T o d a y’s Editorial K eep in g Pace* ( T h e ® S u s a n The W e a th e r Cloudy with local showers. Volume 39 Z 720 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1938 S ix Pages Today No. 160 Neely, Daniels, Townsend Elected; Law, tonally, Kniveton, Crow, Adams, Westbrook To Be In Run-Off: Hasskarl. Lanford In Lead Round-Up Work^r ^ rr'ves They Were Victorious In Final 6,577 Ballot Sets New Poll Record S t a g e s For New College To Make Plans P O L L T A B U L A T I O N S ( U n o f f i c i a l R e t u r n s ) P R E S I D E N T : v J S T A N L E Y N E E L Y B OB T O W N S E N D P A T D A N I E L S C H A I R M A N JU D IC IA R Y C O U N C IL : Bluebonnet B elles M e e t Tonight A t 7 A t t e n t i o n , B l u e b o n n e t B e l l e n o m i n e e s ! Fi nal r e he ars al will be held in G r e g o r y G y m to n ig h t a t 7 o ’clock. M itt J a n e t C o llett c o -d i re c t o r o f t he R e vu e, has a n n o u n c e d th a t it is im p era tiv e that e a c h n o m i n e e a tt e n d so that t he or de r o f p r e s e n t a t i o n m ay be c h e c k e d . O n l y an h o u r ’s tim e will be r e q u ir e d last r e he a r s a l . S u c c e s s o f this part o f th e R ev u e lies in p e r f e c t a t ­ t e n d a n c e o f t h e par t i c i pant s . this fo r Fine Arts Dean Pays Brief Visit To Calho un Dr. E. W illiam D oty, r e c e n tly a p p o in te d d e a n o f th e new Col­ lege o f F in e A rts , a r r iv e d in A us­ tin y e s te r d a y to m a k e a r r a n g e ­ m e n ts f o r th e o p e n in g of the col­ lege at th e b e g i n n in g of th e 1938 s e m e s te r . H e had a b r ie f fall visit w ith P r e s i d e n t J. W. C a l­ houn, b u t no d e f in i te p la n s have been m a d e yet. W a iti n g fo r his w ife a n d his 2 -y ea r-o ld d a u g h t e r to g e t h ere , he te m ­ p o r a r ily a t t h e Driskill Hotel. is s ta y in g 53 Enter Floats In 5 Divisions Parade To Top Previous Records B y B E S S T I S I N G E R L a s t calls f o r R e v u e r e h e a r s a ls w e r e se n t o u t f o r t o n i g h t as final the p r e p a r a t i o n s b eing R o u n d - U p p r o g r a m w e r e t h r o u g h o u t m a d e . T h e f i f t y - t h r e e e n t r i e s in th e th r e e - m ile th e F o u r t e e n f o r f o u r t e e n f l o a t division o f p a r a d e to p all r e c o r d s o f p r e v io u s I y e a r s th is e v e n t. so r o ritie s , a n d ; c lu b s, f r a t e r n i t i e s a r e a m o n g n i n e t e e n t h e g r o u p s w ho will e n t e r f l o a t s in | o n e o f f o llo w in g div isio n s:! m o s t b e a u t i f u l , m o s t u n iq u e , m o st com ical, b e s t a l l- a r o u n d , a n d most e d u c a t io n a l . In c lu d e d t h e in ItscoRcils Pcacs-Patriotism Faculty Ends Final Trial T h e B o a rd of R e g e n ts n a m e d th e n e w d e a n o n M a rc h 6 , a c c e p t ­ ing th e r e c o m m e n d a tio n o f P r e s i ­ d e n t C a lhoun a n d of a special c o m m itt e e h e a d e d by Dr. W . J. B a ttle , w ho h as been one of th e c h i e f e x p o n e n ts o f a College o f ; F i n e A rts a n d w ho had bee n con- the g r o u p r e q u ir e - s id e r i n g th e m a t t e r o f a d ea n f o r C h a n g e s in 60-Page Texan Appears Friday j To Set Record A s Largest Issue Deadly Serious Election Ends B un Campaigns By E V E R E T T S H I R L E Y Well, th a t w as som e elec tio n . N o d o u b t a b o u t it. It w as unlike a n y t h i n g ev e r seen o n th is c a m ­ p u s b e fo re . It, had j u s t a u .,u , ev­ e r y t h i n g e s s e n tia l to a big election. t h a t s t h e w o rd a n d 7 l r ; , w J B ig— t h a t ’s Wolfe Is Voted I Trophy Winner m e n t f o r a n E n g lish m a j o r a n d revision of th e s t a n d a r d of w ork ‘ r u l e , h a v e b e e n f a v o r a b ly v o te d t h e on t o e , c o n d u c to r o f th e U n iv e r s it y C h o ra l j Pa Pe r - *o r A t tho tim e of his a p p o i n tm e n t m o n th s . , D r D o tv w a . a 8, u t a n t P r o f e s s o r will issue th e la r g e s t single ed itio n * 7 of o r g a n a n d t h e o r y w a s assi. t a n t p r o f e s s o r ,, . I N e x t F r i d a y T h e D aily T e x a n c a ta lo g u e c h a n g e s by th e R e vu e high- | ° n ‘ f c«>»lo*ue c h a n g e , by j * — **— d e p a r t m e n t o f m usic t h e r e , gave in sixty page? a n d five sections, issued an e d ition of I him u n q u a lifie d e n d o r s e m e n t . T h e T e x a n ac c e p te d | B. A. w ith F ro m 1923 to 1926 D r. D o ty a t - I f ifty -six p a g e s se v e r a l y e a r s ago. is-1 te n d e d W e s t e r n S t a t e T e a c h e r s T he W isconsin C a rd in a l also t h a t College, K a la m a z o o , Mich. He re- su e d a p a p e r o f f ifty -six pages. place som e w h e re . C a m p a ig n in g for the light* a r e p r e s e n t a t i o n s o f I m o n at th e U n iv e r s ity o f Mich- S w e e t h e a r t o f T e x a s and h e r f o u r S ciences, r e p o r t s D e a n H. T. p a r- | ^ a n * E - v * M oore, h e a d of th e d u c h e sse s, t h e s i x s w e e t h e a r t s o f t h e S o u th w e s t, a n d t h e 2 0 0 B lue­ b o n n e t B elle n om in ees. th e * f a c u lty of th e College of A r t s a n d r e c o m m e n d a tio n T h e Un E n g lish m a j o r sp e cifie s . t e a m , u n d e - a f o re ig n la n g u a g e m in o r will no ce*ved t b * _ . th e H o u sto n B u f f s o f on r e q u i r e m e n t s f o r a an S p o r ts will claim a t t e n t i o n d u r ­ i n g th e R o u n d - U p . to o , w h e n th e L o n g h o r n b a s e b a ll 4 ofgwi in thf. P o n f p r e n c e L e a g u e . plays T e x a s L e a g u e F r i d a y a n d S a t u r - : TT|i n o r r n a Jr be d a y a f t e r n o o n s . T he L o n g h o r n s ] h o u r s in h i s t o r y ; a n d (b ) six se- ave w in n e r s f e r e n c e c h a m p io n s h ip s w ith in the : l a s t t w e n t y - s i x y e a rs. t r a c k m e e t r e • » • * « . »»<« ,, close W e d n e s d a y expert-1 nig h t. T h e G e n e ra l S ectio n will I S o cie ty will be p r in te d on th e m o r n in g o f is- a n 1 8 9 0 bicycle, b a t h i n g s u it p ic ­ lot o f f u n . L i t e r a ­ ture?, a n d a t u r e f o r all w as h a n d e d ou t as l#u ™ . I . J M a v o u rn e e F it z g e r a l d a n d Ann edito r? o f th e e c o n s e r v a t l o n ‘ A nd a f t e r t h e e l e c t i o n . J a m e s Wil­ H isto ric al S e c tio n ; lia m son a n d J i m A n d e r s o n , edi- in d r » w - t o r s o f t h e B u ild in g S e c t io n ; John M cC ully a n d V e r n o n Rooke, e d i­ t o r s of t h e S p o r ts S e c tio n ; E liza­ b e t h K e e n e y a n d L e is S a g e r, e d i­ tuc OUv i v ^ o w u u u . ouu T e x a s U n io n w a it in g f o r the re- t o r s o f th e S o cie ty S ectio n . Bob B a s k i n w i l l b e e d i t o r o f m illin g discussion , m o re m o re p r a y i n g , . e v e ry th in g . . . m ore t h a n e v e r b e f o r e , m o re n e rv o u sn e ss, . a n d w ell, more t h e G e n - 1 sults c a rae e a r l y* stoo<1 o r sat. b u t P*jr S tu d e n t P re s id e n t Dean M o o re Names M e n 's Dorm Proctors P r o c t o r s f o r th e m e n ’s d o r m i ­ to rie s d u r in g s u m m e r i session and th e 1938-39 fall se s­ I. sion w ere a n n o u n c e d by V. Moore, d e a n of s t u d e n t life, T u e s - th e 1938 O f t h e 2 1 8 m e m b e r s of th e first ; be o n ly one scho lastic w a r n i n g i f a c u B1y. 0 f T h e U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s e r a l Sectio n. class of the U niversity, that of called “scholastic probation, to con- *83, thirteen have accepted Dean scholastic probation v ill be the th(. who]e matter of T aylor’s personal invitation to re-, one sem ester, (5 ) students placed teaching of f ine arts. In the turn. They are as follow s: M rs.; on scholastic probation in Sap- February 1936# this comm ittee r e p o r t unanimously J. Marvin Nichols, Jacob Meade ] tember, or in February at the be- made a Ralston, W. E. Smith, B. P. Bailey, I ginning of the second sem ester, I adopted bv , he facuity , approved thp R oard o f Regents> a n d r e c . M a r y L ily A lf o rd , L ivie E . Dill, . . i v M in n ie G. Dill, G e o r g e S. M a t­ th e w s , J . W . M ax w e ll, J o h n L. R u n d e ll, M rs. W . J. T e r r e l l , and M rs. R o b e r t G. W e st. (4 ) authorized a committee for j gider V n , n wil1 be d ro p p e d f r o m th e U m v e r - b Tv_ T D„ ie1af„ rf> T h e L e g i s la t u r e -------------— , — en d 0 a ^ . , . , , T h e H is to r ic a l S ection w i l l t r e a t m o re , to o . th e U n iv e r s ity , the t h e h is t o r y o f people w ho h a v e b u i l t it, its do- plex, b u t it w as c a r e f u l l y designed R o b e r t Vt ilson. n o r s , its b e n e f a c t o r s , and its t r a - ! by e le c tio n ju d g e s P e t e C u r r y a n d M a rv in P ie r c e to b e a c c u r a t e . No- d itions. B r a c k e n r id g e , R o b e rts, a n d P r a - se ssion : G a r t h T he B u ild in g S ection h as been body w a s s a y in g i t w a s n o t. H o w - 1 Bate?. Tom Cox, M e rrill A. C ra z e , t h e r Halls, fall .i n s e r t e d b e c a u s e th is y e a r t e r m i - , ever, so m e sa id th e v o te s w e re be- W. V. K ugle, H o w a r d M a h a f f e y , t h e c a m p u s w ith the com p letio n of th e y w e r e Sop T E X A N , P a g e 2. ing c o u n t e d slowly. M a y b e so, b ut F re d Much, J a m e s P oole, B e r n a r d t h e votes R odger?, ifd Spink s, J a c k V ick re y , Don W e b ste r, a n d R o b e rt W ilson. im p a t i e n t , S ee S E R I O U S , P a g e 2. , e s( !^ es e r in I o m m e n d e d by th e m to th e L eg isla- n a t e s th e t e n - y e a r b u ilding e r a on . The c row d s in th e lo bby of the d ay . T h ey a re as fo llo w s: B r a c k e n r id g e a n d R o b e r t s H alls, T om Cox, J . J. s ta y e d r e g a rd le s s . A n d t h e y ta lk e d D u c k e tt, H o w a r d M a h a f f e y , F r e d Much, Alex P a g e n s te e h e r , E. D. a n d T h e c o u n t i n g s y s t e m w a s com- R odgers, T h u r m a n s u m m e r session: I a h e y , Revue Prelude L a s t y e a r th e a w a r d w a s d isc o n ­ After the largest vote in student election history had been tin u e d and no t r o p h y wa? giv en. The A th le tic C o u n c il re su m e d th e c a s t yesterday, only three candidates were to be determined v a ? ?e-, ejec£e(j }a b e iasb njght as unofficial returns o f voting were this >e a r , a n d a i d J O H N C O N N A L L Y R O B E R T D. H A R R I S . . M A R V I N W H I T E ................... TOM P R I C E J. D. M C C U T C H A N III AL L A G R O N E ............ .................. ..... T OM L A W V I C E - P R E S I D E N T : S T A N L E Y N E E L Y J A M E S M a c W l L L I A M S F R E D B. W A L L I S . J A C K F A U N T L E R O Y ... W A R R E N H U G H E S ................ ......... W A L T E R ‘B O Y ’ H A S S K A R L .... S E C R E T A R Y : E L I Z A B E T H K N I V E T O N M A R G A R E T F I S H E R ...... M A RY S U E B A T E S __ LOIS C R O W ....... ............... LEE T E M P L E T O N _____ T E X A N E D I T O R : P A T D A N I E L S JOE B E L D E N „ C A C T U S E D I T O R : J IMMI E P O U N D S . ...... B O B T O W N S E N D ____ R A N G E R E D I T O R . ... J O E L W E S T B R O O K J O H N C A R T E R A L I C E M A R Y A D A M S B IL L E D M O N D S O N .... b o b b y M c K i n l e y ___ R A N G E R A S S O C I A T E E D I T O R M A R G A R E T L A N F O R D H A R V E Y M A T N E Y ___ H I N D S T H O M A S _______ 2 ,7 1 1 25 _ - 94 61 - . 3 5 2 . 162 2 , 7 4 0 . . 3 , 7 7 7 ... 4 7 8 „ 4 3 0 .. . 1 , 3 2 4 2 . 9 8 6 . 3 , 0 8 8 2 , 2 5 7 - 7 7 3 ..1,221 „ 1 , 7 8 4 7 7 3 ,1 6 0 2 , 9 6 3 2 ,6 7 7 3 , 4 2 3 - 1 , 7 4 5 . 4 1 4 . 2 , 4 7 7 . 7 1 9 7 47 2 , 8 5 5 . 1 , 1 8 7 .1 ,8 3 2 announced. Stanley Neely had sufficient edge on three op­ ponents to assure his election to the vice-presidency» Bob T o w n sen d had d e f e a t e d J i m m i e P o u n d s f o r t h e C a c tu s e d ito rsh ip , a n d P a t D aniels w as v ic to r io u s in t h e T e x a n ed ito rsh ip rac e. A f t e r a t o t a l o f 6,567 v o te s had b e e n ca st, r u n - o f f s T h u r s d a y J o h n C o n n a lly and T om L aw a r e a p p e a r e d c e r ta in in f o u r r a c e s . b r a c k e te d t o g e t h e r in th e p r e s id e n tia l r u n - o f f , h a v in g r u n ev e n ly all the w ay ; E liz a b e th K n iv e t o n a n d L ois C row led t h e s e c r e t a r i a l fie ld ; Alice M a ry A d a m s a n d J o e l W e s tb r o o k e n t e r e d th e r u n - o f f s f r o m a field o f five R a n g e r e d i to r c a n d id a te s , a n d M a r g a r e t L a n f o r d a n d H inds T h o m a s w e r e in t h e r u n - o f f f o r R a n g e r associate. “ B o y” H a ss k a r l a n d W a r r e n H u g h e s r a n “ m p - a n d - tu c k , ” w ith H ass k arl ah e ad by a s lig h t m a j o r i t y . A r e c o u n t vras f o r e c a s t in th e i r ra c e fo r th e c h a ir m a n s h ip o f the J u d i c i a r y C o unc il. M arvin P ie r c e a n d P e te C u r r y said t h a t a p p r o x im a te ly o n e h u n ­ F ic ti tio u s n a m e s a n d the U n iv e r s it y d ir e c to r y a n d d u p lic a t e d r e d votes w e r e s u b j e c t t o d is q u a lif ic a tio n . n a m e s n o t to be f o u n d in b allo ts w e r e s u b j e c t to b e in g th r o w n out. R u n - o f f e le c tio n s will be held T h u r s d a y f r o m 7:4 5 to I o ’clock a t te n b oxes o n th e ca m pus. O ra n g e J a c k e t s , M o r ta r B o a rd , a n d A lp h a P h i O m e g a , w ho c o n d u c te d y e s t e r d a y ’s e lec tio n s, w ill be in c h a r g e a g a in t h e n . Polls y e s t e r d a y closed a t I o ’clock a f t e r se v e ra l c a n d i d a t e s h a d p r o t e s t e d le a v in g th e T e x a s U nio n box o p e n u n til 6. P ie r c e a n d C u r r y la st n ig h t e x p r e s s e d t h e i r s a tis f a c tio n a t th e c o n d u c tio n of elec tio n s by service g ro u p s. A n e w sy ste m of c o u n t i n g a n d c h e c k in g v o te s w as em ploy ed th is y e a r . H e a v ie s t v o tin g w as in th e T e x a s U n io n b o x w h e r e 1,714 v o te s w e r e ca st. O t h e r boxes w e r e as follow s: E n g in e e r in g , 4 5 1 ; Law B uilding. 5 6 6 ; Physics B uilding, 6 0 6 ; J o u r n a l i s m B uilding, 5 6 2 ; G a r ­ riso n Hall. 8 3 9 ; W a g g e n e r Hall, 7 0 5 ; G re g o ry G ym , 1 9 5 ; H o g g A udi­ to riu m , 636; a n d S u tto n H a ll, 283. V o te on ind iv id u al c a n d id a te s a t th e v ario u s boxes w as n o t av ail­ able la st n ight. EYES OF TEXAS......... .. ■........................... im.— C am p u s N ew s As S een By JO E BELDEN ^ A B O U T T H E T IM E M a rc h f a d e s in to A pril on th e ca m p u s t h e r e is a m u lt itu d e o f ac tiv itie s— too m a n y . M a rc h SO— G rid iro n D inn er, M a rc h 31 — L o n g h o rn B a n d C o n c e rt. A p ril I — I n t r a - s e m e s t e r r e p o r t s w e r e d u e. A pril 2— T e x a s Relays. A p ril 5— C o n d itio n e d , ad v a n c e d , a n d p o s tp o n e d exam s. A pril 5— S p r in g elections. A p ril 7— E le c tio n r u n - o f f . April 8 , 9, IO— N i n th A n n u a l Round-U p. A n d w o n ’t e v e r y o n e be g la d w h e n the s p r in g v a c a t io n cornea A p ril 15? P e r h a p s t h e a v e r a g e s t u d e n t t a k e s p a r t in only a few of th e se m a j o r ac tiv itie s, w hich do n o t include all the athletic c o n te sts, d ates, shows, a n d , o f c o u r s e , stu d ie s. B u t t o several h u n d r e d c a m p u s le a d e rs th e schedu le b ecom es o v er-b u rd e n in g . T O D A Y ’S N A M E — He h a s a positio n w a itin g for him with a New Y o rk n e w s p a p e r w h en he g r a d u a t e s in J u n e — V E R N O N R O O K E o f H o u s to n . A bolish E x c e l* H onorxri** Hamilton lo Play For Round-Up Ball b e c a m e G e o r g e H a m i l t o n ’s “ M usic Box M u sic,” w hich f a m o u s w ith V elo z a n d Y o l a n d a a t C hi­ c a g o ’s f a m e d P a l m e r H o u s e , will p la y f o r th e R o u n d - U p Ball F r i ­ d a y n ig h t. M a e s tr o H a m ilto n , w h o h a s w r i t ­ te n a n u m b e r of s o n g hits, has w ith his b a n d th e w o r l d ’s p r e m i e r a c c o r d io n p la y e r , L a r r y S h elto n . I t is his m u sic w ith a g e n u i n e old­ f a s h io n e d m usic box t h a t se ts th e t o n e a n d th e o r ­ c h e s tr a . te m p o o f t h e F o llo w in g such o r c h e s t r a s as G u y L o m b a r d o ’s, T e d W e e m s ’, F r e d d y M a r t i n ’s, a n d L ittle J a c k L i t t l e ’s, th e P a l m e r H ouse d e f i n i t e l y pla ce d th e H a m i lto n o r ­ c h e s t r a a m o n g th e n a m e b a n d s of th e c o u n t r y . in to rig it w as fo llo w in g g r e w as h e a r d o v er t h e M u tu a l B r o a d c a s t ­ e v e ry ing S y s te m n ig h t. f r o m W’GN H a m ilto n f id d le s a n d d ir e c ts th e o r c h e s t r a w ith his violin bow. T h e o r c h e s t r a com e? to A ustin d i r e c t f ro m a n e n g a g e m e n t a t th e C o s m o p o lita n H o tel in D e n v e r. L ig h t * F o r I n t r a m u r a l * . (7 ) 1 9 3 7 , 39 b ie n n iu m F in e A rts . w e r e a n d D ra m a tic s , w hich th e y w e r e on p r o b a ti o n , u n - > t u r e less su c h s t u d e n t s a r e able to pass » n n r n n m t P(l I a p p r o p r i a t e d . . . rn th e r e q u i r e d m in i m u m of w o rk $ 3 2 4 0 0 f o r ea ch y e a r of th e 1937- a t t h e e n d o f th is s e m e s te r , ( 6 ) f o r th e College o f th e g r a d e o f E will n o t c o u n t in T h re e d e p a r t m e n t s r e q u i r e d m in i­ t h e sc o rin g , c o n t e m p l a te d — A rt , Music, m u m o f w o r k will b e r a is e d b y r e ­ q u i r i n g s t u d e n t s t a k i n g less t h a n n in e s e m e s t e r h o u r s p e r w e e k to pass sc o re o f 117 p o in ts if a f i r s t - y e a r P r O S p C C t i v © v7 7 r d Q U f i t 6 $ s t u d e n t ; o f 126 p o i n t , i f , s e c o n d - . g y e a r s t u d e n t ; a n d of l o 5 p o in ts ,; in c lu d in g an a v e r a g e o f a t le a s t C t h ir d - y e a r in n in e h o u rs, s t u d e n t o r above. tim e f o r all good . p ro sp e c tiv e 1938 g r a d u a t e s t h e i r th e U n iv e r s ity in all w o rk a n d to m a k e a n Avoid I n t e r d e p a r t m e n t a l F ri c ti o n to b u y R ; n q s is the if a £ ; f J * N o w . . o f s e n io r rings. Abolish E x c ess H onoraries Postponed Exams Begin Today P o s tp o n e d , co n d itio n , a n d a d ­ d u c e d s t a n d in g e x a m in a tio n s will be held ea ch f r o m W e d n e s d a y , A pril 6 , t h r o u g h M o n ­ d a y , A p ril l l , a t 2 o’clock, E. J . M a th e w s, r e g i s t r a r , says. a f t e r n o o n T his r i n g w as a d o p te d a s t h e s t a n d a r d U n iv e r s ity r in g b a c k in 1926, I t m a y be b o u g h t in m ili­ t a r y o r ro se fin ish, se t w ith a g ar-] n e t o r r u b y stone. O ne o ne s i d e : of th e r in g is a s t e e r h ea d , w ith t h e class y e a r above. On t h e o t h e r is t h e o ffic ia l seal o f T h e ; U n iv e r s it y of T ex a s. G r a d u a t e s f r o m th e College of A r t s and S ciences, th e College of On W e d n e s d a y , A p ril 6 , E n g lish , th e School of E n g in e e r in g , a n d G r e e k a n d p u blic s p e a k in g e x a m ­ a r e B u s i n e s s A d m in is tr a tio n in a tio n s will b e h e l d ; on T h u r s - d a y , A p ril 7, b u sin e ss a d m in is t r a - u su a lly th e la r g e s t g r o u p s to b u y rin g s, C. W. S w e n so n , a s s i s t a n t tion, e d u c a t io n , j o u r n a l i s m , a n d b u sin e ss m a n a g e r o f th e U n iv e r ­ m a th e m a ti c s e x a m s will be h e l d ; sity Co-Op, believes, on F r id a y , A pril 8 , F r e n c h , G e r ­ m a n , L a tin , p h a r m a c y , a n d S p a n ­ ish e x a m s will be g iv e n ; on S a t ­ u r d a y , A pril 9, b o ta n y , c h e m is tr y , ec onom ic s, g eolo g y , a n d sociology e x a m s will be g iv e n . As a guess, Mr. S w a n so n said t h a t a b o u t five h u n d r e d r in g s a r e o r d e r e d ea c h y e a r . E v e n m e m ­ b e r s o f some o f th e old g r a d u a t ­ ing classes o cc asio n ally o r d e r class th e y w?e r e g r a d u a t e d f r o m th e U n i v e r ­ sity, said Mr. Sw'enson. ogy, an d all o th e r s u b je c t s will be held on M o n d a y , A p ril l l . H is to r y , ho m e ec o nom ic s, z o o l - ] r in g s f o r the y e a r rn w hich F o u r o u t o f 2 0 0 are B a rb a ra B r o w n e , C o nn ie D e la v a n , H e l e n H u t r i c h , and Lei* S a g e r , B lu e ­ R o u n d -U p R e v u e , b o n n e t Bella n o m in ee * , w ho w ill be t e e n in the PAGE TWO The First College Daily in the South Phone 2-2473 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-2473 W altz Number From Round-Up Revue Sally Lipscomb killing tim e till m ore tabulations were posted while opponent Con­ ley was sta n d in g n e a r the door tu the co un ting room talking to a , frien d, for ru n n in g w a te r a f t e r c o u n tin g votes fo r “ oh, so m any ho urs.” Daniels and Jim A nderson a p p e a rin g tired but . Behind-the-scene- , satisfied politicians com ing ou t to see “ how' things wore coming a lo n g .” Ellis Mayfield going back F rankie to IVelborn frow ning at, the results • . • And j u s t a lot of people ta lk ­ ing politics. the cou ntin g room. , Lifhta For I n t r a m u r a l * I To Be Chosen For Fiesta Oratory The contest to select e n tr a n ts in the elimination ro u n d of the B attle of Flow ers O ratorical Contest will in public | be held Tuesday, April 12, a t 9 I. The o’clock sponsors, the B attle o f Flow ers Association of San A ntonio, will h ear the talks and choose tw o of the nine p a rtic ip a n ts to oppose the A.&M. te a m in San A ntonio April 21. in Garrison Hall WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1938 Faculty Committee Discusses Dead W e e k [ how Q uestionnaires on dead w eek is observed and w h eth er o r n o t the p r e se n t rules are sa tisfa c ­ to r y are being distributed in some classes this week. P re s id e n t J. W. Calhoun has ap ­ pointed a committee to make a r e p o r t on dead week a t th e fa c ­ ulty m eeting n e x t week. The com­ m ittee consists of th e following: P. M. F erg u so n , associate p ro fes­ sor of civil engineering, c h a irm a n ; Mrs. Connie Brockette, a ssistan t p rofessor of th e a r t of teaching ; Dr. Philip G raham , assista n t pro­ fessor o f E nglish; Dr. C. A. Smith, professo r of and G. W. S tum berg , professor of law*. accounting; Pasteboard Supplied Telephone Doodlers Scribblers and doodlers who f r e ­ q u e n t th e public telephone booth o f the L ib ra ry Building are a t last g e ttin g th e ir inning. The c o n te s ta n ts and th e ir sub ­ je cts in the o rd e r in w’hich they will speak are as follows: Jim Mc- Goodwin, “ T h a n k You, S a n ta A n n a ” ; M ary Chaffin, “ The Al- altin” ; F re d Schmidt, “ A H igher P a tr io tis m ” ; G u rn e y M c C a .l.n d , H f i s s i l t o p o u l o s W i n s F re d Schmidt, Provide Unlver»l*y Hospital The Glory and H eritage of t h e 1 - r The new ly-painted walls were A lam o” ; Nile Ball, “ T exas H e r i­ f a s t becoming covered with su r ­ t a g e ” ; Jo hn Stephen, “ The G re a t Charles Hrissikopoulos, presi- realistic designs and meaningless A m erican D esert” ; W allace Has- scratches, F o rm erly , you had to sell, “ Pioneers and T e x a s” ; J. B. I d e n t °* the U niversity Chess Club, search fo r minute* before finding Trimble, “ The F o rg o tte n A uthor retained his the to sta r t of the Texas D eclaration of Inde- c^ub bV w inning all th irte e n of his a clear spot on which pendence” ; and G erdes Isenhow er, | frames in the round robin to u rn a - y o u r own m asterpiece. Chess Tournament top ran k in g in T he University finally came to “ The M odern Pioneers.” m e n t j u s t finished, fastened a rescue, an d has One hu nd red and seventy-five th e The o th e r m em b ers were ra n k e d larg e white pasteboard square on dollars w orth of prizes will be as follow’s: P a u l Browning, secre- the wall bv the telephone. At the aw arded th e winner*. L ast y e a r ’s tary , second; John M annix and I !.op of the board \8 the *n s c ription. I co n te st w as won by Elizabeth { Luis Delgado-Vega tied f o r th ird ; J o h n “ Please do n ot w rite on the walls.” j Stew art. Gerdes Isenhow er placed I William C u rra n , I Hrissikopoulos, seven th ; J o h n A. So now you can doodle to y o u r : second. h e a r t s c o n te n t w ithout m a r r in g I tied fo r the walls and w ith o u t having t o ; T . A. Rousse, H ow ard Townsend, j e ight; P a u l Slubicki, t e n th ; Ray­ burn! for a space— a t least, n o t f o r R obert T h arp , and Jesse Villar- J m end P e a rso n , eleventh; F oster a while. Ju d g e s wdll be Ellwood Griacom, j Garcia and Phil Velez Phipps, t w e l f t h ; and Paul Kairis. f if th ; real. A b o v e a r e t e e n m e m b e r * of t h e w a i t s s c e n e in t h e R o u n d - U p R e v u e . B a c k r o w ; E li s a b e th A n n W a r r e n , E o lin a B r o w n , F r a n c a * J e a n S m ith , E li z a b e t h B r o w n , a n d M arigold R o b b i n s . F r o n t row ; T o o l e y W il li a m s o n , A n g e la Ziller, Jo**- p hina T u r n e r , M a e b e s s M atthew*, Edith F o s , a nd H e l e n W a g g o n e r . Serious - - C ontinued Ft nm Page I were m a ny , an d cou nters didn’t w a n t to m ake m istakes. The c o u n tin g was in the main b a groom o f the where it could be overlooked by j student* from the balcony. Down forces 015 the flo or paced the two repre- Texas U n i o n , ; totals f o r Daniels, th e m an j re n H ughes on the couch gazing up . . - whose campaign he m anaged . . *r*l Bob Baskin, Texan political edi-1 telling figures . . . Francis Con­ ley gleeful over Hugh W olfe’s te r, with his pencil and p a p e r— . Marvin Collie, im- and w riting nothing. J a n e E yres popularity , enthusiastic abo ut h er can didate, j m aculate and asking how the “ colonel” came out . . . Tom Law Elizabeth Kniveton. In the lobby outside . . . W a r - 1 sta n d in g in the middle of the floor ♦ i l l : - - ... , , ,7 r , . Spanish Rebels Menace Tortosa As Last Road To Catalonia Cut Loyalists Seek Means To Halt Drive In Emergency Meeting A t Barcelona Tuesday H F S T A YE. France. April 5— < (IN S) — Advancing Insurgent troops menaced Loyalist Tortosa tod ay as they cut by a rtillery fire the linking Catalonia road with the re s t of Spam. Seeking a means to halt last in the News tide, the P re sid e n t Manuel Rebel A r e n a of th e Spanish G overnm ent a t held an emergency m eeting Barcelona with all of Sp a in ’s a n t i f a s c i s t parties. The f o u r hours, a f te r session which Prem ier J u a n N agrin con- tody a t Belvedere, fe r r e d with the While the P re sid en t. chiefs lasted * SC HUSCH NIGG NOT ILL V IE N N A .— P e r s is te n t ru m o rs fo rm e r Chancellor K u r t Schusch- j nigg has been tak e n to a hospital I w e r t denied here today, Officials said he is still in protective cus- and In su rg e n ts the M e d ite rra n e an Sea. nitzer, head pushed POPE SUMMONS CARDINAL j V A T ICA N CITY.— Cardinal In- I f o rw a rd against Catalonia the Catholic tow ard according com- Church in A ustria, arrived here t o - ; Biunique, Rebel troops f a r to the night, sum moned by Pope Pius to South lost several thousand men g ve an acco un t of his conversa- in b itte r fig h tin g on the Guada- lion with Chancellor Adolf H itler j la ; a ra fro nt, in Vienna following the German Salam anca of to Rebel advices fro m Saragosa annex atio n of A ustria. the troops which the In s u r g e n t According to reliable rep o rts in J said pushed n o rth e a st of L e n d s a f t e r V atican circles, the Pope will re la tte r a r ­ ce ive H itler when Capturing that Catalonia strong- rives he^-e on a visit to P re m ie r boid are now lining up along a Mussolini. tw enty-five mil* fr o n t p r e p a r a to ry f o r * drive a g t.n e t Tortosa w here th e y r ave already taken up posi­ tions on the outskirt.- of the town. g o v e rn m e n t’s f if te e n th The in c lu d ir^ the Am erican brigade, Lincoln and W ashington B a t­ talions, were virtually destroyed by tho I n s u rg e n t dr ve. - ........ In the m eantim e, e f fo rts will be to effect a rapproch- the Vatican and continued m e n t between the G erm an governm ent. SINOS CLAIM VICTORY S H A N G H A I.— Chinese • {to have cost more a f t e r looking a t the ballots j thv seacoast. Its cap- NAVY CONTINUES TESTS Tortosa, now p a rtly s u r r o u n d e d d e a ^ an<^ w ounded on both sides. Several, however, man-1 troops raced f o r command of the *o loRg- claimed possession of most c f stra- 'c u r a tiv e s o f each candidate o v e r - I Many American volun teers were regie T a ie rc h w an g n e a r the L u n g - 1 c oking a ffa irs. T hey w*ere able to killed, it was sta te d, and hundreds bai Railw ay today as a fierce b a t - ! *••)* how a vote was cast five fe e t of others were wounded, captured, tie b etw een Chinese and Ja p a n ese or lost, aged to fight th e ir way back to city. The conflict was estimated i th e Loyalist lines. In the c o u ntin g than 50,000 ; co unting d id n ’t begin until a b o u t, | 8 o’clock . . . Ballots were straight cued o u t before th en . Al Mav­ b y th e Insurgents, is less th a n ten erick and F r e d Chambers, d e c id - 1 miles fro m coly in te re ste d in the Cactus race, I lu re would legions had taken a long stride in U nited S tate s fleet was somewhere J being first on the scene . . . Law’s in the Pacific to d ay engaging in :1:nen•• ^ oe ^ ilson, Dub Sing.eton th e ir aim of cu ttin g and Randolph Jackson, looking the second phase o f the 1938 an- Spain into two sections. c on fident at first, changing for a while, and th e n looking c on fide n t all over again . . , Connallv’s re p ­ re se n ta tiv e s r e ­ tu rn s with the bad w ith o u t much | change of expression. the great the g re a t a t ­ l f comrr-ar-G r - Admiral c f » f r a t r i c i d a l si***, the C* ™ « C B]och- %vas «ngaged in a series of tactical m aneuvers which eventually will taste t ne n e e t to w a rd to e Aleutian I take th e fleet to w a rd th e A leutian plete isolation and Barcelona, seat e f in the Lovalist G overnm ent, d a n g e r of a fra tric id a l siege, the 100,000 g o v e rn m e n t civilians to join in the fighting or A . i _ f o r a last stand. O range ------*»- Ja ck e ts, who counted i vote?> looking swell in th e ir garb L ast w eek the fleet engaged in a " d keeping th a t way a f te r hours W ith Catalonia in peril of com- n u *] m aneuvers. defenses Iglands o ff th e e o u t of ^ la a k a . H O N O L U L U .— Once again th e I t was believed w*s be ie ed room, a c t u a l ; the Franco th e good In surge n t re c ru ite d secret swift, a ..* ,, mean took • , . . A.P.O. s looking ho t V ote S pring E lection * im p o rta n t of the H aw aiian Ll. S. Buyer Seeks Oil As Indemnity th* “ B a ttle of H aw aii” in a gi-l to determ ine cantic mock b attle the defense str e n g th of the foeti- w 'tr- ana staying th a t way fications of th e Island of 0 » h u , ‘ BobbT McGinnis gravely saying “ I t m ight be close” with his man most Neely ru n n in g aw ay with the race Islands. H e n ry W ade and Ja k e Pickle, in with the 5.— in Bob P a rk , chief gun Fre«b ( I N S ) — F m k in w d a y confirm ed the nomination of behind H u s k e r s cam paign, i c i n g M e x i c o , l a n c e d p e trole um a . t u a - , E b e rt JC. Barlow of P e n n . y l r . n i a fro m box to box with a a e r i c , to be fir st a ssista n t sec re ta ry o f t i on arose tod ay with disclosure th a t an A m erican oil executive the in terio r. with w idespread connections in j Burlew was alm ost unanim ously E u ro p e is in this c o u n try seeking confirm ed by a voice vote a f t e r (D) o f Nevada huge q uan tities of oil as “ indent- S e n a to r P itm a n th re e -m o n th oppo- a i t y . ” SE£ A TE CO N FIRM S B U R L E W Senate Connally men, w alking smiles and sam* way V ernon Childers happily adding I* ASHINGTON.- The M EXICO CITY, April co m nlicationi co m pile * .loft, then going o u t concluded his face. to begin ; . | . . I n te m a tio n a ! N e w s Service sttion to the appointm ent, • to collect HO U SE R E F U S E S GAG RULE le arn e d t h a t W . R. Davis, o f Bos- ton, Mass , is here 3,500,000 b a rre ls o f Mexican oil. W A SH IN G T O N . — Adm inistra- D avls ^ a s r e , . c e n t e d h ere as tion leaders w-ere blocked to d a y in p r e s id e n t of the New York City an e f f o r t to limit d ebate on the holding c o m pa n y for the C ru sa d e r g o v e rn m e n t bill, P e tr o le u m In d u s trie s o f E n glan d, and the House was plunged anew into d e b a te u n m a tc h e d in bitter- th e Irish N ation al R efineries of D ublin, la n k - ness since ill-fated S uprem e g la g e r und T r a n s p o r ta g o f G e r­ Court batCe. m a n y and the Scar.ditar.k concern c f Sw eden. th e Europ.&sche re o rg an iz atio n the House leaders asked! f o r u n a n i­ mous consent to c u rta il d e b a te in an e f f o r t to reach a vote within | the week, b u t quick objections p r o ­ verbed this. throw n into n e a r panic tod ay when * the electricity supply failed. Service was re sto re d a f t e r half an h o u r in some areas, b u t the c e n te r of the city rem ained w ith­ out power. r t T s x i v r u t W A SH IN G TO N . — C arry in g high hope as a m easure to free taxes and b u s i n g s of shackling prom ote national the ' new $5,300,000 rev en ue bill was re p o rte d to the S en ate tod ay by its finance com m ittee. recovery, D ebate on th e m easure was set to begin to m orrow , with a b i­ partisan coalition driving f o r pas­ sage cf it by S a tu r d a y night. C onfronted with this situation, the lea lev* nr ade no e f f o r t to im ­ pose “ g a g ” rub 's which would have brought a n o th er te s t vote on the bill. The c o m m itte e’s r e p o r t was lib­ erally p u n c tu a te d with claims the measure, in the present form , will “ stim ulate and encourage business,” bring i more revenu e to th e g ov e rn m e nt of BA RCELO N A .— B arcelona, goal capital now' static because of high a use unempl ym ent B A R C E L O N A L I G H T F A I L S by u n fre e z in g vast o F r a n c i s c o if enacted am ount* taxe into and law ' f Franco'* I n s u rg e n t forces, wa* rob s to dwindle. Correct Shoes for the Round-Up Revue and Ball by V A R S I T Y - F I V E He said th a t if he g e ts the oil he seeks, th e Mexican petroleu m a d m in is tra tio n will ship it to his r e f i n e r y in G erm any. Davis d eclared w ith emphasis t h a t he has no co nnection with F r a n c is W. R ickett and B ernard E. Sm ith, “ m y ste ry m e n ” o f high in Mexico a fin a n c e who were fe w days ago in connection with a re p o rte d deal to o btain oil from t h e B ritish and Am erican p ro p e r­ ties re c e n tly exp ro p ria ted by the Mexican go vernm ent. CA RD EN A S T H A N K S W A SH IN G T O N , A p r i l 5__ ( I N S ) — Personal th a n k s of P re s i­ for d e n t C ardenas of Mexico r * -e rr P re s.d e n t Roosevelt’* in ­ f o rm a l a n n o u n c e m e n t the U. S will seek only actu al cos’ s minus depreciation as dam ages for Mex­ a n d ico’s e x propriation of oil f a r m the W h ite House to d a y by Mexican A m bassador Don Francisco Na j e r c . lands, weie carried to involve-; N&jero went over the genera Situ at. on in the cu rren t c on trov e rsy betw een the two gov­ e rn m e n ts over r e c e n t e xp ro pria ­ tion by Mexico of approx rn ately $400,000,000 and Britifh-ov. Red oil properties. Leav­ ing, he would rev* ai only th a t he from Mexico, had and C arden as had directed him to personally e xtend thanks to P r e s i­ d e n t Roosevt t. j u s t r e tu rn e d in American Texan - - C on tinu ed From Page I the M emorial Museum. It c o c a i n s a com plete ev aluation of the pres­ en t camp ut* The S ports Section co ntains a p a n o r a m a o f U niv ersity athletics d ed icated and built aro u n d the Bible loan. The Society Section is built a ro u n d th e B lue bo nn e t B ed e ­ en d Sw eetheart*. T he General th* routine edi­ Section * Ll be tion of 'h e pap er c on ta ining the la te s t ta m p a * mw* of the day. ..rnmm. rn rn WM. rn v . / ■ r n r n *MS, ■Sh WMS / Z / s / j S pWM i i Black Patent Tux Oxfordi - - for Escort! W hite Buck Sport Shoes • • for Stags 2 A u th e n tic Styles in genuine W h ite Buck e t this low price The BOOTERY 606 Congress WHEN ITS N . Vs.Round-Up Thne AT TEXAS IT’S TIME FOR .. . Palm Beach C l o t h e s This year we have “ R ou nded -U p " the largest, most complete and colorful showing of Palm Beach clothes ever shown in C e n ­ tral Texas. The beautiful new Palm Beach Suits, in every size and model can be found in this immense showing . . . the price of Palm Beach Clothes is the same everywhere— but in addition this store gives you the services of experienced clothing sales­ men and a perfect fit is guaranteed to you. Also featured in our special Palm Beach department is a complete showing of Slacks, Sport C oats and Tuxedos. “ j u t e ,St Ja I. •■M B IM™ *17.75 PALM BEACH TUXEDOS *20 — S V N T A N COLORS WEAVES • COLORS • PATTERNS ■D IAG OSAL S -DU PL EX S T R I P E S -ST IP P L E S T R I P E S - B A R A T H E A S -SH A D O W S T R I P E S -DROP S T I T C H - S H A R K S K I N S T R I P E S -S O LA R W E A V E S - H A R L Q V 1 N S T R I P E S - A I R TOH E S - B R A D F O R D S T R I P E S - S H E T L A N D S -A N D SO LI D S — B U R M A S H A D E — N A S S A U B L U E — W H I T E 6 1 6 C O N G R E S S AU STIN 'S LEADIN G STORE FOR MEN - - : A ■’ • " I I , L . — r n_ WEDNESDAY, A PEIL «, 1988 Phone 2-2473 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-2473 T h e First CollegeDaily in the South PAGE THREE King Karl Dischmen Drill For Buff Tilt Lawhon Pegs 7 O u t A t Second B y JOE FR A N T Z Texan S port* S t a f f The rest of the Longhorn base ball squad played an intrasquad game yesterday afternoon at Clark Field, but Zane Lawhon, catcher from Thrall, spent the afternoon holding target practice. Base runners were the principal objectives at which Lawhon aimed, and from the results he obtained, the talkative receiver indicated he should be an exceedingly welcome man on a jackrabbit hunt, pro­ vided there were plenty of rocks handy for him to throw. Seven times during the contest opposing base runners tried to pil­ fer second base, and seven times Lawhon brought the runner down — and out— with perfect pegs to second base. Most of the deci­ sions were not even close, with the runner out by several feet. Contrary to the usual custom, the runners did not even question the decision* that Bill Pullman, um­ pire, called against them. They knew they wert out. “ It’s easier to let men get: on j bases and then have Lawhon throw them out than it is to try to keep f i r < ” ob­ them from reaching served Kirven Fields, one of the hurlers. The game itself was a close affair. Uncle Billy Disch mixed players on both teams so that the j teams lost any sort of id en tifies-1 tion aa regulars or second-string­ ers. Johnny Hill, who is b egin n in g to know what the fence around ( lark Field looks like and how hard hit a ball it takes to clear one of those walls, pushed one home run on the left C enterfield wall. ■>. am mat . ... rf i m i m P itch ers m ay com * and pitchers m ay go, but K ing Karl Hub* ball, th* N ew York G iaata’ “ m eal-tick et,” *o#» on and on. Sine a 1928, H ubbell has baan on# of ths b est side w inders in th e girns, but ad m itted ly bes been slipping sin ce 1933, the y ear h e helped hurl the T errib le T arriers to their first p en n an t sin ce 1924. H ub­ b ell still has tw o or three more fo o d p itch in g year* in his lean le ft arm and again w ill he th e nucleus o f T erry’* p itch in g corp. Intramurals W ednesday, April « BASEBALL 4:80—North F.—Frit* House es. Dis­ trict IO. Middle F.» Blew quilt Sw«d#s vs. House of Davis. South F.» Co-Op Ho. 8 vs. Campus Guilds. T EN N IS SINGLES Independent Division Philly Deal S till Unsettled Daffy Dodgers Want La Master portance—-to Phils. the Dodgers had a pitcher. the un-phlinching AA offers. It may be that it also It’s the first time I knew includes a nibble from the Chicago i White Sox, who are looking for Much was being made locally somebody or anybody to play short- today about a so-called “mystery 8toP in pl*c® cf the injured Ap- trip” undertaken by the Brooklyn P’tin3 an<* a*e, I understand, even overseer, Burleigh Grimes, sev- trying to get English weived out eral days ago, the intimation be- J ing that he was endeavoring to | Meantime, the understanding is creep up furtively upon La Master that the Detroit Tigers are doing and surround the fellow. It w as! nothing about the loss of Croueher, simpler than that. What he was s because their tw o third basemen trying to do was to sign infielder i are standing up and, when the “Skeeter” Webb, recently turned ti me comes, Rogell will play plenty loose from the Cardinals’ step by the stern edict of Judge Landis. lock- of shortstop. He always has. the National League, Webb, last year with Columbus, was the only vassal thus liberated who couldn’t have been bought over the hack fence. He’s, there­ fore, playing the field, which cur­ rently includes a couple of class they have to. All told, it seems unlikely that th-re will be much more trading before the June 15 deadline, es­ pecially in the National League. The second division clubs won’t, at least for a while. As for the first division outfits, they don’t think G ive the Palm Beach Representative Your Opinion Today Rural Pastime Goes Collegiate B> C a r d i n a l s I C I * > Slinging bam Gets Demoted • • c . B y RIP DODGE Toman S p o rtrn S t af f Horseshoe Pitching On 'M ural Sports ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., April 5.— (IN S )— S a m m y B a u g h , former all-American football star from Texas Christian University, has been released by the Cardinals to the Columbus dub of the They used to pitch horseshoes American Association, and Paul behind the Tillage post office and Dean, one-time pitching star, bas on the court house square, but accepted a transfer to the Hous- now the hill-billy past-time has ton Club of the Texas League, gone collegiate as the intramural Vice-President Branch Rickey of UU includ. th . ancient gam . on ^ gt Lou;c annoanc, 4 to. day. Columbus and Houston are their sports roster. Just where the game originated, membgr? of the Cardinal minor “Slinging Sam” Baugh, whose no on* seems to know. Maybe Pegasus, th* winged steed you’ve ' league read about in Greek mythology threw a shoe on one of his jour- j football forward passing prowess nays across the horizon, and it brought him fame, was considered dropped around a church spire for a promising third base candidate a “ringer.” Or maybe the village for the Red Birds during the train- smithy invented the game to pro- mg period. vide a market for the worn-out j horseshoes Dobin traded in for a minor new set o f iron footwear. the the j famed “Dizzy and D affy” combi- Anyway, we have the game now, nation of hurlers which brought and it’s a popular sport that re- victories to the Cards. Paul re- | ceives serious consideration in the Gently was reinstated in baseball northern states. They even have after being on th* voluntary re­ last year, when contests for national champs. And tired I the champions pitch the horse- failure of his arm caused him to ! shoes between the legs of bath- ask for retirement, ing beauties to demonstrate their ability for the newsreels. Paul Dean’s departure to leagues, breaks up Beautify the Campus list since system. farm the And now intramuralists I Baylor Sweeps J adopt the sport. Popular | Last year, 289 entries filed for the sport, and an even larger number is expected this year be- 1 H M C Lf DEC I for* th* deadline April 7. The I l l D r X U l J U l C U l l intramural (B erry! Whitaker to you) has built courts north of Gregory Gym . . with . the latest clay ring-boxes. Spu'-ial to The DaUy Toman department f . . ^ . . So popular is the sport that the WACO, April 5.— Tommy Fine, stout-hearted Baylor hurler, was intram ural departm ent limit* each j almost invincible here today as he organization to ten entries. T ro-, blankf.d vail Stall, Phi Gamma Delta,) - - - * - - - - By D A V IS J. W A LSH I - N S . Sports Editor N E W YORK, April 5.— (I N S ) — Reported deal*, whereby the un- phortunate Phillies were to make a forced sale of either W ayne La M aster, left hander, to the Brook­ lyn Dodgers or Bucky W alters, right hander, to the Chicago Cubs, ju st aren 't on at this time, the w riter is able to state p re tty au ­ thoritatively today. If either deal is made at all, in fact, it won’t be before May IS or as much later as the phlabber pasted m anagem ent can stave off the wolf in the g rast­ or the snake in sheep’s clothing or both. All that can be said now isI that, when and if the La Master- j to-Brooklyn deal is closed, it wall include cash, a n extra outfielder. possibly Tom Winsett; an extra in- | fielder, maybe Woody English; and an unnamed pitcher, these be­ ing listed according to their im­ FORT WORTH,* April C H AM PIO N Y A N K S LO SE TWO 5.— (IN S )— Humbled for the second successive day in their trip through minor league territory, the cham ­ today pion New York Yankees venture out against the F o rt ; W orth nine of the Texas League i here. The McCarr hymen lost to the H ouston Buffs yesterday, 7-6, they were swamped by a | when ; four-run rally in the ninth. Urf« Orientation APPLING GOES HOME W in n er of Lee- the championship last year, is n o t :R clfan 8W«eP oT HaF‘or * *1 t i.’ ♦ v,I ” *#• j L, i r . tv* cAviae wit so Jack A kin, R angers, s £ am ® peiuos w ith the M idw est in- couple 0 f Ravlor's two- two r _ w cham pionship vaders. g a Hills]. Club Division McCasland, I*is* vs. M Msc I n d e p e n d e n t D iv is io n 6 .OO—T. Kirk, Open, v*. H. Martin, Open. S. B. Lumpkin, Open, v s , H. Witherbee. Rangers. Winner of Nestor* I Evans va. winner of Hatchet:-Harris. W in n e r of H o o d -H o p k in # v « . W ilk er so n , whose deadly aim carried him C Snyder « . Roberts, winner of Lee-1 the cham pionship last year, is not: ” _ Doyen vs, winner of styron-Haibert.j ;n school Winner of Con*ts«r-Ameen v», w inner. o f D iston -G ood rich . W in n er o f F is e h t r - runner- K e y , v s . w in n e r o f C u p p -W y a tt W in n er o f H o lia fe S n v d e r v a . w in n e r of W in n - j the favored position. D a v is , w in n e r of C o f f e e - s h a w v*. w in * ; w ith the deadline drawing near, ner o f N ie b u h r -C o w a n . W in n e r of M c- the intram uralists get out th* plug Cam m o n - M urray v s . w in n e r o f C o r r .g e n . of Mountain Twist, try to recall S t a c k . W in n er v * . how grandpa the threw H . X . D u r h a m , C a r te r H o u s e . W a lte r tournam ent e t G rassburr Flat, spit H udJow . R a n g e r s, v s , J . S t e e le , O p en . W m . B u r en , O pen, v s . D in H o lla n d , F its on the horseshoe (th a t’s fo r luck, H o u s e C. O liv e r s, H u t c h is o n , v s . H . I not necessary to the science) and I . W na. R a n s o m , I M o rta r, C o-O p N o . let go a t the iron peg. F in c h e r , C a v a lie r s, o f W o o le y .J a m e s last y e a r , is left in t o u r n a m e n t to win R a n g e r s. ““ up v s , M. the, in C lub D iv is io n J . W a lk e r va. M adden F ly . A void I n te rd e p a rtm e n ta l F ric tio n DODGERS LOSE FIVE L A K E L A N D , Fla., A p r i l 5 . — ( I N S ) — The Brooklyn Dodgers will he aiming for th eir first vic­ to ry in six starts when they play today. the D etroit Tigers here The team got no more than four hits from Lou F ette o f the Boston Bees, bowing at Bradenton, 5-1, i yesterday. , f w l^ cn bi- | the Chicago White Sox, was on his jbraska Cornhusker, 6-0, to make way home today t0 Atlanta, Ga., the University of Ne- j .L«k* . ext the in an exh hit ion Fine limited the Cornhusker* to game at Los Angeles. Appling will not rejoin the club until early in June. ^ bere he w ill ®I nd of m onths n u rsin g ankle he broke he o f which were five hits. four bingies of variety, the scratch and sent five of the Nebraska batsmen back the bench on to strikeouts. A void In terd ep artm ental F riction CUBS SIGN RUSSELL in Baylor trimmed th* Cornhusk-, BISBEE, Ariz., April 5.— ens, 9-7, Monday afternoon. Cap-'; (IN S )— .T ack Russel!, veteran slugging right handed pitcher who served tain Ross H’ghtower, outfielder, continued his vicious many years the American assault at the plate by smashing League, today was scheduled to two blistering singles in as many report to the Chicago Cubs in San trips to the plate. Harry Tenr.ison, s Antonio on Thursday. M anager Bear third sacker, also gathered Charley Grimm said Russell, wh a pair of base blows. Wilson, Ne-; accepted branks shortstop, was a batting I be used on relief roles, stand-out in the fielding gem of j the game when he dashed deep into the outer garden to make a miraculous one-hand stab of Billy Patterson’s liner. F ilte r C ig a r e tte H o ld e r U s** another cigarette a* filtor term s yesterday, could LOO V»lu* 2 5 c In v e stig a te F lan l l CHARLIE’S 23 rd A Guad, Largest Stock of Arrow Shirts in Certra' sexes at THE STORE FOR MEN The defensive gem of the after raced far back toward the Merge.* , 4:00—Chs». Lew:*, Mer**!*, vs. H, Morris, Cs'-slier!* R. Smith, H. of Car* noon was turned in by Jack Perry, | ter. vs. c. oiiison, Cavalier*, o. Hughes, B aird -N eville who n - [W in n e r of R usaeU-Sewel! m atch v s. win- r le la * S ner nf p ,irn eu .B a rt. W inner of J see* C enterfield C lif f to take W ilhite v s . w inner of M urphrae-C unyus. f l y w i t h o n e h a n d . S everal pitchers w ere used by stokes VS- Winner of Fits-Culbert.*r n. vs. w inner of H »rso*-D inkins. ,U gsj]ofm> winner of Del v s . w in n er o f R ic k e t t s - v s . w in nor t h * t u r n - i H unt vs w inner . . . . of , , . . series with Diach in preparation for Me two Br#nt v# ^ game the Houston M o n te -R e e * * Buffs here Friday and Saturday. Johnny Large:bars and Charlie Still war a the most successful of the moundsmen. o f M er k t. S m ith v s . w in n e r C orb in - Ro kart s o n . J . B T h om s s , O p en , v f . B a lly P h e lp s, M e r g e le . S . B arrow , C o-O p N o . 2. v s . w in n e r o f B isr d -R o se h . W in n e r o f G u e r r a -L iv in g s to n v s . M. B. S p e n c e . C o- Op N o . I . R . E . R oy, C a v a lie r s, va. F. C h a r le s, H o f C arter. E x p a n d T ea** U nion ROW E STILL A M Y STER Y S p o r t s N o t i c e LAKELAND, Fie., April 5 . ~ (IN S )— Just how much of his old- time form Lynwood “ Schoolboy” Rowe has recovered was still a conflicts w i t h mystery today. This despite h ie ; BEC AL SE Round-Up events and revue rt- fine work rn pitching the Detroit Tigers to a 5-3 victory yesterday hearsay, opening of spring bae- over Buffalo o f the International i ketball training has been post- poned until Monday, April l l , at Ltagu*. innings, Rowe j ® o’clock. Equipment may be yielded seven scattered hit*, el- checked out, however, each after- lowing one tally. Chet Laabs, I noon this week from 3 until 4 chunky centerfielder, contributed | 0 clock. a home run to the victory. The Brooklyn Dodgers came to Lake- land today. JACK S. GRAY, varsity basketball coach. Hurling five of C om p 'ate Your Easter W a rd ro b e W ith A New From the complete stock at Joseph’s Man’s Shop OPPOSITE DRISKILL 127 EAST 6TH V.. He wants to know w hat college men like a bout Pa rn Beach and what they w ant changed. The results o* his survey here may be instrumental in determ ining styles, patterns and w eight oP the Palm Beacn suits in the future. T h e T o g g e r y 2310 Guadalupe J. L. Rose THE R O U N D -U P I S E V U E AN D DAM Ax Spanish Tempo A D A Y 8; 8:15 ’till 2 :0 0 GREGORY GYM w ith The 'Original V ebz anc! Volanda Orchestra George Hamilton AND HIS MUSIC BOX MUSIC SPANISH DANCING SPECIALTY NUMBERS HUNDREDS OF BEAUTIFUL GIRLS O J . B S. CO. THAT TYROLEAN INFLUENCE IN YOUR STETSON Here s the tapered crown . . . the brim that curves up in back, steep as the Alps, and scoops down smartly over your eyes. It’s the Tyrolean at its smartest. . , but with a regulation silk band so you can wear it in town as well as country. See it in Stetsoa’s new “Thoroughbred Colors.” Fitting and Proper The collar ottodfiml dress skirt Is the smartest and moat comfortable thing for black dc occasion*. Try Arrow’s Skoreham It baa tke non-wilt Arose! tora down collar, a soft pleated front, and tho Mi toga tailored kl U t e s t i i l i Sa A R . L O W D R E S S S H I R T S H eadquarters fo r A rrow Shirts on the Drag T h e T o g g e r y 2310 Guadalupe J. L. Rosa Cem ent Experts Speak Today And Thursday Mr. A. G. Royther, instructor superintendent at the Kansas City headquarters of cement, and Mr. C. F. Boulden, state official of Portland Cement, will speak on A rchitectural concrete W ednes­ day and Thursday a t 7 :80 o’clock in the A rchitecture auditorium . These series o f talks will cover design, erection, trea tm e n t and re­ moval of forms for architectural concrete; surface textures and how* they are o b tain ed ; cleaning, patching, and surface treatm ents;; fundamental in; making and placing the concrete, fo r architec­ and specifications tu ral concrete. considerations Phil Ferguson, associate pro­ fessor of civil engineering, said that this Portland cement trip will be for civil and architectural en­ gineers and also contractors of Austin. Mr. Royther k at A.&M. College Tuesday and Wed­ nesday, speaking A void I n te rd e p a rtm e n ta l F ric tio n T E N N IS SCH ED ULE V arsity Courts 2 o’clock— Murphey vs. S tu art;;' Burns vs. Rogers; Blankenburg vs. Purnell. 3 o’clock— Kamrath vs. Christ- ner; Weller vs, McGinnis; Walthall vs, Dullnig. 4 o’clock—Fincher vs. Riskind; Hickman vs. Bill Billings; Hilley vs, Kumra. F reshm an Courts 2 o’clock— Battle vs. Justice; Van Cleave vs. Gardner; Cox vs. Payne. 3 o’clock— Granville vp. Jones; Buren vs. B atjer; Barnes vs. Tan-J ner. 4 o’clock— Nail* vs. Weylendt; McGivney vs. Meadows; Burgin vs. Chiles. 6 o’clock— Shurley vs. Schwarz; Fox vs. Babcock; Kirksey vs, Gardner. Abolish Eaeoss Honoraries P E R R IN E TO TALK Dr. J. O. Perrine of the Ameri­ can Telephone and Telegraph Company, who will present a dem­ onstration, “Waves, Words, and W ires” at Gregory Gymnasium April l l , will use a 600-pound “four-throated” loud speaker and “round-trip” tele­ phone circuits to St. Louis to demonstrate the component parts of speech and music. The demon­ stration, which was arranged by the Electrical Engineering and Physics Departments of the I ni- versity, will begin at 8 o’clock and will be open to the public. long distance unparalleled tu te la g e of Mr. H a r r i n g to n ’s hench­ men, th ey are com ing r ig h t along. Yes n r , I think we ought to have a n o th e r Grass C am paign. A cam ­ / / / / 3 9 MI M2 PAGE POOT The First College Daily in the South Phone 2-247S THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-2473 Keeping Pace Tacks Free By P R E N T I C E HILL 1 1 ..ST FO R R E L IE F and to fool yo u, th e re isn’t a n y th in g b u t a m ention o f politics in re g a r d to th e ir noise and b ustle and th e hellish mess they make of th* cam pus with th e handbills and cards and blotters, which rem inds me. t h a t stu d e n ts as a rule d on ’t pay much a tte n tio n to th e excellent and Most Commendable J o b the g a rd e n e r s p e rfo rm in m a n ic u ring the lawns and hedges. I've been p r e tty w orried ab o u t th e y oun g ones (hedg es) in fr o n t of th e A dm inistration Building. F o r a long tim# th e y looked p r e tty scraw ny and I th o u g h t maybe th e y had rick ets or som ething, b u t Lo!, u n d e r the paign to m ake stu d e n ts lie on th e grass, look a t the grass, s n iff the grass, grass, g rass G ertie Stein, you know. And th e n th e r e ’s the bit of whimsy th a t has to do w ith n a tu r e and the boy a t the T h eta g a rd e n p a r ty which r e c u r r s each y e a r as if it had ju s t happened. Would a n y o f you students who can’t go away f o r a trip this su m m e r like tp go on my to u r? I w en t over th e r o u te th e o th e r day and it was in­ deed an experience. C on venient p a r t of it is th a t it is all in A ustin. You simply go to the Capitol T h e a te r, which flou rished in y o u r pappy and m am m y's time as the H ancock O p era House, to buy scenery th at was le f t fr o m T he Good Old Days. There, you stum ble down the dark aisle while a cutie wails sw ing from the screen. All modern. Good. But you go backstage. It smells of grease­ paint th a t was pu t on in 1897. D ark, strange r ig ­ ging th a t goes out of sight up into the r a f te r s like great spider webs. B u t the loft is the goal. Up a sharp-angled lad der, then a landing, and on up a n o th e r ladder to the bridge which connects the two sides, d arker an d d arker. In the loft. sets is (or the old stand byes of flats t h a t w ere used for every show, with such quain t names as “ L ig h t F a n c y Gothic” and ••Palace, Light F a n ta s tic ” — or “ The I n te r io r ,” “ The W oods.” The Union stage b a n d , lanky, disgru ntled at having to sell th a t the r ig h t spelling?) Me, being ashamed o f m yself fo r ta k in g them a w ay fro m they had th e ir day. And down fin a lly to th e stage floor and o u t th e smoky iron “ S ta g e D oor,” which is set richly-inscribed-w ith-trouper’s- in a chipped and narnee brick wall. I w a n t to ta k e a person with a fa n c ifu l im agination down there so he can tell me how he sees the chorines and actresses of the late nin e tie s leaving th ro u g h this door, tir e d from a hard show, going over to get some beer or food. th e a te r w here the m u sty W hat has happened to the m o u rn fu l c o u n te ­ nance o f the St. B e rn a rd who w e n t to the U n iv e r­ sity last y e a r? He was noticeably lacking today especially when the cam pus was stom ping ground fo r Alice M ary’s burro (he WAS v e ry whimsical when he would tu r n one ear fo rw a rd , the o th e r back, while the can didate and su p p o rte rs were sin g in g ), the alligator, the black police dog with the push-w agon (H e was f o r Cor.nally. A d v.). But I am w orried a b o u t the St. B ernard . Did he g et a degree, perhaps a t h e tea c h in g position I can pic tu re him best tea c h in g Greek provinces? an d Latin, leaning on his desk looking pe rpe tu a lly melancholic as he myopically reads Pliny or E u r ip ­ ides to dull stud ents, A happier th o u g h t is th a t he has gone to the Alps w here all good Aip-dogs go, and now w ears a keg of b ra n d y at bis th roa t. It is told that this g re a t canine w as th e intim ate c f m ore professors th an the student?, ever know. He m u st have been a c om fort to th e lesser ones'. R.I.P. in One little Russ sr.-looking fellow who played a viola or violin took the affection of the e n orm ous crowd at the St. Louis Sym phony— he looked so yo un g and in te n t and Latinish and w h ole-hearted a b o u t the w ork to be done . , . and the tw o old ladies who sat beside us a* “ Snow W h ite ,” whose all.g a to r te a rs quite m atched those of th e fa w n s a t th e instance of the b rin g in g flow ers to t h e h e ro in e ’s bier . . . th e e ie c tio n -retu rn -m a n in the T exan office, whose te lephone p a tte r so unded like the bookie r ig h t a f t e r th e a f t e r n o o n ’s ru n n in g : “ Which race? *— “ F o u rte e n u p ” . . . an d the Pi Phi house w ith th e solid silver chand elier which has been re d o n e by covering i t with gilt paint. c o n sta n t tion. It w i l l be worth their time in seeing the physical plant in action at its best. And a turn-out of this size is of infinite value to the University— a step in the direction of providing the interest which will insure its growth in the future. Looking Back W ith W aldo N iebuhr Q lX THOUSAND political-minded atu- dents were treated to som ething new in ballot counting yesterday w hen Judges Marvin Pierce and Pete Curry inaugurated a new departure in handling returns. In the counting, accuracy and precision keynoted all arrangements as much as the sincere desire of those service organiza­ tions in charge for fairness. A little drag in turning out results was the necesary con­ com m itan t of a heavy vote and a new painstaking system of counting. Emphasis was placed from start to finish, from poll to judges' card, on ac­ curacy. The departure from a scrawled voter's signature at the bottom of his bal­ lot to his name recorded in an official book and later checked by a battery of workers proved to be a sound and fair evolution of campus election mechanics. Exclusion of most of the onlookers from the floor of the counting room, at­ tempted this year, will make for speedier, fairer results in future counting. Even though representatives of candidates were thinned out to a large extent, the personnel of the election officials placed final results above the realm of question. Viewed from the perspective of a clos­ ing political year, the work of Orange Jackets, Mortar Board and A .P.O. has proved the immense value these organi­ zations will exhibit in future elections. Their taking over of counting pro­ cedure is the necessary m echanical step to keep pace with increasing student in­ in politics and increasingly heavy terest campus voting. Round-Up Letter ’"’pHERE IS NO time in the school year as busy for the student body as the months of March and April, and no activity w ith more convolutions for the campus than Kound-Up. Preparations for its three days of fes­ tivity take up the activity of a thousand students on three fronts. The revue and ball, the parade, and the general person­ nel work of campus com m ittees have kept student workers busy for alm ost a month. From now until Friday when the Round-Up curtain goes up on the parade, first o f the festivities, student work will reach a peak. Y et one of the most important phases In which students can help build a better spring hom ecom ing is usually shoved into the background in the last d a y s o f frenzied preparation. That phase is personal invi­ tations to visit the campus. Could every student on the campus to­ day account for one visitor over and above the returning alumni, Round-Up would count its participants at nearly 20,000. A letter home is invitation enough to parents or friends for this year’s celebra- l h D d f i f o a Th# Dally Texan, etude-? newspaper cf Th# University of is p abashed on tho campus of the University at err rr -.ra­ Tex##, Au atilt fey the texas Student Publications, Inc., tes except Monday. Entered as second c.ats ma i matter at th* Postoff -« Au*. Sir. Texas, under the act of Cor .-rets. March 3. 1*79. Editorial office*. Journalism Bufidin* 108, 101, and IO*. Telephone 2-2 473 Advertising Building 108. Phone 2-2478. and Circulation Department—J on rn a! ism Printed by in * Uniteratty Preee. A C Wright, resister, SUBSCRii . JON RATES I Month _ ......... 1 Semester < 4 s mo.i ...... 2 Semesters (8 mn.I I .60 I.TS 8,00 I .SO 2 r . 4.09 By Carrier By Mail REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY Nations Advecting S e r v i c e , Inc. Col ege Publishers R epresen tative 420 MADISON AVE NEW YORK, N.Y. b »,s t u n . l o b an g e l e s . s a n f r a n c i s c o c h i c a g o 1937 M e m b e r Assoc ated Collegiate Press 1 9 3 8 .... ---------- ........ -------------------- E difor-ta-chU f ED S Y E R S Jo e Beld e n .^Associate E d itor John Mc Cully .Sport* E ditor V ernon Rooke, Bill P u m a ] Associate E ditor! Elizabeth K eeney--------------------------- .Society E ditor — As s oc i a t e Society E ditor Lois S a g er. — Jim A n d e rso n Editor Margaret? e Carri yon ......... E ditor Pericles A l e x a n d e r ,------------— A m usem ents Editor O lcott S anders ——Associate Amusement* Editor J. R. P a lm —..P hotography Editor ——-......... , . ..... E D IT O R IA L ADVISORY COUNCIL Dick W a tts, chairm an Bill Woods E a rl A rn e tt Ram sey Moore ... . . H a rry Quin Billie Ruth Y oung .Le Selden Joel W estbrook Bill Fra n c is i et.h r 2, H eeK. Bob E c k h a rd t p # J# Thompson Tora Law . N IG H T E D IT O R ....................JA M E S W ILLIA M SON A ssistants ....... ..................... .................... Ju lie t Knight, Snowden, H eartsill Young, Edwin C liffo rd K am p m a n n , W ilbur Rollings, L e ste r H. Cam p­ b e ll Night S ports E d ito r A s s i s t a n t s Night Society E d ito r ......... A ss is ta n t...................... . N ight T eleg rap h E d ito r A ssista nts — ...Clarence La Roche ..............Joe Jam es, Clyde La Motte Constance Matula M ary F ra n c e s Casbeer ...... .....Oma Ray W alker - . .B u s t e r Gober, ..................... W ilbur Rollings. Today’s Cross Word Puzzle 2 3 M 6 I '/A / a IO 5 12 I I IS 2 2 % r V / 2 6 / S Y /c 13 16 I Wa IM l l A Z A 21 2 7 V V / 3 0 ''/VU SSS 31 S S / 3 5 r f / 2 * 3 3 S H PTP j $ 3 7 W a 1 2M 2 3 M5 HS 3 © / /A , f s HO A A /* / / / . HH M? 5 2 I ll IM 2 0 2 5 2 5 3 2 3 6 M7 5 0 M3 MS 5 ; ’AAA Wa 35—-hail! SS—relating to columnar curve 38— solar disk 39—genus of geese 40— river island 41— durable 43— kind of lace of silk 47—grows old 48—mischievous sprite 49—silkworm 50—deity HORIZONTAL I-—one who judges by externals 5—pouch 8— Firmmit 11—Greek queen of heaven 12— French coin 13— constructed 14—conclusion of a dis­ course 16——plane surface 17—precious stone 18— form er Russian rulers 2*3— Egyptian sacred bull 22— small workbag 25— cooking vessel 26— pikelike fish 27—tricks 28— symbol for silver 29—-total 30—footlike part SI—like 32—class of society 34—-evil 51— river in England 52— amount owed VERTICAL 1— personal pronoun 2—cluster of fibers in wool staple 3— source 4— bundles 5— ask alms 6— sharper 7— visitor S— the ankle 9—poem IO— seed of a well-known vine 13— masculine name 15—mystic ejaculation 19— ventilated 20—fast 21—heathen 22—-engine of war 23—depart 24— Prussian city JE two banks of oars , * rtcx 29— remains on the feet 30— moccasin 33— gazed 34— galley with Herewith is the solution to yester- 26—conjecture v**» *vr*ars*I a day’s puzzle u_ A, M Alm a n a rn2_ LU M o R A L_ I L_ A. NJf l a n s S A_Il_P 'n a s a JLp A RLY T j!E£> . : - Jo.ja a nm M o E_ a m m m pj LL T JL N_ o mmnm E_ X £ E u L_ L_ A □ mmm N B. i f R a n nm D LLc Y S £ A_J I MCh ;P_□ a a a * EL i M piJUIL A □ a a a A 3 D_ E \ N_EL VV* s a a ElA_ L_ E itsX R_ N s a a a to *** A N_JE.LL Ccgrngitt. HSI. Xx Kint lututis Sya&Uxu. tax 42— past 44— imitate 45— bill or beak 46—channel from a shore inland 35—dress 37—lukewarm 38— was affecter with pain p _U A tamals D 40— suffix : per­ 41— ugly old taining to woman V £ They Talk A b o u t ------------ Mock Warfa re— Fake Cures— Tolerance Plus In O th e r Papers Compiled by Ann Jarratt public office Comm unists and e th e r radicals. The Steer Standard By BOYD SINCLAIR A P R I L IN V E R S E Generally, as a rule W eather in August is cool, T here’s ice on the pool, Kids go to school, W e celebrate Yule, Cool is M olecule the Mule. M ere ridicule. April fo o l! a p r i l i n t h e n e w s BERLIN, G erm any. — (BS) — re p o rts U y o n f i r m e d from the c o u n try se a t of the Duke and Duchess o f W indsor indicate th a t a divorce su it may soon be filed by the f o r m e r Prince of Wales. Reports o f e x tra v a g a n t outlay f o r an E a s te r o u tf it by the D uch­ ess is stated as the final climax in the m arital r if t between the fo r m e r Mrs. Wallis W arfield Simp­ son and f o r m e r King Edward. The ru m o r also states th a t the now im pecunious Duke has d e­ cided to completely give up the woman for which he gave up ru le r ­ ship o f o n e-fifth of the world and an an nu al income of $2,000,000. to be nam ed co­ Alm ost sure re sp o n d e n t in the suit is Gypsy Rose Lee, hot-spot strip-tease a r t ­ ist. whom it is said the Duke will m a r ry as soon as he can a r r a n g e f o r h e r trav elin g attire. The Duke u n d e r s ta n d s from news of the b u r ­ ro to g ra v u re lesque sections t h a t Miss Lee won’t be as h a rd to clothe as his p re se n t wife. “ I t m ay be h a rd to g e t her to p u t a n y on,” said the Duke, “ b u t t h a t is easy on the pocketbook.” th e a te r and today receipt of N E W YORK. N. Y.— ( B S ) — T he New York sub-treasu ry an ­ gold nounced shipm ents r e p re se n tin g full p a y ­ m e n t of the entire w a r d ebt owed the U nited S tates by fo reign countries, plus in te r e s t— except t h a t o f Finland . The paym en ts w ere as follows: G re a t B ritain, $5,092,163,000; F ra n c e , $4,061,234,000; Italy, $2,- 015,535,000; Poland, $24 i , 097,- 000. F inland d e fa u lte d again with a courteous diplomatic note s t a t­ ing her inability to pay. The c oun trie s stated t h a t they were able to pay th e ir d ebts be­ cause of c u r ta ilm e n t of m unitio ns buying. LONDON, England.— (BS) — Benito (Moose) Mussolini a n d Adolf (H it) H itler in a p a c t sign­ ed last F r id a y announced a closed season fo r the dove of peace by an n o u n c in g destru ctio n of war m a ­ terial-. The p a c t calls fo r obser­ h e re to fo re tr e a tie s vation signed by Italy and G erm any. Men u n d e r a rm s will be reduced in nu m b e r at, once. of Mock W a rfa re Two have airplanes crashed du rin g the sham b attles off the coast cf Hawaii, Eleven men have m et their death. Even mock w a r ­ f a r e these days is hazardous. The navy has been staging the dete rm in e sham m aneuvers w hether th e facilities f o r p ro te c t­ ing H aw aii are ade q u a te , and pro b­ ably to give pilots and seamen an o p p o rtu n ity to practice. to W a rf a r e has been highly m ech­ anized, b u t no th in g has been done th a t will te n d to reduce the length of ca su alty is rig ht when he says that a nation m u s t have a d e q u a te m anpow er to v. in a war. roles. Mussolini it is, perhaps, essential, Mock battle, such as t h a t in the is expensive, vicinity of Hawaii b u t It gives service men not only p r a c ­ tice bu t some conception of w hat t h e y will be up a g ainst in real w ar. This a n ti r a d i c a l bill p ro ba bly would have been found u n c o n stitu ­ tional if it had been signed. But if it had gone into e ffe c t, it would have been a lam entable step to ­ w a rd to ta lita r ia n go vernm ent. As the New York Times and o th e r conservative pap ers pointed out, it would have made Communists instead o f suppressing them. A m e r­ ica will be no longer tho home of th e free when those who belong to m ino rity p a rtie s have Their civil rig h ts cu rta ile d . A few o f the more a d v e n tu ro u s A m ericans have participated in the w a rs and in Ethiopia, Spain, E ve ryo ne w ants tolerance and China, b u t the m en in the arm y fre e d o m for himself. But it takes and navy a r e n o t free to become a broadm inded type of p atriotism soldiers of fo rtu n e . Unless th ey t0 insist on tolerance and free d o m are exercised in sham battle, they will be a t serious disadvantage in f o r those of opposing views. The case of w ar with the battle-bro ken Pre se rv a tion in v e te ra n s of Italy, Germany, J a p a n , A m erj ca depends largely on keep- I M /y X VI the T T A/tt " I * Vt A SVS O a T AT t- IX %• en a- m * a n in e f fe c t Thomas J e f f e r s o n ’* Russia, Spain, France, and China. i n * rig h ts and n ot allowing bill o f tra d itio n a l Am erican freedom to be cu rta ile d by oppressive m eas­ u r e s like those used by H itler and has S talin. G overnor Lehm an shown him self a friend of dem oc­ ta k in g a stron g stand r a c y b y a g a in st repression of m ino rity groups. Six persons have died in Florida in th e space of a day fro m e ffec ts of a d ru g o ffe re d as a cancer cure. -Dallas Times-Herald. Fake Cures of ^ dem ocracy _ „« , n — Dallas News, I t h a sn ’t been long since sev­ eral th ro u g h o u t the c o u n try died from the use of sulfanilamide. V o t e S p r i n g E le ctio n s One of the tra g e die s of life is t h a t those who are ill will ta k e the chances t h a t c h a rla ta n s p r o m ­ ise. I t h a pp en e d in W est T exas one tim e w hen those afflicted with tuberculosis w ere duped by fr a u d s r e h e a rs a l of claim ing m arvelous results fro m b re a th in g th e fu m e s fron) clay t h a t was fo u n d somewhere n e a r San Angelo. Official Notice A L L BL U E B O N N E T BELLES m u st m e e t in Gregory Gym f o r the p re se nta tion a t th e Round-Up Revue and Ball, a t 7:00 W ed nesday night, is n e c e ssa ry th a t they be th e re both nights if they intend to pa rtic ipa te I t WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 193* L O N G C A N G E - L E T T E D f •> H H (BL— B K Indictment Sir: W e as students o f The U niversity o f Texas are w ell fam iliar with the fact that our fo re -fa th er s estab lish ed th is in stitu tion with tbs stipulation th a t it was to be a university of the first class. Face th e facts w ithout prejudice. Is it? O ar university should be one o f the fo re m o st of the United States, o f th e w orld. W e have th e resou rces w hich are n eed ed to build such a u n iv ersity ; w e h a v e the b u ild in gs in w hich to put it. W hen you and I leave the h alls o f learn in g here and go in to th e b u sin ess and pro­ fessio n a l w orld , w ill we be resp ected and esteem ed as h ighly as if w e had atten d ed one o f the m ore m odern and p rogressive in stitu tio n s? F o r g e t your bias and an sw er tru th fu lly . T here is a new system o f education, pioneered by such u n iv ersities as C hicago and O xford, t h a t is f a r superior to the an tiq u ated sy stem used b y us, along with m an y others. Are we justified in n o t ad­ v a n cin g simply because progress is n ot popular? W e have placed emphasis on the tvrong th in g h e re a t Texas. S tu ­ d en ts come h e re to g e t a d egree, n o t an education! They t r y to m ake a grad e in a cou rse rather than try in g to m aster th e cou rse fo r its ow n valu e. They memorize th e m , m any prejudices which th e in stru c to rs force them to take simply because we do not have freedom o f tho ug ht. fa c ts a n d along w ith is b are to criticism A n o th er phase of our u niversity which is the good tim e a ttitu d e of the stud en ts. T hat is the primary objective of a g r e a t number of stu d e n ts o f the university. We have a drive to g et an a n n u a l a m o u n t of m oney f o r the Union which will equ al the '38-39 ap prop riation f o r th e e n tire new College of F in e Arts. W e place football on a pedestal and worship it as th e Israelites w o r­ shiped the golden calf. And y e t we have t h e a udacity to call o u r ­ selves the stron gh old of higher learning! The personal c o n ta c t and guidance of s tu d e n ts is virtu ally absent. W e have a gigantic machine o f lectures and exam inations throu gh which we r u n stu dents in much the same m a n n e r t h a t H e n r y Ford run s cars thro u g h b is fa c to ry . A nd the result is practically the sam e: we incapable o f ind ep end en t, logical thinking in so fa r as it is possible to crush it ou t of a m an in f o u r years. t u r n o u t a h u m an m achine, W e are fo rb id den to th in k f o r ourselves; t h a t is, unless we ag re e in o u r conclusions with w h a t th e in struc tor thinks and with th e con­ ventional ideas. O ur r ig h t to think freely is im paired b y the very th e prom otio n of free institutio n thinking. th a t is theoretically devoted to A w aken to the call of progress, t e a r down the despotic m o narch from the th ro n e , take on the new and leave* the old, place our own U niversity of Texas far out in to the lead of all th e educational in­ stitutions of the world! R* F. W ALLA CE. The P o e t’s Release I S A W A MAIDEN I saw a m aiden sta n d in g lonely, Crying, sobbing by the sea; And I m u rm u re d , “ O you lovely! W h a t yo ur life could be to m e ’.” Ah, the b eauty of her body! Yes, I w orshipped all un seen— U ntil I called, “ Oh you lady, All our life could be a d re a m .” “ Come,” she w hispered, speak­ “ You m ay stand here by my ing softly, sid e ; W aiting f o r th e tide to rise; And her body!— O I could n e v e r Tell the secret of her sighs. I heard a chorus o f T heban Maidens Calling o ’er the dashing sea, A nd I said, “ Oh you M aidens! Leave alone this maid and m e .” B u t th e ir cries were all be­ moaning; Crying! Cursing! All at me! Yes, th e ir moans were all lamenting F o r my sin beside the sea. Ah, th at chorus of Theban Maidens, moan. Maidens! I curse, yes curse, th e ir Grecian Wrhy d id n ’t th e y — those cursed Leave this maid and me alone? W re tc h e d ! Ah, the m aiden ery- Sobbing as I left her side; H ands ou tstretc h e d ! Bosom ris­ . *m g : ing! Then h e r tide, d e a th — th e rolling IR A L WAGONSELLER VERVE VERV E Translated from original French S p o n s o r e d b y E S Q U I R E $2.50 per cop y V o l. I , N o s. I S t 2 a v a i l a b l e a t C H A R L I E ’S T„id* BLUEBONNET BELLES Remember the final Round-Up Revue Rehearsal at 7 tonight in Gregory Gym Y O U MUST BE THERE! TK© R o u n 8 - U p Revue Com m ittee is no t G overnor L ehm an in E urope, and de- ________________ Clasp my body, ah so tightly, While we wait the rolling tid e.” T hus we stood alone, to g e th e r, II Duce a n d Der F u e h r e r t h u n ­ dered their desire fo r peace a n d co n te n tm e n t the kind of man anyone would accuse of being sym pathetic with Com- munism. B ut he is rightly opposed m anded th a t the new law -m aking to any a b rid g e m e n t of free speech, bodies o f E thio pians and Jew s m a- directed to arm y leaders, and was f r e e press, freedom cf assembly Aerially redu ce taxes a t once. diplomatic a n d freedom c f thought. He po in ts o u t correctly “ T here a re sa n e r ways of deal- which directly or indirectly limits re g a rd in g the policies of both die- ing with th e Chinese,” the Son of op p o rtu n ity fo r free public" discus- told this by underscore- wire service correspondents. “ His aion un derm ines the very fo u n d a ­ Highness proposes that w e get the tions of con stitu tion al g o v e rn ­ League of N ations to have every- m e n t.” J a p a n .— ( B S ) — “ We body boycott Charlie Chan and fix Fascists and Nazi new spaper* channels. w ith insulting re m a rk s The press w as only mildly H eaven’s royal rebu ked fo r taries. t h a t “ any s ta tu te came not handled spokesman TOKYO, th ro u g h • must stop raisin g hell in C hina,” patronize Mr. Moto. T h a t’ll the Son of H eaven said in a royal these u p s t a r t Chinese.” com m unique to the J a p a n e se a rm y in China y esterday . The m essage. A Delayed which was a d a m a n t in tone, was A PRIL FO O L!!! • 20 Years A u s tin ’s p a ra d e f o r the laun ch in g of the th ird L ib e rty Loan is the la rg e st rn the city’s history. From the U niv ersity are the following u n its: U ni­ v e rsity band, R.O.T.C., Red Cross and o th e r women Students, U nive rsity Ladies’ Club, facu lty, and Radio School stu den ts. An article on the U n iv ersity ’s Roll of W ar Dead by Ed Angley, jo u rn a lism s tu d e n t, is published in Leslie’s Magazine. We g e t fairly used to ta k in g chances w ith thoee who promise m uch in the political field, b u t we c a n ’t t r a n s f e r th e se promises over into th e field of h ealth. T ak in g chances o fte n m eans a loss two w ays— a loss of th e “ m e d i c a l ’ in ­ ve s tm e n t an d a con tinu ed loss of health. — San Angelo E ve n in g S ta n d a rd . IO Years Tolerance Plus this event. JO HN MCCURDY, secretary, E x -S tu d e n ts’ Associa­ tion. V O L U N T E E R S O FFE R IN G e x tr a room s to accom m odate R ound- U p visitors a re asked to send o r phone th e ir nam e, address, and phone n u m b er to th e E x-Students* Association office 7710, by T ues­ d a y a fte rn o o n A complete list of room s, a rra n g e d in zones, will be who wish to make housing p ro­ visions fo r th e ir frien ds a nd re la­ tives du rin g Round-Up. The L ongh orn s win th e ir aer:es opener with th e Mustangs, 10-8. March oil ro yalties in the U n iv e rsity to ta l $224, 4 73, th e s ta te tr e a s u r e r announces. S ta rrin g C hristy Johnson and George W olfe th e C u rta in Club p re se n ts “ Dear leads, in the B rutus-” in m a n y W ith oppression intolerance of o f m inorities fre ed o m now and the ra m p a n t p a r ts of world, it it g r a tif y in g to n o te the stan d of Gov, H e r b e r t H. L e h m a n C U R T A IN CLUB try -o u ts will of New Y ork in d efe n se of t h e bill of rights. G overnor Lehm an has sa fe g u a rd e d the in te r e s t of A m er- rig h t a t Texas Union 315. lean dem ocracy in his S ta te by ve toing a bill designed to bar froar held W ednesday a t 2 the a fte rn o o n and a t ID A N E L L BRILL, J O H N A. MCCURDY, se c re ta ry , E x -S tu d e n ts’ Association be o’clock in se c re ta ry . 7 o’clock a t ■■■■— — WEDNESDAY, APRIL «, 1938 Phone 2-2473 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-2473 The First College Daily in the South PAGE FIVE Petitions Required In Class Elections Due Saturday Alpha Chi Omega To Start 'Monterrey Hacienda’ Soon Pioneer Portraits To Be Exhibited Painting portrait# of pioneers Officers of the four class coun­ cils will be nominated by petition this year, Cap and Gown Council | announced Saturday. No nomina­ tions from the floor will be made when the classes meet for elec­ tions. Alpha Chi Omega sorority senoritas w ill see work start on their new Monterrey hacienda on the northwest corner of Twenty-sixth In 19,34 M ary Talbot Landrum and Wichita Street, .bout A pril I S. T M . ie the third sorority chapter I undertook that task for the Lower howe to be built this year. The P i P h i. and Chi Omega, are already Rio Grande Valley. H er portrait. occupyng their new houses. - ........... for posterity! +....— ..... , _ j .w ill be on exhibit rn the Texas The house will be “ puro mexi­ following the Monterrey can©,M Alpha Chi Omega is another of Union the sorority group to break away as a feature of Round-Up. a...A t - . . , A petition signed by thirty-five * « > * » ' etch,lecture " I the open tnm th, pr„p0, ed plan, for . I , M \" U « d ru m a task of paint- required f o r ; rambhn* Pl*® around a central class members is Greek Row along University Ave- 5n* the likenesses of as many as each girl being nominated for of- PatJ0* ^ I* to be constructed of , nae directly south of the Library possible of the men and women plans were who played an important role in fica within her class. Also re-! |lat;,' e str,ne and wood, and w ill quired is a certificate from the the brush- f Registrar’s office stating that the characteristic of the Mexican ar- fraternity row a.ong this avenue. i > tlD of nominee has in a C J twelve hours of work for the pre­ ceding semester. chitecture. The patio will be an | W ith the building authentic adoption to this type of houses on other sides of the cam-iTexas a ma* ic vallfT began as house. a n d bringing f * ° f th* developed into a forth from Building, Previous southern several1 average life ™ of pus, the plan has been abandoned. hobl work. The house plans have been ap-|wor* ‘ It Bel The house is to have two floors I Cap and Gown Council members to whom petitions may be submit­ In the basement will be a chap-; ted are Dorothy Matson, Leah Na- than, Constance Matuia, Margaret J ter room equipped for meeting j Correl!, Elizabeth Keeney, L illie Ruth, Bettie Jane Valiance, Dor- These petitions may be pre­ sented to any member of the Cap and Gown Council before Satur­ day, April 9, at I o’clock. A t the time the classes meet for election of officers, the Council will an­ nounce the nominees to be voted on. thy LeM ay, and Jane Eyres. Pay S tu d en t P resid en t I'Y 1 Organizations Elect Spring Officers Ta n , . , et and Helen Mac he- James Street and H-Um -la jmehl were elected presidents of Y.M .C.A. and Y.WhC.A. Men­ | or officers spring term. include living two large Donald, nations president of the aas!Tmlat®8 . J* basement, Cm the first j proved by Mrs. Minerva Osborne and a floor will be rooms, a dining room, a library, | sorority, w ho visited the chapter ! J* 1S avai a e " n guest rooms, and a room for mem-{ here several weeks ago. Mrs. c t r 11!!"1 p* hers who do not live in the chap-! H arry Power, national treasurer King r a n ' a r * M iffir)10 Kenedy Charles Still- ter house. T h . living mom. and and resident of Austin dining room will be convertible i charge of the building plans, into one Boost c©-oj»*rsnvt Housing tertainment purposes. man. Judge James B. Wells, Rob­ ert J. Kleberg II, Lon C. HUI, and S. P. Silver. mu,c m‘ ? n ” * t2?n r -' unject* _f '* r *&|tS- ° o ? immense room for en- ta Fran ; ;!„ , rait** is TA PtTar^ cr " ne tbesa ^r?1, Landrum read* and | purposes, also the main meeting! wesley chun* j room for sorority members. On Herb«rt Prey this floor there will also be a storage room for. trunks and lug­ . gage. the slope of a hill provides ade-; quale lighting and ventilation for i Reuben w,nd« the basement. , Toe house s being built on I Victor Ri»t«r Elena Pirmova Howard Martin . . . SICK. L I S T S t. D avid ’s H ospital William Gr««ub«r# Arthur Owen Valdena Pry* J sc k Powell S e to n In fir m a ry Bill F.y*»en IU st Horn* After Mr;-. Landrum has com­ pleted the pictures of the pio­ neer?, she hopes to continue with portraits 'if other? who contrib­ uted to the development of t h * South Texas area during the pres­ ent century. B oost C o -o p erativ e H o u tia y Urgs O r c u tt* . i 1S13 E X E S M E E T S A T U R D A Y The rest of the house will i in - .C H IL D S IM P R O V IN G T T h : ' ‘T’T'T, k ;U(ift eleven bedrooms, a Sleep- students of the elass of 1913, win W esley Child, wa* reported im-• hold their annual breakfast dur­ t h e proving at St. David's Hospital ing Round-Up at the Texas Feder- ing porch, and a suite for I ne re w ill be serv-j yesterday where he is recovering ated Women’s Club, at 8 o’clock houaemother. is the ice rooms, a laundry, linen closets.! from burns received in chemistry Saturday morning. and utility closets on the second laboratory March 30. He was twenty-fifth year members of the floor. Th house will be large burned when alcohol with which class have met. Starr Armstrong enough to accommodate twenty- • he was working in a Chemistry of Balms is permanent president This 821 laboratory ignited. of the group. 'Most Beautiful' Faculty Turns Out For Social Given By Arrowoods Monday Dr, and Mrs, C. F , Arrowood entertained at the University Club*" Monday night with the largest social affa ir of the pre-Easter season i o introduce their sister, Dr. Ju lia Arrowood of Massachusetts Cen­ tral Hospital, Boston, who arrived Monday for a two-week visit. Guests were received by Dr, Caroline Crowell, Dr. Elizabeth Sentry, Mrs. B. F. Pittenger, and*-------------- ---------------- Mrs. J . L. Henderson. Hents of mint ice with ginger ale md Easter cakes were served to approximately ifty callers. Included two hundred and \f) 0 3 D /\ntO!llO V V . I O / V i 6 6 i A Refresh-j A A I J \y/ "T AA . Pi Phi Banquet Held Monday MIS S A M Y Burnham Onken, national grand president of P i Beta Phi sorority, was the guest speaker at the annual na- , he' d house P«rty L . on of ^ Am(,rican A , soc,ation I « ! * eh’ Ptor ko“ ’ ' M.™ d* y m* ht _‘ h . active chapter and alumnae in the “ d was also a M f " meeting in Texas for several years, Mr- ’ 7 ’ tV „on.i T.v<>,vt.., I.. T B ellm ont, F. in the program. J. Adam s; Dr,, and Mesdames L. Anri, g „ d 9. The ,m ve r.,.:y w n l, About on. hundred and f.fty local The Southwest central coneen- 1 , ‘° " sl ™ » d" l ’ d“ y University Women, the fi,.t I,n rh e r Stark , b(. \ h™ (rue stu. , :* a 5 $ j a d e i t e ' of I „ , Th* Tho Dawn of an Era. American librarian, will speak on Dr. Cerin. E. Castaneda, Latin- Robi„ so* . J ' be well represented, since fifteen ; 1 T , J 1 “ c . j Hod w K MmbTomerv M .rv t l . , nd M .rth a Schmidt as k„ , {tom , h(. ,otive chapter, ; Prominent alumnae were Mes- Sevtn delegates wall be sent I dftmeg Raymond H ill, Ben Thrash­ to the convention as represent#- ei% E T Miller> j ohn Bremond, er, tiw s of the Austin branch cf the Roberdeau, M ary Robinson, and A .A .U .W . They are Mesdames : Roy Rather. Robert H, Cuyler, president of ^ _ J: C!'.ck’. 5“ ,.L ; Id a n u .l, J . B. W h .re y , Georg, W . J 'th~ Stocking, Aaron Schaffer, J. An - 1 |OCH, branches are former ierson Fitzgerald, D. B. Klein, I d»nt» of th* University. len ry W . Harper. J- L. Hender­ son. T. W . Riker, A- B, Swanson, S. H. Sellards, T, H. Shelby, E. I. Mathews, A. P. Brogan, E , K. McGinnis, K. G. Smith, B. F. Pit- enger, Henry L. Hilgartner, E d ­ gard L Dodd. T. S Painter, « . IV. Hackett, Stanley Finch, Fred- ?rick E b y , C. A. Swanson, ll. J . the Austin branch, bred Bullard, s wjnf antj Ettlinger, H. H. Vandiver, Rex H. P. Bybee, Rex Hopper. M A. natjonR an{j delphinium on the Hopper, 0. B. Douglas, Mesdames) McMiehael, and_E. H . Sellards, and j Speaker9» roses and table, and bluebonnets in gold arrow bowls Kathleen Bland, Connie I throughout the dining rooms. The __________________________ ___ stta, Corrie W . Allen, , banquet tables were placed in the! ^Vatts; Misses Annie Webb Blan-; on, Ione Spears, Florence Spell­ shapes of “ U ” and “ T ” , with the C a p i t a l S c o u t s M e e t speakers* table in the center hall er, L illia n Wester, Erm a Gilt, j between them. Roses and Easter Thursday A t Lodge orothy Gebauer, Lula Bewley, lilies graced the other tables in id Rosalie Godfrey. the house. a d j u d g e d by the country’* l e a d i n g a d v e r t i s ­ ing art d i r e c t o r * , m e e t i n g in t h e m o s t beauti­ New York, a s i s pic­ ful m o d e l i s w e a r i n g tured jewels worth $1,000,000. w __ _ in flowers, wine car Brock-1 Miss Dorothy Gebauer. i n A m e r i c a , S h e house was decorated V i r g i n i a a x I a b o v e . Maud J u d d , be * , , . J The ( apitol Area Council. Boy K ^ A b o u t ----- University People in the dining Serving room ere Mesdames Joe Thorne Gii- prt and V. I, Moore for the first lour, and Mesdames J. W . (a1- J ic un and T. S. Painter for t h e ■ cond hour. Assisting C a w l I and Mr*. E. R. Coppock B ; loft San Antonio Monday to ,pan4 U e a iia n ♦ c * “ a f 0v^ d^ Tieing. in the dining room th summer near Peru, Ind. Nancy Expand Ta*a» Union join Short, rn W spent the week-end at th eir homes ;n gar) Antonio • n ,n J M a r t e F a i r b a n k s a n d L o i s S i e n gere Mesdames V irg il Barnes, C«ppock, their daughter, will Ha> cis Jr., > • aM < Jyron Oscar Powers, Sharks Zivley, Leo Haynes, J . J . I >ne% J- C. Holley, G L. Joughin. D. Weeks, Byron Garret of io u sto n ; W. E. Gettys, D. T* starnes, D. L. Miller, Am o No- Hotnv, Hugh McMath, Banner rogg, Richard W. Pettway, B e r ­ eft William s Comanche; jerx y*inimm» Mi™** qaiiv M o o r e May B r o o k - M »rg* r©t Vargmia McDonald, all mg a s e r m o n , b e n e d i c t i o n , and the j tend. rtsi«!r H r i F FlinT. G l i a ' Mullins. ,„d O live C a d w e ll. 200 Students Attend Catholic Retreat A n n e B e t h M o r n s , Hef c rt ha eluded Tuesday night at St. Au^ giving of th . P e p .. b ! , „ i „ , . ^ The retreat, conducted by the a n d j tin’? Chapel with a service includ , More than two hundred students Helen Dashieil w ill attend the N i e l s e n , L i l l i a n I ^ k - t T S e e l i g e r , . , of . . _ - . | Dr. Ju lia A row ood gradua e Boston n medicine from ity and^^was valedictoriaB oi^ lass. lassachusetti General Hospital. She is a staff member of , ja lv*r* home Sunday. lied San Antonio last “ F a m ily Relationship” w ill be Rev. John M. Riach, consisted of H E W I T T T O T A L K O N M O N E Y the topic for an open forum fM- y ee W alt, senior, was at her morning mass and evening serv-j :-- — 1 Homer G. Hewitt, state man- lowing a talk by Mrs. Virginia Sunday night ASeer for the Northwestern Na- Sharborough on the same subject Insurance Company, at the Child Study Association retreat and made a short will speak on “ The Relation o f meeting Tuesday night, April 5, the University He next spoke Money to Fam ily L ife ” to Dr. C. at 8 o’clock Father Riach outlined the plan of tional L ife in Houston Saturday and ices each day. R u t h M i l l i c a n , sophomore, vis- the in Burnet last week-end. opening address. *w ,iiV _____ ... in ! Investigate De n I! TODAY major, w a s at her home ham Saturday in and Sunday. Mrs. W . J . Blount of Fort Worth R U 5 H W E E K D I S C U S S E D Louise Baier, home econom ics!00 ’ The Christian Home,” and his In Brief visited her daughter, last week-end. S h e l l e y , Bren-5^ na^ sermon was "Vocations.” morals this morning at l l o’clock a special ope, held at. night in the W esley Foundation. He that fathers and wi l l speak on “ The Student’s Use Crested m a y be j W . H a lls class in marriage and Baptist Church. The meeting is sn any others in­ guests of the o , u Rush week p.ans for next year 0 f Money” at Wesley Night were discussed Monday at Panhel- the W esley Foundation tonight at Mrs. 0. L . Norman will sing, lenic meeting. Miss Amy Burn- 8:15 o’clock and will address Dean accompanied by Mrs. Holland ham Oaken, grand president cf Pi j a . Fitzgerald’s class in life in- Howell. Both are members of the in Waggoner Hall 210 club. The entertainment eommit- Beta Phi sorority, was the speaker durance tee will serve coffee and cookies. at the meeting. Thursday at 3 o’clock. in club. The banquet was held in com- J Scouts of America, w ill hold spring Jack the ninety-first meeting Thursday at 6:45 o'clock R;ard vice-president, and Hugh memoration of anniversary of the founding a* , x* .* the national organization of Pi - „ororjt Rnf, jn honor of The urpoee ef th f mM« „ g will C.A., and Elizabeth r *inte^ ' d" ; | two g irl, and the hou,em other. ftio confit I Art crc* af fjiiXt&Y rMFK. r*L* a1 c: «#PTPt&fV. th* Y M tHC. , z*, , «... t x * IOT „ . /* I . I *• . . . ‘ rrosident. a n i M a ry A nn Kigso^. be to consider a new constitution j ^ rretary> for the Y.W.C.A. W R. and by-laws, the planning and ’Woolrich' dean of the College of adoption of the year’s objectives,; Engineering, was elected to the further organization of district s e n i o r board of directors, and Tom and council committees, and a Law, James Howard, n\n barbecue supper. ! ne, Jack Lewis, and Fred Schmidt Dr. Goodall H. Wooten, coun- w e r e e l e c t e d to ‘be student board , c o r o r o u g Cotton Ball at A.&M . next wJek- atte" d; d the annual three-day re- oil president, said that all council nf directors. end treat tor the c atholic students at and district scouts as v/ell as scout- Abolish Excess Honoraria University which was con-1 masters, assistants, cubmasters and troop and pack -------- committeemen are invited to at- assistants, and ul.lbCCluw v„ S t u d y G r o u p 7 Has Forum April 15 Collegienne (glamour FORMALS FO R B e l l e s on Budgets P l a n n i n g t o A t t e n d TLe ROUND-UP BALL S o com pletely alluring, so definitely c a p tiv a t­ ing, so m odestly priced at Sca rb ro u gh s . . • these glam our form als will throw the stag line into a frenzy to reach you. They're practically gu aranteed to banish any stuffy conversation ab o u t the European situation, post-m ortem * ab o u t the relays. Ethereal mousseiines, crisp nets, airy laces. M a n y with little jackets— and A L L within your means. 1 :30— Austin Municipal Golf Club meets in front of W o ­ m en’s Gym. I :3f>— Adult education cia'-' will leave Austin to tour Dessau community. I -.go— Classes in technique at Gym swimming pool. saving the. Gregory life 2— Try-outs, for “ Call It a Day,” Curtain Club’s next produc­ tion, in Texas Union. 4 University Ladies' Club tea at University Club. 6— Homer G. Hewitt, state man­ ager for the Northwestern National Life Insurance Com­ pany, to speak in the M es- ley Foundation. 7— Theta Sigma Phi, Jou rn al­ ism Building IOO. 7 — Bluebonnet Belle nominees rehearsal in Gregory Gym. 7 — Try-outs for “ Call It » Day in Texas Union. 7 30— S a n A n t o n i o C l u b w i l l meet in Texas Union 301. 7 ;3 0 — Alpha Delta P i alumnae monthly business meeting at chapter house. 8— Dr. J. M. Kuehne, professor of physics, will talk on “ The Choice of Subject in Photog­ raphy” at a meeting of the A u s t i n C a m e r a C l u b , Physics Building 203. 10:15— Lucky Strike newscast over K N O W . 7:30— Mrs. Pat Doole will re­ view Carl Crow’s “ 40 M il­ Alpha lion Customers1 at Delta P i house. 7:80— Preliminaries for the Battle of Flowers Oratorical Contest in Garrison Hall I. Austin Hiliei Debaters Defeat Alabama, 4-1 The debating team represent- ng the Austin H ilk l Foundation Irfcated a team representing the d iv e rs ity of Alabama Hiliei in s’ew Orleans April 3 on t h * quts- ion: “ Resolved, that it would be interests of world n the best lew ry to accept Partition >lan of the British Royal Commis­ sion.” the the Hiliei The Austin team was composed if Harold Alberts and Aaron W it*, ivhb were selected following try- juts at Foundation March 27. Virgil Smirnow aud _cwis Newman were debaters for | he Alabama team. The decision ivas rendered in favor of the Aus- in men by a n Oxford decision of I to I. The debate was under the luspices of the New Orleans Lodge 3’nai B ’rith, The Austin team is planning to iebate the same subject in H qus- on soon. Expend Tex** Union C a t h e r i n e anc! L o u i s e M i c k e y nave returned from a short visit o San Antonio. Henrietta Castillo spent th veek-end in San Antonio. L i l l i a n S c o t t B e a s l e y v i s i t e d her home in Beeville last week­ end, A n n H o l l o w a y spent last week­ end in Weimar. Visitors in Houston last week­ end included M a r t h a H a r r i s , M a r . f a r e t C o x , and M a d e l y n OIH*. T h o m p s o n week-end in Austin. s p e n t B i l l y l a s t Dr . H o b G r a y , assistant profes­ sor of the art of teaching, who has been ill at home for several days, is reported improving rapidly. G l e n n A p p l i n g spent the week­ end in Dallas as the guest of her cousin at S.M .U. M i s s e s F r a n c e s J a n e E v a n s , Cornbell, and Sue E d w a r d s , ex- students, came up from Beaumont and were guests at the Zeta Tau Alpha house. They attended the Zeta Tau Alpha sorority formal Friday afternoon. B r u c e W a t t s of Baylor I niver-1 Slty visited his sister, Marguerite ; W a t t s , University student, last week-end. B oost C e-op orative H ou sin g E D I T O R V I S I T S S I G M A C H I is; The alumnae chapter of the Sigma Chi fraternity gave a ban­ quet for M r. and Mrs. Chester I Cleveland at the Driskill Hotel Monday night. Mr. Cleveland editor of the magazine, Sigma Chi, and has been visiting chap- j tors of the the; state. While in San Antonio, Mr. I Cleveland was guest of honor at a banquet given for him at the j St. Anthony Hotel. From San An- j tonio he went to Mexico, and re- j turned through Austin on his way to Houston. Mr. Cleveland showed • sound motion pictures he has I collected of famous Sigma Chis. fraternity in P ro v iso U n iv ersity H osp ital O P E N H O U S E S A T U R D A Y Alpha Chi Omega sorority will entertain with an open house Sat­ urday night from 8 to 12 o’clock. Easter decorations will be used. The committee in charge of deco­ rations include* Jo Anne Pitten­ ger, chairman; Felice Cline, M a­ rion McFarland, and Doris Leahy. SEE C O R R E C T LY W ith Glasses Made for You! Daily stupes demand quick, accurate sight. Let us fur­ nish you with glasses per­ fectly prescribed to correct your sight s deficiencies, & T R JE A D t y £ £ £ oj^o^m jars Seventh St Cor wires a ounc L U p I ssue o f th' e file Daily f exalt The Round-Up Issue of The Dally Texan this year will be the biggest and most complete issue ever published! In it you will find many special features of interest to a l tue students— feu d in g pictures c r the Sweetheart Nominees, the Bluebonnet Belle Nominees, and visiting Southwest Conference Sweethearts. Also, special sections devoted to the history of the University, buildings, and sports will be found in this Issue. Because so many students have asked for a convenient way to have copies of this Issue malled to their friends The Daily Texan has made arrangements whereby a student may have a copy of this big Issue mailed anywhere In the United States outside of Austin for only the price of the paper— five cents. Just bring your nickel to Journalism Building 108 sometime before Friday. The Daily Texan Journalism Bldg. ,108 Above: P-nfc embroidered mous­ se ne. SO e'Lring its bourd to catch the eye of a! the beaus e * the baL 10.00 Left A b o v e : Aqua 'ace with a crisp jacket that makes it so useful for all types of occasions. You*!! glory in its a-Vy loveliness a t the Ball. 12.75 R igh t Below: Beige embroidered net with tiny puffed sleeves and wide flo atin g skirt. A real find at 10.00 Scarbrough’s Collegiate Fashions SEC O N D FLOOR PAGE SIX The First College Daily in the South Phone 2-2473 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-2473 Music Boxer A I R W A V E S Houston Chronicle WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1938 fo r re c re a tio n , th e p h otog rap h er said. U. T. Given Portrait O f Ashbel Smith P ic tu re s w ere tak en in th e U ni­ v e rsity co-o p erativ e houses and in s o ro rity and f r a te rn ity houses to I A p o rtr a it o f Ashbel Sm ith, firs shl o w . c o n t r a , , in h o e i n g facilities president of th e B oard o f Regent! and to illu strate the essen tia! like ness o f th e w ays in which stu d en ts spend th eir leisure tim e. was re ce n tly given to the Univei sity by his g ran d n iece, M rs. H enr M r. Gibson is one o f the leading the S outhw est. p h otog rap h ers in L i g h t * F o r I n t r a m u r a l * P . Jo n e s of B en n in g ton , V t. The p o rtra it, a life size bus done in oils, was accom p an ied b S T A T E W A R R A N T S C A L L E D a sword and scab b ard once w or I Photographs U. T. Je s s Gibson, s ta f f photograp her f o r the H ouston C hronicle, was in A u stin M arch 3 0 and 31 to pho­ to g rap h v ario u s phases of U n iver­ sity life fo r a scheduled ro to g ra ­ v u re section on the U n iversity of T e x as. G eneral sta te w a rra n ts up Mr. Gibson took “ shots” o f the to n um ber L ib ra ry Building, T exas Union, and m en 's and w om en’s d orm itories, j 4 4 8 ,7 3 8 a re now being red eem ed , and stu d en ts d ancing, studying, | C harley L o c k h a rt, s ta te tr e a s u r e r, w orking, and “ politicking.” The has an nou n ced . T hese w a rra n ts in C hronicle is p articu larly in terested in showing how M r. Jo n e s ’s boy c a n w ork his w ay th rou gh school and still have tim e and op portu nity 1 M r. L o c k h a rt said. elude those issued on or b efore N ovem b er 1 4 , 1 9 3 7 . The p resen t is $ 1 1 ,7 8 9 ,4 9 1 .1 0 , s ta te d e ficit including serial by the fo rm e r p resid en t. Thes also w ere the g ifts of M rs. Jo n e and w ere accep ted by the B oard . Ashbel Sm ith w as born in 180 in C o n n ecticu t and was ed ucate a t I ale and in P aris. He cam e t im T exas in 1 8 3 6 and took an in ed ucation s m ed iate a ff a irs . in te re s t Symphony Concert Ends Third Successful Season By J . O L C U T T S A N D ER S With a p rogram of stan d ard num bers draw n alm ost en tirely from the R om antic P eriod , the St. Louis Sym phony O rch estra, und er the direction o f Vladim ir G olschm ann, la s t night pleased a v e ry respon- air e audience and b rou ght to a close a third su ccessfu l A ustin Com ­ m unity C o n cert A ssociation season. In fa c t the o r c h e s tr a and t h e 4................................................ - - The fam iliar B erlioz “ Rom an horiar in the Queen Ann« Room the of the T exa? Union. The follow - ing business ad m in istration stu- audience seem ed to be try in g to outdo each o th er in resp on sive­ ness. F ro m the au d itors, who have few opportu nities to w atch a sym phonic group in actio n , cam e an indication of sa tisfa ctio n which m ust have en couraged th e p la y ­ ers th rou gh ou t th e p rog ram and which was fin ally answ ered w ith fo u r en cores. C arnival O v e rtu re ’* opened Im m ed iately im pressing co n cert w ere the u n d ram atic but co m - m anding p latfo rm m an n er of Mr. the sw eeping unity G olschm ann, the brilliance o f o f the woodwinds, and the u n ob tru s­ iveness of the b rass, th e strin gs, the seatin g arra n g e m e n t, \ ary mg from the m ore c u sto ­ th e m ary rig h t hand ’cellos occupied outside position usually taken by th is the second violins. the im p ortan t e ff e c t of em ­ had p assag es, phasizing ’cello the notably the in trod u ction of first them e subordinate m ovem ent o f the B rah m s “ Second the main them e Sym phony’’ and in the second m ovem ent, F o r us the the in in found M r. Golschmann the B rahm s score lyricism and g en tle good hum or. S u rely this p e rfo rm ­ ance com pared fav o rab ly with r e ­ cent md casts of the work bv the m ajo r E a ste rn orch estra?. The m u ­ tech n ical sic sh ortcom in gs w e ,-e inconsequen­ tial. fairly glowed, and in The only attention given the C lassical Period < excep t fo r one the ballet suite e n c o re ) w as from Ore try 's tale et Pr e n s .” which began section of the pr- gian t. This w as a th oroughly ii serai [ating n o v elty , rr* pf the muted m e ru e tto being p a rtic ­ u larly a ttra c tiv e . tm tu rn ed C ontinuing with dance form s, th e Mr. Golschm ann to w altzes from "D e r R osen k av alier” by Richard S trau ss. He took them in a free rh yth m ic s tvie F in ally cam e da rices from Iffor” played verv e. P B oro d in ’s with full >v els "P rii fire an vigc the a E n c o r e s popular follow ed tre n d . T h « y were th e fa m o u s B o c ­ c h e rin i m in u e t. D vorak “ Sla von ic D a n ce No. I , ” th e wedding m a rc h f r o m “ R im s k y - K o r s a k o ff s **Coq d’O r ,” and t h a t old sta nd by , the in tro d u ctio n II o f W a g ­ to A ct n e r ’s “ L o h e n g r o i,” done with u n ­ w e a r y enthusiasm . in lr: A s the p resen t season conies to an end and hundreds o f person s th e th eir m em bership r e n e w C om m u n ity C o n ce rt A ssociation fo r a prom ising new y e a r, th e re can be no doubt about the valu e o f th e association plan. the ca se o f this v ery o r ­ ch e stra can be observed some im ­ p o rta n t fa c ts . Two y ears ago a local organ ization lost a con sid ­ era b le am ou n t of m oney, it is r e ­ it p resen ted S t. p o rte d , w hen a t L o u is H ogg M em orial A u d ito riu m . L a s t n igh t the sam e building w as fused to c a p a city , and eagem listen ers sa: in th e windows, even in the s e c ­ ond flo o r windows. Sym phony O rch estra P a r t of th e p resen t g re a t in te r­ est m ust bo glue to th e th re e y e a rs of fin e co n c e rts, alw ays b efore a full house. W e v en tu re th e op in ­ ion th a t p riv a te ly sponsored c o n ­ fu tu re will benefit c e rts m uch from th e new audience de- a s o c i a l on veloped plan. th e der in Delta Sigma Pi Pledges Ten D elta Sigm a P i, professional business ad m in istratio n fr a te rn ity , announced the pledging of ten students a t a dinner given in th eir dents w ere p led ged: R o b ert R oy B ain es M elton L ee B rig g s C arroll E d w ard Brow n G eorge W eldon G artm an J r . R ob ert B eegle Kemp Donald R o b ert R ichardson G eorge Madison Roach Floyd C laren ce Smith Elw in Odell Sw int M alcolm Sam uel V au gh an Mr. M. B. P ig o tt, assistan t sec- the T exas r e ta r y -tr e a s u r e r P ub lic S erv ice C om pany, spoke to the group on “ The O pportunities Open to Stu den ts of B usiness Ad­ m in istration in the Public U tility F ie ld .” He pointed ou t tibet r e ­ the u tility g ard less of w hether com p an ies are owned p riv ately or by the g o v ern m en t th ere will be fo r stu d en ts a big op portu nity o f acco u n tin g in that field. of M em b ersh ip f r a t e r n i t y in is b y in v ita tio n only and pledge serv ices a re held tw ice each y ear. the Abolish E xcea* Honoraria* Northwestern Offers Law Scholarships S ;x te e n scholarships tuition ran gin g from $200 to $ 4 0 0 are to o ffered in Septem b er e n te r 1 9 3 8 at N m idw estern U n iversity in C hicago. to stu d en ts planning school law C arl B. S p aeth , ch airm an of and the co m m ittee on admission th at ap­ sch o la rs !::: s, an nou n ced judged pri­ p licatio n s will be th e ir u n d erg rad u ate m arily by scholarship standing, but co n sid ­ e ra tio n will be given as well to the n a tu re and e x te n t of e x tr a ­ stated cu rric u la r a c tiv ity , He ♦Ko­ ap plications should be in the s of the s e c re ta ry of th e law than A pril 15, si n o t ap plication form s would la te r be sen t upon req u est. Smit Ktducid Homing Rents Photo Fiesta Meets A t Marlin April 9-10 The f irs t m eetin g o f the “ Blue- bonnet P h o to F ie s ta ” will be at M arlin S a tu rd a y and Sunday, April 9 an d IO, under th e auspices of th e M arlin C am era Club. T his will be a state-w ide m eet- ir g of ( am ora Club m em b ers, and am a te u r p hotograp hic fan s. The F ie s ta p rog ram will include S a tu rd a y m orning, reg istratio n April 9, follow ed by luncheon at a b an q u et S atu rd ay noon. and night. S unday will be d evoted en­ tak in g o f the pic­ tirely to tu res. Models will be on hand un­ the m eetin g . No til reg istratio n fee will be paid. the en d o f the T C ' aim of this F ie s ta is a state organ ization o f C am era Clubs of I exas. E s t a b l i s h F i n * A r t * S c h o o l 'Gone With The Wind’ Now with a fo u rth season to be led by Ja s c h a H eifetz, to p -ran k in g th e econ om ically sound Checked Out Most v iolin ist, fi is plan : only the - v en ts an Incid ship. be m ade U] g e n e ra l cai pre- I h e t - m a; »f t i . a] M ost popular of th e fictio n in the loan d ep artm en t o f the Main is M arg aret M itchell’s L ib ra ry “ Gone W ith the W in d ,” the a ssist­ a n t in ch arg e o f “he p op u lar fic­ tion -helf say?. The book has not th e sh elf fo r any rem ained on len gth of tim e since th e beginning of the y e a r. U. T. Gets $70,559.51 From Oil And Land V o te Spring e l e c t i o n * T he Uni e le a -el­ ce: v e t $7 0 ,5 5 St. 5 ro y a lty , mir K* g ra z in g and g a s ro y a lty M ineral re n ta l r 7 5 3 .1 4 , G razing ST 7 .7 0 . T exat l r 'a! an w a I ga*. L L J t L U ' J I . Last Times T o d a y ! -I. r “ L e s t H orizon ,” by Ja m e s Hil­ to n , is second in p opu larity with “ Main S tr e e t” th ird . The m ost popular iy a t p resen t is “ B enjam in i” by F lo re n ce T u rzak . Lew is’s in dem and is ch arg ed k c s t once a w eek , th e as- the Ie are u-ed less th an an y o th er up on the sh elf. Books ab o u t aid. Bi v r * grapl -ariki ii A bo it- 81 OI slan t B a c k t h e B i b l * P i t a NOW S H OW I N G! TH E G IR I G OLDEN W EST CHARLIE RUGGLES I • A R * T f l l l t l U l l M a t C O H O N W A L T I * CA T U T T • • • T I M I S I C lp fic U n j to n ig h t B arn u m and B ailey ’s and R in g ­ ling B ro th e rs’ circu s com es to New Y o rk ’s Madison S q u are G arden F rid a y n ig h t, and in h onor o f the occasion A n d re K o stelan etz will special a rra n g e m e n t of play a “ C ircu s on P a ra d e ” on the C hes­ (C B S - terfield p ro g ram KN O W a t 8 o’c lo c k ). M r. K ostel­ the an etz prom ises hundred and one noises c h a ra c ­ te ristic of a circu s in to his a r ­ ra n g e m e n t, sten ­ including to ria n ton es of the rin g m aster, the m edley of sounds from the anim al c a g e s, and even the »lence th a t te n t when an p ervad es anim al tra in e r holds sev eral lions a t bay. to blend all the big the G race M oore will p resen t W a l­ te r C assel, b aritone, as the second \ little-know n g u e st sta rs. of her Miss M oore h erself will sing “ The Old R e fra in ” and “ S ta rs in My E y e s ” by K reisler and “ One Fin e D ay” from “ M adem oiselle B u t­ te r f ly .” F re d Allen will in terview E l­ liot W isbord, a te s te r o f b ullet­ p ro o f v ests, on “ The P erson Y ou Didn’t E x p e c t to M eet” portion o f his Town Hall T onight b ro ad cast (N B C -W O A I a t 8 o ’clo ck .) f ;0O— M u s i c * ! C l o c k 1 1 : 1 5 — E d w i n C. H i l l P a t t e r 4 : 1 5 —- P i a n o w i t h V i r g i n i a D o n o h o 8 : 3 0 — B e a k * C a r t e r 7 : 3 0 — B e n B e r n i e a n d a l l t h e L a d s 8 : 0 0 — A n d r e K o s t e l a n e t * a n d G r a c e M o o r e 9 : 3 0 — G a n g b u s t t r s 9 : 3 0 — H o b b y L o b b y 1 0 : 1 5 — N e w s F l a s h e s 1 0 : 2 0 — B e n n y G o o d m a n ’ s O r c h e s t r a 1 0 : 4 0 — G e o r g e O l s e n an d H i s O r c h e s t r a 11.*00— Red Norvo's Orchestra 1 1 : 2 0 — F r a n k D a i l e y ’s O r c h e s t r a W O AI 8 KIO— B r e a k f a s t C l u b 3 ; 0 0 — N e w s c a s t s 7 :0G— O n e M a n ’s F a m i l y 9 : 0 0 — K a y K y s e r ' s M u s i c a l C l a s s and D a n c e 1 0 : 3 0 — H o r a c e H e i d t a nd H i s B r i g a d i e r s 11 OO— A n d y K i r k s O r c h e s t r a Jin x T u rn e r spent th e week-end in H ouston. M r. a n d M r*. C la r k T h o m p t o n of G alveston visited th e ir son, C lark J r ., last w eek-end. j do n e x t. T hen in th e last re&l, ; life falls aw ay and you see a pic- itu re screen . the Louise Cam pbell as little ch urch -m ou se lib rarian , who is a h ealth y and n orm al g irl when she is with th e boy she is engaged to m a rry , really ca rrie s th e tr a n s f o r ­ The e n tire c a s t blends m ation. the mood p ro p erly into I itself which th e d ire cto r p resen ts, j th e “ S can d al S tr e e t” is a p ictu re to see and consider f o r y ou rself. fe e t, R em ake and we will aw ard it th e nam e of one of th ose ra r e sm all m a ste r­ pieces which a re all too few .— B, I S in clair. thousand la st H E ’L L F I D D L E W H I L E T E X A N S P L A Y . — G . o r g e H a m i l t o n , l e a d e r of h it M u sic B o x o r c h e s t r a , will play f o r th e R o u n d -U p R e ­ vue a n d B a l l in G r e g o r y Gym F r i d a y n ig h t. A violinist, H a m i l t o n K N O W uses His violin bow t o lead hi* o r c h e s t r a , in ste ad of th e c o n v e n t i o n a l b a t o n . A n o r c h e s t r a l e a d e r since his D a r t m o u t h c o lle g e d a y s , H a m ­ ilton wa* o n e of th e fir »t le a d e r* to p l a y in th e C e n t r a ] P a r k C a s i n o in N e w Y o r k C i ty . Reviewed Today W h e re to G o " S C A N D A L S H E E T . " — -At t h e Q u e e n . Original story by Vera Caipary. Screen­ play by Eddie Welch and Bertram Mil* h a u l e r . D i r e c t e d b y J a m e s H o g a n , R e ­ leased by Paramount. THE CAST Joe MeKnight Nora Langdon . Austin Brown ... Ada Smith _ D a n i e l W e b s t e r S m i t h Bennie Johnson _____ James Wilson ___ ___ ......... Willie Murphy .... ....... Lew Ayres L o u i s e C a m p b e l l R. scoe Karns Elizabeth Patterson . Edgar Kennedy Alfalfa Switzer Porter Ha;! Virginia W'eilder P A R A M O U N T .— “ The Girl o f the Golden W e s t ” W ith Nelson E d d y , Je a n e tte M acD onald, and F e a tu r e begins W a lte r Pidgeon. a t 1 0 :5 5 , 1 :0 8 , 3 :2 2 , 5 : 3 4 , 7 :4 7 , and IO o’clock. (L a s t d ay .) S T A T E 'B rin g in g Up B a b y .” ------------- ith K ath arin e H ep b urn, C ary G ran t, and C harlie R uggles. F e a ­ tu re begins a t 1 1 :1 2 , 1 :1 7 , 3 :2 2 , 5 :2 7 , 7 :3 2 , and 9 :3 7 o’clock. The rew ard of the rev iew er who has to go to the seco n d -rate mo­ tion p ictu res is g re a te s t because it com es not often and u n exp ec­ is one of tedly. Masked behind a com m on title , place and sadly d eceivin g the “ S cand al S tr e e t,” b est co -o rd in ated , w ell-edited, di­ re c te d , and skillfully w ritten m o­ tion p ictu res am ong u np retentiou s The the pity o f it is the d ire c to r in the last reel rev erted to fo rm u la— no doubt under ord ers. film s we have seen. As “ The In fo r m e r” w as le t down slightly by a single s c e n e ; this m otion p ictu re is let down by one r e e l ; but we are prone to give it critica l p ard on, and ch eer even the obvious th e a tric a l trick ? th a t le ft th e re a lity of life in th e lurch n eighbors and th eir stran d ed on gossip fo r the satisfactio n of th e the stage-m in d ed-in - ; obvious and its e ffe c tiv e stead of con tin u in g d ram atic m arch fo r an o th er th ou ­ sand fe e t, the m alicious the peak o f as sr me w h at “ Scand al S tr e e t” has p oten ­ tialities ar.d actu a litie s th a t Sin­ It? best clair Lew is would ch eer. tw o parallels in scre e n h isto ry a re “ The N ight of Ju n e 1 3 th ” and Phi; S to n g 's “ V illage T a le ,” tw o p ic­ th a t w ere n e v e r acco rd ed tu re s wide public and c ritic a l en d orse­ n e o -p e r­ m en t fe c t d ram a. Both w ith gossip as a th em e, the fo rm e r tre a te d it in th e cro ss-sectio n d ram atic T h ere action s seem to be aim less study. “ Scandal S tr e e t,” a1! e x ­ cept its last reel, seem in gly is an stu d y o f e ffo rtle s s , closely-k nit the asso ciation of lives o f some people you m igh t know in a little niche which m ight be you r tow n, or it m igh t be in a big tow n, o r and QUEEN L A S T D A Y — 2 5 c T i l l 5 L E W A Y R E S • L O U I S E C A M P B E L L • E D G A R K E N N E D Y T H U R S D A Y - F R I D A Y ! Q U E E N .— “ S cand al S t r e e t . ” W ith Lew A y res, E d g a r K en n edy, F e a tu re and Louise Cam pbell. I , 2 :4 8 , 4 :3 6 , 6 :2 4 , begins at (R eview ed 8 :1 2 , and IO o ’clock. to d a y .) C A P IT O L .— “ I Met My L ov e B e n n e tt, A g ain .” H en ry F o n d a, and D am e M ay W h itty. W ith Jo a n V A R S IT Y .— “ G re a t G u y .” W ith Ja m e s C agney and Mae C larke. T E X A S . — “ C o lle g iate.” W ith and J o e P e n n e r, Jack Oakie, F ra n c e s L an g fo rd . a cou n try -sid e. W h eth er it is a cinem a accid en t, o r a co-ord in ated e f f o r t on th e p a rt of th e scrip t, ed iting, and d irecto rial fo rc e s th a t made it— who can tell? T h ere is th e e f f e c t o f a slice of life ’s being pulled ou t of re a l­ ity ami held up to your view . And the c h a ra c te rs behave as in life. T h ere action s seeo to be aim less. T hey d on't seem to realize all o f one a n o th e r’s m otives and actio n s. T h ey’ re blinded by a re a lity , which is comm on enough fo r you and us. And you don’t know w h at th e y ’ll Shoe Repair S P E C I A L S W E D . , T H U R S . , S A T . L A D I E S L E A T H E R TAPS M E N ’S W O M E N ’ S V2 Soles Rubber Heels IOC P r , 49c P r . 24c P r . F R E E SHINE with E V E R Y PAIR A U S T IN S H O E R E P A I R 2 4 0 8 G U A D A L U P E CAPITOL S T A R T S T O D A Y ! With J O H N B A R R Y M O R E UflRSITSCSa m r G R E A T g u t MAE C V M ** . „ 4f«» A UP AND NATIONAL PICTURE T H U R S D A Y O N LY ! T E X A S K E L L S J a c k O akie m I Penner w i t h C O L L E G I A T E " F R A N C I S L A N G F O R D 50 pipeful* of f r a g ra n t to b a c c o in every 2-o x. tin of P r i n c e A lbert B r in c e A l T exan C lassified A d Section 2-2473 Announcement* Announcements N O T IC E Classified Advertisers You con run your classi­ in fied very economically The Daily Texan: R E A D E R A D S 20 W o r d s — M axim um ____________$ .40 1 t i m e 2 t i m e s ________________ .55 3 t im e s _____________ .70 .____________ LOO 6 t i m e s 2-line ads $2 month D IS P L A Y I c o !, wide x I in. d e e p , 60c insertion. N o refunds for cancella­ tions. Responsible for one incorrect insertion only. A L L A D S C A S H IN A D V A N C E M essenger service until 4:30 p.m., week-days. C o u n ­ ter service until 6 p.m. Dial 2-21*73 tor further information on messen­ ger service. S a l e o - S e r v i c e A S a f e P l a c e t o B u y a U s e d C a r R U S S E L L C . F A U L K N E R 3 0 6 E a s t 5 t h P h o n e 6 8 8 7 Autos for Sale KERRVILLE BUS CO M PAN Y, Inc. A L L N E W B A D I O E Q U I P P E D B U S E S G O V I A T H E S H O R T E S T A N D B E S T R O U T E T O Houston, Beaumont, Galveston, Victoria, C o rp u s Christi, Schulen­ burg, Kerrville, San Angelo, Big Spring, El Paso. 7 ;2 5 l e a v e A u s t i n a t S C H E D U L E S D A I L Y T O F I V E H O U S T O N AND P O I N T S E A S T . B u s e s a . m . . 1 0 : 3 0 a . m . . 1 : 1 6 p . m . , 4 : 3 0 p . m . , a nd 7 :2 0 p . m . T H R E E S C H E D U L E S D A I L Y T O K E R R V I L L E A N D W E S T T E X A S P O I N T S . B u * * * t h e w e s t a t 6 : 1 5 a . m . , a n d 1 : 1 5 p . m . , and 6:16 p . m . S C H E D U L E S D A I L Y T O T H R E E C O R P U S C H R I S T I . B u s e s l e a v e 7 : 1 0 p. m. a . m . a n d 1 : 2 5 p . m . , a n d 6 l e a v e f o r Sample LO W FARES A U S T I N T O — O n e W a y R o u n d T r i p $ 5 . 0 0 H O U S T O N J 6 . 0 0 C O R P U S C H R I S T I 8 , 5 5 S A N A N G E L O 2 3 85 E L F A R O 3 . 0 0 4 . 0 0 4 . 7 5 1 3 . 2 5 F O R F U R T H E R I N F O R M A T I O N C A L L B U S T E R M I N A L PHONE 2-1135 S P R I N G p i c n i c I S H E R E ! L e t m e l u n c h . f i x y o u r 2 6 1 7 U n i v e r s i t y A v e . 2 - 0 7 8 6 . T W I S T A l g . . G e o m * A n a l y t . . E s p . t e a c h e r . R a n d l e , 2 3 1 1 S a n A n t o n i o . 2 - 0 1 5 7 . M A T H C o a c h i n g b y M A. C a n d i d a t e , E x ­ p e r i e n c e d . G w e n T u b b . S . R . D . , 9 1 3 1 . Dressm aking S P O R T c l o t h e s , e v e n i n g g o w n s , a l t e r a ­ t i o n s . M r s . N i c k e l . 1 9 0 7 P e a r l . 8 0 8 7 . D R E S S M A K I N G . A l t e r a t i o n s , s u i t s , s i l k d r e s s e s . M r s , C a s e . 8 7 0 5 D u v a l . 9 8 9 0 Rentals Travel Bureaus Rooms for Boys C A R S St p a i s e n g e r * d a l l y t o «U p o i n t * A B C T r a v e l B u r e a u . 7 1 0 B r a z o s . 2 - 7 2 6 4 2 B O Y S : N i c e r o o m b l o c k w e n t U n ­ i o n . S h o w e r s . 4 0 7 W e s t 2 3 . Room and Board B O Y S : B e d r o o m , a d j o i n i n g b a t h w i t h I I I . OO p e r m o n t h . 2 5 0 5 R i o s h o w e r . G r a n d e . 2 - 9 4 4 4 . ________ Locksmiths P E T M E C K Y ’S F I F T H S T R E E T S H O P . 101 W E S T 6 t h . P H O N E 2 - 7 9 8 1 . K E Y S F I T T E D C A L L U S Pawn Brokers M O N E Y T O L O A N o n D i a m o n d * , W a t c h e s . J e w e l r y o r A n y t h i n g o f V a l u e N o I . n s o t o o F a r c e R I D E . ’ M K S . T A Y L O R S T R A V E L B U C ar l R E A U . E s t a b l i s h e d y e a r s , s i x and p a s s e n g e r * a n y w h c r a . R e f e r e n c e * b u y g o l d . 1 0 2 W . 1 0 t h . 2 - 3 8 3 3 . C A S H pai d f o r U s e d T y p e w r i t e r * . Crud d o c k * * B o o k s t o r e . 8 2 1 C o n g r e s s . Typewriters Typing L E T A N E X P E R I E N C E D t ( ’ all M a r i e B a t e a c h e r , B . B . A . g r a d u a l t h e s i s , t h e s i s t y p e y o u r t y p e w r i t i n g U. o f T „ 4 5 9 0 . T Y P I N G : N e a t — a c c u r a t e . C a l l 2 - 6 0 8 3 O f 1 9 6 1 . L A W O u t l i n e s , t h e m e s , t h e s e s . C a l l 8 - 1 2 - 4 . M a * M u r r a y . 2 2 0 6 N u e c c s . 2 - 8 8 1 Used C ars 2 1 7 E a s t 6 t h P h . 9 2 2 9 w a t e r E . R A V E N — S i n c a 1 8 9 0 — P l u m b i n g g a s p i p i n g , r a n g e s , h e a t e r s c o n n e c t e d , s i n k s , s e w e r s u n s t o p p e d . 1 4 0 8 L a v a c a . P h o n e 6 7 6 3 . r e p a i r i n g , h e a t e r Plumbing Records d i e R i c h A H i * O r c h e s t r a . “ W H I S T L E W H I L E Y O U W O R K " F r e d ­ " H i - H o , ” H o r a c e H e i d t A H i s O r c h e s t r a . R e c o r d s on s a l e a t J . R . R e e d M u s i c C o ., 8 0 5 C o n g r e e t ) . 5 , 0 0 0 S L I G H T L Y U S E D P h o n o g r a p h r e ­ c o r d s : V i c t o r , B r u n s w i c k , D e e r s , V o c a ­ l s , M e l o t o n e . B a r g a i n , 5 c e a c h . P e t e ’* P a c k a g e S t o r e , 1 1 6 E a s t 6 t h . W H Y GAMBLE? BUY An O K ’d Used Car IT COSTS NO MORE SEE U S T O D A Y Capitol Chevrolet, Inc. Ph. 2-31 4th & San Jacinto W anted fo Buy Shoe Shops I P A Y 8 3 . 0 0 to 8 1 0 . 0 0 S u i t s . 2 1 8 E a s t 6 t h Ch f o r M e n ’s U s e d 2 - 1 0 6 0 . RO W ELL'S SH O E SH O P C O M P L E T E S H O E S E R V I C E H a n d - M a d e B o o t s a S p e c i a l t y H I G H E S T CA B K F O R s e c o n d - h a n d c l o t h i n g , s h o e * , a n d s u i t •axes W e a l s o h u t m u s i c a l i n s t r u m e n t s A. S c h w a r t z P h o n e 8 7 6 2 . P R I C E S P A I D SH O ES DYED TO M A T C H Y O U R DRESS C u r b S e r v i c e — 1 6 1 6 L a v a c a S t r e e t M A L K I N P A Y S M O R E f o r U s e d S u i t s , C l o t h i n g a n d S h o e s . 4 0 7 E a s t* 6 t h . 2 - 0 6 3 5 . C A S H P i n s w a t c h e s e t c 9*21 C o n g r e s s S c r a p G o l d . R i n g s . T e e t h , t - 7 7 1 2 . f o r Coaching C oa chin g Automobiles Coaching U X I l l I t W W M R • B A I * H E N R I B E N N E R F O N D A I M il MY IOU AGAIN D A M I M A T WH I T T Y - A L A N M A R S H A L A l s o ! H e rb i e K a y A B a n d Sc E d g a r K e n n e d y C o m e d y m n m T h ursd ay N ight— 9 P.M . TH E NIGHT CLU B OF T H E AIR w i t h J I M M I E W E I L E R T B a n d B o o t s C u l l i n s a n d t h e P i c k a f A u s t i n ' s E n t e r t a i n e r s ! F O R S A L E : 1 9 2 9 m o d e l A s p o r t r o a d s t e r , r u m b l e s e a t . G o o d c o n d i t i o n . B a r g a i n . C a l l 2 - 6 7 9 5 . 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C a l l 6 2 9 7 P r a c t i c e a p p o i n t m e n t . F R E N C H C o a c h i n g . T e l e t h o n * 7 4 3 8 . M r s . C . B . S i m p s o n . DRISKILL HOTEL LA U N D R Y 8 - H O U R S E R V I C E 6444 119 Easl 7th HOME LAUNDRY I l l P H O N E 3 7 0 2 EARN M O N EY IN YOUR SPARE TIME Start A C O A C H I N G A D TODAY Special Rates 2 Line A d s $2*.00 M onth F o r Exam ple: C O A C H I N G : German, Latin, French, Greek, Translating. Call 1-0000 THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS Journalism Building 108 C A L L 2-2473 B E F O R E 4:30 c f 8 (