T he Texan T h e F i r s t C o l l e g e D a i l y i n t h e S o u t h V O L 46 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, O C TO BER 17, 1944 Four Pages Today No. 32 The Daily Texan Wins Pacemaker For Seventh Year Originality, Type, Features D r a w Bonus From Ju d ge The grader had to add points to the established maximum scores for rating college newspapers to show The Daily Texan superiority in the over other college dailies Associated Collegiate Press judg­ ing of papers. The result w as the award o f All-American Pacemaker to editors’ Weldon Brewer and 1943-44 Daily Jack Maguire’s Texan. Buddy Yoder and Mari- frances Wilson were associate edi­ tors under the respective editor­ ships. The Texan, ★ the only college daily in the United States to win Pacemaker, has received this rec­ ognition consecutive years. seven for The score sheet, received at Texas Student Publications Inc. T h u r s d a y , complimented the Texan as a newspaper with thor­ ough coverage o f newrs points were given for originality. Comment, plus additional points on the score sheet, were given Buzz’s political features, typogra­ phy, and the editorial page. The .judge wrote . . Your edi­ torials this year have been well worth reading— notwithstanding what The Houston Post has to say about them ! . , . You do an u nex­ celled job of putting out a new s­ paper that reflects the personality of a great university in a great state.” Pacemaker is an additional dis­ tinction given to those all-Ameri­ can papers which are outstandin g in their all around quality. The paper must stand ou t in its own group and stand the severe test of being judged with other leading papers from all classifications. Fullerton Contests New Constitution a stud en t Contesting- the recent adoption of the revised constitution, Byron assembly Fullerton, member, Monday night submitted a complaint to Judiciary chairman Jim mie Fogartie, for a hearing on the docum ent o f the validity o f its adoption. Upon receiving the complaint, Fogartie said that he, as judiciary chairman, saw no reason why he! should not call a m eeting o f the judiciary council for a hearing' on a contested election. Fogartie! called the m eetin g for W e d n e s d a y ,! October 18, at 3 o ’clock in the S tu dents’ A ssem bly room o f t h e ! U nion. He judiciary! members, Fullerton, e l e c t i o n jud ges LeRoy Gloria and George Gibbs, and Jack Corman be pres­ at W ednesday’s meeting. en t Corman was mentioned the Texan report o f the dispute which arose the judiciary votes o f voters who voted against the constitution. concerning requested counting that in The t e x t of F ullerton ’s com- III. That on October 12th, 1944. the official vote was announced in The Daily Texan; and said com-; plainant now complains that said election was void and in total number of valid that in said election was: votes cast illegal the See FULLERTON, Page 4 One History 15 Exam for All? Committee Eyes Uniform Test There has been some in vestiga­ tion in the History Department to decide w hether a general exam ina­ tion for all sections in History 15 would be desirable. This problem was brought about by the require­ ment that a student take a course in United States history before a degree from the U ni­ plaint follows: ,, A com m ittee headed bv Dr. R ,. tho Honorable J u d .c i.r y L Biesele h>, b,,en app(mltc(1 t0 versify, . I t . o f tho University o f , tndy , he project rr To Council “ ‘ The general examination wrould Now comes Byron F. Fullerton, be made up o f fundam ental fac- complainant, and would respect- tors which all should fully show the Honorable Council know to pass History 15. It has j not been determined how these the follow ing; i questions would be made up. prob- is a duly registered ably through the University test- student ing bureau. I f the student passed School of Education at the Uni- this exam ination, he would be given another examination in his versity of Texas. section to determine his grade. in good standing students I hat he in the II- I* That on October l i t h , 1944, The requirement for American an election was held on the cam- history to g e t a degree has caused pus o f the University of Texas few er students to take English and fo r the purpose o f voting on a continental history courses. Constitution to govern the student governm ent at the University of Texa*, and to determine a method o f selection of members of the said Judiciary Council o f the s t u - : d en t body at the University of Texas. Clubs Have Week To Choose Belles The Weather Monday was the first day to campus organizations’ in turn I f you are the type that believes Bluebonnet Belle nominees for the In being on the “ safe side,” wear: Cactus, All nominations m ust be your raincoat today, but d o n t be m by October 24. Official blanks surprised if Texas weather isn ’t up to its old tricks because the offic ia l report is partly cloudy with little change in temperature. may be obtained Building 108. in Journalism Students W ill Hear Facts Reviewed Af misters Want Ramey Wallace to Outline To Stay in Office Rainey Dispute T h re e org an iz at io n s of Austin ministers, the executive com mittee of t h e Austin Council of Chur che s, t h e Austin t h e University Religious Ministerial Association, a n d W o r k e r s Association, m a d e public M on da y a resolution a d o p t e d by the m com m en di n g t h e w or k of Dr. H om er P. Rainey, urg ing th e continued s ac red n es s of freedom, an d ur gi n g t h a t “ all things necessary will be done to ma intain him in his c a p a c it y as p r e s id e n t of t h e University.” (Dr. Rainey) John T h e resolution follows: The Honorable Coke Stevenson, Governor o f the State o f Texas; The Honorable Biekett. chairman o f the Board o f Regents o f the University o f Texas; m em ­ bers o f the Board o f Regents; Dr. Homer Price Rainey, president o f j the chairman of the Board of R e - t The U niversity o f Texas. G e n tle m e n : sacred from the birth o f this n a ­ tion and costing untold sacrifices in our tim e and in other ages, should find nurture and protection in a university founded by free men for fre e men. W’e commend gents for his published ment of this ideal. endorse- in it, it and w elcom e Second: We as Christians have) In the light of recent develop­ ments at The University o f Texas, no fea r o f any truth; indeed we the execu tive committee of the the seek Austin Council o f Churches, the realm of science or religion, and I Austin Ministerial Association, the truth is sacred w hether expressed University Religious Workers As- by the learned or the unlearned. Extra i sociation* in official session a s s e m - ; it is, however, o f splendid assist- ‘ bled, respectfully invite the atten- i ance forces o f religion tion o f the Governor of Texas, th e when a scholarly president o f a Board o f Regents and the P resi­ great university can bear witness dent o f The University o f Texas to Christian truth in his own life to the follow ing statem en t o f con ­ by word and deed and in addition victions: can endeavor w ith candor, humil­ ity and sincerity to work out the implications o f Christian truth within the framework o f the m od­ ern day. First: W e hold it as self ev i­ in idea! dent that the the word “ Freedom ,” an ideal embodied the to MAC WALLACE Com e to convocation decide what +o d o." anc MICA Endorses Rainey's Work Council Passes Confidence Vote With many campus organiza­ tions passing resolutions endorsing the present administration, MICA has added its vote o f confidence in President Homer P. Rainey. The resolution follows: “ Whereas, education is the cor- and, democracy; of “S tud ent s! The fact s ab out Rainey and Regents. All- S tud ent Convocation Meeting a t Gre go ry Gym Tu esd ay . 7 p.m .” These re d, gr een, and black signs sp rinkled a b o u t th e c am p u s Mond ay anno unc ed the g a t h e r i n g of th e en ti re s t u d e n t body f o r ton ig ht called by s t u d e n t pr es ide nt Mac W al la c e for “ information and ac ti on ” on th e c u r r e n t con­ troversy bet wee n University P r e s id e n t Ho mer P. R ai n e y and th e Board of Regents. With rumo rs of i n d e p e n d e n t action b y certain o r g a n i­ zations floating over the campus '*"---------- —------------ - Wallace advises, “ We m ust not have any groups taking matters into their own hands. Come to the convocation and decide there what is best for the studens as a group to do.” Move on to Make McAfee a Regent --- As representative students, the president’s c a b i n e t , judiciary m e m b e r s , assembly members. Anne Burkhart, University sw eet­ the editor and associate heart, editor o f the Texan, and presi­ dents o f service organizations— Silver Spur, Cowboys, A .P.O., Mortar Board, and Orange Jack­ ets— will sit on the stage. A fte r the band has w e lc o m e d ; way, the students to the convocation, J News Wallace will “ impart some valu­ able information concerning the Rainey-Regent a ffair.” Poll Shows 71.4% for Move A . P.O. Takes Poll O n M e d School Third: As citizens o f T e x a s . 1 nerstone whereas, The U niversity of Texas I eatin g places during should continue to be a to expect o f Regents it reasonable of o u r j among higher educational institu- w'e hold that a Board State University, in its r e p r e s e n ta -; tions; and, whereas, Dr. Homer rally. live and official capacity, shall be Price Rainey, as president o f the 1 Members o f Alpha Phi Omega I governed by unflinching loyalty to; University, has shown by his many will visit girls’ boarding houses, actions that he believes and sup- and sororities; the Griscom Speak- ports the truly American w ay of I ers w ill talk at N avy dormitories; education. in interest f o build up the student convocation, members of four d ifferen t service and speech organizations will visit campus lunch time leader Tuesday to give short talks stress- importance o f the Gym j *nST the democratic processes and to the ideals o f integrity, scholarship, and gentlem anliness and that the poise, vision, and sound wisdom of the Board shall be reflected not only in the plans for the U n i­ versity but in the planning process as well. Fourth: We recognize that in See M INISTERS, Page 4 Rumors Over State “ Therefore, w e, as members of the executive council o f the M en’s I n t e r-Community Association, wish to indicate by this resolution in that w'e have fu ll confidence of Homer Price the R ainey.” leadership Previously there was commend in state papers o f the possible ap- Forensica girls will visit fratern- j pointment of Congress Martin for re- ity houses, and Orange Jackets Die*, who did not run will he on duty at the N avy tables: election this year and who is re­ portedly to He taking up private in the Commons and in the boys* law practice in Lufkin. boarding houses. Betty Beall is directing Orange the Jackets; Liz Trossman is See S T U D E N TS TO, Page 4 Results of the A . P.O. Student Opinion Service poll last week show' that 71.4 per cent of the students favor the moving of the U niversity’s Medical School from Galveston to Austin. Other winners, all college w eek­ lies, are the Campus Chat, North Texas State Teachers College, Denton; Hatchet, George Wash­ ington University, Washington, Representative proportions o f D. C.; Los Angeles Collegian, Los from all colleges and students A ng eles City College, Los Angeles, schools were polled as w ell as a Calif.; The Mac Weekly, Macales- special cross-section for pre-medi- ter College, St. Paul, Minn.; and the W illamette Collegian, W ilia m - ; cal students who will he most | effec te d by any move of the Medi- ette University, Salem, Ore. The Associated Collegiate Press, | cal School were polled by the Organizations are urged to fill in correct name, address, and with headquarters at the Univer- A .P.O .‘s. phone number of nominee so that sity o f Minnesota, each year c o n - 1 Most of the students polled had she will be notified as quickly as the ducts possible about when the pictures I Service to criticize and rate col- question Do you favor the lecent I lege newspapers and give recogni- j proposal for moving the Univer- I sity Medical School from Calves- ! tion to the leaders. an all-American Critical very d efinite opinions on will be taken. Any o fficia l University organ­ ization with fity members or less may nominate one girl; organiza­ tions with more than f if t y and less than IOO are entitled to two nominees; and organizations with more IOO members may nominate three. O fficers o f the clubs must turn the official blanks before their nominees are accepted. than in students not returning in N ovem ­ ber may have pictures made for the 1945 Cactus now. Appoint­ ments should be made in Journal­ ism Building 108. Class pictures for other students will be made after Novem ber I. Group pictures are being made for organizations, and those plan­ ning to have pictures in the 1945 Cactus should make appointments in Journalism Building 108 before Saturday. Organization pages for the 1945 Cactus must be reserved by Octo­ ber 31. Newspapers are judged on the effec tiv e n e ss with which they serve their individual school. They are classified according to method o f publication, type and size of school, and frequency of issue. 36 lo Receive Graduate Degrees Thirty-six graduate degrees will be conferred at the end o f Octo­ ber, five o f which are doctors of the Graduate Schoo philosophy, has announced. These graduates are part o f the eighty students! ' working towards their degrees in the U niversity. * , « j i » i , An analysis of Rin g Lardner’s or, Who American Language; Learnt You Grammar, Bud,” is the scholarly title o f a master’s Isaac thesis being written by Edgar Clark. Master's students who will receive degrees at the end o f this semester are due Oc­ tober 19. Thesis for doctor’s de­ grees were completed October I. thesis for ton to A u stin ? ” George Gibbs, A .P.O. member, reported that m any Galvestonians voted to retain the school at Gal­ veston while others who opposed the move asserted that the cost o f moving would be too great and the loss o f contributions from the Sealy-Smith Foundation would be too great a ptiee to pay to be free from their jurisdiction. fine arts The strongest support for the moving of the Medical School came from pre-med students, law stu ­ dents, students, and graduate students. The pre-medi­ cal students favor the Med School move by a 76 per cent m ajority, the poll shows. The College o f Pharmacy gave the proposal the least support of any of the colleges or schools with only 58 per cent o f | / v l v t . l i b V I *• favoring the pharmacists polled ’ U I h t l i u u i o w i t n u u » \ u n n • * . ; the m ove. The results of the poll were as f o llo w s : All-University P ercentages; Y e s— 71.4 No— 28.5 P ercentages by S ex: Male— Y es— 74.5 F em ale— Y es— 68.6 N o— 25.5 No— 31.4 Pre-Medical Students: Y es— 76 No— 24 College o f Pharmacy: ^ es—-58 N o ——42 B-29 s Hit Formosa Again Dallas News Reports Suggestion Regents Fire Rainey and Resign N ew spaper com m ent from over the Rainey-Regent Texas about controversy within the last few days has ranged from rumors that Dr. Rainey would run for governor of Texas at the next election to suggestions that the regents fire Dr. Rainey, resign, and the whole administration start from scratch. let in A news story of undisclosed origin appeared the Sunday Dallas Morning News. The story, w'hich was w'ritten by the New's’ Austin bureau at the capitol, said. “ Installation o f an entirely new7 administrative regime at the U n i­ versity o f Texas to end the bicker­ ings between P resident Homer P. Rainey and the present Board of Regents was suggested here Satur­ day as the solution of their d iff e r ­ ences.” The “su g g e stio n ” w7as that the board dismiss the president, resign as a body, and le t Governor Coke Stevenson appoint nine new re­ gents who wmuld pick a new presi­ dent. Here, too, source o f the s u g ­ gestion was not given. ‘Heads Sh o u ld Have C o m m a n d , Not Boards' An editorial from the Marshall j N ew s Messenger o f October 12 j said that ’’som ething is wrong . . . Perhaps it is impossible to sepa- j rate institutions o f I higher learning from the pitfalls I and bunkers of politics. state-owned control o f educational institutions, which usually am ounts to “liberal­ ism against conservatism .” The editorial concluded, “ Homer for Rainey had gre at ambitions the University, and he has made a i stitute, good start in carrying them out. W e are hoping that this contro­ versy does not end his career at Austin, More than that, we hope that the U niversity itself does not su ffer. Dr. Rainey can get another position very easily. The U niver­ sity strong enough to survive anything that m ay come, of course, but it could its fam e would be happen limited to that arising from its size and from its material resources rather than as a truly great insti­ tution of science and learning,” is big enough and that has now* been substantially re- lieved o f authority over the Medi­ cal School, w'hich is another griev­ ance he aired before the faculty. His relations with the school con- in the News' opinion, a conclusive argument against per­ m itting him the administrative freedom he demands as the price o f peace between him self and the R egents.” A news story in the same issue I of the N ew s said that “reports t h a t : Dr. Homer P. Rainey had g u b e r - 1 natorial aspirations and would run ; for governor in the next state elec - 1 tion gained considerable ground j yesterday follow ing publication of his statem ent attacking the Board j o f Regents of the U niversity. . . . It was variously declared that the I University president was p r e p a r - 1 ing the way to create statewide sympathy, and if the Regents were reactionary, to carry fight the directly to the Legislature. ‘Rainey or Regents Will Have to G o ’ From the other side o f the argu­ ment, the Galveston News, which has taken an active part in the Medical School controversy, voiced its opinion that the present state o f affairs could not continue— t h a t either Dr. Rainey or the Re­ gen ts wilt have to go. “Failure of the Regents to adopt his to long-range program and remove the Medical College from Galveston added fuel to fire, it was declared, and made Dr, Rainey the more determined regents to first base,’ observers said.” Origin of the reports was ‘to beat The editorial says, “ Dr. Rainey j not given. Defend Rainey' M e e tin g Held in Brownsville G i a n t B-29 Superfortresses rained concentrated destruction on Jap air and supply bases in formosa Monday, slashing at the installations for the sec­ enem y ond time in forty-eight hours in a vicious one-tw o punch co-ordi­ nated with naval carrier plane assaults on the enemy bastion. the same The sky battleships hurled rec­ ord bomb loads at the enem y bases o f Okayama and Heito on the southw estern coast of Formosa in a follow up attack after their raid on targets Saturday. The superfortresses encountered no Jap aerial opposition in Mon­ d ay’s raid, and an official com ­ munique from the Twentieth Air Force attributed the lack o f en­ em y interception to the damage done to Formosan bases by car­ rier borne planes of Vice-Admiral Marc A. Mitscher’s fam ous Fask Force 58. “ The dream o f educators like \ B-29 pilots reported that Jap M e d Students O rgan ize airfields near their target areas Cultural Study Forum had been rendered inoperable by I The Medical Stu dents’ Forum N avy plane attacks, and Super-! fo r t crew m en counted at least I Has ju s t been organized by stu- f ift y Jap planes destroyed or dam- i dents on the campus of the U n i­ versity School of Medicine at Gal­ aged on the ground. veston. The club was started be­ cause its members want to “learn facts and problems and discuss land-ba’sed bombers spread new destruction in Formosa, reports were awaited from the blazing aerial action o f f i°^ t!ie soc‘a *» economic, and cul* then the boards the island where U. S. fleet units battled at­ tacks from Jap torpedo planes. tins! aspects of a doctoi a life. Dr. Rainey to make Texas U. and A. & M. among the greatest schools in the world will never be is realized unless an about-face achieved . . . Another year or tw o of internecin e incessant battles will undermine the in flu ­ ence and e ffic ie n c y of both. • ^ e m arid hire som ebody else. But Membership is open to students as jong as they are the heads of the schools, they should be freed of continual sniping and fa u lt ­ finding.” “ The heads should be given com ­ if they don ’t deliver, repeated desperate mand, and While giant these the World N e w s at a Glance FORMOSA _ Yanks crush five Nazi counter-attacks. HU N GA R Y — N azis tighten their grip on Hungary. Y U G O S L A V IA — Belgrade battle begun by Reds and Partisans. More WORLD NEWS, Page 4 interested persons only, but all may attend the programs. N ext m eeting o f the Forum will be Tuesday night, October 17, at 7 o ’clock at the John Sealy N urses’ Dr. J. A. Home Auditorium. Scott, professor of epidemiology, who w as form erly with the Rocke­ in Egypt, will feller Foundation I compare the culture of that na- the United that o f ! tion with ^ States. 4Rainey Has M a d e G o o d Start at U.T. The Sherman D em ocrat of Octo­ ber 12 emphasized in sn editorial the “ usual controversy” between administrations and boards of A “ Defend Rainey” m eeting was called at Brownsville Mon­ day night by Hart Stillwell, new s­ paperman, writer, and an ex-stu­ dent of the University. Other meetings to “investigate the sit­ uation” are reported brewing at a number o f T e xas cities includ­ ing Austin, San Antonio, Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, Laredo, last week and The executive council of the Ex-Students’ Association met the matter here was discussed, but no official ac­ tion was taken. The council, a representative group made up of from ex-student representatives six f ifte en Texas districts and members-at-large, agreed to r e ­ tu rn home and attem pt to find out the sentim en t of ex-students and to return at another date with a better knowledge of what posi­ tion it should take. The Brownsville Herald termed the m eeting there as “what may turn into a state-wide move to rally ex-students o f The Univer­ sity o f Texas to the banner o f President Homer P. Rainey.” Fort Worth Principals To Hear Rainey Tonight Dr. Homer P. Rainey le f t Mon­ day night for Fort Worth to speak Tuesday night at 6:30 o'clock to the Association o f Principals of F ort Worth Public Schools at their m onthly dinner meeting. He will return Tuesday night. Captai n Wdl i am J. S ag t t e t t e r , B. J. *38, now stationed at the Laredo Army Air Field, visited the campus Monday. should remove | * nc* Amarillo, TiJltat Qaei On T U E S D A Y Morni ng 9— University Surgical Dressing Center, 401 W est 26th Street. 9:3 0 -4 :3 0 — State Department o f Health and Child Welfare Con­ feren ce, Texas Union. 10— J. Mabel Clark will review “ Roots o f the T ree” by Helen Todd, W om en’s Federated Club Building. 10-2— Caroline Darieux art ex- hibit Elizabet N ey museum. A f t e r n o o n 1— Brats’ picture fo r Cactus, front o f Main Building. 1 :30— Association for Childhood Education picture fo r Cactus, front of Main Building. 1:40— Sigma D elta Pi picture for steps o f Main front Cactus, Building. 2—3— D.A .R.’s o f Andrews-Car- ruthers chapter pay dues, Texas Union 316. 3 —5— Caroline Darieux art exhibit, Elizabet N ey museum. 3:3 0 — Meeting o f F aculty Wives Social Club at Mrs. C. A. S m ith’s home, 1510 Woolrich Drive. 4— I- M. Lewis Biological S o ciety’s call meeting, Biology Labora­ tory 225. 5— W om en’s Intramural Swim ­ in W o m en ’s m ing Meet, pool Gym. 5 :1 5 — Tennis doubles, m en’s t e a m s , in ­ Intramural tramural Courts. Field. 5 :15— Touch football, Intramural Ni g ht 6:4 0 — WICA m eeting. J u n i o r Ballroom, Texas Union. 6:4 5 — Longhorn Band.on stage o f Gregory Gym, ready to play. 7— Student body m eeting to con ­ sider R ainey-Regents question, . Gregory Gym. 7 :30— M. D. Williams Jr. to speak on “ The F uture of Mission in the P acific,” U niversity Method­ ist Church. 8 : 1 5 — Joint concert o f A ustin Symphony and Austin Mixed Chorus, H ogg Memorial A udi­ torium. 8 : 4 5 — “The Daily Texan of the A ir,” KNOW. East Texas Exes Support Chemist A movement by ex-students in Ea«t Texas to get Dr. A. M. Mc­ A fee o f Port Arthur appointed a Regent of the University is under­ the Port Arthur reports o f October 13. Terms of three of the present Regents, H. J. Lutcher Stark o f Orange, Mrs. I. D. Fairchild o f Lufkin, and Dr. K. H. A ynesw orth of Waco, expire Decem ber 31. Governor Coke Stevenson, w h e n asked at a recent press co n fe r ­ ence if he had thought o f possible appointments three vacancies, replied, “ I have g iv e n no consideration to the m atter up to this tim e as to appointm ents or re-appointments.” the fill to of chairman Dr. M cAfee, a research chem* ist fo r the Gulf Oil Co., and fo r­ merly the P ort Arthur school board, grad u ated from the University in 1908. Ha was president o f the Ex-studenta Association for two term s from 1941 to 1943 and has been a mem­ ber of the executive council o£ the association for seven years. Several years ago Dr. M cA fea was appointed by the Regents as one o f two alumni members o f tha advisory council of The U niversity of Texas Resear ch Corporation. Later the Regents named him as chairman o f a com m ittee to in­ vestigate and evaluate a process devised by Dr. E. P. Schoch, pro­ fessor o f chemical en gin eerin g, into for con ve rt i n g natural gas valuable products. On several occasions he has been consulted by the R eg e n ts and by Dr. Rainey on research story and patent matters, said. the Won t Comment, Says Stark ORANGE. Oct. 13. — “ I don’t admit, deny, or explain,” replied R egent Lutcher Stark at his homo in Orange to the charge of Presi­ dent Homer P. Rainey that he wa* an example of one of the six tee n “ repressive” influences w h i c h President Rainey asserted w er e causing disharmony. In his statement to th e fa c u lty in a special meeting last Thursday, Dr. Rainey charged R egent Stark with a motion to elim inate D ean T. H. Shelby, Roy Bedichek, and R. J. K i d d from the Division o f Extension because o f their parti in e l i g i b i l i t y rules of the In ter­ scholastic League a f fe c tin g hie sons, then senior* in Orange High School. When Dr. Rainey refused to re­ move these men from o f fic e , Mr. Stark is reported to have said, “I am going to fight you like hell.” R egent Stark was asked, “Just w'hat did you tell Mr. Rainey?” He answered, “ I don’t admit, deny, or explain. Why don’t you ask him? The minutes o f tho Board o f Regents are public property and can be read by any­ one.” Sociologist Williams To Speak on Missions In a return engagem ent at Wes­ ley Foundation, M. O. William# Jr., form er sociology teacher a l Soochow University, China, will speak on “The Future o f Mission# in the P acific” Tuesday night at 7:30 in the church auditorium. Professor Williams spoke at tha morning and evening services la*# . Sunday. 1 1 :3 0 — Presentation o f lf Y o u ’re Leaving Nov. I, flags to University students from Prosi- I t dio County by Governor Coke G e t C a c t u s P i c t u r e M a d e Stevenson in his o ffic e. . j- * * n , , i , XT N ovem ber graduates and other | PASE TWO Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 TUESDAY, O CT O BER 17, 1944 Sports W hirl B y J A C K G A L L A G H E R Torr.n Sport* E ditor Tennis Andersen Promoted as Bible Ranking Shuffles Starting Lineup J Dekes Beot S.A. E/s, 3-2, In W a t e r Polo Semi-Finals A n d re w s ' Play W o w s H o m e to w n Folks T h e big hit of th e Dallas trip this y e a r was colorful little Billy “ R o o s te r ” A n d r e w s , whose ext ra- poi nt kicking a n d passing antics before t h e Dallasites won him t h e pla ud its of t h e crow d. T h e r e ’s a little s to r y behi nd Billy’s a p p e a r a n c e t h a t b e a r s mentioning. Last W e d n e s d a y d u r in g an int ra -sq ua d s c r im m a g e b e ­ t w een t h e varsity an d t h e B tea m. Rooster w e n t in to kick th e e x tra -p oi n t an d su rprised the Bees by pass ing to Bobby La yne inste ad of kicking. We h a d seen Billy do th e sa me stu nt once before, in th e w o r k o u t previous to t h e Ra ndo lp h gam e, an d w e r e wise to it. It looked to us as if it wo uld m a k e a p r e t t y good story, th e f a c t t h a t th e Lo n gh or n s h a d t h e i r ow n “secret w e a p o n ” to t h r o w aga in st th e Ram blers. It w a s F rid ay , ho wev er, an d t h e r e is no S a t u r d a y Texan, so t h e m a t t e r h a d to rest for a while. A f t e r last W e d n e s d a y ’s s cr im m ag e, d u r i n g w h ic h t h e trick w as pulled ag ai n , we d eci de d to tell of th e incident. Billy t r o t te d over a f t e r th e w o r k o u t an d said, “ Ple as e d o n ’t w r it e an y t h in g abou t t h a t play we pulled to d a y , J ac k , be ca u se i f s th e t y p e of p la y you can only pull once in a season, a n d a f t e r t h a t the opposition is wise to it.” Rooster w a / almost right, ex c e p t t h a t t h e p la y w ould have w o r k e d twice in one d a y instead of once in a season but fo r t h e fact t h a t he received a b ad pass f r o m ce n t e r the first time he tried it. Billy w a s r us h ed a n d h ad to m a k e a h u r r y - u p th r o w to Leroy An der sen , w h o w a s out in th e cl ea r on th e left flat, but c o u l d n ’t g e t to t h e ball. It w a s a t r e a t to see Billy in his second e f f o r t w h e n he passed successfully to Layne. He j u m p e d up an d do wn an d was so h a p p y t h a t he r a n o ver and shook h a n d s with Bobby. It was an e x a m p le of r eal te a m spirit seldom seen on a football field, an d t h e fa ns gave the p o p u l a r m a n a g e r a big h a n d . Billy w a s a m a r k e d m a n f o r t h e rest of th e afte rno on . S a t u r d a y n ig ht as he w a l k e d into th e J e f fe rs o n Hotel one f em a le gu sh ed ex ci te dl y as Rooster strode busily to w a r d th e elevators, an d w h is p e r e d to h e r comp anio n, “ Oh, t h e r e ’s t h a t cute little n u m b e r 99.” Hail to T e x a s ’s “ s ecr et w e a p o n ”— Billy A n d r e w s — f o u r feet, eleven inches of fig h t in g foo tbal l pla yer . L ie u t e n a n t ( j - g . ) D . R . J o h n ­ so n , B B A. ’42. has just returned from N aples. He w as in the inva­ sion o f France. His w ife, th e for­ m er B e tty Loos, ex-student, and the Lieutenant Johnson visited campus last week. E. w . P a r k e r , stud en t in 1941- 42, is now on a thirtv-day leave in his home town, San Saba, a fte r having spent tw enty-six months in the P acific with the Marines, fig h tin g on Tulagi, Guadacanal. Tarawa, and Saipan Islands. The fo llow in g is a lis t o f the the the players on standing o f Varsity squad: S argent Bradley Sutton I. Goldfarb 2. Sayres 3. W olf son 4. DeLlano 5. Hamilton 6. Gordon 7. Blanton 8. Gerhardt 9. IO. l l . 12. Gorman 13. Marquez 14. Kemper 15. Bright 16. Gallagher 17. Martin 18. N ettleton 19. H o lt 20. Camp 21. 22. 23. 24. Sturges Taylor Thompson Powell man above him. challenge, they touch with These players may challenge the If they wish to in should the m anager, Jack Conman at 81005 or the assistant m anager A lfonso Cortez at 24784. If you can not g e t either o f the above .then call Dr. Pennick. g e t Holt to Re-O rganize Sw o rd sm e n in N ovem b er U niv ersity Swordsmen will or­ ganize again in Novem ber with Arthur Holt, senior student, as to coach. Membership interested U niversity men in learning to fe n c e , and physical training credit will be given. is open Captain o f the 1942-43 fen cin g team . Holt has fenced since his first year o f high school. He had to argue his w ay into the Navy last fall because o f his abbre­ viated height. Meetings will be two times each week for two-hour periods. The club was a member o f the A m a ­ teur F encing League of America when it was organized more than a year ago. "L e t s Look at the Record": During the pas t three years our records show h un dr ed s of Army, Navy, and civilian students have been t a u g h t to fly. T h a t means many, many thous ­ ands of hours of flight instruction un d e r c a pa b le CAA government appro ved instructors. This has given Ragsdal e Flying Service a ba ck gr o un d of top flight teaching. O u r original $2.50 introductory lesson is y o u r o p p o r t u n i t y to g et ac ­ q u a i n te d . Fly with R ag s da le toda y. North aide M unicipal Airport. East Slat. Street. Tel. 8-8779 U. S. Gov. A p p r o v ed School No. 2 207. R A G S D A L E FL Y IN G SERVICE Dial 8-8779 {PMpMWPM s u m T H E D A I L Y T E X A N r CLASSIFIED ADS Phone 2 -2 4 7 3 for A d Taker MAXIE BELL, tho hard-running ex-W est ^exas State back, has been d o ng some s p e n d id work in the Longhorn backfield in the *ew tones he has had a chance to perform this season. O n e of the best passers and field generals on the squa d, Bell stands five feet, eight inches tall, weighs 165 pounds, and hails from Vernon. Season's Standings T eam Te xa s Christian ...... . .... 2 Texa s A. & M ................ .... 3 2 So u th er n M ethodist .... .............................. .... 2 Te x a s Rice ................................ ..... 2 ...................... ..... I A r k a n s a s C on ference Stand ings W L T Pts Op I 6 0 35 56 0 0 42 0 9.3 I 58 47 87 65 46 71 20 0 I I I 2 2 T eam Texas Christian ......... ... 0 ....................... .. . . 0 A r k a n s a s Te xa s ...... ........................ .... o ............................ Rice . . . . 0 Te x a s A. & M. .................... 0 S ou th er n Methodist .......... 0 W L T Pts Op 6 I I 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 6 0 0 0 0 Last W e e k ’s Results Texas A. & M. 7, Louisiana State 0 Tu la ne 21, Rice 0 Ra nd ol ph Field 41, S ou the rn Me thod ist 0 Texa s 20, O k la h o m a 0 N or ma n O kl a h o m a Naval Air Station 27, A rk an sa s 7 This W e e k ’* S ch e d u le Saturday Texas Christian vs. T e x a s A. & M. a t College Station Texas vs. A r k an s as at Little Rock Rice vs. S o uth ern Methodist at Houston (nigh t) L eading Scorers P layer F aul Yates, A. & M., fb ............ .... 6 Bobby Layne, Texas, hb ....... ...... 2 J o h n n y Powers, SMU, hb ....... ...... 2 2 Bill Scrubs, Rice, hb ................. Bobby Folsom, SMU, e .................. 2 2 R a n d y Ropers, TC C, bb ....... o G eor ge Walmsley, Rice, hb ... 9 Ivan Cun n in g ha m, SMU, bb ... 9 N o r m a n Cox. TCL’, fb ............ 2 Bob Smith. Rice, bb ................. T D P A T TP 36 0 15 3 1,3 I 0 12 0 12 0 12 0 12 12 0 0 12 0 12 B y B IL L S M IT H In the tightest gam e o f Scout Clyde Littlefield, who I Dormitory 0; Kappa Alpha I, Phi Delta Theta 0; T w elfth Co. An­ drews I, Seventh Co. Prather 0. the In Tuesday n ight’s water-polo semi-finals the scores w ere: Delta Kappa Epsilon 3, Sigma Alpha held back his in formation on Al­ .E p s ilo n 2; Sixteenth Co. Bracken- , kansas one week, unveiled his re-; ridg<, , . Fourth Co u t „ , Campus port on the Razorback* yesterday and warned the Longhorns that the F ayetteville club is goin g to be hard to beat, that they are big­ ger and faster than the Steers, and that the Hogs, like Oklahoma. • " ’T ** thB D «k“ d efeated the S .A .E .’s 3-2, Early in the first are gunning fo r revenge after ! period Bob Leroaux scored a goal having lost every game between ; for the Dekes on a long pass from the schools since 1938. Chuck Amidon; the S .A .E .’s received the ball th e y held it on the Deke goal-line until the end o f the half in an attem pt to score, their the whistle ending threat. With new' determination the S .A .E .’s came back in the sec­ ond period, and made a goal on a pass from Bill Patm an to Dick Miller, thus tying up the score. Continuing their rally the S.A .E .’s scored again, John Shannon swim ­ m ing the ball in for the goal, but the Dekes were far from beaten. The combination o f Lerouax to Amidon tied up the score again, and a goal by Scoopy Thornhill in the last minute o f play gave the gam e to the Dekes 3-2. Bible promoted Leroy Ander­ sen, the lend-lcase g if t from Wis­ consin, to the first team fullback spot yesterday on the strength o f the N.R.O.T.C. boy’s show ing in the Oklahoma game Saturday. Andersen is taking the place of Sandy Crow, who is on a par with A ndy o ffe n siv e ly but lacks A nd­ er se n ’s d efensive skill. All this means that Coach D. X. Bible has a busy week ahead of him planning a way to stop the the Razor- attack which netted backs 673 yards first their in three games. then when terized by plenty o f rough play, but heartened by B e a n ’s score the Brackenridge teld a ver y team strong defense that prevented any score by L. C. D. spirit renewed A nother game of second-half scoring came when the Tw elfth Co. Andrews w ent into the second period with to make the goal th a t beat the S e v ­ enth Co. Prather 1-0 and put the T w elfth Co. into the navy finals. R. H . Green put over the score amid the usual rough play that marks all navy games, and his team held the Prather team score­ less until the final whistle. No Fight Songs Until A. & M. Rally Contrary to a previous an ­ nouncement, none o f the songs en ­ tered in the fig h t song contest will be submitted to the public until the winners are announced at the pep rally before the A. & M. game. The original plan to introduce a song a t each rally has been changed in the b elief that jud ging will be easier and more fair without it. Francis Gerling, a member o f Austin H igh’s 1942 state cham­ pionship eleven, was elevated to the varsity yesterday a fte r having played well in the B tea m ’s game with Hondo army air field Satur­ day. Gerling is a guard, and will be valuable later on in the season when Phil Bolin and Bob Lem ­ m ons have departed. Both Bolin and Lemmons are slated to leave in the N ovem ber I navy transfers. Chub Merritt may not be able to make the trip to Little Rock, state of his knee although injury has not been determined j took yet. There is still a chance that Delt his knee will mend in time the This yea r’s Arkansas team, contrast to other years, boasts one of the best running attacks in the Razorback history. Under the guidance o f a new coach, the Hogs run their plays from a tricky T form ation and ran up 449 yards the ground and amassed 31 ; on first downs their first three games. in the ball Halfback Anton Baldwin car­ ried time* against Missouri, Oklahoma A. & M., and T. C. U., and averaged 3.1 yards per carry. forty-three Arkansas lost to the star-stud­ ded Norman Zoomers last Satur-| day, 27-7, a fte r having tied T. C. lh , losing to Oklahoma A. & M. and defea ting Missouri. Littlefield saw the Hogs in ac­ tion against T. C. U. the week before last and was very much impressed with their performance. Two ex-students. E n s ig n G e o r g e M o r g a n K e ith and E n a ig n T e r r e ll graduated J a c k s o n fro m naval in ­ doctrination at Tucson, Ariz. r e s e rv e o ffic e r s school S m a ll have science degree Ensign Keith graduated with a bachelor o f in chemical en gineering in 1943 and was a process engineer with the in Los Angeles, Texas Company Calif., before joining the navy. Ensign Small received his bache­ lor of science degree in mechanical engineering in 1942. Before join ­ ing the N avy he was employed as an engin eer with the Douglas Air­ craft Company in El Segundo, Calif. time period In an over the K .A .’s put on enough steam to beat a strong Phi Delta Theta team 1-0, Bob Biechlin showing his usual ability to score at the All entries should be turned in right moment by m aking a goal to the o ffic e of the Texas Union in the last minute o f play. All through the gam e the Phi D elts led | by Novem ber I. The name will be detached and the song given a by Bubba Worsham and Collis n u m b e r ‘before it is judged by a Garrison made repeated scoring committee by Colonel threats, but the K .A .’s were just George Hurt and composed o f fightin g too hard to be beaten. Billy Andrews, Bill Reynolds, Buddy Kayser and Herb Miller Charlie Featherstone, Betty Os­ to the Phi borne, and V irginia Dare. tim es before the to score in; * oal that won for Kappa Alpha their 1-0. ability to score under pressure; for fratern ity ehampionship game between the K.A.’s and Dekes should be any­ body’s victory. Jaim e* B , A llis o n Jr., ex-student, recently started his combat career as a fighter pilot in the European thea- the crack ter. He has P-47 Thunderbolt fighter group commanded by C olonel Frederic the ball down goal many Biechlin was able S e c o n d L ie u t e n a n t that reason The K .A .’s showed headed joined the In a game with plenty o f long C. Gray of Abilene. passes, VV. C. Bean scored the only goal of the game that enabled the Sixteenth Co. Brackenridge to d efeat the Fourth Co. L. C. D. 1-0. Until the second half the game was an even match charac- Lieutenant Allison has already participated in several escort m is­ to Europe, accom panying sions of F ortresses large form ations and Liberators in targets t o France and Germany. W omen’s Intra murals B y P R I S C I L L A C H A S E The fourth round o f tennis will extend into November. + The volleyball team s have been practising fo r the tournam ent that starts Novem ber IO. As y e t the number of team s participating in the tournam ent has not been de­ for each organization termined may en ter two teams. I>a 9 IO Wa 13 Z Z ll 14 lb 23 2e> 45 50 SS IS 19 I 20 24 V//A I, , r m 25 29 AAA/30 22 17 21 I I 2b 27 Wa 31 34 33 VAA AAA 37 AZA VV// 43 3B — TTT/ 39 r n 40 42 V/// AA 51 4 b n47 I 5b 52 59 57 bO / / y Wti 44 4e> WA/4^ S3 Wa54 s i 1 0 -1 0 I 2. indefinite article 3. s lig h t drin k 4. acid 5. w ound m a rk s 6 more precipitous 7. c orrela tive of e ith e r 8. steep, a s flax 9. edible ro o tsto c k IO. position in golf l l A m eric an elk 13. h a s te 16. rip 19. g e t up 21. e a ts a m eal 24. dull 26. s lig h t 52 re fa ste n 54. symbol for selenium 5 5 . endeavor 57 gnaw ed a w a y 59. g lu tte d H O RIZO NT A L I. endures 6 varieties 11. m.sare person 12. n egotiates 14. upon 15. ta lk foolishly 60. s a n d y tr a c ts 17 sn a re by se a (E ng.) 18. room in a hare m 20. cornered 22. single u nit 23. native of Serbia 25.sa v o ry 27. symbol for cerium 28 Roman V E R T IC A L I. came ashore A nsw er to y e s te r d a y ’s puzzle. m a g is tr a t e SO. in vigorated 3 2 .to ta ls 34. city in N evada 35. unclosing 38. sm all rock 41. note in th e scale 42. ste p 44. wild plum 45. sick 47 bristles 49 the sun 50. labor A e r a g e tim e of so m tio n : 27 m inute*. Dint- by Eujg Features Syndicate, loc. IO-IO depressions 29. M o h a m m e­ d an p rinces 31. w orsteds 33. m ocked 35. leaves o ut 36. guides 37. m ovable b a r r ie r 39. h a n g m e n ’* ropes 40. fished for la m p rey s 43. m a rk e d by tim e 46. I ta lia n cola 48. Ire lan d 51. illum inated 53. e t e r n i t y 56. Odin’s bro th e r 5 & p r e & * . o t ' I s n e a k e d o u t in t h e s e c over a l l s . T h e w i f e thinks I’m w o r k i n g o n a n i g h t s h i f t . " *7Ue. tyinituj JI Ute. Med Student Debates Move Where Is Our School Spirit? th e it, a n d all s t u d e n t m u s t h ea d ed . W h a t do th e y w a n t w ith it dow n h e r e ? F o r a d e ­ g r e e in P h a r m a c y I u n d e r s t a n d t h a t ta k e E nglish, g o v e r n m e n t, m a th and o t h e r s u b je c ts w'hich a r e n o t t a u g h t h e r e and f o r w'hch th e re a r e no facilities. T h e r e is n o t s u f fic ie n t ro om h e re f o r th ose classes. T h e r e is room in A u s­ tin, a b e a u tif u l c a m p u s to go those classes w ith a r e t a u g h t th e r e now, a p p a r e n t ­ ly suc ce ssfu lly eno u g h , so why move th e P h a r m a c y School? It w as bad e n o u g h to th in k o f idea, b u t th e n to a c tu a lly th e go a h e a d a n d move it d ow n to G alve ston— th a t w'ould be to o I hav e much. E v e r y s t u d e n t h e a r d m en tio n is of th e opinion t h a t th e P h a r m ­ ac y School w ould only lose a lo t by th e move, a n d I feel the sam e w ay, only m ore so. th e m a t t e r A n d I w o n d e r w h en th e P s y c h o p a th ic H ospital will be o pene d u p ag a in , a f t e r its a l­ leged 1943 sto rm d am ag e . I h a v e n ’t se en a n y d a m a g e , an d if t h e r e is an y , th e y c e r ta in l y a r e n ’t r e p a ir i n g it. W h y is all th is t h a t s t u f f go in g on a t pla ce ? A n y w a y , th e Med s t u ­ d e n t s go t lot o f good in a s tu d y and ex p e rie n c e t h e r e t h a t we a r e n ’t g e t t i n g now, and w hich w ould be of g r e a t value to u s a n y tim e . I ’d like to give th e h o tf o o t to w h o ev e r is keep­ ing it closed. I to give you j u s t w a n te d idea o f how some o f us th in g s dow n I hope I h a v e n ’t ta k e n an f e lt a b o u t here . up too m uch of y o u r tim e. th e s e R I C H A R D O. A L B E R T , A S ( S ) US NR, V - 12 B. A. ’43 to is own hook. W hen a g a m e in M em orial S ta d iu m pla y ed you have to th e o p p o r t u n i t y re a lly show some s p irit b e c a u s e th e opp o sin g te a m is r i g h t in f r o n t of the U.T. s t u d e n t sec­ tion. T h e r e will alw a y s be some o f th e v is i to r ’s s t u d e n ts s it tin g th e U.T. secion, bu t n e x t th e i r c l a p p in g a n d c h e e r in g f o r one of th e ir h u r t boys should n o t sto p th e U n iv e rsity s t u d e n t s f ro m c la p p in g r e ­ m e m b e r t h a t he played a good g am e or he w o u ld n ’t h a v e been if so m e th in g h u r t. L e t ’s see c a n ’t this, a b o u t done be J o h n n y . J u s t too. S in ce re ly y o u r r, E .L .W . r r in a (A .C .P .) — “ Y o u ’re now a t ­ t e n d in g college r a t h e r u n iq u e tim e. T he college e n r o ll­ m e n t is sm all b u t we m u s t r e ­ m e m b e r t h a t a sm all college e n ­ r o llm e n t h as some a d v a n ta g e s as w ell as d is a d v a n ta g e s . T h e r e can, o f c o u rse , be no a t h le tic p r o g r a m a n d t h e r e a r e o th e r ac tiv itie s w hich w e c a n ’t have b ec au se of th e sm a ll n u m b e r s ; b u t on t h e o t h e r h a n d , you have tim e f o r m a n y th in g s t h a t you w o u ld n ’t h a v e tim e fo r if col­ life w as m o r e com plex. lege th e o p p o r tu n ity You hav e to in s t r u c to r s a n d to kno w y o u r s tu d e n ts y o u r k now w hich w as impossible u n d e r o th e r co n d itio n s as rn 1920 d u r ­ ing th e pea k e n r o ll m e n t fo llo w ­ ing t h e f i r s t w a r w hen w e had f o u r- classes g r a d u a t i n g h u n d r e d . ” — P r e s id e n t D. S. B r a i n a r d o f Coe College, C e d ar R apids, Iow a, discusses som e of th e b e n e f its of th e small w a r ­ tim e college. fello w of 135 Tons of Bombs Dropped on Balikpapan D e a r F i r i n g L ine: I f t h e r u m o r s one h e a r s and th e r e p o r ts one r e a d s a r e c o r­ rec t, t h e r e has r e c e n tly been some a g i ta t io n to g e t th e Med t.o A u stin , and School m oved th e n o t h e r a g i ta t io n to have the P h a r m a c y School m oved to G alveston. L et m e d e b a te a little on those two questions. be ta k e L e t ’s the Med School s tu d e n ts th e firs t. M ost of I t h in k it h e re w a n t i t m oved. m ig h t som ew here b e t t e r else, b u t I ’m n o t to o su re th a t th e b e n e f i t s g a in ed by a move it. T h e y say w ould be w o rth we d o n ’t h ave eno u g h clinical m a te r ia l here. I h a v e n ’t m ade a sta tis tic a l s tu d y to see w h a t wre do a n d d o n ’t hav e h ere , b u t I hav e n o tic ed t h a t t h e r e are few e m p ty beds a r o u n d , and o f te n n o n e a t all. I f t h e r e w ere m o re beds I a m su re it w o u ld n ’t be h a rd to keep th e m full, too, which w ould u n d o u b te d ly be of value t o th e stu d e n ts . A n o th e r b u ild in g o r tw o w ou ld do a lot to do aw'ay w ith id e a o f t h e r e n o t b e in g en o u g h clinical m a te r ia l. A u stin r a t h e r p r e t t y tow n, while th is island is b a re a n d old in co m p ariso n . T h at m akes some d if fe r e n c e , b u t n o t I th in k such a v e r y g r e a t deal. th e school m a y e v e n tu a lly be moved to som e o th e r city, b u t I d o n ’t feel v e r y s tr o n g ly t h a t it should be. B u t this is c e r ta in l y to m ove it a n y ­ n o t t h e tim e w h ere. is a th e A b o u t th e P h a r m a c y School b e in g m o v e d dowm h ere, I feel much m o re stro n g ly . I o fte n w o n d e r w'ho f i r s t g o t th e idea, I t str ik e s me as not an y w a y ? being v e ry b rig h t. it knuckle- seem s In f a c t, dow n r i g h t D e a r J o h n n y — to I w ould like to ta k e th is op­ p o r t u n i t y r e p r im a n d so m e ­ one f o r th e po o r school s p irit which T e x a s U n iv e r s ity is s u p ­ posed to have . Yes, this is w a r a n d I know th e re is supp osed to be a w e a k ­ en in g e l e m e n t here in th e w ay o f “ u n lo y a l” V -I2 s. This is no alibi, th o u g h , bec ause o v er h a lf o f th e V -12s here a r e a f f ilia te d w ith th is c a m p u s a n d school in f r a t s a n d o t h e r o rg a n iz a tio n s . E v en I p e rso n a lly d o n ’t give a d a r n f o r T e x a s U n iv e rsity , but I kno w I yelled m ore f o r T ex a s a g a i n s t R a n d o lp h Field th a n th e a v e r a g e “ r e a l-s p iri te d ” U. T. s t u d e n t. O v e r te n th o u s a n d “ A g g ie - h a tin g ” se r v i c e rn e n c o u l d n ’t sto p 1,600 A ggies last ye a r. T h a t is rea l school spirit. A re you g o in g to le t f o u r or fiv e h u n d r e d V-12s sto p U .T .? A n o t h e r v e r y n o te d lack of school s p ir it a n d sp o r ts m a n s h ip is t h a t o f n o t even c la p p in g f o r a n o p p o sin g is e i th e r h u r t a n d is c a r r ie d o f f th e field o r com es o f f on his p la y e r who Official Noticed. TO R E S I D E N T H o s te s s e s of girls all b o ard in g h o u s e * : P leas e phone th e vacanc ie s w h ich a r e ex p ected for to Dean of Wo- N o v e m b e r s e m e s t e r m**n's Office . A is being p r e ­ p ared of all p o ssible liv ing so c o m m o - dation* for th ose who a r e m a k i n g in ­ tl lirv fo r s e m e s t e r o p en in g N o v e m ­ ber I. list DO ROTHY G E B A U E R , D ean of Women. is r eq uired t o n o tify Any m ale in te n t i o n a t s t u d e n t who des ire* to ch a n g e hi* place of r esid en ce fo r n e x t s e m e s t e r his h o u s e m o th e r of his le a s t t e n d ay s before t h e end of t h e present, t h a t s e m e s t e r . A w r i t t e n notice e f f e c t m u s t be the hand# o f his h o u s e m o th e r no t l a t e r t h a n O c to b e r 17. t h e s t u d e n t will a u t o m a t ­ O th erw ise, ically h a v e a s s u m e d a c o n t r a c t for t h e next se m e s t e r . t o in C H A R L E S V. D U NHA M A s s i s t a n t to t h e Dean of S t u d e n t Life. in Dip h o u r a f t e rn o o n t h e sw im m in g pool of t h e W o m e n 's G y m n a s i u m will he held e v e r y a t 2 o'clock u ntil E x am Week begins. T h e r e g u l a r Dip H o u r a t 5 o'clock will be every a f t e r ­ noon except T u e s d a y and F rid a y , when t h e r e will be s w im m in g m eets the pool. in ANNA H ISS, P r o f e s s o r and d i r e c t o r o f ph y sic al f o r wom en. t r a i n i n g A few p a r t - t i m e p ositio n s o f fe r in g ro om , bo ar d, a n d so m e ti m e s a sm all s a l a r y , a re av ailab le in w o m en 's r e s i ­ d ences for g r a d u a t e st u d e n t# w o r k in g i n t e r ­ on If their m a s t e r ’s d eg rees , es ted. d etails m ay be ob tain ed th e in Dean of W o m en's office. M A R G A R ET FECK A ssista n t Dean of W omen. tio n s o f G e r m a n sh ip p in g h ad bee n s t a n d i n g b y n o r t h o f A th e n s t o tr o o p s e v a c u a t i n g th e ca pital. o f f G e r m a n t a k e ★ Nazis Tighten Their Grip on Hungary G e r m a n a u t h o r i tie s in H u n g a r y , r e p o r te d l y to r n by civil w a r and r e s is ta n c e to th e Nazi o c c u p a tio n a l forc es, t i g h t e n e d t h e i r g rip on th e g o v e r n m e n t M onday B u d a p e s t n ig h t, “ r e t i r e ­ t h e m e n t ” o f R e g e n t A d m ira l N icholas H o r t h y a n d e s ta b l is h m e n t o f a N a tio n a l Socialistic reg im e. a n n o u n c in g Sov iet c o m b a t e le m e n ts a n d Y ugoslav p a r t i s a n f o r c e s o p e n e d th e b a ttle f o r t h e Y ugoslav c a p i­ ta l o f B e lg ra d e to d a y sm a sh in g into th e o u t s k i r t s o f t h e city a n d c a p tu r in g 1,500 Nazi tr o o p e r s . th e the m a in S im u lta n e o u s w ith a n ­ n o u n c e m e n t t h a t R ussian f o r c e s w ere w ith in th e d e f e n s e s o f B e l­ g r a d e , th e S oviet High C o m m an d a n n o u n c e d t h a t R ed A r m y f o rc e s s tr ik in g 125 miles s o u th e a s t of th e Y u g o sla v c a p ita l h ad seized the vital B a lk a n rail ju n c t i o n of N ish, c o n t ro llin g r a i l ­ ro a d lines t o G reece a n d B u lg a ria , T h e c a p t u r e o f Nish leaves a n e s tim a te d fo rc e o f 100,000 N azis a t t e m p t i n g to f i g h t t h e i r w ay o u t of t h e s o u th e r n B a lk a n s w ith no m ain rail escap e r o u te l e f t open O t h e r S o v ie t u n its f o r sla sh in g th r o u g h r e e lin g Nazi u n its in a d ­ n o r t h e r n T r a n s y lv a n ia v a n c e d a lo n g w-ith R o m a n ia n f o r c e s to c a p t u r e over IOO i n h a b ­ ited places, in c lu d in g t h e to w n of B orsa. them . Russian ta n k in H u n g a r y T he B u d a p e s t radio, seized by th e N az is along with o t h e r public when b u ild in g s r e ­ H o r t h y a n n o u n c e d h e h ad te r m s q u e s te d from a rm istic e th e Allies, d ec la re d t h a t H o r t h y h a d “ r e v o k e d ” his p ro c la m a tio n o f S u n d a y a n d “ c o n f i r m e d ” an a p p e a l b y his ch ief o f s t a f f w'ho had u r g e d th e H u n g a r i a n s to ^on- f o rc e s b a t t e r i n g G nue th e fight a g a in s t th e I nited to e x e r t p r e s - 1 bac k axis fo rc e s on th e H u n g a r i a n i N ations, p la in s c o n t in u e d su r e on B u d a p e s t while new S oviet g a in s t h r e a t e n e d im m in e n t e n t r a p ­ m e n t f o r all a x is fo rc e s c a r r y in g on th e b a t t l e o f T r a n s y lv a n ia . * Yanks Crush Five Nazi Counter-attacks German Radio Reports Nazis Leave Greece W ith Allied p lanes and ships into p o u r in g tr o o p s a n d supplies G reece, r e ­ ra d io p o r te d to d a y t h a t Nazi fo rc es had e v a c u a te d the e n t i r e c o u n t r y . t h e G e r m a n U. S. F i r s t A rm y f o r c e s denied to n ig h t tr o o p s all esca p e Nazi Ministers - - (C o n tin u e d fro-m P a g e I ) A t libe rate d. N ax o s lies 110 J ,n l a r g e s t o f in T he C a iro ra d io , h e a r d in Lon- o f T e x a s, don. said t h a t t h e G re ek island of p o r t u n i t y N axos, Islands been miles s o u th e a s t o f A thens. the P ira e u s , th e c o n d u c t of a g r e a t public in i s t i tu tio n such as The U n iv ersity th e re is a b u n d a n t op- and f o r c o n s tru c tiv e th e Cyclades u se fu l public service o f the highest the A eg e an Sea, had ■ o r d e r by m e m b e rs of boards with- th e ir p r o p e r field o f g e n e r a l p o lic y -m aking a n d b ro a d p la n n in g a n d t h a t th e r e likewise is am ple th e p o rt of scope f o r c o n s tru c tiv e a n d e f f e c ­ A th ens, th e N av y a n n o u n c e d th a t tiv e p u blic service on th e p a r t of B ritish w a rsh ip s O rion, A ja x and Black P rin c e, to g e t h e r w ith o th e r those e n t r u s t e d with e x e c u tiv e a n d ’ d e s tro y e r s an d u n i t s of th e G reek a d m in is t r a tiv e duties, w ith o u t any tr o o p s n e c e s sity of conflict. We believe navy w ere th e b e s t s p ir it o f public! a f t e r m in e sw e e p e rs c le a re d mine- fields which d e la y e d th e original in b o th fields ofI la n d in g schedule. T h e L o n d o n radio, m o n ito re d T ex a s sh o u ld w ork in co -o p e ra tio n 5 by CBS, r e p o r t e d t h a t c o n c e n tra - a n d te a m w o r k f o r the w e lf a r e and j those in T h e U n iv e r s it y of la n d in g f r e s h a c tiv ity service, t h a t in g r e a t n e s s of th e U niversity. IV. j u d g m e n t ( C o n tin u e d f r o m P a g e I ) Fullerton n ot th e sa m e a s th a t a n n o u n c e d officially. F i f t h : W e a f f i r m a s o u r con-1 side re d t h a t H o m er P ric e R a in e y h as p ro v e n him self j an able a d m i n i s t r a t o r a s p re sid e n t j of th e U n iv ersity , t h a t he has been 1 loyal to sound e d u c a tio n a l p r in c i­ ideals o f C h ris­ ples a n d th a t tia n i t y a n d d em o crac y , a n d he has sho w n him self in a c t and e x p re ssio n in mind a n d o f s te r l in g c h a r a c t e r , alto- illegally dec la re d g a t h e r m e ri tin g h o n o r a n d respect. B e cause o f w h a t he is and w h at hope T h a t an u n d e t e r m in e d n u m b e r of votes w e re n o t p r o p e r ly r e ­ t u r n e d by th e o ffic e r s in the elec­ tion, b u t w ere void a n d o f no e f f e c t ; a n d t h a t by re a s o n o f su c h ac tio n on the he has done, we e a r n e s tly p a r t o f t h e elec tio n offic ia ls, the tr u e t h e election was r e s u lt o f not an n o u n c e d . t h a t f o r th e w e lf a re o f th e U n i - 1 v e rsity a n d th e S ta te o f Texas,} all th in g s n ec es sary will be done to m a in ta in him in his c a p a c ity as P r e s i d e n t of th e U n iv ersity . V. u n c o u n t e d to be k ee n to th e T h a t H a v in g come t h e r e f o r e u r g e n tl y th e s e conclu-j to sions by c a r e f u l t h o u g h t a n d d i s - 1 cussion, w'e th e G o v e rn o r of T ex a s! r e q u e s t a n d the B o a rd o f R e g e n ts a n d the P r e s i d e n t o f to h e a r a n d c o n s id er well the s t a t e - j m e n ts h e r e in ex p re ssed . th e U n iv e r s it y R e sp ec tfu lly . C h a rle s A. S u m n e r s , p reside nt;} E m il H alm , v ic e -p re sid e n t; f o r the e x e c u tiv e c o m m itte e o f th e A u stin Council Blake Sm ith, p r e s i d e n t ; R ichard S. M ar-! s e c r e t a r y ; f o r th e U n iversity C h u rch e s. o f R eligious W o r k e rs A sso c iation. - L ie u te n a n t C o lo n el T om Ram •ey,, B.S. ’39, who has com p leted se v e n ty m issions as a M a ra u d e r pilot the in E n g la n d a n d holds D istin g u ish ed F lying Cross and A ir Medal w ith f o u r t e e n clusters, xisited his cousin, Mrs. G ranville P ric e, T u e s d a y a n d W e d n e s d a y . He is a w a itin g his n e x t a s s ig n ­ m e n t. f r o m sh e ll-to rn A ac h en , closing r in g a b o u t t h e ste el co m p le te ly t h a t e m b a tt le d WeitWlH b astio n a n d c r u s h in g G e r m a n c o u n t e r - a t t a c k s w hich inj t h r e e d a y s h a v e c o s t th e e n e m y a t le a s t six ty ta n k s. five m ore f r a n ti t h e i n f a n t r y o f Lieu^ A r m o r a n d t e n a n t G e n e ra l C o u r tn e y H H o d g e s ’ co m m an d se ale d th e n a r ro w half-m ile-w ide c o r r id o r le a d ­ la te ing f r o m M onday, while inside A achen bay onct a u d g r e n a d e w ielding dough boys c o n tin u e d t h e i r mopping-u] o p era tio n s, c l e a r in g th e f a n a t i c s Nazi d e f e n d e r s f r o m se veral moi blocks o f building s. f la m in g c i ty ★ As th e F i r s t A r m y tig h te n e d it th e Gerniai on s tra n g le -h o ld ap c o n tro ls s tro n g h o ld which p ro a c h e s to th e in d u s t r ia l Rh in a n d R u h r V alleys, B ritish tro o p toop position in a new driv e th e f r o m s c a r c e ly e i g h t m iles D u tc h - G e r m a n b o rd er. th« A t sa m e element! tim e, C a n a d i a n c a p t u r e d a n i m p o r t a n t to w n dom in a tin g th e escape I s th m u s from th e G e r m a n -h e ld S c h e ld t Estuary Islan d s of W a lc h e r e n a n d Zui< B eveland. f r o n t , s tr a t e g ic On all ac tiv e se c to r s o f the; the Allice lon g W e s te r n of G e n e ra l D w ight D tro o p s E is e n h o w e r ’s S u p re m e C o m m am h a m m e r e d o u t gains e x c e p t io n — f u ­ b u t with o n e nnies th e Met o f so u th w e s t f o r t r e s s city o f t h e Moselle Val ley, L i e u t e n a n t G e n e ra l Georg: S. P a t t o n ’s th ir d a r m y withdrew from th e s u b t e r r a n e a n d e p th s o a t W A L G R E E N D RU G STORE 8th a n d C o n g r e s s said ballots have been held a n d a r e b eing held by said election officials. T h a t said election w a s held, in p art, fo r t h e p u rp o se o f a p p r o v ­ ing a “ n e w ” c o n s titu t io n to g o v ­ e r n the s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t a t th e U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s ; w hen the d o c u m e n t t r u t h in f a c t a n d b ein g voted on w as n o t a “ n e w ” c o n s titu tio n . V I. V II . in T h a t said d o cu m e n t, t r u t h and f a c t, only a m e n d s a n d revises the old c o n s titu t io n a n d is n o t a “ n e w ” c o n s titu t io n . VIII. W H E R E F O R E , based upon the f a c t s a n d fo re g o in g ab ove a n d alle g a tio n s, r e ­ th e c o m p la i n a n t s p e c tf u lly r e q u e s ts an d m oves th e J u d ic ia r y Council to ta k e ju r is d ic ­ the tion o f C h a ir m a n o f th e J u d i c i a r y C o u n ­ cil to ta k e ju r is d ic tio n o f th is c o m ­ p la in t a n d th e to s e t a d a t e J u d ic ia r y C ou ncil th e for a n open h e a r in g b e f o r e in v e s tig a te J u d ic ia r y Council the l i t h , 1944. ele c tio n o f O c to b e r th is c o m p la in t a n d th e C h a ir m a n of to IX. T h a t said c o n s titu tio n a d o p te d O c to b e r l i t h , 1944, be s u sp e n d ed while u n d e r in v e stig a tio n , an d th e p rev io u s c o n s titu t io n g o v e r n u n til a f in a l a d j u d ic a tio n of this c o m ­ p la in t has been m a de. Students to Hear - - ( C o n tin u e d f r o m P a g e 1) Griscom r e p r e s e n t a t i v e , a n d M a rie A nn e S m ith r e p r e s e n t s F o re n sic a . Also t o d a y will be a special s e s ­ sion o f th e G e n e ra l F a c u l t y a t 4 o’clock to “ c o n s id e r r e s o lu t io n s .” The m e e ti n g w as called by a p e t i ­ tion o f a p p r o x im a te ly tw e n t y f a c ­ u lty m e m b e rs. is in d a n g e r o f “ f a il in g T he p r o c la m a t io n by W a lla ce s t a t i n g t h a t r e c e n t d e v e lo p m e n ts had m a d e i t c l e a r t h a t th e U n iv e r ­ to sity th e co n tin u e as a u n iv e rs ity o f f irs t class,” called f o r the s tu d e n ts who have t h e “ g r e a t e s t s ta k e in the U n iv e r s it y ,” to m e e t t o g e t h e r and, u n ite d by a “ co m m o n d esire f o r an even g r e a t e r U n iv e r s ity o f to “ s p e ak as w ith one T e x a s ,” voice” th e people w h e r e to th e s t u d e n t s s ta n d . Pocket Books Ladie s' Billfolds C h a n g e Purses Poker Sets Photograph Folders — Fine Quality Leather tell A s m a sh in g raid on B a likpa p an, J a p a n ’s vital p e t ro le u m c e n t e r in s o u t h e a s t e r B orneo , by f ig h te r - e s c o r te d L ib e r a to r s which u n lo a d ­ ed 135 to n s o f b o m b s on r e f i n ­ L i e u t e n a n t C h a tm a n , b o m b a r ­ e r ie s a n d d e f e n s e in s t a ll a tio n s w as d ie r on a 1 5 th A r m y A i r F o r c e c a r r ie d o u t T h u r s d a y . This m a kes B-17 F ly in g F o r tr e s s , e n t e r e d th e th e six th and h e a v ie st blow level­ a r m e d f o rc e s on F e b r u a r y 6, 1943, ed a g a in s t th e highly p ro d u c tiv e received his w ings in D e c e m b e r o f g asoline r e f i n e r i e s d u r in g th e p ast I th a t sa m e y e a r , a n d b e g a n t o u r o f tw o w eeks. | f o r e ig n d u ty on J u l y 3, 1944. Tex a s Bookstore