T he Da T exan VOL. 46 Price Five Cents T h e F i r s t C o l i e g e D a i l y i n t h e S o u t h AUSTIN, TEXAS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1944 Four Pages Today No. Change in Regulations Announced at Convocation A do rmitory officer for each of the Naval dorms and ti detail of five first-class N.R.O.T.C. men to assist e a c h dor mi tor y officer are the two c h an ge s in the o r g a n iz a ti o n of the N avy p r o g r a m as announced W e d n e s d a y by C a p t a i n Rawson J. Valentine, c o m m a n d a n t of th e University Naval train ing p r o g r a m . The new ruling will go into effect Mon­ day. These n ew provisions were a m o n g the subjects discussed by C a p t a in Valentine at the all-Navy convocation W e d n e s ­ d ay night. “ The University authorities a n d myself,” said C a p t a i n Valentine, “ have not been entirely satisfied with th e s u p e r ­ vision in the dormitories. Th er e are not enoug h p e t t y officers to keep watch continually at each of the dorms, and there ou gh t to be someone on duty a t all times in e a c h * I d or m i to r y . ’’ LanguageSiudies O ffice rs Supervise N aval Dorm s High Despite M onday, R O T Cees A ssist War, Profs Say Time Confuses Assembly, Constitution W o rk Delayed A D e m o c r a t i c c o n v e n t i o n a n d ’ p r o b a b l y b e p r i n t e d in T h e D a ily m i t t e e r e p o r t i n g to its c r e a t i n g c o n f u s e d t i m e s i g n a l s p o s t p o n e d T e x a n S u n d a y o r T u e s d a y g i v i n g b o dy . .. „ ... t i 'n e t h e p r o p o s e d n e w c o n s t i t u t i o n W e d n e s d a y n ig h t . W h i l e A s s e m b l y m e n m e t a t 7 ' t u d y i t bef<>r" t 0 i t h e o p e n A s s e m b l y m e e t i n g n e x t t h , l a s t m e e t i n g o f t h e S t u d e n t s ’ r i u d e n t a ., . ... , , t h e C o n g l u t i o n T h u r s d a y w h e n A s s e m b l w i t h c o m m i t t e e o n t h e d is c u s s i o n s a n il p a s s o r r e j e c t r e v i s i o n s o f D r - ° - » • W e e k , , e h a i r m a n o f th e f a c u l t y c o m m i t t e e , s t a t e d t h a t A s s e m b ly m u s t his c o m m i t t e e w ou ld m e e t F r i d a y a n d w a n t e d t h e d o c u m e n t . H ow- N e i t h e r H a d e n n o r J a b l o n o w s k i j e v e r, A s s e m b l y m e m b e r s , s a i d t h a t c o u l d b e r e a c h e d W e d n e s d a y n i g h t j t h r e e m a i n p o i n t s f o r t o c o m m e n t o n w h e t h e r t h e c o m - d i s cu s s i on — t h e p l a c e s y s t e m f o r t h e p r o b a b l e j th e A s s e m b l y , t h e m e t h o d o f stu - m i t t e e w o u ld c a ll I f t h e y do t h i s d e n t r a t i f i c a t i o n o f t h e d o c u m e n t , T h u r s d a y m e e t i n g . t i o n o f f i c e i n T e x a s U n i o n 2 0 6 , m e e t i n g w ill be , a s t h e p r e c e e d i n g a n d th e S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s sec- t h r e e h a v e b e e n , c lo s e d s e s s io n s C o m m i t t e e c h a i r m a n B e n H a d e n a n d k e y - m e m b e r " B i l f j a b l o n o w s k i ^ I f t h e A s s e m b l y s i t t i n g in. m e t a t 7 : 4 0 ro o m . t h e c o m m i t t e i n ­ b e a n o f f i c i a l A s s e m b l y m e e t i n g , j e l u d i n g t h e s e p o i n t s a s t h e y now t h e J u n i o r B a ll- W a l l a c e calls i t , h o w e v e r , i t w illJ r e p o r t w o u l d be p r e s e n t e d , o ’c lo c k i n t h e S t u d e n t s ’ A s s o c ia - J a b l o n o w s k i said i t o f f i c i a l l y . r e m a i n e d tio n . in ’ E a c h g r o u p w a i t e d a t i t s m e e t ~ ! ° P e n *° Rt u d e n t s * t h e c om -1 a r e , t o t h e f a c u l t y c o m m i t t e e , i n g p l a c e h a l f a n h o u r b e f o r e ; le a v i n g , a n d T o m A r n o l d , o n g i- Ex Reports from Washing ton j o i n e d ----------- ■----------------------------------------- —— — B e a r i n g H a d e n a n d b e f o r e 8 o ’clo ck . a s s e m b l y m a n , J a b l o n o w s k i s h o r t l y Largest Enrollment Seen in Spanish, French Classes Salerno Vet Teaches Navy F o r e i g n l a n g u a g e s a r e b e c o m i n g a n i n c r e a s i n g l y p o p u l a r f i e l d o f s t u d y a t t h e U n i v e r s i t y , a c c o r d i n g t o p r o f e s s o r s o f t h e f o u r d i f f e r e n t l a n g u a g e d e p a r t m e n t s . A m u c h s t u d e n t s a r e l a r g e r n u m b e r o f A v e t e r a n o f t h r e e o f t h e M e d i­ r e g i s t e r i n g f o r S p a n is h , F r e n c h , t e r r a n e a n ’s t o u g h e s t b e a c h h e a d s — G e r m a n , a n d R u s s i a n . D e s p i t e w a r ­ S a l e r n o , S ic ily , a n d A n z io — is n o w ti m e c o n d i t i o n s , P o r t u g u e s e , C z e c h , G r e e k , a n d L a t i n clas se s j ™ d u t y a t ihe U n i v e r s i t y a s a n in- h a v e a b o u t t h e s a m e n u m b e r o f s t r u c t o r f o r t h e N .R .O .T .C . u n it . e n r o l l e e s as t h e fa ll t e r m o f 1943. Lt. Leber Sa n k Tw o M id g e t Subs m e e t i n g f o r A s s e m b l y - c o m m i t t e e b l u e Pr i n t ? a ” d t a b u l a t i o n s t h e s e | t h e l a d y ’s f e a t h e r e d h e a d d r e s s t o I in t h e cla s s. T h e c o n f u s i o n c a m e w h e n t h e t h r e e , h a v i n g n o o t h e r n o ti c e , m e t a s d e c i d e d a t t h e l a s t m e e t ­ A s s e m b l y m e m b e r s , o t h e r in g . a n d A r n o l d , w e r e t h a n H a d e n c a ll e d in t h e o f f i c e d u r i n g W e d n e s d a y b y s e c r e ­ P a t M c C l a r n e y , t a r y . t o m e e t a t 7 o ’clo c k s t u d e n t I I T h is w a s p l a n n e d a s t h e l a s t t o t h e d i s c u s s i o n b e f o r e p ro p o s e d | t h e f a c u l t y c o n s t i t u t i o n g o e s c o m m i t t e e o n s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t F r i d a y a n d a s d e c i d e d by th e A s s e m b l y , t h e c o m m i t t e e , t h e f a c - I u l t y c o m m i t t e e , a n d d e a n s in a t h e c o m p r o m i s e m e e t i n g w a l k - o u t in A u g u s t . a f t e r e x p e c t e d S t u d e n t P r e s i d e n t M a c W a l l a c e h a d n o t r e t u r n e d f r o m t h e D e m - ] o c r a t i c c o n v e n t i o n in D a lla s , b u t s o m e t i m e w a s J a b l o n o w s k i , H a d e n , T h u r s d a y . a n d o b s e r v e r , E lm o F e r g u s o n , g o t b a c k in A u s ­ t i n a t 3 o ’c l o c k W e d n e s d a y m o r n - ) in g. a n o t h e r . s t ud e n t b a c k m e m b e r s A s s e m b l y h o p e d W e d n e s d a y n i g h t t h a t e i t h e r H a d ­ en o r W a l l a c e w o u ld c a ll a m e e t ­ i n g f o r T h u r s d a y n i g h t t o f i ni s h t h e d i s c u s s i o n s a n d c h a n g e s b e f o r e s e n d i n g t h e t h e c o n s t i t u t i o n f a c u l t y c o m m i t t e e F r i d a y a f t e r ­ t h a t f o r f i n a l a p p r o v a l b y n o o n 1 b o d y . a r e ou 51 e * t h e s e m e e t i n g s s e t t l e d , c o n s t i t u t i o n w o u ld I f t h e to Rayburn Already Busy With Inauguration Plans T h e D e p a r t m e n t o f R o m a n c e L a n g u a g e s h a s u n d e r g o n e t h e la rg - e s t g r o w t h d u r i n g t h e la«t y e a r . T h is t e r m 9 4 3 s t u d e n t s a r e regis. 1 t e r e d f o r S p a n is h , a s c o m p a r e d w ith 7 1 3 d u r i n g t h e f a l l t e r m o f | 1 9 4 3 . W i t h o n l y 2 93 s t u d e n t s la s t t h e F r e n c h d iv is io n n o w h as , . a c u r x i r t a » I .“ u r n s « ’ a m i e r n a t i o n a l c a p i t a l _ it**1 . . ! c a P»tol do IDG t o s t ic k cl n e w fc&th- v o a r i r f " T 4 1 9 s t u d e n t s . A l t h o u g h o n l y on e ‘ ec m * lf> A c t u a l l y t h e s k y - c l i m b e r w a s re - c o u r s e is b e i n g o f f e r e d t h i s t e r m t h e r e a r e s i x t e e n jn P o r t u g u e s e is m a s s e d w i t h j m o v i n g t h e p l a t i n u m 'O'1-'-’ f r o m “ ti p s in t h e m s h a r p e n e d . T h e t i p s i j>r jr p S im s. c h a i r m a n o f t h i s T h e se r v e a s l i g h t n i n g d e f l e c t o r s a n d I d e p a r t m e n t , o f a ; m u s t b e m a d e n e e d l e - s h a r p e v e r y c r e a s e d a t t r i b u t e s in i n t e r e s t in R o m a n c e lan t h e f o u r y e a r s , he crew m a n h a , a n t e d on th e n u m b e r o f n e w s t u d e n t s r e g i s t e r e d j v e r y tip o f M iss F r e e d o m ’s h e a d , i in t h e U n i v e r s i t y S e p t e m b e r I - g u a g e s t o t h e f a c t t h a t a l a r g e r : v d a y s in p r e p a r a t i o n f o r th e p r e s i - h a v e d e n t i a l i n a u g u r a t i o n serv ices. T e x a s l a w m a k e r is a m e m b e r s p e c i a l m i t t e e r a n g e m e n t s o f w ill 1 9 4 5 . j o i n t H o u s e - S e n a t e c o m - a r ­ r e s p o n s i b l e t h e e v e n t, w h i c h t a k e p l a c e o n J a n u a r y t h e f o r R a y b u r n ’s t a s k is t o i n t e r v i e w D e m o c r a t i c c a n d i d a t e P r e s i d e n t R o o s e v e l t f o r his w i s h e s as t o t h e l a y - o u t o f t h e c e r e m o n i e s , w h ile M i c h i g a n ’s R e p u b l i c a n S e n a t o r V a n d e n b e r g s o u n d s o u t G .O .P . n o m i n e e T h o m a s D e w e y f o r his r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s . t h e A l t h o u g h p r e s i d e n t t h e s u b j e c t , h a s t o his g i v e n n o o f f i c i a l h i n t as i d e a s o n r e ­ is it p o r t e d t h a t h e a d v o c a t e s h o ld i n g t h e s e r v i c e s in t h e H o u s e o f R e p ­ thi s y e a r , r e s e n t a t i v e s c h a m b e r b e c a u s e o f t h e d i f f i c u l t y in o b ­ t h e w a r - s c a r c e m a t e r i a l s t a i n i n g n e c e s s a r y t o e r e c t h u g e p l a t f o r m s F u n d o f , u 2 0 , ; like a D a v id a t o p a G o lia t h , a n d c a v o r t e d g i n g e r l y f o r t h e b e n e f i t th e c o ll e c ti o n o f o n -l o o k e rs o f S e e R A Y B U R N , P a g e 4 Loan Funds Go Begging Now In 1920’s, Students O verborrowed T h e S t u d e n t M e m o r ia l L o a n t h e E x - S t u d e n t s ’ A sso- : j e la tio n , w h ic h in n o r m a l t i m e s has R u s s i a n c la s s e s h a v e b e e n g r o w ­ in g s i n c e f i r s t t a u g h t in 1 9 4 2 . T he c o u r s e h a d o n l y e i g h t e e n s t u d e n t s : l a s t f a l l c o m p a r e d w i t h t h e fo r ty ] s t u d y i n g t h e l a n g u a g e t h i s t e r m . D r. E d u a r d M ic e k , c h a i r m a n o f t h e D e p a r t m e n t o f S l a v o n i c L a n - j in- j g u a g e s , s ai d c o n c e r n i n g c r e a s e , t o o l s t r o n g l y k n o w l e d g e o f R u s s i a n . A m e r i c a n s ; s h o u l d th is o n l y m a t i c r e a s o n s b u t t o be a b l e to r e ­ a d v a n t a g e o f R u s s i a n t a k e s e a r c h b a c t e r i o l o g y , f o r c o m m e r c i a l a n d diplo- j t h e p r a c t i c a l n e s s o f a a n d b o t a n y . ” Dr. l a n g u a g e n o t in m e d i c i n e , c h e m i s t r y , ; c a n n o t s t r e s s s t u d y t h i s “ I S e e L A N G U A G E , P a g e 2 Profs Stay Clear Of Loan Sharks Credit U n io n ’s Interest Low T h e U n i v e r s i t y F e d e r a l C r e d i t U n i o n r e c o r d s i t s 1 1 0 9 t h lo a n t h i s m o n t h , a n d in s p ite o f r i s i n g p ri c e s a n d t h e w a r , h a s n e v e r r a i s e d its i n t e r e s t r a t e o f f i v e - e i g h t s o f o n e p e r c e n t a m o n t h o n th o u n p a i d b a l a n c e s i n c e its f o u n d i n g in 1 9 3 6 . A f i n a n c i a l s e r v i c e o r g a n i z a t i o n , t h e U n i v e r s i t y F e d e r a l C r e d i t U n io n in A u s t i n o w e s i t s o r i g i n t o t h e F e d e r a l C r e d i t U n i o n A c t p a s s e d b y C o n g r e s s in 1936. It* r u l e s a n d r e g u l a t i o n s a r e o u t l i n e d b y f e d e r a l l a w . in on t h e i w i t h h e lp e d s e v e r a l h u n d r e d s t u d e n t s I I a n n u a l l y , h a s h a d o n l y e i g h t o r ; T h e c u s t o m a r y p r o c e d u r e is to t h e c e r e m o n i e s f r o n t o f h o l d g r o u n d s th e c a p i t o l ] t e n a p p l i c a n t s s i n c e J u l y , a c c o r d - b u i l d i n g . A v a s t s e a o f b l e a c h e r s ; \ng to J o h n A . M c C u r d y , e x e c u - i a n d s t a n d s a r e u s u a l l y e r e c t e d , j t i v e s e c r e t a r y . la c k o f i n - 1 s e c t io n s t e r e s t in f i n a n c i a l h e l p h a s been a p p r o p r i a t e ra d io , a n d n e w s r e e l c o r - ! n o ti c e d b y c u s t o d i a n s o f t h e v a ri- f r o m ] 0 u s o t h e r l o a n f u n d s a v a i l a b l e t o I ] r e s p o n d e n t s . w h ic h t o e p r e s i d e n t s p e a k s in p a s t j s t u d e n t s , a ls o , s a y s M r . M c C u r d y . I , y e a r s h a s b e e n g la s s - e n c l o s e d a n d t h e s t u- , w e l l - s u r r o u n d e d w ith a r m e d h a r m e f j d e n t s is d u e t o s e v e r a l c a u s e s , th e , i n d e p e n d e n c e o f r o s t e r p r e s s , T h e T h e f o r J . , . Community Assets To Be Viewed Here A s s e t s o f T e x a s c o m m u n i t i e s — p e o p l e , b u s i n e s s , a g r i c u l t u r e a n d u s t r j w ill be a n a l y z e d fro m g u a r d s , s e c r e t s e r v i c e a g e n t s a n d t F . B. I. o f f i c e r s . t h e T o h o ld s e r v ic e s t h e in H o u s e c h a m b e r w o u ld e n ta i l t e a r - ,• i n g o u t t h e l a w m a k e r s ’ l e g i s l a t i v e s e a t s a n d b r o a d e n i n g t h e v i s i t o r s ’ g a l l e r i e s t o p r o v i d e s p a c e f o r a l l : t h e o n - l o o k e r s s p e c i a l g u e s t s , w h o i n e t m e m b e r s , c o r p s , E nd v i s i t i n g dijjnitEri^s* t h e t h e i n c l u d e c a b - a s w ell a s A l t h o u g h p l a n n i n g c o m - t h e I d i p l o m a t i c , . , m i t t e e , h e a d e d b y V i r g i n i a 's D e m - ! . . , .. 4 ’ t h e p o i n t o f v ie w o f t h e i r u t i l i z a - '■ . ti o n f o r c o m m u n i t y d e v e l o n m e n t ! f o r rP S l s t e n n * V 1 r c o m m u n ! t y e n v e l o p m e n t m ost o b v io u s o n e b e i n g t h a t tw?o- a n d p r o g r e s s a t a c o n f e r e n c e h e re t h i r d s o f t h e b o y s h e r e a r e in o n e O c t o b e r 5-6, W . T. R o lf e , p r o g r a m o f the N a v y u n i t s o r a r e e x - s e rv - c o m m i t t e e all­ ice m e n t a k i n g a d v a n t a g e o f th e n o u n c e d . g o v e r n m e n t s A n o t h e r r e a s o n w a v e o f p r o s p e r i t y d u e jo b s . C a l l e d to c o n s i d e r t h e p r o b l e m s t h e g e n e r a l i 0 f t h e c i t y , t h e to w n a n d t h e com- t o w a r j m u n it y o f T e x a s “ a a t h e y a w a k e n t o t h e i r o w n r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s , ” t h e M a n y s t u d e n t s h a v e f o u n d j o b s c o n f e r e n c e will a t t e m p t to e x p l o r e , , . . , , {n ,1 . oU- af m o l n t l i a m t h e m to ind© p6iid6nt. j th© mEk© ta l >m, oth fr nee(J, Thcse o f . In t h e M e d i t e r r a n e a n a c ti o n , c a m p u s f i r s t w e n t a b o a r d , t h e a f t e r t h e d e a t h o f M rs. A lic e L it L i e u t e n a n t L e b e r w a s g i v e n o f f i - ; s t u r d y l a n d m a r k h a s b e e n v a c a t e d cial c r e d i t f o r tw o G e r m a n m i d g e t s u b m a r i n e s , in a d d i t i o n to his w o r k I _ d a b o u t t h e c r a f t “ U . S . S . P . C . 5 5 8 ” j in t h r e e a m p h i b i o u s o p e r a - ! tio n s. a n d a n o t h e r e r a l o g g e d o n its r e c - t r a i n i n g p e r s o n n e l t h e Fall Registration Totals 2,880 Late Enrollees Are Losing Credit N e w r e g i s t r a n t s f o r t h e fa ll t e r m t o t a l e d 2 ,8 8 0 W e d n e s d a y in a r e p o r t f r o m t h e B u r s a r ’s O ffic e . T w e n t y - t h r e e o f t h e s e r e g i s t r a n t s h a d t o t a k e t h e h o u r c r e d i t f o r f e i t in S i n c e th e N a v y c o n c e n t r a t e d t h e t h e m e n ’s I d o r m i t o r i e s a t t h e s o u t h e a s t cor - ] lier o f t h e c a m p u s , C a p t a i n R. I R. V a l e n t i n e e x p l a i n e d t h a t it w a s a n d p r a c t i c a l j to m o v e t h e h e a d q u a r t e r s t o Rob- j e r t s H a l l . c o n v e n i e n t m o r e “ O u r o f f i c e s in R o b e r t s a r e n ’t I so s p a c i o u s , ” h e p o i n t e d o u t , “ b u t 1 t h e y s e r v e t h e p u r p o s e . ” Tri t h e m e a n t i m e . C a p t a i n Yal - j e n t i n e said, L i t t l e f i e l d will s e r v e $2,000 Offered For Best History , ........ S e p t e m b e r 7 A p ’ izc o f $ 2 ,0 0 0 , to be k n o w n . as K l i e f o r t h C a n a d i a n - A m e r i e a n T h e n u m b e r Will p r o b a b l y re a c h H i s t o r v P r i z P . is b e i n g o f f e r e d f o r t h e b e s t m a n u s c r i p t o f a b o o k c o ­ t i t l e d “ N o r t h A m e r i c a n H i s t o r y . ” k ° ° k is to be s u i t a b l e f o r use j b y s t u d e n t s in t h e e l e v e n t h g r a d e in- I 0 f s ch o o ls o f t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s a n d t he C a n a d a . 2 ,9 0 0 s i n c e so m e s t u d e n t s w a i t e d uncil t h e l a s t m o n t h o f t h e t e r m to r e g i s t e r l a s t s e m e s t e r . T h e J u l y I . , , t o t a l t e a , 4 .6 4 4 s i g n i n g f o r . . L i t t l e f i e l d ’s o f f ic ia l a d d i t i o n to f i c e r s b e a s s ;s t ed b y a d e t a i l l i s t o f U n i v e r s i t y b u il d in g s o f f i v e f j r g t-c la s s N . R . O T . C . m e n t h ^ d o r n , ito r i e 3 t h e c a m e in 1 9 3 3 w h e n th e h o m e w a s w ho w ill Iive t u r n e d ^ o v e r t o s c h o o l a u t h o r i t i e s . t o w h i c h t h e y a r e d e t a i l e d . in l i e f ield. “ T h e r e a r e f o r t h e C a p - T h e o r i g i n a l p u r p o s e o f t h e g i f t | t a m . “ F i r s t , th e d e t a i l w ill a s s i s t in t h e s u p e r v i s i o n o f t h e d o n m i- torieg> T h e r * b y s o m e o n e will b a on d u t y a t aH t i m e s in e a c h d o r m . « X hc s e c o n d r e a s o n _ _ t h i s a d d i , b u t n e v e r b e e n a d a p t e d t o t h a t p u r - , w a s t h a t t h e h o u s e b e u s e d a s a f o r U n i v e r s i t y p r e s i d e n t s . h o m e t h i s a c t i o n , ” e x p l a i n e d tw o p u r p o s e s f o r v a r i o u s r e a s o n s i t Po se ’ In 1 9 3 6 , d u r i n g t h e c e n t e n n i a l , o f f ic ia ls c e n t e r e d U n i v e r s i t y cele- G r s t - c la s s R O T C e e s will b e b r a t i o n s o f t h e e v e n t in t h e p ie- t u r e s q u e o ld h o m e a n d t h e L it- t l e f i e ld h o m e w a s a g a n t h e s c e n e N a v y is c o n c e r n e d . ” d o n a ! d u t y will be e x c e l l e n t t r a i n - ing f o r th e N .R .O .T .C . m e n . T h * t h * f i r s t t o b e c o m e o f f i c e r s — t h e y a r a the s e n i o r V -1 2 m e n as f a r as t h e | o f b u s y a c t i v i t y . T h o s e in t h e V -1 2 p r o g r a m m u s t A f t e r t h e c e n t e n n i a l , h o w e v e r , a t t e n d m i d s h i p m a n ’s s ch o o l b e f o r e t h e i r co m m is* th e h o m e w a s no l o n g e r n e e d e d , w e n t b a c k t h e N .R .O .T .C . m e n c e n t e r o f t h e m u s ic d e p a r t m e n t , j a r e c o m m i s s i o n e d a f t e r t h e y h a v e t h e r e q u i r e d n u m b e r o f in t o u s e a g a i n a s t h e s ions, w hile t h e M usic B u il d in g f i n i s h e d t h e y c a n r e c e i v e t h e n B u t w a s c o m p l e t e d a n d t h e m u s i c i a n s s e m e s t e r s in th e U n i v e r s i t y , m o v e d o u t, a n d t h e N a v y m o v e d : in - T h is c h a n g e , h o w e v e r , d o e s nob t h a t V -1 2 d ri ll s will b * N o w th e N a v y is o u t , a n d L i t - I s u p e r v i s e d b y t h e R O T C e e s . T h * its n e x t ! V -1 2 c o m p a n i e s a n d p l a t o o n s w ill t h e i r o f f i c e r s a n d w ill d r i l l t h e N . R . O . T . C . tl e f i e l d H o m e tenant.*. ------------------------------------------------------- s e p a r a t e l y a w a i t s m e a n f r o m k e e p Hopes High' For Song Contes! ] u n it . t h * C a p t a i n V a l e n t i n e d e n i e d I r u m o r t h a t t h e r e w ill be a n y d r a s ­ tic. c h a n g e i n N o v e m b e r . “ H o w ­ e v e r , ” he r e p o r t e d , “ t h e r e w ill b a a r e d u c t i o n o f p o s s ib ly ISO m e n , o r a l i tt le o v e r , in t h e V - 1 2 p r o - , H o p e s a r e h ig h wnth t h e c o m - j g r a m ’* , , , s u m m e r - f a l l s e m e s t e r . M a n y h a d o n o n ai,UUU new ' s t u - d e n t s in t h e f a l l t e r m . T h e B u r s a r ’s O f f i c e is al s o c o l­ l e c t i n g l a t e f e e s a n d t h e b l a n k e t t a x . T h e a c t u a l c o u n t f o r t h e s e is n o t k e p t in t h a t o f f i c e b e c a u s e t h e r e c e i p t s a r e n o t n u m b e r e d . H o w ­ e v e r , t h e y r e p o r t e d l o n g l i ne s o f he n o t s h o u l d M a n u s c r i p t s s u b m i t t e d , u n d e r b e l o n g e r t h a n 1 7 5 , 0 0 0 w o r d s . T h e y sh o u l d a p s e u d o n y m o n ly , t o t h e c h a i r m a n o f t h e p a n e l o f j u d g e s , P r o f e s s o r A. L. B u r t , p r o f e s s o r o f h i s t o r y , U n i v e r s i t y o f M i n n e s o t a , M i n n e ­ apol i s I 1. M i n n . A t t h e s a m e t i me , t o e a c h c o m p e t i t o r s h o u l d w r i t e in t h e A m e r i c a n C o n s u l G e n e r a l _ ,V * . u thPe g U d o n ' v m ’ um 'ie- - * - j . . A t p r e s e n t , i n t e r e s t h a s b e g u n m i t t e e b e h i n d t h e c o n t e s t f o r a new*, r o l l i c k i n g p e p s o n g a s c a m ­ pu s t o grow* a s a r e s u l t o f t h e a n n o u n c e m e n t o f t h e c o n t e s t T u e s d a y . t h e r e a r e a p p r o x i ­ m a t e l y 1 3 0 0 N a v y m e n o n t h o c a m p u s . T h e r e f o r e , e v e n w i t h t h * r e d u c t i o n o f 150 m e n , is t h e r e t h e o f f i c i a l s u r p l u s , still I his is a c o n t e s t n o t j u s t fo r a q UOt a is o n l y 1 0 45 m e n . A l t h o u g h i n - : th e V - 1 2 s w ill b e r e d u c e d in n u r a - t h e x . r . o . T . C . u n i t will b a jn c r e a s e d s l i g h t l y . T h is a d d i t i o n t a l e n t e d - Sis b u t a n y s t u d e n t w ith s t r o n g bei.f scho ol s p i r it , a n d a d e s i r e t o see t h e c o m m i t t e e ***': *‘ ***«/*«***= rn v o m it y h a v e o n e o f ***** ***> . s e me s t e r s o f V -12 t r a i n i n g . . . “ l b ! f e w , t h e a s a . . . t h e ^ [ j b e 0f m e n w b o h a v e h a d t w o i l I *vT“ni,y :o cw“ - i S in c e i t s b e g i n n i n g , i t h a s I i n a r v n la n n i n tr G n a (Wnk C a p i t o l B u il d in g '* s u p e r v i s o r , ’ e s t i- ; 1b' U n i v p r s i t v b o y s w h o f e l l tho e s t a b li s h e d in 1 9 1 9 in m e m o r y o f b e n e f i t s o f t h i s e x p e r i e n c e t o c o m - 1 s t u d e n t s w a i t i n g a t t h e p a y w i n - ! , , - ir, in ; m u t i n i e s all o v e r t h e s t a t e , a s well I <|®"- •<««» t h e U n i v e r s i t y C o -O p L m e d u c a t i o n a l b ills, consolidation of d e b t s t o r e d u c e i n t e r e s t , a n d f o r h o u s e h o l d g o o d s. a d v a n c e m e n t , s o m e e i g h t v t h o u s a n d d o ll a r s o f r e t u r n i n g a m o n g c o m m u n i t y l e a d e r s . s L t h e t a x p a y e r s ’ m o n e y . x i a , n a ll y m e a n t v e t e r a n s o f the w a r f o r whom the ; t o h e l P W a s h i n g t o n s i g h t - s e e r s h a d a g o v e r n m e n t h a d m a d e n o pro- g e n e r a l c h a i r m a n o f ™ P r e s i d e n t H o m e r P. R a i n e r , t h e c o n f e r - d e a d l i n e f o r f r e e p i c t u r e s . A f t e r s t u d e n t s 25 th l s d a t e --------------------------------------------------------- e iv e wil1 V , ..............................................‘ ’ T h* a im o f t h i s c o r n e t G L n i v e r s , t -V ( ° " ° P h a s o f * feredS125 m P rtzc money a s a r e * A n d r e w s t h e m e n w ill be r e d i s t r i b u t e d , a n d a n d Oak; d o r m i t o r y a c l e a r e r n i c t u r e n f o u r N o rth w a f d P tu d e r't e f f o r t s . T h e co n - G ro v e wiU b e r e t u r n e d t o t h e t h a t all g r o u p s a n d ' D ire c t o ri e * S till A v a i l a b l e I A m e r i c a n w a ^ o f li f e a n d t o r>ro- * ' ,; ,Un tl,,0U8dl 1 - a n k s g iv - ; U n iv e r s ity , N o t p r i m a r i l y a m o n e y m a k i n g p r e v i e w o f t h e p r e - i n a u g u r a t i o n j v isi°,n V, 1 !ie’ l u n d "ua s i a t P r rn ade e n c e , u r g e s f ” 1 ? ' a n a ® o r g a n i z a t i o n , t h e U n i v e r s i t y F e d - p r e p a r a t i o n s l a s t w e e k w h e n t h e y e r a ! C r e d i t LTn io n is m o r e n e a r l y ’ w a t c h e d t h e e x t e r i o r o f th e C a p -1 L o a n s o f a s m u c h a s $ 2 :,° a a c o - o p e r a t i v e o r g a n i z a t i o n t o lo a n m o n e y a t a lo w r a t e o f i n t e r e s t t o its m e m b e r s a n d t o p r o t e c t t h e m f r o m lo a n s h a r k s Rnd o t h e r f i n a n ­ c ial a g e n c i e s d e m a n d i n g h i g h r a t e s o f t h e i n t e r e s t . A n y p e r s o n o n U n i v e r s i t y p a y r o l l — f a c u l t y m e m ­ b e r , s e r v i c e m a n , j a n i t o r , o r y a r d ­ m a n — is e li g ib l e t o a p p l y f o r a l o a n . ito l B u i l d i n g b e i n g g r o o m e d f o r w e ' e ^ * a n t ( ’’L See L U A N t h e e v e n t . A c o r p s o f w h i t e o v e r - t h e a i l e d p a i n t e r s s w a r m e d o v e r d o m e , g i v i n g i t s q u a d r e n n i a l c o a t o f p a i n t . A l t h o u g h th e d o m e is u s u a l l y it s e a r s e v e r y f o u r y e a r s in p r e p a r a ­ t i o n o f t h e i n a u g u r a t i o n , th e p a i n t j o b w a s p u t o f f a y e a r b e c a u s e o f s c r u b b e d b e h in d o t h e r i t h P a g e 4 Issue at Dum barton O a ks s t u d e n t s . | o r g a n i z a t i o n s i n t e r e s t e d in t h e de- ; ’ 1 y e a r ; v e l o p m e n t ct c e n U c it y , o r c o m m u n i t y p la n t h e i r h o m e ‘ t o w n , ] so m e f a l l d i r e c t o r i e s w h ich will be H e m p h i l l ’s B o ok S t o r e still h a s m o t e a b e t t e r u n d e r s t a n d i n g be 8 * t w e e n p e o p le s o f t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s i n q u i r i e s s h oul d r e s e r v a t i o n s a s a n d C a n a d a . All to send : a v a i l a b l e w i t h o u t ‘ “ ' ’ V ............ v ' ‘ ' j r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s t o t h e c o n f e r e n c e . I l o n g a s t h e s u p p l y l a s t s lie a d d r e s s e d to P r o f e s s o r B u r t . W h o May Send U. S. Armies to Fight? “ T h e s i m p l e is s u e in t h e c o y t r o v e r s y o v e r t h e w o r l d s e c u r i t y ; p la n se t f o r t h b y t h e r e c e n t D u rn -! b a r t o n O a k s c o n f e r e n c e is w h e t h e r to allo w t h e r e p r e s e n t a t i v e o f o u r t o n a t i o n e x e c u t i v e t h e w o r ld c o u n c il t o c a l l o u t o u r a r m e d I f o r c e s w i t h o u t c o n s e n t o f C o n - j g ro s s o r m a k e h im w a i t f o r a n o f f ic ia l d e c l a r a t i o n o f w a r , ” d e - j d a r e d D r. C. P . P a t t e r s o n , p ro - s0! a Kov< ! n m e n t , \\ e d n e s d a y D r. P a t t e r s o n a n d H . A, C a lk in s , p r o f e s s o r o f g o v e r n m e n t , th e D u m b a r t o n a p p r o v e d , . , b o t h O a k s p la n . ] ; a r m e d World News at a Glance J t u a l l y h a s t h e p o w e r t o e n t e r a w a r n ow . G i v i n g p o w e r h i s rep- ------------------------------------- — — P A C I F I C — M o r e t h a n 2 0 0 J a p a n e s e p l a n e s a n d s e v e r a l c a r g o sh i p s r e s e n t a t i v e t o th e e x e c u t i v e co u n - “ A s c o m m a n d e r in c h i e f o f t h e t h e P r e s i d e n t a c - ! f o r c e s , — * w e r e d e s t r o y e d M o n d a y b y U n i t e d S t a t e s c a r r i e r p l a n e s . G E R M A N Y A m e r i c a n t r o o p s h a v e f o u g h t t h e i r w a y i n t o S i e g f r i e d L in e in b i t t e r b a t t l e s . S O U T H E R N F R A N C E — A m e r i c a n s a d v a n c e d to th e v i c i n i t y o f L u r e . a n d 4 0 , 0 0 0 .S a ri a r e t r a p p e d in S o u t h w e s t F r a n c e . r a i l ou* o u r a r m e d f o r c e s I w o u l d t o f o r m a l l y t h u s a m o u n t t h e e x e c u t i v e l e g a l i z i n g a p o w e r b r a n c h h a s a c t u a l l y a l w a y s pos- . (, ^ , d . . - . . . , , . . . . , R U S S I A — T h e lied A r m y h a s r e a c h e d t h e P o li s h - C z e e h o s I o v a k f r o n t i e r p o i n t ' “ A l t h o u e h tei h n i e a i l 7 onl'v I Congrresa c a n d e c l a r e w a r , a c t u a l t h e d i r e c t i o n o f w a r j m o v e s M o r e W o r l d N e w s o n P a g e 2 a n d h i t a t s u b u r b s o f W a r s a w . in In o r d e r t o a p p l y , a p e r s o n fills o u t a n a p p l i c a t i o n i n M a i n B u ild ­ in g 3 1 3 . T h e w r i t t e n a p p l i c a t i o n is c o n s i d e r e d b y t h e C r e d i t C o m ­ m i t t e e in r e g a r d t o t h e f i n a n c i a l a b i l i t y o f p u r p o s e o f t h e l o a n . t h e b o r r o w e r a n d t h e w a r . O n e a g il e s c r a m ­ b le d 2 8 7 U t i p o f t h e s t a t u e o f f r e e d o m o n t h e s t e e p l e j a c k t h e v e r y f e e t t o , th e U m t 6 a C n 6 S f A p p e a l s To M eet T od ay Cactus Staff Recruits Workers T o d a y j o i n t c o m m i t t e e w h ic h t h e U n i t e d C h e s t A p p e a l s T h e h e a d s on T h e U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s c a m - . , p u s w ill m e e t T h u r s d a y a f t e r n o o n I uTiich, a f t e r n o o n All s t u d e n t , at 5 b u s i n e s s r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s a r e t o w o r k o n, S u z a n n e I c h a i r m a n s h i p o f D e a n C, T . M c - ! S t u d e n t s i n t e r e s t e d in w o r k i n g a t 2 : 3 0 o ’c lo c k i n M a i n B u i l d i n g f a c u l t y , a n d o n t h e C a c t u s m a y m e e t w i t h t h e 2 0 1 . s t a f f T h u r s d a y r e ­ o 'c lo c k in t h e C a c t u s o f f i c e in t h e q u e s t e d t o b e p r e s e n t . T h e b u s i - n e s s o f t h e d a y w ill be c o n s i d e r a - J o u m a l i s m B u i l d i n g . W o r k e r s h a v e t h e i r p r e f e r e n c e * ti o n o f t h e r e p o r t o f t h e b u d g e t t h e a s t o w h ic h o f t h e n i n e s e c t io n s c o m m i t t e e , t h e y w is h T h o m a s o n , a s s o c i a t e e d i t o r o f t h e | C o r m i c k , m e t W e d n e s d a y a n d a p C a c t u s , a n n o u n c e d . C a r d s a r e p r o ­ v i d e d f o r l i s t i n g c h o ic e s o f club s, h o n o r a r i e s , s t u d e n t g o v ­ s p o r t s , e r n m e n t , s o r o r i t i e s a n d f r a t e r n i ­ ti e s , f i n e a r t s , n a v y , f e a t u r e s , a n d s u b d i v i s i o n s . in A n o t h e r g n e o f t h e s e d a y s w h i c h i t ’s cool e n o u g h f o r a s w e a t ­ a n d w*arni e r e n o u g h f o r a b a t h i n g s u i t a n d a d ip in B a r t o n in t h e a f t e r n o o n is in o r d e r h e r e t o d a y . T h e w e a t h e r - t a k e n t o a n A u s t i n h o s p i t a l S a t u r - j m a n f o r e c a s t s m o d e r a t e t e m p e r a - l i t t l e c lo u d i n e s s d a v n i g h t , w a s io n i c b e t t e r , it w a s r e p o r t e d W e d n e s d a y a f t e r n o o n . t o r e s w i t h v e r y I t h r o u g h T h u r s d a y . M rs. A m o N o w o t n y , w h o w a s Mr*. N o w o t n y I t B e t t e r The Weather t e n t a t i v e b u d g e t. t h e m o r n i n g p r o v e d a u n d e r i n --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I h a v e a l w a y s b e e n a n e x e c u t i v e I “ U r r e f ' M n c e j , r e f u n c t i o n , b e c a u s e r e l a ­ t i o n s a r e a l m o s t all e x e c u t i v e in f o r e i g n o f A n T h e p l a n : c o m p o s e d e x e c u t i v e w o r ld c o u n c i l w i t h a n a r m e d f o r c e a t its d is p o s a l will h a v e t h e r e s p o n s i b i l i t y o f m a i n t a i n ­ T h is c o u n c i l will in g p e a c e , be t h e U n i t e d S ta t e s , G r e a t B r i t a i n , R u s s ia , a n d C h in a ( p e r m a n e n t m e m ­ b e r s ) , a n d s e v e n o t h e r m e m b e r n a ti o n s . A m a j o r i t y v o t e o f th i s c o u n c il i n c l u d i n g t h e v o t e o f A L L f o u r p e r m a n e n t m e m ­ t o u s e b e r s w ill b e n e c e s s a r y In f o r c e a g a i n s t a n y n a t i o n . a d d i t i o n t h e t h i s c o u n c il , p la n calls f o r a w o r ld a d v i s o r y a s s e m b ly o f all p e a c e lo v i n g n a ­ tio n s. t o U n d e r t h e p l a n S t a t e s r e p r e s e n t a t i v e t h e U n i t e d t h e ex- t o ecutivi* c o u n c il is r e s p o n s i b l e o n ly t h e P r e s i d e n t , a n d m a y v o te t o t o use o u r a r m e d f o r c e s a g a i n s t a n a g r e s i M i wi t h o u t consent, of C o n g r e s s . I t is o v e r t h i s p o i n t o f c o n s t i ­ in itia - to a c t on i t s o w n c o u n cil fiv e a n d i n d e p e n d e n t l y o f t h e l e g - 1 c h a r a c t e r . is la tiv e b o d ie s o f t h e m e m b e r n a ­ tio n s. T h e o ld L e a g u e c o u ld not m e n d a c t i o n t o th e l e g i s l a t u r e s o f do It s s o v e r e i g n t y lay t h e m e m b e r s . in th e L e a g u e m e m b e r s , n o t in th e b o d y i t s e l f . H e n c e i t c o u ld t a k e J n o r e a l a c t i o n . c o u ld o n l y r e c o m - : t h i s — it “ T h e c r u x o f t u t i o n a l l a w t h a t t h e c o n t r o v e r s y p l a n o v e r has t h e D u m b a r t o n s a y s b e ­ a r i s e n , D r . P a t t e r s o n c a u s e i t m e a n s d e l e g a t i n g m o r e p o w e r t o t h e P r e s i d e n t . is i n t e r n a ­ t h i s : s h a l l w e h a v e a n ti o n a l o r g a n i z a t i o n w h ic h c a n a c t o n its o w n i n i t i a t i v e a n d q u ic k l y “ I t is t h i s p o i n t t h a t d i f f e r e d 1 p u t d o w n a w a r , o r o n e w h ich le g i s l a ti v e a c t i o n , t h u s g i v i n g t h e a g r e s s o r a g r e a t a d v a n t a g e ? G a te s t h e D u m b a r t o n p la n t h e old L e a g u e o f N a t i o n s p la n , t h e e x e c u t i v e b e c a u s e f r o m m u s t w a i t o n t h e q u e s t i o n i t a llo w s “ T h e c o n s t i t u t i o n p la c e s t h e use o f f o r c e ( t h e A r m y a n d N a v y ) in t h e h a n d s o f th e P r e s i d e n t e v e n i n t e r n a ­ in p e a c e t i m e . t i o n a l b a sis, i f we h a v e a n y f o r c e to UMt, w e m o a t p l a c e t h a t f o r c e i n t h e p f r t a i n (0 h is h a n d s o f a n e x e c u t i v e b o d y . a l o n g w ith h is .i s t h e m o s t t h a t a s k e d ,, . t u r n t a b l e i t s e e m , O n a n , , f e llo w s t u d e n t s ? f r e q u e n t q u e s t i o n o t h e r s i g m f . c a n t q u e s t i o n , jr a ( i e r , hip> o f f i c M | < “ A s f o r c h e c k s a n d b a l a n c e s , C o n g r e s s w o u ld still h a v e e n o u g h p o w e r t o c h e c k a n y m o v e m e n t th e e x e c u t i v e b r a n c h m a d e . ” a n i n t e r n a t i o n a l F. B. I. t o k e e p t h e e x e c u t i v e c o u n c i l i n f o r m e d . o n t h e h e ld s c h o l a s ti c a b il it ie s , c o u r t e s y . c a m p u s , h o n e s t y , i n d u s t r y a n d g o v e r n m e n t F r e q u e n t l y , w h e n e x e s a p p l y f o r i n v e s t i g a t o r s ta l k w ith t h e d o r m i t o r y d i r e c t o r o r h o u s e m o t h e r jo b s , D r, P a t t e r s o n s a i d he f a v o r e d ! will c h e c k re c o r d s a n d H o w w*ell d o e s a s t u d e n t g e t z a t i o n , 2 3 2 8 G u a d a l u p e , i ng w h e n t h e a n n o u n c e m e n t o f t h e t w o w;m.!r,g song* will be m a d e . ] As t h e e n t r i e s c o m e in, t h e b e st o n e s will be s e l e c t e d a n d u s e d d u r ­ i ng t h e a p p r o a c h i n g f o o t b a l l s e a - ] son. F r o m t h e s e m o s t s p i r i t - i n s p i r ­ ing s o n g s , t h e j u d g i n g c o m m i t t e e h e a d e d b y C o lo n e l G e o r g e H u r t w ill s e l e c t t h e $ 1 5 f i r s t p r i z e a n d $ 10 s e c o n d prize. t h a t d e s e r v e i tw o t h e H e a d Yell L e a d e r J o h n n y B a r n - t o t h e h a r t h a s m a d e a n a p p e a l s t u d e n t s . B a r n h a r t h a s h a d id e a o f a s o n g c o n t e s t f o r a l o n g tim e , he s a y s , a n d r e f e r s t o i t a s i his “ p e t . ” t h e : Character Important As G rad es to Employer f , "‘ N u m e r o u s e m p l o y e r s a r e a s k i n g l e t t e r , a b o u t I n l ­ ,M im , D o r ° ' h 1' *•«- r e h a r - »» ' “ " I C UP. a v s a I' h *' p o r t a n t a s t h e s h o l a s ti c o n e s . T h e r e c o r d o f a s t u d e n t b e g in s a s so o n as h e e n t e r s scho ol. T h e f i r s t s e m e s t e r o f t h e scho ol c a r e e r is j u s t as i m p o r t a n t as t h e f i n a l o n e . \W hat Qaei O h c M e sie T H U R S D A Y Mo r ni ng 8-6— B la n k e t T a x p i c t u r e s t a k e n a t U n i v e r s i t y C o -O p . A f t e r n o o n - - 5 — N u r s e s ' a i d e class, B r a c k e n - r i d g e H o s p i t a l , 3-6— Jam es Swann a r t exhibit, T.F.W.C. H e a d q u a r t e r s . 3— W e e k l y p r e v i e w o f f i lm s by* V is u a l I n s t r u c t i o n B u r e a u , E x ­ t e n s i o n B. 101. . . . 4— R o u n d c u s s io n co u n c il, H ille l F o u n d a t i o n . t a b l e c o f f e e , a n d d is ­ s e n i o r s p o n s o r e d b y 5— C a c t u s s t a f f m e e t i n g , J o u r ­ n a li s m B u il d in g , 5— P i e r i a n L i t e r a r y S o c ie ty , T e x a s U n io n . N i f H t 6— S i g m a D e l t a C hi, E l C h a r r o N u m b e r 2. 6 : 4 5 — c h r i s t i a n S c i e n c e o r g a n U 7— A s s o c i a tio n f o r C h il d h o o d E d ­ u c a t i o n , T e x a s U n i o n 3 0 9 , - H o g g D e b a t i n g S o c ie t y , f e t a s U n i o n 3 1 5 . 7— Curtain Club meeting, M.L.B. 7-9— U p p e r c l a s s C lu b o p e n h o u s * a t Y- M. C. A, 7 ;30— Dr. H o m e r P. R a i n e y will s p e a k a t I n t e r - A m e r i c a n Asso­ J u n io r c i a t i o n , T e x a s U n i o n Ballroom. P A G E T W O Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2 - 2 4 7 i > T H U R S D A Y , S E P T E M B E R 14, 1944 Yankees, Tigers, Browns Open American League Stretch Drive S p o rts W h ir l B y J A C K G A L L A G H E R T e x a n S p o r t• E ditor UL lo Put Salt 4* I 03635236 l f ^ 1 1 S h a u g h n e s s y Proves De fe ns e for T-Formation in A it « r r a t i n g Bp for thr** days white their manager* racked their brains and sleepless tossed slumber, the "big four" o f the torrid American Leafrue race— th e N ew York Yankees, Detroit Tiger*. Sr. Louis Browns, and B oston Red Sox— open their fran­ 1944 tic drive pennant, today the for A month ago not even the m ost rabid Yankee fan would have dreamed o f the Bronx Bombers— or any other team, fo r that matter — sn atching the lead away from the Browns. the crest o f a On A ug u st 17, the Browns were riding ten-gam e w inning streak, 9 5s gam es ahead o f the fourth-place Yankees whom th e y had just finished licking in a four-game series. The plugging Boaton Red Sox, despite the loss o f their ace pitcher. Tex Hughson, clung to second place, but were full games o f f the pace. seven D etroit’s Tigers were third 8 Vs gam es back. leading The Browns, who amazed the the baseball world by consecutive league three fo r months despite their mediocre club, seemed to be "in,” needing on ly to play ,500 ball the rest of the way to win their first pennant. But a series o f batting slumps, Injuries and hard luck to pitchers, losing and their first dangerous streak o f the scapon caused the lose 18 o f their 25 Browns to gam es on the road— and when Luke S ew ell’s battle-worn crew r e ­ turned to St. Louis Monday they were the game Yankees. behind one The Browns are in third place now, one game behind N ew York and one-half gam e behind Detroit, whose rejuvenated Tigers roared through A ugu st w inning 22 of their SO gam es as pitchers Paul "Dizzy” Trout and Hal N ewhouser each became 24-gam e winners. league— are White the Y ankees and Tigers phenomenal winning registered the Brow ns had a streaks and miserable series o f defeats, the • | Red Sox continued to play their j consistent brand o f ball and crept j ! up on the Browns. Joe Cronin’s I I men— the best h ittin g team in the j j loop wuth Bob Johnson, Bobby Doerr, and Pete F ox sporting the | three highest batting averages in fourth place the three gam es behind at present, i the Yankees. * I Here are the com plete A m eri­ can League standings: L 61 61 62 64 72 75 74 SO CLU B New Y ork D e tr o it —. S t. Louis _ B o ston « C l e v e l a n d _ Philad e lp h ia Chicago __ W a sh in g to n P C t. GB .555 .551 4 .547 I .53 3 3 .474 l l .4 60 13 .451 14 .425 18 W 76 75 75 73 65 64 63 59 in Some say the Y ank ees will cop the fla g due to Manager Joe Mc­ Carthy’s genius. Others pick the Tigers because o f their winning spree which is still goin g great I guns. Only a few faith ful f o l lo w - J ers o f the Browns pick them be-! I cause o f their poor showing dur­ ing the last four weeks and be- • cause th ey seem to have fallen ; apart with no chance of recover­ i n g . And some still stick by the fighting Red Sox. All eq u al— the three top team s are so close to- things being Tennis Schedule The follow in g men are to report to the varsity courts this a fte r ­ noon a t 4 o ’clock: Bob Sutton, I Bob Bradley, Tom m y Kemper. Carl Bright, Joe Gcrhardt, and* I Marvin Wise. Intramural Schedule M ONDAY W a t e r Polo Tim* 7 :0 0 — Delta Kappa Epsilon vs. Phi Kappa Psi 7 :0 0 — Phi Kappa Sigma vs. Alpha Tau Omega 7:20— Sigma Chi vs. Kappa Alpha 7 :20— Phi D elta Theta vs. Sigma Alpha Mu 7:40— Phi S igm a Delta vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon 7 :40— Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Sigma Nu 8:00— B eta Theta Pi vs. Phi Gamma Delta 8:00— Presbyterian Club vs. W esley Foundation 8:20— Tejaa Club vs. la tin -A m er ica n Club Intramural Results | 7th Co., Prather and 4th Co., Little Campus, tie 2nd Co., Roberta, I , 13th Co., Andrews, 0 9th Co., P rather, I, l i t h Co., Oak Grove, 0 5th Co., L ittle Campus, I, 8th Co., Prather, 0 12th Co., A ndrew s, 2, 16th Co., Brackenridge, 0 10th Co., Hill Hall fo r fe ite d to 3rd Co., Roberts R eluctant D ragons, 0, SRD Dark, 2 that g e t h tr they are actually on equal term s— the Tigers or the Browns should win the cham pion­ ship. The Tigers will not play the Browns again season, and this both teams have all o f their re­ maining gam es at home. Incident­ ally, there are 17 gam es le f t fo r the Browns, Yankees, and Red Sox, and 18 for the Tigers. The Y ank ees embark on a le n g ­ thy road trip, p laying tough team s lie Cleveland, Detroit, Boston, and St. Louis a w a y from home. The Red Sox schedule the same. is much Veteran observers agree that the 1944 American League race— the closest in history and one in which the w inner will set an all- time low in w in nin g and the cellar team will se t an all-time high— will be determined during the last week o f S eptem ber when the Yankees in vade D etroit for a four- game scries and then go to St Louis to play the Browns. who will the have Tigers. finished p laying just Women s Intramurals Tw enty - s e v e n organizations have entered w o m e n ’s intramural? this season. Their m anagers are: I.ila Keys, Alpha Chi Omega; Rose McNamee, Alpha Delta Pi; F ay Lipper, Alpha Epsilon Phi; Dorothy Davis. Alpha Gamma D elta; Theda Jane N elson, Alpha Omicron Pi; Mary Louise Shurr, Alpha Phi; Ruth Billing,-ley. Chi Omega; P eggy Neuhaus, D elta Delta D elta; Fran Kirksey, Delta Gamma; Irene Shir- I ley Cohn, Delta Phi Epsilon; Johanna De Lancey, Gamma Phi ! Beta; Janita Van Landingham, Grace Hall. Ruth Morgan, Kappa Also Sylvia Lensky, HiO; Sarah Alpha : T h e t a ; P e g g y Graves, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Mary Lucille Y ea­ ger, Kirby Hall; Marion Cramer, j Littlefield; B e tty McClusky, New'- j man Hall; Margaret Ann Neville, Phi Mu; J ea n n e Graham, Fi Beta Phi; Ruth A n n Jacobson, Sigma Delta Tau; Frances Allen, S .R D.: Patterson, W esley; Katherine I Dorothy T e tley, Wica: Frances | Pierce, Wica Odds; Melba Cox, j Wica E v ens; and Susan HamH- tor. Zeta Tau Alpha. The m anager o f Delta Zeta has | not been announced. Lieutenant ( j .g .) Jerry C oving­ ton, geolog y graduate '42, is visit. ! ing in A ustin with his w ife, the former Eloise Broussard, also an ^x-student, and daughter, Renee, j 1707 Bouldin Avenue. He is on eighteen-day leave fo l­ the con voy d u t y in lowing Atlantic. Ever since Clark Shaughnessy came up w'ith one of the greatest team s of the modern collegiate era a f e w years ago at Stanford, f o o t ­ ball strategists have attem pted to devise a method o f stopping the celebrated T-formation. If the T is worked right, and if there are four narks possessing the ability of Albert, Standlee, G a llarn eai, as there were at Stanford, then it is next to impossible to stop. and Kmetovic, F ew team s, however, can match the precision or the flaw lessness ■ of S tanford or the Chicago Bears in utilizing the complicated form a­ tion to its fullest extent, therefore not every team which adopts the T— and the number o f advocates has soared to great proportions of j late— is successful. One o f the main reasons why , the North lost the recent North- South gam e at Wichita Falls was the fact that the North coaches persisted in using the T when their backs could not becom e accus- ; tomed to that type of play. N o d efen se has yet been found to stop the Bears, today's modern exponent o f the T, but look for a wholesale exodus from the Halts- Shaughnessy if style scheming coaches do hit upon a method to stop it. o f play The Philadelphia Eagles of 1942 thought th e y had the answer. | In order to cope on even terms with the Bears, the Eagles adopted I the T that season, and sported a 14-0 lead at the half in their game | against the Chicago outfit. For the sole purpose of befuddling Greasy N e a le ’s team , Balas, w ho is now | in the N avy but was then coach of ; the Bears, bad not set up any de­ fense w hatsoever in the first half. In the second half it w’as a dif­ fer en t story. The E agles failed to *core a point against, the Chicago defense while the Bears were run- ; ning up forty-nine. Apparently Hates has found an answer to the defen se of th* T, J but his bewildered opponents have | not. Shaughnessy thought that he could solve the riddle this year. ; The c r a fty University o f Pitts- ! burgh coach deserted the Bears and helped train the Wa ' >" Redskins this summer, and taught George F lah erty’s eleven U e oi- fensive side of the intricate forma* "I will sure hate to tell my son i a fter the war that all I did w as go to school,” was the recen t com­ ment o f Ensign Dick Harris. Ensign Harris, a form er Univer- j I sity student, has recently been sta­ tioned at Memphis, Term., where he is attending his second three month’s course o f specialization for engineers. I Sidney H. Krakow*!-, student in 1940-43, who is stationed at Pope Field, Fort Bragg. N, C., with the First Troop Carrier Command, has been promoted first class. to private rn Private Krakower, from Hous- ! ton. entered the army in Decem- i ber, 1942. ★ dr C a p ta in J i m e i F. B * a ll, ’34 graduate o f the U niversity Medical School at Galveston, has recently been made Flight Surgeon at the Fort Worth Army Air Field station hospital. Captain Beall, a member o f Phi Chi medical fraternity, attended the School o f Aviation Medicine at j San A ntonio in 1942. Hon as well as all the defensive measures. two theory In order to try out Shaugh- n essy’s exhibition ga m es between the Bears and Red­ skins were arranged, the first of which w as played last Sunday. It was the first battle betw een two great pro team s using the T style o f attack. The Skins were expected to furnish much more opposition than the lowly Eagles, and besides the Washington entry had Shaugh- n essy ’a new T defense. To the surprise o f everyone, the ; Redskins, engin eered by the deft hand o f Slingin* Sam m y Baugh, : d efeated the Bears, 21-7. This poses the question whether the T has already outlived its use­ fuln ess and is on the w a y out. If so, many a coach w'ho has worn his i trousers shiny on the bench while I his team attempts to stop the T j can fo x y Clark Shaugh- ! nessy. thank ★ An early-se&son gridiron classic is on tap for Middle W est football fans this Saturday w-hen the Iowa I Seahawks. one of the best teams , in the nation last year, collide with Michigan’s Big Nine co-champions at Ann Arbor, Captain Bob Weise is expected to furnish the punch in the Wol­ verine backfield, while the Sea- j haw-ks will present a new array of stars to replace those of the sterl­ ing 1943 squad. A t end the Seahawks have John Herriman, form erly o f Tulsa, and in Vie a very Schleich, star on the 1940 N e­ braska Rose Bowl team. strong tackle George Stroll mo ver, f o r m e r blocking back at Texas Tech, will I start in the Seahawk backfield. C asu alty Exes Ll. Parker, B-26 Pilot, Missing Lieutenant G e o rfe Lee Parker, pilot o f a B-26, is reported miss­ in action over France since ing July 28. Lieutenant Parker, student in 1940-42, has fifty -tw o missions to his credit since January, 1944, and has been awarded the Air Medal with ni ne oak l e a f clusters. ★ Sergeant Frederick VV, Dodd, student from Paris, was killed in action with the Ma­ rine Corps in the P acific area. in 1937-40 S e r g e a n t Dodd had bee n in se rv­ ice f o r t h r ee y ea rs a n d had been t w e n t y- s i x months. j o ver se as f o r ★ S t a f f ’24, wa* kdled i n f a n t r y t h e Sergeant Neal Davis, in action M.D. in F r a n c e on w i t h July 26. Formerly a resident of Kilgore, S e r g e a n t Davis e n t e r e d the Army in 1940. He returned home shortly before Pearl Har­ b o r w hen me n over 28 were r e ­ leased from service, and then was called ba c k into the Arm y w'hen war was declared. it Lieutenant G e o r g e Pierce Brown Jr., LL.B. '40 of Edinburg, was killed in action on July 14. Lieutenant Brown w as serving with the in fantry. Previously assistant district at­ torney o f Hidalgo County, he en tered the service in 1942. $400 G ran t Starts Test of M e th o d s The beginning .of a n ew ex­ periment in methods of in jecting salt w ater into sands o f the East fields has been an­ i Texas oil nounced by R. F. Dawson, assist­ ant director of the Bureau of E n gineering Research, The project has received a pre­ liminary grant of $400 from the National Tank Company o f Okla­ homa City, and F. B. Plummer, geologist for the Bureau o f Eco­ nomic Geology is in charge o f the experim ent. The closed method o f injection, with which the experim ent is con­ cerned, resulted from the success­ ful the open method last year which was spons­ ored by the East Texas Salt W ater ' Disposal Association, Mr, Daw-son experim ent with reported. The salt w ater which is pro­ duced w-ith the oil m ust be in­ jected back into the sands to pre­ s e n t the pollution o f streams and I to recharge the sands to permit more oil to be reproduced. E sti­ mates h a ve been made that the i injection will increase the produc- ; tion o f the wrhole field by half a million barrells. •’The d ifficulty in restoring toe water to tile sands is that the wells I used for this soon becom e clogged by the salt and new ones must be drilled. These processes prevent I the clogging o f sands,” he e x ­ plained. In the open method, the salt water is aerated and kept in open In the closed method, all tanks. air is kept out and gas is used instead of air in replacing the salt water. I "Both methods have advant­ ages” said Mr. Dawson, "and we improved methods ^ r e devising this the closed method in *or experim ent.” Language— (Continued from Page I ) Micek added that Czech, a course fourteen i-tudente are taking, will also be a language of importance after this war. Contrary to the violent reaction 1 against the German language dur- is a : ing World War I, German . popular course of study at the J University today. Compared with the 173 student'* taking this sub* j jeet last fall, there are 260 en* j rolled now. One of the professors I of German commented that the | language will continue to hold its ' place because of trade and diplo­ m a c y a fter the fail o f Nazism. ; Also the Germans have the largest continental in language group Europe. S ufferin g more from the effe c ts : o f war on the campus than any other languages, the Department of Classical Languaes, neverthe­ less, h a 5* seventy students enrolled for courses this term. Dr. H. J, Leon. chairman of tho department, hastened to say, “S tudents wish­ ing to major in the classical lan­ gu ages should not hesitate to do so ju st because they think it im­ practical. Our department has for several years been unable to fill all the positions calling for Latin majors. Both high schools and col- , leges w ant teachers.” j —.......... .....- - —■ .......- ■ ■.■■■■■■«— *■■■-. L ie u te n a n t C h a rle t H. W righ t, B.B.A. ’43, has been visiting on is now the campus recently, He stationed at the San Marcos Army Air Field. W or ld N e w s at a G l a n c e Y a n k Carrier Pilots Down 200 Jap Planes in New Blow ^ Striking deep into the heart o f the Philippines, slightly more than 200 miles south o f Manila, an ar­ carrier mada o f United States planes on Monday destroyed more than 200 Jap planes, and sank several cargo ships and numerous small craft. Admiral Chester W. N im itz’s powerful Third Fleet made the first naval attack on the Philip­ pines since the outbreak o f the war, last Friday, when 89, and probably more than IOO Jap cargo ships and sampans were su nk or severely damaged, and 68 Jap planes destroyed. The attack was concentrated on Mindanao, sou th ­ ernmost island o f the Philippines. Monday’s bruising blow was le v ­ elled on Cebu, Negros and Panay Islands, in the central Philippines, north o f Mindanao. Q u e b e c Conference i Considers Russia, C h i n a The scope o f the Anglo-Am eri­ can war con feren ce at Quebec was broadened im mensely tonight as a sta tem ent by President R oosevelt indicated that European m atters were under discussion as well as the form ulating of military plans for the war against Japan. P resident Roosevelt said that the British and American con tin ­ gents "are working in consonance in China, the with the situation Pacific, and in Europe, co-ordinat­ ing our effo r ts with those of our Allies, particularly the Chinese and R ussians.” ★ * Siegfried Line Cracked, Allies Take Roetgen troops In multi-pronged storming a s ­ saults, American have fought their w ay into the Siegfried line “a t various points.” headquar­ ters revealed early today, after U. S. First Arm y tank forces cap ­ tured the German stronghold at Rontgen and swept on to Aachen. less than 35 miles from the Rhine. ★ 40,000 N a z i s Trapped In S o u t h w e s t France ga tew ay American troops advanced T u es­ day night to the vicinity o f Lure, only 20 miles w est of the vital Belfort to Germany, w'hile other forces mopped up on an estimated 40,000 Nazis trapped in Southw est France bv a f u l l ­ scale junction of the Allied S e v ­ enth and Third Armies, ★ Red A r m y Assaults S u b u r b of W a r s a w The Red Army reached frontier the Polish-Czechoslovak to* day, assaulted German defenses in W arsaw’s suburb o f Praga, and captured Lomza, 20 miles helow East Prussia and the last m ajor hairier on the southeastern ap­ proaches to that German province. it 53 G e r m a n Planes W i p e d O u t in O n e D a y A t least 53 additional planes o f Germ any’s dwindling L u ftw a ffe were wiped out Tuesday during an American raid on Nazi syn th etic I oil and other plants, in the sixth consecutive day o f the g r e a t e it : air assault o f all time. ★ France To Be C ons ult ed In Fate of G e r m a n y S ecretary o f State Cordell Hull told a new s conference, W ednes­ day that F ran ce will be consulted in both the military occupation and final disposition of Germ any in the postw ar Europe. H owever, the Secretary did not say w heth er France would he represented on the European Advisory Commis­ sion or on another ag en cy which may be created to control a d e­ f e a t e d Reich. U. Unit Pleases Frozen Food Co. The new flash freeze unit d e ­ veloped by Dr. Luis H. Bartlett j under the auspices o f the Bureau ; of E n gin eerin g Research was riem- : onstrated recently to Fresh Froz­ en foods, Inc., at its plant at Delta, ; Colo. Dr. Bartlett, who made the d em ­ onstration, said that o ffic ia ls o f the com pany were very pleased and expected to discuss plans to contract for the use o f the m eth ­ od W'ith the University Regents. In his demonstration Dr. Bart­ l e t t froze cherries, apricots, ap- iples, plums. English peas, corn-on- the-cob, and chicken. The results were a great im provement over J the eold-pack method used by that company. Water Supplies A n a ly z e d Daily, in B Hall atory of the Geological Survey, located in tho basement o f B. Hall, has been testing, for fiv e years, in Texas, Louisi­ water supplies to ana, and Oklahoma in order determine where the best w ater sources are located, An o ffic e at 302 W est F ifte en th Street works with the W ater R e­ source's Lav>ora:ory by sen d in g ou t , geologists to get samples of water supplies. The Laboratory makes tests to determ ine the chemicals (contained in the samples. The Laboratory makes daily an- jalysis of ail public w ater supplies and m aintains many stations on Texas rivers for t h i s purpose. I W. W. H astings is in charge o f is part o f the the D epartm ent o f th*’ Interior, and works in connection with tho Texas S tate Board o f W ater En­ gineers and the Bureau o f Indus­ trial C hem istry for the U niversity, laboratory, which ’43, visited L ie u te n a n t G eorge W. F o o te J B.B.A. the camp W ednesday on his way to his n< ; station in New York. He has he stationed a? Love Field in D a d a 5 Lieutenant Foote received I commission from the o f f ic e r ’s ca : didate school at Miami Beach I .Tune. T H E D A I L Y T E X A N C LA SSIFIED A D S Phone 2-2473 for Ad Taker i m m fir o w l mmmsmrn.. „ l t x i a C L A S S I F I E D I N D E X A oa ou sc em en t* I — A aloe for Sale Z— Autom otive Trade* I—‘Wanted A a tome btl** 4— & ferric* Station* A— Ba* Lines *— D in in* an d D ancing 7— Lodge and Fraternity Notice* 5—-L o tt and Foaad a— Professional IO—-Person*;* 10—A— School* and Collatee 8 us) as** der vt cee 11— B arber Shop* 12— b e a u ty S erv ice 18—4. c a n e r s .B atter*. Tailor* 14— Laundn** 15— Lifectneal Service 15— -F ir It" 1 7 — Furniture Repairing I b— Locksmith* I St— Moving. H a u lin g s a d S to ra g e £ 0— P r in t in g . O ff ic * % I— Sewing 2 t — boe Repairing a z —Caf** a irm e n * Jtanpieym est S I— Help Wanted Mala 26— & si** rn ta Wanted 24— Help Wanted Female £7— Mala Worn Wanted SA— Fame.* W ork W anted educational ZF— Instruction * 0 — Ma sic. L ancing, Dramatic* tim 6 p lack ZZ— Coaching S t- A — F e t e S4-A— Genera] Fe* Sale Ran tale 44— Room* Parajcted 46— Room* Unfurnished 47—Room and Board 4 A— Furnished Apt*. 4 S-A— U nfurnished a per tm ante MercbanOi** 83— Bicycle* and Motorcycle* 84— Food and Food Product* 16— Furniture and Household Goods 86— Musical and Radio* *7— W atches, Jewelry Repelt I * — MiseelJaneou* For Sale 4(1— Oarage Apartment* 60— I.,ar*g* Room* i I —Room* for Boy* 6 2— Room* t m Girl* 46-A— Livestock Supplies Financial * I —A u to L oan* 4 2— Bank Lone* 4 8— Bu*meas Opportunities 4 4— J! os sneer** Wanted *9—"Swap** 46— W anted Mere band'.sa 8 — L o st a n d Found Alterations 3 2 — C o a c h in g C A L L B E R N IC E S M IT H at Cam pus Alterations Shop 2324 Guadalupe (Upsfalrj over Renfro s) *rc r Correct Fittings on Dresses, Suits, and Forma's P H O N E 2-8561 9— Professional MATHEMATICS— Mr. R. M. Rand*!. Fh j A -1 15 4. -’509 San Antonio St. COACHING: ENGLISH. Expert help by experienced teach er with M A. degree. Proof reading en the*!*. Rate— 11.00 *n hour. Mr*. Cass. Phor • 2-13*5. 51— R o om s for Boys DOWNSTAIRS ROOM in priva*:* home, private entrance, garage, near bas tin*. : Phone 6'*54. ----------------------------------------------------------------- D O W N S T A I R S ROOM In p r i v a t e home. en tran ce, garage, near bu* private I tine Rhone 6954. NEAR UNIVERSITY or double room, modern, shower*, quiet. Phone 2-0916 sin gle on* S OUTHEAST RINGLE ROOM adjoining bath. A lt o ro om mate wanted to share room, sin gle bec*. Ph. 4794. 2021 Red Riser T T P ING— For t he sis and them* typing call 2 -9M 4, R o om m ate W a n te d Business C o lle g e s BUSfNtSS COLLEGES W A N T E D Boy roommate vMTSTi*-HOUSTON SAM ANTONA - >7 worth - HAmjNQgM Approved bou se near U n iv ersity Sing!* bed* Phone 6421 718 West 24th B U Board BOARD FOR BO YS— Can accommodata a few m o l t boys, e* ce!!ent h"m«-cook- Ph. family sty le. ; ed m eal* f 367*. served 607 West 24th. Sto ck s, Bonds, N o t e s EXCELL ENT HOME COOKED meals 8 - 3 8 :4 . served family sty]*. Call I t l l Speedway. 24— H e lp W a n t e d M a le in tim e to w ork p a r t W A N T E D — S tu d e n t s ta tio n , en m e ex p erien ce se rv ice required, W ed n esday o ff. Rh. 6774 1900 Guadalupe. S a f e t y D e p o s i t B o x e s TO PROTECT YOUR WAR BONDS L O ST — Y eilo w .gold E lg in L a d y ’* w rist watch, black Viand on or near Guada­ lupe, Reward. Pr, 3*0216 30 M u sic, D a n c in g , And Other Valuabl** Now Avertable •< LOST— Sn;al! brown ch ange purse t e n ■ tam!ng money, auditor's receipt, and I hun* M e r n a Lynn bientt!ma* on ai .* Mala*.. .• 10.• a. g!-. e r arm TE Af HER with degree | g music will for henge * * p e u typing of thesis. Phone 6638 at eig h t. lesson* in THE CAPITAL NATIONAL BANK IS YOUR PEN WORKNG SMOOTHLY? Bring It in For The Texas Book Store Repair Service is A leaky pen or one with a just not scratchy point necessary w h en our quick re­ pair service can rem edy an y ailm ent it m a y have on short notice. “...OUR TROOPS ARE ADVANCING..:' Back ’em up . . . SAVE WASTE PAPER! * I i f In by 9-Out by ll Same Day Service Our fighting men depend on paper every «tep of the way to Berlin and Tokyo. For paper gee# into 700,000 battle items— ■hell and cartridge container!, bomb banda, helmet linings. But waste paper supplies are critically short—our reserve* are dangerously low. T hat’s why you are asked to save waste paper. Ne ve r b u rn i t . Collect all kinds of waste paper—corrugated, brown, wrappings, newspapers and magazines, and get your children and friends to do the same. Bundle it up—turn it in—to shorten the war and save precious lives! U. S. Victory WASTE PAPER Campaign Repair Shop in Our Store Texas Bookstore A C R O S S F R O M U N I V E R S I T Y G U A D A L U PE ST. Did You Get Your FREE U. T. Calendar THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1944 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 ” 1 ” I O I I I I I hey oo I cl r* ood to lo ny I Dr. Swanson O range Jackets in *23 Marries Mrs. W altman ‘ W i l h * D Radio House Accepts 62 of 141 During Preliminary Auditions to From pep squad ed as guides a t displays and as hostesses to baseball teams when they visited the University. the ou t ­ standing: girls* ho n or ar y service organization on the University Membership still being limited campus— this reflects t he growth to twenty. Orange Jackets “ taps ” o f the Orange Jacket s in the last three times a year. Only sopho- t wenty-one Near?;. Composed of ! mores and juniors are eligible and a re chosen on the basis of “ schol­ “ t he twenty most representative arship, leadership, and general all- is known on women, ” around ability.” To become a its orange t he Fo r ty Acres by member, a girl must maintain a sleeveless in general C average during her years a t the University and be white. the club tr i mmed jackets orjran’zations. l e a d e r 1 * lo‘ * r ,in a t l es !t tw0 <' " mPu!l In 1023 co-ed cheer Dorothy A nn Fisher chose t w en t y : Jacket banquets girls from 1,500 co-eds then e n - : rolled in the University to net as Z , " ,0" * ? " , e*ch «'«“ »>" »r « a pep squad, and it was named high spots of hilarity. New mem- Orange J ackets in honor of the school color*. their new name real significance, t he members earned money to buy j acket s by maki ng and selling sandwiches to r oot ers bound for the Texas-A. & M. game on the College Station train. In or de r to give C l u b N o t e s Y W elcom es N e w Students A t Party Tonight hers entertain with skits involving old members, and give reasons why they were chosen members. Inevitably new Orange Jacket will give “ big f e e t ” as her reason because of the footwork coming from service activities. some Mrs. Frances Cummings Wal t ­ man was married to Dr. A. B. the First English Swanson Luther an Church August l l . in Mrs. Swanson, affectionately the girls of Pi called “ P i” by Beta Phi sorority, had served as t h a t sorority for ten Formal initiation is held a f t e r ! chaperon of the banquet when each new mem- j years, ber is given her own jacket with her name embroidered inside. The Romance next two days the initiates wear varsity. their jackets. Headed Ur. Swant on is a professor of languages a t the Uni- Only members of their imme- this year by Frances I diate families attended the cere- Murray, Orange Jackets will con- mony. Dr. and Mrs. Swanson are tinue to service where needed on a t home a t 2428 Ja r r a t t , the campus and to uphold the t r a ­ ditions of the University. it W i n n i e R a y m o n d aril E n s i g n from H e r m a n W e t e g r o v e , both Raymondville, were married July 27 at Tampa, Fla. Mrs. Wetegrove wa* in the Col­ lege of Arts and Sciences a t the Ensign Wetegrove University, was in the N.R.O.T.C. * Betty H. Hollingshead was ma r ­ ried to L i e u t e n a n t W i l l i a m G u y B r o y e * J r . on September 2 at the First Baptist Church in Abilene. Lieutenant Broyles was an arts and sciences st udent 1935*38. Response in numbers and tal ent to the Radio House auditions this semester was exceptionally high. Out of a total of 141 tryi ng out Monday and Tuesday night, sixty- two were accepted by the judges for tentative membership in the Workshop. includes This nu mb e r thirty- nine women’s voices and twenty- three me n’s voices. Two of these, Martha Hunt, anti Lois Evelyn Theime, are being considered for the i nt erpret at ion of children’s voices only. ★ Since the number a u dition ’ g is was unexpectedly large and \, shop membership to limited around t hi rt y to provide maximum t here will be other efficiency, try-outs final to determine membership. Prior to t h e s e t r y ­ outs, however, schedules will be checked to see if the broadcast­ ing schedule of Radio House con­ flicts with that o f any who h a v e passed the auditions. the When Orange J a c k e t s had An introduction to the “ Y's” Dean of Women's office workers . v the University, They participated t - mversity \ . . f . C . A . reached its t hird birthday, the ac- U p p e r Cia** C l u b of 1944-45 will were hostesses, tivitics of the group had expanded be given a t a party Thursday i greatly. No longer a pop s q u a d , ; nigh. from 7 ln „ „>lock in the ; t he members had be gun to pro- mote campus activities, to act as hostesses of t o ' Marvin Clark, vice-president of welcome celebrities t o the c a m - 1 t he Y.M.C.A., will welcome new : pus. the students, and Helen Rainey will drive to secure the Texas Union ! in te rp r et the meaning and pur- Commission and helped establish Mo t he r’s and P080 will furnish D a d ’s Day. Since t hen the Orange Jackets i f o r m a t i o n on plans f or the year to in working interested with campus problems, political affairs, race, community action, worship, personnel, recreation, or I cation majors are eligible to be- at the Waco A r m y Air Field publicity. P. E. M. is a club organized for physical education majors. Its programs are built around discus­ sions of cur rent physical educa­ Lieutenant Hilscher at Denni­ tion problems, dancing lessons, son University was a member of and sing-song^. All physical e d u - ; Sigma ('hi. He is an instructor M a r y J a n e L a n e of Waco be­ t he bride of Lieutenant Virginia Lee Stevenson was Richard H i t c h e r of Canton, Ohio, Sat urday night at the First Pres­ byterian Church in Waco. Marilyn Shanklin and Dee J e n ­ kins were appointed as t reasur er and reporter of P . E. M. Septem­ ber 7. have helped A. P. 0 . with elec- tions, sold bonds, given i nf or ma­ tion a t Orientation programs, act- Mrs. Hilscher was a student in t he University in 1942-44 and a member of Chi Omega sorority. made head of the social commit­ tee. the “ Y*” chairmen a t booths j come members. those came in * revival series, Sequel to last. year's Fine Arts film this y e a r ’s series will probably he shown on the campus in the late afternoon. The exact lime and date will be announced later. Eiithe Hamilton Beal, acting director of broadcasting, requests that f reshmen who passed audi­ tions meet Friday at 5 o'clock in Studio A at Radio. House. Twenty-three in- eluded in t he names listed. freshmen are revival filial auditions the will be announced next week. Those who passed the auditions follows: “ This y e a r ’s films will not use theme as the American last year, ” Mr. Goodall | we did pointed out. “ The 1944-45 series will a tt empt to show some of the representative directions in film productions both in Europe and Monday night a re as the work of great America and < hallos Alvey, Toby Joy Ar onoff, film directors and personalities of Marcia Atlas, Betty Ann Bando, I both, he commented. Patsy Beassley, Charles A. Brovm Jr., Bella Bulba, Donald J, Clark, ! Bernice Cobb, Edwin G. Cohen, ’ Helen Cunningham, Ferguson. and Elmo Plans for P A S E THREB Men Enough lo Resume Choir A C a p p e lla Starts Rehearsing Soon o f Activities the University A Cappella Choir, which suspend­ ed rehearsals soon a f t e r t h e war began because of the lack o f men, will he r e t i m e d during the Fall : Term, Present piers include only one rehearsal each week, but this will be increased a t the beginning of the Wi nter Semester. The Choir was organized in 1940 with a membership of sixty, and during two years the next gave several performances on the 'ampus and in Austin. Since the end of t h a t period, however, the Choir’s maroon robes, collapsible ; risers, and a library of new music have been collecting dust, in chapel, or term “ a cappella” means Tho literally church, style, but of r ecent years so many school choirs have college and developed t h a t the is now term to mean singing generally used without aceomnaniment. Most of the g re at choral music throughout the ages has been written in this style. Anyone interested in pinging . in the University A Cappella Choir to see Dr. Archie N. is asked in Music I Jones, Building 205 within the ne xt few davs, All students are eligible. the director, S w in g - A - B y e B a b y K n ow s Score, Flies Low a t Wooldridge It took the practicality of a 7- year-old girl. attending her first year g r amma r school, to discover the usefulness of the chain fence between the Geology and Main Building®. Barbara White, who lives at 1907 Wichita, was seen by a j o ur ­ nalism reporter Wednesday a f te r ­ noon swinging on a section of the two-foot high fence. When queried as to the reason she prefered the improvised swing to those on the school playground. Barbara replied. “ Because I know this one wmn’t hreak.” Tall Coke, Short Lime— Right M e n to Fill Orders The long and short of it a t the Home Drug Company now are Carl Hickfang and Harlan Shu- gart. Carl, 6 feet, 8 inches, and Har- Ion, barely th» M o o t touching mark, are claiming the distinction of being the tallest and shortest fountain boys in the U.S.A. It has been rumored t h a t Har- legs len can go between Carl’* without bending over. Carl is a freshman University student, and Harlen attends Aus­ tin High School. L i e u t e n a n t Billy Noble, B.J. *43, former associate editor of the Ran­ ger and now a B-17 bombardier, has been in Italy for a month with eleven missions already on his record. Lucas V. Hill Jr., Ja ne Hnehn.j Charles William Johnson, Mary Frances J o h n s o n , Harold Joseph, Barbara McMahon, Fo r ­ rest M, Smith Jr., Jack Dudley) Summerfield, Boh White, and Vaughn B. Williams. J. I Those who passed the auditions Tuesday night arr- Donald Lea Blum, Edna Brewster, Glenn Brown, Sally Carmichael, Dorothy Cloud, Betty Jo Duncan, Jack Edwards, Margery Vaughn Evans, Bill Feille, Sydell Feldman, Eliza- beth Ann Graham, Thelma Gregg, Coleen Grossman, John Harrison, Craig C. Hill, Earlene D. Mann, Peggy Mead, Linda McGee, Emily A. Meh.coley, and Paul Noe. Others are Alma Ran Olmsted, William Peckham, Patricia Powell, Mack Reinmuth, Fred E. Ringe Jr., Enid Ruth Robinson, Carolyn Roekitt, F l o r e n c e Schwartz, Suzanne Session*. Jack Smith, Tommp J. Stalker, Lucille .Starnes, Archie Swann, and Joe Wright. Patsy Fine Arts Film Series Supplement to Courses The College of Fine A r t 5; film series f or 1944-45 will begin No­ vember I and run through the two semesters u nder the sponsorship of the Department of Ar t and Drama, Donald Goodall, director of the series, announced Wednes­ day, is hoped t h a t they will be It include a few examples able to of the great document ary films and r ecent examples of German and Russian propaganda, perhaps even the German “ Baptism of Fire,” he added. There is a possibility t ha t the Rudolph Valentino picture, “ The Sheik,” will be shown. This will be in response to a petition for the film which circulated last year a f te r the showing of “ Monsieur Bcaucaire” on the campus. It's Proved Again! Girls at Texas Are the Prettiest illustrating The hazel-eyed blonde Olive Rankin, pre-medical f resh­ man at the University, has been chosen, in a nationwide search by Wal ter Wanger, as one of the o u t ­ standing candidates for film s t a r ­ dom and the title of “ most beauti­ ful girl in the world.” The Departments of Drama and the series Art are establishing i nt roduc­ principally as aids for tion to a r t and theatrical courses of the two departments. Fo r this reason the films selected wilt be staging, those hest forms, composition, shapes and and t e c h n i c a l demonstrations r ather than stories. All of the pictures, however, will be open to the general faculty and s t u ­ dents. from Beaumont is pleased a t the favor­ able mention given her photo­ graph. hut she is just as interested at the moment in her college ca ­ reer. Should she be summoned to Hollywood, she will continue her studies along with studio activities. “ The films will date as f ar back The girl selected by Mr. Wa n­ as 1911,** he explained. “ By then ger will get the s tarring role in producers had persuaded some of “Salome, Where She Danced.** the great; stage personalities such ■ More than thr ee thousand photo- as Sarah Ber nhar dt that motion graphs and descriptions of beauti ­ pictures were respectable. Plans ful girl® have been received by the now are to include such o ut sta nd­ studio the the ing American film actors as John search. Each month brings an a d ­ Barrymore. Douglas Fairbanks, ditional thousand or more and John Gilbert, and works of candidates vicing for the title and such great directors a® Hone role Clair, Sergei Eisenstein, and King Vidor.” s t a r t of since two Wanger, who is largely respon­ sible tor the careers of many of the box-office favorites, including Hedy La ma r r and Maria Montez, is looking for not only beauty but also a dancer aud an actress. After Y e a r in A r m y W o r k Miss Rankin has studied dancing since she was 3 years old and has the had dramatic experience Little Theater. She was brought to Mr. Wa n g er ’* attention by Fred Minton, director of the t heaters Jef fer son Amusement ''or Robert G. Scott, assistant p r o ­ fessor of drama, has ret ur ned to the University a f t e r working in airplane sheet metal mechanics a t Fan Marcos Navigation School for the past year, While there, his work dealt with manu fa ct ur ing Company in Beaumont. and c or r e­ sponded closely to his civilian job — costume design, He changed in­ struments new mountings. Miss Rankin was graduated from Beaumont High School, hav­ ing t r ansf er red there from Lub­ bock. repair which designed some and the in T O D A Y O N L Y J O H N W A Y N E M A R L E N E D I E T R I C H M I C K E Y R O O N E Y — IN — l l T H E SPO ILERS 11 A L S O I N T O T H E C L O U D S M A O R I G R A S M A R S H S D 3 LAST DAY LEWIS STONE IN— ll Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble” CARTOON AND NEWS LAST D A Y ! Charl es Laughton — I N — T h e Centerville Ghost' STARTS F R ID AY ! STATE LAST DA Y! EDGAR BERGEN ‘Charlie M c Car thy” 'S O N G OF T H E OPEN R O A D ' S T A R T IN G F R I D A Y I Mr. Scott is now designing cos­ tumes for “ Skin of Our Teeth.” The contemporary background ct the play is worked into the cos­ tumes which are designed to bring out the values of the anarchron- istic element. Outstanding costumes thus f ar designed are the dinosaur and the mammoth. Though the stage ani ­ mals are not realistic, they suggest the animal form. Mr. Scott is ex­ perimenting with plastic make-up on heads instead of masks since in this w a y , part o f the face will be revealed and the other p ar t will be built on animal forma. 14 M e n Take The Sta ge For The First Time Approximately fourteen of the malp members of the cast of “ The Skin of Our T eet h” have never before appeared in a University play. They were chosen on a com­ petitive basis from tile men who appeared for try-outs. The faculty of the Department of Drama was pleased at the num­ ber of men who tried out, said Mr*. Martha Morgan, t ut or in the I |]|j|| Depar tment of Drama. She said that male students, especially ex- servicemen, who are interested in being in plays should come to t r y ­ outs. “ Skin of Our Teeth** is spon­ sored by the Department of Drama under the direction of Professor Lawrence Carra. * boga i ber musical □ dent of piano who the pleasure of her was overheard one Costum© D e sign e r Back F O R Bagroom, Ba et or " a p Dancing Class or Private Instruction Janet Collett SC H O O L OF D A N C IN G 2330 Guadalupe Phone 9956 or 6430 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 7 T lT 3 ^ r5 ] YIP-P-P-E-EE! .I i J;, Jfcfc—> M J*. a ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ CAPITOL T O D A Y ! ( i n S p a n i s h ) M ARIA FELIX — I N — ''D O N A B A R B A R A ” W i t h JUL IAN SOLER STARTS F RIDAY! EDDIE CA NT O R — I N — 'Show Business' 4 % / \ Decorated Exes \ L i e u t e n a n t J a m e * A v e r y R u t h , '43, won double honors Jr., B.A. in the third gr ad u a ti ng class of administrative Ar my Air Forces officers at the San Antonio Avia­ tion Cadet Center recently. Li eut enant Rush was awarded a silver trophy f o r military profici­ ency, and he was corps command­ e r o f his g r adua ting class with the s t u de n t r ank of l ieut enant colonel. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J a m e s A. Rush of Amarillo, ★ For t he en t er t ai nme nt of the group, Billy Smith and Georgette Hugh Haddock, chief of " t h e Bailey will dance an adagio. Olive Austin International News Serv- Lockhart and jC(, bureau, will speak to S i g m a a skit. Pa t M c C a m e y will sing. D#| ta chi, journalism fraternity, an d Dr. Archie Jones will in some songs. Other lead Thursday night a t 6 o’clock El Charro Number 2. friends will give * ★ activities recreational will include dancing, ping pong, games, and refreshments. Members of the Upper Class Council, who planned the party, are Helen Rainey, chairman, and George Gibbs, Betty Beall, Curry Gillmore, Shirley Jimerson, Row­ land Pattillo, Ruth Ann Douglass, Oscar Faul kner , Joe Painter, and Mary Virginia Alves. Dr. Homer P. Rainey wilt ex­ plain the University’* par t in in­ t er-American co-operation when he speaks to the I n t e r - A m e r i c a n A n o c i a t i o n Thursday evening at 7:30 o ’clock in the J un i or Ball­ room of the Union. The meeting, which is the Asso­ ciation's first of the Fall Term, will commemorate Mexico's Inde- 16. Inter- ^ tudenls i ^ e r e s t e o n pendence Day, September in in Texas Union 315, Roger Ab-- Ame nc an r e g i o n s may come. S t a f f S e r g e a n t W i l l i a m M. T h a c k e r Jr., CX-Student 1941-43, has been decorated with the air ★ n u * - in­ medal as recently announced D e b a t i n g tho commanding g enr - al of the meet *»* 7 o'clock^ThursdVy night Eighth Air Force. c * u The citation which accompanied j bott, secretary, has announced. T ha c ke r ’s decoration j exceptionally me n- ‘“ Resolved: The Electoral Col- Sergeant loge Should Be Abolished” will r ea d: “ For toriou® achievement while serv- f be the subject of a debate at the ing as a waist g un n e r of a B-17 ' meeting. Participants will be Fl ying For tr es s on a nu mb er of Ji mmy Allen, Vaughn Williams, sustained bomber combat missions Tom Pollard, and Shirley Purdum. enemy oc­ over g e r m a n y and cupied Europe. The courage, cool­ ness. and skill displayed by Se r­ g e a n t Thacker on these occasions reflect g r e at credit upon himself and the United State®.” The Residence Hostess Group from in Texas Union met Wednesday afternoon 3 309. Furt her plans were formulated for a new scholarship group. The to 4 o'clock the Armed ■es of M a r y De l l W o o d and J a y S e e - f e l d , ex-students, were married August 17 in Hearne. Mrs. See- feld, a sociology major, was an Alpha Gamma Delta, and is now alumna vice-president. Mr. Seefeld received his bache- | ior of science degree in electrical ; engineering in 1943. He was sec­ r et ar y of the American Institute I of Electrical Engineers and a member of Ramshorn. He is now or, special assignment from E as t ­ m an Kodak Company with the A r m y Engineers in Oak Ridge. The couple will make their home in Oak Ridge. * M n * J o h n F r a n c o * J e n n i n g s , B.A. '38. and Lieutenant Ar t hur Henry Berndtson, U.S.Nj, were married September 2. Mrs. Berndtson is a member of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority and tile 1 Girls* Cotillion Club. The groom from the United was gr aduat ed States Naval Academy, and is now stationed a t Newport, R. I. ★ B a r b a r a S u t h e r l a n d , student in 1941-42, was married to Captain Rayburn D. Lancaster September I in Austin, Mrs. Lancaster is a member of Pi Kappa Delta and Phi Theta Kappa honorary fraternitie* and a gr aduate of Hardin-Simmons University. * Mr. a n d Mr*. W a r r e n M, B e a ­ m a n , ex-students who were m a r ­ ried Jul y 22 in La Grange, are making temporarily in San Antonio where Mr. Bea­ man is working with the United States railroad r eti rement board. their home Mrs. Beaman, the for mer S y b i l R u t h Gie*t>. was an Alpha Chi Omega pledge, a member of the the home economics club, and ULT. S. A. Mr, Beaman was a member of Phi Kappa Sigma and Radio House and received his bachelor of arts degree, in economics. He w-as hon­ orably discharged from the marine ably discharged from the Marine Corps a f t e r serving twenty months. Fra-Ority Also Sue Ann Gordon, H a n ­ nah G r o g i n s k i , Bitsy M er­ mine Gruver, Corinne Hanover, I Cultural Program Opens With Otero E mma Otero, Cuban s o p r a n o , j will open this y e a r ’s Cultural En-! to ria in merit Program, to which a l l ! student* holding activity tickets are admitted f rec, with a concert. October 16. She will appear with Frank La Forge, composer-pianist, I under whom she lias studied. A t ou r of Europe Miss Otero career as a s -avg only fur friends. She day by Bonnvnino Gigli, and he was so impressed that be insisted s h e rip vc lop her gift. A® a r e s u l t she came to New York to study. in 1938 brought her fame. In this country she is well known for h e r appearance on such radio o r ograms a® the Sundae Evening Hour, the Pet Milk Serenade, and others. For the last two nears tho National Broadcasting Company has presented Miss Otero in her own program. international in Recent successes include an a p­ pearance as Rosins the Con­ necticut Opera Association's pro­ duction of “ The Bar ber of Se­ ville,” a concert in the Fine Art® Series at Clark University, and he r appearance with the Chamber Music Guild in Washington. Coo I Recital Hall W as Popular All S u m m e r Tile air-conditioned Recital Hall of the Music Building, which f u r ­ nishes an opportunity for students . o enjoy t he ir music in comfort during hot weather, has been kept in almost, constant use during the past summer. The Houlton Symphony Orches­ tra gave two i-oncerts there. Con­ certs by the University Symphony Orchestra, the University Sym­ phonic Band, and performances by individual guest stars werp also 'riven. During the Music Education s Conference also used. the auditorium was A series of faculty recitals on i Sunday afternoons and st udent ' recitals on Wednesdays was given. During the week the auditorium w'as used for practice on the organ or the concert grand piano. M e l v i n P o p e , former president of the Curtain Club, and active in dramatics on I ho campus for several years, wa* hack on the campus for a short visit a few weeks ago. T h e C l e r i c a l C l u b will meet Tuesday, September 19, at 7:30 o’clock in Dr. W. J. Battle's of­ fice in the Tower. Old members and students interested in joining are invited, The Club will meet the second Tuesday in each month. The annual fall reception hon­ oring University Christian Science students will be given by the Ch r i at i an S c i e n c e O r g a n i z a t i o n at the home of Mrs. Earl E. Simms, 108 West Thirty-Second. Sunday night from 8 until IO o ’clock. The Christian Science Or gan­ ization’s regular meetings are on Thursday nights a t 6:45 o'clock at 2328 Guadalupe. ★ ★ T h e P i e r i a n L i t e r a r y S o c i e t y will have its first meeting of the a t 5 o’clock Thursday season afternoon, the Texas Union, (>ld members are requested to be present. in The A t t e s t a t i o n f o r C h i l d h o o d E d u c a t i o n will meet Thursd, % night a t 7 o’clock in Texas Union 309. Plans for the year will be the meeting. Vir­ discussed at ginia Pivoto, vice-president, has announced. A n d Ch u rc h Notes the first Glady* Kuhn wa* Installed as president of the Lutheran Student Association at meeting of the year Tuesday night in the University Y.M.C.A. Other Officers installed were Mar gar et Schuette, Sally H af ne r, secretary; Bill Anderson, tr ea s ur e r; Dorothy Klingemann, reporter. vice-president; Fra-Orities List regular Qffjcers Pledges For N e w Year D e l t a Z e t a ha® announced elec­ tion of the following officers: Mayre Robinson, president; Doro­ thy Louise Fields, vice-president; Nilda Castro, recording secretary; j Rev. F. G. Roesencr, association Vera Faye Manteris, correspond- J sponsor, spoke on the aims of this ing t r e a su r er ; Marydean Barron, his-, organization and emphasized the t or ia n; Flu Kopocenski and Jeanne fact t ha t membership is open to all Luther an students on the campus J Moore> captains; Frances regardless o: the synod to whicH , Taylor1, activities chairman; Betty] they belong. | Long, social chai r man; Fiances secretary; Sydney Burke, rush H. E. Gibson, University pro- Berry, j u n i or Panhellenic r e p r e - 1 fessor and former choir director se n ta t iv e . shirley Chapn lan, senior at Texas Lutheran College, was Panhellenic and Betty Ray Lyon, publicity chair- introduced. representative; * ! man. * lawn j o u n c e s Davie Jones’ Locker will be D e l u T . u Delta f rater ni ty an- to all University students open the affiliation of Don Satur day night on the University Presbyterian Church from Wolf of Cincinnati. Dave Evans 2000 to 2230. Boti: Davie J o n e s ; 0f pj g Spring, and Lester Price I the pledging of and King Neptune will bo present, 0f Houston and so come and drink sea foam and John Stitt and Bill Tucker, Corpus eat corral chips while mermaids Christi; J immy Valentine and Ern- e n t e r t a m you with music. A small est Camp, Palestine; Billy Dick skit with background music will ■ Gaston, Mac Reinmuth, and M o r - 1 also be presented. * rig Midkiff, Austin; Wootten Joe Dupree, Fort Brown T h . Newman Club had a picnic Worth; Buss Johnson, Pontiac, at the Keyes s Lodge on Lake Aus- HL; Howard Carlson, Omaha, tin Sunday. Micki Campbell was * Neb,; Craig Hill, San Antonio; Fey chairman of the committee on ar- McMaster, Abernathy; and Charles rangement s for the barbecue din­ ner, swimming, and dancing. ★ Members of Theta Xi fraterni ty ring at mass on Sundays. Inter- will give a dinner at Old Seville cried boys should Roe Al \ cli at I in honor of their new pledge* at Hill Hall. Later a female choir 7 o ’clock Friday night, Septem will be formed, A male choir is being formed to Weldon, San Marcos. [ ber 15. and II a t i o a - F k e e P vrk your p r e t t y feet in R e p e ­ aters an d let t he fun begin. They re light a n d lively ag a Mexi can j u m p i n g bean . • „ colorful a n d s t ur d y . . * the keenest casuals t ha t e ve r # a \ e d a r a t i on st a mp . The Bootery Congress Near Sixth 3.95 J **■ PAGE FOUR Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1944 O ff The Record - By Ed Reed *1Ue ty i> iin (f, J lin e (EDITOR'S N O T E : Thi# colum n is open to stu d en ts, facu lty m em bers, and ad m in istrative official* who wish to subm it co n stru ctiv e article* o f in­ terest to Texan readers supplem en­ tary to Texan sto ries. should be as short Contribution* a* possible, and the editor reserves th e righ t to condense. L etters m ust be clean, decent, and free of m alice and signed though th e w riter can request that in itials only be used.) T h ey m u st be libel. Dear Editor: A lot of American? are wan­ just what should be dering done with Germany when she capitulates to assure us she will pursue the path of p e a c e .. . The German nation should intact. be allowed to remain Such ideas as advanced by Sumner Welles, that is, to cut up Germany, smack of insan­ ity. The population of Ger­ many should not he shifted about by the millions as some advocate nor should parts of her territory be taken by other nations. The Allies imposed a “ Peace, of Vengeance” upon Germany in 1918. We’re pay­ ing for it today in dead and maimed youth by the millions and destruction of wealth run­ ning into astronomical figures. Just an example of what stupid blind force will do: we kept the blockade on Germany for sev­ eral months after she surren­ dered. What happened? Three hundred thousand Germans lit­ erally starved to death. Other millions half-starved. Such this— short-sighted policies as in the extreme— engender hat­ reds that will never die. Make no mistake about it— intelli­ gence in handling defeated na­ divi­ tions dends. . . . enormous pays in As a people, Germans are no better, certainly no worse than English, Americans, Russians, etc. They don't believe in war any more than other peoples. Millions of Germans the United States are splendid and valuable American citizens. They’ve contributed greatly to our civilization. Millions of Germans in Germany believe just as strongly in democracy as we do. All they need is the opportunity to carry on. Let us encourage to the utmost the anti-Fascist millions there. Let us not forget that before Hit­ ler’s rise the Peace of Versailles, Germany was a much further advanced democracy the than United States or England. Let us never forget our share of for Hitler and responsibility his revolting regime. By our impositions o f an insane and inhuman peace upon vanquish­ ed Germany, we sowed the seeds of chaos and Hell and de­ struction unleashed upon us by Hitler and his F a s c i s t hordes. to power and either Let us not follow precedent of World War I in another “ Peace of Vengeance.” If we do, World W a r III is assured and it may well end civilization itself. Let us not make this terrible mistake again. same Germany has done wrong. We all know it. But two wrongs In the never make a right. peace soon to come, let us be merciful. Let us extend to the vanquished the hands of help, hope, benediction. We are honor-bound to do this out of respect to civilization, Chris­ tianity, and the dignity of man. Let us rest our case herein, namely, “A man IS his broth­ er’s keeper.” MALCOLM A. GREEN’, B.B.A. ’27 1016 Spence, Austin 22. Dear Editor, I saw the football scrimmage Saturday and read the sports I page of the Texan Sunday. don’t know whose fault it is, but the article doesn’t seem to coincide the scrimmage. too well with It seems that G a l l a g h e r doesn’t realize what he’s writ­ / ing because I personally don’t think he would purposely mis­ I’m no journalism construe. major, but I have a firm belief in the facts being printed. The Sunday Texan said that Phil Bolen was about to replace Jim Rishi at right guard position. If I were either o f these boys, I would consider this statement as an insult. In the first place the two boys don’t play the same position so how could one replace the other? fairness If you will read the report* of any other paper that had the scrimmage reported in it, you will probably find a favor­ able report on both the boys. In all football to squad and the Texan public, J ask that you examine your if you sports s ta ff and see don’t find some foul play or some member of the staff with a prejudice. the Sincerely, B. T. S. Loan F u n d s-- Rayburn — towards requests (Continued from Page I) interest but later at 5 per cent. During the “ lax twenties,” as Mr. McCurdy characterized them, the policy of the Ex-Students’ As­ sociation for loans had not crystalize^, and many students “got themselves in a jam” by heedlessly contracting obligations. Students would often come up year after year and bor­ row money up to the limit of the fund, and upon graduation, just when they w e re faced with the difficulties of starting out on t heir own, would find that they had a deft of $1,000 or more that had to be paid off. the Oddly enough, during the de­ pression years of thirties, there were comparatively few re­ quests for loans. Mr. McCurdy attributes thi* to the fact that the students had to face realities, and were not anxious to burden them­ selves with financial obligations. Today, a s tu de nt who requests a loan is granted it only if the Ex-Students’ Association decides that it will really help the stu­ dent “get the job done.” The applicant is called in for a con­ ference with Mr. McCurdy, and In this his needs are discussed. way, students are prevented from running recklessly into debt. Any student is eligible f o r a loan who has completed one semester of the University with a work grade average of C. in funds with More recently the Ex-Students’ Association has supplemented its loan scholarships, which are given to promising stu­ dents. The scholarship f unds are mostly individuals who are interested in some par­ ticular field of study. the gifts o f Ensign Jack Mills, B.B.A. ’43, and a member of the amphibious forces in the Pacific, is now on a thirty-day leave and has been visiting the campus. (Continued from Page I) and newsreel cameras on the ground below. One mis-step would have sent him crashing through the capitol dome, probably land­ ing in the very middle o f the old room where the Supreme Court used to holds its sessions years ago. in bronze, inches high. The freedom statue, said to be the first imprisonment in metal of the ideal of liberty, stands 18 feet and 6 the work of cast Thomas C r a w f o r d , father of the Francis Marion Crawford, novelist, in Rome, Italy. It is be­ lieved to anti-date the statue of liberty in New York harbor. It tips The lady the scales at 14,985 pounds, and cost a total of $23,796.82. She was placed on the capitol dome on December 2, 1863. i s \ Registration cents to have a picture made for the identification ticket, i Many students didn’t pay this fee when they registered for the full summer-fall semester in July because its benefits seemed too f ar in the future, and since then they have forgotten about it. Students who will enter school I in November and miss some of the • activities covered by the blanket tax will get it at a reduced price. Last year the ones paid as late as semester only eo*fc* is no deadline for-: spring | the $3.70. There paying the fee. L i e u t e n a n t J o s e p h E. Moge l s on ; University student, 1941-42, ha I reported for duty at the Carlsba* Army Air Field, Carlsbad, N. M L i e ut e na n t Mogelson complete* his cadet training at Fort Sumner N.M., and was commissioned ©1 December 5, 1943. Qet you* rf-tee Pictute fjo4j*-~tf>U&cuf 9 I JH ait jbcuf, the University’s The bl a n ke t tax is lagging again. Sales of activity ticket this y e a r are surprisingly below the comparative levels of othe r years, ye t the benefits are definitely on a p a r with previous offerings. The cause of the lagging sales is not all student apathy. It was an u n p re ­ dictable yet nevertheless important fa ct t h a t the sale of the bla nk et taxes in Jul y has probably served to reduce the over­ all total of sales to date. Students registering fo r the Summer- Fall Semester were r a t h e r generally s ur­ prised when fee-fixers asked if they wanted blanket taxes. There had been no publicity, no previous announcement, nothing. As a result, many students failed to buy one then because the “ out- of-season” sales had c aug ht them fi­ nancially unpr ep ared to make the p u r ­ chase. Now, of course, the students who failed to make purchases then are re a c t­ ing in typical student fashion to the c am ­ paign to sell taxes with a well­ troubling intentioned ap at h y themselves to buy the tickets. S o m e h o w it is easier to pay $35.50 for tuition and the tax th a n just dig out $10.50 in the middle of the school year. towa rd the The past, for lengthy comment. Sales NOW, are the issue. though, is no topic P a r a d o x of th e whole question is t h a t in seeking to sell the blanket taxes, no one is profiting. It is not like a club sale of tickets to raise funds, it is ra th e r an opportunity fo r t he student p ur ch ase r to save money in a concentrated ex­ pense. The football games, basketball games, cultural en ter tai nm ent programs, and all the other Blanket tax activities will dr aw student crowds— blanket taxes or no bl anket taxes. Yet with the $10.50 tickets the students will save themselves money, without really making money for anyone. At November registration the blanket taxes will be sold again. That, though, will be a whole football month too late to secure the full benefit of the p u r ­ chase. This is the time to buy. F r i d a y is the last d a y to have y o u r pic­ t a x t u r e m a d e f r e e the b l a n k e t ticket. F r id a y is a good d a y to buy. f o r This is not j u s t a n o t h e r fee to pa y , not j u s t an o t h e r as s es sm en t on you r w a y to h ig h e r education. This is a ge n er a l d e ­ posit on a good time. A b la nk et t a x is a money-saving item for any student. You are not ex ce p te d in t h e bargain. Buy one no la t e r t h a n y o u ’ll be glad you did no t o m o r ro w . — H. B. today, an d l a te r t h a n tfte/L um en M a y M oi H u t S e n io r I W ill (lem em beA . Fees. fees, fees . . . Club dues and more cl ub dues . . . Books, books, an d books . . A n d , of course, t h e b la n k e t tax. So you hate to pay th e Union fee. If y o u ’re ne w h e r e a n d ma yb e you don ’t even know' w h a t th e Union fee is. But ask your sorority sister, w h o w as he re in spring, 1942, or y o u r u ppe rcl as s advisor, or the senior you meet on the campus. T h e y ’ll tell you w h a t t h e Union fee can be. The y p r o b a b l y even f o u g h t to ha ve it m a d e co m p ul s o ry one n i g h t t h a t s p ri n g w'hen h u n d r e d s of st u d en t s p a c k e d -the hot, smoke-filled ga l la r ie s of t h e S tate Legislative halls. F i r s t th e bill for the compulsory f ee w a s n 't pars ed, t h e n it was, then it w a s n ’t . . . Well, finally the comp ulso ry fee was defeated, b u t a vo lu nt ary fee w a s insti­ t u te d giving t h e o p p o r tu n i ty a n d initia­ t e of su p p o rt for th e ir studen t Union to th e students— those wh o pack ed th e galleries in Legislative halls a n d those w ho voted for it on the cam pus . So t h a t ’s how you nowT h av e th e vo lun ­ t a r y Union fee. T h a t ’s wh y i t ’s up to you now to pay t h a t fee. No need to ex pl ain t h e m a n y w a y s t h e Union helps y o u r ca m p u s life— t h e p r o ­ g r a m s and d an ce s its committees spons­ or, the m a g a z in e s a n d g am es it keeps h a n d y fo r use a n y t im e d u r in g th e day, t h e Su nday o p e n houses w h e r e sailor m ee ts girl, th e h a n d y lounge w i t h the easiest of easy ch ai rs w h e re you can s pe n d a restful h o u r t a lk in g or studding. out these ad vantages in yo u r camp us f r e e h our s or w h e n you go ov er for a club me et in g o r to m e e t a friend. But y o u ’d b e t t e r find out soon, even go over a n d p a y t h a t fee, which is only one-half do ll ar for this te rm , so th e Union will be able to c a r r y on this p r o g r a m for you and sponsored by y ou r s t u d e n t go ve rn m e nt . — G. H. W. Y o u ’ll find out the se Q jJjicu U M oticeA to the R eg istra r s O ffice and m ake application for th# degree by fillin g If you have not out a degree card. vet attended th is d etail, please do co at once. to W. R, WOOLRICH. Dean of E n gin eerin g. FOREIGN LANGUAGE reading e x ­ am inations will be held at 2 o ’clock, S a t u r d a y S e p te m b e r 2 3, in Geology B u ild in g 14. Any stu d en t who doe* n o t know whether or not he m ust take th® exam ination should see hi* dean Petition# m ust be in th® R eg­ istrar's O ffice not Later than Sep tem ­ ber 20. M S. CARSON, Chairman of Foreign L anguage Exam inationa. F riday. 2#. Botany, ch em istry , econom ic#, geology, and m usic. Septem ber Saturday. Septem ber 20. Racteri- o log v, biology, h istory, hom e eco­ nomic#, so cio logy, zoology, and other su b jects. I J M ATHEW S, R egistrar. NOTICE TO CANDIDATES for a degree in the C ollege of E ngineering who exp ect to receive their degrees in O ctober. 1945, or prior to that is n ecessary th a t you go date It r1 o d a *fi Qn&L&uvand and R e-exam ination s P ostpon ed and A dvanced Stan d in g E x a m in a ­ tion# will be given Septem ber 25 P e l i o n * to th ro u g h Septem ber SC take exam ination# sn thi* m o lt be in tne R eg istra r’# office not later than S ep tem b er IS a t fi o'clock T h e ached!Ie for th e exam ination#, in G eology to be g iv en which are B u ild in g I t ie a# follow a; M onday, S ep tem b er 25, Art, e n ­ d ra w in g ). E ng- (ex cep t g in eerin g li#h. and speech. T ueeday, S ep tem b er 25, A n th ro ­ g o vern m en t, philo- p o lo g y , dram a, aoph.y, p hyaic#, and p sy ch o lo g y W ed n esd ay. S eptem ber 2 7. E du­ cation . journalism , and m a th em atic*. lan­ g u a g e s, B ible, b u sin ess ad m in istra ­ tion, draw ing, and pharm acy. T hursday, S ep tem b er 2* All SII* Pally Sttcan in A ustin Th* Dally T exan, stu d en t n ew spa­ per o f Th# U n iv ersity of T exas, Is p ublished every m orning ex cep t M ondays and S atu rd ays, S ep ­ tw ice weekly tem ber during the sum m er se ssio n under the title o f The S um m er Texan by Texas S tu d en t P ub lication s, to J u n e, and Inc. T h e Daily T exan is entered as s e c ­ ond the p ost office a t A u stin , T e x a s, by A ct of C on gress, March 8, 1879. c la s s m ail at N ew s con trib ution s may be mads by telephone (2 -2 4 7 8 > or s t tb s ed i­ torial o ffices in Journalism B uilding 101, 1 0 2 . and 109. Com plaints abou* d eliv ery in th e b u sin ess o ffice. Journalism Build­ ing 108 (2 -2 4 7 3 . should be m ade serv ice Member P U so cialed C oB e& ate P re ss SUBSCRIPTIO N R A T E Si By Carrier: N ovem ber I to March I, 11.8 5 ; N ovem ber I to July I, 82.60. to March I, to July I, 88.80. By M aili Novem ber I 1 2 .0 0 ; N ovem ber I M onthly r a te . 60 cen ts. The Texan w ill be delivered in A u s­ ii tin provided th e place o f d elivery lim its, from N ine­ w ithin tb s carrier lr- teen th to T w en ty -sev en th S treets, elu siv e, south to north, end from Rio G rands S treet on tb s w elt and San J a cin to Boulevard on tb s eaet. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ...HELENE WILKE ASSO CIATE _ .............. I DITOR ------------------- M ARU-RANCES WILSON E ditorial A s sista n t-. . Ji#mii« Grove . Cissy S tew art S o ciety Editor ... S ociety Associate Doro thy Huntington A m u s e m e n t s Editor M ekey N e ’ e t rah! A m u s e m e n t # Assoria-® Parlay ne Bls k Sport a E d it o r ...... ...........J*, k G aiiag her S ports A s s o c i a t e Bill Jo h n s o n F e a t u r e E dito r ..._______Kathy B and i n * W orld N ew s E d ito r. Exchange Editor ____ Helen Jackson N i g h t E d i t o r - Marion Fridg e s David I H o ra c e B u s b y, V olney O 'C o n n o r, R aven n a Mathew*, M arifrances W ilson STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Night Editor Hickey Nebenzahl Assistant Night Editor Pa* Seipel Night Reporters ........... ............ .. Alger, Helene Wilke Maudie Aigre, H u m e Wjlke C o p y r e a d e r s Kay Tiller, Johnnie Weeks, Horace Busby Night Sports Editor ........ ..... .....—..... Jack Gallagher Bill Johnson Assistant.*. ...... Night Society Editor ............... Assistants ...... Hilda Chaleff, ..........._ Priscilla C base | j Naomi Levinson, Na mn Hegar Night Amusements Editor. Ha Hay rte Black Night World News Editor ......... Martha Murphy ■* * 3 4 5 6 7 8 >0 Ii % r n 22 23 i8 ///< 33 r n ' / / / y y y . 13 16 9 14 >7 ' / / / f/ / / / 20 19 7777 SS Si YYYV 24 "/A IV V // Z I 28 26 34 37 I r n 41 29 35 v s f t / v /v j / v 36 39 ?777. V Y // / / / / 43 40 i 4-4 p * 5 r n 42 / / / U t 4 7 I 12 IS ZI 2 5 J"* ae 48 54 57 v /y 49 so 55 r n / / / se / / / / s s / / 56 59 J 48, curve 49, choosing 54. illuminated 55. European mountains 56. Great Lake 57. S-shaped worm 58. the Orient 69. additional respiratory sound VERTICAL 1. varnish ingredient 2. macaw 3. summit 4. puff up 5. dip out, as water 6. medicinal plant 7. Australian ostrich Answer to yesterday's puzzle. 777/ V Y / / V V // // /v 30 3* ?7? J / / / W VV/. BZ S i 53 6 - 2 2 8. devastates 9. component parts 10. god of war 11. golf mounds 16. cavil 20. immense 21.skin pro* tuberances 22.extent 23. conducts 24. watch over 27. imitated 28. free 30. worry 31. spreads for drying 33- back 38. herring-sauce 41. sally forth 43. Fall flower 44 wan 45. daughter of Nyx 46. exclamation of reg ret 47. dissolve 50. geological age Cl. masculine name 52. nothing 6 3 .turn to the right h o r i z o n t a l I. recent 5. former heavyweight champion 9. pithy saying 12. accessory seed covering 13. feminine name 14. late Anteri. can humoriit 15. roomy 17. cravat 18. narrative 19. smooths 21. irrigate 24, Russian ruler 25, wander 26, peel 29 sieve 32. close 34. metal fastener 35. weed 36. normal 37. Icelandic literature 39, guided 40. uttered 42. endures 44 fleshy fruits town in Iowa ’NEXT TIME YOU ACCEPT A WOMAN JUROR, BE SURE THERE'S SOMEONE HOME TO KEEP HER KIDS!" Y earling Y ears B y D O R O T H Y J A M E S partment, which t i t l e was changed to Dean of the College of Engineering in 1920. He held this office until he was made Dean Emeritus in 1936. He died on May 28, 1941. in his eighty- fourth year, having been a member of the University fac­ ulty for fifty-three years. These are the positions that he held at the University, but his real place was in the hearts of all the students to whom he was a lasting and loyal friend. They remember him as the man with the drooping mustache, the wing collar, the black tie, the broad sense of humor, and the watch chain carrying the many scholarship pins and med­ als that had been awarded him. He was the strongest supporter athletic for event that Texas ever had and up until the time that he was confined to his home because of illness he could inspire stu­ dents to yell like they had never yelled before at the Texas pep rallies— and he could out-yell any of them! any Longhorn And Dean Taylor loved the pretty girls. In 1940 he refused to ride as a dignitary in the Round-Up par ade because, he said, “I w an t to look a t the pretty girls, and I can't do it if I’m riding in the parade.” In 1941 the parade w'as routed past his house and Dean Taylor got up out of bed and sat on the f r o nt porch to wave a t the procession as it passed. His office was hung with pic­ tur es of relics of friends, “yearling years” on the campus, and souvenirs. The spade with w'hich he broke the ground for the Engineering Building hung over his door. One of his most prized souvenirs was a small stone from the steps of the Old Main Building. “ On this stone,” he would explain, “have stood Teddy Roosevelt, Jim Hogg, Carrie Nations, Bill McDonald, Big hoot Wallace, and a score of other famous persons.” Under his leadership the Col­ lege of Engineering grew from a d ep ar t me nt with no building to a college with a faculty and buildings of its own. The spirit of the Grand Old Man will live as a memorial to the days when the University w-as young. He lived to see the University grow to the magnificent school it is today, but his feeling for the past can be seen in his remark about old B Hall; “ I was pres­ ent when the first shovelful! o f dirt was moved; I hope I ii not live to see the day when B Hall comes down.” Dean Taylor is gone, but he should be remembered by all students, both old and new, as an integral part of our Univer­ sity’s history. At his funeral services, the girls and women who formerly worked in his o f ­ fice wore orange and white. He had especially requested this be­ fore his death. This alone, should signify how much the University meant to Dean Tay­ lor, but aren’t enough words to tell how much Dean Taylor meant to the Uni­ versity. there just Ca pt a i n Ro ber t H. Baker, 1935- 41, received a second bronze oak leaf cluster to the air medal in the Southwest Pacific. the Faces of freshmen for many, many years were sober when they listened to the University’s “ Grand Old Man,” T. U. Taylor, beloved dean of the C o l l e g e of Engineering, tender tell story o f the dying mother who requested that her son be sent to Texas U. This used to be an annual part of the Yearling Round-Up each fall, and it was hard for upperclassmen, who had heard the story before, to keep from laughing. They knew that the pathetic story' was only a build-up to the singing of “Don’t Send My Bov to A. & M.” The “ Grand Old Man” of the Texas U. doesn't greet freshmen anymore, but they aren’t here very long until they hear all about Dean Taylor, and he becomes as much a part of Texas their tradition within hearts as the glorious orange of the Tower after our Longhorns have won ahother Victory. to Dean Taylor came the University as Assistant Pr of es­ sor of Applied Mathematics in 1888, was soon advanced to Pr of essor of Applied Mathe­ matics, and was changed to Pro­ fessor of Civil Engineering in 1903. In 1905 he w'as made Dean of the Engineeri ng De- RHYME — M a (le a A o + t E T E R N I T Y Have you ever thought upon yonder stars And shining moon And meditated that agos past through Poets have been known to sing o f them? Unchanging yet they are ever changing now And witness to the passing of all things. We here them in turn do gaze at And medi tat e on inous form. their lum­ What will the future tell of stars or moons to come? Generations doth but succeed each generation And years their tidings tell. So moon and stars by night and sun by day Constantly go on their rounds o f telling the years And ages past and future, near and far away. O D E TO A C A M P F I R E Beside a campfire’s burning I think of things both ill and I dream of places I have been And of the faces I have seen. And as the sparks successive Some bear a sigh, some sing w'ood good throng a song tone And each one’s gift is a varied Of the folk and thoughts that I have known. The fire with penetrating ray Reflects the sun of a departed And the glowing lights which heav’nward rise The sun’s sunbeams immor­ day talize wrought nought day The night the blaze with havoc And lifts its veil as if ’twere But when the sun returns with The father steals the son away. The dreams which reveled in And rode on sparks in upward Their speeding steeds by then Had "tabled them, and gone to the night flight full-sped bed. A verage lim e of solution: 24 m inutes. Lust by JLflg Feature* Syndicate, Lac. 6 - 2 Z •ne