\ The Daily Texan Of the Air 1490 Kilocycles Sljit jBMu tent The First College Daily in the South Tune In K N O W Monday, Wednesday, Friday 9:15 o’clock VOLUME 42 Price Five Cents AUSTN, TEXAS, SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1941 Four Pages Today No. 172 Steers Set W orld Sprint Medley Mark in Iowa Texas Can Stand J u ly I P ro b ab le D a te for Se co n d R e g is t r a t io n ; Waler Uphill? War Inflation, /Statisticians Told U n til Em e rge n cy E n d s Mechanic Brain? It's Power Show! U. T. Is Favored In 3 Finals Today D rafte e s M a y Se rv e BY BILLY SANSING T tx a n Sports Editor WASHINGTON, April national ten as 25.— (IN S )— The second registration day under the national d ra ft law for youths who have reached 21 since last October I will be held about July I, it was learned today as growing belief was expressed in W ashington th a t conscripts now in the army would serve for the j duration of the emergency m- I stead of one year, . . , I to It was originally planned j iho*d the second registration day , sometime in September. However, : plans being made moved the dates the youths up approaching by Labor Day whether they may en- ter college or business. A fter reg­ istration, a lottery will be held to determ ine in what order they are called up, and this lottery, too, will be before Labor Day. 21 will know to Juiy so , • . .. tT th at t. 0 , Meanwhile, there is a growing in- belief th a t conscripts being ; ducted this fiscal year will be kept j in the Army for the duration of I the emergency. As fa r as can be | learned, no legislation is needed. ln It is pointed out th a t conscripts, a fte r their first year, will become reserves, eligible fo r service at next ten «service because of any time during the the years. President Roosevelt, by ex- J emergency fo r as long ecutive order, could keep them in J years is necessary. 'I Am an American Day’ May 18 to Honor New Voters and Naturalized Citizens “ I Am an American Day,” which has been proclaimed by President Roosevelt as May 18, will be cele­ brated by Austin and the Univer­ sity with a patriotic program. The program will be of dramatic and ceremonial nature along with pa­ triotic music. Honor guests will be citizens just coming of voting age and citi­ zens who have been naturalized in the past year. About 1,500 students come under the first cate­ gory. The University unit of the Texas State Teachers’ Association, of which Dr. J. Anderson Fitzgerald, professor of banking and insur­ ance, is president, will organize the program, with most of the pa­ triotic organizations and service clubs in Austin participating. Mrs. Cora M. Martin is chair­ man of the general committee of which the following are m embers: M e s s r s . W. F Long Amo Novmtny Boy d .Sinclair Cliff 'In turn John Babcock A. L. Brandon Joe Dacy H. J . Ettlinger Anderson FitzgeraldJ o h n W ard H. L. Gaskin Malcolm Gregory George ll. Wells Edmund Heinaohn Art Wilka Ray Lee O. I). W eeks M i s s e s Sarah Dodson Anna H ise H. J. Ettlinger Marion Fowler Violet Greenhill Mesdames Nell Scott Lucy M. Moore Claude E. Hill Cora M. M a rtin H. H. S t u d e r Program Committee R a y Lee. c h a i r m a n Violet G reen hill George B. Hurt A. h , B r a n d o n Joe Dacy W. E. L ong Mrs. Cora Martin H. J. Ettlinger Marion Fowler J a m e s H. l 'a r k e H. L. Gaskin O. D. W eek s Contact Committee Malcolm G r e g o ry , A m o No wo tr y chairman Mrs. ll H. Studer Mra. H. J . E t t l i n g e r J o h n W a r d Rev. Edmund H ein- G e o r g e ll. Wells sohn Miss Anna Hiss Art Wilke Mr. Roosevelt already bas said 1 that he will ask fo r legislation to keep the National Guard in ser- ; vice for more than the one year originally planned. It is expected th a t approxi­ m ately one million youths will register in July, and high mili­ tary officials indicated th a t these new registrants will be called into the service almost immediately. of 400,000 More than the 16,500,000 men between the ages of 21 and 36 who registered last year have been inducted into the army, and a total of 600,000 are expected to be called up by July I. A fter July I, according to plans the national d ra ft officials, of about 60,000 conscripts will be in­ ducted into the army each month. The army plans to draw as many as it can from the one million youths registering in July. These reasons are assigned: (I ) Younger men are more adaptable to arm y training; (2) They are healthier; (3) They have few er dependents; (4) Most of them are not engaged in essential defense jobs. Tranquil Here, Mexican Finds Prof Returns, Calls U. T. Home This New 'Kyserism*— It'll Go Down in Hysteria Need for Complete State Farm Census Is Pointed Out Texas is better-equipped to cushion the shock resulting from rearm am ent, war fiance, and per-t T. ___ was t haps inflation than probably any l„i j tt i other state in the Union. L l , ,, . Friday afternoon by Morgan H. \ Rice, research and statistics m an­ ager of the Dallas Federal Re­ serve Bank, speaking before the afternoon session o f the combined membership of the Texas Statis­ the American tical Council and Statistical Association their third annual m eeting held on the University campus. in “ The people of this state have so fa r received all benefit and lit- tie grief from the $3,000,000 in­ dustrial and defense program this area,” Mr. Rice said. “ But be­ cause much of this has gone into the upbuilding of industry which can be converted fo r peacetime production— such as steel mills airplane m anufacturing— and Texas will ad ju st itself much quicker than otheh states can a f­ ter the w ar.” V. C. Childs of the D epartm ent of A griculture m arketing service, stated during the m orning m eet­ ing th a t Texas has a definite need fo r an annual crop-and-livestoek census in each of its 254 counties. Jh is state is one of the few with no complete agricultural census, he said. \ Physicists to View Marvels of Science, M oon's Craters The unusual, the scientifically weird, the marvels of modern sci­ ence—all will be shown at the an­ nual Power Show May 2. The most interesting general sense, any show can use fo r its attractiveness is used bv the Pow­ er Show each year a t the Univer­ sity. field, in a Demonstrations and exhibits, telescopic wonders, sound visible to the human eye, the best in high speed photography, stroboscopic light— godsend to the speed cam­ era fiend—and many other inter­ esting features of what present- day scientists are capable of play­ ing tricks with, will be shown to the public. The Departm ent of Physics, the graduate students of which will explain the equipment and effects, will furnish wonders in the fields of optics, electricity, light, sound, as well as photography and relat­ ed angles. Besides a g reat display of sound— including Dr. C. P. Bon­ er's continuous organ concert— which gives effects of snare drum, cymbal, train whistle, and birds— all coming from an organ with a wide range of tones— there will be an optics show including a dis­ appearing goldfish, mixing colors, light trapped under w ater, and the terrificaily-fast stroboscopic light. the blades of an electric fan will seem to be stationary while the breeze of the fan can be felt, and a saw will cut wood while it appears to stand still. By means of light, this A fter dark, the observatory on top of the Physics Building will be opened. Detailed m ountains and volcanic craters on the moon will be distinguishable through the telescope. furnish Electricity will such tricks as popping pop com on a stove which does not burn the hand; an electric light bulb burn­ ing under w ater w ithout wired attachm ents; and an electromag­ net which will pull objects away from the spectator trying to hold them. I Texan Editor Among Those af Press Meet Texan Editor Boyd Sinclair and H arriet Cunningham, student as­ sistant in the Departm ent of Jo u r­ nalism, are attending the South Texas Presa Association meeting in San Antonio. The association is the largest sectional press or­ ganization in the United States. Drama Confab To Get 2 Greats State One-Act Play Finalists to Be Here Gilmor Brown, executive direc­ to r of the Pasadena Community Playhouse in Pasadena, Calif., and John Rosenfield, dram atic critic of The Dallas Morning News, will give the principal addresses at the Second Annual Texas Drama Conference here May 1-3. the Mr. Brown will speak on “ The T heater in Parlous Times,” F ri­ day night a t Hogg Memorial A u­ ditorium. Mr. Rosenfield will dis­ in cuss “ The A m ateur T heater Texas” at a luncheon Friday at the Home Economics Tea House. The dram a conference, held in conjunction with Fifteenth Annual State One-Act Play Con­ test, is sponsored by the In ter­ scholastic League of the Univer­ sity Division of Extension and the University D epartm ent of Drama. Visitors a t the conference will be guests of the University C ur­ tain Club Thursday night a t the club’s rehearsal-preview of next production, “A Woman Wronged, or May Blossom,” an 1885 melodrama. Friday night, the Curtain Club will honor the eight high school casts participat­ ing in the one-act play contest, their directors, and visiting speak­ ers a t a dinner a t the Texas Fed­ eration of Women’s Clubs Build­ ing. K ay K y ser it show n ab o v e as th e to h a a tte m p te d re c e iv e g re e tin g s o f m o re th a n a th o u ­ sa n d s tu d e n ts a n d to w n sp eo p le a t th e a ir p o r t F rid a y a t 1 :2 0 o ’clock. T h e cro w d p u sh e d an d ja m m e d its w ay to th e d o o rs of th o p la n e tr y in g to g e t a close look a t th e P ro fe s s o r. P o lice r e ­ in fo rc e m e n ts w hich a r r iv e d to a id in h o ld in g b ack th e cro w d co u ld n o t g e t to th o p la n e . W ith d iffic u lty h e a c c e p te d a cow boy h a t, a p a ir o f sp u rs, a n d a key to th e C ity o f A u stin . BY JA C K D O L P H T SIX MINUTES afte r 4 o’clock, the big red curtains of Greg­ ory Gym were raised and there was the man of the hour, Mr. A Kay Kyser. The audience which filled several thousand downstairs chairs and upstairs bleachers was not surprised to find him there (not a t $1.75 and 85 weren’t) , but the m aestro himself appeared puzzled. cents a throw, they* ( E d . n o te : Ho p ro b a b ly w as n o t p a ls ie d , ha p ro b a b ly w as a c tin g .) The m aster showman kept his already appreciative audience in a state of near-hysteria fo r one hour and a half. His music was limited to a few pieces, and the rest was plain rhythm ical joshing, as “ The Three L ittle Fishes.” Mr. Kyser, filling the re st of the time with of Musical Knowledge and assorted vaude­ ville, was both the m o rt active and most uninhibited perform er of the crew. his College Applicants fo r education in the Musical College were not numer- out. Drawn by lot, the band leader found students not particularly seeking learning. The quota was finally filled, however, and the contestants m arched up, took the I. Q. ratings, and the professor selected “ Cactus” P ryor and Con­ nie Eversberg as winners of the five-dollar bill prizes. The devotees listened in rapt attention to the muaic, laughed dutifully at the jokes, and even few skeptics present were the amused at Mr. Kyser’s mugging. His m otto: “If you aren’t pretty, take a horrible picture, then peo­ ple think you’re kidding.” The orchestra was well-trained and capable. The boys were there for fun, and no matter bow much work it took, they were determined to enjoy themselves. concert had nothing to do with It was the attendance the band. of the audience in inform al attire, which is, I think, the proper way to attend a concert. It is cer­ tainly a healthy way to promote interest in music, and a practice which could be extended benefici­ ally. The idea of the concert cer­ chord. tainly hits a responsive Th« student body was highly in­ terested in this one, came out in a their toes, whistled and shouted, and had a swell time. large gathering, tapped Kyser Keeps It Up Through the Dance, Too Kay Kyser and his talented I gang played to and entertained one of the largest crowds in Uni­ versity dance history Friday night in Gregory Gym. The music was good, and the entertainm ent was better. Kyser let his troopers rest while he took the brunt of the entertaining. Lovely Ginny Simms captured the hearts of all the men, and H arry B abbitt made the women swoon with his blue eyes. Ish Kab~ bible was the favorite of all with his dead pan and wonderfully old jokes. At IO o’clock, usually a Pop­ ular time to be in the Library, there were eleven studenta in the Reserve Room. The Weather: Partly cloudy to cloudy with The most remarkable part of the p etitional light showers. Finals in the one-act play con- Joe Cook, Texan editor in 1931, test are scheduled for Saturday, and present editor of the Mission the Albany High Times, is one of the association’s May 3, and School will present “Two Thous­ directors, and will make awards as the T heater” by and Nights in chairm an the Cup Contests that R obert Nail of Albany on committee. A rthur Kowert, ex- night. studfent of the University, who is now editor of the Fredericksburg Standard, is leading discussion on play contest competing E ntertainm ent finals are Lamar High School of j news photography. planned by Joe Mus- Houston, Waco, Greenville, San Angelo, Crowell, Victoria, N e w W av e, form er University journal- ism student, now a member of the Braunfels, and M arfa high schools. San Antonio Chamber of Com­ merce. Regional winners in the one-act the has been of in ll. T. Hosts Ready For School Champs Two representatives from each , school in Texas which offers jour- I nalism courses are attending the ! annual meeting. Paul J. Thompson, chairman of , Looking to . U t . fin al, in eleven I ‘lf* D . p a r t m e n of Journalism , is ■ fields c f athletics, argum ent, and academics, plans were completed j Friday for the th irty -first annual 40 Delta Tau Members Texas Interscholastic League meet To Attend M obley Rites here, May 1-3. ______________ _ also a t the meeting. two Approxim ately thousand schoolboy and girl champions in everything from track and field dompetition to typing are expected to attend the University-sponsored m eet, Roy Bedichek, director, said. S tate finals are scheduled in the following fields: tennis, one- act play, journalism , ready-w rit­ ing, applied music, debatae, ex­ tem poraneous speaking, declama­ tion, typing and shorthand, three- R, and track and field. the following As sidelights to the three-day contests, special events are docketed: a State High­ way Department-sponsored wild flow er show, a high school prin­ cipals’ meeting, dram a, press, typ­ ing and track and field confer­ ences, a the thirty-second Power Show, staged annually by student engineers. tennis clinic, and F orty members of Delta Tau Delta fratern ity have gone to Dal­ las to attend the funeral of Charles Mobley, their fratern ity brother, who died Austin Thursday a fte r­ noon, Mobley died in Seton Hospital afte r a lingering illness which had kept him from attending classes regularly the last few weeks. An autopsy failed to reveal the exact cause of his death. Surviving Mobley are his par­ ents, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Mob­ ley of Dallas, and a sister, Mrs. B urt Speed of Elgin, the form er Mary Helen Mobley, who was a m ember of Delta Delta Delta so­ rority here in 1934-35. The funeral will be held in Dal­ las Saturday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock. tribute to Mobley, flags at the University were flown at half mast Friday, In Regents to Approve Co-Op Directors Approval of four faculty mem* j ber appointm ents to the University Co-Operative Society Board of Directors will be p art of the bus­ the Board of Regents iness of Saturday. Dr. Homer P, Rainey, president of the University, will nominate four persons to inaugurate a new procedure approved two months ago. The appointees will serve one, two, three, and four years, respectively. The successors to each of these appointees, how­ ever, will serve a regular four- year term . The new faculty directors will take office before May 5 along with the four student directors al­ ready named by Fred Nieman and J. Ward Fouts, present and re­ cent presidents o f the Students’ Association. Faculty members on the board now are Byron Short, professor of speech; Edward Crane, profea­ sor of law; and Dr. C. T. Gray, professor of educational psychol- ogy, who has been chairman of U h s group for savers^ yourn. • of Statisticians praised work the U niversity’s Bureau of Busi­ this field, but ness Research in th a t pointed out funds limited prevent such thorough examina­ tion of agricultural trends. BY H O P E B E R D IC H E V S K Y For two days I had been trying to m eet him. Ingeniero Vito Ales- sio Robles, historian and intellec­ tual of Mexico, stopped in Austin thus ending his fo r round-the-United States visit to colleges and universities as guest of the D epartm ent of State. I had heard about him— about his exploits when he had been with m ation come to his office from Diaz’s army, about his sense of out-of-state concerns, Mr. Childs humor and personality, about his said, and “ a complete presents- tion of factual inform ation Many requests fo r such infor- the National Univer- two days, j courses in See STATISTICIAN, Page 3. on sjty 0f Mexico, and his wide va­ riety of interests. At the univer­ sity he is professor of history and m athematics, besides being a mem­ ber of the board of regents. Accountants Meet /H ere Wednesday Several ex-students of the Uni­ versity who are prom inent in the field of accounting will take active parts in the sessions of the Insti­ held tu te on Accounting to be W ednesday in the Geology Audi­ torium under the auspices of the Texas Society of Certified Ac­ countants and the Austin Chapter of th a t Society. The purpose of the Institute is to bring together practicing ac­ countants, industrial accountants, university instructors in account­ ing, and accounting students for a discussion of timely subjects re­ lating to the public practice of accounting. a t Wednesday, beginning 3 o’clock, the afternoon session of the Institute will begin with a dis­ cussion of the “ Laws and Regula­ tions of Accountancy” by Clifton H. M orris, chairm an of the State Board of Public Accountancy. Mr. Morris is a p artn er in the firm of McCammon, Morris and Pickens in F o rt W orth. accountant Wli ¥ » J. F. S tu a rt A rthur of Dallas, a p artner of the firm of Lybrand, Ross Bros., and Montgomery, will discuss “ The Duties of the Ju n ­ ior A ccountant.” Mr. A rthur is a l chartered accountant of Scotland. Fred F. Alford of Dallas will ^ ^ ^ p r e s e n t a paper dealing with the en- ,VB | ' rvices of the titled “ The A ccountant’s Office, its Operations, Functions, and Services.” An ex-student of the University, Mr. A lford is a prac­ ticing public accountant in Dallas. J. A. Phillips of the J. A. Phil­ lips Company of Houston, will dis­ cuss “Taxation and the Account­ ant.” Mr. Phillips is a certified ac­ countant o f Louisiana and Texas. “ Contents, Purposes and Res­ ponsibility of the A udit R eport,” will be discussed by A rth u r C. Up- leger of A. C. Upleger and Com­ pany. • On our way to Dr. Castaneda’s office— where he has been work­ ing on some w riting— I promised not to question him on politics. “ I am not a politician,” he said. “ I am an historian.” WTe did not mention the many times th a t he has intervened fo r his country. Eleven years ago, Dr. Alessio Robles was in Austin— as an exile. For one whole year he spent all his time in the Latin American col­ lection doing research on several of his books, which, he says, would never have been w ritten if it had not been for The University of Texas. When the political disturbances which caused him to leave his coun­ try blew over he was allowed to re­ turn home to his family. “ And yet,” he says, “ when I arrived in Austin this Wednesday, I fe lt as if at last I was coming home.” • He did not need to tell me how he fe lt about our University. “ Has it changed?” I asked. In­ stead of answering he picked up some sheets of paper lying on the desk. It was an article which will be printed in a chain of newspa­ pers from Mexico to California — on the University and Austin. “ Where could I find better inspir­ ation?” and our No finer treatm ent of heartfelt sincerity has ever been expressed city. about our school “ The Tranquil City” Dr. Robles calls Austin — incidentally, the “ ingeniero” in fro n t of his name is the equivalent o f our doctor of philosophy, only in Mexico they have no such degree. He tells of visiting the University of Califor­ nia and being taken over every nook th at had to do with engineer­ ing. “ I’m an old man,” the pro­ fessor says, “ and I was tired of the tramp. Here in Austin I can rest.” . . We talked about journalism ; he has been editor of two newspapers and is a contributor to the “ Excel­ sior” of Mexico City, the Diario Yucatan, the Porvenir of M onter­ rey, La Prensa o f San Antonio, and La Opinion of Los Angeles. Dr. C. A ubrey Smith will pre­ side a t the afternoon session. Mr. Howard T. Cox, chapter chairman, will preside during the evening program . Both sessions will be open to the public and all discus­ sions are concerned with the de­ velopment o f accounting. Professor W. T. Rolfe, chair­ man of the Departm ent of Archi­ recovering from a tecture, broken foot received last Sunday the _____________ | when he WM p ly in g g olf .I B M - institutes on meeting*. ex- -•counting have been held in other for Open forum s will follow Sim ilar trop State Park. He hie office is states, but this is the first one of peeled back Ha type to be held in Texaa. I two weeks. in Ro) fa ’s F oot Brob on A DES MOINES, Iowa., April 25— Broken records rolled from beneath Longhorn spikes twice this afternoon as The University of Texas held complete sway a t the opening day o f the Thirty-second Drake Relays. The flying Steers lost only once in an entire day of competition, the loss coming to Hughes in the discus. A gainst th a t loss the Steers piled up a world record, two Drake records, and added first place for the 880 relay team and both entries in the 100-yard dash pre­ liminaries. S aturday’s championships will see Texas action in the 440 and 880 relay finals and in the 100- yard dash. The Steers are favored in ail three. I t’s a toss-up between Fred Ramfcdell and Carlton T erry in the latter. Dorothy Ball ’Blitzes' Iowa The world marx th at Texas made before the 10,000 fans was the climax of a full day of shattered records th at showed six broken and one tied in this big two-day Midwestern carnival. Goes on Air 4 Times In Ninety Minutes Spacial to tho T tx a n DES MOINES, April 25.—I t was a big question here Friday night as to ju st who had accom­ plished the most during the day, the Steer trackm en or Texas Co­ ed Dorothy Ball. And considering the new records th a t the Long­ horns made, th a t’s going some for Dotty. Blonde, drawling, and very beautiful, she had Des Moines under her thum b afte r she left o’clock Friday her train a t 7 breakfast s h e morning. A fte r record-breaking started on her tour th at took over all of this city and added half of Iowa. But she wouldn’t start, she told them, before she did one thing; so early Friday she saw all the Steer track stars and wished them her best for the day. A pparently it worked. She visited Drake University in the morning then toured the city in the afternoon. At 4:30 o’clock, she met her Pi B eta Phi sorority sisters, and then dashed through four radio program s within an hour and a half. Dorothy finished the day with visits to the Alpha Tau Omega and Tau Kappa Epsilon fra te r­ nity dances in her honor. All that— and she won’t even be crowned Relays Queen until Sat­ urday afternoon when Bill Stern, NBC’s star announcer, will place the diamond crown on her head, announcing it over coast-to- coast hook-up a t the same time. a Bill Stern to Broadcast Coronation and Sports The N.B.C. broadcast from Des Moines of the ceremony in which Miss Ball will be crowned Queen of the Drake Relays by Bill Stern, ace sportscaster, will be this a fte r­ noon a t 2:30 o’clock C.S.T. Miss Ball, sw eetheart nominee from Houston, was chosen Queen from a field of candidates representing twenty-one universities and col­ leges. Other outstanding events of the Thirty-second Annual Drake Uni­ versity Relay Carnival will also be described by Stern who will broad­ cast interm ittently from 2 to 4:30 o’clock, taking the air from time the m ajor to events. to describe time W ithin the mass of m ark smash­ ing, Texas won the sprint medley relay finals in 3:23.2, slicing an­ other 8 /1 0 of a second from the world m ark they had set a t the three weeks ago. Texas Relays The Steers, with Morris (Red) Barefield, Billy Seay, Barnsdall, and Mac U m stattd all running beautiful races, stayed well ahead through the last half with Um­ stattd closing well away from Ohio S tate’s E isenhart a t the fin­ ish. Next on the Texas program o f mark breaking was in the 440-yard relay group. Running the regular four of Seay, T erry, Ramsdell, and Lonnie Hill, the Longhorns swished to the fastest time th a t had been run in the nation in the event in three years— a startling 41 seconds. Hill, his injured leg perform ing perfectly, added a fine anchor to an excellent s ta rt by Seay, T erry, and Ramsdell. Texas defeated its nearest heat compe­ tition, Minnesota, by some tw enty yards. • In the sprint medley, Texas had plenty of competition, but wera simply too fast. Barefield in his leg came home a opening 440 scant yard back of N ebraska’s na­ tionally-known ace, Red L ittler. Seay and Ramsdell, in the 220 dis­ tances, gathered an eight-yard lead fo r U m stattd over Michigan and Ohio State. The Steer sopho­ more was two strides ahead o f E isenhart all in the last HO yards, moved out for See RELAYS, Page 3 the way, and The Summary: 120-yard hurdles (qualifiers) I Owen*, Howard Payne; Wright, Ohio State; Bu- cck, Texaa AA M; Revel, Pittsburg, Ran. Teachers; Horveth, Northwestern; Finch, Northwestern: Tate, Oklahoma A AM.; Edwards, Oklahoma A.AM. Bast tim e: Owens, 14.5. Two mile m n final: Won by Hunter, Notre Dame: Gibson, Oklahoma A A M , second; Grace, Yankton, third; Wisnar, Michigan University, Times 9.24.7, fourth. 100-yard dash (qualifiers): Ramsdell, Texas; Jam es, East Texas Teachers) Tarrant, Alabama Teachers; Piel, Michi­ gan; Terry, Texas; Gibson, Notre Dame) Brown, Louisiana State; Millen, Mar* quette. Beat time, Ramsdell, 9.7. Sprint medley relay final: Won by (Barefield, Seay, Ramsdell, Um­ Texas third. sta ttd ); Ohio second, Michigan Nebraska fourth. Time: new world’s record, S :23.2, Old record, 3:24, held by Texas. Discus finals: Won by Biosis, Georgs* town. 161 feet 5 inches; H ughes, Texas, second, 160 feet S inches; tie for third—• Pitch, Minnesota and Isham, Southwest Texas Teachers, 146 inches) feet Prochaska, Nebraska, fifth. S 440 yard relay (q u alifiers); Texaa (Seay, Terry, Ramsdell, H ill); Minne­ sota. Illinois. Rice, Notre Dame. Beet time— Texas, 41 for new Drake flat record. Distance medley relay finals: Won by Michigan normal; Notre Dame sec­ Stat# ond, W isconsin, fourth, Drake fifth. Time 10:15.8. third. Iowa Broad jump finals: Won by Brown. L.S.U., 24 feet 5 7 /% inches; Rice, East Texas Teachers, second, 28 feet 6% inches; Christopher, Rice, third, 28 feet inches; Christopher, Rice, third, t i 6% inches; Walker, Alabama State, feet 4 fourth, 23 feet % inches; Luxemburg, Ohio State, fifth, 22 feet 4% inches. 880 relay (qu alifiers): Texaa Barefield, Sparks, R am sdell); AAM. , Rice, braska. B est time, Texas 1:26.7. (Seay. Texaa Illinois, Michigan, N e- Mile relay (q u a lifiers): Michigan, Louisiana State, Ohio State, Drakes Notre Dame, Missouri. Beat times Mick* igan, 8:18. 187.97 Javelin (qu alifiers): Grots, Nebraska. 211.27 fe et; Vos berg, Marquette. 1 9 6 .lt. feet; Barker. Grinnell, fe et; Isham, Southweet Texaa Teachers. 184.4* feet; Kientin, Illinois, 181.56 feet; Bae* movich. Michigan Normal, 176.19 feet) Landen, Iowa State, 176.11 feet; Bed* ley, W isconsin. 178.56 feet: Elders, IU, linoia, 178.51 fe et; Maya, Iowa 8taftsi» 187.97 feet. Shot put (qualifiers); Biosis, George* town. 52 foot % tech; Sc b Ie ic h. Betone* ka, 49 feet I inch; Hook, Michigan. 49 inch; Pack vee. Wisconsin, feet % feet 19!4 Inches; Wilson. Barter, feet 4 5 / i inches; Weber, Purine!, feet 7 * feet f% inches; Moines. Atetomn 44 feet I 45 feet 11% inches) Deal, Hies, m l inches; Sikteh. Blin©*! inch; Aseteker, Aggies Battle Steers Today for Chance to Stay in Race. I • eem Sports fey Billy Sanding T tr a n S po rts Rd Her Fire Likes Steer* DES MOINES, April 25.— The Steer track team is indeed having th ie M idw ettem a hot track trip. time on Deutsch and Bumpers Set for Mound Duel BY BILL WHITMORE T Sport Stsff Tbs Tex** Longhorns have not lost an athletic event to the Tex** A f f ie s d uring tho 1940-41 school year. Brat th a t record will be in danger this afternoon when the Steer* in a t Clark Field play A.AM. a game th a t will have an im po rtant bearing on the Southwest Conference baseball standing*. Texas now ■♦stands in first place and the Ag­ th eir forem ost gie®, are one of challengers. If the Aggies win they will be up in the midst o f the p e nn a nt fight— if Texas wins, th e j .Steer* will have a firm er grip on the Aggies will first place, and drop nearly out of consideration.: Rinky Dinks Crush Schreiner Club, 13-0 In Only 'Mural Tilt The Longhorns were In a hotel fire at Lawrence last week and Taking advantage of wild pitch- decided th a t they had had their in t and poor fielding, the Rinky I DI nit a rruahed the Sehreiner Club, l»«t d!M«t*r fo r the J»ant. d F r j. But their mind* were abrup tly changed Friday morning about 6 I . , o’clock. A fire aim*] In t h . Fort S'1*1' • « • " > « » » ®" » • m tr .m u r .1 De* Moines Hotel started things, fields. and said fast fo r the n ext half-hour. thing* were happening j The Rinky Dinka scored a run j in each of ^ f i m two innm* , t , , . ^ )n th, , , _ , t It all happened when a traveling .ii.L . , salesman w ent to sleep on the fifth floor with a lighted c igarette in hie nin* fo r »ix ru n.. Continuing their hand. A resulting fire g u tted two j slugging in the fourth, Hill Hall rooms and completely filled runs en tire upper stories with dense smoke binits. th«n broke ooh* in the third In* the boys chased across. more five .. . . , Littlefield Fastest The siren awoke the Steers with a s ta r t and they all headed for the fire eecape and a ten story trip downwards. Flash Allen, Rinky Dink Short­ run, stop, knocked out a home and his team m ate Vernon Martin poled a long double left field, le o n a r d Yamgan, pitcher for th# Schreiner Club, connected for a double and a single to lead his team in hitting. into think You might th a t Clydt eight Littlefield w ouldn't have aa much Schreiner batters in his three in­ speed as soma of hi* proteges, but nings on th** mound, and Mike ab ou t th# fifth floor in th# down- i Sweeney took over in th* fou rth wa d flight he passed th# o t h e r s , I#nd „tnJc1( out twf) Yanigan fan- r o m , bo f a rt th a t ha f in .lly b r o k . out a step in the fire escape. Joh nny Gill struck out A flight ha — * ak , n d p , rm lM , d r m , „ , d f „ „ „ en hit#. Breathless and etiil shaken, Mac lobby U m stettd arrived w ithout his ahoee— and he didn’t know it unit] he wee down. the in Swimming Longhorns Banquo! Tonight The Kensae U. boys fared worse. They threw all their possessions the window and clambered out down on e blanket rope. Some c o a r b . , maintained th a t t h . f i r . ’ ™ 8 , t “ rd *y Bl* h‘ * ' 7 h u rt some of their boys, M arquette •specially. The University swimming team ill clo*# it* ten th successful sea-! 1 with a banqu et in the Texas tin - Ion. The team ha* a national rec- Ord srithout ever being defeated in a dual meet, and ha* won the conference title every tim# *ince the sport wa* recognized. This entire town pauses on Drake Relays week-end to do noth­ ing b ut live and talk track, stir­ ring up amazing in te re st in the meet. Stye jS a ily & x & r f PASE TWO SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1941 Owls Knock Baylor Bears From Conference Fight, 2-0 The largest crowd o f the sea- 8 m tt m tf> tkt T, ril„ to jam *on— over three thousand fans— WACO, April 25.— R ighthander Fred Pepper alm ost single-handedly throttled Baylor’* strongest Southwest Conference p e n n a n t hopes are expected by Business M anager Ed Olle in years by pitching five-hit sh u to u t ball and by ritarring a t b a t as the Clark Field stands to see the game, and most Rice thumped the Bears, 2-0, here Friday a fternoon. The two teams of *ee tween Mel Deutsch of the Long-j horn* and L efty Bumpers of the Aggies. them will come primarily the slated pitching duel be­ * play here again Saturday. to I Pepper singled in the fir s t Rice and then scored the second run himself. His mound opponent, Joe T erry, perform ed commendably, also, limiting the Owls to six hits and rarely ge tting serious trouble. into Only once during the game did Baylor th re a te n to m a r Pepper’* shut-out. With men on second and third, however, the Owl hurler bore down to retire the side with­ out fu r t h e r ado. fo r Baylor had previously been in the fore of the fight the Southwest championship, having auffered only two defeats while winning five contests. Their loss to Rice, however, almost certain ­ ly shoves them o u t of th# Confer­ ence picture unless Texas and the Aggies, the only two team s with less than three losses, should su f­ fer unexpected losses. Dented) is established as prob­ ably the best hurler in the c o n - ! ference, but Bumpers doe* not rate far behind. And since he is a i* left-hander, the Aggie ace given a good chance of upsetting! Texas, since left-handed batters are the leaders of the S teer hit-! ting attack. Two of the most talked a b o u t 1 Major League Results NATIONAL LEAGUE .St. Louis 8, Cincinnati 4. Brooklyn 5, Boston 0. New York l l , Philadelphia 4. Chicago 8, Pittsburgh 7. to play an AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland 5, Chicago .‘J. D etroit 12, St. Louis l l . Boston 8, Philadelphia I. New York 5, Washington 0. football player* in th# Southwest in Conference will also be the is ex­ their hattin g game, and pected integral part I in their te a m ’s *uccessea— or fail- j ure*. For Texas it will be Pete Layden, the boy who pitched those passe* on last fall! the gridiron and who now roam* Centerfield for th# Longhorn baseball team. For the Aggies it will be big Ma­ the sta r q uarterback rion Pugh, who the Aggies vow would have fall Raymond A tar, Longhorn short- mad** had he been able to play a t full stop, was leading speed against Texas, and who now Conference hitter in a release of *i r i t baseman on the ba tting averages with a .473 av- Happen Here TE N YEARS AGO TODAY- thing* d iffe re n t listed a* the It Did last 8 diamond. arage. Lea C ro u c h e s the Longhorns’ ) FIV E YEARS AGO TODAY— regular right fielder, probably will Bill Wrelch, s ta r Longhorn golfer, play but may not be able to lost to Billy E ager of Georgia s ta rt tod ay ’s game because of a Tech, I up, 20 holes, in the semi- Intercol- in yester- final* of kne*» d ay ’s w orkout when he ran into j l e g a t e golf to u rn a m e n t a t Athens, the right field cliff. If he can’t G*- play, Horace Glenn, a s q u a d m a n ! ONE YEAR AGO TODAY who saw quite a bit of action on I The Longhorn* nosed out injury sustained the Southern the in due to 7“l [P Bottlers 9-8 in a long, rag- 8 * ™ ,un(*# r , * * * his place, Or there is a po*- new Drake Relay* I throw ing the discus in the preliminaries. record 159.79 Steer Reserve Nesters Play At Aggieland This Afternoon First Four Stay Here to Prep For Miam i Match BY TOM DAVISON Ttrail Sport Staff I Six Steer second-stringer* will ! g e t the call this a fte rnoo n when the Texas invades tennis College Station for a match with Texas A.&M. on the Aggies’ lime­ stone courts. team Fou r singles and two doubles matches are scheduled in the Long- \ horns’ first match on foreign soil since their Louisiana invasion a t the s ta r t of the c u rr e n t season. Playing nu m b er one for ti. T. this a fte rn o o n will be Leo La- Borde, the fo rm er Lam ar Ju n io r College star. A one-year le tte r ­ man, La Borde played very well for the Longhorns a gainst East last Tuesday. He will be Texas aided by Milton H offm an, Joe Ball, Gene Weil, Cullen Crain, and Garland Poole. All are let­ te rm en except H offm an, a sopho-j more, While their understudies are in I Aggieland, the Texas “ first f o u r " will be busy priming fo r their match against a formidable Miami University q u a r te t here Wednes- j day. In th a t match W arren Christ- ner, Captain Maurice Henry B atjer, and possibly Reu­ ben Riskind will go back into ac­ tion. Fincher, ! Composing the Aggie team are Xavier Fernandez, the little Mex- j jean sophomore who is the first- netter, H enry ranking Cadet Guinn, Ralph Eads, and Al Krez- den. and singles, W arren C hristner Henry B a 'je r . Also qualifying were Lefty Brown of Baylor, Fred Higginbotham of S.M.U,, Jack Rodgers and Dick Morris of Rice, Joe Taylor of Abeline Christian, E a st and Tex**. Singles alternates, listed in the order ranked, are Wilkins of S.M.U., Nachlae of Rice, Gene Wilson, Maurice Fincher, and Bill Blalock of Texas, Harris of Bay- Jim m y Kroesen of ,lor, and F re e m a n of E a st Texas. | Double* qualifiers a r e Morris and Rodgers of Rice, Wilkins and Higginbotham of S.M.U, Brown and H arris of Baylor, and C hrist­ ner and Fin c h e r o f Texas. A lte r ­ nates are B a tje r and Blalock of Texas, W h ite h u rst and Nachlas | of Rice, Guinn and F e rn a n d e z of of Texas A.&M, and Kroesen % 1 Schultz# o f E a st Texas W lv / > PLA 17 RA C KET S Good Serviceable Racket Strung and equipped with Rubber Handle. 195 READ Y TO PLAY FO R Y O U PRESSES Hard W ood Racket Press­ es of several Styles with Rust Resisting Hardware. lasting Racket A good Saver for only 49 B A L L S S H O E S Dunlop and W right & Ditson "championship” p r e s s u r e packed. 3 for $1.25 N IM BLE BALL I FO R 55e S t , our largo displays el BADMINTON U. S. Keds in many style* and models $1 to $2.50 EYE SHADES (or a belier gam * 35c TABLE TENNIS W E ST R IN G R ACK ET S SPORTING GOODS DEPARTMENT Te x a s Bookstore World Badminton Champ To Play at Baylor Three Longhorns In National Meet Special to tho Ttitan Jack WACO, April 25 P ur­ cell, world’* champion badminton player from Canada, to g e th e r with Guy Reed, champion of the A mer­ ican courts, will perform a t a spe­ cial badminton show a t Baylor gym here May 6. Mary Honaker, atate single* player who recently took p a r t in the National m eet a t Cleveland, and Texas Jud y , leading women’* double* player from Dallas, will feet I app ear on the program with the I world famous bird smasher*. by O fficial net representatives for the J of the Southwest district N.C.A.A. were released last night by Dr D. A. Penick, the Univer­ sity tennis coach and director of the qualifying to u r n a m e n t fo r the National Intercollegiate Meet. The tournam ent was completed in Houston last week. These players will e n te r the In- j tercollegiate meet the third week in June at the Merion Cricket Club in Haverford, Penn. Texas ha* two qualifiers in B I M I M B I Big Al Blozi- wa* complaining | B ^ i ’ s t o e T B e i T Waterman* tT £ I ribility th a t Alton Bostick will’ go HouM> PrHc* Jftck Hu*he* *et Stern Plugs Texas Thi* year an atte m p t is being to have all ex-Longhorn made , ....... swimmer* present a t th# banquet. ‘ Presentation of the Nagle Trophy I th<* N’° rth Texas trip, ■ for sportsmanship, and the Texas of a sore band the morning before e » e n t out to duel with Jack J w|jj ^ made. Speeches by I to rig h t field, with Preston Flana- football coach Dana X. j Fan toking over the catching du- 'If*' stadium on the Friday half award* will complete the program, rhythm to pace the runner*, the Texas nine with Backing I Bible, the election of the captain * » j k l ! ^or n#5lt year, and varsity le tte r I fir* in Bostick’* place, Traveling more than ten thou- Longhorn Band will be m jje, ^ i s season, the team stands ^ Hughes In the discus. #ni Ini t h e o f the program won# on Satur- j day, ; ie cobego >and» move in. A g l . n c . a t th* high achoo! HO* lion of th* meet Friday morning leads to a decided decision that th# Texas lad* run a much faster brand o f track and field than do their corn-fed counterpart*. , tm A • ♦ I* rn. r n A a 6 « <1 ak or ai The Longhorns finished o ff T hursday night before the pre­ lims with a two hour bull session th a t involved Michigan U.’a stars a n d several Kansas U. men. Bill Stern, N.B.C.’s g re at sport* announcer, dashed into th# press box ® h c r t'y before the first event s ta r t to check up on hit technical adjustm ents, and smilingly prom- t h . " S u m p lug, M W . national hookup. r the Drake Relays wsre And starting. O k lahom , A AM. T a x . , A.&M. and the Dallas Athletic Club In early m eets; won the con­ r e ­ championship, ference cently handed the Mexico Olympic team a decisive defeat. and Scuddy and Richey Show Cag* TaUnt the in the to play victory march or final on the dirge— depending score. T eam T e x a s _____ _ „ 6 Baylor ____5 T exas A.AM. 3 S M U ............... ______ 5 _____ ___ 3 Rice T.C.U. ____ ________ I S e ato n • S tanding* W L I 3 2 4 7 6 Pct. .857 .625 .600 .556 .300 .143 Getting in his first licks at re- f g building a basketball team riddled j r 0 r T by g raduation, Coach Jack Gray ; Play Local Girls Tonight has been drilling his tw enty-man 1 U n a m p S . \A7^r*U b“ k,t1b* 11, to U n rn t- t? ntlJ *mc' A pr'' 6’ plan' about ten more days of workout* for his squad before the spring ses­ sions are closed out. The promising new J. J. Corral girl*' softball team of Austin will meet the Williamson-Dickie M anu­ atate facturing Company from Fort Worth, a t 8 champs o’clock th* Barton tonight a t Springs J. C. diamond. ten, Aggie Golfers Boat S.M.U. BALLAS, April 2 5 — (IN S) C urrently making good stride* toward filling th# vacancies left Two Texas A.&M. golfers toured j by senior* Hull, Cooley, Granville, Mildred Sassman, Corral pitcher who pitched a no-hit, no-run game the Dallas Country Club course in I Houpt, Nelms, and Moore are two | thia year, in her opening game p a r Thursday as their team shut junior college tra n fse rs from John out Southern Methodist Univer- T a r l t o n , Lavoie# Scuddy and Odis ! will try to stop the Cowtown team, *ity. Henry Richards and Henry Richey; sophomores-to-be Dudley | which boasts such players as pitch- H a u ie r of A.&M. Both parred 27 Wright and John Hargis; l e t t e r - J cr Jo Kennedy and second base- holea. Th# Aggies won fo u r sin- man Le* Sander, and squadman j man Doxie Washington, both all- gi#* and two double* match#*. j Curtis Popham. > state players. I n t r a m u r a l S c h e d u l e BASEBALL F raternity D ivU IM I >43 •’Clock Iterth ll>IS—-Tau Delta FM n Bap- pa A lp h a . Middle field— Pi Kappa Alpha va. S i t n a Alpha Epsilon. 4 IS o'Ciock Booth flak!—Kappa Sterna va. Chi Phi. Club Diviate* 2SSO «‘Clach B eath f t#14— R o b erta H ail va, W isner a t befc*-e®er va. Esakv Dinka, 4 >** a Clock: N 1441a f ie ld —-B en# o f A loe Ta. P r a ­ t h e r BAU. MICA D ivision S i t e o'clock N o rth field •— W llk on la g Honan va- Compaa C a lif. M ddl* Sense*)*. Co-op. field — BerowbaHa va. WOor 4 .4S o'Clock Worth {Sail— UopaoB Houao v s. Dixon TENTIS TEAM O oh Division B o’Clock P . Adair.*. C. Hof nor. GUMon A Ho­ va. Parker. Co*. (Pro*. Caste ha) rah Kahn A Bol raw (LCD), Bhmrt, McC ti tertian. Kapp jot A HarL (Boma of Ajar) v t. Bs**, Paaok. bvrt Fannin A Vo«o! (Prather). C om o. K eeton. Kirk A Sailors (Tojna) va. Dree nor. Lope*. Weaver A Shanty (L C D ). Parker, B o n , B rasero A S halt# (Fea­ th e r) #«. I m a , Kirk, Dennis A Bode 9 • ‘Clock ■ B H B MHI*. U U U A i s m aa (Pan­ th e r) na. McKedi, T anto n a. O beahs na A Hopk in s ( S . H a ll). ■ H a m , Pnatn*. B ie n s A G srasr s ip llp l a t A irn } va. M arkle?. C arny, A m m m r (U C D ). A XeariaeB • LCD) va. winner o f S torey. S h effield , (T ejaal va Nathan. McCarthy A Hush Latvia, Rode A Brea rn (D elta Sigm a P l). Corrigan, H am let!, P eterson A F ait vs Gilland, Manroe, i F r e t. C seek s) D m ughan A Hill ( f r a t h er). MICA D ivision 2 o ’Clock I A y, H itchcock, Compere A C 'bani (Camp ss (Jtiild > va. winner of Mc lf an e­ A Fla •-.a tan m ia, FI ta gem id, * Oak G rove) va. Troiano. W ilson, Fln- •ar A Cunningham (M o lo ch s). D avis Bro tab, Jank, W hite A Goad ( W liken- ■ fig > va. Clardy. Chiodo. Verheyden A V erhsydoa (R u b icon ). A o’Clock B u tler, S m ith . W alk er A W illiam * va. w in n er of D uhoan., (S c re w b a ll* ’> P h i.lip*, F ried la n d A M ahler tC r» .;-h > *a. S a d le r, A llen, S haw and W atson (B io m eu ia t). Winner of M itta f, Ferguson, Knapp and G ilt (Oak G rove) v*. Cobia, Depew, v t , Harriman nod Alien ( A lexan d er) •cordon. Martin, Adair and Sm ith (Cy- clep a ). A 2 o ’C lo c k Jon** A W atson, U hl, Kennedy (Jon**) v*. winner o f Roaaon, MncKen- (Campus Guild* v». *v*. H o rs A Starry Reed, R ob eru on . Morris A Steed (Oak G rove). W innor af Edm onds. Johnaon, Seay va. Cornetti, (C yclop*) sa d Edmonds Dennison Sparks A Jon es ( B lom q u ist) va. Baker. Culweii. Garner A Riley ( W li­ k en in g ), • o’Clock Durham, Baird, Ham mark and Mar- (Rubicon) va. winner of F rits, k ette lf fin a ls , Co I let ti and Fnrenthoid (S crew . bsJla t va. Lean bard, Hen nee#y, B ally ta d Mnrphey (Campus G u ild). W inner of Cram. Frank, Young and Andoraon. If a th old ( E achherger) (Oak H erring, Flay her and Morris Oro**) VS Baker, Coms**, Eddtas and S m y th s ( A io a a u m t) , va. F raternity Diviaion 4 o ’Clock r n Penlek, K elly, W adleigh Rill t Dri'a Tau) va. N eim eyer, Jacob*, Mor­ ris A MrMullen (A T O ), and Bary, Thompaon. Brown, W alker vs. W ortham Bishop, Thorns* (B eta ) and H am bcrt (P h i D o lt). B envienu. Baker, Siaipeon A Dorsey ; i Kappa B ig) vs. Blanchette, Nemtr, Bai- b o r t A M<*Caul ( P h i G a m ) . Berne*, Davidson, Srnrlock and Ba*. IKA) v a . K tog#, McBirnvy, Spear* •# r i and P o t t e r I D R E ) . I o'Clock Bowen, Rhode*. Manning and Hagen j I DKS) v*. Bronatad, Byar*, Abbey and (Crouch (A TO ). Batt Ie, M -Donald, Bwanaon and Ken* (P h i Gam ) v*. Rideoui, Dunlap, n#dy Terrell and Neat (D elta C hi). Gaine*, Taliey, G oaaett and Ayer (SP E ) va. Scudday, Spear*, K itta aad Pi ne on (D elta Big). Duson, C'Miles. Moore A Lucas ( Kappa S it) va. R uttenberg, L evtt, J u r a a and I^d in (Tau D#H>. WHEN SPEED S YOUR NEED PHONE TELEGRAMS TO I foetal Telegraph c a m e s MB THUMBS ■pam ci ta t w i t ta WW mCFNMC Btu. Girls Softball Gal FT. WORTH’S “TEN PRETTY GIRLS” l e t VB. DOUBLE J GIRLS SATURDAY, 8 P M.- (Turn L eft -BARTO N SPRINGS FIELD at B arton's B rid ge) SUNDAY, 2:30 P M — STATE HOSPITAL (Double H eader) 4200 Guadalupe S t. A dm ission I Be The Double ‘J ’ Corral W ill O pen W e d n e sd a y at 2426 Guadalupe (One Block W est of C irothore D orm .) Featuring A Real Ranchy Chuck Wagon TALL COKES AND DR. PEPPER ....Sc ......................................... Sc HOT DOGS HAMBURGERS .......................... - ........10c A lto F R E E D E L I V E R Y ^ (jive Her One of these I Specials f r o m Cactus an J B I uetonn ct Belle Nominee Negatives.... Regular $5.00 Picturer (BxIO)_______ $3.98 Regular $7.00 Golblend (8x10)______ $4.98 1306 Colorado (DRI (TUMM I K M R * AH I a - - r til— r* MAY ll . . . A DAY FOR SONS AND DAUGHTERS TO HONOR THEIR MOTHERS Just thirty-throe years ago Ann Jarvis of Philadelphia originated the first Mother's Day, a tribute Inspired by revere nee for her own beloved and accomplished mother, In 1914, W oodrow Wilson, as President, proclaimed Mother's Day as a national day of observation by children of al! ages— everywhere. There is another Mother's Day — 1941— and there Is no one among us so preoccup sd, so distant, or so heedless of the blessing of having a mo­ ther to cherish— that we can let that day— M ay I I ’-"-slip by without expressing our thanks to G o d . , . and to her # . , your mother and mine! Georges and \ Willaoghbiys Get Clubby W hich w a y did he go, G eorge? I t seem s W hich w ay did he go? to be a r a c e b e tw e e n th e G eorge Club a n d t h e W illough bvs, w ith the G e o rg e C lub le ad in g and the W illoughby* tr a ilin g . T he G e o r g e Club, a new insti- th e ca m p u s, has tion o n th r e e m e m b ers, a n d “ th e o th e r m e m b e r / ’ “ Alice f r o m D allas” Jo n e s, J a n e J e s te r , an d S h irle y S co tt fro m Mc­ K in n ey a r e th r e e m e m b ers, and J a n e C a r t e r i* th e o t h e r m e m ­ ber. W h e n e v e r th e G eorge Club ta k e s in a show , th e choice o f th e movie r e s ts on th e th r e e m e m b ers. I an d m e m b ers. th e co st rest* on th e o th e r th e T h e W illo u g h b y Club, o f w h ich Jim m ie M o ro n ey , D ub S ingleton, H o m e r M u e lle r, a n d F r e d C h a m ­ bers a r e c h a r t e r m e m b e rs, have o rg a n iz e d to c o u n t e r a c t a n y s u b ­ versive ac tiv itie s o f th e G eorge Club; T h u r s d a y a t e G eorge Days on the c a m p u s, th * club a n n o u n c e d F rid a y . E a c h T h u r s d a y th e th r e e m e m b e rs a n d th e o th e r m e m b e r w ea r red , w h ite , a n d blue candy- strip e d d re sse s a n d red bows. L a s t T h u r s d a y th e W illoughby Club s e n t a la rg e box o f slightly used flow er* to th e G eorge Club, but th e G eorge* replied t h a t th e W illoughby* w e r e m e re ly t r y in g to m a in ta in go o d rela tio n s. / Today On the Campus S A T U R D A Y M orning 7 4 0 — W a t e r s a f e t y in s tru c tio n a t G re g o ry G ym. 9— K a p p a p ro v in c e c o n v e n tio n m e e tin g s, K a p p a H ouse. A fte r n o o n 2-—W esley F oun dation o f the U ni­ v ersity M ethodist Church picnic startin g a t 2 o ’clock. 4 ;30 — Klip Klub d e p a r t u r e f ro m Journalism B uilding fo r P ease j Park fo r w ien er roast. N ight 6— Kappa P r i D riskill H otel. U n iv ersity T— Ui \ 6 — K l con ven tion banquet, sw im m ing team banquet in the T exas U nion. Ka r g :1 5 — “ The P eo p le, Y es” E xp erim en tal T h eater to ry . in the lab ora­ 9 — U n iv ersity N igh t Club opens a t the Club H ouse. 9 :3 0 -1 2 — Kappa barn dance, Bar- " ton Springs. 8 4 1 — Mrs. E. J. R a isc h ’s Board­ in g H o u se o pen house. 8-11— D e lta Chi open house. 8 4 2— A lp h a Chi O m eg a f o rm a l, F e d e r a t e d W o m e n ’s Club. 9-12— D e lta P hi E psilon fo rm a l, M a rie A n to i n e t t e Room o f th e S te p h e n F . A u stin H otel. 9 4 2 — L ittle C a m p u s A ssociation s p r in g f o rm a l, M ain L o u n g e o f j the T e x a s U n ion. / Work Begins O n N ew House For Gamma Phi’s A rchitect* have begun work on th e new Gamma Phi B eta house to be located a t 2622 W ichita across from th* Chi Om ega and Kappa A lpha T h eta houses. The hou se will be b uilt o f w hite lim e­ sto n e from A ustin , and on a lot 60 by 150 fe e t. trees, and The b uilding ie shaded by bv* oaks and pecan the house its e lf w ill be built on the Town C olonial sty le, in the shape o f an “E ” w ith the m iddle arm knocked o u t. It w ill have a glassed-in lo g g ia , and w ill ac­ com m odate tw e n ty fou r girl*, the housem other, and guest*. * Th* library is to be paneled in natural pine, w hile the other rooms a re to he o f various colored plas­ ter. W hile th e fu rn itu re has not been ch osen, and the interior dec­ oration s co m p letely decided upon, the house w ill be furnished w ith sim ple, m odern istic furn itu re. T 'Use Own Ideas To Decorate/ ; Says Teacher W a n t some inex pensive sp rin g h o u se -d e c o ra tio n h ints? L iste n to Miss M a ry G o ld m a n n , d ire c to r of th e U n iv e r s ity home m a n a g e m e n t j houses f o r co-ed home econom ists. Miss G o ld m a n n ’s rule is to “ use She brea ks it w h a t you have .” dow n this w a y : U se the g r o w i n g t hi ng s a r o u n d y o u — v a r i e d shades of gr e e n leaves f r o m t r e e s in y o u r yard, wi l df l o w- ers, and ho me g a r d e n var i e t i e s can j be a* e f f e c t i v e as “ ho t house I pl a n t s . ” U se food a n d b e v e ra g e b ottles, th e c o n ta in e rs a t h a n d — ja rs , a n d th e fire p la ce in su m m e r b sck erou n d , for ^ flo w e r a r r a n g e m e n t , a , exp.maive Sty* P a t ly l o o n SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1941 P A G E THREE Kappa OfficerS/Visitors Begin Province Meet M eetings and th e K a p p a K ap p a Gamm a p ro vince co n v e n tio n F rid a y m o r n in g and will c o n tin u e Sat- ta b le discussions b eg a n r o u n d a l d a y m o r m n g a t 9 o'clock. T he fo rm a l b a n q u e t of th e s o ro rity will be held to n ig h t a t b va?c?i . * n« ’ - to 12 o’clock at B a rto n p rovince vic e-p re sid e n t. o’clock a t th e Driskill Hotel. A f t e r w a r d s , v isito rs a n d m em bers of the Beta Xi c h a p te r will be e n te r -1 ---------- —~ — ta in ed w ith a b arn d a n c e fro m Engrel 0f T ulsa, O klaho m a, T h e ta 9:30 S^ com m on sense F ew flow- ers w ith o u t long ste m s m a k e d e ­ ing ta b le a r r a n g e m e n t s low eno u g h to see over. Use h a rm o n io u s and I Mrs. Schofield a n d f o u n d e r , of c o m p le m e n ta ry co lor,. UM "u n - th a n sym- A m o n g th e c o n ve ntion visitors a re Mrs. E v e r e t t S chofield of Indianapolis, ta ste — E ach in dividual g r a n d f o u n d e r s home calls fo r a d i f f e r e n t a r tistic T he A u stin C hickering of Brooks Field, S an ’ p r e s e n t w ere Mrs. Lucite F ish e r, I e f f e c t. S tu d y y o u r own needs fo r A nton io, n a tio n a l pledge t r a i n in g ; and Mrs. F r a n k an d Miss K a th r in e S earcy, c h a irm a n of Mrs. A le x a n d e r P ope, Mrs. Powell, colors and space filling. Miss Gold XI w ere h o n o te d w ith a ^e a i rnet r y f o r in te r e s ti n g varie ty . n a tio n a l F rid a y a t th e hom e of Mrs. Ben p r e s id e n t; Mrs. E dw in Powell. even b alan ce I n d ia n a , r a t h e r \ j s e . Are You Going to Church? F IR S T E N G L I S H L U T H E R A N Fred W. K ern, p astor l l — S e r m o n : “ P a tie n c e in S u f f e r i n g . ” 3 :3 0 — Men of th e c o n g r e g a tio n will hold a rally a n d b arb e cu e. 7— L u th e r L e a g u e will th e I n te r m e d ia t e D e p a rtm e n t. in d evotio n al service co n d u c te d by jo in 8— S e r m o n : “ T hings W o r th W hile.” The G irl’s C horus of the U n iv ersity High School, with C arl F e h r as d irec to r, will sing. • U N I V E R S I T Y M E T H O D IS T Ed m u n d Heinaohn, pastor l l — S e r m o n : “ H app ine ss in Spite o f— 7:3 0 — S e r m o n : “ The H ig h est A u th o r ity . ” Solo by J o h n Collins. • F IR S T M E T H O D I S T K e n n e t h P op e, pastor 9 ;3 0 — C h u rch school. 10 :45— S e r m o n : “ K ee p in g Y o u r F la g U p .” fi:30— Y oun g p e o p le’s m eetin g . 7 :4 5 — S e r m o n : “ P r a c tic in g F a i t h . ” • U N I V E R S I T Y C O M M U N IT Y M ilton M a xw ell, pastor 10— S e r m o n : “ We, th e L iv in g .” 11— F o ru m s u b je c t : “ L atin A m erica, a S tu d y in M a rg in a lity ,” by Rex D. H o p p er. S t u d e n t s u b je c t : “ Discussion on L a b o r P ro b le m s .” l l — S e r m o n : “ In M em ory o f H im .” T he q u a r te r l y o b se rv a n ce of th e L o r d ’s P r a y e r . 8— E v e n in g w orship s e rv ic e : “ P r a y e r Is P o w e r.” • U N I V E R S I T Y B A P T I S T W a lt e r H. M cK e nz ie, p astor • C E N T R A L C H R I S T I A N Dr. M. E. Sadler, p asto r l l — S e r m o n : “ M a in ta in in g th e A m eric an Way* o f L ife .” 7 :3 0 — S e r m o n : “ W ho A re the Religious P eople o f A u s t i n ? ” • F I R S T B A P T I S T S. G. P o s e y , p asto r l l — S e r m o n : “ C h r is t o r C h a o s.” 8— S e r m o n : “ T he U n c o n q u e ra b le C o n q u e r o r .” • A L L S A I N T S E P I S C O P A L T h e Rev. R o b e rt R. B ro w n o f th# T r i n ity C h u rch , H o u s to n , will c o n d u c t r e g u la r service* in place of th e Rev. C h e ste r L. H ults. • C H R I S T I A N C H U R C H T h o T e x a s B ib le Chair F. L. J e w e t t , m in ister l l — S e r m o n : “ Open Wells o f G e n e ro s ity .” (This will be th e la s t m e e tin g this school y e a r.) Statisticians - - Relays - - (C ontinued from Page I ) (C ontinued from P age I ) Texas would be su ffic ie n t to im- h very decisive victory o f about press these potential citizen s and nine yards. industries.” W. F. C allander, head agricu l­ tural statistician in charge o f the Federal A griculture M arketing Service, wa* the principal speaker at a luncheon held in the Texas Union. He discussed the work of that departm ent in u sing fixed area sam pling data in d eterm ining crop acreage, labor conditions on farm s, and also described other d ealin g w ith agricultural life. The Ione T exas d efea t o f the a ftern oon w as d ealt H ughes by huge Al Blozis, G eorgetow n U ni­ versity w eigh t star, in the discus fin als. Blozis shaded H ughes by fo o t, his slightly m ore throw go in g 161 inches to H ughes 160 f e e t 3 1-2 inches. H ughes has several tim es beaten that mark this year, throw ing the disc 165 fe e t, 9 1-2 inches in the T exas R elays. Blozis also than a fee t, 5 m a n n advises. T r e a t each flo w er a r r a n g e m e n t as a p a r t of th e f u r n ­ ishing unit in th e room. 'N o Rata D a ta ’ W ill Rata Data l f T h ey Call G .H .O . T he No R a ta D a ta Clique has w alke d o u t on a ch a n c e f o r a I t seem s t h a t th e y w ould p a r ty . r a t a d a ta if th e y would only g e t in touch with th e new social o r ­ g a n iz a tio n o f the G as H ouse G ang, th e G a m m a H a m m a G am m a. T h e G a m m a H am m a G am m as a r e a t t e m p t i n g to p u t the m se lves on a new social f o o tin g a n d H er­ b e r t M a rtin, vice p r e s id e n t, asks th is clique to ple ase g e t in touch with him irrynediately. $155 Scholarship Applications Should Be Made by May I W o m en s t u d e n t s w ishing to a pp ly f o r th e $155 T e x a s F e d e r ­ a te d W o m e n ’s Club scholarship should do so b e f o r e May I, Miss D o ro th y G e b a u e r , f a c u lty m e m b e r of th e scholarship co m m ittee , a n ­ n o u n ce d F rid a y . s ta n d in g w ho U n iv e rsity w o m en o f a t le a s t so p hom ore have m a in ta in e d a high scholastic s t a n d ­ th e a n n u a l ing a r e eligible scholarship. f o r T h e p e r s o n a lity o f th e a p p lic a n t t o g e th e r w ith h e r special a c h ie v e­ m e n ts a n d p a r ti c ip a tio n in e x t r a ­ c u r r ic u l a r activ itie s a r e considered by th e c o m m ittee . A pplications m ay be m a de in th e Dean of W o m ­ e n ’* O ffice, T h e c o m m itte e of a w a r d is m ade up of the P r e s id e n t of th e F e d e r a ­ tion, c h a irm a n of th e D e p a rtm e n t of E d u c a tio n , a n d Miss G eb a uer. W * ’r* Net Running Out O f Oil, Geologist Says The oil supply o f the U nited its problem s w as dis­ S ta te s and cussed by Dr. Luther C. Snider, p rofessor o f g eo lo g y , in G eology Building 14 Thursday night. th e idea o f The p etroleum exp ert disagrees this country with ru n n in g out o f oil. Long before the supply is used up, tech n o lo g i­ cal advancem ent w ill be at a point w here petroleum w ill n ot be used, se says. Dr. Snider teach es petroleum and historical geo lo g y , and he is the author o f “ Earth H istory” which has been used here for sev­ eral years. He is p resident o f the Am erican A ssociation o f P etro l­ eum G eologists and a m em ber of seven other national g eological so ­ cieties. Miss Rather G u est O f M iss Gearing Miss M ary G earing, p rofessor o f hom e econ om ics, en tertain ed at her hom e a t 210 A rchw ay, W ed- n esday morn m g, w ith a c o ffe e fo r type Miss F ra n ces R ather. Spring flo w ­ ers decorated the house and cen ­ t e r e d the c o ffe e table. th e g u ests Miss G earin g and Miss Rather received in form ally, and Mrs. R oy R ather and Mrs. E. J. V illavaso poured. Mr*. Ben P ow ell, Mrs. Bob A rm strong, and Mrs. C. D. S eybold o f T em ple w ere in the h ouse p arty. New Paint Far Spring U niversity w indow “ E very m ajor co n flic t has been ; o f 52 f e# t, 1-4 inch, in the prelim ­ led inaries o f the sh otp ut w ith a throw and doors will soon be g listen in g un­ der a new co a t o f paint, says G eorge Steph en s, a ssista n t com p­ tbe 100-yard dash, T exas if accom panied by in fla tio n , but troller. P ain ters are now a t work in flation develops during the pres- it* on ly two en- in the U nion, and Garrison Hall en t world crisis, it w ill be o f the . trjegf T erry and Ram sdell, with the latter having the day's lo w e.t «■* B inlog,cal L aboratory a r . tim e. 9.7. Terry fa irly walked part!® " th * ” P*m t *“ * t0 b® re*c h ,d o f his race, re stin g up fo r Satur- woon* __________________________ d ay’s fin a ls good* can be produced,” Mr. Rice declared, when he discussed re­ arm am ent and finan ce. A nother S teer v icto ry cam e in ■ H a n d ica p Scholarship* O ffered His tim e w as 10.1, e a g j j y qualified pow er sills A s a resu lt o f the n ational d e­ industry fen se program , T exas has been stim ulated. A irplane fa c ­ tories, chem ical plants, and ship­ building have been introduced and some o f them w ill becom e p erm s- nen t if this sta te show s to. bei ad- ^ vantageous he added. eir pro u to , , Louisiana stu d en ts w ith physical th e 880 relay as S eay, B a r e fie ld / All Joe Sparks, and R am sdell romped handicap* who are q u alified to hom e in 1:2 6 .7 , fa r ahead o f any do work at the U n iv ersity m ay j make application fo r one o f the heat com p etition. S ta te U n iversity's fiv e W ill R ogers M emorial Schol- • ; g rea t star, B illy Brow n, won the [ arships. The ap plications, which othej> U nivergity f in t l o f the m ust be fiie d w ith the scholarship w hen he took the broad j u m p com m ittee headed by Dean V. I, j title fo r the third straigh t tim e,! M oore by May I, m ay be obtained at the o ffic e s o f P resid en t Hom er leapin g 24 fe e t, 5 7-8 Inches. A s ex p ected , H oward P ayne's P. R ainey or o f D ean Moore. P ren tice H ill Ie H ere ie v isitin g P ren tice H ill, ex -etu d en t in the U n iv ersity w ho has been in N ew in A ustin. Re­ York, coverin g leg operation, H ill is w alking w ith the aid o f a crutch. W hile in the U n iversity, H ill w as a stage de­ sign er fo r th e C urtain Club. fro m a su ccessfu l In this discussion o f industrial­ in the Southw est, Elm er ization H. Johnson o f the U n iversity Bu- reau o f B u sin ess R esearch, said that the moat prom ising o f these industries in his estim ation w ere the the paper and pulp mill*, chem ical p lastic and in dustry, alum inum factories. Pharm acist* E d it Palter A n ew m onthly new spaper edited by stu d en ts in th e C ollege fo r the o f P harm acy appeared fir st tim e th is m onth. The paper, which con sist* o f fo u r p ages, has a for Thought,” which presents answers to seven q u e s t i o n s on p h a n n a c e u - ; professor o f keel topics, Others participeting in the fi­ nal panel discussion were W. L. Pier, vice-president of the Fort Worth Notional Bank; Ronald B. Shuman, industrial technician, Na­ tional Resources Planning Board, Dallas? and Judson N e ff, A-AM. «n*m**r en titled , “ Food colum n - . . / P ete Owen* led the high hurdle! q u a lifiers but w a s prom ised a j stro n g race S atu rd ay from T ex a s A .& M /a Roy B ucek and Y oun g Bob W right o f Ohio S ta te. O w ens’s tim e w as 14,6. M r * . N * v * t * f O w i n g W e l l Mrs. Amo Nowotny, wife o f the assistant dean o f men, was re­ ported to he “doing very well” at S t . David’s Hospital, where she is recovering from a recent opera­ tion. Mr*. Nowotny ie expected to be able to leave the hospital within im days. TOP PRICES PAID f o r e n g in e e r in g ! DRAWING INSTRU­ MENTS ■ ■ ■ A T W E m H Texas Bo mStok agama* t m * «m t r e n v r * • t o * a U A B A U m t t Club Notes Z E T A T A U A L P H A s o ro rity w ill en tertain w ith the a n n u a l spring picnic S u n d a y a f te r n o o n at the L a n d a P a r k in N ew B r a u n ­ ti fels. Supper w ill be served at o ’clock. U. T. Dames Have Tea For Ladies T h e U n iv e r s it y L ad ies’ Club w as fete d w ith a tea hv the U n iv ersity the Dixie T e a House D am es at to F rid a y a f t e r n o o n from 3:30 • 5:30 o'clock. Mr*. John A. F o c b t will have supper a A M E R IC A N S O C IE T Y O F C I V IL versify D am e s; Mrs. B anks the F ra n k F a r le y , p r e s id e n t for m e m b e r s of of G uests w e r e received by Mrs E N G IN E E R S and their g u ests S a t ­ u r d a y a t Onion C re e k . E n t e r t a i n ­ include sw im m ing and m ent w ill baseball. Mr. F o c h t is th e sponsor of th e A .S.C .E . T he D ate o f th e S O U T H E A S T T E X A S C L U B ’S s p r in g picnic to in New B r a u n f e ls has be held l l . T h e r e been ch a n g e d to May will be a m e e tin g of the picnic c o m m itte e s in th e Main L o u n g e of the T e x a s U nion W e d n e s d a y , A p ­ ril 30. • K L IP K L U B will go to P ease L au rin , p r e s id e n t of sity Ladies* C lu b ; and M esdam es ll. Y. B en edict, J. W. C a lh o u n , M. J o n e s , B. T. Bettie, W. S. F e r ­ guson, H . S, R a tliff , T» J* Rich, S. A. S tr e e t , W. R. N a b o u rs, L. W. P ay ne, J. K. B e rry , R. L. Hobbs, G len d o ra H u n t, L. L. L usk, Jo hn Olsen, N. T. P rib b le , J. W. R a m ­ say, and Leo W ilkerson. Pzatlx Announces Initiates After ‘Hell D a y’ • leaving P a r k fo r a w ie n e r ro ast S a tu r d a y ! New in itiates of PZ A T L X , wom- the J o u r n a li s m e n ’* sc re w ba ll o r g a n iz a tio n , w ere a f t e r n o o n th e y an n o u n c e d W e d n e s d a y a* B uilding a t 4 :3 0 o ’clock. w e n t The th r o u g h “ Hell D a y .” new m e m b e rs are Kay A b e r n a th y , J a n e C a r t e r , V irginia B ow yer, B e tte B e n iso n , D o ro th y Moore, Bernice Evans, Pat R o b e rd e a u , Marion Robbins, Margie McGinnis, an d J u n e W rig h t. T he initiation took place at the home o f K a th e r y n R a th e r, IQI L a u re l L ane. A n n a M u n g e r is p resid e nt. T R 1 A R T H R U S C L U B , h o n o r a r y geological o r g a n iz a tio n , h as e le c t­ ed W a lte r Belt p r e s id e n t f o r next y ea r. O th e r o f fic e r s a r e W allace McClendon, v ic e - p re s id e n t: M a rvin H a irg ro v e , s e c r e t a r y ; and H a r r y Phillips, t r e a s u r e r . • T h e U n iv e r s ity Y O U N G D E M O ­ C R A T S have elec ted the follow ing new o f f ic e r s : E dw in S ta n to n , p r e s i­ d e n t ; V in c e n t F e r r e ll, v ice-p resi­ d e n t ; C arlisle Blalock, t r e a s u r e r ; G eo rg e L e o n a rd , s e c r e t a r y ; D a r b y p a r l i a m e n t a r i a n ; David O rg a in , and B r o w n , Doyle F ine, c h a ir m a n of the e x e ­ c u tiv e c o m m ittee . s e r g e a n t- a t - a r m s ; B a n d Pla y* at S e g u in S ixty m em bers of th e L o n g h o rn Band played in Seguin Friday to raise fu n d s f o r th e B and Hall. T he con cert was sponsored by Mrs. H il­ mar W einert, w ife o f the regen t. Zeta* to H av a P icn ic Zeta Tau A lpha sorority will en tertain m em bers and their dates with the annual spring all-day pic­ nic at Landa Park in N ew B raun­ fe ls Sunday. Two home econom ics f r e s h ­ men a t S y ra c u se U n iv e r s ity have “ com m uted” fro m Puerto Rico to schools in the U nited S ta tes fo r fo u r years. T he A ssociated A rt I n s tr u c to r s of T ex a s will have a business m e e t­ ing S a t u r d a y m o rn in g a t IO o’clock in the Biology Building A u d ito r i­ um with P r e s id e n t R o b e rt W. T a l ­ “ P ro b le m s o f A rt ley in ch a rg e. A p p re ciatio n T e a c h in g ” the topic of ‘the discussion to be led by G ibson Dane* a t 2 o ’clock in the Biological L a b o r a t o r y A u d ito ­ rium , w ith panel discussions by Mrs. E llsw o rth a n d P r o f e s s o r W il­ liam Lockwood. is T he T e x a s A r t T e a c h e r, o f f i­ cial m a g a z in e o f th e A .A .I.T., was i n a u g u r a te d w ith the May 1941 issue. P u blish e d a t S o u th w e s te rn U n iv ersity , th e T e x a s A r t T e a c h e r is edited by C arl B e n to n C o m p ­ ton and A m e R andall. Edwin Scarbrough. Longhorn boxer a n d student, en g in eerin g has been notified t h a t he w ill be­ gin p r e lim in a r y a r m y flight tra in ­ ing a t San Diego, Calif., April I 30. S c a r b r o u g h took his exam ina- ! tion f o r a d m itta n c e into th e U. S. A ir C orps ea rly in F e b r u a r y this year. i 1 J , 1* ' ’ * / Late World News Fall of Athens Imminent, Germans Claim A d o lf H i t l e r ’s Nazi arm y , sm ashing B ritish re s is ta n c e a t T h e r ­ m opylae Pass, a h u n d r e d miles n o rth of A th e n s , w as r e p o r te d F r id a y nig h t to be f ig h tin g on to w a rd th e G reek < s p ita l. Nazi spokesm en pre d ic te d t h a t th e city soon would fall like “ a ripe a p p le .” G e rm a n th e dive b om be rs rele n tle s s ly sp rayed valley south of th e pass and ra n g e d f a r ahead to c u t o f f escape to the sea by b o m b in g shipping in S o u th e r n G reek ports. the w ith d r a w in g British in • the U n i v e r - ^ a g g re sso r w a r c r a f t ” a n d w a rn of Uni- U. S. N avy to Scout for 'Aggressor1 Ships Mc- An extensiv e sy ste m o f U n ite d S tate* n a v a l p atro ls to “ sc o u t f o r th e ir p r e s e n c e was disclosed by P re sid e n t Roosevelt F rid a y , but he r e je c te d at the sam e tim e a n y idea o f convoying A m e r ic a n supplies to G re a t B ritain. The patrol, th e P re sid ent said, is not a convoy system . Nazis Will Sink War Materials for Britain W a r n in g s th a t U nited S ta te s w ar m a te r ia ls f o r B ritain will be sen t to th e bottom o f th e ocean as f a s t as G e rm a n m ilita ry p o w er can sink them w ere r e p e a te d w ith in c re asin g em phasis in Berlin Friday night. This goes w h e th e r th e N azis said. the m a te ria ls a r e convoyed or not, — Bob Long. FOR SPORT A N D SCHOOL WEAR The Eyes Sl Have It Polaroid Day Glasses STOP GLARE Polaroid Day Glasses are m agically effect­ ive against glare reflected from water, sand, highways, all shiny surfaces— uses process that actually cuts out part of the light waves. $ | 9 5 COM PLETE W IT H I LEATHER C A S E 0nly UNIVERSITY CO-OP r n PgP W M H | m m , | ll .maim, i Tile Texan urassi Classified Ad Y. *— * - 4 H J T - T i * ^ Announcements Coaching For Sale Typewriters J U N I O R O R S O P H lo t m e in t e r e s t s y o u , If th * p o sa ib itity o f p a y in g you r w ay th r o u g h th o r u t o f your tim # in eo l- toll you i*g* o f th o e x p e r ie n c e o f * T t u i Ex in irn u t • n o th o r co I logo. H o w e v e r , you froo, bo m *io. h *vo 4 hour* a day ha vo a fla ir fo r rio t ho*, a good per- a o n a lity , and h a v o no foar o f d ir e c t • o ilin g . F o r a p p o in tm e n t ph one W G. M erger a t th o S tep h e n F. A u stin H o­ t e l S a tu r d a y or S u n d a y . On Your Vacation or Week­ end Trips Travel via KERRVILLE BUS C O M P A N Y , Inc. “Friendly Service” THE SHORTEST AND BEST ROUTE TO Houston, Baaumont, Galveston. Victoria, Corpus Christi, Schul- enbarg, Kerrville, San Angeio, Big Spring, El Paso. D A IL Y P O IN T S TO S E V E N S C H E D U L E S H O U S T O N A N D E A ST . Bu*** le a v e A u s tin * t 6 a.m ., 8 a rn., 1 0 :8 0 a m .. 2 p m . 4 p.m .. 6 p.m ., t p.m . S C H E D U L E S D A IL Y TO T H R E E A N D W E ST T E X A S K E R R V IL L E P O IN T S . Buaea fo r th o W est a t 7 :0 0 a .m .. I p .m ., and 8 :1 5 p m. TO T H R E E S C H E D U L E S SO U T H C O R F U * C H R IS T I A N D T E X A S P O IN T S . B u*#« lo#vo 7 :1® # 4* ., 1 :1 0 p.m . and 7 :2 6 p m. T W O TO D A IL Y B R Y A N . B u«oa le a v e A u a tio a t I A i p.m . and I p.m . S C H E D U L E S D A IL Y le a v e LOW F A R E S TO A L L P O IN T S FO R F U R T H E R IN F O R M A T IO N C A L L R U S T E R M IN A L PH O N E 2-1135 Coaching S P A N I S H . F R E N C H . L atin . Mr*. H am - ph ray. 2 9 4 -B W . 2 9 . Ph. S -2 0 4 9 W O O D SO N 'S) P s y c h o lo g y , E n g lis h , H i*- t e r r . M ath, C h em . P h y a lo a . P h . 9 8 6 5 . E N G L IS H T U T O R IN G by azp e rien ee d te a c h e r w ith l l . A . P e g***. P h . 2 -1 1 8 3 . P H Y S IC S — M A T H E M A T IC S . W h e e le r. 4 1 1 P h y a ie a B ldg. I* L. P h o n e i i T I—-SSS. S P A N ISM . F r e a e h . G erm s a . Ita lia n . E x*, te a c h e r , 1 7*1 C o n g r e ss . 2 -7 1 4 4 . U N IV E R S IT Y C O A C H IN G All C ou rt#*. Ph. 8 -6 0 0 2 A B U R E A U 2 -6 0 9 9 . E F F E C T IV E M A T H C O A C H IN G P u re and A pplied ft. M. R andle 2 3 0 9 San A n to n io R. W . F arr PH. 2 -6 6 1 1 E N G L IS H 12. J -Q. E xp ort tu to r in g by exp e rien ce d ti ach er w ith m a » te r ’a d e ­ i l l W aat in E n g lis h Mr*. C asa, gr ee 22nd . P h o n e 2-1 SSS. Cafe! S N IP E S A IL B O A T — R edw ood h u ll oak fram e, a irp la n e sp ru ce m a s t and boom . 1906 U n iv e r s it y A v e ­ D o u g la s S k in n er nue. P h o n e S-20>*s. SE E T H E W ILSO N T Y P E W R IT E R C OM ­ PA N Y for g o o cl r en t ty p e w r ite r * . N e w and U sed T y p e w riter * fo r aal*, l l * W aat 7th S t. P h on e 6 0 6 0 . Home Bakeries Typing W U K A SC H S IS T E R S — C ook ies A cake* in s to c k . 1 9 0 8 W ic h ita . 2 -6 8 9 8 .______ Jewelry to S A V E U % D iam ond*. W a tc h e s. J e w e lr y , L u g g a g e and G ifts L A V E S J E W E L R Y A L U G G A G E CO 217 E a s t 0 th ._______________ 60% on . Lost and Found T Y P E D W ORK m ean* Dora B o y d , 2 6 0 2 S an ■ b e t t e r g r a d e s . A n to n io . 2 -4 6 * 6 . T Y P IN G — D ep rn d ab i# s e r v ic e . able. Mr*. W aaaon, 2 0 8 W , 2 0 th . P h . 2 - 9 1 3 6 . N E A T . M iss J o h a n n a H e y . 2 -9 6 2 0 , a f t e r E. e ffic ie n t ty p in g . R ea een a h l* . E X P E R IE N C E D T y p is t. Hale® S tr o n g . 180 9 C olorado. 8 -1 2 3 0 . R E W A R D — fo r A lpha G am m a D elta pm . N erne e n g r e v m l on back. P h o n e l*S9ft3* T Y PIN G — C heap, a c c u r a te , Quick. Mr*. H u m p h r e y , 2 0 4 -B W e st 2 0 0 2 G U A D A L U P E L oy c# D aw son . Dancing Laundries L E A R N TO D A N C E . • i***on* 8 8 .1 0 Jlaa*#*— M onday. T h u r sd a y , 7 SO p m. A N N E T T E D U V A L D A N C IN G SC H O O L l o t W »*t 14 S t. Phono* 2 -9 0 8 6 -—8 -8 9 6 1 . Dressmaking MRS. N IC K E L — S p ort c lo th o , a v a n ia g gow n *, a lte r s .on*. 2 6 0 8 G uad alupe. A L T E R A T IO N S , b u tton hole*. S p ecial!** in fit tin g * Mr*. K ie « iin g , 2 -2 6 8 6 . Classified Advertising RATE CARD R E A D E R A D S 20 W ord *— Maximum tim * 1 2 tim e* 8 tim e* 4 tim ** I tim #* ( ‘j i m 6 .40 .66 .70 .80 .00 I.OO Run Reader Ads Are To Be On Consecutive D ayt We Charge for Copy Change D IS P L A Y A D S I column wide by I inch deep 60c per insertion the right We re-er*# to edit M N t t y la a te d by th e to co rresp o n d arith The D elly T sxan . Messenger Service anti! 4)*9 g a . terr tee natl) w««k-dare Coaster A L L A D S C A S H IM A D V A N C E Dial 2-2473 tor further Information or messenger service. Re* poo* ifcle for aa* in co cra a l insertion eely Ne ref a ad* fe e aaasell* liens. "O n e Day Service” DRISKILL HOTEL LAUNDRY “ Trust your duds to our Suds” Transfers B A G G A G E , tr u n k * , r e fr ig e r a to te h e a le d . D ay A N ig h t S e r v ic e . O w l T axi. P h . 4 1 1 8 . Wanted to Buy H IG H E S T C A SH P R IC E S fo r • u lt*, sh oe*. A. S c h w a r ts . P h . S -4 1 S 4 . M A LK IN P A Y S M ORE for U eed S a il s . C loth in g and S h oe*. 407 E a s t 4 . 9 -9 3 4 4 . R e n ta ls Real Estate Phone 6444 119 East 7th. C A L L .MRS. L IN D L E Y — Corner l i t h in & C o l o r a d o ; for e a c e lle n t b argain * B o a r d i n g H o u s e s , H o m e s . L ots, Farm *. le a s e a n y th in g. P hone 2 - 0 1 4 4 . Sell or Plumbing Room & Board W O. H A R P E R . 2 546 G U A D A L U P E — P lu m b in g . Ga* A fclaetrical co n tr a c to r . P lu m b in g A H e a tin g Ret>air*. S to v e c o n ­ n e c tin g our a p e c ia ity . P h o n e 2 -S 5 2 1 . tar h e a te r E. R A V E N — S in e# 1 8 9 0 — P lu m b in g . Wa p-ping rep a ir in g , ran ge*, h eater* c o n n e c te d . *inka. *ew«ra un »top p e 4. 1 6 0 6 Lktvaca^ P h o n * 4 7 6 jL _ ga* Records Victor* D ec ca. V oce Ion SL IG H T L Y U S E D P h on ograp h R ecords IOC e a c h — 3 fo r 8 4 c . P e te ’* P a k a g e S to re o f A u stin P h o n o g r a p h Co- TOI E a st 6th . J im m y Dor»#y •W H E N T H E S U N COM ES O U T "— O r c h e str a . “L et'* G at A w ay From It All " F ox Trot — T o m m y D or*ey and hi* O r c h e str a . Re- cord# now on nal* i t J . IL R eed M usk* Co,, ROB C o n g ree*. and hi* Schools end Colleges ^U iH A aW cm HOUSTON b m - FT WORTH-Th AfLU.NGlNL.j H o u sto n A S an A n to n io S ch o o l* open J u n e 9. 2104 G U A D A L U P E — M en or c o u p le t. M ake you r reservation* now fo r hic# ro o m s and excellen t meal*. 1 8 7 .4 4 PW . r i m m e r a e m e a t e r . P h o n e 6 6 6 0 . Furnished Apartment* L O V E L Y FIV E -R O O M D U P L E X — N ic e ly fu r n ish e d . V e n e tia n b lin d s, tile In k it- , h e n — b ath. a tt ic fa n . G arage. N o r th e f U iii v e rs it y on T om G re en . 3S7 8 ^ _ _ _ _ .,—,—— Furnished Houses r— ------ . ... - . r r r r . - ■. CO O LER B E C A U S E mil. .. insulated. J u s t r e ­ fin ish e d c o m p le te ly . S ix r o o m s, aleep- allower. Available in g th ro u g h S e p t. 7 th . 14 0 2 % Wee! Avenue. r-orch. tiled ...................... -■ 'i. I'.rieaaae— ama. Furnished Rooms 2 4 0 8 G U A D A L U P E — L o v e ly t o r b oy*, m en or b u sin e* * w om en . N ic ely fu rn ish ed , in se r n p r ta g m * t- tr e a se a , a b ow er#, p r iv a te e n tr a n c e , 4 4 1 7 . tw in bed*, room E X T R A L A R G E room , tw in bed*, s m all d r e s s in g room a d jo in in g tilad a b o w er. P r iv a te e n tr a n c e , g a r a g e . O n e in h o u se . H a lf v a lu e . 1 -2 4 7 9 . Coaching or Typing Advertisements Special Rates - - 2 Line A d s $ 2 .0 0 M ontk Call 2 -2 4 7 3 Before 4:00 for M essenger Service 'TT’HESE ARE TIMES tha t try m e n ’s souls, tha t grive <46 A l 5 0 This WoM By Associated Callafiata P r* « The pioneer plainsman who Mold take one last look at the heavenly bodle* before he closed hi* eye* each night in his open-air bedroom had noth­ ing on resident* of McTyeir* Hall at Emory University. They too gaze at “heavenly bodies” as a prelude to sleep. tacking o f Faced with an edict banning the the work of such master* as P etty, Harrell and Varga— not to mention that portrait o f the One and Only—-to they evolved U»e even more satis­ factory idea o f fastening said art masterpieces the ceil­ ings. the walls, to Now th* McTyeri* lullaby is “Look Up, Look Up.” Typing or writing in long­ hand seemed slow to Leon A. Dance, a Harvard freshman, so he submitted a 2,000-word Eng­ lish composition on a home­ made phonograph record. Dr. Claude M. Simpson, Jr., instructor, gave Danco a his passing grade, but forbade any repetition of the stunt. “For one thing,” Simpson said, “how can you correct ap elin g and punctuation In a them e like this?** Some of the more observant students at Rick’s Normal Col­ lege, Rexburg, Idaho, think they smell a conspiracy. The Beta Sigma Phi chap­ ter’s new president is Maxine Hallstrom, Maxine Scow is vice is president, Maxine Neville is treasurer and Maxine Rice retiring vice president. Quotable, B y Associated Collegiate Press to shape is “A democratic education an education which helps hu­ man persons them­ selves, judge by them selves, dis­ cipline themselves, to love and to prize the high truths which are the very root and safeguard o f their dignity, to respect in in others hu­ them selves and man nature and conscience and to conquer them selves in order to win their liberty.” Dr, Jac­ ques Maintain, noted French educator, visiting professor of philosophy at Columbia Univer­ sity, emphasizes discipline in defining democratic education. spirit of “ Wherever a dictator has •risen, there education has suf­ for know­ fered. The desire ledge, inquiry the which is the God-given right of a free people, has been stifled and the training o f the young has been confined to the trades and the most elementary gen­ eral subjects. This must not happen in America.” Gov. John Wr. Bricker of Ohio charges educators guard to •gain st dictatorship threat*. stand Students and faculty at the University of Rochester are conducting a “ driveiesa drive” f o r $1,760 to buy a desert type ambulance fo r Britain, Sljf $aily[ Stan T h * D a lly T # * * n , s t u d e n t n e w s p a ­ p e r of T h # U n i v e r s i t y e t T e x a s . U t h e c s m p o e o f t h e U n!- Sn M U ‘ie.; on very It? in A c e t i n b y T e r n * S t o d e n t l o o , e v e r y m o r n i n g e x ­ r o b . Alterm an A s s o c ia te --------------------- Jack Adkins Dorsiae Geiger E xchange E ditor Editorial Coo ac ll, Mary Elisabeth fa th e rla n d . Jack Do pl.. Ben Kaplan, J a '* Howard, Bob Owens Henry B riokerboff. Z i6 n .irr.a t, Mary Jeanne Doug a* A rth u r Caruthers. and A onto Jam ison. Editorial Ass a ta" ta 1 Jack Howard an't Loser ay Burleson. Cspi tot C orrespondent: Aion rn J e ­ ttiso n W ashington Ba-eau of th* T exar I?* H arvard Hall. U S# H arvard rn, W. FUrri MeGosra J r.. Correa- ppoottHL YorlL th* T exan. 127 Went Fifty-*eeor-d S treet. Jo* W h itler. Correspondent, e t STAFF FOF THIS ISSUE N ight Editor, Head Copyreader .Bob Owen* Stanton F itzner, Allen Robertson. N ight Sport* Editor___ Dick Tarpiey. Assistant: T. Davi­ son. Night Society Editor Elizabeth Wharton. Assistant: Vivien Crosby. Night Telegraph Editor Bob Night Amusements Editor. Ed­ Long. die Griffin. Reporter. ^Jimnay Bitt lg|t jSJaily; ten PAGE FOUR SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1941 A/eUiOHcUUm Jntebnatio^aLUm? food for th oughts too de e p for tears. And the sons of men who foug ht in the Wor ld W ar m ay he abo ut to dupli c ate their f a th e r s ’ de e ds. But the re are also others wh o r efuse to c onsider A m e r i c a ’s entry into the war. It is a question of nationali sm vs. i nte rna tio nali sm. Do we c hoose to be m aste r onl y of our o w n territories, or do we c hoose to he di ctators of the uni verse? Rumors are rife and one of the m is an old i dea that most peopl e th oug ht w a s e nto m be d. Christ-like it has risen to ap pe a r as a truth. That is the ag gr and i z i ng , territorial c has e t ha t would onl y need suc c ess to m ak e o f it an empire. Onc e be for e the United State* bo ugh t It has proved an ill- and war r e d to ge t forei gn dirt. om e ne d, de ad al batr oss h an gi ng on Uncl e S a m ’s neck. For Ame r i c ans it is a que stion of de c i d i ng w h e t h e r to m a ke of the United States a wor ld e mpi re e n g ul fi n g both he mi s phe r e s or to stay as protector over this i m­ m e d i at e we ster n hal f o f the wor ld. This pr obl em is partic ul ar ly i m mine nt since it is onl y a matter o f time until the G r e e ks and British are go i ng to g e t their f e e t wet . Thr ough the faul t of hasty c i r c um sta nc e the All ies are ge tt i ng w h i p p e d like Grant took Ri c h m ond — wi th numbers. Are we thi nking e ntirely of our se lve s in ta k­ ing the big step e v e r yone dr e ads but fe e l s ne ce ssary? If Ame r i c a is to fi gh t the n she fac e s a handic ap. The c osmopol itan pe opl e that form our po pul ac e have the di sa dva nt ag e o f a material phi l osophy. Bull ets mean blood, and blood m e an s dea th to the realistic doughboy. This nation of busine ssme n can neve r look at the pros­ pect of de ath wi thout first havi ng the sc ale bal anc e d by the c onfi de nt gl i m me r o f a c ha nc e to win. G loom y da ys and isolationists will m a ke the decision a hard one. Fatali sm is a ne c e ssar y part of the gr e at fighter . Gr ee c e and Yugosl avi a have that c o m for ti ng phi losophy to e ase their mi nds in de f e at . All g r e at mil itary ge ni uses have nec essar il y be e n fatal ists or the y could never hav e been c our age ous wh e n the y had to be c our ageo us. Some of us are pessimists and justl y so be c ause three thousand mil es is a l ong stretch o f wate r to cross for a prize fight. If d e m o c r a c y ’s last lone outpost is to vision i nte r na­ tionalism, it must acc ustom itself to hand l i ng all men, be ­ c ome a worl dl y lot of rulers wi th the nec essar y put-on as pe c t o f lord A n d master. It is a role and the ac to r must pl ay his part. 7hate, dejected Hunk 9A Good, But 9& Not A T E G L E C T of the physi c al we l fa r e of Ame r i c an chi l ­ dren is r efle cte d in the hi gh per c e nt o f yo uths r e ­ je c t e d for mil itary se rvi ce by re ason of physi cal de fe c ts. Surge on- Ge ne r al Parran has said that the r eje cti on of 30 to 40 per cent of y o un g men, o t he r wi se avai labl e for military service, is “ a national di sg r ac e . ” Graduall y, by r eanson o f the ov e r e m phasi s upon m o ­ toring, major athl etic e ve nts and simi lar diversions, Ame r i c an youths like their parents, have be c ome a g e n ­ eration of spe ctator s. Al th oug h the de pr e ssion i mpose d a strai n upon fami l y r esourc es for necessi ti es, the i ndul ­ ge nc e in l uxuries and pl e asur es has c ur tai led the a mount of mon e y and time avai l abl e for he al th activities and medic al attention. P hy si c a l l y unfit y ouths hav e be en an i nevit abl e c o nse que nc e o f this di sloc ation in normal liv­ ing. The high per c e nt of r eje cti ons for mil itary ser vi c e tells onl y hal f the stor y o f ne g l e c t, be c ause the same or a hi ghe r proportion of physi c a l unfitne ss is to be found a m on g Ame ri can girls, wh o will be the mothe rs o f to­ morrow'. Luxury and e a sy l ivi ng spe ll d e c a de nc e o f a pe opl e, al thoug h the proc ess wTorks slowl y . — Fort W o r th Star -Tel e gr am . Safety Slicuf SU B JE C T : “My duty and responsibility as a tra ffic citizen.” P R IZ E S : One prize of $5 per day fo r ten different day* to the w inner each day. From among the ten winner* will be chosen • first, second and third prize winner to whom additional money will be awarded aa follows: First prize. $15; second prize, $10; third prize, $5. NUMBER OF ESSAYS: Each student may write as many ss ten essays if he cares to and enter one each day. However only the best one of his essays will be awarded one of the ten daily prizes. Only one essay from each stu den t will be entered in the contest for first, second and third prize. P L A N : This contest is being conducted in cooperation with The Daily Texan. News items and publicity on the various phases of the contest will clear through their columns. Watch your Daily Texan for announcem ent of this contest. JUDGES: Judges will be selected by The Daily Texan and the Safety Committee of the Chamber of Commerce. LENGTH: Essays will be limited to 500 words and may be present­ ed on the subject as a whole or divided into two sections: Section A. My duty and responsibility as a pedestrian traffic citizen. Section B. My duty and responsibility as a motoring traffic citi­ zen. Each essay presented must deal with both pedestrian and motor­ ists' duties and responsibilities. DATES: April 16, 17, 18; April 22, 23, 24; April 29, 30; May I, 2. WHERE: Place essay in envelope addressed to Safety Essay Con­ test, Daily Texan, Journalism Building 109, and drop in any f acuity Mail Box. No postage is needed. ^JottcU idL G A Q i& W & u t P w 2 / ll& IO ll 25 26 3 0 la*..--; ii:22 IT 15 2 7 31 3 5 sr 55 13 16 n 13 20 7/ 2 3 24 2 T 25 3 2 33 5 1 3 3 Ak 4 2 4 3 WL 40 45 52 56 14 3 4 54 5 7 HORIZONTAL I —masculine name 4—make use of 9—seat in church 12— sleeveless garment 13— poor 14— reverential fear 15—gripping instrument! 17—appraised 19— divisions of learning 20— intimate 21—part of a book 23— having pow­ er to estab­ lish as law 27—revoke, as a legacy 29— part of th* eye 30—correlative of either 3!—stick 32— minute particles 34—by way of 35— river in Siberia 36— pierce with rn dagger 87—repasts 39—-educated 42— woody plant 43— unusual 18— insect* 20— injure 21—word of honor 22—brick dried in the sun 24—daughter of Tan tai us 25—dress material 26— eradicate 28— pertaining to mother 33— allowance for weight of a container 84— glossy liquid 36— heavenly body 38— English public school 40—tendency 41—deceives 45—portion 46— mineral spring 47—metal 48—body of water 49— high priest of Israel 50—£alkaJine solution 63— myself 44—preposition 46—strict 46—dog 61— pointed piece of metal 52— Mohamme­ dan noble 54— wily 65—conjunction 66—smallest 67—hasten VERTICAL 1—strike lightly 2—Japanese sash 8—took charge 4—dill 6—poetry 0—bronze in Roman antiquity 7—I would (contr.) 8—quality of being lyric ’br 9—famous operatic soprano 10—sheep 11—marry 16— American Indian Answer to yesterday’s pazzle. Avance tis* el aehrtSen i SS ahintrn. DUtribqted bf Kine PutnrM tvMtrsui Im 0 facial Notice The Theater-Goer BY EDDIE GRIFFIN Texan Amusements S ta ff The latest trash from Holly- ♦---------- / ^ L and press wood via the mails ai?,n u ha, the follow ing a . i n u .. C h e y e n n e N i c e , to re la te : M.G.M. But Not Terrific » KI i s *a ^ in “ Barnacle W C S t C T H C O I T I G d y eating p a tt e r will sta r Shirley Temple, long ab- sent from movies, Bill,” which production will prob- , ably show the need f o r barnacle- scraping, Cary G ra n t has been subjected “ T h e L a d y from Cheyenne” fall? into th a t vague and general classi- fjcation of bring nice and pleas- to the title of “ Bedtime Sto ry,” ant, b u t hardly sensational. To and if it takes, they will send it some extent it is entertaining, so this way soon. T hat title should why bring in the harsh realities be changed to avoid the obvious wisecracks various critics may hang on it. But G ra n t will save many a bad and again. of screen mechanics to judge it. plot— again Loretta Young, enjoyable ac­ tress th a t she is, makes the situa­ tions amusing. Miss Young has been always, I think, accommo­ th a t she presents at dating least an attractiv e personality. She is by no means tremendous nor excruciatingly humorous, just in is Harold Lloyd supposedly planning to be his own: producer, tar, and director of the next flicker which he has an ything to do with. You m ay ha lf-heartedly merely nice and pleasant watch fo r a surprise in something called “ A ffectionately Yours.” It