The SumA r Texan AUSTIN, TEXAS THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1945 Four Pages Today No. 8 VOL. 46 Price Five Cents Hall-Quest: Re-Build German Character “ Re-education of the G erm an population must center around rebuilding of c ha ra c te r a nd personality r a t h e r th a n academic study. This may be achieved r a t h e r easily in the younger children, but more impor tant and more difficult will be the ta s k og teaching the older, die-hard Nazis. *------------------------------ Exams at Night, August 27-30 No Interruption O f ‘SF’ Courses Hi Final examinations in summer ||e r m courses will be held on Mon­ day afternoon, and Monday, Tues­ d a y , Wednesday, and Thursday nights, August 27-30. The after­ noon examinations will be held from 2 to 5 o’clock; night exami­ nations 10:30 o ’clock. The usual detailed exami­ nation schedule, giving the date, time, and place of examinations, will be announced later. from 7:30 to Examinations will be held in the following order: Monday, August 27, at 2 p. rn.: (classes meeti-ng Group E 12 - 1 ). Monday, August 27, at 7 :30 p. rn.: Group A (classes meeting 8-9). Tuesday, August 28, at 7:30 p. rn.: (classes meeting Group B 9-10). Wednesday, August 29, at 7 :30 s p. rn.: Group C (classes meeting 10-11). Thursday, August 30, at 7 :30 p. rn.: Group D (classes meet­ ing 11-12). The above examinations involve summer term courses only. They are placed at these particular interfere hours in order not to with summer-fall courses. During the entire week, beginning August 27 and ending September I, all summer-fall classes will meet on schedule. “ SF” courses will not be interrupted by the closing of the summer term and the opening of the fall term. J.B.’s Newest Cutie M a k e s Former Shorties Tall The Journalism Department runs to extremes in the matter of height, or lack of it. Volney O’Con­ nor’s 6 fe e t IO inches has been a decided contrast to such shorties as Dorace Caldwell, Marjorie Wal- i berg Jones, and Thelma Freidin, ; but the newest reporter on the \ these girls campus makes even look tall. Evelyn Joyce Schepps, 16-year- j Id freshman from Dallas, is just J 4 feet 6 inches short. She says she j comes by her height naturally be- ! cause her father is just 5 feet 5 j inches and her mother a little i under 5 feet. She has gotten used to people staring as she walks down the street, guessing her age as 9. Pass­ ing guessers have flattered her by aging her as old as 12. Being short has brought advan­ tages of half price in bus fare and free admittance to the show until she was 8 years old. l/Oh o t Qoed. Oh N : T H U R S D A Y 5:15— Tennis, Intramural Courts. 5:15— Softball, Intramural Courts. 6— Inter-Fraternity Council meet­ ing, El Charro No. 2. 7— Curtain Club, Radio House. 7— Paul Bolton will speak at YMCA. 7— Softball, Intramural Fields. 8— Camera and Models Club, Physics Building 421. 8:30— Ruby Spencer Lyon Trio, Music Building. F R I D A Y 3— Ex-Servicemens Picnic at Bar­ tons. 5:15— Tennis, Intramural Courts. 5:15— Softball, Intramural Fields. 7— Softball, Intramural Fields. 8:30— Pre-recital rehearsal is open by to Clayton Wilson, music lovers. 8:30— Sigma Delta Pi Inter- American Association. 8:30— Fiesta, Newsman Hall. 8:45— Movie, “Music in .Manhat­ tan,” Open-air Theater. 9— Corral, Texas Union Patio. ♦‘ said Dr. A. L. Hall-Quest, visiting professor of educational adminis- tration from New York University. One of the most difficult prob­ lems to overcome will be gaining the confidence o f the German peo­ ple so they will accept what we tell them as fact, not propaganda, Dr. Hall-Quest said. “The children can be taught at school, but the older Germans must be recondi­ tioned so they w'ill not. destroy at home what the children learn at school.” German teachers, not foreign ones, will have to teach in German schools, because the people listen more willingly to one o f their own nationality. “ We will have to use visual material such as moving pictures and illustrated books to give them positive proof of what we say if they are to believe us,” Dr. Hall-Quest advised. He believes it is desirable for the pictures we show the Germans to be made in Germany by Ger­ mans, but under allied supervi­ sion. The material which they read should be written by their coun­ trymen and printed in their coun­ literature and try, but all Nazi other material should be de­ stroyed. is Dr. Hall-Quest’s belief that Germans should be left the music, literature, and other works in which they have national pride. It “ The Germans have been docile so long under their own leaders, in whom regrettably they still have confidence, that it will be a difficult task for them to accept allied leadership instead of direct indoctrination,” Dr. Hall-Quest stated. “ It seems likely that the allies can achieve best results by an education that provides long exposure to respect for others, patient consideration, sympathetic co-operation, and tactful guid­ ance.” All these will be needed if they are to learn to accept differ­ ent ideas of the individual and the state. “ It is most important for these people to be taught and shown that in a democracy an individual is respected for what he is, and that a person is held higher than the state,” Dr. Hall-Quest said. Proctor Elected Pre-Law Head The Pre-Law Club elected o f­ ficers and adopted a constitution at its meeting Wednesday night. Law students Warner Brock, Bill Fritz, and Jack Ritchie were guest speakers at the meeting. Officers elected were Frank president; G. Milton Proctor, Hughes, and president; vice Ruth-Lee Taylor, secretary-treas- urer. Warner Brock, explaining the function of quiz masters, said, “They are not masters in any sense of the word— they should be more called slaves.” He added that the quiz masters check class rolls, do re­ search, and shepardize (run down) cases for professors. appropriately Law Review, explained the the publication Bill Fritz, editor of the Texas im- ; portance of to I students and attorneys over the state. “ It gives students a chance to study and criticize cases,” he said and added the case notes and comments in the Texas Law Review are written entirely by students of the School of Law. The articles and book reviews are written by Texas attorneys and professors, he said. that Jack Ritchie told the club of the honor system. “The character, conduct, and ability of the stu­ dents set the standards by which themselves.” He tney added that examinations and class work is conducted on the honor of the student. Proctors are not pres­ ent at examination, he said. govern E x I* V e n e z u e l a n Oil H e a d J. Taylor Fly, LL.B. ’13 from Goliad, has been elected director of the Creole Petroleum Corpora­ tion in Venezuela. F’or many years in the legal departments of South American oil companies, Mr. Fry was most recently on the legal sta ff of the Standard Oil Company of Argentina. The Weather Paul Bolton Will Review San Francisco Meeting Crag those rain coats and um­ brellas to the tune o f “Stormy Weather” classes Thursday. for morning News commentator Paul Bolton, o f KTBC, who attended the San Francisco Conference, will speak 1 at the University “ Y” Thursday night at 7 o’clock. He will discuss j j the conference. “ Blue Skies” dotted with a glaring sun, however, will change the theme song of the day, with for sqn rain equipment glasses -and bathing suits during the afternoon. traded 'Constructive Program’ Asked To Aid in Lifting Probation Academic Freedom Committee decides 1News Services9 Will Continue But Her W ings Are Clipped O n Terra-Firma “ If you can drive, you can fly !” That’s what an Austin Flying Service instructor told ex-student Dell Givens at Municipal Airport as she began her flying lesson. It was 6:55 o’clock in the morning. first Dell flew five hours and fifty- five minutes that day. At 7 o ’clock that night she soloed. She had learned to fly in one day. Now she wants to learn to drive a car. Eight UT Profs Teach in Mexico Enrollment Totals 1,050 for Summer Enrollment in the Escuela de Verano at the National University of Mexico totaled 1,050 on the last day of registration, said E. J. Mathews, registrar, who recently returned from Mexico City. Eight University of Texas professors are teaching summer courses in the field school there. The director of the summer school predicted last spring that the enrollment would not exceed 1,350 this year because attend­ ance during the past two or three years has been excessive. Students were required to register by mail for the “summer school for for­ eigners” before May 31. “Those who went without acceptance went at their own risk,” said Mr. Mathews. Mr. Mathews explained that the over-population the summer in session was probably caused by the ten or twelve University pro­ fessors who were there when opened attention and gave confidence to students. it I in 1943. They attracted j “People also have the desire to get away from ceilings, rationing, and coupons. But prices have more than doubled on everything dur­ ing the last two years,” the regis­ trar explained. “ An inflation of a wild sort” now exists in Mexico, j Some price restrictions do exist, | Mr. Mathews added, and he cited the protective measure regarding automobile tiles. Each automobile is given one “vacant” day a week, and the owner faces a stiff fine if his car is found on the street while supposedly on its vacation. Professors from the University teaching in Mexico this summer are Professors George C. M. Engerrand, anthropology; Loren N. Mozley, art; Eastin Nelson, economics; Fred M. Bullard,; geology; John L. M e c h a m , government; Charles W. Hackett, history; Rex I). Hopper, sociology; and J. R. Spell, Romance lan­ guages. By HORACE BUSBY T e x a n E d i to r Indication that newsheet and poster campaigns on the current probation status of the Univer­ sity will continue came last night when the Academic Freedom Com­ mittee agreed their “information service” to the stu­ dent body. to expand Since the student convocation last week the Academic Freedom Committee— which was formed last fall during the Rainey-Regent controversy— has distributed lit­ erature from a booth in front of the Texas Union, and the com­ mittee decision last night will probably continue this activity. introduced Wednesday morning a new note wms into the campus activity on the probation action which black-and-white posters ap­ peared on campus trees urging the campus “quiet down” that and “forget” what was termed the “ Rainey-Regent fuss.” One poster pictured a cover- ailed Kentucky man seated in a rocking chair holding ropes tied around the Tower, and captioned “Punch n’ Judy.” Although many its meaning students debated in it was believed long arguments, Sniper Killed Flynn On Kunishi Ridge First Lieutenant Mike Flynn of the Marines, student in 1941-43,1 was killed on June 18 by a sniper hidden in the coral crags of shell- torn Kunishi ridge, two miles from Okinawa’s southern-most tip. Lieutenant Flynn had led an ad- j Vance patrol up the steep, rugged slope to establish a company com­ mand post for the Sixth Division’s I Twenty-second Regiment. T h e r e ’ they had been pinned down by heavy enemy fire. As he moved to deploy his men Flynn was struck in the head. He died a few minutes later. Throughout cam­ the paign, he was conspicuous in his leadership of a machine gun pla­ toon, being among the first t o i reach the crest of bitterly-defend­ ed Sugar Loaf Hill. entire Platoon Sergeant Elbert C. Black in an effort to drag Flynn to safety after he had been hit. lost his life ‘Malicious X ’ M ars Probation New s Stencil An “X ” marked the demise of the first edition of the “Probation News” — mimeo­ graph sheet distributed by the Academic Freedom Commit­ tee on campus this week—- after Tuesday night. Stencils for the first edi­ tion of the News were slashed with an “X ” sometime be­ tween Tuesday night and the Wednesday morning YMCA, committee officials reported an dtermed the act as “malicious” against the w'ork of the group. in this referred to President Her­ man Donovan of the University of Keutcky who voiced a more se­ vere criticism of the University’s Regents than did the majority re­ port of the Southern Association’s investigating committee. . Other posters pictured a “ Wild­ eyed. . Hayseed” holding an economics book and urging action on the probation restriction, one showed a farmer-type man outside a log cabin— presumably a South­ ern Association representative— shouting about the University. the campus last week posters ap­ Earlier saying peared on “Thank you, Regents. . . Thank you, Dr. Painter,” and one poster depicted a Regent smiling on a “Don’t do anythingwhileUTgoesto- hell” student and frowning on an active student. Posters, however, were— as far as public comment was known— not authorized by any established the campus although group on leaders of both groups were known to have objected to pre­ senting the posters. Activity in the Academic Free­ dom Committee and the Commit- See NEWS SERVICES, Page 4 Dr. Duncalf Says Blakeway Invites Active Interest Still No Plans For Convocation A call for student body co­ operation in a “constructive pro­ gram” for aiding in efforts to lift the Southern Association’s proba­ tion of the University was voiced last night by Clayton Blakeway, president of the Students’ Asso­ ciation. “ Student government can oper­ ate efficiently only if all students help supply facts and take an in efforts to re­ active move the probation from the Uni­ versity,” Blakeway explained. interest Blakeway reiterated his earlier statements that he has no immedi­ ate plans for calling a student con­ vocation again this summer. “I believe there is a feeling of unrest and uncertainty among the stu­ dents,” Blakeway said, “but I do not plan a convocation unless stu­ dent interest warrants the action.” “ I want student government to work in a constructive program toward elimination of the proba­ tion,” he emphasized pointing out, however, that the meeting o f the Students Assembly will be impos­ sible until September when enough members are expected to return to constitute a quorum. ’Presidency May Be Less Desirable Now* Presidency of Since June the Assembly— leg­ islative branch of student govern­ ment— has been inactive because of the absence of all but four members. When the body recon­ venes in September, however, Blakeway will have at least five positions to fill by appointment with the possibility that he may have to fill seven posts with his nominees. Tenure in these offices would be until December when a the University of the state came several reports may become a “ less desirable posi- of ex-student reactions to the pro- tion” to some candidates seeking bation but as yet the fervor of the office since the Southern As- last November has not been sociation of Colleges and Sec- j stirred. ondary Schools has put the school! on probation, Dr. Frederic Dun- j are the only organized calf, chairman of the faculty presi­ dential selection committee said nast night. Fort Worth exes and “friends” group to endorse in written form the As­ sociations action. A letter sent to the regents supported the pro-: new Assembly will be elected. Blakeway indicated in his state- bation and “properly condemned j position of the school will affect the exercise by the regents of ment to the Texan that he wants those seeking the presidency of power properly belonging to the students to take a more active i interest in th eaffairs of the legis- that school,” explained Dr. Dun- president and the faculty.” calf. “ But the advisory commit- lative and executive branches of state in McAllen, Editor Si C a s-; student government and aid the tee will do the bert it can.” S n report has been received as «Wy nf the Valley Evening Mon!- j student officials in collecting in- From the opposite end of the “Anything which affects the i f»nm thf> A \ II P and Dr yet from the A.A.U.P. and Dr. | Hilda Rosene, secretary, does not expect one until early fall. From widely scattered portions Chopped Worm and Raw Egg Diet Fatal for ‘J’ai Faim ’ tor editorially attacked Dr. T. S. formation on the probation. p,.es)(|(!nt for hjs “I would like to encourage stu- ^ statement last week reporting that dents to get all the intormation the current Regents have not vio- they can about the situation here, lated “good principles.” Cassidy particularly about the causes of charged Painter with presidential probation, he reported, aspirations. See BLAKF,\\AY, Page 4 I Thompson, Ex, Ate Stolen Pigs In Jap Prison at Manila They A in ’t ‘Furriners’ But 14 Passed Exams On the foreign language exam­ inations given July 28, the follow­ in Spanish: ing students passed Maude Hancock Baines, Patricia W. Bergman, Louis Bodzin, Bertie N. Chinn, Selden Marth, Joy Mar­ garet Moore, Mrs. Marilen Mullins, Bettie Jean Nanney, and Patsy L. Yarbrough. In German, Frieda E. Nurn- berger passed. In French the following passed: Dorothy Sue Coffman, Patricia Inez Gillette, Burton H. Goldman, and Nita L. Greenwood. Curator Traces History Of Bison 400,000 Years An article on “ The American Buffalo,” written by Miss Eula Whitehouse, curator of botany in the Texas Memorial Museum, ap­ pearing in the June issue of the Coastal Cattleman, official maga­ zine of the Coastal Cattle Associa­ tion, Inc., the American bison 400,000 years back. traces Miss Whitehouse, a former in­ structor in botany at the Univer­ sity, painted the background of the buffalo diorama in the Mu­ seum. She is the author of the volume, “ Texas Wildflowers.” An abandoned orphan, “J ’ai F'aim,” who had gained great popularity at Littlefield, found dorm life too strenuous. The tiny mockingbird, found by Betty Dun- in his nam incubator, a delicate arrangement of old sheeting attached to the desk lamp, Monday between 9 and IO o ’clock. last Thursday, died His name which is French for “ I am hungry” was quite appro­ priate because he not only wanted to be fed at the regular intervals, but would awake at 12 o ’clock chirping for a midnight snack of raw egg and chopped worms. loudly S w e e t h e a r t S a mm i e Here Sammie Farrier, Sweetheart of the University, visited on the campus Wednesday. Vacationing for the summer, Miss Farrier is to forward loking school for the fall term. to returning Second Lieutenant Shirlireed Walker, B. J. ’35, is on the camp­ us visiting her sister, Jane Walk­ er. Lt. Walker is being transferred from the WAC training center at Fort Oglethrope, Ga., to the St. Louis Ordnance Depot. J ’ai F’aim was buried beneath a located close to the cedar tree I spot where he had been found. The only statement his sorrowing mistress will make is, “And he would have been flying within the j next day or two.” Pr i v a t e Fir»t Cia** Jack Eve r ad T h o mp so n, Marine from Leakey former University student, and from a liberated was recently in camp Japanese prison the Philippines. Now the United in States Naval Receiving Hospital in San Francisco, Private Thompson tells how the Japs tortured him by hanging him up with ropes tied on his wrists and ankles and by tying him to a post to facilitate beating him. his After capture. Private Thompson was put in the brig for a month and then taken to Manila. In the prison there men were forced to sit with their faces to the walls and their feet doubled under shorn. If they spoke, no food was given them at the next meal. Private Thompson said he often got so hungry that he stole pigs to eat so that he would stay ' U T M a y G o Through Measles, Operation But It W on’t D ie’ Says Retiring Dr. Porter B y V E R N A M A E OR T S Honing. “ I enjoy not having to listen to bells or go to classes. I like class­ es but after more than fifty years. you get tired of it,” said Dr. M. B. Porter of his first day of leisure after fifty years of teaching at the University. Dr. Porter, who was a professor of pure mathe­ matics, recently resigned. ★ Dr. Porter is not worried about the University’s future. “ I think The University of 'texas has the most brilliant future of any in­ stitution south of Chicago. The University will probably live long­ er than the United States.” He compared it to the University of Paris which has survived con­ quests and other disasters. “ A university may go through meas­ les, whooping cough, and even have a major operation,” he de­ clared, “ but it will go on func-- Dr. Porter emphasized that the University and the Board of Re­ shown him gents have always every consideration. The Regents did not want him to resign and in a letter to him they said, “The University is so much a part of your life and you are so much a part of its life.” Dr. Porter does not remember any disagreeable things about his early days at the University. “ You don’t when you’re young,” he ex­ plained. fade away and only the nice memories remain.” “ The bari things Dr. Porter entered the Univer­ sity in 1888. At that time Aus­ tin was a little town. There were streetcars pulled by little Mexican mules which went from the rail­ road station to the University “and not much further ” There were in thej only about IOO students University and Dr. Porter knew them all. He also knew the origin­ al faculty, all of whom are now dead. Among those he remem­ bers were John Sterett, famous archeologist, and Robert T. Hill, eminent geologist. ★ The only building on the campus then was the West Wing of the Old Main Building. Debating and liter­ ary societies were popular, and Dr. Porter belonged to the Rusk Literary Society. He was also a founding member of Chi Phi fra­ ternity, and on its fiftieth anni­ versary he was living charter member. the only Dr. has Porter traveled through South and Central Ameri­ ca, the West Indies, and all of Europe except Spain. He found litera­ Paris very stimulating liked ture and snence. but he Rome the best. “It is the only b i g 4 in city I ever really cared about.” Dr. Porter has a collection of curios which he has picked up in ivory his travels. He has many carvings, one of which was carved by Negroes in Africa; a seal 3000 years old which was taken from a mummy; and a piece of meteorite that fell at Odessa. He also has some very unusual lamps, two of which he made himself. Dr. Porter declared that from now on he intends to do “nothing.” j He will leave for Denver in a few; days to cool off and complete work on a hok of analytic geometry. F ishing is not a scheduled part of his vacation, for as he says, “I have caught only one fish in my life.” Despite his fifty years of teach- J ing, Dr. Porter says that in spirit he is ab^ut the age o f his eleven- month-old niece. He asserts that “Being with youth has made me i young.” alive. While at the prison, he was assigned of keeping job enough wood cut for the galley's use. the ★ timetable” “ The human they call P r i vat e Charl es W. H a c k e t t Jr., University graduate and son of Dr. C. W. Hackett, now sta­ tioned at Biggs Field. Without consulting a timetable, Private Hackett can give you complete directions for a train ride to al­ most any part of the country, in­ cluding times of departure and arrival, lay-overs, and alternate routes. started F’rivate Hackett’s unusual hobby of collecting and studying time­ tables probably about twenty years ago when young Charles agreed to eat everything on his plate for thirty days if his father would take him for a train ride from Austin to Llano. His present favorite out of the time­ tables isn’t the Congressional Lim­ ited nor The Chief. He likes the sixty-mile Tululah Falls train from Camelia, Ga., to Franklin, N. C., which runs every day except Sun­ day. ★ ★ ex-student, has L i e u t e na n t ( j g ) Robert H. C o ­ returned que t , from an eighteen-month tour of duty in the South Atlantic where he served as pilot of a Navy patrol plane. L ie u t e n a n t Calvin Collier, CX- student and former American Statesman sports wmiter, is a mem­ ber of a new supply organization in China. Called a gypsy unit in which everyone flies, this group has done almost everything from to carrying transporting troops butter and eggs. the speedy evacuation o f the last string of American bases in China, this unit played a major role, working under the worst possible flying conditions and came through with the loss of only one ship and crew'. Lieutenant Collier recently re­ leaf cluster and short-notice In ceived the oak two battle stars. Journal Gives Campus History Of Naval Unit Engineers To Have Student Copies Available Today A Navy issue of The Journal o f Architecture, Engineering, and Industry will be distributed In tho corridors the Engineering Building Thursday. It contains a record of the Navy program in the College of Engineering from 1940 to the present. of The record goes back to Septem­ ber, 1940, when Captain Herbert W. Underwood came to the Uni­ versity to organize the NROTC unit, which had its headquarters on the third deck of the Journal­ ism Building and the armory in the basement of the Law Building. The issue tells of the days when the campus was a “Pensacola in miniature” and the Naval aviation cadets marched to chow and classes and dunked their soloists in Little­ field Fountain. It remembers the coming of the first V-12 students to the campus, and tells how those V -12’s feel about their “war-time alma mater.” The Navy issue contains, among other features, a comparison and evaluation of wrar-time college training programs by W. R. Wool- rich, dean of the College of En­ gineering. There is also a brief memorial to Sydney Stokes, V-12 from Kelseyville, Calif., who died of poliomyelitis in June. Short sketches of the command­ ing officer of the Naval Training Unit, Captain R. J. Valentine, and his predecessors, Captain J. J. London and Captain IL W. Under­ wood, are included in a story on the Navy staff. A list of Navy students with their home-town addresses has been compiled and published in the Navy issue along with pictures o f Navy activities on campus and cartoons by Ken Larsen. The cov­ er was done by Richard K. Over­ street. See JOURNAL, Page 4 Texan Mentioned For Court Post D. A. Simmons, Houston attor- I ney, LL.B. ’20, and president o f the American Bar Association, is being mentioned to fill the Su­ preme Court seat vacated by Jus­ tice Owen Roberts, says a recent article in the Houston Chronicle. Mr. Simmons has recently re­ turned from the United Nations at San Francisco, Conference where he served as consultant to the United States delegation. Mr. Simmons has served as president of the American Judica­ ture Society and president of tho T e x a s Bar Association. He founded and was first editor of the Texas Bar Journal. Blood Bank Wondering lf Boys Have Blood, Too Whenever there’s a need for something just call on the girls, j Or that was the case when it came ! to answering the urgent call for i blood donors from the laboratory I of Brackenridge Hospital, j The blood bank was almost issue. ; Then three University students re- | sponded— all girls. But, boys, i there is still a need for more i donors. empty when the call was Students interested in donating j blood should telephone 23151, the laboratory at Brackenridge Hos- ; pital for an appointment. File in and Record Your Club in Organization File I An informational file on cam* ! pus organizations has been started in the office of the Texas I nion, A list of officers, phone numbers, meeting places, meeting time, and any other information that people might want to know' about an organization should be mailed or taken to Texas Union 203. the Organizations which use Union for meetings will be re­ quired to verify summer reserva­ tions or they will not be held past August IO. Reservations are still being taken. More Chlorine Added To City Water System More chlorine has been added to the city water this year, the super­ intendent of Water Department admits, but the amount added is so low that it should not be tasted. The extra amount was added as an added precaution against dis­ eases common in the summer. k The musical taste fo r lig h t clas­ sics in th e sum m er is the basis on which the pro gram of th e Ruby Spencer Lyon Trio T hu rsd ay is a rranged. The three traveling in ­ strum entalists will play a n d sing music fa m ilia r and easy to listen to. Playing concerts exclusively f o r colleges this summer, th e trio is composed of a coloratura soprano, a violinist, and a pianist. Ruby Spencer Lyon, the soprano u n d e r whose n am e the trio travels, r e ­ cently sang th e lead in a musical produced in New York, “ My Mary­ land." Most o f her work has been on the musical comedy stage. The violinist, in Chicago a t Jenn ie Goudio, and the pianist, E jn a r K rantz, th e have ta u g h t Sherwood Music School. Both have played in orchestras and musical ensembles, Miss Goudio with th e Sherwood Symphony, a n d Mr. K rantz as an accompanist. Each has two solo sections on the program . Twice they will com­ bine the Bach-Gounod “ Ave M a ria ” and a medley of light op era music. to play PKone 2-2473— T H E S U M M E R T E X A N — PKona 2-2473 THURSDAY, AU G U ST 2, 1945 Hutch House, 1-0 Classics for Colleges O n Trio’s Program P A S E T W O JABBER.., Advisory Council Accepts 3 Proposals; C an a d y Plays A ga in B y B I L L J O H N S O N Texan Sport* Editor Grove First Companies In /-Frame Tie The Intram ural Advi*ory Coun­ cil m et again Wednesday a f te r ­ noon an d passed on three pro­ posed changes fo r the intram ural by-laws. The proposed am end­ ments a r e : Dells Drop AEPi; Hill Hall Victorious Rain forced the cancellation of the fit -t day o f intram ural soft- 1) I f a man plays in any varsity ball Tuesday evening in b r a te r - game, pre-season or otherwise, at pity League C games. A nother a n y accredited college or univer- I shower of gloom befell the Club Di vision when W esley F ou n d a ­ sity, he shall be ineligible to com­ tion forfeited for a second time pete in th a t sport, or its comple­ to practically assure its non-par­ ment, in University intramurals. ticipation this summer. 2) Diving shall be excluded fro m the fall swimming me*t. 3) A double-elimination to u r n a ­ m e n t shall be held in all individual sports. All of these proposals are sound i enough to merit close considera- j lion. The first, of course, is the most debatable. DISPUTES HAVE ARISEN fro m time to tim e over the eligi­ bility sta tu s of men who w-ere fo rm erly o ut fo r the varsity sport. T ra n sfe r s c h o o l o th er through the Navy program has brought many athletes with experi­ ence a t o th e r schools. from Some of these from smaller col­ leges have not attem pted to go o u t fo r varsity here. However, th e experience they received p r e ­ viously provides debatable m a­ teria l on the sageness of its pass­ ing the vote of intramural m a n a ­ gers. Nearly ell individual sports are cluttered with defaults, and play drags considerably besides pre­ ve nting some o f the players from ge tting into much competition. Two games ftood out above the rest— a seven-inning tie between the F irst Companies of P r a th e r and L< D, and Oak Grove’s close shave a t the hands of Hutchison N A V Y D I V I S I O N F i r » t C o . , P r a t h e r I , F i r s t C o . , F o u r t h Co . , Hi l l H a l l 4, S a c o n d L C D , I . Co . , L C D , 2. C o . , P r a t h e r 2. S e c o n d C o . , P r a t h e r 5 , T h i r d F R A T E R N I T Y D I V I S I O N Ph i S i g m a D e l t a 6, L a m b d a C h i D e l t a T a u D e l t a 7 , A l p h a E p ­ A l p h a I . s i l o n P i 2. T a u O m e g a I . M I C A D I V I S I O N B l o m q u i s t S w e d e s 5, R a m b l e r s 3. S a n d i d g e H o u s e 2 2 , T L O K 2. O a k G r o v e I , H u t c h H o u s e 0. C L U B D I V I S I O N B r a c k e n r i d g e H a l l o v e r W e s l e y F o u n d a t i o n b y d e f a u l t . Men have been knowm to qualify f o r playoffs without playing a game. This lack of practice can easily cause a player to “ slip up' in the finals. Double elimination would give him another chance to struck o ut five men, allowed three j survive. White W ins Q w n Fracas . P i t c h ' r Bill W h i t e k n o c k e d a t h e t r i p l e w i t h o n e a b o a r d f o u r t h t o a 1-0 v i c t o r y o v e r H u t c h i s o n H o u s e . From the very s t a r t the game was a pitcher’s duel, as White loser Dave JIMM Y CANADY, 1043 .econd- McGee fanned M T.n, while walk- and * icine aw ay three l e a d O a k G r o v e ‘ walks and two hits; t o in , t r i n e Mockin* beck on the Lone- I horn football squad, bas recently received his discharge from the Navy a f te r a y e a r and a h a lf in the V-12 program a t A rkansas A & M. j The fo rm e r Austin High flash, who weighed 170 du ring the ’4 5 season, will be “ a ro u n d ” very d e fi­ nitely fo r this y e a r ’s pigskin fes­ tivities. Rain, Forfeits Dull 'Mural Tennis Play Five o u t o f nine intram ural m atches were decided on defaults in tennis singles Monday a f t e r ­ noon. I n te r m itte n t showers forced cancellation of play Tuesday. Even though play slowed down a g re a t deal, Paul Mohr and Dick Cato hung up th e ir fo u rth stra ig h t victories— the fo rm er winning on de fa u lt and the la tte r in two suc­ cessive sets. The results: Coy over White, 2-0. L am brecht over Vaughn by de­ fau lt. fau lt. Mohr over Caldwell by default. Cato over Templeton, 2-0. Sau nd ers over Johnson by de­ Burton over White, 2-0. Rhodes over Majul by default. Ossa over Fowler by default. Daniels over Mussclwhite, 2-0. A n c h o v y N u m e r o u s I n G u l f Most num erous species of fish in the Texas coastal w aters are anchovy, menhaden, mullet and croaker, according to Dr. Gordon Gunter, research associate in The U niversity of Texas In stitu te of Marine Science, who has tabulated scientific data on 78,265 speci­ m ens which he caught in a 21- m onth expedition. He estimates approxim ately 200 species live in G ulf and coastal waters. hits, The first three Innings almost hitless as each team got but. one bit apiece. Then, in the first, o f the fourth, McGee issued • a pass to Beggs, who stole second. The n e x t tw o batters struck out, bu t W hite rapped o u t a triple to win his own game. The n ext inning proved to be much like the first th ree a* b a t­ ters were set down in order. C opeland Tied by Turner the fifth P r a th e r ’s L. h . T u rn e r and burled LCD’s Leon Copeland in­ scoreless hall until ning. Then with tw o men out, W alt Wollam singled for P rather. R. F. Fleischli scored Wollam on a double, but was p u t o u t w-hcn tried to steal third. Iii the last half o f the fifth, LCD got an unearned run to tie the game. C. D. Haiain walked and the next two men flew out. L. A. t ’asteix then drove a liner dow n The | third baseman couldn’t hold on to the ball, however, and Haisin ■ .scored while < astelx stopped at J. B. Ingram flew o ut to third. end LCD’s th re a t. the third base line. in to P r a th e r th re a te n e d s c o r e 1 again the first o f the sixth, j when Leo Berube tripled and W. FL C raig walked, but Copeland calmly struck out the next three j men to end the th re a t. T u r n e r was nicked for one hit; Copeland gave five. Scott Turns Back AEPi A strong Delta Tau Delta team defeated Alpha Epsilon Pi, 7-2. AEPi w ent down due partly to a group of errors committed in one inning, when they allowed fou r runs to cross the plate. AEPi scored two ru n s Sn the first of the first inning, when its Rw I T H E D A I L Y T E X A N CLASSIFIED ADS Phone 2-2473 for Ad Taker 8— Lost and Found 51— Rooms for Boys L O S T — B row n le a th e r billie;! I w ith I.o w - KOO l f FO R TW O MKN OR C O U P L E - • r a to o le d o r le a th e r . C o n ta in s a d i - j A d jo in in g batt! tor** r e c e i p t a n d o t h e r v a l u a b l e p a p e r s . J 'h o n e D o n a O d e n 2 - 4 1 1 4 . 2 3 0 5 * N i e c e * T e l e p h o n e 3 6 2 2 . * m & i SWEATING IN an all-important run for his team, First Co., Prather, Patcher L. I . Turner is shown w aving teammate NA/o It NA/olldm around th '6 base and on into home p !a*e, while the ba I (hit by R. F. Fleischli) is seen getting through Short Fie!der Tom H e a rd (in background). W ith his back turned to Turner is Third Base­ man C . L. Jaquess. The p oy took p !ace in the fifth inning, putting Prather into a I O ©ad over First Co., L C D . The ball may be seen just below W o lU m 's right hand. D e l t a K a p p a E p s i l o n 12, A l p h a Clearing the Softball Confusion Oboe Sings No Sad Songs On Wilson-Newman Recital First Companies, P ra th e r, LCD, I mon. fought to a 1-1 deadlock Monday ■ A fte r yielding run s in the first, the afternoon in a well-fought con-j Scott pitched superior hall Roberts Takes First Step Second-place Fourth Co., Rob­ erts, will field a nicknamed team Thursday afternoon when it plays twice-tied First Co.. LC D, in in tr a ­ mural softball. Taking the first step in d e a l i n g a long-muddled situation, Roberts’ m anager — Mike Callas — chal­ lenged not only his te a m ’s oppon­ ent today but all o ther Navy Divi­ to choose “colorful sion groups names t h a t best suit th e ir com­ panies.” Com m ander J. N. Ferguson, executive officer, stated W ednes­ day afterno on t h a t be saw no way in which the choosing of nick­ names would conflict with Naval regulations. Confusion has been Rt its height this sum mer with V-12 and RO It, companies being numbered sepa­ rately. The result has been th a t there have been two F irst Com­ two Second Companies, panies, and two F o u rth Companies com­ peting ag ainst each other. Continued addition to the m ay­ hem has been the re n u m b e rin g of all the companies every sem ester or tw o in compliance with the change in Naval enrollment. However, problems of personnel change are on a more even keel now with enrollm ent pared down to a total th a t should rem ain fairly consistent during the coming year. Bruce Scott of the Delts walked | le t his w ent J three men. The Delts came back hits. in the last of the fir s t to score two runs on th ree errors and tied the score. its A f te r opponents collect eleven rare form. Sandidge House slaugh­ te re d a motley crew from TLOK to . Phi two b a tte rs first Sigma Delta, with W alter “ L e f ty ” struck out, Hill Hall collected tripped Lambda Wolff hurling, three hits and one walk to bring The Chi Alpha Monday night. in first baseman Wilbur Ross fo r the first score of the game, a d d in g . Lambda ( his have y e t to win a th re e more in the second. rem ain un defeated. game. . in The oboe will step o u t of its th e public well-worn groove mind wrhen Clayton Wilson of the Music D epartm en t plays his “ Re­ cital of Contem porary Music” Sunday. Always labeled sad, slow, and sonorous, th e oboe music on his program will be a n ything b u t that. the To prove his point— th a t oboe can play light and modern music as well as dirges o r death- songs— Mr. Wilson, an in s tru c to r in woodwind in strum ents, chose first a sonata w ritten in 1938 by Paul Hindemith. Its movements, marked “ c h e e rfu l” and “ lively,” speak f o r themselves. The Goossens concerto on the recital is in answ er to request, says Mr. Wilson. When be first came to teach a t th e U niversity, he and H om er Ulrich, music direc­ to r of Radio House, gave a jo in t recital on which the concerto was played. K ent Kennan, who the music fa c u lty in 1943 f o r m ilitary service, w rote the “ A llegro" on le ft G o n z a l e s in G a r r U o n 2 - 3 D a i l y A ndres C. Gonzalez, co-ordina to r of Inter-Americi.n stu d e n t ac- ‘ tivities, will be in Garrison Hall 120 from 2 to 3 o ’clock daily for consultation. FINE D IAM O NDS R A V E Y ’ S Costume Jewelry, Birthstone Rings U B l o c k f r o m H igh P rice * 1 1 3 W . 7 t h Tires Recapped Truck • Passenger Scib erltn g D istributor A u th o rized H a w k in s T ire T read Service N o H ea t A p p lie d to Side W a lls BLUE PENNANT TIRE CO. 4 1 9 C o l o r a d o P h . 2 - 6 2 1 1 M oney W h e n Y ou N eed It • Q uick • C ou rteous • • P rivate • L O A N S on a n y th in g o f va lu e W I L S O N Loan & J e w e lr y Co. 5 1 7 E . 6 t h P h o n e 8 6 1 4 0 EXPERT W A T C H REPAIR S P E C I A L o m ct wcHMES Almon H Q -f i t 5 0 $ t ( 2 6 w e s t 6» s r A U S T f Af, T E X A S - O L D - ’ S E V A X ! i to * N ow O p en . • . 11:30 A. M. 11:00 P. M. Closed Mondays D in * in th* C ool - C o lo rfu l P a tio A f t e r 5 P . M . ic 1601 G u a d a lu p * T e l. 8 -4 3 2 1 fo u r Coming to b a t in the second, the Delts added run s as Evans, Troxell, Franklin, and O u t­ law scored. The Delts scored a n ­ other run in the third. The rem ain der of the seven- inning duel was scoreless. The tw irling fo r AEPi was handled by Zeke Bodzin, who fa n n e d seven rest of the way. Tlir#*..#.!* n m n a il Lorries Ih ro u gh Fourth Co., Hill Hall, gained its first victory a t the expense of Second Co., LCD, 4-2, Monday a f ­ ternoon. liamar Hilton, LCD pitcher, allowed eight hits, issued 5-0. eight free passes, and struck o u t four men, while rival Bill Adams Intramural Schedule SOFTBALL T h u r s d a y , A u g u s t 2 5 :15— S e c o n d Co., LI D, v s . Third Co., F ield — l e a g u e A • ; vs. F o u r t h Co., (M id d le — A ) ; F o u rt h Co., LCD Pr a th er F i r s t Co., Pr ath er Hill Hull R o b e r t s t S o u th - A >. ( N o r t h F i r s t Co., v s . 7 : 0 0 — P i K a p p a A l p h a v s . T h ! C . n m m a ( N o r t h — 1)1 : Tau D e l t a P h i va . D e l t a K a p p a A l p h a • S i g m a v s K a p p a S i g m a ( M i d d l e ——D ) ; P h i K a p p a ( S o u t h — D L F r i d a y , A u g u s t 3 T h e t a .I : 1 5 — B e t a 9 ( N o r t h — C l ; S i g m a C h i E p s i l o n v a . T h e t a X i S i g m a N u v* . T h e t a ( M i d d l e — C ) : S i g m a A l p h a v a . D e l t a ( S o u t h — C ) . P h i P i 7 : 0Q— A l p h a E p s i l o n P i v a . P h i K a p p a ( N o r t h — B l ; D e l t a K a p p a E p s i l o n ( M i d d l e — B I ; v a . L a m b d a C h i P a l v s , D e l t a A l p h a T a u O m e g a A l p h a ( S o u t h — B *. T a u D e l t a T E N N I S T h u r s d a y , A u g u s t 2 5 : 1 S — M u r r a y W o l o w i t i v a . K e n n e t h 1 6 ) ; B i l l ( 7 — 1 6 ) ; H a r ­ ( C o u r t 6 — L e a g u e V a u g h n W h i t e v a . B o h D o t s o n r i s P a r k hi l l v s . L . M . C o y ( 8 — 1 6 ) ; W i l l a r d J o h n s o n v s . J a m ? * T e m p l e t o n ( 9 — 1 7 ) ; P a u l M o h r v a , W a v n e S a u n ­ d e r s ( I O — 1 7 ) ; J . L . T i p p e t t vs. D avid C a l d w e l l ( l l — 1 7 ) . F r i d a y , A u g u s t 3 5:1 ">— T om F r o s t va. L. S. Brin (6 — I S ) ; H o lt D a n i e l s va. E. M. S e e ( 7 — 1 3 ) ; Ed W a lt h a ll v« J. B. Reid <*— 1 8 ) ; I m il K l a t t vs . W , M. B u r n e t ' (!•— 1 4 1 : J a c k V a u g h n E u g e n e Gardn er S t a n l e y v s . ( I O— 1 4 ) ; Don W o l f Gra ne r (J. A nd e r son ( l l — 1 4 ) ; W. vs Dirk W o h l g e m u t h ( 1 2 — 1 5 ) ; Zeke W i l e m o n v s , B. M. B u r g h e r ( I H—- 1 5 ) ; P a t T o m m y M o r r i s o n ( 1 4 — 15 ) : K e ll y v s . vs. The rest of th e game was a see-saw a f fa ir with both team s getting on bases, but unable to score. Then, in the last of the sixth, LCD got on the ball and scored two runs on three hits. Swedes Sw at Ramblers The Blomquist Swedes beat the 6-3, Randle House Ramblers, Wednesday evening. three ru ns The Swedes sta rte d o ff by scor­ in­ in ing ning. and came back in the sec­ ond to score the other two. They led going into the third inning, I the first In their half of the third the Ramblers came to life and scored a ru n . They added two more to their list in the fifth. Max Anderson was the losing pitcher. He was nicked for eight hits, walked four men, an d struck out one. Dick Cato was the winning chunker. He gave up seven hits, walked one man, and -truck out two. . . . In Other Gam es ( anda Kegans and his Second racked up Co., P ra th e r, m ates successive victory, fo u rth their rem aining unbeaten in League A. . . Delta Kappa Epsilon routed Alpha Tau Omega in a tilt th a t was twice postponed and finally p l a y e d W ednesday a fternoon. in Pitcher Jim m y Kemper was Keep Your Shoes N ew H « « I s Re pair#*! W h i l e Y o u W a i t . H E E L S R E P A I R E D W h i l e Y o u Wmit. P r o m p t S e r v i c e o n R e b u i l d i n g Y o u r S h o e s L i k e T h e y Uaed t o B e . G oodyear Shoe Shop 2 3 2 6 G u a d a l u p e Decca Records Kreisler, Tibbett ' In 1945-46 Program The C u ltural E n te rta in m e n t program f o r the w in te r sem ester is as follows: N ovem ber 20— F ritz Kreisler, vio­ linist, G regory Gym. D ecember 5— “ Romeo and Juliet,** N ational Classic T h e a te r with Clare T ree M ajor, Hogg A udi­ torium. December l l — Dr. F ra n z Polgar, m ental scientist, Gregory Gym. J a n u a r y 29— The Chinese T h e a ­ te r, fo u r one-act Chinese plays, Hogg A uditorium . F e b ru a ry 5— Don Cossack Chorus, G regory Gym. F e b r u a ry 18— Lawrence T ib b e tt and the A ustin Symphony O r­ chestra, G regory Gym. March 8— A ndres Segovia, g u it a r ­ ist, Hogg A uditorium. O U T D O O R T H E A T E R P R O G R A M A u g u s t 2 , T h u r s d a y : R u b y S p e n ­ c e r L y o n T r i o , R e c i t a l H a ll ; 2 5 a f o r S u m m e r A c t i v i t y F e e H o l d ­ e r s ; o t h e r s 7 4 c . A u g u s t S a t u r d a y * M o v i e , 4 , “ M u s i c ( A n n a i n M a n h a t t a n " S h i r l e y , D e n n i s D a y ) , O p e n - A i r T h e a t e r . A u g u s t 5 , S u n d a y ; C l a y t o n W i l ­ s o n , o b o i s t , R e c i t a l H a l l , 4 : 3 0 p . rn. I Auto Repairs F o r p ro m p t and e ffectiv e service on y o u r car— we o ffe r : A F a c t o r y t r a i n e d m e c h a n i c s ★ F a c t o r y e n g i n e e r e d p a r t s A R e a s o n a b l e p r i c e s ★ A l l w o r k g u a r a n t e e d " C B " S M IT H M O T O R S D o d g e - P l y m o u t h 3 0 1 W . 5 t h T e l e p h o n e 2 4 1 2 1 C o r n e r 5 t h a n d L a v a c a RUBY SPENCER LYON Among Miss G audio’s solo selec­ tions will be K reisler’s “ La Gi- ta n a ." Mr. K ra n tz will conclude his solos with “ Scherzo in B F l a t M inor" by Chopin. Mr. Wilson’s program . Originally the fir s t m o vem ent of a suite, its delicate tones a re in c o n tra st to the concluding n u m b e r on th e recital, a d issonant suite of five pieces by W alter Piston. W ritte n in th e style and spirit o f the c o n ­ tra p u n ta l, o r double-melody, d e ­ cline in th e E ig hteen th C entury, it has the m odern addition of dis­ so n a n t harmony. S U M M E R S C H O O L B A N D STUDENTS W E H A V E Pre-War Instrument Accessories • L u d w ig D rum A c c e sso r ie s • Squire, B la c k D iam on d , an d R ed -O -D ay S trings fo r a ll strin g in stru m en ts n e ts and T ru m p ets • N o. 71/2, IO, an d IOV2 B ach m o u th p ie c e s for Cor­ • S elm er, W o o d w in d , P e n z e l-M u e lle r , and D ick S ta b ile C larin et m o u th p ie c e s • R eed s o f a ll m a k es an d num bers SPECIAL: O n e 1 2 0 B ass W u r litz er A cco rd io n $175 mium-7nuns A CO M PLETE M USIC SE R V IC E 2 5 3 0 G u a d a lu p e O n T h e D rag P hon e 9 3 9 8 O p p o site H o g g A u d itoriu m Here s What They’re Reading • “P r o c ee d W ith o u t D e ­ la y ” b y Sgt. Thomas R. St. George in A n othe r hilarious episode th e a rm y life of th e a u th o r o f “ % Po stm a ste r." • “A . W o o llc o tt — H U L ife and Hi* W o r ld ” tells by Samuel Hopkins Adam* One of A m e ric a ’s best known story of a u th o rs W oollcott’s life. An in tim ate frien d of W ollcott’s, Adams sprinkles the book with a n ec­ dotes o f the “ G rea t O ne’.’ the • “U p F r o n t” by Bill Mauldin c a rto o n ist all soldiers T he know — the s t o r y of Bill Mauldins O’seas service a n d how he drew his cartoons. “ H er ita g e R iv er” o f t h by Muriel Elwood An eventful, vividly charac­ terized, emotional, and su perb ­ ly scened novel of in life C anada in th e late 1600s. L O S T — B e t a T h e t a r n n e a r C h e m B l d g , o r M L. B. M a r y , na Fren< h P h o n e 2 - 4 1 3 5 . A l o W , A v e I i 48— Furnished Apts. 18694— Out of N ow here (You Came A long) Strange as It Seems Helen Forrest IO— Personals I L A D Y w o u l d • e n j e o n * i r a n -t p o r t a t io n w i t h l e a v i n g U n i v e r s i t y e a c h d a y e t 5 P . M. e n d g o i n g n e a r 2**19 b lo c k B ' i d i e P a t h . P h o n e k- 5 2 8 5 e v e n i n g * . 24— Help W anted Male W A M E D — F r e s h m a n f o r ■ta • c e h a n d . W r i t e B u d D a i l y , 9 1 4 rn m i r i s n * W . 2 2 n d S t . 34-A — For Sale, General F O R F A L L — B o y ' s b i c y c l e . S h e l b y F l y e r i c g o o d c o n d i t i o n , u n * n e w Ore a n d t u b e . L e a r n a b l e . M r * . A . B . H o l t , 2 1 5 h 2 c b t . Buvst War Bonds, Stamps TV A K T F D — F u r n i s h e d a p a r t m e n t f o r o n ­ c e r n n c y n o w o r S e p t e m b e r n o w F , * - » r r v i c e m a n c o u p l e m e m b e r . N o c h i l d r e n , n o p e t s . M e l v i n I P o p e . P h o n e 9 1 7 1 - 2 1 8 o r * - 6 0 0 3 . f i r s t bv j f a c u l t y ' 1 8 6 6 ’)— I Don’t Care Who Knows It I W alked In Glen Gray 45—-Rooms Furnished 23429— The Man I Love Fascinating Rhythm Hazel Scott C O R N E R e x p o s u r e . P r i v a t e t i l e s h o w e r . U s e o f r e c e p t i o n s o u t h e r n R O O M , r o o m a n d ic e c h e a t . P h o n e 8 - 5 5 8 8 . 23426— Liza Teachers ( u - t ) b e l o w u p TKA* HEILS P R O M O T I O N S — M a n y g o o d Pine* # in T e x a a , N e w M e x i c o , A r i z o n a . R e a d t o : P r i m a r y a n d e l e m e n t a r y m a n y u-t 1 1 8 0 0 , m u s i c u - t 8 2 4 0 0 , b a u d u - t SSK OO, p r i n c i p a l * S 2 4 0 0 e m p l o y w i f e $ 1 6 4 5 a r u f u r n i s h h o u s e , - l i e n e e a n d m a t h e ­ c o a c h e s u - t $ 2 9 8 0 , m a t i c s u - t $ 2 2 5 0 . c o m m e r c e u - t $ 2 2 5 0 . P h y . E d b o y s a n d f o r g ria $ 1 5 0 0 vip; m a n y p r o v i d e a n n u a l r e a c h $ 2 2 5 0 a n d R e g i s t r a t i o n Fre* n ee . p i p o * it ion t h r o u g h o u r a id . S C H O O L i ’h. 2 - 3 6 1 8 , o 2 0 E. S E R V I C E B U R E A U 3 0 t h , A . c l i n . t o M A N Y O T H E R S . 1 y o u ! in c b e t t e r . i n c r e m t n o n l y P a y if I’ve Got Rhythm Ethel Smith 23 3 9 2 — Just A Prayer A w ay My Mothers W altz Bing Crosby R E C O R D S H O P E v ery th in g in R ecord* 6 1 2 B raze* (N a lle B ld g .) P h on e 8-1131 SANDALS 99 # “ R u n w ay to th e S u n ” by Col. R o b e rt J. Smith J r . The a u th o r o f “ God is My Co-Pilot" the story of his life as an aviator. tells • “ A L i o n S treet*” I n T h e by Ad ria Locke Langley The story of a man destroyed by his love of power, and a woman forced to choose be­ tw een her love and deepest convictions. ‘T h e B ig T h r e e 1 by David J. Dallin A “ m u st’ book— a discussion o f post-war pow er politics by a m an t h a t has intelligently analyzed events. • "Put O ff T liy SHo«»” by E. C. Voynich An unusual historical novel by a woman who become f a ­ mous f o r her best-seller “ The in 1896. G adfly,” published T EX A S B O O K STO RE The Students Book Exchange' H e r e it is j u s t t h e t h i n g f o r y o u r l o n g w o r k i n g d a y a n d f o r s p o r t o c c a s i o n , In y o u r c h o i c e o f e i t h e r b e i g e t o o . o r w h i t e , p e r f e c t t o w e a r f o r n o w a n d a ll s u m m e r l o n g . C o m e i n a n d g e t y o u r s t o d a y . With Thh Wits Major Joe Kilgore Marries Patricia Jane Redman M a jo r J o * M ad iso n K ilg o r e , fa m e d Texas a rm y pilot, and Miss P a tric ia J a n e Redm an were m a r ­ ried S a tu rd a y the Randolph in Field Chapel. th e a te r M ajor Kilgore, a B-24 pilot in in the M ed iterranean 1942 and 1943, w ears the Air Medal with th re e oak le a f clusters, the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Silver Star, and th e Distin­ guished U nit Badge. He is now as­ signed to h ea d q u a rte rs o f the cen ­ tra l flying tra in in g command a t Randolph Field. He was a law stu ­ dent a t the University when he en te re d the service in 1941. The couple will reside in Sunset Hills, San Antonio, a f t e r a sho rt wedding trip. C ap tain J o e P e c k H art, who served sixteen m onths in the P a ­ cific, was m arried recently to Lo- nita Faye Curtis of Smithville. L i e u te n a n t ( j g ) J a m e s G illilan d of W eatherford , also back from the South Pacific, bro u g h t his bride home with him. He m arried in Auckland, New Billie Myall Zealand, last w inter. O ther Pacific v ete ra n s to m a rry University exes are A r t. I c W a l t e r L. N e ls o n and S e rge a n t W. J. Rousseau. Nelson m arried E u n ic e Currie on Ju ly 14, and S e rg e a nt Rousseau m arried EWa Jo C a b a ­ n a s on J u ly 21. ★ ★ O th e r Ju ly weddings include to L i e u t e n a n t Je r r y F e r n S p e ck Ed R o y ta n T o w n s e n d , USNR, in Dallas j u l y 17; H a zel K a m m e r e r ’45 and L ie u te n a n t William B. Defier now stationed in A ustin, in Panhandle Ju ly 8; Brunelle Hall and C h a p la in F e li x M. G r esh am , on J u ly 8. J e a n E li z a b e th B o w d e n and C arl C o o p er S t a n f o r d , USNR medical stu d e n t a t Baylor Medical College on J u ly 16 in F o r t W o rth ; and L a u r a K u y k e n d a ll, ’44, and L ie u te n a n t W. T. McGehee Jr. J u ly 15 in San Saba. Mrs. McGe­ hee was a m em b er of M o rta r Board, P a n Hellenic, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Delta Pi, Pi Sigma Alpha, a nd Delta Delta Delta. ★ Among the J u n e weddings were the following: Mollie Genevieve A rm stron g to L ie u t e n a n t V e r n o n H o w a r d H a r p e r N e w m a n , ex-stu­ dent, on J u n e 5 a t West P oint; V ir g in ia D u r k e e , ex-student, to Ensign R obert Lee B rinaker, US NR, J u n e 25 in H ouston; B a rb a ra Je a n P o r te r to L ie u te n a n t R ob ert N a p ie r C o r r ig a n , Sigma Nu, J u n e 19 in Indianapolis, Ind.; E liz a b e th J a m es , g ra d u a te , to E n s ig n B u ­ fo rd S t e w a r t , ex-student, in Aus­ tin July 19; an d Bessie Mae Love of Beaver, Okla., to C h arles Her- N ew Assistant Dean Comes; Miss Gebauer O n Vacation Miss M arg a re t Ball a rrived on A ugust I to be assistant d ean of women, filling the place recently vacated by Miss Lelia Holcomb, who resigned to be married. Miss Ball received her bachelor of a rts degree from Oberlin Col­ lege and from Mount Holyoke Col­ lege in M assachusetts, where she served as a resident fellow in one of the dormitories. Miss Dorothy Gebauer, d ean of women, le ft Saturd ay, July 28, on a m o n th ’s vacation in her home sta te o f Kentucky. She will r e ­ tu rn A ugust 26, in time f o r the term . The opening o f fall a ssistant deans will look a f t e r m atters, durin g her absence. th e L f. B o u r la n d V is i t s C am p u s L ie uten a nt Brad Bourland, fo r ­ m er Mica president, was a campus visitor S aturd ay. He was recently commissioned in Pennsylvania. D I N I N G D A N C I N G ENTERTAINMENT This THURSDAY and Every THURSDAY MOTON CROCKET •cid hi* 12 piece ORCHESTRA ^ CACTUS PRYOR Master of Ceremonies ^ VICTOR GRANT doing Charcoal Drawings THURSDAY 7:30 ’TIL MIDNIGHT 7 : 3 0 — 1 0 :0 0 D in n er 6 :3 0 — 1 1 :4 5 D an c in g Stephen F. Austin Hotel Dial 4-361 fo r R e se r r a tio n s KRUGER’S ON THE DRAG bort H e a t , ex-student, in P e r ry ­ ton, Texas on June 3. ★ V ir g in i a H u d s o n M artin , Alpha Xi Delta, Alpha Lambda Delta, Pi Lambda T heta, a n d P hi Beta Kappa, was m arried to Corporal Frederick Taylor W olf o f D ur­ ham, N. C. on Ju n e IO; a n d Enid MacPherson, fo rm e r m em ber of the Glee Club and th e O pera Com­ pany, was m arried to Bruce K. Hallock recently. J e a n e t t e E la in e R eal was m a r­ ried to Dr. R a y m o n d J. B o s t e r Jr. in Kerrville recently. Both g ra d u ­ ated from th e University School of Medicine in Galveston, where Mrs. Boater studied medical tech­ nology. Dr. Boster is a m em ber of Phi B eta Kappa a n d Alpha Epsi­ lon Delta. and J e w e ll P a p e S id n e y S. Bell, students, w ere m arried r e ­ cently in Austin. Bell, a geology m ajor from Rochester, N. Y., is a m em ber of th e Ex-Service­ men’s Association an d is o rg a n ­ izing th e O uting Club. Mrs. Bell is an in te rio r decoration m ajo r from A ustin. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. E le a n o r C h a n c e C ouch , ex-student from B ryan, was m a r ­ ried re c e n tly to F r e d W imberly of P a y n e M ara b le a n d L i e u t e n a n t D av id B o ren , ex-students were m arried recently in H enderson. S w eetw ater; C lara ★ C la ra cita B u rk s, ’44, w as m a r ­ ried recently to L i e u t e n a n t W. J. K ovar, a m em ber of Phi E ta Sigma, Phi Lam bda Upsilon, Omega Chi Epsilon, and T a u Beta Pi. ★ O ther re c e n t m arriages include th a t o f Helen Childress o f Mule­ shoe to ex-student L i e u t e n a n t W . G. M a rq u a rd t, U SN R; C ar oly n C onlisk, B.A. ’44, to Raymond R. Male; D o r o t h y J e a n Hill, s tu d e n t in 1944-45 to Private Boone Wil­ liams in Floresville; V ir g in i a C a l­ houn, Pi Beta Phi, to L ieu te n a n t Charles Joe McMordie in San A n­ tonio. ★ J a c k ie H o m p el, f o r m e r direc­ to r o f “ Time Staggers On,” and dancer in m any campus activities, was m a rrie d recently to William Price. Mrs. Price has sailed with an overseas u n it of th e Radio City Rockettes. ★ ★ in L ie u te n a n t K uenstler W ille n e H e n r y and L ie u te n a n t R ich ard E. K u e n s tle r , ex-students, will be m arried J u ly 27 the Denver Heights Church o f Christ. recently r e tu rn e d from overseas a f t e r serv­ ing eighteen moatiis in the China- Burm a-India th e a te r. He w ears the Air Medal and the Presidential Citation. The engagem ents of E lv a Jo Caban:**, ex-student, to S e rg e a n t W. J. Rousseau J r . of Pasadena. I Calif., and o f E la in a L evi, ex-stu­ dent to S e rg ea n t Robert I. Lans- burgh have been announced. OjuXa SjL iooVt You l o o t doe new w ay—fo o n g . fiwA mm! fi#Uur*L Lustre Face Powders give jom the rieUaato opaJetoatf* o f gco&bdhu—jpet d i n g for bowet, Pink Laatre, Peach Rachel Law n, Rom Rachel Learn* Brunette beatee, or Copper Lustre f ^ ................f LSO eta* FeAmt ta* W A T C H O U R W IN D O W S FOR DAILY GIFT SU G G ESTIO N S T W O M O D ER N STORES TO SERVE Y O U 722 C O N G R E S S Downtown ★ BUY W ITH C O N F ID E N C E 2236 G U A D A LU PE On the Drag * USE YO U R CREDIT REMEMBER — FOR Q U A L IT Y — SH O P AT KRUGER'S FIRSTI S U M M E R T E X A N Society THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1945 PAGE 3 B o lt o n ’* *Y’ T o p ic , S a n F r a n c is c o P aul Bolton, radio com m entator, will speak on the San Francisco Conference a t th e “ Y” T hursday night a t 7 o’clock. Mr. Bolton a tte n d e d the c o n fe r ­ ence as a representativ e of KTBC and several Texas newspapers. Club Notes Senors and Senoritas to Conga At Inter-American Fiesta Don y our sombrero, grab your senorita, an d conga over to the I n t e r .A m e r ic a n S ig m a D e l t a P i, A s s o c i a t io n fiesta F rid a y nigh t at Newman Club. Fro m 8:30 until 12 o’clock everyone interested in things Lat- in-American may dance to Latin records o r sing Mexican ballads with Gordon McNeil and his gui­ tar. Marylyn B ennett, p resident of Sigma Delta Pi, is in charge of a rrangem ents informal for party. Assisting her a re J a n e t Roy and Patricia Bay. this The guest list includes Dr. Ra­ mon Martinez-Lopez, Dr. and Mrs. P. M. Ynsfran, Mr. a n d Mrs. D. A. Schofield, Dr. and Mrs. E. R. Sims, Mrs. E. G. Currie, Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Long, and Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Villarreal. it Color photography and color prints will be discussed at the A u s tin C a m era a n d M odels C lu b Thursday a t 8 o’clock in Physic* Building 421. carbrough&Sons i i Fra-Ority A T O Pledges Dedicate Song A t 'Drugstore’ A new song w as dedicated to A lp h a T a u O m e g a mem bers and th e ir dates by the pledges a t a the ch ap ter drugstore p a rty a t house S a tu rd a y night. R efresh­ ments were served fro m a soda fountain, and the pledges e n te r ­ tained with “ come back” skits. Guests o f honor were Mr. and Mrs. William K ing and d a ug hte r and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph C. Goeth. ★ Phi Sigma D e lta s held initiation services f o r J e r r y Bailes, Max Tonkon, and Leland Schwartz. A dinner a t the c h a p te r house hon­ ored the initiates. I n t e r - F r a t e r n it y C ou n cil will 6 meet T h ursday evening o’clock a t El Charro No. 2. a t Personals J e a n B e g e m a n , B J. ’45, is in W ashington, D.C., visiting L ieu­ te n a n t and Mrs. Les C arpenter. Mrs. C a rp e n te r is the fo rm e r Liz Sutherland. While in the U niver­ sity Miss Begeman was secretary of th e s tu d e n t body. She is a m em ­ ber of Alpha Phi sorority. Miss Begeman plans to rem ain in W ash­ ington indefinitely. ★ M a rjo rie B e a t r ic e T a y lo r , Wave specialist (3c) an d ex-student, has arrived the H aw aiian Islands for duty. in The girls of W o o t e n Hall were the guests of F re d Adams a t a supp er on Lake Austin picnic recently. They w ent boating and swimming. P e tty O fficer and Mrs. J a c k ie F ie ld announce the birth of a son a t McAllen Hospital. P e tty Officer Field is a fo rm e r U niversity back- field star. Minton L. White, ex-student, has accepted the position of p rin ­ cipal of Alice High School. While atte n d in g the U niversity, he was on the varsity baseball and ba sk e t­ ball teams. N e v ill e Hay*, fo rm er University student, is now a receptionist with the Humble Oil Company in H ous­ ton. F reshm an women at Littlefield Dorm itory e n te rta in e d members of th e faculty a t Sunday dinner. ★ P a t Fow ler of Denton, B.J. ’45, has been added to the fac u lty of N o rth Texas S ta te T eachers Col­ lege, according to President WL J. McConnell, who named Miss F ow ­ ler an in s tru c to r of Journalism this week. She was church e d ito r fo r the T exan, and is a m em ber of Theta honorary Sigma journalism and Chi Omega sorority. sorority, national Phi, * ★ ★ ★ ★ Statesm an The Austin has am ong its s ta f f some of the g r a d u ­ ate stu d e n ts from the departm en t of journalism as well as some of the p rese n t students of the U ni­ versity. Among these are Mrs. Nella Mao Dieter, Helene Wilke, Mary V. Polly Smith, L. W . Wallace. Brooks, M argaret Myers, Mrs. L o r­ aine, B arnes Hood, Volney O’Con­ ner, Helen and Mrs. Jackson, Lillian Boyd, Weldon H art, Morris Midkiff, and Gordon Fulcher. Miss Horace Caldwell was also a m em ­ ber of the s ta f f until her m a r ­ riage recently. The fa th e r of H ild e g a r d Schm*- lenbsck, ad m inistrative secretary of the School of Law, was buried Monday a t 6 o ’clock. He died Sunday a fte rn o o n in Georgetown. in Miss Schmalenbeck Georgetown a nd to r e tu rn Friday. is now is expected Phi P*i fr a te r n ity had a ship-, wreck p a rty .Saturday night a t th® ch a p te r house. A Zeta rush p a rty was held W ednesday night a t the home of Mrs. Niles G raham . A w atermelon p a rty was held at the home of Miss Irm a Dean Fow­ ler for the ln t e r -V a r * ity C hristian F e llo w sh ip G rou p July 29. Newman Club has two new chaplains f o r the summer, F a th e r Richard Walsh and F a th e r Jerry M a gu ir*. Dean A m o Nowotny left Mon­ day for a sho rt vacation in Colo­ rado, ★ ★ ir ★ ★ ★ ★ B lack Cottons l o r J u n io r s A black cotton is a "m ust in every college girl's wardrobe. Select your midsummer black cotton now and wear it right into fall. C a p sleeves. W hite lace trimming. Sizes 9 to 15. 8.95 SCA RBROU G H’S COLLEGE SHOT, SECOND FLOOR G ardenias f o r A c c o m p a n im e n t A d d the finishing touches to a black and white ensemble. Tuck them in your hair, at your waist­ line, or at your 'shoulder. Small, medium, and large corsages of one, two and three Towers, W ith or without combs. 50c to 1.00 SCARBROUGH’S FL O W ER S S TR EE T FLOOR W hite Gloves Make white frosting against summer b !ack. In s!ip on, novelty s t y l e s and l o ng lengths. 1.00 to 2.98 SCA RBRO U GH ’? GLOVES, ST RE ET FLOOR 0orX r ; 7-£j'°’' O r a n g * Flower SU . I jostling j’of,on for ‘Im loot clear and J ' 1 suture I , ° ? H bracing re . «li". Helps I V°j n g. N o n-drvmr. LIM ITED SCARBROUGH’S COSMETICS, ST RE ET FLOOR DeVoto: ‘U T ...an Alert to the Republic Bernard Devote, Noted Critic and Historian, Views UT Scene From the ‘Easy Chair’ in August Harpers1 and Decides It Is ‘Excellent. . . That This Struggle . .. Has Not Been Passed O ff1. . . Oh the Rumor Factors — * By B U ZZ " W H A T S going to h a p p e n th is fall?** S tu d en ts , ste e le d to a s te a d y h a m m e r in g o f nerve - tin g lin g “ in c id e n ts ” on an a v e r ­ a g e o f one e v e ry tw o w eeks, hav e been ask in g this r a t h e r e a g e r ly th e p a s t f e w days— m a n y people don t believe a n y ­ th in g else could h ap p e n . O N LY a sh u tdow n o f th e Main Building, L aw School, Y MCA, a n d G arriso n H all could stop th e “ e v e n ts ” on this cam pus. E ven th e n B. Hall and th e E n g in e e r in g Building m ig h t c u t loose w ith some full-blow n upheaval. l a s t U N L IK E is n o t c le a r — even su m m er, th o u g h , th e p a t t e r n of com ing ev e n ts to p u r e guessers. T h e r e ’s no one to be fired, t h e r e ’s a p r e s id e n t to be hired b u t no one a ta lk in g a b o u t t h a t, t h e r e ’s no o p en po­ litical cam paig n e x c ep t a few ads in th e new sp a p ers a n d a few speeches a r o u n d th e c a m ­ pus, and even th e 18-year-old vote m o v e m e n t filed a w a y f o r th e p re se n t, a w a itin g a new crop of 21-year-olds to boost it. seem s ca m pu s Q U IE T now . th o u g h , m a y be nisi ending. T he is copulated p re d o m in a te ly by a t r a t a o f aw a y -fro m -h o m e-an d - 16-year-old ea m in g -to -sm o k e freshmen a n d by a s t r a t a o f iw ay -fro m -h o m e -a n d -g e ttin g -to smoke-in-public te a c h ­ es. In bo th cases, th e cause celebre c a n w ait while tobacco )urns. school W h e n S e p te m b e r comes, how ­ ever, th e brow n a n d re d leaves Mil begin to fall on th e c a m p u s igain, a n d all will be co lo rfu l ince m o re. L a s t su m m e r, o f co urse, it pas com m on k n o w led ge on th e th e f i r s t w eeks a m p u l f ro m if A u g u s t u n til H allo w e en t h a t lr. R a in e y w as to he dismissed. Unity was u n a n im o u s. B u t t h a t vas long ago. C U R R E N T b e s t r u m o r s on th e c a m p u s — r e p e a te d m e re ly b e c a u s e t h e y ’re on th e ca m p u s — h as i t t h a t : I ) A new p r e s i­ d e n t will be selected in S e p te m ­ b e r p r o b a b ly , N o v e m b e r a t th e l a t e s t , 2) he will be a BBA p r o f, a h is to ry p r o f, o r o n e o f tw o “ s u r p r i s e ” e d u c a t o r s f ro m o u t- o f- sta te . C O N S I D E R th e se as “ r u m o r f a c t o r s . ” Firing Line IN R E P L Y D e a r E d i t o r : T h e s i g n s which a p p e a r e d on v a r io u s t r e e s W e d n e s d a y w ere a m u s in g , wfe th o u g h t, b u t con­ f u sin g . T he K e n tu c k y sign, f o r in ­ s ta n c e , m ig h t com p letely be­ f u d d le som eone w ho did n o t r e a d t h e f o o tn o te s to th e r e p o r t of th e S o u th e r n A s s o c i a t i o n . . . T h e K e n tu c k y “ h ic k ” r e f e r r e d to in th i- sign is H. L. D onovan, p r e s i d e n t o f E a s t e r n K e n tu c k y S ta te Teacher'*- College, one o f t h e m e m b e r s of th e I n v e s ti g a t­ in g C o m m itte e — C h a irm a n o f th e C o m m ittee, a s a m a t t e r of f a c t. R eason f o r th e w r a t h of th e sig n -m a k e rs is t h a t P r e s i­ d e n t D o n o v an in­ c lu d in g fo o tn o te s to th e com ­ m it te e r e p o r t w'hich w e re m uch h a r d e r on th e T e x a s R e g e n ts t h a n th e r e p o r t p r o p e r . . . insisted on lu c k y a n d P r e s i d e n t D onovan a d m its to b ein g bo rn in the “ hic k ’’ s ta te r K rec eiving a B.A. f r o m th e “ h ic k ” U n iv e r ­ s e o f K en tu c k y , b u t a f t e r t h a t th e re c o rd is less clear. H e r e ­ ceived a n M.A. f ro m Columbia, w hich w e p r e s u m e p u ts him in the “ city slicker* class. A Ph.D. f r o m G eorge P e a b o d y College does no d am ag e to his r e p u t a ­ tio n e ith e r , since P e a b o d y is u n iq u e in th e field o f T e a c h e rs Colleges, . . . Sincerely , B. H. J . S U M M E R T E X A N CdiiosUali THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1945 PAGE 4 A h O m en A s tra nge , new wind blew w e s t across the Atlantic t h r o u g h t h e leaves of history last we ek a n d rustled books still unwritten, f o r the votes t h a t were counted in E n g l a n d a re still being counted a r o un d th e world. The forces t h a t w e r e oppos ed in E n g l a n d ’s election have th e ir c o u n t e r p a r t s in every political syst em — in­ deed, every climate of t h o u g h t — t h r o u g h o u t the world. So it is not, surpr is ing t h a t th e L abo r P a r t y victory has stirred a tu r b u l e n t s tr e a m of c o m m e n t from political le aders an d observers in this co unt ry an d stat e w'ho have keen senses of w h a t such winds m a y por tend. Texa s ne w s p ap er s , as a nota ble exa m ple , have been almost unanimous in noting th e swing in Britain as an omen of a new er a of conflict b et w ee n ideologies in this country. One characteristic, however, ha s d o m i n a te d the r e ­ sponse of high and low alike in this coun try to th e news from Br it ain : complete surprise. Stat es men , politicians, businessmen, editors, professors— those most seriously conc erned with such t r e n d s — se eme d s ta rt le d by the news an d th e n s o m e w h a t at a loss to explain th o ro u g h l y w h a t the new g o v e r n m e n t w ou ld mean. If such men as these w ere surp ris ed an d u ni n f or m ed , w h a t then of th e a v e r a g e m a n ? Since th e begi nnin g of th e w a r p er io d— s ta r t in g with th e fall of F r a n c e — the co nce rn of the United States has ce nt er ed by and large a r o u n d th e technological aspects of global fighting. N e w s p a p e r s have p ic tu r ed w a r as a conflict of a r m e d m i gh t and .scientific, res ea rc h r a t h e r Institutions of h ig he r t h a n as a conflict of ideologies. educa tio n have, of necessity, foll ow ed th e tr e n d by p la c­ ing em p ha si s on th e te chn olo gic al studies. As a re s u lt of this g en era l em ph asi s t h e re has deve l­ oped a w i d e s p r e a d te nd en cy to e n t r u s t the p o s tw a r re­ a d j u s t m e n t to the te chnologists of th e generation. In t h e re has a p p e a r e d a pr o ­ universities an d c o l l e g e s nounced tr e n d of s u p p o r t i n g the scientific and sacrific­ ing th e hum an iti es. Th e pr es u m p ti o n is t h a t if t e c h n o l­ ogy w on th e w a r it will v i n th e peace. Is it pro bab le , th o ug h , t h a t the peace of several billion tr o u b l e d souls can be won by testing tube and f o r m u l a e ? Is it logical t h a t t h e forces in conflict in En g l an d a r e to be th o r o u g h l y a n a l y z e d and under sto od an d a n s w er ed in scientific la bor at or ie s alone? If the election in E n g l a n d served any im m ed ia te p u r ­ pose it served to em p h a si z e t h a t h i g h e r educa tion in the United States must— if it is to .serve the nation well— em p h a si z e to an even g r e a t e r d e g r e e th e s tu d y of the sociological sciences. Unless th e political scientist is c o m p e t e n t to the pro ble m s of his s p h e re th e physical scientist is not safe in his own sph ere. Ed uc a tio n c an n ot safely minimize one s tu dy at th e expense of th e other. Accion Issuance last week of the new m a g a z in e Accion is in di cat io n— a most h e a l t h y ind ication— of the strong c u r r e n t of intelligent interest in L at in - A m er i ca n aff ai rs t h a t is increasingly ev id ent t h r o u g h o u t th e University. A l th o u g h not an official publication of th e institution, Accion was th e result of w o rk by University stu den ts a n d faculty alike an d is deserv ing of praise as an ou t­ g r o w th of the Univer sit y’s em p ha sis on relations with t h e ot h e r A m er ic an republics. Since the early da ys of the “ Good Ne igh bo r Policy,” La ti n -A me ri ca has assumed a ste ad il y increasing posi­ tion of im p or tan ce in th e pl a n n in g of c a re e r s by college youth. T h e University, of course, long ago took r eco g­ nition of this in the classroom a n d cu rr ic ula planning. Still, th ou gh , op po rtu ni tie s f o r d ev el o p m en t of an idiom­ atic u n d e r s ta n d i n g of th e lands to the South have been slight. Accion, as a p r ac ti ca l as well as li te r ar y ex p e r i m e n t in an u n d e r d e v e lo p e d field of periodical editing, affo rd s fine o p po r tu n it y to bring the La ti n- A m er ic an scene into a new focus for th e wide body of those interested here on th e campus. U n d e r the editorship of Selden Marth, sociology stu ­ dent, and associate editorship of Miss Eva Garcia-Uurrie, tu t o r in Rom ance Lan gu ag es, the first issue of the m a g a ­ zine w a s an e n co u r a gi n g edition from s ta n d p o i n t of both cont ent an d pr es entation. The ca m p u s needs more Ac­ cion of this sort. THE SU T e x a n T he S u m m e r T e x a n , s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f T he U n iv e rsity o f T ex a s, is published on th e c a m p u s o f th e U n iv ersity a t A u stin by T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b lica tio n s, Inc., on T h u r s d a y s a n d S u n d ay s. E d ito r ia l o f fic e s a r e in J o u r n a li s m B u ild in g 109, 101, a n d 102. T e le p h o n e 2-2473. A d v e r tis in g a n d c irc u la tio n d e p a r t m e n t s a r e in J o u r n a lis m B uilding 108. T e lep h o n e 2-2473. T h e T e x a n is e n t e r e d as second class mail a t th e post o ffic e a t A u stin , T exas, by A c t o f C on gress, M arch 8, 1879. M a s b o Associated Galle 6iate Press Official re q u e s te d ers itte e has b» en t a c t E at;* - A m ericas B . A. o r M. A. te r e s te d f l u e n c y T H E 'TEACHERS A p p o in tm en t Com ­ to co n ­ tea c h e r* w ith 'legree* who a re in ­ in Vene*ue!a. in Hue of E n g lish n ecessa ry . interested will please see te a bing Anyone in the se c re tary in S utton Mali 219. MIRIAM D O Z IE R , S e c re ta ry . T H E T E A C H E R S A P P O IN T M E N T C o m m itte e ha* been ask ed to recom ­ m end t o o t te a c h e rs f o r th e P an am a C a n al E o n , If in te r e s te d , ace s a la rie s a r e good. MIRIAM D O Z IE R . S e c re ta ry S u tto n H all 219. P A Y R O L L CH ECK S an d w a r ra n t! th e m o n th o f J u ly will be d is- to U n iv e rsity em ployees on th e ) :W A. M. to 1:00 P, M. to 4 :00 P. M. t f f tr tb u te d T h u r s d a y . A g. 2. b our* fro m an d fro m 2 -.0$ p . M i '<45. d u rin g C. H, S P A R E N B E R G , A u d ito r. In D a lla s on J u l y 16 B e tta G i r a r d , ex-Mtudent, w as m a rrie d to S t u a r t P a g e , a n d Hazel J a r r e l l w a s to W illia m M il** a i r t e d W o o d a ll J i ~ tx-;:lim iest. A S U B S C R I P T I O N R A T E S : F o r th e s u m m e r te r m th e T e x a n will be deliv ered in A u stin f o r 50 cents, provid ed th e place o f d eliv ery is w ith in th e c a r r i e r lim its, fro m N in e t e e n th to T w e n ty - n in th S tre e ts , inclusive, so u th to n o rth , a n d f r o m R e d R iv er S t r e e t on th e e a s t to S an G abriel S t r e e t on th e west. S u b scription r a t e by mail a n y w h e re o utside of A u s tin is 50 c e n ts f o r th e s u m m e r te rm . E D I T O R - I N - C H I E F . _________________________ H O R A C E B U SB Y A S S O C IA T E E D I T O R ------------------------------- M IC K E Y N E B E N Z A H L S ociety E d i t o r -------------------------------------------------- D o ro th y H u n tin g to n ___________ A m u s e m e n ts E d i t o r S p o rts E d i t o r --------------------------------------------------------------- Bill J o h n s o n J im m y G rove S T A F F F O R THIS ISSUE -------- N ight E d i t o r A s s is ta n t N ig h t E d ito r C o p y r e a d e r s ___________ ...D O R O T H Y H U N T IN G T O N -------------- Mickey N eb e n za h l .M arvin Alisky, J u d y G aston, Melba M arshall, S hirley H aa s, M ary E la in e L ow rey, J a n i e R ubs, H ilda C h a le ff , S u zan ne C a tle tt, Lou H o n e y c u tt, R. N. Moore, T o m m y L ay. ..Bill Jo h n s o n ...G abriel W e r b a , H o w a rd F itz g e r a ld N ig h t S p o r ts E d i t o r ........................ A s s i s t a n t s -------------------------- N ig h t S o cie ty E d i t o r ____________________________ A s s i s ta n t ~ Louise Cam pbell N ig h t A m u s e m e n ts E d i t o r ___________________________ L ela Belitsky i—1» 1.11 ».««. R e b a G r a h a m A i t i t t ■ ...I. 'I..,—p. ....... ■. ..I a • - Jo y c e Bell a good L a s t fall t h e B o a rd o f R e ­ g e n t s o f T he U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s d ism issed th e p r e s id e n t, Dr. H o m e r P. R a in e y. Since th e n a v io le n t f ig h t o v e r a c a ­ dem ic f r e e d o m has been going on in T exas. I t h as a r o u s e d f a r m o re people th a n such s t r u g ­ gles u s u a lly do an d, in f a c t, has sp r e a d all o v e r th e s ta te . E v en a t th is d ista n c e it is c l e a r t h a t Dr. R a in e y w a s f ir e d becau se he w as p rec isely th e kind of u n iv e rs ity p r e s id e n t would n o rm a lly w a n t a n d had been a d m in is t e r in g T e x a s U n i­ v e r s ity a c c o r d in g to t h e ideals lib e ral e d u c a t io n — so o n e ’s of is to cla ssify th is f irs t d esire p a r t i c u l a r su ppressio n. I t is a kind w ith which we a r e all too f a m i lia r up N o rth b u t w hich has g r a d u a lly bee n g r o w in g less c o m m on a n d m o r e easily w ith sto o d — an sp o ­ radic a t t e m p t t o g e t rid o f one p a r ti c u la r t h o r n in th e side of som eone, individu al whose ideas h ad p ro ved o f f e n ­ sive to a p a r t i c u l a r p e r s o n o r g r o u p ? O r do th e ta c ti c s used a g a in s t Dr. R a ine y a n d m o re p a r ti c u la r l y th e c h a r a c t e r o f t h e op positio n to him in d ic a te t h a t th is m a y be su p p re ss io n of a m o re s in iste r kin d ? Is T he U n iv e r s ity of T exas, t h a t is, b e ­ la te d ly m a k in g r o u tin e f ig h t w hich m o s t u n iv e rs itie s have h ad to m a k e in o r d e r to d ecen cies g e t ac ad e m ic es ta b lish e d th e episode a sign o f th e tim e s t h a t f o re s h a d o w s an a t ta c k likely to be m ade on m a n y e d u c a tio n a l in s titu tio n s th e U nited a s S ta te s r o u n d s in to th e p o s tw a r e ra ? th e r e ? O r iso lated, single th e th e is a H e re in th e N o rth it is s a ­ g acious to re a liz e t h a t th e f ig h t in T exas is c o m p lic ate d a n d t h a t it involves issues specific to T e x a s a n d o th e r s sp ecific to th e S o u th as w ell as th e basic issues o f fre e d o m co m m on to all colleges. No N o r t h e r n e r kno w s how m uc h to allow, fo r in sta n c e , f o r th e v ested i n t e r ­ ests o f G alv eston in th e m edical school, w hose p ro p o se d r em o v a l to A u stin h elped to p r e c ip ita te th e show dow n. N one o f us know s how m u ch o f th e tr o u b le m a y be d u e solely to g a n g f r i c ­ tion in T e x a s politics— th o u g h if ro ses o f full-b low n T e x a s politics a s com e to n a ­ tio n a l a t t e n t i o n a r e c o n c e r n e d a t all, p r o b a b ly we do n o t n e e d to k n o w m o re t h a n th a t. B u t a t a n y d ista n c e a n y o n e ca n r e c o g ­ nize a s ta te of m ind, a n d we m a y b egin th e re . such T e s t if y in g b e f o r e a c o m m it­ te e o f th e s t a t e le g is la tu r e , one o f th e r e g e n ts said t h a t no p a r ­ t ic u la r h a rm w ould be do n e if th e A m e r ic a n A sso c ia tio n o f U n iv e r s ity P r o f e s s o r s sh o u ld b la cklist th e U n iv e r s it y — w hich w ould m e an t h e n c e f o r t h t h a t no se lf- r e s p e c tin g t e a c h e r fro m o u ts id e th e s t a t e w ould jo in th e f a c u l t y — b u t t h a t u n f a v o r a b l e a c tio n by th e S o u th e r n A ssoc ia­ tion o f Colleges a n d S e c o n d a r y Schools w ould be “ q u ite s e r i­ o u s.” T h a t m a y be a clue a n d p e r h a p s it is r e in f o r c e d by th e r e m a r k o f a n o t h e r r e g e n t t h a t “ p o w e rfu l w o rk in g f ro m o u tsid e th e s t a t e w e r e th e whole f o r resp o n sib le a f f a ir . Those vicious o r g a n iz a ­ tio n s th e A A U P a n d th e A m e ric a n Civil L ib e rtie s U nion . t u r n e d o u t f o r c e s ” to be A sked if he believed t h a t a Booklet Outlines Bill to Law Procedure in Legislature A s t u d y o f la w m a k in g in th e T e x a s L e g is la tu re has been co m ­ pleted by th e B u r e a u of M unici­ pal R e sea rch a n d is p r e s e n te d in its la te s t booklet, “ H ow Bills Be­ com e L aw s is to m a y o rs, city b ein g r e s e a r c h b u r e a u s o f m a n a g e rs , public a d m in is t ra tio n th r o u g h o u t th e U n ite d S ta te s , a n d t o T e x a s le g isla to rs a n d citizens. in T e x a s ,” which r ele ase d D e p a r t in g fro m th e e x h a u s tiv e r e se a rc h e s d ea lin g w ith p a r ti c u la r g o v e r n m e n ta l problem s, t h e b u ­ r e a u in its la t e s t s tu d ie s p r e s e n ts a specific problem s w hich citiz ens m a y have in o b ta in in g th e sm o oth f u n c t i o n ­ ing o f s t a t e g o v e r n m e n t. c o m p a c t p ic tu r e o f W r it te n by Dr. Dick S m ith, i n ­ s t r u c t o r in g o v e r n m e n t, th is book­ let is th e th ir d one issued in th e b u r e a u ’s a c q u a i n t T ex a s citiz ens with th e m a c h in e ry o f la w m a k in g as one o f th e f u n c ­ tio n s o f s t a t e g o v e r n m e n t. p r o g ra m to T he booklet is b ein g s e n t to high school p rin c ip a ls in th e hope th a t it m ay help high school s t u ­ d e n ts become in te r e s te d in T e x a s g o v e r n m e n t, said Dr. S t u a r t A. M acCorkle, p ro fe s s o r o f g o v e r n ­ m e n t a n d d ir e c to r o f th e B u r e a u of M unicipal Research. Tw o o t h e r p a m p h le ts issued by the b u r e a u th is y e a r a r e “ Cities Ex Insurance Major Back on Campus E x -s erv ice m a n C. T. J o h n s o n is ba c k on th e c a m p u s — p ra c tic in g w h a t he le a r n e d in th e U n iv e rsity . Jo h n s o n , who m a jo r e d in in s u r ­ an c e, is now local a g e n t f o r th e S o u th la n d L ife I n s u r a n c e C o m ­ pany. While in th e a r m y he w as c o n n e c te d w ith th e in s u r a n c e and w a r bond d e p a r tm e n t , a n d won re c o g n itio n as th e le a d in g sa le s­ m a n o f in s u r a n c e a n d w a r bon ds f o r th e S econd A ir F o rc e C o m ­ m a nd . $253,000 Contract Let For New Negro College C o n s tru c tio n c o n t r a c t f o r th e H o u sto n College f o r N e g r o e s was! a n n o u n c e d by th e U n iv e r s ity of H o u sto n B o a rd o f R e g e n ts on J u ly I 12. T he c o n t r a c t of $2 2 5 ,7 0 0 is! th e f i r s t p a r t of a $353,590 b u i l d - 1 ing p r o g r a m f o r th e college. T he b u ild in g c o m m itte e rec eiv e d j a r e q u e s t f o r a u t h o r i ty f r o m th e u n iv e r s i ty p r e s id e n t to have p la ns 1 f o r d o r m ito r ie s an d o t h e r b u ild ­ ings o f b o th H o u s to n a n d stu d ied . th e U n iv e r s ity o f j the N e g ro college Ex Employed as Head O f Baylor News Bureau E lm e r C allihan , B.J. ’29, h as r e c e n tly been em p loyed by B a y lo r U n iv e r s it y to head a p r o g r a m d e ­ sig n e d to e x p a n d a n d revise th e ir p u b lic ity a n d jo u r n a l is m d e p a r t ­ m e n ts. Mr. C a llih an will be r e ­ sp onsible th e n e w s b u r e a u , s e r v in g in a n a d v is o ry c a p a c ity w ith a s s is ta n ts to help in t h e w ork. f o r m e r l y th e D e p a r t m e n t of c h a ir m a n o f J o u r n a l i s m a t D ra k e U n iv e r s ity in , D es M oines, Iow a. Mr. C a llih an w as .... „ f o r f o r in c o rp o r a tin g a n d O r g a n iz a tio n deals w ith in S o cie ty ,” w h ich p r e s e n ts th e g r o w t h of cities, t h e i r role in s o ­ ciety, a n d some of th e p ro b le m s o f th e u r b a n c o m m u n ity , a n d “ An to M unicipal I n c o r ­ I n tr o d u c tio n p o ra tio n in th e T e x a s ,” which m a j o r f e a t u r e s o f th e a v a ila b le f o rm s o f g o v e r n m e n t, th e p r o c e ­ d u r e cities, to w ns, a n d villages, a n d th e m e t h ­ ods f o r c h a n g in g f r o m o n e fo rm o f c ity g o v e r n m e n t to a n o t h e r . “ H ow Bills B ecom e L aw s in T e x a s ” is based on o b s e r v a tio n s of sessions o f th e L e g i s la t u re a n d c o n v e r sa tio n s w ith m e m b e r s a n d o t h e r I n t r o ­ legislative offic ia ls. du ctio n , re a d in g s , f in a l passag e , an d a n d a m e n d m e n ts o f bills, a c tio n s of th e c o n f e r e n c e c o m m it­ te e a r e co vered in th e small s tu d y as well a s veto a c tio n by th e g o v ­ e r n o r a n d its e f f e c ts . is t h ir ty - p a g e in S o c ie ty ” bo o k le t on T h e is p r e p a r e d “ Cities m a in ly by Dr. W ilfre d D. W ebb, r e s e a r c h a s s is ta n t in th e b u r e a u , who p o in ts o u t t h a t u r b a n g o v e r n ­ m e n t im m e d ia te ly resp o n sib le f o r th e g e n e r a l w e lf a r e o f som e s e v e n ty -fiv e m illion people. E v e n th e small to w n has a c e r ta in social a n d econom ic im p o r ta n c e to th o se living bey o n d th e lim its o f m u n ic i­ pal ac tiv ity . T h e u r b a n g o v e r n ­ m e n t is an i m p o r t a n t se rvic e-giv­ ing in s titu tio n f o r th e m a n y m il­ lions living in cities. B road p r o b ­ lems w hich cities m u s t d ea l w ith th e f u t u r e a r e a p a r t o f th e in g e n e r a l p ro blem o f r e t u r n i n g o u r c o m m u n itie s p e a c e tim e to econom y. a L i e u t e n a n t J e r r y T . S t o c k a r d , U n iv e r s ity s t u d e n t f r o m 1937 to is now s t a tio n e d a t P o p e 1940, th e F irs t F ield, N. C., base o f T ro o p C a r r i e r C o m m an d , f o r a o n e - m o n th c o u rse in n a v i g a tio n a l tr a in in g . Y A U K E A T R E “The North Star” A nd A n d r e w s S i s t e r s M a r t h a D r i s c o l l N o a h B e e r y Jr. N E W S — S H O R T “FRISCO SAL” T u rh an B ey S u za n n e Foster Cartoon N e w s “M il Estudiantes Y Una M uchacha” Enrique H erb era a n d J o a q u in N ew s Short In t h e A u g u s t issue of H a r p e r ’s a not ed li te r ar y critic, historian, an d a ut ho r, B e r n a r d DeVoto, w rit es of t h e University co nt rov er sy s te m m in g fr om th e dismissal of Dr. H o m e r P. Rai ney last N ove mb er. This article, a critical su m m a ti o n a n d analysis of t h e situation, is of int ere st an d significance to th e c a m p u s f o r t h e insight it a f f o r d s in u n d e r s t a n d i n g th e w ide nat ional in te res t th e local cont rov er sy has aroused. th e th e e d u c a tio n f a c u l t y who w as ★ p r o f e s s o r sh o u ld n e v e r q u e s ­ tio n a n y r e g e n t a n ­ law, a sw ered , “ I d o n ’t th in k a n y o n e has a r i g h t to q u e s tio n o r vio­ la te la w .” He told F r a n k Dobie, a d istin g u ish e d m e m b e r of j u s t h ack f r o m r e p r e s e n t i n g A m e r i­ can a t C a m b rid g e U n iv e r s it y t h a t “ we shou ld be non -p o litical views, in w hich o f c o u r s e p re c lu d e s a n y f a c u l t y c riticism o f th e B oard of R e g e n t s . ” One o f his col­ le a g u e s said f o r th e re c o rd t h a t “ if he ( a n econom ics i n s t r u c ­ t o r ) did n o t th in k th e sitdo w n s tr ik e th e m o st d a m n a b le t h in g in A m e r ic a n life, he d id n ’t d e­ th e U n iv e r ­ se rv e a place on s ity 's f a c u l t y . ” . . . o u r too in v a ria b ly A lr e a d y a s ta te o f m ind has been d e f in e d . W h e n m e n f r e e d o m no a t t a c k ac a d e m ic w e a p o n is too vicious, too dis­ dishonest. h o n o r a b le , o r T h e y invoke m ass p r e ju d i c e a n d m ass f e a r , a n d th e y t h a t in v a ria b ly d isc ov er t h e college involved is a ho tb e d o f h o m o se x u a lity a n d o f c o m ­ m u n is m . . . E v e r y on ce in a while one o f th e u n f o r t u n a t e s called in v e r t s does g e t on a col­ lege f a c u l t y b u t in a t t a c k s on a c a d e m ic f r e e d o m h o m o se x u a l­ ity is a g i f t fro m th e gods to th e a t t a c k e r s : a h o m o se x u al is o f t h a t M any f o r th e y hav e t e r r i b l e evils, sim ply a n y o n e w ho c a n n o t be b r o u g h t to hee l a n d a c o m m u n ­ ist a n y o n e w ho holds id e a s which t h e s u p p r e s s o r s do n o t like. Such t e r m s a r e m e re m ob th is p a r t i c u l a r in c ita tio n , a n d gang, b e in g in th e S o u th , h a d av a ilable o th e r s j u s t a s usual. p r o ­ th o u s a n d s f o u n d ly t r o u b le d T e x a n s h o n ­ estly believe t h a t th e R e g e n ts have bee n d e f e n d in g t h e i r s t a t e f ro m o u tsid e d o m in a tio n , t h a t th e y have s tr u c k a t r i u m p h a n t f re e d o m , blow in d ividu al saved T e x a s t h a t fro m in a w ay th e R e p u b lic o f T e x a s h as been r e n e w e d . T o an o u ts i d e r it is c le a r t h a t in s te a d th e y a r e r e g r e s s iv e a n a c h r o n is tic , t h a t th e y hav e only r e a r e d a wall a g a i n s t m o d e rn g o v e r n ­ m e n t, m o d e r n th in k in g , m o d e rn l i t e r a t u r e — in s h o r t a g a i n s t th e m o d e rn w orld. B u t t h e r e lin ­ g e rs in T e x a s th e g h o stly m e m ­ o ry o f a n u n in d u s tria liz e d so­ ciety. O f a f r o n t i e r w h e r e lack o f econom ic a n d political s a f e ­ g u a r d s a c tu a lly w o rk e d a g a i n s t th e h a r d e n in g o f class lines. O f p io n e e r sim plicities w hen f r u ­ g a lity a n d e n t e r p r i s e a n d m in d ­ ing y o u r ow n business w e r e e n o u g h in th e m se lv e s to m a k e life ex c e lle n t. To t h a t go ld e n n o sta lg ia th e w all a g a i n s t th e m o d e rn w o rld se em s a d e f e n s e a n d t h a t h a s p ro v e d a g a i n s t all g r ie v o u s in th e e x p e r ie n c e o f o u r g e n e r a t i o n a n d a p ro m ise t h a t S am H o u s to n will com e a g a in . . . ch a n g e . H e r e is a n a k e d f o r m o f th e old t e r r o r : t h in k i n g is d a n g e r ­ ous. H e re a r e su b v e rsiv e , c l e a r ­ m in d e d m e n w in n in g t h e s u p ­ p o r t o f h o n es t, tr o u b le d m e n to a n o t h e r p a n i c - s tr ic k e n a t t a c k on e d u c a tio n in t h e b e lie f t h a t e d u c a tio n , w hich m ig h t he th e i n t e r p r e t e r e n l ig h te n e d a n d g u id e of c h a n g e , is t h e b e g e t t e r o f In m o r e h o p e f u l tim e s Ave used t o believe t h a t such a n e f f o r t could n e v e r su c­ c e e d — t h a t t r u t h m u s t e v e n t u ­ ally w in, t h a t e d u c a tio n could n o t f in a lly be c o n t r o l le d .............. W e w e r e w r o n g a s hell itself. f o rc e s o f W e hav e se en s u p p re ss io n w in a f t e r tim e, d e s tr o y a d ozen n a tio n s , a n d com e w ith in a n in c h o f d e s tr o y i n g t h e w o rld . T h e y c a n it— a n d no w we still d e s tro y have se en th e m w in h e r e a t hom e, in T exas. . . . tim e th e W h a t h a s h a p p e n e d a t TfV? U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s has hap-'''? p e n e d to us all. . . . T he a c a ­ dem ic c o m m u n ity th e w orld o f in q u ir y a n d a p p r a is a l , t r u t h a n d o f p ro g re ss, is one. W h e n T e x a s has lo st its f r e e d o m we hav e lost ours. . . . th e se a rc h is o ne, f o r s tr u g g le It is an e x c e lle n t th in g t h a t th is h a s n o t b e e n passed o f f in T e x a s as a tr iv ia l a m o n g sq u a b b le p ed a g o g u e s , th e s t a t e has been t h a t b u t dee p ly shocked a n d has com e to see w h a t is a t sta k e. T h e y have so u n d e d a n a l e r t to th e Republic, n o tif y in g th e r e s t o f us t h a t w e m u s t be on g u a r d . *News Continued for Campus Serviceto Be Journal Gives Navy History To Be Distributed By Engineers (C o n tin u e d f ro m P a g e I ) S t u d e n t e d ito r-in -c h ie f of t h e is Bill B laney. S t u d e n t J o u r n a l e d ito rs of issue a r e th e N av y D a n n y H e a r n , R ich a rd K operski, J a m e s A. W ilkinson, J o h n E. Dill- man, A. M. W ilk e n d o rf, P a u l W oolrich, A llen D ow ney, a n d R icha rd K. O v e r s tr e e t. se c u r e in M ay m a y H o ld e rs o f tic k e ts w hich w e re th e i r sold copies o f th is issue by p r e s e n tin g th e ir stu b s a t th e ta b le in th e cor- tic k e ts m a y be pur- A d ditio n a l A d d tio n a l tic k e ts m a y he p u r ­ ch a se d a t th e o ffic e o f th e D ean of th e College o f E n g in e e r in g . Science, Engineering Good for TVA Jobs e n g in e e rs , E le c tr ic a l physics m a jo rs, a n d o th e r science m a jo r s in p o w e r econ om ics a r e tr a i n e d th e T e n n e sse e V alley n ee d ed bv A u th o r ity as p o w e r a n a ly z e r s a n d f o r e c a s te r s , a c c o r d in g to a l e t t e r received th is w eek by W . R. Wool- rich, d ea n o f th e College o f E n g i­ n ee rin g , f r o m th e T V A p e r so n n e l d irec to r. f ro m $2,400 S a la rie s o f th e po sitions o p en to $4,3 00 a r a n g e ye a r. A c c u r a te o f po w e r r e q u i r e m e n t s o f c u s to m e rs o f T V A is especially n e e d e d a t this s ta g e o f th e w ar. f o r e c a s tin g □TEE L A S T DAY — I n — “Home In Indiana” Also S P O R T S C O P E Ski Gull (C o n tin u e d f r o m P a g e I ) te e fo r t h e D e fe n se o f th e U n i­ v e r s ity h a s bee n in te n s if ie d by th e p r o b atio n r e p o r t fro m th e S o u t h ­ e r n A ssociation. M e e tin g s o f th e C o m m itte e f o r th e d e fe n se , how ­ ever, h a v e n o t been a n n o u n c e d publicly a n d p la n s a r e n o t know n. A t la s t n i g h t ’s m e e tin g o f th e A ca dem ic F r e e d o m C o m m itte e th e in d ic a te d m e m b e rs o f by a 17-13 v o te t h a t th e y did not f e e l a s t u d e n t convo c atio n is n e e d ­ ed a t p r e s e n t. O th e r a c tio n s of th e d ev o ted m o st of t h e tw o h o u r session to c o m m itte e — w hich t h e g r o u p Blakeway Invites Active Interest ( C o n tin u e d f ro m P a g e I ) N e w sh e e ts a n d p o s te rs on th e c a m p u s th is w ee k in f o r m in g s t u ­ d e n ts o f d i f f e r e n t view s o f th e c o n tro v e rs y g o t B l a k e w a y ’s a p ­ pro v al as “ e n l ig h te n in g .” “ I d o n ’t t h in k i t will h u r t th e s t u d e n t s . ” he said, “ b u t I believe th e y should g iv e close s c r u t i n y to th e so u rc e s o f th e in f o r m a ti o n . I w ould advise t h a t th e y w eigh th e f a c t s . ” L i e u t e n a n t R. G. W i l s o n Jr., U S N R f o r m e r U n iv e r s ity law s t u ­ d e n t is ho m e on leave a f t e r s e rv ­ a ing p a t r o l b o m b in g s q u a d ro n th e a t l a n t i c F le e t. th ir ty - o n e m o n th s w ith in dililFl L A S T DAY — I n — “BETWEEN TW O W O M E N ” A l s o N E W S — C A R T O O N » Lon M cA llister J e a n n e Crain Van Joh n so n Lionel B arrym ore discussion — w as n o t r e p o r t e d ex­ c e p t f o r t h a t th e se rv ic e w o u ld c o n tin u e . th e a n n o u n c e m e n t i n f o r m a ti o n $335,000 in Fellowships For Science Research T h e R o c k e f e lle r F o u n d a t i o n a p ­ p r o p r ia te d $335,000 th is w eek f o r p r e - d o c to r a l fellow ships in n a t u r a l science, follo w ing a pro p o sal f o r m o re r e s e a r c h in n a t u r a l scien ces by Dr. V a n n e v a r B ush, O ffic e o f S c ie n tific R e sea rch , W a sh in g to n . F ello w sh ip s will be a d m in is t e r e d by th e N a tio n a l R e sea rch C ouncil. Y o u n g men t h e a r m e d fo rc e s f o r th is p u r p o s e a n d s t u d e n t s sho w in g p ro g re s s in r e ­ se a r c h will be eligible f o r th e f e l ­ lowships. r e le a s e d f ro m o f o f th e C o l o n e l E d w a r d M. F i c k e t t , h u s ­ f o r m e r D o ro th y b a n d M a th e r , U n iv e r s ity g r a d u a t e a n d d a u g h t e r la te W . T. th e M a th e r, p r o fe s s o r o f physics, a c ­ co m p a n ie d G e n e ra l D w ight D. E is e n h o w e r a t r e c e p tio n s in W a s h ­ re c e n tly . ingto n a n d N ew Y o rk to Colonel F i c k e t t will r e t u r n E u ro p e as a s s is ta n t c o m m a n d a n t o f th e S e v e n ty -n in th Division. Now Show ing Sulio Brancho F ern a n d o Cortez ( I n S p a n i s h ) “LA CORTE DE FARAO N ★ ★ ★ ★ LA TE ST N E W S Em pire State • Short r r v j i M i E n d s T o d a y * 2 5 c T i l l 5 P. M. I I S ! em ST A R T S F R ID A Y 2 D A Y S ON T H E STAGE! S o u t h ' s L e a d i n g HILLBILLY SHOW! S T A R T S FRI DAY J o h n n y B r e n d a J O Y C E S H E F F I E L D T a r z a n and T h e A m a z o n s In l'& CALLAHAN A N O T H E I R - ' • LUE R I DGE MOU NT AI N FOLKS" - (i “ H er Lucky N ig h t ” 7 r jU t lT f ^ ST A R T S F R ID A Y ----------------E N D S T O D A Y -------------- G r e e r G A R S O N In ‘T h e V a lle y o f D e c isio n ’ G r e g o r y P E C K