T h e Dai T e x a n T h e F i r s t C o l I e g e D a i l y i n t h e S o u t h VOLUME 45 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, J A N U A R Y 18, 1944 Four Pages Today No. 102 B.B.A. Degree Candidates Announced List Includes Forty-Eight Students to receive F orty-eigh t stud en ts are candi­ the degree o f dates bachelor o f business adm inistra­ tion in February, Dean J. A. F itz ­ gerald of the School o f Business A dm inistration has announced. They include the follow in g: Merilee A ron, Elon Elizabeth B arfield, Bill Barnhouse, D orothy K ell Berry, Donald Lyons Brun­ son, A lta Belle Campbell, Mary Louise Carr, Kell Maurice C ottle, L ois. E laine Cowley, Dorothy Ma­ rie D allm eyer, Kell Mae D aniel, Alma Louise D avis, and Frederick D w ight Dickson. 'Roosevelt Faces Problems That Confronted Lincoln9 Sandburg to Tell What A b e Would D o B y R A V E N N A M A T H E W S Carl Sandburg was the man the students wanted, and Carl Sandburg is the man they will hear Thursday night free of charge, at 8:15 o’clock in Hogg Auditorium. “ What Abraham Lincoln Would Do T od ay ’’ will be the subject of the "People's Poet," au thor of the four-volume, Pulitzer Prize-winning Lincoln biography, “The W a r Years.” Sandburg has visited the campus several times before to talk on poetry or folklore. Lincoln’s position in ............— ...................... 1 the Civil W a r presents many ♦ a n a lo g ies to R o o sev elt’s position in ■■ I I I" I Fewer Holidays? O.K.—Maybe W e ll Be G one By X m as, Sa y M e n I World War ll, Sandburg believes D em ocrats and conservative Re­ publicans sniped at Lincoln much as R epublicans and conservative D em ocrats do now. If .General Mac­ A rthur should be the Republican candidate for president, R oosevelt would fa ce the sam e sort o f com ­ petition that Lincoln faced in Gen- J erat M cClellan. War aims o f both ; presidents have been m agnanim ous! and far-reach ing, he thinks. “ C e s t la g u err e!” “ I t s tough, W hile Sandburg has been pro- but . , *t* “ Of course I don’t lik e : R oosevelt, he m ay say in his talk I today would o f f e r ! dynam ic principles I T hese wore typical reactions o f the people that Lincoln IO Million Voles Lost With Bill Mrs. Rainey Sorry It D id n ’t Pass j A lso Frank Lipper Dover, Jam es I Dillard Dyer, Raymond S w ezey j Edmunds, G enevieve Olga E ngel, Marjorie N ell F enner, Emma A u ­ gu sta Fleischhauer, Golda Jean Breckenridge Gellman, ; Graves, Richard L ockett Hays, H enry Pope Hodge Jr., V irgil Lee Humphrey, Mrs. Maxine Roebuck Johnson, Theodore L a w r e n c e j Jones, Helen Leone Larson, and (la u d e t faction s anH b hew ing a desire to “ make t h e ; jnp thjs a people's war. stu d en ts polled at random on the which would unite subject o f the recently announced puU the countrv in one direction, easily have been adm inistered, de- ' cu t d*y** A b o Frances Louise M iller, MaV u n 'M it d T e iT C a r e m e in the 1944 Christmas 'hob- and that R oosevelt should be more clared Mrs* Hom er P. Rainey W illiam M uehlberger, Mary Kath- trenchant and provocative in mak- when she explained the pros and ; ryn Nipper, Jam es A m stater Op- | cons o f the soldier vote to the ' penheimer, D aisy Dean Reed, Ann Whynama Roden, W eldon Gleen Shudde, Sybil E lizabeth Sm all, W illiam W ym an Stephens, H elen V irginia Sum pter, William Minims and Sutton, Grace Thom pson, The very fa c t that S a n d b a g is. Campua 1,,,aEue o f WoHien V oters f)n n . . ... [king on i„ n _„i i .L in co ln Would Do Today” is an ISum lal' afternoon at lh c D nsk,U indication o f a Lincoln m yth dc. Hotel. A nd it w ould have made su bject “ W hat! „ the gubject the or “ i f ' T i I, la A « + K l , * *‘ T d a n , „ „ ^ ' . . a The Green-Lucas Bill c o u l d W illiam F alvey Matthew’s. veloping all o ver the nation but I possible som e ten to tw elve mil- w eakest, o f course, in the South. I President R oosevelt expressed the > pie’s represen tatives. the cou n try’s a t-' uniqueness o f titude toward him when he, t o o ,! , . „ * * i made a speech at G ettysburg leading up cum stances , Mrs. Rainey outlined the cir- Helen W alters. B illie W hiteacre , Green-Lucas B ill and said that it Louise W oodcock, i would have put the ballot into the Elaine Zwernem an. to the Jr-> John W ildenthal Jr., H elen and Doris lion m ore ballots cast for the peo- j Doughlas Robert Vain A lso H elen Jane Voelcker. Mary b est of th in gs,’* m ost o f the stu­ den ts expressed dism ay, hut alm ost i ta!kijl? invariably added a “but ju alification to their statem ents q ualification to th e ,r statem ents. ‘I don’t like it, but if it’s really n ecessary I gu ess I can hardly o b je ct.’* The first one approached, a lik ely-lookin g p iece of draft-bait, said, “ It looks like th e y ’re really > . pouring i t s okay by] m e •*. , it on, but . . a a ll sr , , . . . . . . . . AU oi tne a a v y Boy* consulted a gtate»m an o f one gen eration the service, with help w hen and Sheen om itted, ho is w ere agreeable, albeit unhappy w ou id 8urmoUnt the crisis o f an-! w here to cast it, There would be ' see Dean F itzgerald. .b o u t the w hole bu«me..» One » ; othpr o f v -1 2 from ( ahform a, said that it , he e non-pert.san war ballot c o m m i e - ---------------------------------------------------- u i I ^ se ldom helps to w onder how’ hands o f every man and woman in l f ®oy candidate's nam e has requested to f „ , h(, „ n a .. + * * j i • J * C taM m * A nother1 T x R O ih e co n flict which lo t, o n " , '.p e cia l v o tin g d /y Z t ' k j m a A W V I C f t , i r f f S t V d S A S concern him much. aa he too war leavin g b e f o r e C hristm as, He is a senior and plans to graduate in June. Several girls, all from A ustin, decided that th ey w eren ’t particu­ larly d istressed, as th e y g e t to go , home every night, anyw ay. One f took excep tion, however explain- ing that she “g ets tired* of goin g to school the v ear round ” One girl with a very rea listic' - vr help.” forced r ? h ” pT idcn/ y up h^ . thh,; iom m an d ,n g ,,fficer “ evcr 10 turn t0 hlm A>r; « « h f.f'h tm g unit. * P rofessor R. H. Gabriel, in his The bill was d efea ted by an “ The Course o f Am erican Demo- “unholy a llia n ce” betw een north- cratic T hought,” says th at “the em and southern senators and im plication alw ays is that, if L in -I thrown back into the laps o f the coln so believed, closed. , The armed services are rapidly thinning o u t the num ber o f stu- is sta tes through the* Eastland-M c- dents enrolled in law schools. At the present rate, “law stu d en t” to i C lellan-M cK ellar clinch argum ents as d iffe r e n t as which would give the p oliticians j could w ell be an obsolete term in the m atter His w ords are used su bstitute bill, s e n a to rs .. . . , . . i . , i , , l. ■ . i those o f C alvin Coolidge and E a r l; in the fo rty -eig h t sta tes a chance J another tw o years. '' Brow der.” to determ ine The &rand rituaI o f the L i n c o l n I had been cast w hether the cou n t; B efore the w ar nearly tw en ty- in line, Mrs. R ainey J fiv e thousand stud en ts w ere en 1 A r m e Q 3 e r v i t e i Thin Law Schools Sandburg, how ever, in his m any I outm oded th at outlook prophesied lo ts of ^-Vth, says Mr. Gabriel, occurs on stud en ts w ould probably extend | feb ru a ry 12; its sanctuaries are the holidays o f their own accord. the birthplace in K entucky, the T he t r u t h o f th is s t a t e m e n t w a s ; £ rave in Illinois, and especially the brought ou t in a recent article im m e m o ria l in W ashington. Lincoln the Texan on absences, in which a \ has reached this position because, geo lo g y p rofessor reported that to the A m erican people, he “ per- m ore than 40 per cen t o f his s t u - I so n ifies the fa ith upon which the !- d en ts failed to report for c ia s* : Republic r e sts.” the day b efore the holidays started la st year and that attendance a fter volum es on Lincoln, gives the im the holidays continued to be poor. pression o f not suppressing any­ thing. For in stance, he show s Lin­ in his role as shrev/d poli­ coln tician, although he em phasizes his position as a w esterner and man o f the people. Prof s Son, 18, Has Articles Published Two articles on the C onfeder­ A lthough accurate and based on very exten sive reading and study, “ The W ar Y ears” could have been w ritten only by a poet. acy w ritten by Frank E. V andiver, I Sandburg influenced is stron gly 18. son o f P rofessor H. S. V a n -i by W hitman, and passages o f his diver, have been published re- biography show much the sam e at- cen tly in T exas and Louisiana h is torical journals. “It explained. in nearly im possible to do i rolled in law schools, ac cording to fig u res released by the Am erican a n y t h in g w ith th e soldier ballot j B a r A ssociation. By Septem ber, to in clared, and she expressed hope I 7 ,887, and Septem ber, 1943, found th a t a f t e r th e w ar th e c o u n t r y will j 4,803 stu d e n ts enrolled in the Re­ c o n c e n t r a te m ore on n a tio n a l u n i - 1 tio n ’s law schools. this f o r m , ” Mrs. R a ine y de- 1942, to ta l h ad dro p p ed the , , i athel Elan on recalling tho ; days of th e Civil War and the s t a t e s rig h ts ,” the g r o u n d on which Re­ publicans r e je c te d th e bill. slogan of M rs. R ainey heartily advised m em bers o f the league to w rite to their congressm en at on ce sta t­ in g th at th ey w ould like to see the G reen-Lucas Bill passed “ w ith­ ou t and w ithout am endm ent.” su bstitution --------- The follow in g list shows the en ­ rollm ent in a se lec t group of rep­ resentative schools. U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s U niversity o f A rkansas__ U niversity o f C aliforn ia__ Stanford U n iv ersity........... Y ale University.*. ...... ........ N orthw estern University™ U niversity o f C hicago___ U niversity o f Illin o is____ “ This is a peop le’s war, and ; Indiana U n iversity ___ m any rules and regulations will j S ta te U niversity o f Iowa. have to be se t aside,” s ta te d Mrs. I T u la n e University.._______ Rainey. titu d e, som etim es much the same T h e W e a t h e r form , that W hitm an had in “ When Lilacs Last the Door-Yard B loom ed.” peratures. in F air today with m oderate tem ­ Toonerville Trolley of A ir Hauls Pigs, Ball Teams Harvard U n iv ersity---------------- U niversity o f M ichigan---------- U niversity o f M innesota--------- Cornell U n iversity---------- ------- Columbia U n iversity__________ N ew York University.™,--------- U niversity o f N orth C arolina— Duke U n iversity---------------------- U niversity o f North D akota___ Ohio State U n iv ersity ________ U niversity o f O k la h o m a ^ U niversity o f P en nsylvania___ ... U niversity o f South Dakota Southern M ethodist U niversity _ U niversity o f V irginia W ashington & Lee U niversity .. U niversity o f W iscon sin M exico’s “T oonerville T rolley o f J eerie a to mail pouches, from school the A ir” com es out for an airing J children to baseball team s, from in this the Southw est Review funeral processions to fiesta per­ sonnel. Some o f . th e b est-paying Architects Elect month as Mrs. E lithe H am ilton little-realized Beal points up a routes are in Chiapas, which he field o f aviation jun gle the had to abandon until la tely be­ lands o f southern Mexico. cause o f N azi sa b o ta g e.” in Rolfe an d Mrs. Scott The article O h c M e S i e is a biographical sketch o f the pioneering spirit o f aviation and o f one p ioneer— P eck W oodside, a Tennessean gone M exico. Mrs. B eal, actin g director o f Radio H ouse, was taken for j ties a ren ’t the best, but the pilots truck aerial rides on P eck’s planes when are. To Peck th e y ’re aerial 7 :3 0 — W ICA m e e t i n g , Texas she made her sw ing through M e x -1 drivers, but to others th e y ’re the The planes can m ake a tran s­ port trip in eigh teen m inutes that was taking fiv e or six days by mule pack— and air is cheaper. E quipm ent isn ’t fa n cy , and fa cili- I T U E S D A Y A f t e r n o o n 1-5— Spar recruitin g in the Texas U nion. Union. 8— Common S en se. Mac Strauss w ill speak on “ W hat A bout the Soldier V o te? ” P hysics Building 201. 8— E x-S ervicem en ’s A ssociation, T exas U nion. 8— Theodore A pstein w ill address M exican Literary S oeiay, Texas U nion 309. 8— Mac Strauss o f the A ustin Chapter o f the T exas C om m ittee the Poll Tax will to Abolish speak to Common Sense, P h ys­ ics B uilding 201. to ico and C entral America years ago. Peck reckons, “ I was in my born w ith transportation blood. My granddady used to give me a lickin’ w’hen I was a kid for try in ’ to hitch up his roosters and drive them .” a few best o f stunt flie rs— they have to be those land on field s. One field on a cattle and cacao plantation in the m ountains o f Chiapas is rather sm all— only 275 yards o f it. som e o f As Mrs. Beal says, “Peck W ood­ side m ay n ever be a rich man— P eck ’s transportation spirit, his not in m oney. But h e’s caused sev­ m echanical ab ility, and his “air eral hundred thousand people to m ind” has built up an air trams port service for the out-of-the-w ay j look up— from roofs, places and people in the sta tes of ! from corn patches, from dugout Chiapas and Tabasco. “ H is air | can oes— to service every- includes hauling thing from £ i g s to bulls, from g r p - thunderbird crossing their S ee TROLLEY, P a g e $ thatched W . T. R olfe, professor o f archi­ tectu re at the U niversity, is the new ly-elected president o f the A us­ tin group o f the Texas S o ciety Architects. Mrs. Myra Scott, architecture graduate in 1941, w as elected secretary-treasurer. “ The newr o ffic er s are interested in doing all they can to im prove conditions in practice in order to give a more com p eten t architec­ tural service to the public,” said Mr. Rolfe. “ P ost-w ar building w ill be a very im portant fa cto r in peace em ­ ploym ent, and every e ffo r t should be made now tech ­ to niques and know ledge o f new m a­ terials and research fin d in g s for the day, not too fa r aw ay, when largest building pro­ im prove look up at the silver I one of the jungle ; gram s in history w ill g e t under w a*. T hree other articles d ealing w ith the C onfederate food situ a ­ tion , the C onfederate navy, and th e C onfed erate arm ory a t Ma­ con, Ga., have been accepted fo r publication in quarterlies o f Geor­ gia, V irginia, and North Carolina. V andiver is now w riting the life o f a C onfederate ch ief o f ord­ nance, G eneral Josiah G orges, whom he considers a g reat m ili­ tary gen iu s n eglected by past his­ torians. hl/Uat Qoei We ll Do the Fighting if You’ll Back Us With War Bonds’ •MfTVtAfG Servicemen at Rally Urge Homefront Help Ha lf a gym full of Austin citizens had brought home to them last night just what w a r is really like, at the W a r Bond Rally sponsored by the Austin Junior Chamber of Commerce which was held in Gregory Gym, The rally got off to a late start, because of last minute changes in the program, but the people who had been waiting, some of them since 7 o’clock, got a real lesson from the boys who have been in the thick of the fight, and have been lucky enough to come back. Introduced by Harfield Weedin, general m a nag er of KTBC, E. P. Cravens, chairman of-#1 the F ourth W ar Loan Drive fo rt Travis C ounty told the crowd o f j A u stin ’s $6,965,000 quota, and in- U. S. Fighter tr o d u c e d his a s s is ta n t chairm en, F r a n k VV. W oolsey, Louis N ovy, a n d Bob Lyles, “ T h e T hird W a r L oan q u o ta was m e t in the f ir s t t w e n t y - f o u r h o u r s ,” Mr. C ravens -aid, “ so th e big sh o ts a t W a sh in g ­ to n said t h a t if we could m e e t a sm a lle r tw e n t y - f o u r h o u rs, we could su rely go beyond t h a t in one m o n th . ” This q u o ta is t h e in largest ever attem pted T ra v is C ounty. q u o ta in s Killer But He W orries About Hom e The A m erican figh tin g m an is an intensely religious soldier w ho o f te n w orries a b o u t his loved on es, b u t he is also a cold, re le n tless film, A ctu a l “ f r o n t line " motion p ic -| lu r e s of th e T a r a w a invasion, a n d a n o t h e r “ Baptism U n d e r I F ire ,’’ which h elped A u stin ’s cit- kll!er who H nds d iffic u lty in re- irons to u n d e r s ta n d the w orkings ad justing h im self to the hum -drum of a s o ld ier’s mind ju st before he; 0f everyday civilian life . go* - into action, took up a m ajor po rtio n of the program , along with th e con cert by the Bergstrom Field A rm y A ir F o rc e Band. This was th e opinion exp ressed a t the A ustin Forum o f Public Opinion Monday n igh t by M ajor E d w a rd H. N igro, a form er trans­ port pilot in North A frica and now assistan t operations o ffic e r at Bergstrom F ield. P a p p y C heshire, nationally k now n radio com edian who cam e to A u s tin especially f o r th e rally, in tro d u c e d f o u r N avy o ffic er s and •dx m en f r o m th e A rm y , tw o o f them o ffic er s. A ll o f these m en had seen a c tiv e service, and they told of th e ir experiences. from in “ I, m yself, had d iffic u lty find in g my place in life w hen I returned duty,** Major Niff co said. “ W e saw so much k illing over there th at w a had no fo r h u m a n life o v e r h e re .” r e s p e c t or com bat r e g a r d le a f clusters w hile The Arm y A ir Forces pilot, w ho w as awarded the A ir Medal w ith three oak in N orth A frica, said, how ever, th at he had devoted far m ore tim e to thinking o f religion and that tho men in his squadron had done lik e­ wise. “ Everyw here there is a great de­ sire to com e home— to return to the best country on earth ,” he said. “ Som e soldiers even su b ject them selves to enem y fire in hopes that they w ill be w ounded and sent hom e.” Major N igro w as high in hi* j praise o f th e British. Co-operation betw een A m erican and E nglish fo rces m ade possible the d efea t o f the A xis in N orth A frica. N a v y men introduced w ere: Lieutenant Comm ander I r a Sm alling, who w as on Pelio Is­ land, n e a r Pearl Harbor, when the Japanese attacked. Lieutenant R. E. Gibson, who See BOND RALLY, Page 3 She Was Well Fed As Jap Prisoner TO M A K E THIS D R E A M C O M E TRUE, invest your money In W ar Bonds and Stam ps. Figntin’ Texas Exes Penland Recommended For Silver Star L ieutenant (j.g .) G eorge Har­ vey Penland Jr., who w as killed May 4, 1943, at the gun station of a su b m a rin e involved in a s u r ­ fac e b a ttle , has been recom m ended fo r the Silver Star. L ieu tenan t Penland h a s been a w a rd e d posth u m o u sly the Navy and M arine Corps Medal and the Purple Heart. His subm arine crew has been cited f o r its re c o rd o f ten hits on en e m y ships with t e n shots, H e received his law degree at the U niversity and w as a m em ­ ber o f a Dallas f ir m b e f o r e en­ te rin g th e Navy in the fall o f 1940. ★ H ig h School, r e p o r te d to S tr o t h e r f ro m his p r im a ry t r a i n in g a t S ikes­ ton, Mo. S t r o t h e r Field is nam ed fo r C a p ta in D onald S tr o t h e r , pilot w ith th e N in e t e e n th B o m b ard m en t G roup , w ho w as killed in Ja v a . ♦ tw o-week ceived in ju rie s, bu t. with the ex-J N one of the N a v y men, now s t a ­ tioned a t C orpus Christi, had re- F l i g h t O f f i c e r J o h n G e o r g e V a n N e t t * , 1937-4 I, is v is itin g his horn A u stin w hile on a in A ustin while on a f u rlo u g h . V a n N a t t a h as been in ( o p t i o n o f one. all of the A rm y m< n b ore some kind o f injury. T h e th e S o u th w e s t P a c ific f o r eight A rm y m e n a r e s ta tio n e d at Mc- m onths, fly in g a C-47. His job was ( losky H ospital in T em ple, w here to fly supplies into the islands a n d they a r e r e c u p e r a ti n g fro m th e ir bring ou t the w ounded Yanks. injuries. F ive e x - stu d e n ts o f the U ni-' those A m o n g versity recen tly reported to Lub- r e c e n tly g rad u - bock A rm y Air Field fo r their acl- a te d a n d receiv ing their commis- j vanced pilot training. They are sions a n d silver w ings in th e A rm y j A v iation C adets B o y c e V. M a t k i n , A ir F o rc e s a r e J a m e * E . Su l l i v a n P itts b u r g , 1939 13; J a c k i e F. Bird- song, Dallas, 1942; W i l l i a m A. an d J a m e i M. Ink*. L ieu tenan t Sullivan, who at-I Tracy, F o rt W’orth, 1939-42; Carl tended the U n iversity in 1936-38, G. B e a r d J r . , A ustin, 1941-43; and was graduated from Pampa A r m y : C l a u d i u s B. H o d g e s Jr., Buda, A ir Field. L ieu ten an t Inks, 1941- 1941-43, 42, w as graduated from the ad- vanced navigation school a t Sel-j man F ield, La. He attended Austin High School, N ew M exico M ilitary In stitu te, and The U n iversity of Texas and worked with the base en gin eers a t Del Valle A ir Base be­ f o re he e n te r e d th e service. ( j . g . ) P a u l E u b a n k killed in a piano crash in the South P acific. lie w as a form er m em ber o f the T exas H ouse of R epresentatives and p ilot of a N avy torpedo plane. L i e u t e n a n t , s t u d e n t J e s s e O. * Y a r y a n , He received his b a c h e lo r o f arts; degree from Texas Tech and at-1 tended The U niversity o f Texas; 1 9 3 9 - 4 0 , now a P - 3 8 pilot stationed I L»w School from 1 9 1 1 -4 2 ,’He had I som ew here in England has been been at sea since May se r v in g !,, prom oted to captain, according to aboard an aircra ft carrier a n d , ^ ® ^ word received by his w ife, form er- was recently awarded th e D istin -1 ; . e ^ ly Miss Carolyn Berry, student in g u sh e d H y in g Cross and the Air 1940-42. Medal. in j A graduate o f Austin High, Cap-i L ieu tenan t Eubank entered the tain Va rya n was one o f the last service in February, 1942. and re­ group o f fly in g sergeants to re- ceived his N avy w ings at Corpus Christi rn N ove mbe r of t h a t year. ceive w ings at K elly Field. G o v e r n o r Coke S te v e n so n sent eon- W a l l a c e L u n d g r e n , who w as a i th e U n iv ersity student in the 1940-41 , dolence session, is now an aviation cadet; news o f P au l’s contribution o f his and receivin g bis basic a t S t r o t h e r A rm y A ir Field, Kans. I We here, w’ho had follow ed his! Lundgren, a graduate o f Elgin ' career w ith pride, are stu n n e d .’ fo llow ing m e ssage ol to his parents # 1 Ex Is 'Soldier A t Bryan A ir of Week* Field 40 15 53 42 55 53 48 36 23 25 41 IGI 71 64 33 118 244 12 25 7 30 25 50 o 41 41 5 49 Private fir st class Louis B. Prew ­ itt, has been selected by Panel, Bryan Army Field o ffic ia l new s­ paper, as “ Enlisted Man o f the W eek” at the field. P rivate P rew itt, now a member o f is the 420th A .A .F. Band, from T aylor, where he attended the public schools, takin g an ac­ tive part in athletics. He studied business adm inistra­ tion and was a member o f Chi Phi fra tern ity wrhile at the U ni­ versity. Miss Jo se p h in e Ward o f A ustin, w ho received her bachelor of arts degree here in 1917, r e tu r n e d to this cou n try aboard th e ex change lint r G ripsholm a fte r being held p ris o n e r by th e J a p a n e s e . A lthough air power is o f g re a t im portance, it alone can n ot bring about the d ow n fall o f G erm any, M ajor N igro believes. U sin g th e M editerranean isle o f Malta as an j exam ple o f a land holding o u t A m issionary again st w ave a fte r w ave o f en em y ' , ^ g e n e * S allee of Waco* ' Jttack5’ the B ergstrom F ield o f- that actu al m ea- sion by th e en em y w-ould be a ne­ cessity. * ng classes in , boj,s ! 1 flcer declared high school a n d g ir ls ’ school K aiteng, H o nan p rovince of < nina, , p a r a t r o o p e r s can play an Ira- j w hen th e g a te k e e p e r ran in say- J p0rtan t role in op en in g a second in China w hen in ‘ . that ing r o und e d the compoui o They dn piloted planes f ro m which the sky- the J a p a n e s e had sur- fron^ M ajor N igro said. He once | the only t h in g th e y could, prayed. | f i g h t e r s iuniDed The tw o wom en have heard f b u t l pma they w ere "Tragic many aton es sh ou t Japanese tor- lure of American m issionaries in never in their m ission com pound to prevent their escape to F ree China. The : Japanese needed prisoners to e x ­ change for their ow n countrym en j held in th is country. interned The w omen had more food and j th ey could use. j provisions than T h e i r Chinese frien d s kept them w'ell supplied, and their own tw o ! cows provided milk and butter. I Their C hinese pastor kept them j inform ed o f church and village : news. T hey w ere seldom bothered by j their captors. Jap an ese officers I would occasionally appear on the p retext o f h en tin g fo r radio send­ in g sets and carefu lly scrutinize everyth in g on the prem ises. trouble «They 0f ten have in ian(jing f but w hen they are firm ly established on the ground, th ey ca n perform d e a d ly a n d im p oitan t work,** he stated . Is Italy War A Sideshow! The Italian cam paign m a y no longe r be th e big show, b u t m a y be on ly a sideshow to occupy th o G erm a n s while we p r e p a re fo r a second f r o n t , Dr. H. J. Leon said M onday n ig h t a t a m e e ti n g o f tho Classical Club. W h e n th e Y n t u r n o R iv e r be* cam e sw ollen in early O ctober, our troops foun d the goin g tough indeed, Dr. Leon said. Our heav» iest figh tin g, how ever, h as b een in the hills overlo o k in g th e L ir a River. T h e re w e have m a d e little progress, due la rgely to the w eath- The annual M ile-of-D im es cam- er anfj ^ d efen sive strategy o£ M ile -o f-D im e s Drive W ill Begin Friday tr a in in g ; life to o u r n ation has rea ched me. j h a rm e d . They w ere ★ F i r s t L i e u t e n a n t W i l l i a m E. W e s t f a l l , 1940, bomber pilot w’ho has served in fifty com bat m is­ sions over the M editerranean area, is now a t Miami Beach, Fla. in E n g l a n d The arrival “som ew here in E n g­ lan d ” o f F i r s t L i e u t e n a n t G e o r g * W e s l e y H u n t J r . o f A ngleton w as announced recen tly by the com ­ m anding gen eral o f the Eighth T r a v i s E a r l Ray, pharm acist’s j F igh ter Command. The two-day drive w ill be o ffi- m ate fir st class, who attend ed the in, N a v a l A v i a t i o n C a d e t Ma r v e l d a lly opened by G overnor Coke U niversity in 1938-40, has just re-j 1938-41, is now a pilot in a fight* D. Al l e n , 1943. son o f Mr. and S teven son and M ayor Tom M iller turned cifie area. He has been stationed Mrs. R, L. A llen, 3103 San Ga- j by a radio broadcast at l l o’clock cr squadron and is preparing it in com bat against the Ge/ in New Caledonia m on th s. j paign, a drive for funds by t h e ; national foundation for in fan tile; paralysis, w ill be on bt day and H u n t No w Saturday, January 28-29. The Aus- I tin Junior Chamber o f Commerce w ill handle the solicitation, and a booth w ill be set up at Seventh and Congress. thirteen briel, ha* been transferred to Pen- January 28 D .m es booth. from the Southw est Pa L ieu tenan t Hunt, the M ile-o f-1 fly P V I. PREWITT j aacoia, F la. Germans, student | mans. from fo r ♦ P A G E T W O Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 J / e t e A t e H e c i a n i m T l “ 6 ' “ ™ * SI,, J3aila te n qj^ u NoUlxi “ I would like to get some alligator shoes.” “ W h a t s i z e shoes does y o u r . _______ ____ a l l i g a t o r w e a r ? ” ★ T IO N S w ill on ly be p rin ted B L U E B O N N E T B E L L E N O M IN A - in th e in T exan w hen th e blank to th e S t u d e n t P u b lic a tio n s B u s in e ss O ffic e . J o u r n a lism B u ild in g 108 . so r e q u e sts. th e o ff ic e r tu rn in g D A V E W IL L IA M S. C a c tu s E d ito r. Old Maid: “I hate to think of The Brute: “ Why, what hap­ my youth.” pened?” Old Maid: “Nothing.” TUESDAY, J A N U A R Y 18, 1944 A man met a friend on the street, all bandaged up and walking on crutches. “ What the friend. happened?” asked “Well, I had a date with the girl friend. We were dancing when her father came in and . . Well, he’s kind of hard of hear­ ing and couldn’t hear the music.” 'VTV - T ile D a lly T axan , a tu d e n t new apn 11 _ in A uatin la per o f T h e U n ie a r a ity o f T ax**, publieheH ex a ry m o rn in g ex ce p t M o n d a ys and S a tu r d a y s, S e p ­ tw ic e w eek ly tem b er du rin g th e eu m m er s e s s io n under the title o f T h# S u m m er T ex a n by T ex as S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s, to J u n e , and Inc. N e w s co n tr ib u tio n * m ay be mad* by te le p h o n e (2 - 2 4 7 > ) or a t th e ed i­ torial o ff ic e s in J o u r n a lism B uild ing tot. 1 0 2 . and 109. C o m p la in ts abou t In d e liv e r y th e b u s in e s s o ffic e . J o u r n a lism Build* in s 108 sh o u ld be m ad e s e r v ic e ( 2 - 2 4 7 3 ) . A d v e r tis in g m a n a g er la A) N ic h ­ th# in o la s, w h o se h e a d q u a r te rs ara b u sin e s s o ffic e . T he D aily T ex a n is en te r ed aa s e c ­ th e p o s t o ffic e ond a t A u s tin . T e x a s , by A e t o f C o n g r e ss. M arch 3. 1 8 79 . c la s s m ail a t M e m tx t f t s s o c i d e d C ol!p6»n!e P r e y S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E S : B f C a r rie r : N o v e m b e r to M arch I. S I .8 5 : N o v e m b e r I to J u ly I, 12 60. to M arch I. to J u ly I. $ 3 .80 By M ail: N o v e m b e r I 1 2 .0 0 : N o v e m b e r I I th e place o f d e liv e r y M o n th ly r a te . 60 c en t* . T h e T ex a n w ill be d e liv e r ed In A u s­ is tin p rovided from N in e ­ w ith in te e n th to T w e n ty -a e v e n th S tr e e t# , in ­ c lu s iv e , so u th to o o r th . and from Rio G rande S tr e e t on th e w e st and San la c in to B o u lev a rd on th e ca rrier th e e a s t. lim its , E ditor A a so c ia te E d ito r ___ M A R IF R A N C E S ...........JA C K M A G U IR E W IL SO N A s s is ta n t to th e E d itor . A. R. H ow ard R a v e n n a E d i t o r i a l A s s i s t a n t s M a th e w s. M arjorie W a lb tr g . M an - f ra n e es W ilso n ......... S o c ie ty E ditor ______ H elen e W ilke S o c ie ty A ss o c ia te M arion Bridsrea A m u s e m e n t # E d itor ______ E r n e s t i n e D a v is . D u ck y D avis P au l T racy. A m u se m e n ts A ss o c ia te S p o rts C o -E d ito r s G eorge Raborn S p o rts A ss o c ia te Intramural E d ito r B u s in e ss E ditor P a n -A m eri an E d ito r _ _ ™ _ _ A rn u ifo F a t T a ylo r J o y c e B ell J a c k G a lla g h er S. M a rtin e t Radi o E ditor ___ — E a r l a v n e Black E x ch a n g e E d itor M a rg a r e t W estb rook C hurch E ditor A ss o c ia te C hurch E d ito r T elegrap h E d itor J e a n e tte Heard ~ P a t F ow ler .Joyce Cole ... N ight E d itor Assistant Night C A R L F R E U N D Alene E d ito r Walker Night Reporter? A. R. Howard, Ravenna Mathews, Bill Johnson Paul Tracy J a c k U allcgher. Night Sport Editor A ssistan t? Buck B radley N ig h t S ociety E d ito r Jo y c e Bell Night Amusements Editor Ernes­ Thelma Freidin. tine Davis Assistants Frances Smith Reiney Night Telegraph Editor Virginia Radio Editor. Earlayne Black C o f f e e , ' 22, H e a d s D a l l a s B a r recently: Roy f , Coffee, LI B. ’22, elected 1944 president of the Dallas Bar Association, said in his acceptance “ Independent speech thinking lawyers of the nation must furnish the leadership and point the.way for the return of our government to the constitu­ tional principles upon which it was founded.” Mr. Coffee worked his way through the School of Law by carrying a newspaper route and w a i t i n g on t ab l es . T H E DAI L Y T E X A N CLASSIFIED ADS Phone 2-2473 for Ad Taker ss. V V-#' * '■ \ HS*®*#3! Imp 2 • ' '■■’'VS?’ E %'«»' ; v‘- ’ E . - '■ . . V ■> • -v. : 8— Lost and Found 34-A— For Sale, General CLASSIFIED INDEX A .nB auac«B ieots 1— A u to s for bale 2— A u to m o tiv e T rad es 5— W anted A u to m o b iles 4— S ervice S ta tio n s ti — Bur Linea 6 — D in in g and D a n cin g 7— L o d g e and F r a te r n ity N o tic e s 8— L o st and Found 9— P r o fe s sio n a l IO — P e r so n a ls 10—A — Sc ho ol* and C oll e ge s B u s i n e s s S a r v i c s s 1 1 —-Barber Sh o p s 12— B e a u t y Se r vic e 13— C le a n e r s -H a tter s. T a ilo rs 14— L au n d ries 15— E le c tr ic a l S arviee I 6— " F ix l f 17— F u rn itu re R ep airin g IS — L o ck sm ith # I .(— M oving. H a u lin g and S to r s g s 20— P r in tin g . Offica E q u ip m e n t 2 1 — S ew in g 2 2 — S h o e R epairing 28—C a f as E m p l o y m s n t 2 4 — H elp W anted M s!# 2 5 — S a le s m e n W ant ed 26— He lp Want ed F e m a l e 2 7 — Male Work W an ted 28— F em a le Work W a n ted E d u c a tio n a l 29— I n s t r u c t io n 30— M u sic , D a n c in g , D r a m a t i c s SI — S p eech 32— C o ach in g 33* A — Feta 14- A — G eneral For Sale R e n ta ls ♦ 6 — R oom s F a m i s h e d t 6 — R oom s U n f u r n is h e d 4 7 — R oom and Board 48*— F u rn is h ed A p ts. 48-A — U n fu rn is h ed A p ar tm e n ts M erch a n d ise 3 3 — B icycle# and M otorcycle# 34— F ood and Food P ro d u cts 85 — F u rn itu re and H o u seh o ld Goods 3 6 — M usical and R adios 37 — VV e tc h e s. J e w elr y Repair 38— M isc e lla n e o u s For S a le 4 9— G arage A p a r tm e n ts 5 0 — G arage R oom s 5 1 — R oom s (or B oys 5 2 — Room # for G irls 3 9 — "Sw ap" 40 — W anted M er c hand is e 4 0 —A — L iv e sto c k S u p p lies F in a n c ia l 4 1 — A u to L oans 42 — B ank L oans 43— B u s in e ss O p p o rtu n ities 44— B u sin resee W anted 3— W a n t e d A u to m o b ile s L O S T : R row n ch a n g e p u rse. R E W A R D . R e tu r n to D o r o th y J a n e A llen . P h o n e 4 2 1 7 . th r e e -q u a r te r E X C H A N G E D by m is ta k e : N atu ral tan, rain coat. N am e le n g th sta m p e d on collar. L o st in T ex a s U nion 401 S u n d a y a fter n o o n . R etu rn to J .B . 1 08 . L iberal R E W A R D . L O S T : S m a ll brow n ju s t b efo re h olid ays. C o n ta in s lo s t fo u n ­ ta in pen. w a lle t, w a tc h , and B la n k e t T a x. R E W A R D . P h on e 2 -2 4 7 3 . le a th e r p u rse L O S T ; In G regory G ym . O m e n C u r v e t W a tch . G en erou s rew ard. S e n tim e n ta l ; a# w e ll as m a teria l v a lu e . B ill W illia m ­ so n . P h o n e 8 -9 1 1 7 . L O ST : P in k -c o ld G ru en w a tc h in T ex a s U n io n or Chuck W agon . P le a se retu r n to E v e ly n B re w ste r, 2 -9 3 3 2 . te a c h e r. 5 1 7 9 . L O S T : B row n P arker V a c u m a tie Pen a nd P e n c il S e t. L ost n orth o f C h e m is­ tr y B ld g ., b e tw e e n th e v o lle y b a ll c o u r ts and th e b u ild in g . C all 6 5 5 8 . ta in s L O S T : B row n w a lle t on m tn p u s. C on ­ fou n d , ca ll Given J. B igler, 2 0 0 6 0 L ittle C am pu s Dorm R E W A R D . id e n tific a tio n cards If Business Colleges BUSINESS COLLEGES ,AUST<* - HOUSTON SAN ANTONIO - r j w o r t h - HARLINGEN 23— Cafes 2 0 0 2 G U A D A L U P E 32— Coaching M A TH COACHING— R. M. R andle, 2 3 0 9 S a n A n ton io . P h o n e 8 -1 1 5 8 . Seed & Garden Products W A N TED *. C on v e r tib le C oupe < a1! T u e s- : d a * . T h u r s d a y o r S a t u r d a y b e f o r e I I o' cl ock. IMH) 6 - 9 2 8 2 . 8— Lost and Found ( LOST : B illfo ld in T ex a s T h e a te r im p o rta n t cam p u s. C on ta in s id en tify- c a tio n paper* Keep m on ey a* rew ard. Dial 9701 or m ail 2 50 V S a n J a c in to .; •lane G illisp ie. or j L O ST : I black S h a e ffe r pen w>th w ide gold rim on th e to p . R eturn to Edna C olson. Ph. 8 -8 3 8 1 . L i g h t e i — p r o b a b l y ! L O ST : G<*ld E ven * Pocket C ig a r ette l os t n i g h t of V a r ­ s ity C arn iv al. R E W A R D . P h o n e J o h n n y M orris, 2 -2 9 4 0 . j L O ST : M exican silv e r b r a c elet In V ar­ s ity T h e a te r T h u r sd a y . Ph. Mrs. C un- : n in g h a m a t 8 -6 6 0 1 or 8 -3 8 3 2 a fte r 5 I p. m. P o u l t r y R e u te r s F resh T e s te d Feed from N ew O rlea n s. F e r tilis e r s , O nion P la n ts , S p r a tts Do r and Cat F o o d s. D ittlin - f e r ' a F o r W i n t e r • 'old*1 D is in fe c t Y our P o u ltr y D r in k ­ i n g W a t e r w i t h A V S. P o u l t r y T a b ­ D e w o r m Y ou r P o u ltr y w i t h l e t - t h e A.V S, T o b a cco P ow d er M ixed to F e e d . A. V. S. I n s e c t i c i d e s Kill* A n t s and R o a c h e s. Sp ray era, G arden T oole Fe e d s . a t — 1413 Lavaca TH E AUSTIN AG RI CU LT UR AL A N D VE TE RI NA RY SUP PLY H OUSE B E A U T IF U L lo n g black v e lv e t e v e n in g c o a t w ith w h ite Lapin fu r co lla r. S ire P h on e r ea so n a b le, C all a fte r 6. 1 4 ; 8 -8 3 0 5 . D R A W IN G S E T and odd d r a w in g in s tr u ­ m e n t!. S e e M iss S te b r . R oom 814. B io lo g y B ldg. E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IS T a t te le p h o n e 2 -9 4 4 4 . 45— Rooms Furnished FOR R E N T i N ic ely fu rn ish ed bedroom w ith p r iv a te bath. P refer s tu d e n t or T elep h on e 8 0 6 W e st 32 n d LA RG E S O U T H W E S T ROOM. P r iv a te bath, p r iv a te e n tr a n c e . S in g le room . N ear cam p u e. 2 8 3 4 Pearl. Ph. 2 -8 4 2 8 . 47— Room and Board B O Y S : R oom and board. Ideal fo r E n g i­ neerin g s tu d e n ts . U n u s u a lly n ic e , tile bath, d o it ile d o n c ts , good b ed s. 2 315 O ld ham . P h . 8 -6 0 3 7 . 5 i — Rooms for Boys M O ST D E S IR A B L E dou ble room . P r iv a te tile b ath , p r iv a te e n tr a n c e . T w in heil*. w aln u t fu rn itu r e . 911 W e st 1 9 th . P h o n e 8 -7 9 6 6 . C H O IC E ROOMS FOR B O Y S : 2 blocks P IE R C E H O U S E . 2 0 0 E. 26 * S t. P h on e 8 -3 8 8 7 . A lso m e a ls . c am p u s. o f 52— Rooms for Girls V A C A N C Y ! 3 m e a ls d a ily , d ou b le room . S h o w e r s, tu b -. G la sse d scr e en ed s le e p - in g -p o r c h e s. C h oice o f p r iv a te b a th s — h o t, cold w a te r 8 0 3 C olorado. ROOM - B O A R D for 2 g ir l* — 3 bleck* from campi:.''. M rv R K. H arri*. 2 1 0 0 R io G rande. Th. 3 787. ID E A L ROOMS FOR l f G IR L S . L arge, c o o l and clea n , N ew tw in bed# Mfcd PH. from c a m p u s ttfc b lo c k s se r v ic e , 2 -3 0 8 5 W ANTED — R oow r - a t c s t u ­ dent, in p r i v a t e heinie, T w in beds, with o r w itho ut p r iv a te bath. 906 W. 22nd S t. Rh. 2-8806. se nio r f o r S a f e t y D e p o s i t B o x e s TO PR O T E C T YOUR WAR BONDS A n d O t h e r V a l u a b l e s N o w A v a i l a b l e a t THE CAPITAL NATIONAL BANK S p r i n g G a r d e n s Stocks, Bonds, N o te s tf-osi f c u y iw j Q o s u t i T h e F o u r t h W a r L o an D rive s t a r t s todaj% J a n u a r y 18, a n d c o n tin u e s t h r o u g h F e b r u a r y I . Su re, w e k n o w t h a t th e r e h a v e b e e n lots of o t h e r d riv e s , d r iv e s fo r W a r B onds. R ed Cross, C o m m u n ity W a r F u n d , a n d o t h e r a g e n cie s. M a y b e you re t ir e d o f driv es. B u t th e A m e ric a n so ld ie rs a re tir e d of f ig h t in g , too. B u t do th e y q u i t? ■What a r e so m e o f th e r e a s o n s o t h e r p e o p le b u y w a r b o n d s ? If you*lI a sk th e m , t h e y will tell y o u : T h e y b u y b o n d s to h e lp t h e i r c o u n tr y w in t h e w a r . W h a t b e t t e r r e a s o n c o u ld a n y A m e r i c a n w a n t ? T h is is o u r w a r , a n d it is o u r r e s p o n s ib ility to h e lp p a y f o r it. Is it q u ite f a i r to a s k t h e b oys to give t h e i r lives, w h ile w e do n o th in g t o w a r d b r in g i n g a b o u t t h e end o f th e h o stilitie s? •k S om e b u y b o n d s to b a c k u p t h e i r loved o n e s in th e If o u r se rv ic e. W h a t m o re c o u ld you do f o r t h e m " boys ca n ris k t h e i r lives, c e r t a i n l y w e sh o u ld b e w illin g to invest o u r m o n ey . A lm o s t e v e ry o n e in t h e c o u n tr y h a s a h u s b a n d , b r o th e r , son, f a t h e r , siste r, u n c le , or cousin in t h e s e n d e e . Is it too m u c h to a s k t h a t y o u b u y a b o n d fo r th e o n e s you love— w h e n y o u c o n s id e r w h a t t h e y a r e d o ­ ing f o r y o u ? * * im p r o v e m e n ts , a n d lu x u rie s — in s h o rt, f o r O th e rs b u y b o n d s to m a k e a s a fe in v e s tm e n t. If y o u ’ve e v e r w o r r ie d a b o u t h o w to sav e m o n ey , h o w a b o u t b o n d s ? N o w is th e tim e to sa v e m o n e y — f o r e d u c a tio n , r e t i r e m e n t , old a g e. n e w e q u ip m e n t, h o u s e h o ld c o m ­ f o rts , th e t h in g s you c a n ’t o r s h o u l d n ’t b u y t o d a y . T h e r e ’s not a b e tt e r , s a f e r in v e s t m e n t in t h e w o rld t o d a y t h a n b o n d s. A n d t h e n t h e y b u y b o n d s to h e lp k e e p o u r e c o n o m y on a n e v e n k e e l. S u r e ly y o u ’ve n o tic e d h o w m u c h m o re y o u h a v e to p a y f o r m o s t t h in g s t h e s e day s. T h e g o v­ e r n m e n t is d o in g e v e r y t h in g p o ssib le th e c o s t ' o f living, b u t u n le s s w e sto p s p e n d in g a n d s t a r t s a v in g e v e ry c e n t a b o v e t h e b a r e s t necessities, it will go still h i g h e r . A n d w h a t a b o u t t h e p o s t- w a r w o r l d ? If w e b u y b o n d s n o w , t h e r e will be n o d e p re s s io n a f t e r ­ w a r d . W e c a n ’t a f f o r d N O T to b u y b o n d s. to c o n tr o l Som e b u y b o n d s to h e l p p r e s e r v e t h e A m e ric a n w a y of life. Y o u lik e d y o u r life b e f o r e t h e w a r , d i d n ’t y o u ? T h e n d o s o m e t h in g n o w life possib le a g a in , a n d soon. to m a k e t h a t C a n y o u t h i n k o f a re a s o n w h j y o u s h o u l d n ’t b u y e v e r y b o n d y o u c a n ? W e c a n ’t. W e ’r e g o in g o u t n o w a n d b u y o u r b o n d s . How' a b o u t y o u ? — F A Y E L O Y D Modern Maidens "THEY AREN'T W I N G S , M A D A M T H A T ' S H I S P I L L O W ." S M A L L TALK By MARY B R I N K E R H O F F in the midst of a fight. But. I can picture a soldier, not an actor or a mathematical num­ ber, grabbing for a grenade in his pack, scratching around frantically and not finding it. and then remembering that he has no more because headquar­ ters is out of grenades. Because I’ve never been in a battle, the picture goes blank when the Jap across the way finds his grenade and throws it. Ifs probably just as well. Anyway, I have some hopes of being able to give the soldier another grenade before ifs too late. “Do you think it’ll ram to­ night?” * As you left, you would know* that the man we're writing about isn’t a gibbering idiot. Neither is he a cynic, nor a skeptic in the general meaning of the word. His one belief is that real things suffer unless you learn to draw the line be­ tween what is real and what is designed simply for tear-jerking or money-making or reputation- building. For him, the soldier scratching desperately after a grenade that isn’t there is rea­ son enough to buy bonds. Any­ thing else is too much. ^ ladaqi Ctio.iioMj.tid to This column is of and for the Fourth War Loan Drive, but it probably isn’t like any­ thing else you’ll read from that drive's beginning its end. The reason is that it’s written about a particular type of citi­ zen and an out-of-the-ordinary kind of bond buyer. * The person we have in mind is not one of those known as “mouth patriots.” He is, in fact, heartily sick of all the brassy, outspoken soap-box American­ ism that has been crammed into his eyes and ears ever since this country got into the war. He wears 'earmuffs in the warmest weather to keep from hearing patriotic jive about Pearl Har­ bor and other equally unjingly matters which just don’t sound hep no matter what tune you arrange to. He wears blinders stolen from a milk- wagon horse so he won’t have to look at signs in people’s win­ dows saying “ I am an Ameri­ can," as though these pieces of cloth with words on them made their owners any more Ameri­ can than anybody else. them Suppose, sent to sell this man a bond, you fell back on that faithful old support of sales­ men and promoters throughout the year: statistics. These would be things he couldn’t contradict. You would fire them at him fast and heavy until he stopped you quietly and commented, “ I’m sorry, but I flunked math in the fifth grade. All this is above my head.” A Desperate now and out of breath, you would make a last fervent appeal to his excuse for a heart bv picturing a soldier on a battlefield, a sailor on a destroyer, a marine on a land­ ing beach pleading across miles of ocean that all Americans buy bonds. And your pigheaded prospect would freeze you in your tracks by replying that he didnt thought think soldiers about these things except wrhen they were at ease, that in actual combat he believed the fight wa" the thing with them. This would he the end. You would spin around in disgust and start to walk awray, angrily to buy this stub­ determined born man’s bond yourself so that the quota could still be met. Then he would call you back. “ Wait! I want a bond. Maybe two.” “ It’s this way,” he would ex­ plain, smiling into your bewil­ dered face as he gave you his money. “ I do have some imagi­ nation. I can’t grasp statistics and I can’t see an American boy making Shakespearean speeches e#MT*3 i MW* #»*♦>:VkteM ap. ’> v •*«*:<. .VVWbt&Z%(#.TSU?, tm. Co. N*4* Ffc IS***/ ■ % ?#»>■.<*+& ■- UV«44* CK* Bo■ ■ ** UM iitifji <5C| ? %• c h e yt n t o w#i J CVAK-Lrc«fl -5 Oot-k'X*>« k^A I t &•"***&' f V 7&*» ■ >,. <> '*<>•<• Tv/'ku E*v* kv>; **« *W ^ *#* K tm 0*4*8*, ^Wg ■>,. : «>** «)M M ! WMS **j53>w* *J”WV I .dx1* «*i'« j c .in»Hip«*r> ••■•'Wtwtvr a I flaps? M* w*» »k««*' ** ■ ; i *« * < * £ & * * * 4 1 H rn - I . MMI : « | '-•«• ' .!• !*-" I A At.* > OS' 'OVwct-Sr un mss •■ <<:**»•* •' i*> tfc w«^i(Df*ids«r2S^'a®s¥f ** tat . • w A ... # | h »#**■ "*«#« .*♦• S...-, ••«* m. SSS *-**>-■ fiat- ■.% fflM lr-.>*.<»»■< WnCiiVp *a»-*V S J M Itta *tAt jc & arui*- ti rn v Mi "J-J- 3»5s Ss* *3 * !“•' ’v-* t/i Ria Br>« *« •-■-* ■ S& • 3&m r n ^ s f e s g * r anV)ii.»M * ■ivtiwnM* ’■j'SJpi Vwgfc-- Ad. »«»■• WTW* ' • r a w 0* I VKi*w* rn the arca. tw o ! Their m ain job w ill be to choose! and the w inners o f men to fill the vacancy to be left m atches will play in the final*. In by the retirem ent of Bishop John I the ten nis m atch, C. B room field, St- Louis. Mont.,! D ottle Drawe, Gamma Phi B eta, and the one created six years ago will m eet Delta Gamma s Marion by the death o f Bishop Charles LM McCurdy in the sem i-finals, and Mead, K ansas ( ity. the w inner w ill play Chi O m ega’s Ruth B illingsley in the finals. laym an d eleg a te consolation these Texas has m o le M ethodists than any of the Otho'- eight states and is almost certain to boost one o f I its men to tho top-ranking position of bishop, it is believed. SICK LIST St. David's Hospital Eleanor Thorpt - on Margaret Hsr gis Mary Elizabeth Murchsson Amalic Hacker Maxine Hooker J ii im Arnold Lena Hello Koch J" Pick Fulhright Bf ii ne I-ranees Dismukes Robert >S. H a r v e l B ll Tindell Abler Howard Schramm James E Ellis James W. Voss J D. O'Quinn William W. Stephens Wayne Drysdale R A. Davis Robert L, Marshall SRO. Mn r caret E li za b eth R uth Mosier Raskin Katherine McCarroll Sara Beth Hughes Anne Notley ll] at Home J nim Soh ielk« Anne Ruth Mary O. Lewis Jackson C e l i a Dolin Carolyn Scott Nona Claire Caln Kibble Polsky Janice Malts Joyce Whiting Rose Marion Mary T.evine Ben Parker Lots Stanford Mary Helen F ek en Lena Belle Koch Edith Eileen Quick Shirley Creiaen Howard Edwin Arthur Irak** I Luther l a v e Ktrley Alice Adel* B' ark- James f . F o s s ct ie A fred Negley E rin C olleen Moore G loria Plainer Constance Powell Frederick H. Francis I,lies lone! Ambler Ella Townsend Bettye Jeanne Taylor Marie English Bernard Lichenstein Solomon Cielak Dale Buchanan Betty Sue K r okerboc er Claire Betagole Maribel!# McLaurins Eleanor Po well Mary Angeline Monroe Josephine Bernstein Doris Ruth Hooks Elsie Biggers Gloria Watson Alice Woodcock Louis Goldfaden Benne Frances Dis muk es 'Widerstrom Edna Mae Goldfine Mary ('lien Roy MoKittHek I.eRoy Speed Barton H* earth Fahey Mena Jean Caldwell Jean O’Rrion Thelma Dillingham Chavtor E. Bryant Phyllis Hen nessey Elizabeth Same* Jo Ann Nelson Betty Jane Ingham Henry S. Gwyn Io u Blanton Eugenis M Donald Doris Wild* F rances I.. Oheim WiUene Smallwood Elizabeth Finley Renee Russell Evelyn Brewster Dorothy Prat ley ti. H. Lane Sammy Melamed H, M Medina-Neri Samuel I. Bellman Betty Jo Bel! Rosemary Thyfault Mn ade Alice Dockery Frances Henderson Sue Schroeder Judith Casten Helen Hogg l e e Edward Allan Humphrey Cathryn S ta u n c h DeLaney Bartlett Grace Anne Martin Blansitt Donovan Campbell Harriett FSohan Mary Peareson Richard Sowell Josephine Bernstein Melba Campbell N a om i L e v in so n Marjorie B arhara W ilso n D en ise G ib son D oro th y L o u is e St rohme ver Ballard Nolan Watts fulie Graham Betty Jane Moreland Eon Ann C hernik Marcia Gordon J c en M aekey- J o n e s A nna Le# M artin M ary C a n n itz o C h arlo tte Walters Udtl Bradford Captain Thomas S. Yager o f Cameron, stu d en t in 1938, was lea f recently awarded for j clusters I combat flig h ts against the enem y [in the South P acific area. two oak the Air Medal to Daily Texan Austin, Texas Enclosed find $ ■ — to cover cost of my advertisem ent for — •days. SUN . ( ) TUES. « ) WED. < ) THURS. ( ) FRL ( ) N A ME AD D R ESS BLUEBONNET BELLE NOMINATIONS Must Be in by THURSDAY J January 20 at 5 o’Clock Official Nomination Blanks M ay Be Obtained in Journalism Building 108 PASE POUR Phone 2-2473 — T HE D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1944 Government Subsidy Hinders Argentine Drama, Says Apstein By F L O A L E X A N D E R “ W h y didn’t Orson W hiles m arry Dolores Del Rio instead of R ita H a y w o rth ?” That was the question Argen­ tines asked Theodore Apstein, who returned to the U n iversity Sun­ day after extensive tours through Colombia. Argentina, and Peru. W hen Theodore left last Ju n e on a $3,000 Rockefeller grant for the development of studies in the Latin-American theater, his first stop was Mexico. His time there was spent in hunting fiestas with little success. It wasn’t the season, and he found only one interesting t picture, the audience applauded when the actress first came on the fiesta. Colombia came next. His stay screen. came A fte r Colombia of only eight days there was long j Peru, enough for him to read forty plays, j where his plans had to land in Tru- direct one rehearsal, and be asked j jillo instead of Lim a because of by the M inistry of Education to bad weather. remain as director of the national j theater. Theodoie found Peruvians just j as pessimistic about any form of A t present, Theodore explains, ] national theater as the Colombians there is little or no national the- are optimistic. Although Lim a is ater, but Colombians are optimis-1 fu ll of drama in the making, the tic and are looking to two y o u n g ; only performance he found was an playwrights to help establish one.j operetta by a group of amateurs. In Bogota, where Theodore went Several playwrights w?ere there, to a showing of a Rita Hayworth j but none of any importance. 1 The most important theater > t I movement in Latin-Am erica is in Buenos Aires, says the ex-student. the United States Citizens of I should be aware of that movement, he believes, since it is an out­ growth of U nited States dra­ matics. In Buenos A ires there exists a national theater entirely subsidized I by ti e government and two experi-! theaters partially subsi-i mental the government. That; dized by manner of support is a serious hin­ drance at the present time, says Theodore. j Also seen in Argentina were a museum of the theater, a theater ! Lib rary, and a “ home of the the­ a te r” impoverished actors, play b ig h ts , and impresarios. Ai*- gentina also provides free medical service for actors and their rela- • tives. for W hen asked about the w riting W IL L IA M P R IM R O S E w i l l play his vie a on the same pro­ gram with Richard Crooks Tues­ day, in Gregory Gymnasium. January 25, He Used to Box; Now He Plays Primrose Sees Bouts Regularly The Greeks H ad a Word For lt~So Have We •Is L ife W orth L iv in g ? -’ pro-1 Margo Jones, direc tor of " Is duction of the Department of L ife W orth L iv in g ? ” brought the Drama and the Austin L ittle The- I intimate theater to tile South in ater to be given Ja n u a ry 24-29. J 1939, when she wras director of w ill be presented in the informal the Houston Community Players. style of “ intimate theater,” or Pointing out the sim ilarity to “ Theater-in-the-R o u n d,” as we movie technique, Miss Jones said term it here. that any loss of “ footlight glam­ our” is compensated fo r by the realistic performance possible only in this inform al style. The audi- sides of the part of the The intimate or penthouse the­ ater has been called one of the most important trends in modern drama. A ctually this type of pro-1 ence, seated on all duction was popular in the days of 1 “ stage,” becomes a ancient Greece, when plays were presented in a large arena, and the audience completely surrounded the players. play. The Laboratory Theater, in the Modern Languages Building, is lighted from above by twelve spe­ cial spotlights which are turned off between acts so that sets may be changed in complete darkness. W h ile other dramatic However, the style as we know it was originated ten years ago by Glenn Hughes at the U niversity of Washington. Seasoned producers and critics scoffed at the idea of drama without scenery, make-up, or footlights. You would lose the feeling of a play, they said. B u t Mr. Hughes proceeded to prove that they were wrong. The plays . , . ,. , , Senior Sailors Try New Tack; For Snowball Sub a Smack ‘With this R i n g Miss Manlove Is Bride O f Lieutenant Brush M ary Helen M anlove was m ar­ ried to Lieutenant Robert Lind Brush at Pratt, Kans., on Ja n u a ry 3, and they are now making their home in that city* Mrs. Brush was a senior at the U niversity at the time of her m ar­ riage. She was a Bluebonnet Belle nominee in 1941 arid 1942, a mem­ ber of W IC A and the Newman Club. In 1940 Lieu ten an t Brush grad­ uated from Yale. He is a member of Beta Theta P i fraternity* He received his bombardier’s wings in Midland and his navigation wings in San Marcos. Endsley-Carter Miss Ora Je a n Carter, ju n io r; at the University, became the bride of Sergeant Loren Stanton End- sley of Richmond, Mo., at the home of her parents in Austin Satu rd ay night at 7:30 o’clock. Chaplain N. J . Engelbrecht of Bergstrom Field read the vows. . elor of science degree here in ele­ m entary education in 1943, and Lieutenant Niem eyer received his bachelor of arts degree in 1941. W hile attending the U niversity, Miss Hasskarl became a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. He is a member of Alpha Tau Omega. Lieutenant and Mrs. Niem eyer w ill live in New London, Conn. Sutton-Jurkovich Ju rko vich The engagement of Miss Edith Buda Budapest, H ungary, and Francis X a v ie r S u t­ ton, lieutenant, A rm y A ir Forces, has been announced. of Miss Ju rko vich was an engineer­ ing student here from 1937 to 1939. The bridegroom-elect gradu­ ated from H arvard U niversity and from school of Princeton U niversity, where he was later a member of the faculty. the graduate Mrs. W a tt Schieffer, sister ° T aa Al * I/ L the bride, was maid of honor. W a t t 'V K * v O / r- rV O p © C K y Sch ieffe r served as best man. The engagement and approach W hile Sergeant Endsley is sta- ing marriage of Miss M artha Ko Honed at Bergstrom Field, he and pecky o f Granger and Aviation The original N .R.O .T.C . gradu­ ating class of 1945 w ill have its annual Senior Ring Dance Ja n u ­ a ry 22 from 8 until 12 o’clock in the M ain Lounge of the Texas Union. This class is now divided into three groups composed of twenty boys who w ill graduate in Feb ruary, thirty-one who w ill graduate in Ju n e , and tw en ty-two who w ill graduate next October. Charlie Frezia and his N a vy band w ill play for the dance, which w ill be formal. The program w ill include a grand march at 8:50 o’clock, program dancing from 9 until IO o’clock, speeches from IO until 10:15 o’clock, and the ring ceremony from 10:15 until 11:15 o’clock. The ring ceremony is traditional. | The boy and his date pass through a huge replica o f the official R.O. T.C. ring. The girl takes the boy’s ring, dips it into w ater collected from the seven 6ceans, and puts it on his third finger. The boy then kisses her under the archway. O fficers of the V-12 unit and the N aval flig ht preparatory school M iss W o o d s Is First Ex To Get Certificate w ill be guests. Ja c k Knox, Texas A . & M .’s head yell leader, w ill also be a guest. Three hundred bids for the dance have already been mailed. The programs fo r dancing w ill be circulated through the N aval dor­ mitories during the week. Glenn Pate, president of the ju n io r class, w ill act as master of ceremonies. Charles Graham, sec- retary-treasUrer of ju n io r class, is in charge of arrangements, and Sam Seay is in charge of the decorations, which w ill be entirely* N a va l in theme. t h e C lu b N otes W ICA, MICA To Meet Together, Learn Dancing 7 he election of Bluebonnet Belle nominees w ill be the main business of W IC A when it meetseets Tuesday night in Texas Union 3 rh at 7 o'clock. I F ollow in g the regular meeting, the fo u r interest groups w ill meet to elect two nominees if as m any as f if t y girls are present fo r each group. The dancing group w ill meet at 7 :30 o’clock in the W om en’s Gym . M IC A members are invited to attend and learn dance routines with the girls, announced Ruth Horak. ★ Square A Passing d ifficu lt exams in com­ ranch district o f law, auditing, theory of mercial M IC A w ill meet a t 6:45 o’clock accounting, and practice o f ac­ Tuesday night in Texas Union 301 counting, Muss Woods, from Cor­ to elect Bluebonnet Belle nomi­ pus Christi, was among the IO per nees, Jim Kishi, foreman, has an- cent who passed the tests, and w ill n0Unced. M IC A men who wish to been enter one ot the newest professions j make nominations have to bring photographs o f j for women certified public ac-; asked counting. O nly recently have worn-1 their candidates. ; en been accepted in this field. j + . . , Miss Woods received a bachelor Th® U n i v e r s i t y E x - S e r v i c e m e n ’* . W a lte r K e rr led the group in sing-: “ business adm inistration degree A » * o c i a t i o n w ill meet Tuesday rsity and was grad-; night at 8 0>ci0ck in Texas Union. \Vp s t n r n fa vnrifcps CIOTTI the I JliverSltV and WES fiT&d* : r»i cr bf at* Si rtVlftnlr ir» To v a a T T nirtn intr n il thr* ing all the old W estern favorites. Hated with highest ^honors. ^ Al- a Bluebonnet Belle nominee though 175 of the <00 c e rtifie d ; v,nil be elected, and there w ill be public accountants in Texas are discussion of the visit to McClos-/ the University, 1 1 graduated from ky Hospital, membership cards* . . M i s s Woods is the first woman and a Cactus picture. A program .... . ; graduate to receive a certificate. of the activities fo r the coming year w ill be planned. _________________________ . a * L- u . , I i W illiam Prim rose, Scottish-born I Mrs, Endsley will be at home at violist who appears here on J a n - i * 0, Thirtieth Street. W uary 25 with Richard Crooks, tenor o f the Metropolitan Opera . . . . One in a million is Miss Velda Cadet Alexander Jo h n M cN air, ; V io la Woods, 1939 graduate of the student in the U niversity in 1940- j U niversity, who recently became 41, has been announced. The wed-; the firs t woman ex-student of the j U niversity and the fourth woman ding will take place in Feb ruary, in Texas to receive a certified N ie m e y e r-H a s s k a r l St. Dorothea Hasskarl and Lieuten­ M ary's Academy and is now em- j public accountant’s certificate, ant (j.g .) E . V icto r Niem eyer, ex­ ployed at the State Board of Con- students, were married Sa tu rd ay! trol. Cadet M cN a ir is now in train- ! ing at Selman Field in Monroe, in Brenham. Miss Kopecky attended Miss Hasskarl received her bach- i La. he did in Argentina, the ex-student Association, is an avid boxing fan laughed, explaining that each night anc* bas a seasonal reservation when he got home he would find j for ringside seats at N ew Y o rk ’s pages of memoranda concerning Madison Square Garden, organza- the following day’s appointments. | A n amateur boxer in his sta­ tions a u busy hunting m a terials; They would read . . , “ So-and-so dent days in England, M r. Prim- for scenery, toe Theaier-in-the- wants you to call the People’s The-1 rose no longer ventures into the Round moves on undisturbed, since ater. They w ant you to drop in ring for fear of hurting his hands, . , . The A ctor’s Association called which earn him an income in five no scenei y and attle make-up are . . . L a Prensa wants to j figures. “ W ith me, boxing was * • • . 1C ] r that article an outlet fo r bad temper,” he says, my J Ia>s staged in the Laboratory k n ow if you have long "an d now watching bouts is T ' . first production, Heaven article about the U niversity for main diversion.” ‘Rousin’ ’ Western Party Given by Wesleyans w ere produced in h i. p « n ^ , e , | T k **te r have included “ Tfce Ghost j r«dy.-> Theodore wrote a and the name, Penthouse Thee- Train, ter,” as well as the idea behind i t , : Can W a it.” “ Sporting P in k ." “ Jim spread rapidly Dandy,” and “ The Torchbearers.” W hat's the Matter With O u r G a l s ? Best-Looking Dream Girls Come From Middle West A« r e c e n t l y a* 1 9 4 1 4 0 p e r c e n t The Middle W est leads in sup­ its 1943 plying Hollywood w ith o f the pretty screen newcomers beauty crop. Time was when N ew ! said they were natives of Manhat- Y o rk and the South led in provid- tan. O f the eleven dream girls, ing n e w beauty talent. Now they however, only three girls, 27 per are trailing, according to latest cent, are New Yorkers. Four are I from the Middle W est, a healty 36 statistics. The statistician confesses, be- P er cent, and only one from south the Mason-Dixon Line. The from diverse three are J other ; points, including South A frica. fore going any farther, that gath- °f ering said statistics was one of the most pleasurable assignments he’d had in a long time, for he in ter­ viewed the eleven dream girls in M-G-M's “ Two Sisters and a Sa i­ lo r” to get his facts and figures, and facts on figures as well. ‘You just must see that newspaper. To settle arguments about for- The hospitable Argentines were mer fights, M r. Primrose has a anxious for him to see everyth in g ,; number of fight films at his home Theodore sighed w earily. “ It never in N ew Jersey. They go back to failed for me to get to bed at 3 1922. o’clock in the m orning and then at “ Kid Chocolate seemed the most IO o’clock be awakened by a voice rhythm ic man in the game when saying the I came to this country several fisherman at work in the harbor., years ago,” the viola player states, It s very interesting. I ’ll be by in “ and H enry Armstrong made a great impression on me as a stac- th irty minutes',” scrapper of e x t r a o r d i n a r y . .D urinF t h e r e m a i n i n g part of Cato first part of; technique, executing d ifficu lt pas- Feb ruary, before Theodore goes sages without effort. I suppose, is the to New York, he w ill lectures. A talk in Spanish for the | greatest perform er of his time— Mexican L ite ra ry Society Tuesday j the bass viol of them all.” night at 8 o’clock in the Texas On his concert tours, M r. Prim- U nion w ill be the first. Playw righ t rose makes every' effort to attend Apstein also intends to turn author ; boxing matches scheduled in the soon and write a book concerning 1 vicin ity and has witnessed bouts in London, Paris, Berlin , Rio de the Argentine theater. j Jan eiro , Hollywood, Toronto, and j New York. In Mexico he drove I from V era Cruz to Mexico C ity— give several I however, that Jo e Louis — from sea level to the altitude of 10,000 feet to watch a particular fighter. “ Come and get it,” and maybe you think they didn’t! The chow line, composed of over seventy- five starving and tussling cow­ hands and cowgirls, started the chuck-wagon wheels rolling in a big w ay Satu rd ay night at the W esley Foundation party. W hen the last piece of apple pie had vanished, the crowd assembled around a piano stuck out in the middle of the “ co rra l” to be sere­ naded by the “ Bowlegged Boys From the B a rn y a rd ” (M e lle A lex­ ander. B ill Hoover, W orth Brown, and B ill Reynolds). A fte r the quartet had performed, the Rev. W ag n e r to Discuss Petroleum Chemicals C ary H. W agner, consult! ig pe­ troleum chemist, w ill address the Central Texas section of the Amer­ ican Chemical Society Wednesday in Chem istry night at 8 o’clock i e various barn and Meanwhile, the barn (upstairs) was being prepared fo r a hoe­ down. W hen the signal was given, ,, the cowpunchers and gals trooped * to their new' location and form ed. n i t rings fo r a Paul Jones, fro m a stage surrounded by bales of hay, pitchforks, and other farm yard decorations, Kina H arrison called the square dances, and P a tric ia Anthony and Bob Lusk led them. W hen it be­ came apparent that everyone was intermission close to exhaustion, was declared. Punch was served, and the dangerous a rt of “ horse- fighting” was demonstrated by Seldon M arth, B ill Hoover, Stan Sameshina, W orth Brow n, B ill Reynolds, Sterlin g F ly , and Tuck Focht, who also exhibited his abil­ ity in whip-cracking. A fte r intermission Carolyn W il-j Hams, entertained with her rope-; tw irling act, and the Rev. W a lte r ; K e rr w ith his rendition of “ Stra w - ; Although t h e technique o f play- Building 15 The subject o f the I b erry the dream girls, Blondes still have the same pre- 1 dominance as a few years back. O f five are blondes, three are brunettes, and the J three are redheads, giving blondes 45 ’ 2 per cent. Comic Cantinflas Al Texas Today ’ F I this month and the On height, weight and other; vital statistics, however, there is 1 as marked a change as in home towns. These girls have a mean height— and w h at’s mean about it? — of five feet six and one haJf inches and their average weight is an even 122 pounds. Up to 1941 I the average height o f movie girls was five feet three inches and not! one of them would admit to top- ; j ping a scale above 110 pounds. The smallest dream girl is Kay W illiam s, a neat five feet four: is beautiful tallest inches and Helen O 'H ara, who is an even 6 feet ta ll! ‘ ' ’ mg a rare and beautiful Am ati Cantinflas, better known to his viola i* a fa r cry from that of the Am erican audiences as the Mexi- prize-ring, Mr. Primrose points can Charlie Chaplin, will pull up out that violists and pugilists have his baggy pants and wander around two requisites in common— a long in the hectic life of a circus when reach and a strong grip. “ E l C irco” opens fo r a one-day; ^ a *’ I exas I heater today, j M a c M u r r a y P r o v i d e * P r o p * W h e n Paramount w a s speaking picture are Gloria Lynch, with a shortage of fresh E . Schellmsky, and E. Arozamena. Director of the show' is Miguel M. Delgado, The script was w rit­ ten by Jaim e Salvador, and music was arranged by M anuel Esperson. The picture w ill be shown at faced vege­ tables for blackout sequences in “ And the Angels Sing,” Fred M ac­ M urray, who is co-starred in the musical with Dorothy Lam our and B e tty Hutton, furnished a surplus from his own victory' garden. Co-starring Spanish- the in cl' " popular prices. Joh n Deschner held " ' speech w ill ‘be “ Chemicals From i *be , * ™ UP sPellboun,f. w ith hi* Petroleum .” No admission w ill be I blanket-stretchin’ c e ilin g ct tall tales). Then P a t Anthony and Bob charged. Lusk “ Swing-Out P o lk a” and once again led the again gang in several other reels and folk games, ending with the “ Good Night Ladies” dance. M r. W ag ner has written many technical papers for scientific and trade journals and has conducted researches in the fields of crack­ ing, polymerization, treating, lu­ bricating oil m anufacturing, and distillation. presented the He has served as a chemistry in­ structor and a chemist fo r s e v e ra l} oil companies and is now a con-j suiting chemist, touring Central Texas from Ja n u a ry 17 through Ja n u a ry 26, aaa Real Life Heroes New Movie Theme W ho 'aid it ’s d ifficult to get into the movies? Discover indium — w rite a book — drop a bomb on a Japanese city — and you’re a cinch to be on the screen. Y o u r life story is, anyway. E v e r since Don Ameche in ­ vented the telephone and G ary Cooper won an Oscar as Sergeant York, Hollywood real-life heroes and heroines. So do the fans. likes Take the case of the Curies, S t a r K n i t t e r Paulette Goddard knitted a ! sweater for D irector Sidney Can­ field during the production o f Param ount’*! “ Standing Room On­ ly ,” in which she is co-starred wdth Fred M acM urray. The star fin ­ ished the sweater just before the final scene of the picture was com­ pleted. U B R S IT 9 C 2 3 M A R G O T O M N E A L ll Behind The Rising Sunll A l c o S P O R T L I G H T a n d L A T E S T N E W S T>r. Cox expressed surprise that ! so many people foolishly fear the discomfort they might exerience j ' in the dentist’s chair even in this I day of painless dentistry. In te lli­ gent mouth hygiene, he says, is I i not only the application of prophy- j ^axiS r*a>Lv but tim ely co-operation J SIU D A ! (AMA! D U R Y with HOYD NOUN HUSTON K W K A L S O U n iv e rs a l N e w * W M e rrie M elo d ie C arto o n A £ O M O f A Dm kuib ________ TC T O D A Y Richard Ainley Patricia Dane Sam Le van* I Jimmy Doney DOUBLE HORROR S H O W B I G T H R I L L E D P A C K E D F E A T U R E S j As for waistlines, the new aver­ age is twenty-three and one-half inches, while five years ago, ac- Their life, de-. cording- to the filin g system, it was Health Officer Urges Painless Dental Care The fact that dental decay likely to occur in the mouth ess. . Pierre and Marie, voted to science and the discovery an jnc^ - of ladium, is a ' great a love story as any imagined by Balzac. Metro- Goldwvn-Mayer, realizing that it had a romance both inspirational and adventuresome, little chance on fictionization of the ready-made theme. They had the biography by E v e Curie, daughter of the great pair, to follow so that G reer G arson and W a lte r Pidgeon could stick to fact in depicting ber illustrious parents. took The dream girls average b u s t e e average person despite proper measurement is thirty-five inches, home care of the teeth does not their hips thirty-four and three- ;; lessen the importance of that care, fourths inches. In ^938 the aver- believes Dr. George W . Cox, state age measurement for “ la belie poi-: health officer. The lack of these trin e” was thirty-three inches, for measures gives added power to germs that attack the enamel of hips thirty-four inches. F ive of the girls were Powers the teeth and gum tissues. Neglect and Conover models who smiled in brushing daily and inspection out from pages of national maga- twice a year can also result in sines before they came to Holly- crooked teeth, reduced maMicat- wood, power, and any number of clothes, and one, Helen O ’H ara, j other consequences, he said. was a model fo r her famed artist- father, H enry Clive. t h r e e others modeled Texas limestone— as a medium for " ’-b the dentist. sculptors. A U niversity artist, Charles U m ­ lauf, turned to Texas limestone for C A N T I N F L A S Anybody, the boy next door f o r ; instance, may become a movie hero. T hat’s what happened to P r i­ vate Marion Hargrove. H e’s just a ki d like any other boy. Through hun every son in uniform becomes N ative Limestone Used immortalized on the screen. “ See H ere, Private H argrove” is a story of all the boys in Uncle Sam ’s service. Young Robert W alker is the boy in uniform, Donna Reed his sweetheart. In Um lauf Sculpture another u*e for native H ere’s Few* w ill ever forget George G ershw in’s music. Hollywood will see that people the world o w . will knnw fs.V*bwm th, know Gershwin, the man. W arner Brothers are bringing the life of "V Gershwin to the screen in their f7 Pf! 7 , °r “ Rhapsody in B lu e.” throughout «•_____ and 3 the world Nu n e E lin b e ih I Cities I. . . ‘ 7 *7* Ut have welcomed Kenny. H er treatment for in fa n - ,*____ tHe y »r»ly«i* he* brought out “ the red carpet.” B u t Hollywood doing more than that. m o r t a r in g her. "N u ,se K e „ “ the RICO picture c u rrin g R o ..lio d I months ^ M r- Russell, w ill soon be released. It i, in,.' | T !. T h « i . T i ? ! ! . T lilied “ Mother and found it “ an ad- ,. * ni€‘dl“ ni* eaa*v trj c^ e and this other ,natenajs G *L C’ a 4 !5 ure tbl.^.y on„ cxh' blt j at the VS itte Museum in San An- i * mr» e than a ple? M '? “ T “ 7 * 'o f 48' 7 , “ 7 ^ ______ ttW In “ T h irty Seconds O v e r Tokyo,” the young man who plays Captain Ted Lawson is the one who gets the most footage. But litt le ; Metro-Goldwyn-M ayer had trouble persuading a big-name star to enact Doolittle. H e not only got a star but a two-time Academy A w ard w inner! Spencer T racy play* D o o little ,! and thinks it s gieat. T O N IG H T I J A M E S C A G N E Y H U M P H R E Y B O G A R T — l o --- “ THE O K L A H O M A K ID ” i t C A R T O O N N E W S 2 S H O W S R A I N O R S H I N E A T D R I V E - I N and HELD OVER w i t h E v e l y n A N K E R S • D a v i d B R U C E HELD OVER Here s Your C h a n c e To Learn to C o o k A ll ex-servicemen are urged to attend. A re you interested Theodore Apstein, form er Uni- in foods? j versify student and playw right Do you like to cook? Then attend j who has been traveling in South the cooking classes at the Austin Am erica fo r the past year on a Public Evenin g School each Tues-; Rockefeller grant, w ill speak to I hursday night from 7 the M e x i c a n L i t e r a r y S o c i e t y a t day and j g o’clock Tuesday night in Texas until 9 o’clock. You can learn to plan, prepare, | Union 309. and serve wholesome, attractive meals, how to cook food to retain all the food value, and how to buy food in regard to food value, cost, ration points, and substitutions. E v e ry night actual cooking and serving is done by all members of the class. The school is located in the Aus­ tin High School building, third floor, room 19. There is no tui­ is a registration tion, but there fee of 81.50 for the entire course of ten weeks. F o r fu rth er informa- I Hon, call 2-6363. Students are invited to attend, Miss L illia n W ester, sponsor, an­ nounced. The R a i n b o w C l u b w ill have its monthly dinner at Old Seville W ednesday night at 6:30 o’clock. A program w ill also be given, an­ nounced M artha Elizabeth Magee, president. I he C o r p u s C h r i s t i C l u b Cactus I picture w ill be made today at 1 :30 o’clock in front of the M ain B u ild ­ ing. A ll members who wish to have their pictures in the Cactus are asked to come, bring a dollar ffcr dues, and become a member. A., L i e u t e n a n t A . B . J a r m o n , stu- -38, now deceased, in 193? dent scored two Ja p planes in the air Bluebonnet Belle nominee w ill be ^ I and three probables. I chosen. Let s All BACK the ATTACK Buy an Extra Bond during tKe 4th W A R BOND LO AN C A M PA IG N Let's Win the W ar in 44 HI \ TEXAS THEATER T U E S D A Y O N L Y s A L S O : L A T E S T IS S U E M A R C H O F TIME I The Daily Texan I . . . . . . . . . . .