D ig in W ith Spurs at All-University Dance Saturday Night T he T exan T h e Pf r s t C o l l e g e D a l l y I n t h e S o u t h V O LU M E 45 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1944 Six Pages Today No. 115 Mature Faith Not Finished, Says Dr. Smith Infantile Religion M ethod of Escape For U n b alan ced “ I am n o t t h in k i n g a b o u t Students Pass Goal, ’Fire’ W ith *23,839.70 Billy Mitchell's Pre-Drive Concert ■I Pilot Here Surpasses Quota Interviews G irls For A ir W A C S m a tu r e f a ith in th e sense of a f i n - 1 said Dr. Blake- ished p r o d u c t,” Sm ith, p a s to r o f th e U n iv ersity j B a p tis t C hurch in sp e ak in g to th e Climaxing all efforts at the University during the Fourth U p perclass Club of th e **\ ” T h u r s - ; j War Loan Drive, or any war loan drive yet, studenta day night, “ b u t r a t h e r of a m a t u r ­ While Russia has one m i l l i o n ; d o u b l e their $10,000 goal yesterday with a total of ing faith . T h a t, I th in k , is w h a t S ain t P a u l h a d ’ in m i n d ’ w hen he: " o m e n se rv in g in actual combat $ 2 3 , 8 3 9 . 7 0 worth of bonds and stamps, faculty and em- ployees have responded to letters from the war committee -poke c o n c e r n in g him s elf: with $37,121.50 worth of bonds to date, and the University purchased W ednesday $2,280,000 worth o f bonds from the Austin Women's Victory Committee. I t h a t I have a l r e a d y a t ta i n e d o r a l r e a d y am m a de p e r f e c t. B u t I press to w a r d t h e m a rk . , . . ’ ” * N o t;a n d 377 o ut o f e v e ry B y M A R J O R I E W A L B E R G in A m erica, th o u sa n d w omen in E n g la n d a r e in m ilita ry service, th e pow er th a t is holding th e d e s tin y o f the whole w o rld in h e r hands, th re e o u t of e v e ry th o u sa n d w om en a r e serving in a m ilita ry c a p a c ity ,” sta te d C a p ta in J o h n V. Deuel, d istric t liaison officer in c h a rg e of re c ru itin g a i r WAC?, who A ustin to lead th e B rooks Field r e c ru itin g te a m in p r e s e n tin g th e I a i r W A C s p r o g ra m to w om en. to T e x a s is in I piloted th e A tla n tic , — -------- ♦ $ 2 1 ,5 0 0 ; C a p ta in Deuel, w ho M aj. Kilgore Talks To A ir Institute Army Flyer Lauds Fighting B-24's Other purchases at the University included the follow ­ ing: University Co-Op, $12,000: University trust fund, L aw Review, .................................... $6,000 ; C u lberson F u n d , §2.000} and B e ta G a m m a S igm a, $100, S tu d e n ts alone p u rc h a se d $10,000 th e Dalles tic k ets w o rth o f F r a n t z con cert, which, a d d e d to the “ F irin g D ay” to ta l, m akes $33 ,839.70 w o rth o f bonds and sta m p s the is not F o u r th W a r Loan D rive over y e t, w ith a lm o s t a m o n th to go u n til th e e n d o f F e b r u a r y , B u y in g f ro m 1 0-cent s ta m p s to $1,000 bonds, individuals a n d or* t r y in g j g a n iz a tio n s m a do it possible f a t s u r Pas3 th e 510,000 goal y ester- 0I1 m u d a n d clay | d*y w ith p en n ies, d im e ,, a n d d o h c a m p u s quota- filling Wlth e n « m e * 0 ,rt A lp ha Chi O m ega, Chi Omega, ta k e mil- j a mi w ings to r n , w*as paid to tit© j a n d A lp h a G am m a D elta sorori- n ig h t by M a jo r J o e ties ea ch purcha sed a $1,000 bond, th is g ia n t B-24 the P an h ellen ic b o u g h t $500 w o r t h of of A e r o n a u tic a l Sci- bonds. A lpha E psilon Pi has b ought of R e fu s in g to d r a w a c o m p a riso n i bonds d u r in g th e drive. S m aller fro m o th e r o r g a n i z e tjons pushed the c a m p u s f a r above its goal, a n d th e bonds b o u g h t w ith th e $1 adm ission m o n e y to the w ar bond dan c e S a t u r d a y n ig h t will in c re ase th e to ta l to a n even G eneral Billy Mitchell in th e bat- I in te rview ed j tie of U niversity girls T h u rs d a y a f te r - n o n who would like to jo in th e I W o m e n ’s A rm y C orps in a n effort to t h a t ! sp e ed victory. U rg in g A m erc ian w omen rea lize t h e un- p o r ta n c e o f e x e r tin g eflFort to w a r d lalldi m u s t bv victory, the c olorful f l y e r ; Ioadi said, “ W e are b uild in g an air- L . . * , . p la n e e v e r y five m i n u t e , n ig h t a n d “ elds> *n<1 day, a n d i t ’s g o in g to lions o f hands to k e e p a r m a d a w inging. T h e A m erican K ilgore w h e n he spoke w omen m u s t th e y have a sta k e in th is w a r as well as th e m e n . And like w om en o f A m e ric a they m u s t rise beside t h e m e n to m e e t this w orld challenge in th e n am e o f decency, arid ju s t ic e .” w ith is said a b o u t in c o m b a t, u sin g some f o u r t e e n e n ­ is e x tre m e ly gines. D e s e rt sand h a r d on th e engines, c u t tin g th e ir the B-17, M a jo r K ilgore p u rc h a se s the a v e r a g e B-LM s final goal which con ditions, such as se v e re over- “ The A rm y A ir F orces, highly th e ir ev e ry I o p e r a te u n d e r seven ty -o n e missions I n s t i t u t e ences. t h r o u g h h is to ry , s tu d e n ts. A n d a p p r o x im a te ly rig h te o u sn e ss, $700 w o r t h t o a plane th e m ost T rib u te t h a t can realize t h a t la s t life f o r the ... to a I in en listin g w omen f o r , selective A ir W A C service, n e e d y o u n g wo­ m en of college ca lib re to p e r f o rm the scores o f vital g r o u n d fo rc es,” a p p e a le d C a p ta in Deuel, a t the sam e tim e showing the c h a n c e s f o r y o u n g women to ac q u ire a c a r e e r in a highly skilled ^ated ta sk s w ith See M IT C H E L L , P a g e 6 Delta Gam House Damaged by Fire A fire o f unknow n orig in razed th e th ird floor o f th e D elta G am ­ ma c h a p te r house la te T h u rs d a y a fte rn o o n . No on© w’as in ju re d , b u t c lo t h in g , r a d i o s , „ „ „ . i th e b la r e p a n d o t h e r I K i l g o i c s j_ ° b o u t t h r e e h u n d re d hours, g r e a t e r n u m b e r. O n e p la n e cited flew eig h t ^ h u n d r e d miles back to its base in I M sp ite o f I d ir e c t h it on th e l e f t ; j o s h u te an,! b o ught w in g which l e f t a tw o - fo o t hole. B o o th j w „ e m a n ,led bv 0 T h e la n d in g o f a p la n e w ith its j , ck e t M o n a r B o a rd f o u r en g in es d e a d was also , he ju n i* t ' - | a n d sophom ore classe s,"an d B r a ts . stud ents’ lived up to th e ir o f stam ps. ^ B adly to r n fields le f t by Rom­ mel in his r e t r e a t had to be used r e g a rd le s s tim es r e q u ir in g as m uch as tw o miles f o r th e take-off. o f c o n d itio n s so m e ­ ! no a S la p -a -Ja p cockail,” “ W e g u a r a n t e e no h a n g o v e r a from p o s te r a t the B r a t s ’ booth in f r o n t of th e U nion sta te d , a n d a f t e r one cup o f th e w a t e r w ith a c h e r r y an d e n o u g h c h e r r y ju ic e to m a k e th e w a te r red, ev e ry b o d y knew w h at w as m e a n t. R e p a ir crew s o fte n able to s a v e p lan es th o u g h t com pletely lost in the m inim u m tim e w e re c o m ­ m e nd ed. “ F o r tr e s s o f t h e Sky/* a film M ajor J o e Kilgore, U niv ersity ex w h o spoke a t th e bond r a lly W e d n es d ay n ig h t, w as p r e s e n te d r e c e n tly r ele ase d by B oeing A i r - I a ^rert given one if th e y b o u g h t a th e de-! bond. T h e B r a ts sold •* e o f bonds a n d from I velopm ent o f th e B-17 1 conception in 1934 to i t , p r e s e n t sta m p s w ith t h e i r S lap -a-Ja p cock- sta m p o r $1,187.20 w o rth talk. T ra c in g its n R. O. T. C. Juniors, Seniors W ill G et Commissions Feb. 28 Geologist A n d r e w s A g o g Surprise Ratings Greet 53 Jubilant Juniors th e n ig h t o f | ^ t u l a t i o m T a n d ’ w isecrack-. B y M I K E C A R P E N T E R (to use b e fo re N ovem ber I or 1944 will receive commissions as . . /* F if t y - th r e e o f th e h ap p iest, no, th e ir the “ d e iirio u se s t” own w o rd s ) m e n in T e x a s w ere t e a r in g a r o u n d A ndrew s, th e N.R. O.T.C. dorm , T h u rs d a y , w hoop*1 ing, h ollering, and s w ap p in g con* I t took b u t a s h o r t tim e f o r th e sign ificance o f th e o r d e r to! soak in, an d th e n , f o r g e t t i n g f o r! a m o m e n t th e solem nity of th e o c-| F if t y - th r e e ju n io r s h a d j u s t re- i casion, th e ju n io rs who had ju s t ! reived w ord from C o m m a n d e r D. {been o rd e re d “ f r o n t an d c e n t e r ’ J . F riedell the d o u b le’’ brok e ra n k s and r e - i o n ceive com m issions F e b r u a r y 28 j loosed a yell t h a t will echo f o r ; a long w ith th e fo rty -se v e n seniors, j m o n th s to come on beaches fro m i they wmuld t h a t Men Speed Up f l t o l Months Stationing Orders Expected Soon O ne h u n d r e d m e m b e rs o f the N aval R. 0 . T. C. a r e e x p e c te d to receive com missions in H ogg Me­ mo,,a1 A u d ito riu m F e b r u a r y 28. In a d d itio n to f o rty - seven seniors, fifty -th re e m e m b ers o f the j u n i o r class have been a d ­ v anced a n d will g r a d u a t e w ith th e seniors. Som e of th e ju n i o r class a r e being g r a d u a t e d f ro m tw o to f o u r m o n th s ah e ad of schedule to com ply with o r d e r s o f th e B u r e a u of N aval P erso n n el. C o m m a n d e r D. J. F rie d ell said T h u rs d a y t h a t o r d e r s f o r s t a tio n ­ ing th e men a r e e x p e c te d b e fo re F e b r u a r y ^3. “ T he men a r e all e a g e r to gd,” he said, “ T h e y a re all busy now b u y in g new u n i­ f o r m s .” , . d u e to th e e x tre m e , u r - ; Calais to Singapore, g e n t need f o r N aval o ffic e r s . . .” j C o m m a n d e r F r i e d e n s voice droned fo r ! on as he re a d th r o u g h th e bulletin > who has r e q u e ste d su b m a rin e duty. those at noon f o rm a tio n , “ all j u n io r s , . J “ T h ey need o ffic e rs who w ould have g r a d u a te d on o r f o r See RATINGS, Page 2 “ We know w'hat th e y w*ant us r,” said Buddy Cain, a j u n io r U A | r 3 n A DR. FRED M. BULLARD Geologist Urges J I * I I l l S i f i V Dr. Bullard Tells O f Paricutin I n tr y i n g to u n d e r s ta n d a m a ­ t u r e f a ith , c o n tin u e d D r Smith, co n s id er f i r s t th e c h a r a c te r is tic s of a child. T h e r e a r e m a n y m a rk s o f childishness: a child fee ls him ­ self to be all-p o w e rfu l, and he is not a w a r e of a n y a s p e c ts of r e a l ­ ity g r e a t e r th a n his w an ts . Child­ ishness in a d u lts is seen in pout- into t e m p e r ta n tr u m s , th e U n iv e rsity ’s ex- an d th e Uke. The child also be- geology a n d lieves th a t he is th e c e n t e r of the p e r t on v o l c a n o e s , would like to in te r e s t geological o r g a n iz a tio n s in p d i v e r s e , know ing n o th in g a b o u t co-o p e ra tin g to establish a p e r m a - 1 o th e rs e x c e p t t h e i r a b ility to su p ­ is their t h , child h a . a sh o r t- ra n g e view o f life. He w a n ts F . h . . , in a M e x i a , co rn ow n w ay. T hen Dr. F re d Bullard, p ro fe sso r o f ; inF- ply his w an ts. A m o n g a d u lts to nave Going, Going-- Union Auction Saturday Noon Article by Prof In Printers Ink . Post-W ar A viatio n Frederick’s Topic Pot( 1 t jai m n g n s f r o m tho sen* J V m r c ’as.' a rc W. T. B arn'm ur e, A. KL Bonrr-t m m u , J . F. B r o " der. 0. B. B u fo rd , J r ., R. E . B u r n e t t, W. A. Burns, I). S. Caldwell, G. T. C h a rlto n , H, T. Chilton, O. M. Coir, J. N. Cow an, J. Iv. Doole. F . L. D over, J . D. D yer, R. S. E d m u n d s, W . A. E k lu n d , J . H. G a rn e r, J . D. Gould, J r ., C. B. G raves, H. H. H appe l, H. P. H od ge, V. L. H u m p h re y , A. P. Jo h n so n , T. L. Jo n e s, C. L. Lichte, H. R. Lowe, C. NL M a rtin , J . 0 . published in P r i n t e r ’s In k , a w e e k -1 g o n e , A nd almos‘t M eCaldin, W. W . M cGinnis, Billy | ly a d v e r tis in g and sales m agazine,! se m i-annual U nion auction M cReynolds, C. E. Mitchell, C. W. | by Dr. J o h n H. F re d e r ic k , profes- M u e h lb e rg e r, R. C. N orris, M. C. , sor of T r a n s p o r ta t io n a n d in d u stry . P e a r s o n , R. G. P e te r , H. B. Rule, The the f i r s t p a r t a p p e a r e d O S ch le y cr. W G. Shu dde. W . : l . t e s t issue sn,I bore a n o te from I t h in g s th e y in v a ria b ly contain toe e d ito r sa y in g m a t in asKing a m o n g th e unclaim ed item s fro m v. o t e p n e n s n . the e d ito r sa y in g t h a t S te p h e n s, R. in ask in g , a m o n g the unclaim ed ite m s fro m V. M. S u tto n , J. W ildenthal Jr.. P ro fe ss o r F r e d e r ic k to p r e s e n t a the U n io n 's lost a n d found d e p a rt- . S. W in ters. A. M W o lfo rd , and su rv ey of th e aviatio n business, he; m e n t W hen the gavel comes d o w n i i I * . Ves, . , in , , i gavel comes d o w n l , on th e d o ck e t f o r S a tu r d a y a t 12 j u ‘ v.?. noon F v e r v t h W noon, , pip®* t iv e r y tn m g fro m cqats o r th e m a n y , to p u rse s a n d T he fifty -th re e ju n io r s a r e S. G. j him .” H ave you lost y o u r b est f rie n d ? n e n f o b s e rv a to ry a t E 1 P a ric u tin , D on’t e e t excited* D o n ’t oho ne the F B .lf e ith e r ! Y ou w o n ’t have j to look far. because y o u r frien d ! f ^ d * will p ro b a b ly be w h e re you can j D r* Bullard th in k s that we a re w hat he w an ts w h e n he find him S a tu r d a y if you lucky I n o t tak!!1f a d v a n ta g e of this phc- A m ong a d u lts i t goes u n d e r the people will h a rk e n to th e call of nom enon to s tu d y geology in the I n am e o f e x p e d ie n cy o r practical- the a u c tio n e e r. th e volcano which began e r u p tin g ! the d e t e r m in a tio n th e ! a p p e a r in th e I m aking. M ost geological processes j ity. a re so slow th a t c h a n g es do not 1 lifetim es o f m a n y t h a t ’s I *e<>k>guts. C h a n g e s a t El P a r ic u t in . 'I1 f. L_ A .. . , h a t ' th e rJ { workl . . Bv and bv th e child discovers in which he d i f f e r e n t fro m th e t h o u g h t it to be A m a t u r i n g P a r ic u t in last su m . i one ne i n o u g n t a to De a m a n u rin g ._ person a d j u s ts him self to th is ex- p an d in g r e a liz a tio n of a w*orld be- D r B u l i a ^ d I y » ” d h im - B u t he m a y n o t (frow h e re “ P- One w ay o f e s c a p e 'is religion. hours. _ ____ . . . s . e V isiting El ' '.tj of . . , . cn a num ' , .. . , is a n religion " i n t e r on El , P a ric u tin i l l u s - 1 I n f a n tile r n ini.pd nhntnsm mh# pn cto ^ra p n s- illusion a lb e it a v ery com m on one. God Lf The U nited S ta te ? g o v e r n m e n t! becomes o m n ip o te n t to th e person the . I | t? t e *k* ° « ern n i*L' | w ith the _ n t D r. B ullard to th e H a w a iia n w ith s e n . Dr. B u l l a n ! to the H aw aiian volcano o b s e rv a to r y a t M ount KU I sense th a t He supplies h i s ' w a n ts lauea in 1939 to do research. Al­ th o u g h he missed th e e ru p tio n by five m onths, Dr. B ullard becam e a good f rie n d o f Dr. T. A. J a g g e r , Who is p e rh a p s th e w o rld ’s g r e a t ­ e s t a u t h o rity on volcanoes. See S M IT H , P a g e 2 in f a n tile in f a n tile religion relig ion Ex in Fifth Army As Correspondent Dr. Bullard w as asked t o c r it i­ cize an article on El P a r ic u tin b e ­ f o r e th e Na­ tiona l G eographic Magazine. its p u blication W ith passports to I ta l y in h i s 1 in in in Set at 121 for U. T. One h u n d r e d tw en ty -o n e Univer* D e p a r t m e n t In g r e a t dem and as a le ctu rer, pockets, an offic ia l w a r corre- Dr. Bullard fin d s that people are s p o n d e n t’s a r m band on his newly-! issued u n ifo rm , and a p o rtab le! fasc in a te d by volcanoes. He gave ty p e w r it e r packed f o r ac tio n , ex- th re e le ctu res last week, a n d will s t u d e n t WHck F ow ler, r e p o r t e r fo r th e Dallas M o rning New^s, is h o u r ­ ly a w a itin g o r d e r s to join the Al- j lied F ift h A r m y ’s m a rc h o n Rome. th e f i r s t co r­ is re s p o n d e n t a c c re d ite d by the W a r in- r e p r e s e n t an to ex- n e w s p a p e r sity s tu d e n ts th a t a re to g r a d u a te dividual T exas a f t e r J u ly I will be given a deft r-1 elusively. U nlike th e correspond* m e n n t, Dr. J. A. B urdine, vice- e n ts w ho have h e r e to f o r e re p o rte d presid e n t an n o u n c ed T h u rs d ay . A J f o r g ro u p s of n e w s p a p e r s or press canvass m ade from the College of associatio ns, F'owler will cove r E n g in e e r in g , a n d C hem istry, Phys-1 t h e w a r ics showed th a t JTX s tu d e n ts wore ell- 1 and T exas in te r e s ts ii: mind. g ib le . T h e li s t d o e s n o t a p p l y t o ; pre-m edical studen t?. cr The U niv ersity ami the govern- sw a rm e d ash o re at S ale rn o carry - 1 F o w l e r i n s t i g a t e d th e th e D allasites a n d Geology W ick F'owler a n d T exans in R L* iJmTTwrnid W Y a n ^ d e r j L'onsum ption of Allen, C. J . A rnold, J r ., C. D. Baird, F. W. Bellows, L. T. Bos­ well, J. E. B o rd ea u , J . C. Cain, B. F\ C a rro ll, J r ., B. A. Copass, III, M. E. Cross, L. F, Cum bie, A. M. D errick, J r . , G. Elizondo, 0 . VV. F a u n tle r o y , J r ., N. D. Fla- dos, B, S. Flem ing, R. E. F u g e, I). G m d le r, C. R. G ra h am VV, K. Grice, FL S. H astin g s, B. R. H atley , P. M. Hunt, J r ., E. B. Jo h n so n , J . C. L ivingston, L. E. Loveless, J . FL SE, M. Gale, m 7 w S0 G r> r P a * it l' v I v5PPc * S anders, M. R. Scholl, J r S eay, H. FL Seiko, M. H. Simon, J. ll. Smith, M. F. Smith. C. F. S tein e g er, J r ., A. R. T hom as, J r .. V eer, H. J, W e te g ro v e , A. D. Will b ern , H. J. W illiams, WL H. W il­ son, R. G. W in ters, a n d WL A. Youngblood. 'W h a t O h . a t t e A e F R I D A Y Morning \ g . 1 2 — B o a rd m a n Robinson pic­ tures, A cademic Room, M.B. 11:15 — S p iritu a ls by R adio H ouse W orkshop, W O A I. A f t e r n o o n 2 - 5 — Robinson exhibit, Academ ic Room. 3 :3 0 — Dr. A. C a n e l l Ellis will i th e) speak on “ O u r P eril a n d W a y O u t,” KTBC. 4 — D e p a r t m e n t of F'ine A rts pre-! se n ts fre e show ing of R ussian; films, P.B. 201. 4 - 6— Z eta a lu m n a e te a , 1510 G a s­ was in a u g u r a te d on The over-all p ic tu re o f aviation tw o bases. , F irst, th e d iffic u ltie s it m u s t o v e r­ come, and its possibili­ second, ties. “ Too m a n y people a r e lulled i into the b elief t h a t we will, as a So come one, come all, a n d tr y fo r a p ro fitab le bid. N e gro Education Story To Be on Radio Friday The T exas School o f the A ir tre m e n - will tell a sto ry o f N eg ro educa- m a t t e r of course, see a in com m ercial tion a n d of those who m ade its dous d e v e lo p m e n t air t r a n s p o r t a t i o n , w ith m a n y new I b e g in n in g the airlin es com in g into th e in d u stry , “ Music Is Y o u rs” p r o g r a m goes on and possible w hen I pans ion t h a t t h e r e will be g r e a t e x - j a t 11:15 o’clock ( p 1' *G11 Patton* I F r e d e r ,c k a s se rte d . D ra w b ac ks to I su n g by th e Radio H ouse C h orus give f o u r th is w eek. th e in d u s t r y will be n u m e ro u s — a r e som e which w e re used a f t e r . _____________________ * i t h e r e a re to be 600,0 0 0 | th e Civil W a r as songs o f c o n - 1 • v*Vfin> IU UC UVV,UUU! m c v i l l i * 1 skilled pilots w hen the w a r is over, I q u e s t by 'I ai SS S O n g S th e Ju b ile e S in gers of Deferment Q uotas in p riv a te f ly in g ,” Dr. j A g r o u p of sp iritu a ls F r id a y morning. n • S D ‘ likely xx x v 11 IVC JJT to . . ’ be “ N ob ody Knows and new a n d la r g e r m a r k e ts m u st! Fisk U niversity. he developed to ta k e c a r e o f th e ; the T rouble s u r p lu s o f m a n u f a c tu r e d planes. I ’ve S e e n ” was used to d ep ict the th e su rp lu s by j h a rdships e n d u re d by the N egroes freed. “ Go dom estic airlin es, the g o v e r n m e n t; before of th e U n ite d S ta te s, com m ercial; Down, M oses’’ was a plea to those an d g o v e r n m e n t b u y ers in th e oth- who opposed th e N e g r o ’s progress, e r c o u n trie s, p riv a te th e ir song co m m ercial o p e r a to rs o th e r than airlin es “ m a y prov e its salvation if d eve lope d.” fliers, and I “ Deep R iver” was t r ib u te to Queen Victoria, th e y w ere — — " G o n z a le s-M .’s Talk Last of Series to p r e d ic t th a t, by 1950,1 F a ith in th e e x t e n t o f th e c o m - ; in g a ir tr a v e l w as shown w hen he said, “ I t is n o t being too o p ti­ mistic a t le a st 80 p e r c e n t o f the pas- th e fifty -se v en s tu d e n ts se n g e r s wdio have “ ‘ 1 P u llm a n d u r in g r e c e n t y e a r s will [ s p e a k s on “ The A pplications o f _____ c e r ta in ly go into th e a i r f o r dis­ th r e e h u n d r e d miles ta n c e s o v e r as well as f o r m a n y s h o r t e r dis­ ta n c e s .” th e Good N eighbor P olicy.” The le c tu re , in th e A rc h ite c tu r e Build-; The W eather ing a t 5 o ’clock, 1? fre e public. Dr. M a nu el G onzales-M ontesinos will conclude his se rie s of le ctures tr a v e le d by J a t the U n iv ersity F rid a y , w hen he ment c a n n o t recognize of F a i r and mild Friday. the to (| j I Silver Spurs Will Dance Later; They Believe War Drive Is First flames Italy , a n d possibly broke out. M a r g a r e t J o Pope a n d d e p a r tm e n t s p o in ts f a r t h e r n o r th , w ith D allas i b intuito Gow-en first noticed th e the J ' 1 The" e x a c t tim e th e fire began »Sr t “ »h* bonlbin* o f E a r 0J ,e/ could Bot be d e te r m in e d , f o r none j show ed how p re - w a r r e s e e n * h a d its ttT im e n o y . o f the eig h t o c c u p a n ts w ere p r e s e n t w hen I of the floor ! mad,> PO's,hlJ l h *' , 0 " t‘ U ils - * A large n u m b e r c t stu d e n ta " “,r_ hc.rof 5 bo,« h t it w a s re- g . T m to b u y 33 l t u d e n t a n d a L ib e r a to r th e bduae’. L S d d o r m i t o r / ' g i r i , , n rn ,„r u n i - . . . 1 c i m a n cam e ‘ ■ R bonds, the c l a i m s ; ing th e f la g and a Lone S t a r w ho] copy o f T r a v is ’s l e t t e r fro m the j Alam o. T his sp ir it moved him to th e heroic deeds j o f Lone S t a r sons f o r News read- « rs. ------------------- w a n t to rec o rd ; smoke fro m th e b lase a t a b o u t 6 h idea a f t - 0 f l o c k . 1 The d am age w as g r e a t e r on the P,lot\ R e c e n tl>’ r e tu r n e d f r o m te n g * Ve $2 P a - a n Mv fr.im »’ \ to th e ir u p p erc lass .1 • a ad- n te rio r o f tho atono building, a n d i m o n tl’>’ overse as d u ty a n d hokier visors to g e t sta m p s f o r them . th e only room s on t h e third ’floor ' "! « v * r * 1 raed» l5’ to escape d am ag e w e r e th e s tu d y Is hall and c h a p te r room . T he sec- 10 ond floor w as d am ag e d by w ate r, si J , 10,J ed a t T a r r a n t 1 ,«* JUI »■ in t the a . . , ; tween the s t .ong Sigma Nu, and Febru » .i: « ne- anii 1 afterw ards, who hurried to the Poet Office afterward, window for more a u n tre, ordered, . Mo»t $ 1 5 w orth, and g a v e the clerk $16. “ W hat’s the m atter with you young la d y ? ” the clerk asked the m ixed- up and nervous girl. “N o th in g ,” sh e laughed, but the N avy order had a ffe cted her v ita lly , and she w a s to con centrate. it p retty hard finding More than three hundred stu ­ d en ts worked during the past fe w days and com bined th eir e f ­ fo r ts to make “F irin g D a y ” a su c­ cess, John H ill, chairm an o f the j S tu d e n ts’ War C om m ittee, said. B y 12 o ’clock the T exas Book S tore had sold o u t o f $25 bonds and the U n iv ersity Post O ffice had to put in an extra order for IOO m ore bonds, it was reported. fifte en -m in u te radio broad- A in to ° f th e tJ«” had th e ir p a r e n ts Sigm as j u s t ca u se f o r en v y in g w atc h in g already one of the seven squadron team s phoned home to break the new s from Bergstrom at 2:30 o clock. to th eir pa re n ts. Tol Boswell to ld ; The fliers a r e o u t to ave n g e the how his m o th e r h ad “ cried all over tw o d e f e a ts h an d e d th e m by the the phone.” To the juniors it w as; P r e s b y te r ia n Club an d the. K ap pa a su rp rise, a n d la st m a tche s and so m e w h a t o f a shock. T he seniors, to m o r r o w ’s should be well w orth who had the juniors th eir quick com m is­ sions, joined them in celebratin g and decided they sort o f liked the idea of having their buddies go along w ith them . , All track candidates are urged ’mept this aftern oon at 4:45 .Stadium in repeating the cu r--d r essin g room, where technicolor track j : js ; m eets and g reat athletes w ill be sophom ore in the room, was thor- t0 oughlv d ejected , but found som e ° ‘clock in the Memorial consolation rent “sc u ttleb u tt” m ight happen to the sophs, w ill probably m ove us up a year too,” he said. about w h a t ! m ot,on Pictures o f fam ous Sports Notice Cbarie? Feat he: ^ n , t he only shown. The regular m eeting with Coach Clyde L ittlefield w ill be held about 5:15 o'clock a fte r the pictures have been shown. NORM AN MORGENSTERN, A ssistan t Manager. Posture Prel iminaries Are Scheduled for Monday Three or fo u r hundred women stu d en ts are expected to en ter the prelim inary try-outs fo r the annu­ al posture contest to be held at the W omen's Gym M onday, February 7, a i 4:30 o'c lock, an­ ticipated Miss Leah Gregg, as* for w om en’s sociate professor physical training. “ The first aftern oon w e'll elim i- i n a t e all but f o r ty o r fifty g ir l', lnund, „ „ 5 oVlock on, thc ’ s f cond after Qr fourte(.„ WH, he le ft .” Judges for the fir.-: two rounds will be M isses Gregg, B etty Mac* Michael, and F rances Crawford, instructors. For individual gym tin* final round, held February IO at 7:30 o ’clock iii the dance stu­ dios. four gu est judge.?, and the au dience’s ap­ plause w ill help these jud ges d e­ cide the top w inners. Last year's w inners w ere Sandy Rowe. Kappa Alpha Theta; Em ily McKellar, Pi B eta P hi; and Norm a N cim eyer, Kappa Alpha Theta. there w ill be This con test, held in conjunc- 1 tion with tho w om en’s intram ur­ als program, is open to any wo- I man U niversity student. P artici­ pants in the final round will wear sports and evening clothe'’, walk up and down steps*, sit and rise, and be placed in various situations in which posture is tested. Miss Helen M cKinstry, of Rus- sell-Sage C ollege and one o f the five w om en college presidents in the U nited States, told U niversity faculty mem bers o f the W om en’s physical training deartm ent o f a friend o f hers who is in charge o f hiring personnel in a publishing concern. “ She said th a t good posture makes for b e t t e r w o rk in g habits,” conc luded Miss M cK instry, d u rin g her recent visit in A ustin. Texas Business Curve Rounding O ff A “ ro u n d in g o f f ” of the T exas business curv e in th e n e a r f u t u r e ha^ been p red ic ted by a U n iv ersity ec onom ist as he cites a gain o f in o n ly o n e -te n th of one po in t the sta te ’s index of business ac-! tivity d u r in g December. , ^ Dr. F. A. Buechel, analyst for j the Bureau o f Business Research, follow ing im mediately foresaw the prospective collapse o f Ger-j many “ rather drastic readjust-!?:,: m ents” in a num be” o f Texas i n - 1 *rT dustries— n otably aircraft, ping, and ordnance production, j ' “ War production will remain atj * ship­ a high level, how ever,” he asserted, “ until Japan is elim inated, which, a c c o r d in g to p r e s e n t expectations. will occ ur in 1945. i x a Ben Carroll, CMI o v er KT BC y esterd a y m o rn -1 seenil>d elat(,d in * from ^ the fro n t steps of the j ,jlat M ain B uilding included com m en­ ta r ie s about the bond sales and cam p us atm osphere. Interview ed w ere Anna Buchanan, Joe Maiik. B e tty Osborn, John H ill, and Gloria Hood. The Glee Club and Chi Omega Q uartet sang. The pro gram was directed by Kathy Bland, bunch o f us up to c o ffe e and cig-1 jun ior who „ of the fa ct w as tromp to m is. g ettin g his degree, was la yin g plans for a party at a local n igh t spot. “ I’ve heard that w e've already g o t one club all hooked up,” he announced. told o f an ready held: “ Dick Ryan M. E. Oro??, an oth er impromptu party a l­ junior, j set T ir in g Day is over, but the arf,t tes over on the D rag.” . . j hjs d rive has not ended, and stam ps sale * t ; changed forae w ed ding plans,” re- and bonds are still on for marked Gordon Charlton, “ be- th e ■tudents who didn t buy at le a st, cause I know o f a t least three fel- ; lows who w ere w aiting until grad-! tb eir $2 worth yesterday. I m versity Po?t O ffice gpeed-up already! has A ll going tow ards the $6,950- uation to g e t m arried.” goal, ira via C ounty ,000 “ I t’ll sure change som e study m o n ey in turn will buy the gun*: plans too, from w hat I’ve heard,” j and am m unition and equipm ent ■ added another senior. “ You juniors for a com m ission to bring the boys home sooner. The $2,280,000 worth o f bonds , now. and you can ’t g e t your de- j have a cinrh the f or the U niversity was ordered bt g r e e t.” C. D. Simmons, comptroller, from I’m sure going to slack ‘Yes Mrs. G. B. Sm edley, county chair­ o ff on stud yin g,” agreed the m an o f the W om en’s division of Cros?. “ It takes about ?ix full days W ar F inance. to get yourself officially detached the Fourth War; from here before we g e t our com- C ontinuing the Austin missions. I sure dread fillin g out Loan Drive Friday, W om en ’s V ictory C om m ittee will [ all those form s.” g iv e aw ay the eighteen $25 b o n d s 1 “ That uniform business has g o t n o t claim ed at W ednesday n igh t’* me worried,” said Carroll. “ I heard rally Friday aftern oon at 4 o’clock that there aren’t many ready-made a t 1020 Congress A venue, at ir e uniforms in town, and it take? a n ew bond house headquarters. month to get one tailored. I heard that Commander Friedel! t ip p e d 1 o f f the local outfitters that there j would be a rush on uniforms here today. M ayor Tom Miller will act a? m aster o f cerem onies, and band? from A ustin High School and B ergstrom Field w ill play. Tim rally will honor men o f the Austin P o lice D epartm ent who are serv­ ing overseas. T w enty policem en w ill be present. Ex-Legislator in Pacific With N a v y Air Com m and L ie u t e n a n t ( j - f . ) E v e r e t t Hu t c h ­ i n s on , B B A. and LI B. 1940, ha* been the S ou th w est Pacific under the Air Command o f the N avy fo r a year in L ieu tenan t H utchinson r e c e i v e d h is prom otion Jan uary I, 1944. He is a past president o f the Inter-! F ra ter n ity Council and o f Sigm a j Phi Epsilon fra ter n ity and was listed as an O u tstan din g S tu dent and a G oodfellow b y the Cactus. L ieu ten a n t H utchinson w as also a m em ber o f for two session*. the L egislatu re from the Fourth W ar Bond Buyers H a v e y o u b o u g h t y o u r * ? W allace-Dyke Engravers D i a l 2 - 2 4 7 3 By P A T T A Y L O R Intramural Editor the goin g w as really tough and i for Sigm a Nu. Dub H am ilton, Kap- ten se for all the players, but no pa Sigm a B, made 13, and Dan Last n ight’s gam es in the Fra- unclean play was observed duringj Taylor m ade 12 fo r the Alpha Tau Kappa Sigm a 42, A lpha Tau Oma Pierce House 33, Presbyterian ternity D ivision showed som e o f I the night. There w as a n o ta b le . Om ega A ’s. absence of griping directed at the referees. There w ere so many close gam es that it as the m ost thrilling gam e o f the 1 scores o f the niprht: C L A S S A is hard to pick one out Phi Gamma D elta 23, D elta Tau D elta 21 For Frid a y Here is a com plete list o f the W id en in g House 18, Blom quist ga 18 Club 7 Sw edes 16 fin e st com petition the seen all season. The team s w ere really spir­ ited as a large group o f follow ers cheered each and every one o f their favorite fraternities. The gam es w ere really close and ___________.. . . . j , night. One o f the m ost decisive Kappa Sigma 28, Beta Theta Pi 8 the night w as; D elta Kappa Epsilon 26, Pi Kappa the D elta Tau! . , __________ clo^e gam es o f played betw een D eltas and an inspired Phi Gam-! Sigm a Nu 38, Phi Kappa Sigm a 23 ma Delta squad. The Phi Gams Lambda Chi Alpha 22, Sigma Phi tossed the last m om ent o f play and the Alpha Tau Om ega 40, Sigma Chi ! final score was 23-21. in their w inning goal Alpha 14 ^ ,v «■ #*,» r»- v Epsilon in 15 n i In a close B gam e, the le a g u e -; Phi D elta Theta six the stu d en t body chose or eight girls from am ong whom the A qua-Q ueen was chosen, but this year it was decided to stage a regular “ A tlantic C ity ” con test. ; leading Chi Phis nosed ou t a I figh tin g Phi Kappa Psi a g g reg a ­ tion, 17-13. The Kappa Sigm as, who seem to be one of the g rea t­ e st powers in the F raternity D i­ vision, sm ashed the previously un- , beaten B eta Theta Pis by the sur- beaut.v prjsjn g]y large score o f 28-8. The leading scorer for the night with 20 points was J. A, Vroom , playing for the Dekes in Class A. Roy W illiam s w as n ext w ith 14 Theta 6 D elta 12 Sigm a Alpha Alpha 6 32, Theta Xi 7 Epsilon 15, Kappa C L A S S B Phi Kappa Tau 12, Kappa Alpha l l Sigma Alpha Epsilon 29, Alpha Epsilon Pi 15 Chi Phi 17, Phi Kappa Psi 13 D elta Tau D elta 26, Phi Delta Phi Kappa Sigm a 13, Phi Sigm a n B A S K E T B A L L Cia** B 7:00— Court I — 7th Co., N avy Dorm S, vs. 12th Co., Barracks. 7:45—-Court I — 5th Co., C a r o ll­ ers, vs. 1st Co., A ndrew s Cia** A 8:30—-Court I — Buckingham P a l­ ace vs. P resbyterian Club Cia** B 7:00— Court 2— 3rd Co., Caroth- \ ors, vs. 2nd Co., A ndrew s 7 :4 5 — Court 2 — l i t h Co., Oak Grove, vs. 14th Co., L.C.D. Cia** A 8 :3 0 — Court 2— P a t House vs. F earless Fosdicks Cia** B , :00— Court 3— 6th Co., Navy Dorm K, vs. 13th Co., L.C.D. 7 :45— Court 3— 10th Co., Hill H all, vs. 16th Co., L.C.D. Cia** A 8:30— Court 3 — M oneyhon House- cats vs. Thigpin House Class B 7:00— Court 4— F earless Fosdickt vs. Shelton House 7:45— Court 4— W iley Co-Op vs. The Tenors / How Your W a r Bond Works Buy M ore In ’44 The Texan Grill on tho Drug In Front a t tho Union M ore M ake Tracksters Coach Happy By BILL J O H N S O N T t x a n S ports S t a f f Bruce Clapp, San D iego (C a lif.) J. C., is a better than fair quar- ter-m iler. Coy Porter, a C alifornia V-12, is an ex cellen t broad jum p man who will strengthen that depart­ m ent a great deal. During the past tw o or three- week? Coach L ittlefield has been questioned from several d ifferen t sources a? to w hat he thin ks o f the prospects of track throughout the nation this year. He was quot­ ed by the A ssociated Press and various sports editors o f m etro­ sayin g: “ I politan be don't think there will be as m any standouts as in tim e, since the cream of the crop ! runs the half m ile. He looks prom- o f ath letes is in the armed forces, i ising. Jo e McGill, V-12 f ro m El Paso, I H o w ever, I do think t h e r e will b e j j u s t as m a n y inch, 195- high, if not higher, a competitive pound boy who is expected to de- sp ir it.’ nearly tanee man. p eace- Gaylord H ansen, thrills a n d j u s t as! is a husky 6 fo o t, 2 velop into one of our best h a l f - 1 Donald F ox, an Arizona boy in ; is a m ighty good dis- journals as San Antonio, the V -12, H av in g been able to w ork more | milers, lad, w ith I}!? boys and to get better. acquainted with other promising j nuns both the half and quarter ath letes, Coach L ittlefield added a ! mile, He looks good, few m ore nam es last week's! ast of likely prospects: Preparations are being made for; i S ee MORE TRACKSTERS, Page 6 ! Neal Naranjo, r Laredo to rn .v % is. rn T H E D A I L Y T E X A N CLASSIFIED ADS Phone 2 -2 4 7 3 for A d Taker C L A S S IF IE D IN D E X A n n o u n cem en t* trade* 1— Auto* tot Se!* 2—-A u to m o tiv e 8 — W anted A utom obile* 4 —-S er v ic e S ta tio n * 5 — Hut Line* 8 — D in in g and D a n cin g ' — L odge and F ra te rn ity Notice* 4 — L o st and Found 9— P ro fea a io n a i IO— P e r so n a l* 10 -A — School* and Co I ie* ae B utin*** Service* 11 — Barber S bop* 1 2 — B ea u ty S e r v ic a 13— C le a n e r s -H at te r a. Tailor* I 4 — L aund ries i i — J le c tr ic a l Servica 16— “ Fi* it" 17— F u rn itu r e B ep a irin g 18— L ock »m ith a 1 0 - M oving, H a ilin g and Storage 2 0 — P r in tin g . O ffic e E q u ip m en t ZI — S e w in g Z I —-Shoe R epairing I 2 8 —C a fes E m p lo y m en I 11— H elp W anted Mesa j 25— S alesm en W anted 26 — H elp W anted F em ale 27 — M ale W ork W anted 28 — F e m a le W ork W anted E d u catio n al 29 — I n stru ctio n I O - M usic, D a n cin g , D ram atic* 8 1 — S p eech ; 8 2 — C o a c h in g 3 8-A — P et* 2 4 -A — G en era l F or S a le R ental* J 4 6 — R o o m s F u rn ish ed I 4 6 — Room * U n fu rn ish ed 47 — R oom and Board 4 8— F u rn i* had A pt*. 48-A — Unfurnished Apartment* M erch a n d ise 3 8 — B ic y c le # and M otorcycle* 34 — Food and Food Produ ct* 3 7 — W a tc h e s. Jewelry Repair 38— M isc e lla n e o u s For Sa ia 4 9— G arage A p a r tm e n ts , 60— G arage Room* I 5 1 — R oom * fo r B oy* 6 2 — R oom * for G irls 1 39 — " 3 « a o “ 40— W anted M erch a n d ise ' 40-A — L ivestock Supplies Financial 4 1 — A u to Loan* ! 42— B ank L oans J 43 — B u*ineea O p p o rtu n itie s ‘ 4 4— Bu s i nee* es W anted j 3 6 — J* a r n itu re and H o u seh o ld Good* I 3 6 — M u sica l and Radio* Typing Done EXPERT T Y P IS T typing to don e a t hom e. Ph. 2-4 889. 34-A — General DRAWING SET and odd drawing in stru ­ Sr# Miss Stehr. Room 814. ment* Biology Bldg. 45— Rooms Furnished FOR RENT Nicely furnished bedroom witb privet# hath Prefer stu d en t or Telephone 806 W est 32nd teacher. 5179. 47— Room and Board CHOICE ROOMS POR BOYSi cam pus. Also meal*. t block* PIERCE HOUSE. ZOO E. 26Va S t. Phone 8-8887. of 51— Rooms for Boys very , ROOM FOR BOYS— 2606 reasonable. I block north of Ch em istry and E ngineering Bldg, Phone 4S63, Speedwav, VERY ATTRACTIVE bedroom for on*— tile shower and private en ­ priv a' e trance. Telephone 2 -1740. borhood, RHOM FOR BOYS. In U n iversity n eig h ­ approved house. 707 W, 26th S t. Phone 8-3878 or 8-6181. privet# home. / 52— Rooms for Girl* VACANCY: 8 meal* daily, double room, shower, tub. G lassed, screened sle ep ­ ing porches. Choice o f private bath—- hot. cold water. 1803 Colorado. Call 2-0194. IDEAL ROOMS FOR 12 G IR L S: U r g e . cool and clean. New twin bod*. Maid from cam poo Pit. block* service. 2-3085 Light Housekeeping Rooms 2 I,IGHTHOUSEKEEPING room*— Cnu- pie* or men. Private entrance, hath adjoins Loth. K elvinator shared. Du# east of U.T. Tower 3 blocks, 4th house south of Museum. $26 and $28 per m onth. 2804 T rin ity. Phone 8-7990. Stocks, Bonds, Notes Boys W anted (Over 16 Years Old) To Carry The Daily Texan Apply J.B. 108 - i L i x j b ■ * %: W anted to Buy W ANTED: To buy a 1940-41 coupe, preferably Chevrolet. Call Miguel Jaram illo G. at 87749 after 7 p.m. 8— Lost and Found 23— Caf** three-quarter EXCHANGED by m istake: Natura! u n , raincoat. Nam e length in Texas Union •tam ped on collar. Lost 401 Sundav afternoon. Return to J.B. 108. Liberal REW AR J. LOST; At Theta form al—-Sigm a Phi Ep­ silon pm. Phone Pittm an. 9468 LOST— Grey fountain pen "New 55”— near Sutton Hall. REW ARD. Finder call 2 -2932— W inston Som erville. Lost ! LOST— Log Log Duplex D ecitrig Slide Rule with name T. L. Allen on side of case. Phone Bill Allen, 2-0050. Thanks. LO ST: A G eology I grayback notebook. Return to Richard (D ick) Lyon. Phone 2-6560. 2002 G U ADALUPE 32— Coaching MATH C O A C H IN G -R . M Randle. 2309 San Antonio. Phone 8-1168. S a f e t y D e p o s i t B o x e s TO PROTECT YOUR W AR BONDS Business Colleges And O ther Valuable* Now Available at b u s i n e s s C O L L E G E S THE CAPITAL NATIONAL BANK LOST: I black Shaeffer pen naerier pen with wide I I gold rim on the top. Return to Edna t h e I Colson. Ph. 8-9381. I o b "" a, a Tm im ai i c i z~v*j SAN ANTONIO - FT WORTH - H ' T / FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1944 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 PAG E THREE in living A l p h a P h i sorority will have an f o r ' f i v e inform al open house boys’ boarding houses Friday night from 7:30 until 9:30 o ’clock. The stud en ts the Tipton H ouse, the W ak en ing H ouse, the D ixon H ouse, and the tw o Ban­ invited. dage houses have been Bonnie E rter, Mary Jane Por­ ter, Martha G regory, and others w ill sing songs from the V arsity Carnival m usical com edy. t A l p h a P h i sorority w ill hold fo r T ejas Club on open house Sunday aftern oon from 3 until 5 o ’clock. An Indian them e will he used fo r the party. Martha S ton e, freshm an from M exico City, w ill dance. Alpha P h i alum nae m et a t the chapter house, 2005 U niversity A ven ue, W ednesday even in g for a regular business session. It was announced that there would be a call m eetin g F ebruary 9 at 8 o ’clock. The m eetin g w ill be held in the chapter house. Z e t a T a u A l p h a alum nae w ill en tertain new com ers to the Austin branch o f their group with a tea at the home o f Mrs. Jack Corley, 1510 Gaston, F riday from 4 to 6 o ’clock. Pi B e t a Phi sorority w ill hold open house F riday n ight for S ig­ ma Alpha Epsilon fraternity at 7:30 o ’clock at the sorority house, 2300 San A ntonio. D e l t a G a m m a sorority will en ­ tertain the fo llow in g fratern ities F riday n ight: Sigm a Chi, Phi P si, S .A .E ., Kappa A lpha, T ejas, and B eta. Sunday open houses w ill be held for the N avy boys o f Ca­ r o l e r s and Hill Hall. Fra-Ority Alpha Phis to Dance With Tejas, Boys From Boarding Houses W eskit-W ise Problem-Solver Speaks Tonight Mrs. B etty Gray M auger, a grad u ate o f A delphi C ollege and advisor in personal and religious problem s, will be on the U niver­ sity cam pus until February 12. Mrs. M auger’s v isit is being spons­ ored by the In ter-V arsity Chris­ tian Fellow ship. W hile here she w ill con tact stu d en ts through the U niversity chapter o f Inter-V ar- sity. Mrs. M auger had dinner with the girls o f L ittlefield Dorm itory Thursday n ight and spoke inform ­ a lly w ith a group o f them a fte r­ ward. speak Friday night at 7 o ’clock a t an open m eetin g o f In ter-V arsity a t 703 W est T w enty-third She w ill also speak to th e P resbyter­ ian Student League. She w ill street. P h i G a m m a D e l t a initiated five boys T u esday: Jim D elehanty, Buddy K ing, Stanley McCampbell, Lucian Jones, and Lathem Ables. fraternity K a p p a A l p h a an- Bounces the pledging o f Lynn H unt, W ichita F alls, and F elix K elly, Robstow n. O fficers o f Pi K a p p a A l p h a fra­ tern ity fo r this sem ester are W. W . W harton, p resident; A y lett F itzhugh, vice-president; and Bob U m stattd, secretary. Frank Ries- enecker is house m anager, and A l­ len H um phrey is rush captain. D e l t a D e l t a D e l t a M o t h e r * ’ C lu b en tertain ed m em bers and p ledges! at a party Thursday n ight at the i Girl Freshman Officers chapter house. Plan Civic, W ar Work , D e l t a D e l t a D e l t a M o t h e r s ’ C lu b gave Tri D elt m em bers and pledges two “surprises” as a V alentine party at the chapter house Thurs­ day night. The m others presented their daughters with a gold inlaid silver punch bowl, the em bossed floral design o f which m atches the fo r­ mal silver o f the house. Second surprise of the evening w as the appearance o f Carlton W est, prom inent local artist, who studied in C alifornia. Mr. W est, who did portarits of Judy Garland, J a n et Gaynor, and C harles B oyer w hile he w as in C alifornia, told Tri D elts the secret of m ixing paints and o f m aking canvases that w ill best hold those paints for the lon gest period of tim e. The w orst m odels, said Mr. W est, are sm all children. But men who refu se to pose run the babies The Girls’ Freshm an C lass o f­ ficers m et W ednesday in the o f­ fice o f Mrs. K athleen Bland, as­ sistan t dean o f w om en, to plan a civic and w ar w ork program for the rem ainder o f the school year. The class w ill m eet on Friday, in Texas l l , a t 6:45 February U nion 315 to m ake plans fo r a leap year dance to be held early in the spring term . A ll freshm an girls are urged by Mrs, Bland to at­ tend this m eetin g. . M argaret McKean, president; Ann Dr. Ellis tO Speak Barnes, vice-president; T een y An derson, secretary; Barbara G en ­ Dr A CasWen Elli? w ill s p e a k try, treasurer; and Lucile Head. • reporter. A council to plan and over station KTBC a t 3:30 Friday assist the ESlis is Con_ and war program w as also chosen Way 0 u t the at the m eeting. Martha Jane P e r - . su ita®t on A dult Education at the ter, Ruth A nne D ouglass, Martha ; U niversity o f Texas and is Sanders, B etty B eecroft, Hazel f orm , r director of Cleveland Col- H am pton, and M argaret McCurdy lege, for adults of W estern R eserve U ni­ versity. the civic afternoon on “ Our Peril and /*sn *r\ur p&r;l1 Class o ffic er s for this year are the downtown college in carrying out Pr . . . _ Daughter Born to Exes Cadet a n d Mrs. A m m a n n The broadcast is sponsored by the Austin C hapter o f the A. A, U. W. A W E L C O M E D N E W A C C E S S O R Y this season is the feminine a d a p t i o n o f the weskit (waistcoat). W h e n m ade of plaid or checks it adds contras* to sacks, skirts, and suits. Too, ids a bit o f warm th these cool m ornings. D e l t a D e l t a D e l t a w ill hold open * w ,™ ....... ..... close second. Mr. W est seldom , were appointed to this council. ....... j house o f Phi Psi fra ter n ity at the chap­ ter house at 8 o’clock Friday night. for m em bers and pledges uses p rofessional m odels; he poses the su b jects by registerin g his em otion which he w ants them to reveal in facial expression. W hen he w ants his portrait to sm ile, he sm iles at his m odel. T h e Pi B e t a Phi A l u m n a * C l u b w ill m eet F riday a t IO o'clock at the chapter house. D e l t a Z e t a sorority w ill enter- rain m em bers o f Phi Kappa Tau jr. fra tern ity with a d essert party the chapter F riday even in g at house A m usical program w ill include songs by Carolyn Beacham and a trio com posed o f Mary M acaulay, Marian Tanner, and Evelyn D il­ lard. Spring flow ers w ill be used fo r a Ju n e-in -F eb m ary them e. t d f c u -TRE ENOrf your ** r o p e - Toto/ Am erica Ii Buying W a r Bondi In 4th W a r Bond Drl va M angel's 614 C ongress In the m idst o f valentin es and red carnations, H elen Newkirk, p resident o f the chapter, and Mrs. Sim m ons, president o f the A ustin m others, served c o ffe e and cocoanut cake. Rabbi Friedman to Talk At Temple Beth Israel Rabbi N ew ton J. Friedm an will speak Friday night at 8 o ’clock at Israel on “ High- Tem ple Beth , lights o f W ash ington ”. Rabbi I Friedman has ju st returned from I the capitol w here he attended at m eeting o f the N ational American I Comm ission. Plans w ere discussed for our returning veterans and post-war A m erica. Kirby Hall Entertains Soldiers at U.S.O. W’hen Kirby Hall tokk over the U.S.O . en tertain m en t Thursday night the soldiers w ere treated to a half-hour sk it w ith m usic and dancing said Ginger H ouston, d efen se chairman o f the hall. included, F ollow in g on the which appeared approxixm ately fifteen girls, an was held . program, C adet and Mrs. P. G. Ammann o f Sugar Land announce the birth o f daughter. Sharon baby E laine, on January 25. . The parents w ill be remem- bored at the U niversity as Anita M atlage of Sugar Land and Paul “ R ed” Ammann o f G alveston. B o ys’ Friend, Art Hall, Leaves for A la b a m a Clara Graeber, Ex, j L e a v e f o r L a p QZ Clara Graeber, 1942, exp ects to ; ing on Monday, February jeave Saturday for La Paz, Bo- livia, w here she will be a nurse in a Methodist hospital. Fightin Texas Exes Five U niversity boys have rea­ son to regret the departure of A rt S. Hall, su perin ten dent of the Texas Public Service Company. N u n l e y , E n gin eerin g student from student j for Seism ic E xploration, Inc., in f rom 1^40-42, and C o r p o r a l J a c k Houston. For a tim e he w as claim investigator fo r the U, S, F idelity O r i e L. F o r b i s , law Mr. Hall, who le ft A ustin J a n - : 1941-42 , both from A ustin ami and Guaranty Company, ]ong friend s are now at op- uary 28 and is now em ployed by the Mobile Gas Service Company posits ends o f the earth. in Mobile. A i . . . h a , lon g been , friend of U niversity atudenta. For on(j ^ several y e a r , h i. policy h a , been | , tationed to find part-tim e jobs in his cop) pany fo r students w henever pos­ sible. „ pharm acj! t 's m ate see- N avv. had b„ n th e Canal Zone since ' F. C. Johnston, H oyt Gibson, Jim m ie L. W yatt, W illiam < arl- ton, and Hugh McCain are U n i­ versity boys who w ere under his j em ploy a t the tim e he le ft Texas. July. He received his boot train­ ing a t N orfolk, V irginia and was based in Miami, Florida before being sen t to Panam a. Jack, m em ber o f the ground o f the air corps, recently le ft for overseas duty. He enlisted in the air corps October, 1942, * ] Mrs. Lucy B. K ey, his w ife, is residing w ith him at 599 now E dgew ater T errace, N ew Braun­ f e l s Texas, F ir s t L i e u t e n a n t B e n Z. K a p l a n , B. J. *41, has been com m ended by Major General Jam es H. D oolittle for his thorough new s coverage o f com bat activities o f B-17 F lying F ortresses in the M editerranean theater. L i e u t e n a n t H u b a r t N . D e a n , stu ­ d en t o f education from 1939-42, has ju st reported fo r duty a t the Big Spring Bom bardier School inform al dance w here he will begin his training as a stud en t o ffic er . S.R.D. to Give Valentine Formal form al S.R .D .’* V alentine for L ittle Campus D orm itory and the N .R.O.T.C. cadets will be given S aturday night from 8:30 to 12 o’clock. C offee and sandwiches w ill be served by Billie Jane Chandler and Ann W ells. Gene S tin n ett, Jean F in e, and Juanita Wood are planning the floor show. The up­ perclass advisers are to be hos­ tesses, w ith the dorm itory ma­ trons a i chaperones. Social Calendal F r i d a y 7 . 10— D elta Zeta open house. 7 . 9 — Kappa Kappa Gamma open house fo r N avy boys. 7-8:30— D elta Gamma open house fo r fratern ities. 7:30-9— Alpha Phi inform al open for Dixon H ouse, San- house dridge H ouse, W iley H ouse. 7 :30-12— U niversity Czech Club, Sadie H aw kins party (d an cin g). U nion 316-316. 8-10— Gamma Phi B eta open house. 8-12— McCracken boarding house dance, T exas U nion. 8-12— L atin-A m erican Club dance, N ew m an Club. S a t u r d a y 8:30-12— Scottish Rite D orm itory form al open house. 9-12— A ll-U niversity Bond dance, T exas U nion. Junior Hostesses W ill Be Fingerprinted C lub Notes It A in’t What You Say, Its Way You Say It No m atter w hat you say a thing | Suggs, Join erville; and Dorothy is it isn ’t, A ustin Faricy, instruc tor in E nglish, said at a join t m eetin g o f the g irls’ literary so­ cieties, A s h b e l , P i e r i a n , S i d n e y L a n i e r , and R e a g a n , Thursday aftern oon, the Mr. F aricy pointed out howj words aren ’t really things which they represent. N ex t time som eone says som ething you don’t like, find out by the words he said w hat he really m eant, and then decide w hether to g e t mad or not, he advised. sr A nton Chekhov, o f! author the “ Cherry Orchard,” w ill be subject o f an talk by by Dr. R. C. S tephenson, assist­ ant p rofessor o f Rom ance Lan­ gu ages, Friday at 4 o ’clock in Mo­ d em L anguages Building 101. inform al Dr. Stephenson, w hose talk will be sponsored by the C u r t a i n C lu b , points out that Chekhov w as one of the last dram atists in R ussia’s creative age before World Wrar I. He liv e d iin and w rote about a period and spiritual stagnation in Russia. o f ^ disillusionm ent Tate, Dallas, as new members, P. Hodges, president, announiffj The C z e c h C l u b w ill have it first social o f the new year Frida- at 8 o’clock in T exas U nion S i a* ! 316. The a ffa i- w ill be an it formal leap-year .iar.ee; howevei every member is to sell one tk k e Sr The Duplic%te.Bridger» WI m eet Friday night at 8 o ’clock i the U niversity Club for a bridg party. H ostesses for the party wi be Mrs Lf •‘ran i Benson and" Mil Ruth W heeler. The U n i v e r s i t y C l u b w i l l bai1 its m onthly bridge party Saturda n ight a t 8 o ’clock. H ostesses Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Otto and M and Mrs. E. C. Duke. The new ly elected presided Halon Black, w ill be inaugural! the night o f February 1 2. An execu tive council m eeting To explain how Chekhov wove this negative m aterial into drama is one o f Dr. S tephenson’s aim s in speaking on “The Drama and J and for a ctivities Times o f A nton C hekhov.” j sem ester will be made. M I C A will be held in the Con mons Sunday m orning at 8:4 o’clock, it has been announced b Bill Bradfield, reporter. Plans ft the com in g election o f office! sprit! in the r I * . The A u i t i n U n i v e r s i t y of T e x a s a i sa Alums appointed c o m m i 1 1 e e N ey M u se u m Exhibits chairmen for th eir banquet to b e< F jr»e A r f * C o l l e c t i o n held March 2 at a luncheon at the ; w w .i w v i i v n Driskill H otel Thursday. A ppoint­ ed for the banquet are Malcolm Gregory, program chairm an; Ralph Goeth, dinner chairm an; Jim Hart, speaker chairm an; Mrs. Dan Mc- Caskill, chairman fo r tick ets; and Mrs. Charles Sparenberg, decora­ tions chairman. D uring the month o f February the Elisa b et N ey Museum w ill e: hibit lithograph etchin gs and wi ter-color paintings belonging to th T exas F ine Arts A ssociation. Pria Intem atiom pictures last March m P rint Show held be included in the collection. from tho A few new p aintings, n ever bi in th e m useum , hav fore hung been added. Winter Garden Club Reorganizes This Week The W inter Garden Club, an organization com posed o f the stu­ dents from the Del Rio, Pearsall, B eeville, Laredo area o f T exas,] its reorganization m eeting held this w eek. F unctioning previously on the cam pus for several term s, the group was re-assem bled at the students o f num erous request from trict. the A t its inaugural m eetin g, plans the opening for w ere discussed activities, to be an­ their tim e nounced a t the club ’s n ext m eet- 7, at 7:15 o ’clock. The election of o f­ ficers is also slated for this m eet­ ing. A . W . V . S . o ffic e r s’ club junior h ostesses are asked to m eet at A .W .V .S. headquarters n ex t week to sign, pay dues, and be fin ger- “ W inter Garden” dis- I Prinbed. All junior hostesses may join the o ffic er s club and present o fficer club junior h ostesses m ust sign. Members!- o f Sr the P r e s b y t e r i a n Student L e a g u e w ill m eet Satur­ day at 5 o’clock in fron t o f the U niversity P resbyterian Church to go to the Boy S cou t H ut fo r a treasure hunt to be follow ed by a w ein er roast. M c C r a c k e n H o u s e w ill have a dance Friday night from 9 until 12 o ’clock in the Junior Ballroom of th e T exas U nion. W ednesday night at 7:30 o’clock the w om en’s classes in dancing gave War C onditioning and Dance N ight at the W om en’s Gym. All: classes participated The program consisted o f folk, tap, and modern dancing. The girls o f the war con­ ditioning classes did Cadence I and II.” the “ WAC! D e l l * Sigm a R h o , honorary n a­ tional speech fra tern ity , has elect­ ed Sara D alkow itz, P earsall; Jack from 3 H eadquarters will he open Mon­ day, February 7, to 5 o’clock in the aftern oon ; Tuesday, February 8 , from 3 to 5 o ’clock and 6 to 8 o’clock at n igh t; and W ednesday, February 9, from IO to I o ’clock. Annelle Nelick to M a rry Private Edgar M im s The en gagem ent o f Miss An­ n a le N elick, 1941-42, to Private Edgar I. Mims o f Laredo has been announced. Miss N elick w as a Chi Om ega and a B luebonnet Belle nom inee. She in San An­ lived tonio. form erly U f 5 / " \ A K t f e i a U **MWAL* we PUN*' . So T W eU B e No M ora Coupons I ★ ★ Buy it it W A R B O N D S 8 t h & C o n g i u s s p r I l l g D u e t P a s t e l S i Soft, creamy pastel beau­ ties to add cheery notes to your s p r i n g wardrobe. Long and s le e ts puil-over style. Sizes 34 to 40. short 3 . 9 8 t o 1 0 . 9 5 Ali-University War Stamp Stomp Saturday Night 9 to 12 Motor) Crockett’s Orchestra Texas Un ion Informal Admission: $1.00 Per Person 75c To Be Returned in W ar Stamps S e r g e a n t F r a n k Z . T e c h n i c a l L ieutenant Kaplan, operating from N orth A frica, has handled T o l b e r t , stud en t in 1935-36, r o v - ln*WB reports o f F lyin g Fortress ing editor for the L e a t h e r n e c k . ! ^ o u p s rn the F ifte en th Air Force the Marine Corps’ enlisted m an ’s : * brough the North A frican, the publication, has a story the Sicilian, and the p resen t Italian F ebruary issue o f Esquire called ' cam paigns. “The A bsent-M inded M arine.” in * three j The story is about the R o b e r t R. T h o r n t o n , law student w ays to accen t a password. T h e ; in 1 9 3 7 - 4 0 , has been prom oted right w ay, the Harvard w ay, and: from fir st lieu ten an t to captain in the Jap w ay. The story is w ritten a Liberator bomber division some- in the form o f a letter to his f o r - 1 where in England and is now group j mer gunnery camp. in boot J navigation o ffic er at a Liberator base there. sergeant Captain Thornton entered the T olbert becam e roving ed itor In Arm y in October, 1940, and served October. U ntil then he w as asso­ as an aviation cad et in Maryland, ciate editor. His roving editorship lets him go anyw here he can find ! Alabama, and Florida, receiving a story, and h e’s had about six or his com m ission as second lieuten- seven stories in C ollier’s the p a s t ; ant in N ovem ber, 1941. He then year and a half. Most o f th ese I spent tw en ty m onths in the Carib stories have been about m arines. ★ In W a l t e r C r o n k i t e , Student 1933-35, M a jo r G e o r g e K i r k s e y , student in 1922-25, and S e r g e a n t K e n n e t h B . H a r p e r , B. J, 1935 w ith honors, m eet these days. bean area as group and squadron navigator at Borinquin Field, P uerto R ico; France Field, Pan­ am a; and G uatem ala, and has been recom m ended for the Air Medal in recognition o f his work in these has been awarded the > Am erican D efen se Ribbon, Marine Cronkite, now in charge o f the j R eserve Medal, European Theater O perations, and American The- and ] ater o f Operations service ribbons. U nited Press coverage o f all air activitiea, both A m erican E nglish, in the European th eater ] o f operations, was recen tly de- in scribed by H arper as “ab out the 1932-36, has been prom oted from lieutenan t at Randolph best dressed Am erican in E ngland, [ second now living in a swank apartm ent ! Field headquarters to first iieuten- i s now assigned to the form erly occupied by a English* colonel. H e the book, and he knows everyon e in Army Air F'orces Central F lying the big town from Churchill on dow n.” * Jam** O. Mueller, stud en t is w r i t i n g a special in England I b ascs- Training Command. r e t i r e d an t, and section o f services -v: rn .■‘"A' r n WM ss* r n ■ to M ajor K irksey, who w en t E ngland from the M editerranean theater with the N inth Air Force, is a special w riter and press-liaison expert. M ueller form erly worked in the Com ptroller's D epartm ent o f the S tate o f Texas, and w as later em ­ ployed by the Commercial Bank o f Mason, where he w as located until his entrance into extended active duty with the Army A ir Forces. Harper, wprking w ith Major K irksey in reporting the N inth Air L i e u t e n a n t R o b e r t C. W i l s o n Jr., F orce new s, w rites stories, rewrite* an Army pilot in the Transport stories, goes on m issions, and in­ Command, le ft recently fo r over­ terview s m em bers o f the force. ■k seas duty. He was a junior pre-law student in the U niversity when he L i e u t e n a n t S c o t t W a l t e r K e y le ft to take flyin g. A fter com plet- J r ., 1931-36, has been assigned as an assistan t on the s ta ff o f the j ing his advanced fly in g , he served at R an d olp h ; two years as a C. A. A. flyin g in- provost m arshal the Field. P rior to this assignm en t, Key i Arm y’s Transport Command. He w as stationed at Strother F ield. \ has approxim ately two thousand W infield, Kansas, and w as a t v a r i-1 hours to his credit, ous tim es com m anding o ffic e r of the 1088th Guard Squadron, in-1 vestigation o ffic e r , assistan t trial ju d ge ad vocate, assistan t provost m arshal, and police and prison of- at Coumbia U niversity, fleer. ’39, has received his com m ission as en­ sign from the m idshipm an’s school in Feb- life , K ey w as en- j m ary, 1912, C ampbell was new s gaged in geop h ysical survey w o rk , editor o f the Memphis Dem ocrat. * L e s t e r H . Campbell, B . J . B efore his en listm en t In civilian en tering structor before j P a s t e l S k i r t s W herever you go you'll look pretty In a paste! pleated skirt. Soft pastel plaids and solid colors. Sizes 12 to IS. 3 . 9 3 t o t t . 9 3 SCARBROUGH’S SPORTS SHOP, SECOND FLOOR •AGS FOUR Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1944 Off The Record — By Ed Reed C f f a c i a l N o tic e * . .. «•* tv. MM ■’■Aaa—* pjwnawpw a - J. I ? R JE K £ "I THINK SHE SLIPPED ON PURPOSE- A LEMON RINSE ALL WEEKI” -SHE S BEEN WANTING T a Be C ontinued B y E L ! R O B I N S O N lA je ^ b e n 'tN e e d G oM A cA uptian *7 a C jioe y o u th W oaM 'IOma. W hen the manufacturer of a cheap, a bitter-tasting, or a worthless pharma­ ceutical preparation wants to put his product over to the American public, he usually camouflages it with some type of sugar coat. Our post-war permanent m ilitary conscription advocates have been seeking to sell the American people a very bitter pill, permanent m ilitary conscription, but the opposition has been so great that, both times the M ay Bill (which provides for permanent compul­ sory m ilitary training! has been brought up before the House of Representatives, the outcry was so tremendous that the bill never got to the voting stage. Taking a page from the album of the old cure- all peddler, our militarists seek to sugar- coat their intentions by some hoax about a “ W orld Cruise.0 The parallel is sur­ prising both in value and in deception. Before the war there was a quite popular song which went: “ I joined the N avy to see the world, and what do I see?* I see the sea.0 It is proposed that our young men upon the end of their education spend a year in the services to be stationed three months in the United States, three months in Germany, three months in Italy, and three months in Japan. How much of the world are they going to see from the transport, the military box car, or the m ilitary barracks? if the plight of the Yankees stationed at Camp Swift, of East Texans stationed at Camp Barkeley in West Texas, of California Y-12's at the Uni- ersity, of Texans at Notre Dame, of Southerners at Camp Dix, and so on is any indication, the answer is, not very much. Furthermore, are the Germans, the Japs, and the Italians who are go­ ing to have to play hosts to these rather uninvited guests going to gain much love for the people who sent them over? Furthermore, do we need to occupy permanently the Axis nations after the war, or do we need conscription to do go? Britain has held India by force for over a century and a half without ever having more than a hundred thousand troops in that great subcontinent at any one time. India has four times the area and twice the combined population of Germany, Italy, and Japan. Certainly all the allied nations, the United States, the British Commonwealth, Russia, China, Poland, Czechoslovakia, France, and the others, ought to be able to raise enough troops to occupy the Axis na­ tions, if they must be occupied, without resorting to conscription. W hen the Texas student gets out of the University, ifs going to be hard and long enough for him to establish himself in the American society. W h y make him undergo* the additional hardship of wast­ ing a year of his life in the armed forces, where he may learn to kill instead of construct and lose a good deal of knowl­ edge that he has absorbed in twelve years of education? If the militarists are so anxious for him to improve his “ education,” why don't they advocate that every American youth, boy and girl alike, be given a railroad ticket and a couple of hundred dollars to enable each to see the greatest land on earth, his own, beautiful Am erica? There is no sense in learning about other peoples’ lands until you learn about your own. and few Americans know very much about their own country. Few Americans have been in more than two or three of the forty-eight states, and many haven’t even seen very much of their own states. Most North­ erners think that Texas is merely a land of colorful cowboys and that Southern­ ers lynch a Negro every Sunday. Many Southerners think that the great North­ ern cities are little more than conglom­ erations of slums, apartment houses, and factories, and that Northerners frequent­ ly practice miscegenation. Too many Easterners think that the only thing that there is on the Pacific Coast is Hol­ lywood, and a great many Westerners don’t even know of anything on the A t­ lantic seaboard. If every youth could get to see America, it would not only broaden his knowledge about his own great nation, but it would go a long w ay towards creating one American na­ tion rather than forty-eight. Westerners should be given a chance to see and learn to love the apple blossoms of the Shenandoah, the palisades of the Hud­ son, the rapids of the St. Lawrence, the caverns of Virginia, the falls of Niagra, the beaches of Florida, and the bayous of Louisiana, and Easterners the beau­ ties of Yosemite, the geysers of Yellow ­ stone, the romance of the Rockies, the wonders of the Big Bend country, the oil fields of Texas, and the Grand Can­ yon of Arizona. However, if an American youth is to do so, it must be as a civilian tourist traveling on his own free will and for his own pleasure and education rather than as a m ilitary pawn traveling at the order of some brasshat, and for only God knows what purpose. M IT C H E L L G R O S S M A N *7< 6e Firing Line from L e t t e r * ra id e r * o b * u b je rt* p e rtin e n t to t h * U n iv e r s it y and th * stu dent body ore welcom ed by T h * D a ily Texan. L e t t e r * should be lim ­ ited to 250 word# and m u tt b* on T h * in te re s t. s u b je ct* o f se n o ra ) the r is h t to publish e d ito r reserve# a ll or a n y p art o f a to e dit a1) le tte r* . N o le tte rs w ill be re ­ turned. Addr### le tte r* to : T h e E d ­ itor, T h e D a ily T exan, U n iv e r s it y S ta tio n , A u s tin , 12. T e x **. le tte r and A I R I N G A Y R E S Dear Ja ck , I always get my Texans a few days late, so I have only today seen the Houston Post editorial attacking Dr. Ayres as quoted in your editorial col­ umns, and O ’Connor's counter­ attack. Somehow, it is amusing to see a little man like Mr. Ed Kilm an attack so big a man as Dr. Ayres has always shown himself to he, both in his ca­ reer as a U niversity professor, in his as an economist, and personal principles. Mr. Kilm an, it seems to me, has been guilty before of mis­ quoting. or altering by leaving out parts of, statements made by others in his editorials in the Post. Probably he is better known among friends of the U niversity all over the state for that reason th in for w hat­ ever merits he may have other­ wise as an editor. As fa r back as I can remem­ ber he has been shouting “ com­ munism, fascism, atheism, rad­ icalism !” at the U niversity and calling loudly upon the “ moth­ ers and fathers and taxpayers” to do something about that great big bad place. He has, in fact, shouted wolf so many times that probably if a black- bearded Russian waving a red flag were actually to enroll in institution, Mr. Kilm an that would be unable to get one sane or insane man to help him get rid of the character, It is indeed unfortunate for the Post editor that so many of the students of the U niversity now and for the last several years w ill soon be the very “ mothers and fathers and tax­ payers” upon whom he is for­ ever calling, all of whom still seem to be safely voting the Democratic (would he prefer R ep ub lican?) ticket, and going to church on Sunday. Also, afte r the many, many allusions thereto, one can’t help wondering just where Mr, K il­ man would like the taxpayers to take their money if not to The U niversity of Texas. W h y beat around the bush about so im portant an issue as that? Possibly it may not be true in Houston, but in this neck of the woods the name of Ayres is just a1 synonymous with U niversity of Texas as are those of Dobie, Rainey, Barker, and W ebb— and it will take bigger men and cleaner journalism to rock foundations like those! S U E B R A N D T M c B E E , W ichita Falls, Texas, iloe>i Sp, toil Hede'iixe ^lUant&b on Sac^iilice to B ond %n,iue There is something more than money that can be given to the w ar effort, and the Silver Sp ur', campus service organi­ satio n, have proved it. When the steering committee met the other day to discuss “ Firing D ay” and The campaign to raise $10,000 for 10.000 fighting exes, almost every student or- anization came forward with offers of help. Everybody wanted to help sell ‘ onds and do their part toward making he drive worthwhile. That their efforts were not in vain is proven in today’s page I 8*ory about the success of the drive. > The Silver Spurs, however, did more !than just help sell bonds. They gave that omething more— that added gift that rill become the ‘’Widow ■ M ite” when he history of this war loan drive is formal written. They gave up their dance so that there could be an all- Universify dance this w eek-end to bene­ fit the bond drive. It wasn’t an easy thing to give up their dance. Committees had completed their plans, bids had been mailed, an orchestra hired, and other arrangements made. Everything was ready for the big­ gest social event on the organization’s calendar. The Silver Spurs and their guests won't don their formals Saturday and go dancing, but they’ll wear their soft shirts and short dresses over to Gregory G j’rn and buy war stamps for the priv­ ilege of attending their own dance. It ’s a fine gesture on the part of a fine organ­ ization, and the war stamp dance Sat­ urday night is worthy of the support of every student— JA C K M A G U IR E 7>iainina to Qiulihf,, Mromani Place, Aptest l/Ual S n d i (B y Associated Since the first of September, 1039, women have been taking an increasingly arge part in what was once called “ a n an ’s w orld.” Women have been build­ up .ships, airplanes and munitions for ;he men who were once doing the .job .htrnselvo.- Though the in*roducI i* n of women into the work world on so large % scale was not necessarily through hoice, the women have shown, almost without exception, that they can do a n a n ’s job as well as or better than a nan. this But with development of vom anpower have come many problems, Mot the least of which is the problem of he post-war position of the feminine 'yorker. The ordinary thought on the abject has been that at the end of the v a r woman's place will again be in the nome. Recently, however, Dean W illiam fowling of the College of Liberal Arts, Washington University, in an address elcoming new students brought forth Collegiate P r e s a ) I a new thought on women at work. Dean Bowling said, “ . . . They (college wom­ en) alone have the privilege of training themselves for efficient and effective service in the post-war world.” As Dean Bowling suggests, the period when we will cease to be dependent on women for work once done by men is not to appear immediately upon the demobilization of the Arm y and Navy, The men who have been trained for Arm y life cannot be expected to pick up highly technical and specialized tasks immediately. That will be up to the women who have taken this opportunity to prepare themselves for, in the words of Dean Bowling, “ the age of the college woman.” Possibly it might be suggested that the solution will not be found in exclu­ sion of women from certain jobs by the old edict of tradition, but instead, in letting individual ability and training determine the status of the individual. — S T U D E N T L IF E , Washington Univer­ sity. Stained B y M A R G A R E T W E S T B R O O K E x c h a n g e E d it o r The lecturing light® went on again at Michigan State, or the day of chivalry is not over, or the professor carried on, or . . . A nyw ay, a prof of the chem department was to his class in organic chem when one of the lights in the room blinked and went out, Not the least perturbed, he continued his lecture, when suddenly in the midst of a particularly d if­ ficult passage tho light came on. The prof turned and squint­ ed up at the light. Then in his politest tone he said, “ Thank you,” and bowed, ★ And some poetry wo swiped Indiana D aily Stu ­ from the dent*. The door blaw open; In danced a gust of wind. It tilted a lady’s hat: She cursed within. It blew the ashes of a cigarette into her soup: She cursed within. It snuffed the candle out; In reaching for a light, She spilt her tea: She cursed within. She rose to leave; A drape blew in her face: She cursed aloud. Strange . . . I heard her say She loved a windy day! it in The Found Spectator, school paper at M .S .C .W .: First drunk: This match won’t light. with it? Second drunk: Washa madda First drunk: I don’t know— it lit all right just a minute ago. rf “ The purpose of the A rm y Specialized Training Program is not confined entirely to the needs of the present war effort. Close examination w ill show that it also has a long-range objective— the development of the full benefits of the coming peace,” said General Thomas A. Terry, commanding o fficer of the Second Service Com­ mand, first A .S.T .P. graduates at Princeton U n iver­ sity, the to So you think Texans are state-conscious. So you read the Dallas News and are amused by their insistence that Texas is winning the w ar single­ handed. So you hear stories that there are more out-of-state men the Thirty-Sixth Division in than So there are Texans. you’ve taken a solemn oath to get out of here just a® quickly as the m ilitary will let you. Okay, if th at’s the way you for is no place feel, Texas you. is Bu t, brother, our only cau­ tion to you is that, if you leave Texas, steer clear of Brooklyn, U .S .A . Texans are soft-spoken compared to typical Brooklyn­ ites. To them, Texas just a pinpoint out west. W hen they go west, they simply cross the East R iver into M anhattan. Most of them have never e\en been to Joisey. And as fa r east as they ever get is Jones Beach. The following story of an in­ cident that happened right here in Austin last week w ill give you a pretty good idea of what we m ean: ★ H A M P T O N R O A D S One of the officers of the Naval Flig h t Preparatory School lecturing fights his w ar by every morning to the Regiment of Aviation Cadets and Student Aviation Pilots about the his­ tory of the Navy. Now, anybody who w ill take the time to read a few* books can lecture on the history of the N avy, but to do it at 7 o’clock in the morning in Hogg Auditorium with the bats buzz­ ing around your head and a procession of mongrel pups strolling all over the stage, stopping occasionally to sniff at your trouser legs, does re­ quire a certain amount of savoir faire. it M O N I T O R A N D M E R R I M A C But, nevertheless, the other morning this o fficer was pro­ ceeding with a discussion of the Rattle of Hampton Roads. This classic engagement, a® you don’t know*, wras in three phases: first, the loss of the Norfolk N avy Yard to the Confederacy (as great a blow to the Union in the C ivil W a r as Pe arl H ar­ bor was in th is ); second the destruction of the U n io n ’s Cum­ berland and Congress by the M errim ac; and, third, the f a ­ mous battle of the M onitor and the Merrim ac, The officer went on to dis­ the for cuss how propitious Union was the fact that the M onitor, one of three ironclads- built on Long Island in the un­ precedented time of IOO days, arrived at Hampton Roads at 9 o’clock on the evening of the the M errim ac had very day sunk a n d the Cumberland forced the Congress to strike its colors. He told of the actual battle next day. a four-hour engage­ ment that ended in a decisive victory for neither, hut is gen­ erally conceded to the M onitor because the Merrimac fin a lly high-tailed it back to Norfolk. (O f course, some Texans w ill contest this statement as a piece of vicious propaganda undoubt­ edly found only in “ Northern history books.” ) ★ G O O D B Y E , F O R E V E R Then ho wound up his lecture with a statement of the sig nifi­ cance of the battle— the fact that this clumsy encounter in which there were no casualties except bloody noses revolution­ ized the navies of the world. From that date the ship of sail was doomed as an instrument of war, although, of course, most of the naval actions of the C ivil W a r were still fought in full-rigged ships of the line, or frigates, razees, or sloops. (The lineage of today’s mam­ moth new “ Missouri,” the n a­ tion’s n e w e s t battlewagon (Iow a class), the most form id­ able w ar machine the world has ever known, is directly trace­ able to the M onitor— “ a cheese­ box on a r a f t ” — and the M er­ sub­ rimac— “ like a house, like T H E teacher# T E A C H E R S C O M M I T T E E would A P P O I N T M E N T to hear te a c h ­ fro m in the W a r R elo catio n P r o je c t * ing fo r Ja p a n e se . C iv il S e r v ile a p p o in t­ m ent w ith good sa lur v and va c a tio n . M I R IA M D O Z IE R , S e c re ta ry S u tto n M a li 219. in te re ste d in T H E T E A C H E R S in C a lifo rn ia A P P O I N T M E N T to C O M M I T T E E has been asked reco m m en d te ach e r* fo r a poly tech mc school co n nection w ith the N a v a l F lig h t P re p a r a t o r y S r bool p rog ram . T e a c h e r* a re w a n t­ ed in high school p h ysics, a e ro lo g y , a ir c r a ft engines, p rin cip le s o f {ly in g , n a v ig a tio n . Good salary w ith in cre ase le ave and v a ­ and accu m u late d sick, ca tio n w ith p a y. in M I R IA M D O Z IE R , S e c re ta ry S u tto n H a ll 219. to T E A C H E R S is being asked som eone w ho would A P P O I N T M E N T I H E C O M M I T T E E till m an y vacan cie s ai good salarie s. W e to w a rt teach one girt. S p a n ish am ong o ther subject# , on a ran ch in W c i t T exan, W e w a n t e le m e n ta ry , p rim a ry , k in ­ d e rg a rte n , te a c h e r* . T ho se inte re ste d pleas# see th e sec­ r e ta ry . scien ce, etc,, lik e M I R I A M D O Z IE R , S u tto n H a ll 219 T H E T E A C H E R S A P P O I N T M E N T C O M M I T T E E w ould lik e to co n tact in te re ste d in p o sitio n * the Y o u n g W o m e n s C h ris tia n a the you n g wom en w ith A sso cia tio n s, re p re s e n ta tiv e m iddle o f F e b ru a ry . a p p o in tm e n ts w ith to be m ade fo r M I R IA M D O Z IE R . S u tto n H a il *219. S e c re ta ry B E N E D I C T S C H O L A R S H I P S tru s te e * u n til M arch A P P L I C A T I O N S K O R C A R L S T O N E fo r th# y e a r 1944-4 > w ill oe re ce ive d by the I , 1944. T hese sch o larsh ip s are open Lo m ale stu d e n ts in th e C ollege of A r t s and Science# who w ill have sophom ore s ta n d in g by S e p te m b e r I , 1944, W h ile sophom ores a rc p rete rre d , u p p e rc la ss­ men a rc elig ible. Send ap p licatio n * to J . W . C A L H O U N , S e c r e t a r y , M a in B u ild in g 2606, C L E S P E R S O N S W H O H A Y E L O S T A R T I ­ in the last few m o n’ ha are requ ested to com e by the U n io n and ► ce if they ar.? am ong the in i lie lo st and found d ep artm e n t. U n ­ claim ed article # w ill be sold » t a u c ­ tio n s a t u r d a y noon. item s D O R O T H Y O L S O N . D ire cto r, T exas U n io n . A L L N A M E S fo r senior class e lectio n should be in th e Dean of W o m e n 's I office by M o n d ay, F e b ru a ry o ’clock. a t E le ctio n of the p resid ent and ■- :.# p resid ent w ill be flu W e d n esd ay . F e b ru a ry 9, rn rom 815 of the U n io n at 5 o'cioi k. J A C K I E R e p in ter CO Y O W I L L ’J H E please t a l l b y Dean of VV omen F O L L O W IN G G I R L S the the O ffice of im m e d ia te ly ; E w in g , Mr-. L o rra in e W in t e r * H ale . O rp h a L a v e r n e H o llin g s w o rth M rs. Jo h n F . H ooper, R u b y L a u r a H o use, A d a Jo e H u dson . D o ro th y N e!! H u g h e s. A! .r- Lo u ise l l Jo n n s o n , Mr# M axine Roebuck Ju n e s , G e o rg ia Le e K arn ere r. H an e y Ire n e K e lih c r, H ild a Ja n e K e lle r. K a th a r in e L i n e K ir k p a t r ic k . Je a n La rn pc. M a v is Lan g d o n . M arc bet* L a w non, Ire ? a ( J a l a L ie d e k e r, B a rb a ra L ie u inko. E m m a Le e L o w ry , M a ry E la m * L y o n . M a r y M a rg a re t M a lta, Ja n ic e M a n n in g , M a rjo rie B. M a rtin , B illie V irg in ia M c C lu re M a ry C ath e rin e M iConib, Ja n e S c o tt! Me G ow n, N o r* heil M i L l ha neon, S a ra E liz a b e th M Kiwm'n. Ire n e Lo u ise M c F a rla n d . A n n ie M a rie M c K in n e y , N o rm a Lo u ise Mi L a u g h lin , M n y bio M c N a ir V irg in ia Lo uise M c N a u g h to n , R L * E le a n o r M ilter, l.oi* M a rie M ii *. E le a n o r A >td ey M itch e ll, B illie L o u r # M o n k, Alom a Dolores M oore. E m Iv M a rg a re t D O R O I H Y G E B A U E R O N M O N D A Y I abr .a y- 7. a- 6 P . M, lr G eolo g y B H idin g I t. the T e a c h ­ er# A p p o in tm en t ('d in m itten w ish es to m eet nil stu d e n ts w h " w ill be a v a ila b le fo r te ach in g p osition* a fte r the M a rch serv ice o f ti is co m m itte e in seeking p osition s. p o si­ tio n s for -he c u rre n t school v e a r or fo r the -i’ hon! y e a r b eg in n in g In S e p ­ tem ber a rc w anted to be p resent. I, or before, who w ish A ll ca n d id ate * <*. M i R IA M D O Z IE R , E n g in e e r* h ib itio n of work re la tin g to E n g lis h <17. W r it in g and fu r Ja jo r s . T h is e x h ib it f* being S cie n c e shown in Room I l k o f the A r c h it e c ­ tu re to 6 from 9 o 'clo ck. F e b r u a r y 3-15. J , J E n g lis h 817 S ta ff member ll r lid m g d a ily J O N E S . W h a t wo moan, you No'thun tourists, is: Come down and breathe our Texas air, And be a Texas millionaire, And throw a steer and drill fo r And help us brag about our W ell, anyhow if you can’t come oil, soil. down, Y o u ’ll have to be content with your ow u home town. Radio By the Hour I KTBC >0 N ews. T a b . l l iiii T a b e rn a c le l l :30 T a b e rn a c le l l EV T a b ., L e rn a ? ; Law so n I Law so n ' R u th L e w is I T u n e # ; N e w * A F T E R N O O N 1 2 : 0 0 New# B o lto n 12:16 12 R h i ’ Simeer# I J :4.*• C razy Gause I Bstlkh ag # Pe rkin # Boy# I D r. VV j M o aic ; N e w * M im ic I JIO I :1 I ;30 I 45 S a w Boy# Saw Boy# i o rrfb le T. T e rrib le T . 2:00 Victory* 2:15 V ic to r y 2:30 A ir School A ir Sch oo l 2:45 3 : 0 0 M a r k e t ; B in * 3:15 C r o s b y . N ew * A .A T L W , 3:30 S c o tt R 3:4 5 4:00 Dunn Fu n 4:15 D un n Fu n 4 un S in g A io n * 4 4 5 U .S . Sp e ak* C. F o s te r H arm o n y B u s c a t ed B e Seated M , D o w n e r I rue S t o r y T r u e S t o r y J a c k L it t le B lu e F ro lic * Biti# F ro lic * Tim # N ew * N ew com er# In G ro o ve Vagabond M u s k D. T ra c y B o * 5 -on S o u th w e s te rn 5:15 N a v y ; Sport# 5:30 B iis fie ld 5 4 5 W o r ld : H a ra ch T e r r ? New# J C M id n ig h t A rm s tro n g N I G H T f .Of) New# 6 I S M y C o u n try 6 : 3 0 6 (5 R nest Req ie#t 7 :00 C am p S w if t 7 I S M elo d ic* 7:30 S t a r P a ra d e 7 4 5 Carle. N ew * T ab e rn ae Ie Ta be m ao Se T a k e r nae!* Tabei nacle M no re Du ra m e R ad io H o n * * D ance T im e I CWI* P arn old H anger R a n g e r W a tc h W o rld L a rk e r Me,-* Navy* M eet N a v y I G D r a ft e r i R ip le y I Spot Reed I Rand . Sport,* C u n th e r Aa Y o u L ib * N ero W o lfe N e ro W o lfe N e « # J Brook# ! in no | 1 0 : 1 5 I I 0 ;H0 M r*. M in iv e r I 1 0 M 5 M r *. M in iv e r Freedom h reel , bun M o o a lig h t Moon. : N e w * N e w * ; G a rb e r G a rb e r P e a r l T e ar! I Lob S tro n g { Bob S tro n g I O liv e r O rch. ' O liv e r N e w * S T U D E N T S A N D M E M B E R S of the f s a u l t * re inv ited to visit sn ex­ 12 -0 N e w s ; O ff < S ig n O ff *7a d a y 'l Q n o -iic a o n .d I 12 15 m a 28 n 36 40 53 57 it? 17 / Ss / *9 H 20 /Ay ai J r n 4 13 / / / / / / / 23 /// / /// 29 33 37 V77 / / / 41 43- 5 ° 54 58 to 7 a 9 <0 / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / .... 18 14- 24 2.5 * / / / //// 3 ° 31 ////a / / / / '/// / / / / 35 34 / / I W / 38 39 }///. //// //// '//A 43 / / / / /// /s r / / / / / / , 26 27 />; >/ '//■' 52 7777 W a//// 51 V /// m 55 56 59 rJ /,r / / / merged to the eaves, born on­ ward by a flood.” ) W hen the officer had fin ­ ished. he ordered the battalion commander to take charge. The men were ordered to attention and the instructor strode into the wings. A fte r the battalion had been ordered to “ fall out,” however, one sailor hurried to the front of the auditorium and tip the stairs onto the stage. He met the instructor at the prosceni­ um and hesitantly, self-consci­ ously said, “ Sir, you gave out this some wrong morning, I thought maybe you would w ant to know* so you could correct it tomorrow morn­ ing.” inform ation ★ C O R R E C T I O N The officer put the man at ease quickly with. “ C ertainly, FU correct it. Vt hat did I say that was w rong ?” More sure of his ground now, the enlisted man added, “ W ell, sir, I know I ’m right because I lived for years within a few blocks of where the Monitor was built. I ’ve read the plaque where the M onitor w a : built many times.” “ Is that so?” the officer asked encouragingly. “ Yes, many time®,” the sea­ man said proudly. “ B u t you said the Monitor was built on Long Island.” , “ T hat’s lig h t.” answered the officer. “ But. you see. sir.” the sea­ man replied, “ the Monitor was­ n’t built on Long bland. It was built in Brooklyn.” SOtjJt pally: Srxau rite L a it y Texan, * lu d e n t n e w sp a­ it per c f T h e U n iv e r s it y o f T e x ts , published rn A u stin ever.# m orning except M o n d ay * and S a tu rd a y * . S e p ­ tem ber tw ice w eekly d u riu g the sum m er session under the title of T h e S u m m e r T exan by T e x t* S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n * , Ju n e , and Inc. to N e w s co n trib u tio n s m ay be made (2-2478) or at the edi­ by telephone Jo u rn a lis m Bu ild in g in to ria l o ffice s 101, 102, and 109 C o m p lain t* shout d e liv e ry in the business o ffice. Jo u rn a lis m B u ild ­ ing se rvice should be m ade IOU ( 2-2473). A d v e rtis in g m an ag er is A l N ieh Ola*, whose headq uarters a rs busine## o ffice. in the The D a ily T exan is entered a* sec­ ond the post o ffice st A u stin , Texa#, by A ct of C ongress. M a rch 3, 1879. class m ail a t M e m Dei Pbsociated Gollc&aie Press S U B S C R I P T IO N R A T E S B y C a rr ie r N o ve m b e r to M a rch I, $1.85; N o ve m b e r I to J u l y I . 42-60 I, I . 83.80 B v M a ili N o ve m b e r $2 OO N ove m b e r I to J u l y to M a rc h J I the place o f d e liv e ry M o n th ly rate 60 cents. T h e Texan w ill be d elive re d in A u s­ is tin p rovided lim it# , from N in e ­ w ith in the ca rrie r teenth to T w e n ty - s e v e n th S tre e ts , in ­ clu siv e, south to no rth , and from Rio (Grande S tre e t on th# w est and S an Ja c in t o B o u le v a rd on the east. r ^ “ 44 r n 4 5 4 6 •si as 48 49 E d ito r ___ J A C K M A G U I R E A sso ciate E d ito r __ M A Rif- R A N C E S w i l s o n A s s is ta n t to the E d ito r „ A R H o w ard R a ve n n a E d ito ria l A ssistan t# M a th e w s, M a rjo ris W a lb e rg , M ari- france# W .Iso n ... - — r. H e le n s W ilk s S o c ie ty E d ito r S o c ie ty A sso c,are „ M a rio n B rid g e s A m u sem en ts E d it o r _______ E r n e s t in e D a v is P a u l A m usem en ts A sso ciate - D u c k y D avie I r a c y . S p o rts C o -E d ito rs G eorge Reborn S p o rt* A sso ciate « In tra m u ra l E d it o r Busine## E d ito r _ R ad io E d it o r P a n - A m e rica n E d it o r J a c k G a lla g h e r P a t T a y lo r Jo y c e B e ll E a r la v n e B la ck A rn u lfo , E x ch an g e E d ito r M a rg a re t W e stb ro o k I C h u rch E d ito r P a t F o w le r j A sso ciate C h u rc h E d ito r _ Jo y c e Coi# Je a n e t t e H eard : ------------------------------------------- S T A F F F O R T H IS IS S U E Telegraph E d it o r S. M a r t in e t i : Night E d ito r A, R. H O W A R D ! Assistant Night Editor. Faye Loyd Night Reporters ........ Jo e Hunt, P a t Seipel, Ernestine Davis Copyreaders .... Jo e Hunt, Joyce Cole Raborn I Night Sports E d ito r George Assistants ................ Paul Tracy, B ill Johnson, Pa t Taylo r Night Society Ed ito r ........ Cissy Stew art Assistants . Georgann Scott ........ S a lly Fox, Night Amusements E d ito r .. Ducky Davis Assistants Carolyn Scott .... Pa t M urphy,; Night Telegraph E d i t o r Je a n ] I MacDonald | Assistant Lyn n B arb ar H O R IZ O N T A L I. foot-like part 4, French sculptor 9. loiter 12. insect 13. appearing eaten away 14. feminine name 15. frighten 17. baked at high tem­ perature 19. hasten 20. bone HI. regret extremely 22. cooking vessel 23. unhampered 25. formerly 28. indefinite article 29. to jut out 31. Luzon Negrito 32. light cord 34. covertly sarcastic 36. observe 37, mercenary 39. note in the scale 40- Icelandic literature 42. negatives 43. furrow 44 god of lower world 46. Chaldean town 47.be ill 48. gift 51. province in India 53. celestial body 54. strong grasses 56. Greek letter 57.those in office 58. augurs 59. corded fabric V E R T IC A L 1. dance step 2. enthralled 3. dye 4. female ruff 5 correlative of either 6. English county Answer to yesterday’s puzzle. Average time of solution; 25 minutes. Dish by K in g Feature* Syndicate, Inc. 2-5 2 - 5 7. equal: comb, form 8. cloine 9 former Papal palace IO. citrus drink l l mining tool 16. action in law 18. woo 20. western state 22. outmoded 23. bogs 24. slurrer 26.inspire ■ 27. implied 29. prefix: twice 30. daughter of Nyx 33. blushes 35. hypothetical force 38 gouged 41 three-toed sloths 43. stair part 45. southeastern European 47. Roman coin 48. Greek letter 49. hurry 50 new: comb, form 51 beast of burden 52. chart 55, prefix: from :RIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1944 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 P A S E FIVE Fruit of Efforts Ripens When 'Cherry* Curtain Rises ’Madame Curie’ Rates Every Bond Bought for Admission W hen the stage manager gives fam iliar command, the “ Actors on stage— lights d im — curtain,*' Wednesday night, the hearts of three U niversity girls will stand still. These girls, Betty Blackw ell, Iris Futoransky, and Scharleen Barker, have the feminine leads in the Curtain Club’s prpduction of Anton Chekhov's play, “ The Cherry Orchard.” Betty Blackw ell, junior drama transfer from Stevens College, plays the p a il of Madame Liu b o ff Andreievua Raneveskaya, an aris­ tocratic Russian woman around whose life the whole plot of the play revolves. She is a woman of 48, gay, light-hearted, unconven­ tional, who finds it hard to be­ lieve that aristocracy and class consciousness can’t go on during a decaying era of Russian history. is returning home for the She first, time in six years and finds herself faced w i‘ h losing her es­ tate and position in life. Iris Futoransky, senor drama m ajor from T yler, plays the part of V arya, the adopted daughter of Madame Raneveskaya, She is a very methodical person who has “ The the housekeeper of been Cherry Orchard.” Although she has always been the stabilizer of the household and allows herself no romantic feelings, the possible loss of the only home she has ever known touches her more deeply than any of the other character-. The other daughter, Anya, is played by Scharleen Barker, senior drama m ajor from Am arillo, who can see that life cannot go on as it always has before. A n ya sym­ bolizes the hope of the fam ily for a new life. * ★ Although none of the girls have had previous experience with Chekhov, their experience in oth­ er plays and their wealth of en­ thusiasm and ambition won them the opportunity to play the leads. Blonde B e tty Blackwell played in “ She Stoop? to Conquer,” ‘‘H ap­ py “ C anteclair,” and “ The Pretentious Young Ladle*” while she was at Stephens, and the Curtain Chib’s production of “ Squaring the C ircle” and “ They Jou rn ey,” -> N versity. Petite, titian-haired Scharleen B ark e r says that she has been in shows all of her life and that she want- to go on the stage esther in Chicago or in New York when she graduate?. She was a dancer in tile “ Cabaret Revue” and the “ 43’crs Revue,” which made his­ the surrounding Arm y tory at last camps, and had a part for spring’* play, Peace.” in “ They Die ♦ P re tty, poised Iris Futoransky studied for the diplomatic corn­ in Mexico fo r two years, but with the w a r’s beginning decided to come to the U niversity and major in drama. She was in “ The Eve of St. M ark ” and “ They Died for Peace” last year. Iris believes “ The C herry Orchard” offers her her -be*t acting opportunity to date. Iris is going to the Marine Corps W om en’s Reserve as an o fficer candidate when she graduates in Ju ly . M L m m v U F I and Finished — IF You'll Buy More W AR BONDS Eddie Joseph's CAMPUS SHOP BETTY B L A C K W E L L as M adam e Raneveskaya and Scharleen Barker as Anya in ' -e Curtain C u b 's presentation cf ' The C herry Orchard" February 9-i 2. ► r --- ---- ---- -—........... ............... .......................... ....... ..... ........... A Victory Belle Billie Jean Taps, Sings Boogie for Servicemen I f you wondered about the J Charleston girl, Billie Jean was identity of the petite brunette j years old. B y M A R T H A K E R R who stepped onto a platform on the Drag last week and in the guise of tuneful “ Cow-Cow Boo- gi< ” and "Shoo, Shoo, B a b y ” s a n g a song of w ar bunds, she’s junior drama m ajor Billie Je a n Flannery, whose triple-threat am­ bition actre-s dancer-play- wright has welled within her for many years. of F o r the present, however, Billie is directing her talents J e a n in an "all-out-for-vietory” move­ ment, as she divides her time be- tween war bond show's, and camp enter­ tainment, : long and Then came tedious hours in dancing schools at Long- view, Dallas, Quanah, and Shreve­ port. B u t the tiring lessons were rewarded for in 1938 and three consecutive years t h e r e a ft e r , she was a featured dancer in the an­ nual Longview Lion’s Club min­ strel show, “ The Jo llies,” which played in Waco, New Orleans, and Shreveort. During these years, too, she was winning dancing and sum mer medals placed first iii a contest conducted camp at Drama Department, at Palm Isle in Easfi'exas ♦ In 1941, Billie Jean wa* named sweetheart of the Longview J u n ­ tine sum­ ior High School band, mer the school officials decided lo It a.I started with the U n iver­ let th* band boys and girls g.» to s ity ’s popular “ Cabaret Revue” in Yellowstone National Park for a late 194J, when Billie Jean be­ visit and agreed to pay half the came a member of the “ Cabaret” if the -tudents involved expense chorus girls. She was also a solo­ could obtain the remaining needed ist and sang ‘‘T hey’re Eith er Too finances. By giving breakfasts, Young or Too Old.” The complete dinners, and socials of all kinds review toured Camp Sw ift, B erg ­ for an « ntirc summer, the band strom Field, San Antonio airfields, Camp Hood, McCloskey Hospital, | and its majorettes and sweetheart and a camp house in Gainesville, made the trip. No sooner had they B illie Jean got .*uch a thrill seeing I arrived Jean , with than B illie the delight and happiness the dancing always a prim ary interest, show fostered that she determined helped arrange a special program the then and there to devote as much I of songs and dances, and time as possible to similar enter- j tourist.-1 of \ c iio u stone received ta lament contributions. j an added attraction. * W hen she was asked to sing and ; dance in the bond-selling booths j during D rive, she was delighted, and her act. W hen present schedule includes several casting the days’ performances, Saturday, B illie A year or so later she was given the Fo u rth W a r Loan a chance to fulfill her ambition to the for time came junior and senior j plays, B illie Je a n not only landed Jean again a part, but got one of the leads, to Bergstrom Field , j B y the time she entered Hocka- journey ed that time to take part in the M ile day Ju n io r College in Dallas, she of Dimes benefit show. Dance | was able to assume both dramatic the numbers were c o m p le te with can- and “ The can costumes, she said. "P a g lia c c i,” work, she has been dancing for j which were produced in coilabora- sixteen years. H er career began tion with the Dallas Little Thea- when Charleston Ginger contest, but unlike I W hen at home, she kept up with original I L ittle ’theater work, also giving F a r from being a novice at such Snow M aiden" and school of music’s operas, terpsichorean roles a m iniature j ter. she won Rogers, the in E ve ryb o d y SAVES BOOKS — SUPPLIES ENGINEERS' STATIONERY at the Texas Bookstore | time to U . S. 0. entertainment, 1 Once Fred erick Staffer of the San Francisco B a lle t visited Long- 1 view7 and offered several routines to young ballet aspirants. B illie J Je a n and one of her friends at- ] tended the lessons, and now she considers tre­ mendously helpful in all types of “ Good ballet pro- i lier dancing, instruction that See B I L L I E J E A N , Page 6 Friday and Saturday L O U IS E A L B R IT T O N R O B E R T P A IG E // Fired Wife ll Also B O O B S IN T H E N IG H T and Terrytoon T O N IG H T . . . “Frontier Badm en” with Robert P « if * Ann* G wynn*, Noah Jr ., Diana B arrym ore, Leo B **ry. Carrillo, Andy Devine Lon Chanry. and N E W S — C A R T O O N S H O W S A T 7:30 & 9:30 D R I V E - I N Russian Films Shown loday Movie Experiments Follow Revolution A Russian experimental film group of the mid-tw'cnties is to j be the seventh installment in the College of Fine Arts film series. A product of the surge of cxperi- J mentation in painting, sculpture, J the J and architecture Russian revolution, the film will be shown at 4 o'clock F rid a y aft­ ernoon in Physics Building, Room 201. following is based on two I Grotesque characters and high­ lighted details characterize “ The Cloak.” which stories by Gogol. Such mate ital was ready-made for a group of young actors and directors seeking material for formalized film ac-' tion and experimentation. Andrei ; Moskvin’s photography. is as ro­ mantic and grotesque as the theme calls upon it to he. it “ B v the L a w ” was produced by the first studio of Goskino iii Mos­ cow-. D irector Lev Kuleshov sought a subject offering opportunity for experiment and requiring a mini­ mum of expense and few7 actors. He chose Ja c k London’s “ The U n­ expected,” in which three people related by murder are isolated from civilization by winter storms: and spring floods. The absence of all orthodox film devices, i.e.,: no hero, no villain, no variety of locale, surprises arn! delights Its physiological ten­ filmgoers. sion is unique. Minimum effort maintains maximum of effect. “ The Cloak” translates theater form directly into film, empha­ sizing the continuity of the ac­ tors’ performance , whereas Kule­ shov’s production shows the in­ fluence of Am erican films upon him in *peed, freedom, and action. There is no admittance fee. and everyone is welcome to see two significant experiments in the his­ tory of the film. U.T. Songstresses loSin g in Bastrop The G irls’ Glee Club, under the direction of Miss Charlotte Du­ b o i s . will present a program of “ over-popular tunes” at the Bas­ trop U.S.O , Saturday night. Members of the Glee Club will meet at 6:30 o’clock at the Bowen B u - Station to make the trip. Included on the program aie “ Gianinna M ia,” Rom­ F rim l’s berg's “ W ill You Remember.” and trio Carmichael's “ Stardust.” A composed of Frances Arditi, Irene Viehweg, and Marian Ballerstedt w ill sing Brahm s’ “ Lu llab y ” and Foster’s ‘Meanie with the Light Brown H air.” Kathryn Jackson, violinist, and Marguerite Grissom w ill be solo­ ists with the Glee Club, Mr*. Tracy Honored Mrs. Spencer Tracy has been asked to sit or the faculty of the U n iversity of Southern California and will speak before a group of the country’s leading pediatricians as a result of her pioneer work in! the training of youngsters who j are hard of hearing. v # - v k i i I I ' v * ' ? '' ' -e-,„ - -■ n e : - ; < : - * ' I ;• J f c i l ; v IM P I ' * " - • ■ E R N S T H O F F M A N N , con­ ductor of the Houston Sym- ■ phony Orchestra. Symphony Returns to U.T. Houston Orchestra W ill Play Feb. 14 The Houston Sym phony Orches­ tra's fourth concert on the Uni-, versity campus will he Monday J night, February 14, at 8:15 o’clock in Gregory Gym under the auspices ! Entertainm ent J of the Cultural Committee. The orchestra, known as the Southwest'? (illest musical organi­ zation. will be conducted by E rn s t I Hoffman. Since it was formed in I 1913, the organization has been j supported by civic-minded citizens, of Houston and has grown steadily until it is rated today as one of, Am erica's finest orchestras. It, is the onl\ symphony orches-j tra in Am erica that plays morel concerts on tour than it does in! its home city. This is true because: the orchestra was organized and developed to provide good music j for the entire Southwest and not I merely for the entertainm ent of Houston music lovers. Collegiate Diana Lynn, co-starring w it h , G ail Russell in Param ount’s “ Our, Hearts W ere Young and G ay,” is preparing to enter college at U n i­ versity of Southern California. She ha* enrolled for special courses covering her final year in high school. $1,603,175 sold in war bonds was only part of w7hat went to make the premier of “ Madame C urie” a million-dollar show. Before the feature began, Tech­ nical Sargeant Ja c k Reams and his orchestra of fourteen men, the Seven Hundred Sixtieth Arm y Band attached to the A ir Forces at Bergstrom Field, opened with the currently popular “ Holiday for for Strings.” Sergeant Reams and General W h iffle , the latter a real long-haired musician, played a trumpet cracks complete with which caused the accordionist to quit the band for a pretty girl on the front row7— only to be slapped right back on the stage later. Gen­ eral W h iffle, is a hand-doll. incidentally The orchestra went back to ci­ vilian life with sweet music an d , soft changing In dreams they were at the Sapphire Room in ; Ja c k ; Hotel Washington, where Reams was w ith his orchestra just before he joined the Arm y. lights. I Ja p Sergeant Jackoskie, first saxophone, was with Lawrence W elk on his program; C o rp o ral’ M icky M cLeland is from Ted Fio R ito’? band; Sergeant Paul P iffe r, who sand “ Night and D ay,” was a vocalist with C arl Revisa; and Technical Sergeant Reams was a trumpeter in Skinny In n is’s b an d , and was in an E a r l C arro ll show, I M ayor Tom M iller came to the stage for the introduction of L. Novy and other officials of the bond drive, but would up directing the orchestra. Sergeant Reams and Mr. Novy had bought respectively $000 and $5,000 worth of bonds to make him do it He led “ A lex­ ander’s Ragtime B a n d ” — with gestures. Ushers were twenty men from Bergstrom Fie!,] under Sargeant G. T. Saunders, a resident of Aus­ tin. They arc from the Fo u r Hun­ dred Forty-Second Base Head­ quarters Squadron. “ Madame C urie” is the story of URRSITSG3 Frid ay and Saturday D O R O T H Y M cG u i r e R O B E R T y o u n g in l l Claudia” AI •o R E A S O N A N D E M O T IO N I CAMI. y r ___ C O M M O N C A U S E If i s u i m r 'i -flr i, C Wy Because der Americans Bought So Many W A R B O N D S K T B C 590 On Your Dial M ID-NIT E SH O W SATU RD A Y I ¥ t h * I NORTH j L S T A R j PARAMO Anti* rn it*71* J I lUNT S T A R T S T O D A Y D O O R S O P E N 11:45 A.M. ★ U N IV E R S A L N E W S ★ C O L O R C A R T O O N * G R E E R G A R S O N A N D W A L T E R P ID G E O N which they had together, but which neither had alone Four leng year* of drudgery in a dilapidated shack went for nothing, the7 thought, See ‘M A D A M E C U R R IE ,, Page 6 a woman who wanted to catch a star in her finger tips. She wa? a poor but brilliant student in Paris when she met Dr. Pierre Curie. a scientist who detested whistling in laboratory and felt that women had no place in science. the in the lab, and When a man like that begins to whistle to beg young ladies to meet his parents— something is bound to happen. It did. He rushed into her room at a dawn hour and told her that they j would go together like N ae I. No; friction, but a Hallie and workable union. They did. Only they were greater them thought. either of than The great discovery of radium was something that took manual labor, patience, and imagination, I ♦ 22 c T i l I * * Edward A R N O L D V i r s i r n . W E ID I. K R l l The Youngest Profession'' C O M E D Y C A R T O O N Also a n d L A T E S T N E W S wammm _ tALSO N EW ISSUE f MARCH OF TIME J BUGS BUNNY & NEWS- ? ? ROOMS FOR RENT? Run your vacancy ads for The new term now! Don’t wait until exam wee<. CLASSIFIED RATES Week-SI.OO Month-$3.50 (20 Words) DIAL 2-2473 FOR AD TAKER T H E D A I L Y T E X A N CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT P A S E SIX Phons 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phons 2-2473 On the W o r Front FRIDAY, FEBRU ARY 4, 1944 Susie Can Play Trombone In Spite of Knocking Knees At last we were to be in a band having played In w hat see mea By J E A N E MILLER years. Mitchell (Continued from Page I ) in field semi-technical and the post-war world. In qualifying for enlistm ent in the Air WAC, a girl m ust ( I ) pass a mental aptitude} test, ( 2 ) be between the ages of i 20 and 50, and (3) be in good physical condition. “ Never before has there been so much op po rtun ity in the service f o r patriotic college stu dents as exists today in the Air WAC pro­ g ra m ,” Captain Deuel declared. “ Air WACs perform fascinating jobs, receive valuable training fo r the post-war world of aviation, and live and play in the constant dram a of Army air fields at w ar.” He cited as examples two form er University of Texas co-eds now on duty a t Brooks f ield n e a r San j Antonio. They are corporals Reba I and Doris Grisham, the Army Air Forces’ “ sister a c t.” ★ in In addition to being one of the “ guinea-pig” pilots who partici­ the A t­ the Battle of pated lantic und er General Mitchell, ; Captain Deuel also is known fo r , his work in perfecting the dive­ bombing technique. Before e n te r ­ ing the service, where he has made a record for himself as a flier. Captain Deuel followed a Jo u rn a l­ istic career, making voyages in the interest of science and na tu ra l history the world, including the Guinea j u n ­ gles, w a te rs of the Amazon, A n t­ arctic, South Pacific, South A t­ lantic, and Indies. re c ruiting team will be in Austin this week, and all young women interested in the Air W’AC ; mav obtain information. rem ote parts of The to again. Ever since our last rehers- al with our high school band, we had been sorry the good ole band days were over f o r us. Our hopes rose the other day when we re a d in the Daily Texan th a t Colonel George E. H urt wanted to see all girls interested in band work, We know t h a t no girl had ever played in the Long­ horn band, and ou r knees knocked as we w ent to see Colonel H urt last Thursday night. We found no high-tempered maestro bu t a very friendly, agreeable man. He talked to nineteen of us girls as though we had known each other since way back. Monday night came, and most of us w ent to rehersal early to see abo ut our instrum ents and find our sections before the rush. At last the clock pointed to 7 :30. O ur eyes skimmed over the u n­ fam iliar music, and we wondered if we could possibly rem em ber how to finger all the notes, not 1943 Retail Sales Clim b 23 Per Cent Over 1942 s Sales of independent retailers in Texas for 1943 climbed 23 per cent above those of 1942, the Uni­ versity Bureau of Business Re­ search announced Tuesday. Based on from almost repo rts re p resentin g 8 6 8 a 1! stores, kinds of business except d e p a rt­ m ent stores, rep orted to the bu- rea in co-operation with the United j States Bureau of Census, this j year-end analysis revealed a gain over 1942 of 23 per cent in dollar volume in Dallas, 22 per cent in San Antonio, 19 per cent in Fort Worth. 17 per cent in Houston, and 15 per cent in El Paso, We began, and fo rtu n a te ly our fingering came back to us. Colo­ nel H u r t stopped us and w ent back to the trombone section. As he passed Susie, he pointed to the spot on her music where she had a solo. She swallowed hard and managed to nod h er head— sure she would play every note but the rig ht ones. Luckily she hit the r ig h t notes, even if her tone was fiat. E verything w en t along smooth­ ly. The girls seemed to fit in very well with the boys’ style of play­ ing. O ur only r e g re t was the hour leaving us too quickly, passed wishing Thursday would roll around in a hurry. Instead of a strange new atmos­ phere, we had found a revival of our high school band days, only more so. A Rat in a Trap Because You Bought Your Share of Bonds H ACE'S 5c, 10c, and $1 Storo A c r o s s fr o m H o v e A u d it o r iu m ESI S O M E W H E R E IN THE SO U T H P A C IF IC — W ork ng with assem­ bly-line precision, ground men load bombs into a TBF at a secret coral island air field— one of the jumping off places for the current South Pacific Allied offensive. Fourteen days before this bom ber field (shown in photo above) was com pleted there was nothing on this spot but cocoanut palms and jungle. C ord -w ood fashion, bun­ dies of stee a ra q a at-, are unloaded Tom sh c *o tea :h +o a • field and m any sections have planes rolling on them by nightfall of the same aay. This sudden transition is m ads possible by the ue of s 'e c mats many of which e-e mace by Un jed States Gyooum Com pany, which has converted for the duration from the produc­ tion of metal lath for gypsum plaster wails and ceilings of buildings to landing mat, expanded metal and steel gratings used widely in ships, airplanes and other vital war equipment.— O fficial U. S. N a vy Photograph. U. T.'s Unique Committee Gets Students, Profs to Play B y M A R T H A K E R R Five years ago a unique organ- keeps in mind the essential part the University Recrea- th a t recreation plays in the relief ization, , tion Committee, was the study and develop recreational fa- w ar and the conditions which it tensions brought on formed to of by ‘Nix/ Say Students— (Continued from Page I ) th a t he overlooked Rome scien* I their w ritten t i c e e rro r.” 5 velopes. thoughts into en­ in- form er Dr. Carlos Fling. Such a trick could easily be done s t r u t t e r in psychology, expert - 1 by a man of his experience, though mented with it while he was h e r e ; the odds were against him with and was satisfied th a t ail his ef- people on all sides, they believed, but the r e st of the mind-reading fo rts drew negative results, Dr. act was comparatively simple, g et­ Blodgett said. ting the slips from his pocket to “ There his notebook with the “ cover-’ and help of his glasses, which he reg u­ larly put on and took off. that J o ­ is no doubt seph Dunninger is extremely skill­ ful with pre.'-tidigstation,” he con­ tinued. In other words, the show­ m a n ’s hands are quicker than m ost e v e s . “ E n o u g h s o to afford student, whose , very p l o w e d evening’, enter-: Westinghouse generator was an- ta in m r n t.” W ern er Goldsmith, engineering thought o f Egineers Show They Can Write Charts Follow Rules of G ram m ar An exhibition of work re lating to English 317, Writing fo r E n­ is g i n e e r s and Science Majors, in room 118, now being shown in the the regular display room the j Architecture Building. The dis- supervised bv Dr. J. J. Jones, , nounced by Dunninger, looked into I The trick of the little boy writ- his envelope a f te r the show was utember of the English 31 < staff, from F e b ru a ry 3 to inc the three digit number on a over, and his slip of paper was slate at a distance of IOO feet and gone. The magician's conf using I * ebruary 16 ^ during the hours 9 j D unninger’s transm itting the cor-; the num ber o f amperes with the \l0 ™ I - to 5 o clock, ®*hibit is or interest p n - rect numbers o ther end of a limp rope was con- smith’s potting 'he two numbers ma n iy to engineering and science rtde-ed the most convincing stu n t on the wrong sides of the p a p e r , ; students, Dr. Jones explained, but a l 1 students and members o f the of the show by Dr. Blodgett. the the horsepower was caused by Gold- Confusing concepts exist con-* Thelma Freidin. journalism stu- ; the “ think er” believed. to a girl on t 0 vi*it 'VV ‘ ) 0 aie _ , * * jiave to w n t* reports study of in a on which D unn.tiger One person’s ability to the environment reported cerning telepathy, he said. Some dent, who got a close view of the exhibition, persons think telepathy is cxem- notebook plified when two persons of v e r y . w r ite the thoughts of the audience 1 , rtmilar environment say the same I while she was thing at the same time, when it is the afternoon before f result o the which causes it the show, th at she saw slits on ihe notebook in which paper might plained h a v e been concealed. ‘ he brst section of the exhibit interviewing him *s devoted to an explanation of English 317. The objects and plan the course are ex- re p o rt by Gabriel ( u t vc* A. The course is e x tre m e ^ d e te r - ; As f a r as F eder and Schleyei useful fo r professional engineers fre- mine the general a ttitude of a n - could determine, no mind in the " ho other person about some specific audience was “ r e a d ” from any sec- j fluently. as it teaches commercial largely b y 'tio n other than where D unnm ger and technical writing according to Is determined thing his experience and practice in helped put the slips into the en- modern standards. Though some l o o k i n g f o r the involuntary, almost velopes, with the exception o f a details of make-up can vary ac- i rn perceivable, actions of the per- balcony case. They haven’t deft- cording to standards of each com­ pane and office, the general Hiles nite proof of w hat occurred there, mons being studied. taught in 317 are basic for good A t least two psychology-minded nor have they figured out the slate repo rt writing. Following this di­ students, Luis F eder and Otis and rope they stand vision is a section of stud en t Schleyer, who w ent to the D u n - 1 staunchly in their belief th a t the work, giving examples of several Hinger show determined to dis-! perform ance was one of magic, t ypes of reports, such as the classi­ cover with scrutinizing eyes the not telepathy. fication, chronology description, secret of the “ telepathist's’’ sue- They agree th a t Mr. Dunninger and progress rep ort and some ex- is probably safe in offering SIO, believed th a t they had found OOO to anyone who can prove that ample* of letters of application. Ail this work was done by stu­ he uses confederates in the crowd dents in English 317. because he is such a polished m a­ gician he doesn't need the aid of Bowing to Mr. Dunninger as a “ p ast m aster of magic,” these tw o students said that they saw? the showman “ palm” several slips helpers. of paper from his right hand to his left; hand and then place them eral attitude in his pocket as he assisted certain could read minds, why doesn t he mortal walk along the branch in J I ' ™ i sections of the audience rn putting | collect the standing offers of mon- j ^ -cd a ra th e r gen- askiitg. “ If he Schleyer ex pre ii the answer. trick, but A i b l i n s jl T h e O n 'v B o o h W e W o u ld Like to B u r n — M e in K e m p I - ^ f ▼- y« 1 4 f j 9 s a / 4ss - j / V ^ Win the War in '44 Buy W a r Bonds UNIVERSITY Co-Op /or Basic fo r colleagues th a t there is no scien­ telepathy, other tific basis mystery-minded students c ontin­ ued to be skeptical of the skeptics and pre fe rred to keep the question open and fathomable. Rudolph Upchurch, stu d e n t in 194 3-43, will graduate from the Army A ir Forces Pre-Metevology miiukoi, av xwcuvuui Training D etachm ent a t Kenyon mbier Ohio on F e h - College in Ga ira to * I ’ rw’hinvh ma- fi^d of science. m a r y 12. Pi jored in b u s m e n administration and was a member of Phi E ta Sig­ ma, An interesting p a rt of the s t u - 1 , f o r r n - j e h . r . them a , t h students, t o n u * * n d faeiff th nm « ith l . , university or Ltopia, All p la n s. « ey from numerous scientific insti- lo tio n , over the country fo r prov - 1 and c a lculation, were made by '<*>'*« » t u d . r t r a q u e r t, inp such a thinR possible?" Aneth- students in cr question expressed was, • Why: course. A group which h a , been ap- doesn’t he read the minds of t h e 1 Rv mean? of numerous charts. Hiss, director of'physical training pointed to arra n g e activities in a in social enem y military leaders so the Al- tables, and pamphlets, m any me-I the ball- lies could win the w ar p ro n to ? ” Despite these effort? to convince shown. The processes of making I we do in our free time th a t we room nature, includes the direct- lleasrues th a t there is no scien- artificial ru bb er and plastic and I don’t have to do, such as garden- ors o f the Texas Union, the for women and chairman of the program of instruction everything dancing, particularly of 3 1 7 j struction in social dancing. aids are committee, “ includes ■’Recreation," says Miss Anna I chanical and the English visual . sports, concerts, ‘Y, lectures, J the physical training departm ent, SI the oiling system of a marine ing, engine are some of the illustra- tions. handicrafts, and hobbies.” and the Dean of Student Life, , , of the mechanical (Continued from Page I) In its planning the committee Smith - - The exhibit is informative and the c u rre n t timely because of , . , t-r 8 ° pm In “ Wartime Uses of W ritin g,” some and chemical problems of w ar produc­ tion and wartime research are treated. Miss Hiss favors the Milwaukee ; system of leaving schools open and lighted a t night fo r stu d e n ts’ i use. 1 Each year the Recreation Com- ' mittee sponsors square danc ing, festi- singing, I recreational . i r r e s p e c t i v e of other factors in t h e ; vals, and, at present, the form of introduced by I t o t a l ] COvers th a t although he is not the Miss Ethel Bowers, m em ber of center of the Universe, his im-1 the National Recreation Associa- mediate wants are not always com- tion. Mi>< Bowers, whose visits patible with good behavior o n t o the University were made pos- i good m anners or the well-being of sible by the Hogg Foundation and a 1!. God supplies this person'.-, im- the Recreation Committee, initially in c o -o p e r a tio n w it h the c ity , dem- j c a stra te d program s tor gil ls, serv- but a tiny stain in a dish. I t was ; the fu tu re quite satisfactorily radium. I t glowed, as Marie Curie * “ This,” added Dr. Smith, “ is (icemen, and mixed groups involv- did, and it was with Pierre th a t ; what I mean by an infantile r e - ; ing games, party plans, puzzles, Marie c aught the s ta r she s o u g h t.; ligious faith .” 'Madame Curie - - environment. The person dis- social I mediate w ants w h ile ta k in g ca re o f (Continued from Page 5) | stunts, and contests, recreation folk . Pierre Curie was killed shortly! “ What, now, is a m ature fa ith ? ” A fte r Miss Bowers conducted , a f te r the acclamation of the dis- asked Dr. Smith. Religious faith !:f>r Hrst series of lectures in No- covery, and Marie almost could in general is m an ’s conscious ad- member, the com m ittee recognized not go on alone. But something justm ent of his life to what he be- ?nat a £'reat fleal “ tore emphasis! flame-like th a t was in her made lieves to be most meaningful in the should be placed upon the needs I universe— to th a t in his total e n - ; of special groups, bo in J a n u a r y ,, her continue. I t. to In the last scene Marie Curie is vironment which creates and sus- ’ ? • Sutherland s return ed , at an old hady and is before a g re a t tains him, and will outlast him. assembly. In what she says you can, Religion and Christian see reflected fluence of Pierre Curie. - and in- however, I “ One may a d ju s t his life to a white ■vPey*fic r n faith, discuss are not synonym ous.; 8 r °ups an^cl to help t eem p an the pionlems of specia = ten tea Dona piogiam s. t if e t n a Iona . the wisdo request, ,/ T Madame Curie tells the young elephant or to a million dollars ' em era o the ^0,nlmttce a '° people there to look fo r the c l e a r f because he the light of truth, to take the torch of most m eaningful knowledge and build a palace of universe,” asserted Dr. Smith. A 'm a tu r i n g Christian is one who is; light, consciously seeking to relate his Madame Curie loved light, she whole life to God and to live as they are in thinks things ★ * 1 th a t fittin g it. Jesus has revealed, should be Madame Curie, the pair who; e»,” historical Christianity hail M- 7 u tlio d a nj."“i'ir7cto'r"of' the H e r e was eager and searching fo r she never accepted defeat, a n d ! According to Ernest Troelsch, in she was forever looking f o r a star his two volumes on “ The Ethical to take in her fingertips. Yes, it; Teachings of the Christian Church- Mas changed the whole concept o f mat- lowed three main roads in its de- Koundation and E v e re tt G. Smith, The mystical.! profcssor o{ marketing, are ad- te r unconquerable, and the wise, the j route, stressing the inwardness of v.jsorv members kind, and loveable P i e r r e . C h r is t ia n i ty and ignoring or flee- These two people who were one ing the social applications; (2) the were light itself, and it was in- group or sect route, emphasizing in worship deed suitable th a t they should dis-, immediate fellowship cover the secret of rad iant beauty and work, complete unity of doc- and good in th e h e a rt of the earth trines, finally developing our sects the More Tracksters - - (Continued from Page 2.) j — radium.— CAROLYN SCOTT the v e h e m e n t : the ( I ) 1 1 0 eans ie 0 college of Pine Arts and the .School of Business Administra­ tion, the chairmen of the D epart­ ments of Sociology, Physical E d u - , cation, and Physical T raining, the intram urals, director sta ff o f the Y.W.C.A. and members of Y.M.C.A., the Dean of Men, the j | Dean of Women, and the director the Texas Union. Dr. R. L. of Billie Jean- (Continued from Page 5) rhythm, which motes grace and qualities in tu rn are essential to American dancing,” she says. (3> ; and denominations; and church type, emphasizing the u n i - j * ^ r ec®pG°n of some seventy-five j versal, and typified by the Roman Tigh school, college, ami service Catholic Church. These roads, f o p J team s who are expected to com* lieves Dr. Smith are the three di- Pete in the com»n* i e x a * Rela>s here on April I, In spite o f the mensions handicap th a t the w ar has placed faith. track on all sports, event is expected to he ju st as exciting as ever. In the mystical aspect, meaning personal faith, it is plain th a t a n y of a m ature Christian this great her degree receives A pledge of Delta Gamma so-I Christian life has its mystical sid e ., revealed rority, a Curtain Clubber, and a This is the most im p o rta n t to a ju n io r member of Orchesis, Billie m ature Christian, Dr Smith stated, Jean in I He takes his stand on the belief th a t Christ is divine. Emotionally March, 1945, and then, she says, and volitionally he is growing into “ perhaps I ’ll get more to re- one person and his wants are be- write plays.” She has already . I plied are planning on bringing w ritten a monologue entitled “ 4- tourney. to mg disciplined F-er Yours.” , s Personal reactions are Christ- w ith over half of those invited the team s argue about bu t to live by. “ Christ w ^ 0 jlave replied in tho affirm ative already num ber forty-tw o— eight colleges, three service camps, and ju s t keeps out a victory salute and dreams 1 liveth in me.” of the day her ambition will be- j come a reality. Meanwhile, brun ette Billie Je a n (like; his faith is not something to I vet l 0 jje heard from ,, the K ingdom ;. th e ir teams to the big H»ad Coach Clyde Littlefield that some five hundred in v ita tio n s had been extended to various schools and camps, in this; the country. Abouts section of 25 per cent of the coaches of; these The m a tu rin g Christian is one on singing and tapping institutions th a t have time . . . . . Silver S p u r s - - (Continued from Page I) And while yo u’re dancing S at­ urday, instead of standing in a for some movie line block-long you’re seeing fo r the second time, you may see some flashily dressed cowpunchers sprinkled a round in the crowd. Only they a r e n ’t real they are members cowpunchers; of .Silver Spurs. They are hosts. Thank them. Q ur fighting Texas j exes Mould. . Also in connection with who finds bis place in a group of I thirty-one high schools. Christians, the church, and learns the to I ive and v o l * with people un-i track season, Littlefield announc­ e d ’ the influence o f Christ’s s p ir i t.; cd th a t the first intrasq uad meet j will be held S a turda y week, Feb- This is the group aspect. Then, as in the Church or uni- r u a ry 1 2 , at the Memorial Stadi- versal aspect, he feels a sense ol , urn. All real fans should oneness with all people e v e ry - 1 take advantage of this o p p ortune where ih the world, with all time, ty to sec the S te e r thinly clads with the f u tu re and is all under in their initial competition of the the guidance of the Christian re- season. This m inor to u rn a m e n t is velation— to realize Christ’s king- j not being held in a n a tte m p t to in every dom. Each aspect must serve and en-1 event, but primarily to re-accus- tom the men to competition. “ I f s Only then is a person a m a tu re fa r too early in the season to de- a m ature ride who our best men a r e ,” the the best man rich the other. possessing Christian discover track j Christian faith, j Longhorn mentor so aptly p u t it. SAVE O n Motor OHI C Q u a l i t y ( T o a d W estern A u to Is S P A R K PLU G v ^ H e a d q u a rte rs yX Z J ^ P o r m ” 1 0 0 % Pure Pennsylvania Only. -j g o QT. in your car or can GALLON: Bottle dep. & 60c Fed T a x Paid. Any S .A E. 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DUPONT SPEEDY W A X Quick, ea sy to re- •to re new -car lu s­ tre h arm lessly. cl 59c The plain truth is—there is only one kind of synthetic “ rubber” available for your tires today— B U N A S, produced under strict govern­ m ental control. So, regardless of price, you c a n ’t buy a better synthetic, tire. See the D a v is “S-3” today. G et the m ost tire for your m oney I OFFICIAL TIRE INSPECTOR STATION ' A v a i l a b l e o n G r a d e tire ration certificate. I 6:00x16 12 1 5 EASY TERMS P l u s T a x a n d Y o u r O ld T ir e O t h s r S ix e s — S a v i n g s I All Hardwood STOOL Finish it your­ s e lf S^'41.98 EXTRA LIFE for Old Tired 3-PLY PATCH G e n u in e tir e c o r d . 17c Itv.lkv! .. . t v V. I V.'.V. ... .vt. . ,X 5th at Congress S T O R E H O U R S — W e e k d a y : 9 to 6 S a t u r d a y s : 9 to 9 Wa R eserve R ig h t to L im it Q u a n t i t y . . . All M erchandise O ffered Su bje ct to S to ck s on H a n d ) I f a n y Ceiling Price*shown in th is ad Is h i g h e r th a n th e a c t u a l ceiling price on t h a t ite m in a n y of o u r stores, the c o rr e c t C eiling P rice will be d isp laye d in t h a t store. WESTERN AUTO STORES KS'tong KINDLE-LITE LOS Light with m atch! . . . Burns an hour. No dirt, sm oke, • f | | p sparks! * lf a r c a lls k ee p L o n g D ista n ce lines b u s y ... J h a t's w h y y o u r ca ll m a y be d ela ye d .