e a m s , y e t s o m e o f t h e t e a m s w e r e B e t t y C l a i r S c h m i d , w h o is a R a p - K a p p . G a m m a , a n d L a u r a Ba- s o m e a t t o d a y ’s g a m e s p o s i t e , w h o is a m e m b e r o f W I C A . a r e : A l p h a ( - a m m a D e l t a 3 4 , A l - j B o t h o f t h e s e g i r l s a r e e x c e l l e n t p h a P h i 18 ; K ir b y H a ll GO, K a p p a p l a y e r s , a n d t h e p u b l i c is i n v i t e d K a p p a ( - a m m a B 5 ; D e l t a D e l t a ! t o a t t e n d . In t h e s e m i - f i n a l s , B e t - D e l t a I 3 0 , Z e t a T a u A l p h a 2 1 ; t y S c h m i d d e f e a t e d Chi O m e g a ' s 12, A lp h a D e l t a E u g e n i a D u n n , w h o w i l l o f f i c i a t e C u r t i s s - W r i g h t th e g a m e , a n d L a u r a E s p o s i t e de- P h i 2 7 ; D e l t a G a m m a 3 3 , D e lta f e a t e d S h i r l e y H a t h o r n o f W I C A . l l 1 2 ; W I C A O d d s D e l t a D e l t a 3 2 , A l p h a C h i O m e g a R e d s 1 3 ; j t o u r n a - S i g m a D e l t a T a u 3 0 , Pi B e t a P h i m e n t is st i l l in t h e q u a r t e r - f i n a l s . II 1 4 ; A l p h a O m i c r o n Pi 3 0 , H a p- i T h e c o n t e s t a n t s to p l a y n e x t a r e pa A l p h a T h e t a l l 1 8 ; a n d A lp h a D e l t a G a m m a ’s V i r g i n i a F e a g i n s vs. G a m m a P h i B e t a ’s M a r y H in - E p s i l o n P hi 4 3 , P h i Mu II 6 . d r i c k s ; K a p p a K a p p a G a m m a s B e t t y Lou D a h l b e r g v s. A l p h a D e l t a P i' s M a r y J o H u d s o n . T h e g a m e s f o r F r i d a y a t 5 : 0 0 | a r e Z e t a T a u A l p h a II vs. D e l t a j Z e t a ; A l p h a P h i I v s . W e s l e y ; and P h i M u I v s . N e w m a n . c o n s o l a t i o n g o l f T h e ♦ T h e r e w i l l b e a m a n a g e r s m e e t - j i n g M o n d a y , D e c e m b e r 6 , a t h o ’c l o c k i n t h e W o m e n ’s G y m . All M a n a g e r s a r e r e q u e s t e d t o b r i n g I f o l d e r s a n d m a s t e r e n t r y lis ts. T h i s i is a n i m p o r t a n t m e e t i n g a n d all : m a n a g e r s a r e u r g e d t o a t t e n d . Varsity Tennis RatingsmJr i n g t h e P l a y e r s c a n c h a l l e n g e a c c o r d ­ f o l l o w i n g s c h e d u l e : t o , t h o s e r a n k e d f i f t e e n t h o r b e l o w S m a y c h a l l e n g e f i v e p l a y e r s a b o v e ; t h o s e r a n k e d f r o m 7 - 1 4 m a y c h a l ­ l e n g e t h o s e t w o p l a y e r s a b o v e ; f r o m 2 - 6 m a y c h a l l e n g e r a n k e d Tommy Harmon Rescued Again Chinese Guerillas Save A ll-Am erican \ N N A R B O R , M ic h ., D e c . 2 .— ( I N S ) — F l y i n g L i e u t . T o m H a r ­ m o n s ’ s a v e d b y C h i n e s e g u e r r i l l a s w h e n he w a s s h o t d o w n in f l a m e s b e h i n d J a p a n e s e l i n e s in C h in a l a s t O c t o b e r , his f a t h e r said t o n i g h t . life t h e L o u is H a r m o n , 7 0 - y e a r - o l d f a t h ­ f o r m e r M i c h i g a n a ll- s a i d he er o f f o o t b a l l s t a r , A m e r i e a n l e a r n e d t h e d e t a i l s o f h i s s o n ’s r e s - ! c u e fr o m t h e c o m m a n d e r o f L i e u t . J H a r m o n ' s g r o u n d c r e w w h o a r -) r iv e d in t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s f r o m j C h in a l a s t n i g h t. T h e c o m m a n d e r , w h o s e i d e n t i t y w a s w i t h h e l d f o r s e c u r i t y r e a s o n s , t e l e p h o n e d L i e u t . H a r m o n ’s f a t h e r o f t h e r e s c u e w h ic h w a s r e p o r t e d g u e r r i l l a t h e C h i n e s e t h r o u g h " g r a p e v i n e . ” L i e u t . H a r m o n w a s 1 k e t b a l l F O R T W O R T H , D e c . I — B a s ­ i t T e x a s C h r i s t i a n U n i- ! v e r s i f y i* j u s t a b o u t a s b i g a q u es- ! tion m a r k a s f o o t b a l l w a s , C o a c h H uh M c Q u i l la n r e p o r t s , C o a c h M c Q u i l la n h a s on*” l e t t e r ­ j m a n f r o m !a«t y e a r — Z e k e C h m n - j «e n ior t h r e e - i n c h ■ - f o o t , iste r, ’ f o r w a r d f r o m C o f f e y v i l l e , K a n . " W e ’ll h a v e s o m e 15 b o y s o u t , 1 b u t I d o n ’t k n o w y e t w h o c a n do w h a t, i f a n y t h i n g , ” M c Q u i l la n re- i por ts, I j f a r as t h a t " W e ’ll b u ild n c iv i l ia n t e a m as is p o s s i b l e , h u t t h e r e are m o o r t w o o f th e N a v y m e n j w h o s h o w c o n s i d e r a b l e p r o m i s e . ” t o e n t e r t h e t o u r n a m e n t d u r ­ O k l a h o m a C i t y in g in D e c e m b e r , b u t h a v e n o o t h e r p la n s n o w f o r T h e F r o g s p la n la^t w e e k t h e 1 n o n - c o n f e r e n c e c o m p e t i t i o n . I C o n f e r e n c e p la y w ill b e g i n e a r l y I in J a n u a r y , w i t h t h e o u t l o o k fo r a n o t h e r s i x - t e a m c ir c u i t , a s t h e r e w a s d u r i n g t h e gr id s e a s o n . B a y l o r L A S T T I M E S T O D A Y f l S S S T ™ Nm* SMUTCH n arthur l l l t { . Larry SIMMS S T A R T S T O M O R R O W IT'S UNBELIEVABLE.... BUT IT S T R U E ! % B A T T U E # O P E N 1 1 : 4 5 — 2 2 c T I L L I IT'S d COOK'S TMX F T * ' or u m m . wrtk $ Ut ti t tov* thrown >*, i, ani it's l i t 2"v) MARCH OF TIME! N E W S — C A R T O O N STARTS TODAY JOHN MAITH! W A Y N E • SCOTT] ALBERT. DEKKER Baaed on Thornton Burt!*' Story "Wax ai th* Wildcat#" JI tnt. MARJORIE RAMBEAU GEORGE “ S A B E T ’ HAYES GRANT WITHERS "SS W h i l e on t h e s u b j e c t o f b a s k e t b a l l , w e ’d lik e to p a s s o n s o m e o n e p l a y e r a b o v e , t a l e s w e ’v e b e e n h e a r i n g a b o u t t h e M a r i n e q u i n t e t a t P a r r i s ; t h e M a r i n e s w h o w e r e s t a - 1 ta ll C h a l l e n g e s w i l l b e p o s t e d in t h e I T e x a n a t t h e t i m e p l a y e r s h a v e I s la n d , S o u t h C a r o l in a . t i o n e d a t S o u t h w e s t e r n w e r e m o v e d t o P a r r i s Is la n d f o r a d v a n c e d I i n d i c a t e d t h e y c a n p l a y . M a t c h e s t r a i n i n g , a n d a m o n g t h . . , w a , J o h n H a r p , , t h e S t e e r , ’ a l l - c o n f e r e n e e b ' pl? y .e(L t h “ d , y . M o s t o f . . , t h e y j n o t i n j u r e d , t h . c o m m a n d e r . a i d , . / ‘ * in - . ( w h e r e H a r g i s , k n o w n as " L o n g “ o h n , w a s r u n n e r - u p to an . a l l - A m e r i c a n f o r w a r d o f l a s t J e a r. s e v e n o t h e r f i g h t e r t h e i r m i s s i o n a r - j o v e r a t a r g e t in C h i n a , ” t h e f a t h e r a s t y e a r s r e d - h o t S o u t h w e s t C o n f e r e n c e s c o r i n g ra ce , j r a n g e d b y p h o n i n g t h e m a n a g e r j sa id he w a s i n f o r m e d . " T h e y w e r e ! t o g r o w arar a t 8 - 1 0 0 5 o r b y c o n t a c t i n g t h e o p - r e t u r n i n g t o t h e i r b a s e w h e n e i g h t i J a p Z e r o s , d i v i n g o u t o f t h e s u n , ! a r e s c h e d u l e d E x c u s e s s h o u l d be p h o n e d to t h e m a n a g e r o r t o t h e oppone*nt. M a t c h e s " T o m a n d p i l o t s h a d c o m p l e t e d f r o m N a c o g d o c h e s ;g T o m ( o f R i c e H a r g i s h a i l s b a s k e t b a l l p l a y e r s lik e c r o p s ) a n d is o n e o f T e x a s ' s a l l - t i m e b a s k e t - j p o n e n t ball g r e a t s . A s a j u n i o r l a s t y e a r , he c h a l k e d u p 1 8 2 p o i n t s in c o n - 1 T h o s e f e r e n c e c o m p e t i t i o n . In 1 9 4 2 , H a r g i s n a r r o w l y m i s s e d b r e a k i n g J a c k i 10 £ eL c refHt f o r P .T . b y p l a y i n g j “ N o o n e G r a y ’, G r e g o r y G y m s c o r i n g m a r k o f 3 2 p o i n t s in o n e g a m e , W i t h > m T e x , , m i s s i o n , H a r g i s h ad 23 p o i n t s t o his c r e d i t a l t e r a d a z z l i n g f i r s t - h s f T h e s e a r e Corm m n, E l s t o n , F i t z - e x h i b i t i o n . H e s e e m e d a c i n c h to s e t a n e w r e c o r d , but c h o k e d in t h e s e c o n d h a l f a n d f i n i s h e d t h e g a m e w i t h s l o w e d u p in t h e s e c o n d h a l f , to o , a n d t h e u p h u g h , G a l l a g h e r , H a m i l t o n , K e l l y , a t o t a l o f 2 9 . T e x a s M c C a i n , R. S c h n e i d e r , a n d S t a r t * - l e a d i n g S a m H o u s t o n C o l l e g e , 4 - 2 4 , a t t h e h a l f t i m e « ’ *«•'-) J o t m e r e l y t h r e e h o u r , p e r w e e k ! 1 f i n a l sc o r e w a s 6 3 -5 4 m a n . s e t a f i r e , a n d h e p a r a c h u t e d t o t h e t f l o a t e d d o w n , ) g r o u n d . W h i l e h e I t h e r e m a i n i n g f o u r A l l ie d p l a n e s j I c ir c l e d h im t o p r o t e c t h im a g a i n s t i th e Jape. t h , v a r s i t y t e n n i s t e a m m o a t ( . t r u c k . F o u r o f t h e A l l i e d p l a n e , p l a y a t l e a s t t h r e e t i m e s p e r w e e k , We r e s h o t d o w n . T o m s p l a n e w a s l is t e d b e l o w w h o e x p e c t a t t a c k e d t h e m , s a w t h e J a r s u n t il c a n be s e e m t h e y t h e y • ? i f . - o , t , „ ,, L. - a a • , ‘ i • w i t h t h e S t e e r s h a n g i n g on t h e r o p e s a t t h e f i n i s h . C a rr y in g m ore calls — ' 1 . , ■ '* -iF S t e e r s . w ith the h e lp o f / tx i VK, V t / Q U A R T Z / C R Y S T A L S i u t I ■Sa, - * I K J I E F O R F 4 th e war Bell Laboratories* scientist* put quart* c r y s t a ls t o work in such a w a y th a t tu rk * c o n v e r sa tio n s are carried on two pairs o f L o n g D is t a n c e B w ires at on e tim e . N o w w ith stra teg ic m e ta ls so scarce, t h e Reil Sn stem is u sin g o n ly 6,000 t o n s o f n e w cop p er a y ea r in stead o f 9 0 ,000. A n d th e s e t in y c r y sta ls are help in g t o p ro v id e m ore c o m m u n ic a t io n for each p ou n d used. T h e y serve o n th e b a tt le fronts, to o . W e s te r n E lectric h a s m an u fa c tu re d so m e e ig h t million q uart* cr y sta ls for u se in t h e d e p e n d a b le c o m m u n ic a t io n s e q u ip m e n t B ell S y s t e m research is g iv in g the arm ed forces. In t h e b ette r da>s ahead th is exp erience will again he d irected le m a n ! keep in g this co u n tr y 's tele p h o n e service t h e b est in the world. BELL TEL E PH O NE SYSTEM War calls keep Long Distance lines busy ... That's why your call may be delayed. W h e n H a r g i s g e t s h o t , h e ’s th e h o t t e s t t h i n g y o u c a n I m a g i n e r>n a b a s k e t b a l l c o u r t . It j u s t h a p p e n e d t h a t he d i d n ’t g e t hot o f t e n e n o u g h . B u t he d id c o m e t h r o u g h w h e n t h e c h i p s w e r e d o w n — a n d h o w ! ! W h e n T e x a s w o n t h e c o n f e r e n c e l a s t s e a s o n a n d w e n t t o th e N a t i o n a l I n t e r c o l l e g i a t e T o u r n a m e n t a t K a n s a s C i t y , H a r g i s s e t a n th e r e . T h e S t e e r s u p s e t a h i g h ly - " i m p o s s i b l e ’’ s c o r i n g r e c o r d u p r e g a r d e d U n i v e r s i t y o f W a s h i n g t o n q u i n t e t . 5 9 - 5 5 , a f t e r t r a d i n g n e a r l y all t h e w a y — a n d H a r g i s r a c k e d u p 3 0 p o i n t s . I n c i d e n t a l l y , R o y C o x w a s a h e r o in t h a t g a m e as t h e l i t t l e r e d - h e a d e d f r e s h m a n the c a m e t h r o u g h w i t h f i e l d g o a l s l a s t - m i n u t e to w i n t h r e e f o r T h e n in t h e f i n a l s o f t h e W e s t e r n D i v i s i o n p l a y - o f f . H a r g i s t a l l i e d 2 9 p o i n t s a s t h e S t e e r s b a r e l y l o s t t o m i g h t y W y o m i n g , 5 8 - 5 6 . T h o s e 5 9 p o i n t s in t w o g a m e s e a s i l y b r o k e t h e old t o u r n a m e n t r e c o r d o f 5 3 p o i n t s in t h r e e g a m e s . A n d s i n c e W y o m i n g w e n t on to w in t h e n a t i o n a l c h a m p i o n s h i p a n d t h e n d e f e a t th e w i n n e r o f t h e M a d is o n S q u a r e G a r d e n T o u r n a m e n t , H a r g i s ’ p e r f o r m a n c e an d t h e p la y o f t h e e n t i r e T e x a s t e a m w e r e e v e n m o r e p h e n o m e n a l . G e t t i n g b a c k t o t h e o r i g i n a l s u b j e c t o f t h e P a r r is I s la n d b a s k e t ­ b a ll t e a m , H a r g i s w r i t e s t h a t t h e M a r i n e s h a v e q u i te a c o l l e c t i o n o f s t a r s o n t h e s q u a d . S e v e r a l " b i g t i m e ” p l a y e r s f r o m su ch t o p - f l i g h t I l lin o is , L o n g In la nd, an d b a s k e t b a l l s c h o o l s a s D e P a u w , I n d i a n a , t o u r n e y , b u t w a s r a t e d o n e o f T e n n e s s e e a r e o n h a n d . A n d y P h i ll i p s , u n a n i m o u s a l l - A m e r i c a n c h o i c e in t h e n a ­ f r o m t h e g r e a t Il l in o is q u i n t e t , w h ic h d i d n ’t p a r t i c i p a t e t i o n a l t e a m s o f a ll t i m e , is o n e o f t h e s t a r t e r s . T h e r e ’s a n o t h e r a l l - A m e r i c a n f r o m t h e r e ' s H a r g i s h i m s e l f , t h e l i n e u p — a n d o f c o u r s e D e P a u w f i v e g a m e s , h a v e s c o r e d in t e a m h a s a v e r a g e d 8 9 p o i n t s a g a m e f i n e s t b a s k e t b a l l in t h e t h e m o r e t h a n IOO p o i n t s on t w o o c c a s i o n s , a n d H a r g i s has a v e r a g e d 2 2 p o i n t s p e r g a m e . . . T o p t h a t o n e i f y o u c a n ! ! ! Gregg Players - - w i t h a w o o d e n s w i n g i n g d o o r , l a i r ­ e d t w o h o u r s . It w a s t h i s y e a r t h a t t h e P l a y ­ ( C o n t i n u e d f r o m " a g e I ) e r s r e a l i z e d a n a m b i t i o n c h e r i s h e d d u c e d b y h e o r g a n i z e d t w o d e c a d e s a g o . t h e a t r i c a l g r o u p s t h e " D u r i n g t h i s m e t a m o r p h o s i s o f a c h i e v e m e n t , Mr. Y o u n g h a s t r e a t ­ ed o f t h e p l a y in e v e r y p h a s e o f i t s d e v e l o p m e n t . In h is e s s a y s on b y e v e r y d r a m a t i c o r g a n i z a t i o n on th e c a m p u s — to p l a y in H o g g A u d i t o r i u m . J a c k H o lm e s , o n e o f t h e o r g a n i z a t i o n ’s s t a r p l a y e r s , w a s g i v e n a s c r e e n t e s t b y M e t r o - G old w y n - M a y e r s t u d i o s in t h e t h e t h e a t e r , h e h a s s e t f o r t h t h e s a m e s e a s o n . s t a n d a r d s o f d r a m a ; a s a p l a y ­ w r i g h t , he h a s a p p l i e d his r u l e s t o a c t u a l s p e c i m e n * . H e h a s f o r y e a r s c r i t ic i z e d N e w Y o r k s t a g e p r o d u c t i o n s . N o w t h e c r i t i c m a y b e c r i t i c i z e d . Y o u m a y b e t h e c r i t i c . ” * T h e c r i t i c i s m g i v e n w a s e v i ­ d e n t l y g o o d a s " M a d r e t t a ’’ w o n t h e I n t e r - C h u r c h D r a m a t i c L e a g u e t o u r n a m e n t f o r t h e G r e g g P l a y ­ e rs . D e a l i n g w i t h C r e o l e c h a r a c t ­ e r s , " M a d r e t t a ” is th e t r a g i c l o v e t o r n b e ­ s t o r y o f a F r e n c h g irl t w e e n to N e w O r l e a n s f r o m p l a n t a t i o n l i f e o n t h e l e v e e i m ­ l o y a l t y in a s i t u a t i o n o f a n d p e n d i n g d i s a s t e r . e s c a p e p r e s e n t e d D r a m a , c o m e d y , a n d b u r l e s q u e m a d e up th e l i s t o f p r o d u c t i o n s in 1 9 3 7 . T h e y S a m u e l R a p h a e l s o n ’s " A c c e n t on Y o u t h , ” I b s e n ’s " T h e M a s t e r B u i l d e r , ” a n d t h e r i o t o u s " T e n N i g h t s in a B a r ­ r o o m . ” T h e l a t t e r w a s d e s c r i b e d t h e T e x a n : " In a p l a y h o u s e in t a ­ a p p r o p r i a t e l y b le s, p e a n u t v e n d e r s , a n d s i g n s w a r n i n g p a t r o n s t o ‘l e a v e s t o n e s a n d v e g e t a b l e s o u t s i d e , ’ a n a b l e c a s t m e l l e r - d r a m m e r e d t h r o u g h f i v e a c t s o f a l c o h o l i c e n t e r t a i n ­ m e n t , c h e e r e d a n d b o o e d b y a n e n t h u s i a s t i c a u d i e n c e . ” T h e d r a ­ m a c e n t e r e d a b o u t a r e d b r ic k " Y e S i c k l e a n d S h e a f ’ c o m p l e t e e q u i p p e d w i t h In 1 9 3 8 , t h e o n l y i m p o r t a n t p l a y s t a g e d w a s " U n c l e T o m ’s C a b i n , ” w h i c h w a s f o l l o w e d b y a p e r io d o f i n a c t i v i t y n o t b r o k e n u n til D e c e m b e r 2 9 , 1 9 3 9 , w h e n , t h e p r e s i d e n c y o? M il t o n u n d e r R a g s d a l e , g r o u p p r e s e n t e d " T h e S e c o n d S h e p h e r d ’s P l a y , ” a C h r i s t m a s p a g e a n t , t h e A c l o s e s e c o n d to " T e n N i g h t s in a B a r r o o m ” w a s g i v e n in 1 9 4 0 : " M u r d e r in t h e Old Red B a r n . ” It v ill b e i n t e r e s t i n g t o c o m ­ p a r e t h i s y e a r ’s a c t i v i t i e s w i t h t h o s e o f 1 9 3 6 , a s t h e P l a y e r s a r e r e a l l y o f f t o a b a n g - u p s t a r t . T h e y h a v e a l r e a d y m a d e p l a n s f o r a n ­ o t h e r p r o d u c t i o n t o o p e n o n De­ c e m b e r 1 9 , " T h e V i s i o n o f F r a n z G r u b e r . ” M I D - N I G H T PRE VUE S A T U R D A Y P B i n i f s s HMM A T T H E PARAMOUNT T H E A T R E 1 . O 3. I. 5, 6. 7. 8 . p, i n . 1 I. 12 . 13. 1 4. 15. 16. IT. i s . 19, 2 0 . 2 1 . 2 9 ° 3 2 4 . O-, H i c k m a n K e l l y M a b r y G e r h a r d t ( ’o w a n N i x o n R e m y FII s i n it S t a r t z m a n M c C a in r: a g usp R. S c h n e i d e r ( o rat an G a l l a g h e r C r e s s o n F i t z h u g h B r a d l e y H a m i l t o n C o r t e s N f w n a m W i s e G. S c h n e i d e r B o n e K il l e l e a T e t l e y T h o m p s o n F r e z i a B r y a n . ; i n j u r e d , a n d " T o m ’s d ie d w h i l e f l i g h t c o m m a n d e r w a s b e i n g c a r e d f o r by t h e C h i n e s e g u e r r i l - la s. T o m w a* t h e t a i l I s p o t — a t o u g h o n e — s o h e w a s l u c k y t o c o m e o u t o f it a l i v e . T w o o f t h e o t h e r s w e r e r e s c u e d , a n d t h e f o u r t h still is m i s s i n g . ” f l y i n g in L i e u t , H a r m o n ’s m o t h e r . R o s e , s a i d s h e h a d n o t s e e n h e r s o n s i n c e l a s t C h r i s t m a s . S h e a d d e d : " I f G od is w i l l i n g , w e h o p e to s e e h im n e x t C h r i s t m a s ” L i e u t . H a r m o n w a s m i * « in g 2 8 d a y s , t e n n f w h ic h he w a s c a r e d f o r b y t h e C h i n e s e g u e r r i l l a s . I t w a s t h e s e c o n d t i m e t h a t t h e f o o t b a l l s t a r h ad b e e n r e p o r t e d m i s s i n g o n a f l y i n g m i s s i o n . L a s t A p r il 14, h e w a s m i s s i n g s e v e n d a y s j u n g l e s o f D u t c h G u i n e a , b u t r e t u r n e d u n h a r m e d . t h e in DHS F R A N C H O T T O N E M A R S H A H U N T PILOT NO. 5 l l Al t o P O R K Y P I G C A R T O O N Plu* O U R G A N G C O M E D Y a n d U. S. N A V Y S H O R T U R R S IT 9 C S 3 M E R L E O B E R O N B R I A N A H E R N E l l FIRST COMES COURAGE” A l a n M E R R I E M E L O D Y C A R T O O N P E T E S M I T H N O V E L T Y William Holden Eddie Bracken N C 1W Susan Hayward - Robert Benchlet Martha O’Onscoll * Barbara Britton vt of the Golden W e l t r, ~ «- « n r * p 9 ^ D R I V E u n EXTRA T h r o u g h th * C o - o p a r a t i o n a f t h * C o m m a n d i n g O f f i c e r a t Bergstrom A r m y Air Field W E P R E S E N T i i TROOP CARRIER MISSION’’ D e p ic tin g tho work d o n t by th* T R OOP C A R R IE R C O M M A N D , m os t of who*# pilot* r ec eived tr ain in g at B E R G S T R O M A R M Y AIR F IE L D A LS O! L A T E S T P A R A M O U N T N E W S •/c a n e tte a n d t h e M San A n to n io S y m p h o n y O r c h e s tr a €1 H K O O it I i i I M A A S H M O t i s P m A t . V USE Ices U niven'F y e* Texas Cu'fura- Enf®rlair’M,enf C o w r i e # Ticked Prices; Reserved Sections $2.75, $2.20, $1.65, $1.10 (including tax) Tickets O n Sale N ow Texas Union a n d R eed 's Music S tore Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1943 Jeanette Awaits Gene IU Hours in San A n to n io They Play in 'Hansel and Gretel' 'Music Is Yours' Shouts'Ship Ahoy' Sea chanties will sail over the airw ays F rid a y morning as “ Music ; Is Y ours” shouts “ Ship ahoy” and | the Radio House chorus and or- | chcstra brings to life some o f the more fam ilia r salt songs. ‘'Coasts of High B a rb a ry ” and “ Sa cra­ mento” are tw’o of the more f a ­ m iliar ones. G raydon Ausmus discusses the origin of these chanties with musi­ cal director Homer U lrich, and they both w ill have questions fired at them by Jo e M urphy and Ruth Lew is. The broadcast is at 11:15 o’clock over station W O A I. S e r g e a n t Bill W h itm o re, now in the public relations department at Randolph Field, received his de­ gree in bachelor o f journalism, from the U niversity in 1942. S e r­ geant W hitm ore was sports editor fo r the Texan. N ew Paintings Won’t K ill Think The Old, Traditional paintings w ill not M ountain areas by the Indians. die out, despite the changes that are taking place, said Loren Moz­ ley, acting chairman o f the A r t Departm ent of the U niversity, at a recent meeting. The established tradition of por­ tra it painting w ill last because it is a part of the Eighteenth Cen­ tu ry Southern art which in turn is a lasting part of culture, he pointed out. He stressed the fact that people should find and under­ stand a painting while it is still being done. This makes the artist feel that he is not working fo r himself alone, but fo r other people as well. Some of the features and t rinds of modern art were discussed. M r. Mozley compared the bluebonnet paintings of this part of the state with the paintings of the Rocky M r. Mozley said that p ortrait painting in Mexico is d ifferen t from that in this country because most of the M exican subjects are men. M r. Mozley, one of the two mem­ bers of the original A r t Depart­ ment faculty, said that the U n iv e r­ sity’s A r t Departm ent ranks among the largest in the U nited States. F a cu lty members hope to create artists’ school. professional a E n sig n W a lla c e M asters, who re­ ceived his degree in 1942, is ex­ ecutive o fficer of the shore patrol in Galveston. ★ U rial B e r is Ogden Jr., student in 1932-35, has been promoted to a captain. FO U R P R IN C IP A L C H A R A C T E R S from the University Opera's ‘Hansel and G retel," which will run December 8-11 in Hogg Audi­ torium, are Jean Chase, John Sielskl, Helena Boatwright, and Mary Jane Mancie S+oneman.-— Picture by W oody. December 15, but she has an en­ gagement in Chicago and w ill then go to the Metropolitan. Captain Raymond may drive her to Austin fo r her Monday night engagement. Ju s t to fin a lly settle the disa- , greement on what color hair Miss MacDonald has, she told reporters that the “ press book says it’s red- gold.” and she confiim s the de­ scription. H er eyes are blue-gray, and her complexion is rosy and of fine texture. She stands about five ; feet five inches. F o r her interview she donned a cinnamon brown suit and a tiny hat with a big yellow pom-pom. Above her A rm y A ir Forces wings she wore her service flag pin with one star. And here’s a tip for that nice! trim figure, girls. The MacDonald breakfast consisted of— tea and j toast. Miss MacDonald ha« been liftin g the morale since she was 3 years old, when she sang her first bene­ fit performance. A t 9, she began memorizing operatic arias from recordings. A t 13, she was signed I for s t a g e . professional Through her teens she studied singing and dancing afte r school and on Saturdays. the From “ bit” parts in New York, Miss MacDonald was soon pro­ moted to the screes. Probably her best-known “ The M erry Widow’,” “ Naughty M arietta,” “ Rose M arie,” “ M aytim e,” “ The F ir e fly ,” “ Sweethearts,” and “ B it ­ tersweet,” are ★ tours Miss MacDonald has set box­ office records With her seosonal concert in Am erica and peacetime concerts in Europe. She has had a crowded schedule since the w ar began. Besides singing at the Stage Door Canteen, at the Hollywood Canteen, hospitals, and m ilitary camps all over the coun­ try, she has donated the proceeds from her concerts over m any states to the A rm y Em ergency R elief Fund, and the Am erican W o m an ’s V olun tary Services. One of the most irritatin g Holly- w’ood rumors to Miss MacDonald is that which implies that she intends closing her home and giving up her career fo r the duration to fo l­ low Captain Raymond. “ I have no intention of doing any of those things. I w’ant to keep G ene’s home for him as it is . . . And as for my is certainly no time work— this for women to drop their jobs and go running around the world afte r I their husbands at posts and out­ Besides her concert at Gregory Gym w ith the San Antonio Sy m ­ phony, Miss MacDonald w ill sing I for the men at Bergstrom Field. Tickets may be ordered by mail from the entertainm ent commit­ tee, Music Building, and they are on sale at Reed’s Music Store and the Texas Union. Prices are S2.75, $2 20, $1.65, and $1.10. Service men w lil be admitted to the top balconies fo r 55 cents. W o m a n M a r i n e of 1 8 1 2 Has Sisters in 1 9 4 3 It would appear that women in the United States M arine Corps is not exactly new. In 1812, Miss Lu cy Brew er enlisted at Boston, Mass. She disguised herself as a merchant seaman in order to get into the service. Miss B re w e r is believed to have been the only woman member of the Marines. F r a n k P a s c h a l W a l t h a l l , B.A . ’38, has been promoted to captain. A rrivin g on a Houston train in San Antonio Thursday morning at chic, blue-gray-eyed 6 o'clock, Jean ette MacDonald had already set a sales record fo r her concert in Municipal Auditorium. The business manager for the j gan ■ A ntVn^r^ra^hon^b rchest'ri reported a sell-out to 6,000 people for the concert there Saturday night. And— here's the record— this w ill be the first time that San Antonio has ever had a repeat per­ formance of an artist like Miss MacDonald when she sings again PAGE SIX Revue to Begin Tour Sunday San Antonio First Stop, Then Swift Th** Curium Club Cabaret R e­ vue, designed especially to tour Arm y recreation centers, w ill ita first tour performance for the o fficer* and men of the San A n­ tonio A viation Cadet Center Sat­ urday, December 3, The following day. Sunday, the show’ w ill be at Camp Sw ift. The revue, which end* its cam­ pus run in the Laboratory Theater F rid a y night, w ill be given exactly as it is now with one exception. Since only girls w ill go on tour, the dance o f David Neuman and B el Stroud w ill be cut, Nineteen girls are included in the touring cast. They w ill leave the campus at noon Saturday and arrive in San Antonio in time for a rehearsal before giving a mad- i nee. A fte r dinner at the officers’ mess, the girls will give a second performance. Approxim ately three thousand officers and cadets are to see the show’. A l­ expected though the show has been re­ fo r per­ hearsed and produced formance in-the-round, it w ill be given from a stage in San A n ­ tonio. ★ * Sunday the company gives two afternoon performances at Camp Sw ift. Convalescent patients at the hospital w ill see the show’ first. Then the show moves to Service Club Number I for its second mat­ inee. JEA N ET T E M C D O N A L D . , W ednesday night of next week. On tour members o f the cast And there have already been 2,000 w ill serve as crew heads. Lenora Ann Thompson will be in charge i reservations made fo r the second of costumes and make-up and Iris C0!;cer’ - Futoranskv, property. Stage man- H u b b y Captain Gene Raymond ager w ill be Pa tricia M c C a m e y , * » s n ft there to meet her at the : and M artha Morgan w ill be instructing charge of production. Accom panying flyin g cadets at an A rm y airfield as nearby. In fact, she didn’t see him chaperons are Miss Jo e Ann Whit- fo r fourteen hours a fte r her a r­ mure, co-ordinator o f the revue, rival. Miss MacDonald had hoped M r*. instructor in to stay in San Antonio until Cap- Jam es M oll, drama, and Miss Morgan. I tain Raymond loaves his post or in I train— he was busy girls the and she hanger-ons, trudged o ff to aw ait the next rehearsal, a wiser, if not sadder, woman. posts.” ' Hansel’Witch Cavorts O n Broom for Carrs Law rence C arra, chairman of the Departm ent of Drama, sat on the arm o f a seat about half way down in Hogg Auditorium , and watched the witch cavort on her broomstick. H e r shrill and very w itchy voice (cooked up fo r the! ro le ) gnawed a t the souls of the few hangers-on who always seem to be around when a rehearsal is in the offing. “ Stop,” demanded M r. C arra in the stentorian tones with w-hich one might halt a snatch-thief . . . o r a galloping witch. “ B rin g that farth er down stage.” One of the hangers-on edged over to the M ain with the Voice, as the witch, began again. Jean ette Eckey, “ They coach very easily,” she volunteered in her ignorance. M r. C arra looked benignly down I on the benighted hanger-on, and replied, “ Yes, they do very well, but this is not coaching. It is stage direction. Coaching is the private aid a member of a cast is given to perfect his or her individual role. Stage direction deals with produc-1 tion; with the thing as a w hole!” ‘Out of the Shadows* To Promote Safety Plan in incidents “ Out of the Shadows,” a new quarter-hour program based on actual the under­ ground fight fo r freedom in E u ­ rope and Asia, w ill make its debut on Blu e Network under the spon­ sorship of the National Safe ty Council at 11:15 o’clock Monday night. The program, which replaces the “ Men, Machines, and Council s V ic to ry ” series, to bring the Council’s campaign to “ Save M anpower fo r W arpow er” to the attention of more people, is designed Stuart Buchanan, Blue Network producer, w ill continue as pro­ ducer o f the new show', and the salutes to “ S a fe ty Aces” w ill be retained. The show w ill originate in the Radio C ity studios of the Blu e Network, Inc. Radio by the Hour Had this enlightenment not J been administered in such a kindly! manner, Miss Hanger-on would j have shriveled up like a dehydrated carrot and disappeared under the nearest seat. And it was something to he considered worthy' of the explanation at the end of a long evening’s work. A less hearty soul than Mr. C arra would have been j biting o ff heads left and right at ■ the first syllable of an in anity at) that point. B u t the director was apparently' as fresh a- the prover­ bial daisy, and bent on continuing: in Miss Hanger-on’* education things dramatic. s TO 6 .-It 6 .-JO 6 .45 7 .-OO 7:15 7 SIO 7 :45 * :0« * ii a “ From the dramatic point of H 30 !» ;45 view,” he went on, “ staging an ii .-OO opera requires certain compro-i 9 U t 9 J O wises with ordinary dramatic pro­ I< ;45 cedure. A fte r all, the music is the lo-oa thing in an opera, and the action; lo : 3 0 must be subjugated to it. A n d ) 10;4'* there is also the problem of trying to make dramatic actresses out of ; 1 musicians in a few weeks. This, too, limits w hat is done in the way I i 2 :©o is j * * -1 * of dramatics. B u t this bunch I 2 J O smart and willing, and should turn i 1 2 : 4 6 I too in a fine performance.” I :15 I .30 1 :4 5 2 ;00 2:16 2 .-SO 2 ;4 5 8 T O 3:15 3 JO 3:45 4 :00 4 15 4 :$9 4 4 5 6 TO h -lf, 5 J O 6 .45 came the stentorian toner, “ That's ail fo r tonight!” And Miss Hanger-1 on, along with ail the other he U. T. Dramatists To Act Pearl Harbor’ Several U niversity girls from the Departm ent of Drama have been asked to participate iii the P e a rl H arb o r D ay ceremony in the senate chamber of the state capitol, Tuesday a t 7:30 o’clock. This program, prepared espe­ cia lly as a salute to women in war service, w ill be a part o f A u stin’s observance of December 7. A fte r a second of silence, again 1 ; i b ! The U n iversity students w ill en­ act a special -dramatization writ* ten by Dr. £ . P. Conkle, associate professor oI drama. KTBC m o r n i n g — 590 R a n c h 590 R a n c h 690 (Canch 690 R an ch W o rld N e w t Y a w n P a tr o l— N e w * W a k e U p w ith H e e d in . H an d — F o o tb a ll Pre d ictio n # W a k e U p W it h W e ed in W a k e U p W it h W e e d ia W'peri in N ew * O f Men and B o o k — C B S J . M abel ( lark W iii O sb o rn* T o B e A nnounced V o c a l P a ra d e W L 'nan T o d ay 0 ;d T h e a te r T ip * H a lf A H a lf N e w * — M i *ie T h t* R h y th m ic A g * H o lly w o o d S a lo n O rch . R u b y N e w m an and N e w A F T E R N O O N — the B a n d H ic k * N ew s M eet S a w B o y * Saw B o y * O n * o 'C lo ck Ju m p O ne o 'C lock J .nap J en se J a mea G ang T h ® S o p h istic a to r * V arching to V ic to r y M arching to V ictory A m erican Sch o o l o f the A ir American Sch oo l o f th e A ir M a rk e t R ep o rts J E og C ro sb y — N e w * X a v t e r C u g a t p e r r y Com * f in W it h D unn F u n W ith D u n a S in g A lo n g U n c le S a m S p e ak * S o u th w e s te rn U n ic e r* it y S o u th w e s te rn U n iv e r s it y R o y e r By.« field W orld T o d a y E V E N I N G — Ja m e s H ic k * N e w * T h is Is M y C o u n try 6 -OO 6:16 6.-3r:e R a n g e r P a rk e r F a m ily F u lto n L e w .* S u p erm an 6:00 6:3 5 6:30 T h e 7:00 W a t c h th * W e n d Go B y I ii# 7 :30 M eet Your N a v y 8:00 G a b rie l H a t t e r 8 :16— G r a d e F ie ld s 8:30 S p o tlig h t Ban d 8:65 H a r r y W it m e r , Sports 9:00 9:16 9:30 A* You Like It 9 :46 N e w t Reports Jo h n G u n th e r L l oyrt A rn o ld Jo h n K ir b y 10:00 Double or N othing 10:80 D a ily T exan of the Air 10 :45 10:65 N ew s 11 TO T ed F ie R ito Or< h e M .* 11:30 Fd d ie O liv e r O rc h e stra 11:55 N u * S u m m a ry S-i-G-.N O - F - F 12 TO . . don 4 buy I" “ S h o p c a r ' y r a d i c a l a n ■ake y ° ur , • this 7 e“ . e a r e s P e C l atty “ A n d r c t n e i cUs ChrVdtn^’ t h a i s p t h o u g h The Daily Texan