VOLUME 44 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1942 Six Pages Today Ne. S3 No Meat Shortage, Believe Retail Sellers T he Dai T h o F i r s t C o l i e g e T exan t S o u t h i n D a i l y Group Moots At A . & M.— Texas Scientists Advocate Conservation of Resources To conserve and utilize were the two im p ortant fa c to rs stress­ ed a t the annual m eetin g of the Texas Academy of Science a t A. & M. last week-end, which three University scientists, Dr. R. E. H u n g a te , Dr. J. E. Myers, and Dr. A. R. Schrank a ttended. The academy, which is organized to prom ote interest in science in the state of Texas, emphasized a t this p a rtic u la r m eeting im­ portance during w ar tim e of con­ serving our n atural resources such as fo re sts and to develop fu rth e r other resources as fisheries in the Gulf region. In connection with this, a symposium on conservation was held and during*th e luncheon meeting lectures, “ Uses of Chem­ to W a r,” and one, “ P ro ­ istry tection A gainst W a r Gases,” by Dr. Chauncey Leake, executive vice-president of the University Medical School, were delivered. the Dr. R. E. H ungate, professor of zoology, settled a much-argued the physiology of point ab o u t protozoa in cattle based on his owm experim ents of grow ing pro ­ tozoa outside of a cow. In his paper he pointed out t h a t some types of protozoa digest cellulose and there are an th a t aid to cattle. On the o th e r hand there are types of protozoa which c annot digest cellulose and these are o f no p a rtic u la r interest. can DR. C H A U N C E Y LEAKE, executive vice-president o f the University M e d i c a l School, lec­ tu red on Protection A g a i n s t W a r G a s e s ' at Texas A c a d e m y last week­ of Science m eeting end. Dr. M yer’s “ An topic w as fo r Continuous Cul­ A pp a ra tus tu re o f Chlorella.” Dr. Schrank, in struc to r of physiology, related in te re stin g results of experim ents he has m ade in the p ap e r which he delivered. He m easured electric potentials a t various points on and in the tip of young o a t shoots the changes and has th a t which occur these potentials m eeting o f the academy be the shoot orients with re- when lation to gravity. The experim ents a t the University next year. show that electrical phenomena can be detected before other types the electrical and consequently method may prove o f value in analysing mechanism of plant re­ sponses. followed in suggested It was lAshat Qoei Oh Coach Bible Goes To Tennessee To See III Father Late Report Says J. D. Bible Still In Critical Condition Although it was not reported until Monday, Coach D. X. Bible w e n t through a week of practice and then saw his valiant Long­ horns defeated by T.C.U. while his fa th e r, J. D. Bible, 83-year- old re tire d college professor of Greek, was very n e a r death in J e f fe rso n City, Tenn. S a tu rd a y night, a f te r the T.C.U. game. Coach Bible flew to J e f fe r - sin City to see his father. L a te st re p o rts Monday night stated th a t P ro fe ssor Bible was still in a criti­ cal condition. The aged Mr. Bible had been trouble ill with h e a r t seriously f o r over a week, it was annuonced Monday, and had been in a coma fo r some time. Since friends and physicians did not expect his f a ­ th e r to recover, they urged Coach Bible n o t to make the trip to J e f ­ ferson City, b u t he w ent by plane from F o r t Worth. F o r the m a jo r p a r t of his life, a f t e r g ra d u a tin g from the Carson and Newman Baptist College of Je f fe r s o n City, Coach Bible’s f a ­ th e r has taug ht Greek there. A fte r reaching an old age, he retired from his profession. Coach Blair Cherry, who m et the elder Bible when he visited A ustin several years ago, described him as a man “ who you would think stood f o r the best in any community. His life has been c h a r­ acterized by unselfish acts.” “ E veryone likes Coach Bible’s the fath e r, and he is known as an ideal held 1 citizen, teacher and fa rm e r,” said See COACH BIBLE, Page 3 Sweetheart Election Still Goes, Election O fficials Say G a s Rationing Date M a y Switch A g a in - Now to January I th a t The possibility th e date th a t gasoline rationing in Texas would actually go into e ffec t would be set back a nother month, to J a n u a r y I , was in the offing Monday. Chairman C. J. Chewning, of the local rationing board, said S atu rday he had mailed a special to Dallas head- j delivery | q u a rters req uesting that the date be moved from December I, to two weeks later, o r b ette r still, to J a n u a r y I. le tte r th a t Chewning adm itted th a t he had no reply from letter, and unless he did receive one stating a change, the official announced date of December I would remain effective as the first day of gas rationing. than ow ners will • 2.000 University More begin automobile registering the Texas Union a t 9 o’clock Thursday morning for the mileage rationing booklets th a t will c u t th e ir weekly gasoline consumption to fo u r gallons. in th a t to begin Originally slated to begin No­ vem ber 12, registration was de­ fe rred a week w'hen local r a tio n ­ they ing board discovered the w e re n ’t p re p a re d difficult and tedious task. Alpha Phi Omega, whose w ar activities committee was prepared to sta rt registration last week, will accept rationing requests from 9 in the morning until 6 o’clock T hursday i evening and Friday and from 9 the m orning until 2 o’clock j in S a turda y a fterno on . DR. CLA R EN CE E. AYRES 'Age of Airplanes Is Almost Here' Professor Predicts Higher Living Level B y W E L D O N B R E W E R into “ All aboard for Dallas.” Fa rm e r J ones waits patiently for his wife as she puts a large roast the stove and makes everything shipshape inside their new plastic home, a 2042 model with the newest gadgets and “ liv­ ing machines” available on Con­ gress Avenue. J u n io r tunes the motor as she crawls in— the family bus? no .the family airplane, f o r this the year 2042. Away they go on a 400-mile round trip as Mrs. Jones sigh s: is “I do hope the m eat is cooked thoroughly when we get back. Then we can have supper to night like Granny did in the old days, before Dr. Gluck perfected his vitamin formul ae.” The scene is purely imaginary, but it is possible th a t a similar situation might develop, the opinion of Dr. Clarence E. Ayres, professor of economics, who spoke .Monday night at the Austin F o r ­ um of Public Opinion on “ Will the World Ever Be the Sam e?” in T U E S D A Y M o r n i n g 9-12— Exhibition of E urop ean and A m erican paintings, Academic Room, Main Building. 9-1— A r t Exhibition of U.T.A.C. students, Old L ibrary Building. 3— F.F.C. Group, M ary Helen Burns, leader, Y.M.C.A, 4— G ra d u a te Society, G. H. 111. 4— F.F.C. Group, S tu a rt Currie, leader, Y.M.C.A. 4— W orship Commission meeting, Y.M.C.A. IO— Child Study Association, Tex- 4-6— F aculty Wives tea, Univer- as Fed eration of W om en’s Clubs sity Club. Tentative indications t ha t groups j on the campus have been conteni- I plating beginning movements to I call o f f the annual University I Sweet hear t election during war- i time have not been strong enough I to merit a decision or action, the said officials j election. Monday. in charge of : . . . . .. . _ Merv L ippm an, supervisor of I the campus reg istration , caution- ^ University car owners again , Cont rary to popular belief, Dr. Monday th at the rationing appli- lt is likely t ha t people ; cations require a lot of at tention la n d t ha t they must be filled out carefully in­ ink. delible pencil before they will be accepted. In addition to a ns we r­ ing the application questions fully, the applicant must also: Ayres said in the United States will emerge from World W a r ll with a higher st andar d of living than most peo­ ple ever imagined. He declared that t h i s countr y is not over-in­ dustrialized, and in- d u .-i r i a l p o s s i b i l i t i e s which r emain­ ed l a t e n t before the war are now on t h e verge of expansion. Produce his license receipt. Must be the owner of t h a t g re at typing, or in , Building. A f t e r n o o n 1— Campus League of Women V oters Executive Committee, Commons. 1:45-2— Lomax recordings from 2-4— Exhibition of paintings by Jo h n Dull, A rchitecture Build­ ing. 309. 315. 301. 4:30-6— Boxing workouts, Boxing Room, Gregory Gym. 5— M ortar BoMard, Texas Union 5— Orange Jackets, Texas Union John McCurdy, executive sccre- j tar.v of the E x- Stude nts ’ Associa­ the tion, w'hich has charge of ; yearly election, said Sunday that no plans had been made this early t ha t such f or Texas Union plans wrnuld naturally be influenc­ ed by opinion on the campus when the time draws near f or the annual choosing of the beauty to be the Universi ty’s official Sweetheart. the election, and intram u rals Dr. Ayres disagrees with people who worry about their poor des­ cendants, who for generations to come will be paying for this g e n ­ er at ion’s war. emerge “ The community as a whole is immensely going to wealthy in industrial equipment, an example of which is your n e a r ­ by magnesium plant. We have Radio House, KTBC. 5— Cercle Francois the car authorized agent of the or registered ow’ner of the car. the turned in Must have to the Railway Express Company all tires over five which he possesses t ha t and must sign a pledge effect. to Must obtain, from his filling station, a preliminary blank which must be filled in before registra- 2-5— Exhibition of Euro pean and Receiving his medical degree at A m erican paintings, Academic the University of Louvain, Bel­ Room, Main Building. gium, in 1985, Dr. Tavares has been assigned as a special cor-4 2-5— A rt Exhibition of U.T.C.A. re sp o n d e n t in students, Old L ibrary Building. f o r The Jorna] do Brasil, Brazil's 2— F.F.C. Group, Frances Davis, second largest newspaper. the U nited States j leader, Y.M.C.A. Alan Who Aided C IO ToSpeakHereNov.24 , Last year s Sweethear t was K a y j industrial s i n e w s — n o t so success- Abernathy. As Miss Abernathy is not enrolled in the University this n e w i l l emerge t o r * her predecessor by a y e a r , until a b e t t e r Gloria Obar, ostensibly reigning Sweetheart. is | been very successful in building j tion. ^ the applicant d e s i r e s extr a f u l in using t h e m . I d o n o t believe jE**oline above the a mount a l l o w - him by his rationing classifica­ tion, he may fill out a blank dur- r e g i s t r a t on, h u t ing t h i s crisis o f the wealth is brought a b o u t . We are f r o m d is t ri b ut io n the regular '.See AGF OF AIRPLANE, Page 3 I See GAS RATIONING, P a g e 2 Whoo— Whoooo— Screee Tower Sounds Air Raid Quip to 'Put Japs O n Knees with Old Kays’ Starts Drive Drop in your keys . . . put the Japs on their knees. Such were slogans being used in a campus- w ide hunt started yesterday, a hunt fo r old keys. This drive was begun so that the governm ent would not have a shortage of nickel, which is used for the production o f ball bear­ ings for airplanes and battleships. Milk bottles were placed in the entrances to buildings to g e t the needed metal from students and facu lty members. They asked questions, fished in their pockets, and contributed. Among the col­ lection were found such sacred item s as keys to diarys and minia­ ture cedar chests. If something the metal Mr. C. V. Pollard, assistant pro­ fessor o f Germanic Languages and chairman o f the key cam­ paign, said late Monday after­ noon, “ We need all kinds of keys, locker, car, baggage, and door isn’t done keys. about the governm ent may have to call in all nickels in circulation. So hunt up your old keys and drop them in the milk bottles on your way to class. A fter the keys are collected they will be sent to Fulton Lewis in Washington, D. C., who is one o f the sponsors of the nation-wide campaign. shortage, Brazilian Hereon Educational Study application As a part o f his tour to study the educational system s of the United States with a view to the possible of North Am erican educational methods in Brazil, Dr. Hernane Tavares de Sa, professor of biology at the universities of Sao Paulo and Sao Bento, Brazil, is visiting the Uni­ versity through Friday. While in Austin, Dr. Tavares will be the guest o f the Institute o f Latin-American Studies. He will visit classes and laboratories and participate in inform al conversa­ tions with faculty members and students. To each of the North American institutions he visits, Dr. Tavares presents a parchment scroll of greeting from the Brazilian uni­ versities to the faculties and stu ­ dents o f the United S tates col­ leges and universities. A t the con- I elusion of his trip, the parchm ent will be le ft a t the Departm ent of j State in W ashington where he has already officially p resented it. Dr. Tavares, author o f “Dear Neighbor, Here Is Brazil,” will gather material on his trip for a similar book about the United States to be written in Portuguese for publication and distribution in Brazil next year. “ The most socially conscious New Dealer in the Roman C atho­ lic hierarchy . . .” is the descrip­ tion which Time Magazine gives th e Most Rev. Robert E. Lucey, archbishop of San Antonio, who w ill community Thanksgiving luncheon in the Tex- as Union November 24. speak the a t from This prelate who championed the C.I.O. its birth and broug ht its organizers to San An­ tonio where “ poverty is so vast and wages so low” also cham ­ pioned the child labor am e ndm e n t when most Catholic bishops op­ posed it. And in August, 1941, he conducted a tw o-werk school of social justice where Texas priests were ta u g h t courses in Balanced Income and Balanced Prices, In ­ dustrial Unionism, The Living W age, a n d The R ight to Strike. 5— Ph arm a c y School Paper, Texas Union 316. 5— F irst volleyball f o r women, Women's Gym. 5— Hillel Senior Council, Hillel Foundation. N i g h t 7— MICA, Texas Union 316. 7— WICA, Texas Union 309. 7:30— Seguin Club, Texas Union 301. 7 :30— Mexican L ite ra ry Society, Texas Union 315. 7 :30— Light O pera Board o f D irectors, B. Hjdl roof garden. 8— “ Eve o f St. M ark,” E x p eri­ mental T heater, M.L.B. 103. 8— Hulon W. Black lecture on P riv a te L ibrary Catalogues and Fine Prin ting , S ta rk Room, Main Building. 8— Baylor game pictures, Wind­ sor Room Engine Company House. 9:15-9:45— P a lm e r Christian o r­ gan dedication, KNOW-KTBC. Students Race From Beds, Studies To See Fire Scores of University students jum ped from beds and some left studies a t I o'clock this morning to see a huge fire sweep M e r i d ­ ian's Store the 700 block of Congress Avenue. E very fire In Austin tru c k in tu rn e d o ut to fig h t the blaze. The fire a p p a re n tly sta rte d In J the back of the store on the sec­ ond floor. Damage has not been determ ined, early Tuesday m orn­ ing. Ex in Eagle Squadron Killed in Action Shadle, in action Charles C. 1940-41 University student, was reported killed in October. He was a g u n n e r in the R.A.F. Eagle Shadle, Squadron in E ngland. the in from Fort Worth, was Naval R.O.T.C. before going to Canada where he received his tra in in g as a g unner. He basic in May, finished training his | 1942. B y T O M M Y T U R N E R The blood-chilling i-iren that is the highest object above the f or t y acres may not have been heard all over the city Monday night because of a whipping wind, but it nearly knocked me off the top of tile 308-foot Tower. Toget her with Jack Maguire, chief communications engineer for the University, and ( ’. J. Eckhardt, professor of mechanical enginee r­ ing, I was perched atop the tower, clinging in the wind to the small the huge super str uctur e holding the 1.000-watt eerie shreik of the siren that you heard split the air, we all three forgot about the wind, the h u n ­ dreds of feet of space that fell the parapet, and away beneath grabbed our ears. loudspeaker. the The effect of being two feet away from loudspeaker t ha t will w arn this section of Austin in case enemy raiders ever appear over the city cannot be imagined. The night air carries sound well, and yet the Tower rears into the night with a disturbing silence as life are visible ears and bright helow' with no sound heard. As for the wider hearing of the siren, for which thi* reveals the success or failure of instrument. If enemy bomb­ the ers r oa r over Austin inhabi­ tants w on ’t be grouped within two fe e t of the speaker, clinging to trying to p ro te c t tingling e a r drum s with the other. it with one. arm and intended, it was its ROBERT The archbishop has organized Catholic Action groups to foster adult and youth social stu dy clubs. I t was, he said, “ to give them an I un d e rsta n d in g of religious and so­ cial problems.” to live and inalienable lights, b u t The theme of his luncheon ad- : have the liberty of many m i l l i o n s of o u r working people has been the fre e ­ in servi- dom dress will be spiritual background j tu d r .” Archbishop Lucey says. “ In in time o f war. Archbishop Lucey our own day, millions of citizens has been an outspoken foe of iso­ have demanded th at government lationism. calling it “ a spiritual, shall function for the forgo tten impossi­ cultural, and masses, not merely for the privi­ bility. To profess ne u tra lity in the leged few'. They have demanded face of international crime is to a new o rd e r in legislation and in­ deny the existence of a moral or­ dustrial relations. In a democracy, der . . . Murder and injustice . • . these j u s t demands m u st be satis­ do not adm it of neutrality.” fied .” industrial labor This was his attitude before the United States entered the war, when most of the Catholic clergy were isolationist. ‘^We all claim that ail men are equal and all Archbishop Lucey was ordained a priest in 1916, and became Bish­ op of Amarillo in 1934. In J a n u ­ ary, UMI, he was made Archbish­ op of the See of San Antonio. The success of the test Monday night would not be known until Tuesday, when listeners over the city had got together and checked their individual reports. Variation I ian. bet to go into action within , bomba. in sound caused by wiqd, and located from separately reports hearers and other factors will de­ termine the e ffe c ts of the siren. But the University and its area can rer*ham A R r o a d ' P h i De l t ) va Ree k 5 : 1 0 So . rh Field* S i g m a Al p h a Nu v t ' Phi K. S ' * ) va. K a p p a Al pha ' J a n D e l t a Phi pa Pal De l t a T a u Del t a T u . t d a y . N o v * m b » r I T N O T I C E : r , n i f dr, 1 No* I U* r n t r l p * I 7. c l o * * T l t l d i y . T O U C H F O O T B A L L 4 i n —- N o r ' h F'ifM K a p p a S i g m a t i . D. l - & TO— N o r t h I ri d Phi S i g m a P . l t * va. t a K a p p * Epa i i nn A l p h a Ep s i l o n Pi 4 : 3 0 Mi ddl e F ; r l d : K a p p a Al pha va. Pi H A N D B A L L D O U B L E S F r a t e i m t y D t v i a i o n T:00 T a r r y A R a n k * < D . T . D * H ) *» . B o w m a n A St lr m a n S i n g e r A B l u m I Ph i De l t ) O u l e k e » P h i P a l l Ty re 11 A C r e e * A C h e s w i c k T u h h A P r i d d y Lea I SP K I t i . D . P h i ) i B e t a I I T D . P h i ) va. E a l a n d * : ' P h i G a m ! va. Bacillar j t i . H e r n d o n A S m i t h A M o r s e - I> K E > v s . F a r a y A K a a n ( L a m b d a C h i l C o r n w e ll A N i s h A ( a Id well I Kappa Si* I Ba - - A M n , : h ( D I . D e l t ) v s H a w n A ( D . T D e l t ) va. B i v i n s O i d h a m 1 ATO I H o p k i n s A C o o k O de < Br ’ a I G a r y A Al a up B a n e d i , t ( S A E ) ( S A E ) a a . Mi l l e r A ( D K F . ) v s , H e h d o n A 7:45 ( P h i G a m ) vs . F o r t s o n Mel a ,! A L o t t A L e m m o n (Kappa S i * ) Ba - A G r e g o r y A H a m i l t o n ( P h i G a m ) J o n a s A S t e v e n s o n ( S i g m a Ch i ) vs . H o l ­ ( K a p p a Si g ) v*. Trt-ee la I A P o r t e r ( AT O I G r e e n b e r g A k , ne goi d I A E P i ) vs. Ska l - ( Bet a i ley A H o d g e J e n n i t i g a A H a n n a h 1 T h i G a m ) va. B o d o w A T r a v i s ( S A M ) ' S P E ) W a t t . , A K a p l e r R o o . t h i T a n D P h i l D u n h a m < Ind I Club Dt via*** 8:90 De a n A R r a h a n e ' i R i n k v P i n k s ) va. H i c k s A O s o h a ( R o b e r t s I Co x A R e b o r n ( R i n k y D i n k s ) vs. K e a ­ t on A L o v e l e s s ( T e j a a ) T A B L E T E N N I S D O U B L E S F r a t e r n i t y Di vi s i o n 7:00 (SAK. ) va. A b e r c r o m b i e T i t t l e A Ha l e A W a t t * I . e a v y A Dale I D T . D e | t i A C o n n e r ( P h i D T a u ) A P r e w i t t ( C h i P h i l Z i m m e r m a n A Kl e i n Taylor A P o r t e r ( D K E ) 7:15 H a r r i s o n A Fi * h A D o u g h e r t y G r i f f i t h A K e n n e y A Zobel ( A . E . P i ) ( D S . P h i l v s . P u t o n ( K a p p a Si *) ' P h i P s i ) vs . Jos ep h* P o p h a m A M e t x e n t b i n ( C h i F h i ) v*. Rt n n e y A L y o n s ( P i K. A I (SGgma C h i ) va. S p a i n C o d y A G a n n o n ( S PF. ) A Le e 7 30 F i n e g o l d A T r i e m a n ( A . E . P i ) vs. R a t ­ liff A H u b b a r d ( A T O ) W h i t e A W i l s o n ( K A ) vs. R n s t h A C o o t ( T a u D P h i ) W e a t A Si m OTons Mi l l er ( S A E ) M c C a u l A K e n n e d v d e r * A H a m m ( R e t s ) 7:45 ( A T O ) va. H o l m e s A ( P h i G a m ) va. G u i ­ Bel l A G a r y Ri -bnei der ( P h i Gani i ( D K F ) vs. B l a n e h a t t e A Di l l a r d A K e n n e d v ( S P F ) va. S t o v a l l A G r i s s o m ( D e l l * C h i l A m i d o n A C a m p b e l l ( D K E ) va, R o o s t h A L e r n e r N e f f A W e s t A Le v i n ( T a u D. P h i ) ( P h i G a m ) vs. K r a k o w e r ( T a u P. Phi ) SOO i C a m p b e l l A Rowel! ( K a p p a S i g ) v s . C u l ­ l om A Rol i n T a r r y A B r a d l e y A H o u s e m a n ( P h i G a m ) ( P h i De l t ) ( P . T P e l t ) vs . Se a v S' o o l A H e l l a n d A F i n l e y s o n ( K a p p * Ri g) vs. vs . Sk c l l e y A M u e h l e h e r g e r ( B e t a ) I S w e a t * A D a v i s ( Ti K. A ) va S w a n a o n S p a i n A L e w i ' ( S P E ) va, H a m m o n A W i n t e r * ( P h i P a i l p a is A Q u i ' l i a n ' K A I va. W e s t o n A C o * Dr we A ( P h i P s i ) I s e l i n A L i t c h f i e l d ( B e t a ) ( D e l ‘a S i g ) vs . H o d g e L e a r . A Ad a m* ( Ph i K. S i g ) va. S e i b e r t A W o o d w a r d < Phi G a m ) M I C A D i v i s i o n O l G e r A D r i . k e l l e n * o n A Deppe Ra n d a l ! A S a u n d e r s ( K . 22 AA) vs. Be e n- ( P i e r r e ! ( D i x o n ) va. A l t m a n AT**: ( C a m p u s G.* A d k i n s A S m i t h ( C a m p u s G. ) vs . S e v i e r A Fi:»«el! ( G r a c e H I Ve r r e t * A He n ma n ( O a k G A vs . H o o t A R o ' e l l i n : ( W a k e n i n g ) l u r e r A M a y ( D i x o n ) vs . B u t l e r A Hi l l ( P i e r r e ) W i n s a u e r A S h a - p ( O a k G ) vs. W i n n A P e n n i n g t o n ( S h a n g r i C s I Roes A S r b r o a d e r ' ' r i d . ) va. St o va l l A A H u n t ( S A E ) 8:15 B u r u s a A L e w i s I ? f i n * Ni l ) va. Hon*t e m ; A Reed ( C h i P h i ) R o h h i t t A N a s h ( B e t a ) vs S n e e d A Fox ( D T . D e l t ) ■ Ca r r o l l A J o n e s well A M r C a u l d i n ( P i K A ) ( S i g m a C h i ) vs. H a r ­ a n a ( S i g m a N u ) vs. H o n * . B u r n s * A T.ewi* t on A R e e d ( C h i P h i ) B o b b i t t A N a s h ( B e t a ) vs. S n e e d A F o x ( D . T D e l i ) i C a r r o l l A J o n e s well A Mc C a t i l d i n ( P i K A. ) ( S i g m a C h i ) v*. H a r ­ *:30 ( Ch i P h i) va Waay : We Hh A H i g g i n s A K e e n a n ( S i g m a Chi) B e r r y A L o v e ( D K F ) va. C h a m b e r l a i n A B o o t h ( K A ) G o a . e t t A F r a m h a r h ( S P E ) va. T a l l i r h e t A C l e m m o n s ( K A ) record of 1.121 yards unbeaten, untied Hardin-Simmons ran up his season’s total of yards gained to 1,148 in seven garner, easily exceeding the previous all- time in eight games «iet. by Whizzer White of Colorado back n 1937. The C owboys hogtied the Louisiana in p r e p a r - ; Tech Bulldogs 47-13 ation for the biggest West Texas this week-end— the game b att e and between H a rd in -S im m o n s | 0 I T O 111 l l T O I K G S U i i S - ■ T o u ch F o o tb a ll Roberts Hall 12. P ra th e r Hall 7 B.S.U. 6, N ew m an Club 0 Oak Grove 13, E. 22nd A.A. 13 p e n e tra ­ on Oak Grove won tions). R.O.T.C. Co- 3, 20, Hellcats 0 Co. 1 won over Co. 2 by default Rinky Dink? won over Hillel by iTeA.sk Tech ai Lubbock. j default ju st one game Repetition makes m any things trite, but the acceptance of a philosophical attitu de and the fact left th a t th e re ’s this season is what the Longhorns must cling to. Texas has gotten down to business on manp jinxes j this faT, b u t the one to break was hoodoo. the Horned Frog they failed Which has lead us to the con­ clusion time and again th a t much of football, or any other activity, is mental— w hether or not a per- j son is ‘ready.’ to And listening in F o rt W orth Southwest Conference s c o r e s from the press box .Saturday, sports writers got the impression th a t conference team s ju s t w ere ­ n ’t ready, th a t too much un cer­ tainty exsted among the minds of both coaches and players. • Certainly the w ar has account­ ed for almost all this feeling of cloudiness. If any th in g has been topsy-turvy in the p a st year be­ it has sides the world situation been insig­ football. Seemingly nificant substitutes have beaten the Longhorns twice this season— f irst Al Pick, unsuccessful in a t ­ tem pts before and since, kicked a field goal from an odd position to win and Beecher Montgomery, third-rank ­ ing F ro g shoots through the Steer line like an ex­ plosion th* show away from o ther more potential backs like Nix and Bagley. for N orthw estern, quarterback , to U ke In 1941 we had the possible fault of going to extrem es— pep rallies every night big games. A fall is much h a rd e r to U ke a f te r a big buildup, and th a t may be the reason why only one gigantic rally will be held before before Gas Rationing - - (Continued from page I) the blank must be mailed to the i local rationing board for action, I | Lippman said. to them Most University students and receive an “ A” i professors will j booklet entitling fou r gallons weekly. The “ A” booklet contains thirty-two coupons, each for fo u r gallons. Coupons good the first page will he good on I for t w o months and motorists who are saving gasoline for trips must use the coupons only during the rationing dates they are valid, i officials warned. show Persons who can th at their occupational driving exceed* 150 miles per month, or persons who can show valid reasons why they should hav# more gasoline, may be issued “ B,” “ C,” and “ D” books which gives them additional mileage. The rationing board will be in all applications for additional mileage, however. the determining body A fte r mileage rationing gets under way, all automobile owners will be eligible to purchase tires if they meet certain qualifications. These include re g u la r tire inspec­ tion by designated inspectors, r e ­ cording of serial num bers of tires, and others. All “ A ” card holders must have inspected between December I and J a n u a r y 31 and every fou r m onths th e re ­ after. Holders of other cards will have inspected more frequently, depending on the num­ ber of miles they drive. their their tires tires A.P.O. members directing the Thursday registration here advise University car owners to register as early as possible and to expedite the process by having all neces­ sary papers with them. C oach A sso ciatio n to M oot ATHENS, Ga., Nov. 16.— (IN S) Members of the American Football Coaches’ Association will meet in Philadelphia W ednesday. Nov. 23, for a one-day m eeting which will replace the organization's annual convention. The meeting was announced to ­ night by Lieutenant Commander Madison Bell of the N avy( presi­ dent of the association and fo r ­ m er head football coach a t S outh­ ern Methodist University. Com­ m ander Bell is now head o f the athletic departm ent of the Navy’ , Pre-Flight School rn Athens. i In A Sports Sense Br LLOYD LARRABEE Ttmmm Spmrts Miler Reams of copy could be w ritten— and have been w ritte n ab o u t the dow nfall” of the Longhorn* Saturday, b u t there wa* m o re than an air of t h . l o ., of . ball g a m . among T . x a . f a n . r .p U y in * th* g a m e the Aggie game only a week and * f L M t " « r , following t h . d . f . a t of the S u e r , by T.C.U., Coach D. X. Bible wa* a glum man, n a tu r - ^ ally, b ut he admitted “ t h a t ’s foot- ball.” This year, the Coach was a half away. not around following the game. He had departed to his Johnson the City, Tenn., home to be a t bedside of his father, RO years traditional old, for what may be ! ’ tim€' a week from W ednesday nigh t in Gregory Gym, a n d on freshm an field north of the Gym, w here the singe and experienced Longhorns will the see what should be one of in dem onstrations of spirit This season, a* last, the Long- last e v e r y o n e , a bonfire will team of the _ . th a t the possibility i mav be the last season o f horns can fall back upon the Ag- ■ years. this fries to redeem themselves of any W ith big- * football, and th a t we do have lost glory. Not only can we beat th a t CAN beat anyone, the fa rm e r boys from A. A M.—• the last it’* very possible t h a t a what-the- any slacking of spirit a t , attitude can give m om ent will be no t only unsports- h .ll- .n d - l. t .-go a ttitu d e e n p . m . nlik, ( b u t ^ f o r t u n a t e . To t h . the boy* the stimulus to adminis- quegtion 0f w h a t happened in the shellacking — this T.C.U. game, we should be able te r to point to our Aggie game again. time to preserve the aged tradi- - ♦ U u n r n t . r Mr And I’m m aking no score predic- w jm ng u i c c e p t ^ non th a t . . . m a to hover over Me an o th e r j iAa., team at. a n l ,, a morial Stadium. on the game— you know whom • i ITI pick. High-Scoring Frosh Prepare To Meet Aggie Fish Saturday in to L ast year A fte r scoring 176 points to their opposition’s 21, four game*, the 1942 yearling football team comes th a t final week in which they m ust prep are them ­ selves for the real game of the year a gainst the Aggie “ Fish.” This grudge battle always acts as a preliminary to the struggle be­ tween their upper-classmen on Thanksgiving Day and often the outcome of the frosh b attle indi­ cates how the other game will go. the frosh b eat the Aggie “ Fish” 13-7 a t College SU tion as underdogs because of their loss to the Rice “ Slimes.” This y e ar however, although the freshm en “ Fish” beat last week, also 13-7, and the Yearlings tied the Slimes, 7-7, the Aggie frosh are no t given any special edge. Both squads have large roster with some sixty- a the seven men w orking out on Aggie the Texas teams while finally been settled frosh have around thirty-six men. the Rice When two colorful fresh men team s meet S a tu rd a y a f t e r ­ the noon in Memorial Stadium a taal battle is promised. Both teams •have about tha same record this year except tha unusually for high scoring done by the frosh aa resulU o f victoria* over two service team s in which the frosh rolled up 142 poinU to zero for their opponents. Both team s hav# excellent peaking attacks with Gene Hill and Frank Guess match­ ed and against David Daily Marion Flanagan for the “Fish,” and plenty o f rushing is in the offing. Monday afternoon the yearlings held a rough workout, trying to iron out their runback of punts and kick-offs. Following a session of punting and tackling “ Shorty” Alderson picked two teams and ran them against each other for a succession of downs with both team s going at full speed. • The yearlings w ill have this afternoon to practice their own plays again, but will probably work against the varsity starting W ednesday, with Friday to them­ selves. Zaeh, Thompson was back in action Monday afternoon ta d Tommy Landry may be able to see action by Saturday. Both boys have been out o f action for about three weeks due to leg injuries. Meat— (Continued from png* I) planned rationing of cheese, and probably a sm aller supply o f but­ ter will a ffe c t the m eat-eaters o f the campus. T atty dishes that served aa fillers-in for m eat, made of cheese, will not be as plentiful she if cheese is rationed said. soon, Patron* o f th* Commons, how­ ever, should rest assured, stated Miss Janzen, that the m eat prob­ lem, whatever form it m ight take, will be coped with adequately. The sugar and coming coffee ra­ tioning has been dealt with m ost successfully, she added, and the same will be done with meat. Above all, agreed all the spokes­ m en, hoarding should not be re­ sorted to— or a definite shortage o f m eat will result. • IT S SMART TO SHOP EARLIER THAN EVER THIS CHRISTMAS White is Right for Day or Night! FAMOUS ARROW WHITE SHIRTS IN IO SMART STYLES For a man to Buy for himself . . . or to give to e man at Christmas- time . . . we recom m end A rro w W h ite Shirts, and call attention to our sparkling selection of these famous favorites. Let us show you all IO styles today! THE HITT a a . Pin* broadcloth with standard Tm benized collar . * • • • • * * • • * • • . $2.25 THE A R D E N . . . Broadcloth with short Duke of Kent stylo collar • # « * * * * • • • • • • • $2.25 T R U M P H . . . Broadcloth wi th French cuffs and detached collar. For civilians and Navy officers alike » a . * a a a # . . a a 4 * * t * , # # - $2.25 THE KENT . . . White-on-white striped broadcloth with short collar • • • * * » ..................... $2.25 jacquard THE A R D SLE Y . . • Whita-on-whita pattarn with low collar . * * • • • * • • • • $2.50 THE DART . . . Broadcloth with regular collar $2.50 G O R D O N R . . . Oxford cloth with button-dow n collar # * * * # . . . * * • • # * * * • • • • • $2.50 THE D ALE . . . Fine broadcloth with regular style collar and French-turn front . * • * * • * * • • $2.75 THE C L A R ID G E . . . Fine count broadcloth with soft coiler and tailored French front . . . * $3.50 Plenty of Colored Arrow s, too! PURE SILK POLKA DOT TIES TO CONTRAST . . . Long-TV earing Foulards 1 . 0 0 Leather Back Satins 3.50 G O R D O N DOU BLER . . . Oxford cloth with two- . $2.50 way collar for sport or business wear . . T U E S D A Y , N O V E M B E R 17, 1942 Piton* 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Piton* 2-2473 SOCIETY— PASE THREE Fighting Texas Exes Ben Kaplan, Former Texan Associate, G ets Over-Seas Duty Former associate editor of the Texan, Lieutenant Ben Z. Kaplan, has gone overseas. Follow ing a tw o months training period at the Special Service School, Fort George Meade, Md., Kaplan w as sent to W estover Field, Mass., to aw ait further orders. In about two weeks time these o rd ers finally arrived with notice to leave fo r a po rt of em b ark a­ tion immediately. D estination— a m ilitary secret. The untimely arrival of the orders prevented Kaplan from a tte n d in g a “ Texas R eunion’’ which was being plan­ ned in New York City. Mrs. Gladys Henderson, the P a t Holts, Ll z Sutherland, Elgin Williams and all the o th er Texas exes w ith ­ in a fairly close vicinity of New Y ork City were to be corraled f o r a week-end. the out invitations Ironically enough Kaplan had sen t and organized the whole meeting. But Uncle .Sam planned a n o th e r r e n ­ for L ie u te n a n t Kaplan dezvous to keep. L ie u te n a n t K enneth Burch, ex- ! the University, has J stu d e n t of been aw arded a silver s ta r fo r g a llan try in action. He is now stationed with a bombing squad- I ron in the South Pacific. Louis 0. White, U niversity stu d e n t from 1937-39, and fo rm e r MICA president, is a second lieu­ te n a n t in in Louisiana. this he served as an RCAF pilot. the Air Forces Previous to I our college store now has it I >-5rs. * l'*’1 A tip. ITI / . 1-UfVs a naw and improved drawing ink. Notice how freely it flows. Absolutely will not cake in bottle or on your draw* ing pen or brush. C o v e n thoroughly and o ilily. T h * Indio Macle and whit* ar* completely opaque. O d o r ­ ed in 2 0 waterproof color*. R e list! oreiur*. Makoa splendid reproduction*. Try J U S T R IT E Drawing Ink just o i k #. You'll be delighted with th * results. Y ou 'll say J u itrit* i i " J u s t right". M A N U F A C T U R E D BY L O U IS M C LIN D C O M P A N Y 3 6 2 W. CHICAGO AVENUE DEPT. 0 CHICAGO, ILL. Su p e r-K n it, H ig h Twist M e rc e riz e d c o t t o n . Fou r th re a d heel and toe. B E N Z . K A P L A N M.I.C.A. Dances; W.I.C.A. Elects Its Boy Friend Hours fo r the MICA dancing school have been set for Monday, Tuesday, and W ednesday nights from 6:30 until 8 o ’clock in the ballroom a t 402 West Twenty- fourth S treet. Flo A lexander and John O ’Con­ nor will dem onstrate latest steps and give individual instru c­ tion in any type of ballroom d anc­ ing. the Instruction for eight of the in­ formal dance sessions with or w ith­ out dates is $2.50. Tickets will be sold this week only a t the MICA office in the Texas Union. • Plans for the election of a male WICA sw eetheart will be made Tuesday nigh t when the W om en’s Indep end en t C ampus Association meets a t 7 o’clock in Texas Union 309-311. The sw eetheart will be announced n e x t Friday night at the WICA vice versa dance to he held in the Ju n io r Ballroom of the Union. Guest cpeaker for the evening will be Dr. E. G. Lewis, instru ctor in the D epartm ent of Government, who will speak on democracy a f te r the war. Executive Board ap po in t­ ments of publicity m anager and as­ sociate will he announced. Ki pl i nger Bo o k to Be R e v i e w e d “ W ashington Is Like T h a t,” by W. M. Kiplinger will he reviewed Friday by Mrs. Frank Sexton in public the the library, a t 3:30 o’clock the in afternoon and 8 o’clock that night. auditorium of THESE. NEW English Ribbed Anklets 39c NEW HANKIES LINEN PRINTS in 35c C O - E D S H O P Tex a s Bookstore Club Review Omicron Nu. honorary boma economics fraternity, initiated the recently: Elise follow ing girls Groos of San Antonio, Dorothy Maierhofer o f San Antonio, Mar­ guerite Smith o f Brownwood, Margaret Roos of Fredericksburg, and Frances Hemphill of Kerens. A dinner at the Home Econo­ mics Tea House followed initiation, and Miss Bess H eflin, professor of home economics, spoke briefly. O fficers o f the organization are Signe Marie Swanson, president; Willie Mae Stork, vice-president; Joyce Files, secretary; Nila R eese, treasurer; Mary Frances Johnson, social chairman; and Janice Files, editor. Miss Josephine Stash, as­ sociate professor o f home econo­ mics, is facu lty sponsor. • The names of nine pledges of the Sphinx, ho norary and social a rchitecture club, were announced by Victor Probst, president. They are Jack Erwin, John Howard, William E verett, R obert Richey, Van Dom Hooker, H e rb e rt Ul- bricht, Marvin Luedtke, G a rdn e r Smith, and Richard Hill. O ther officers a re Josh Ewing, Jo rg e Gonzalez, vice-president; secretary; William Sh ort and W alter Wilde, sergeants-at-arm s; Jack Morgan, tre a s u re r ; and H e r ­ bert Crume, reporter. The Sphinx will the end of initiate mem­ bers this week and have a p arty fo r them the week­ end of the Thanksgiving game. • recently initiated Mu Phi Epsilon, hono rary music sorority, th e following: Betty J e a n Jones, M ar­ jory Love, La Delle M e n e m , Rowena Smith, Nancy Williams, and Mary W inton. Members are elected from those th e u pp er fo u rth of ra nking in the ju nior and senior classes. Following the services members the initiates had dinner a t and Spanish Village. Members of Mortar Board will e a t supper T uesday night a t the home of Mrs. Louise L. A r m - 1 strong, instructo r in home econo- i mics and one o f the organization's sponsors. They will meet first a t 5 o’clock in the Texas Union. • • Fra-Ority Corner Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity an­ nounces the pledging of C liff Sei­ dell of Syracuse, N. Y. • Phi Kappa Psi fraternity enter­ follow ing guests at the tained lunch S und ay : J a n e Ann F lo y d M ickle W eir B e tty J o T o m fo r d e R oena E llis M imi M er e d ith N e l l J a c k M a rg a ret C annon V ir g in ia H u n te r F .liia b eth C alhou n Flo N e e ly M argaret B ru sh G ayly M illin g B illy B ob D ick en a , G a lv e sto n L t. J . A rch R oca, B o y c e A li c e T a rv e r M a g g i e T u r n e r N e ll H a r r is M ary V ir g in ia A lvia B i r d i e N a y lo r M aurine D a v id s o n C am p H ood L t. B ill B o lto n , C am p H ood • Luncheon and a football listen­ ing p a rty were on the calendar fo r the following guests at the Theta Xi house Saturday after­ noon : M a r y B e lle D e e n O liv ia G l o v e r J o E l l e n L e w ie P e g g y F e t s r h T o l e n e D a v i s F lo rin e S ta n a e ll V iv ia n B u tte r y M arion B a U er ste d t M arion T u tt R ay C ollum Lambda CHI Alpha fraternity the pledging o f has announced John Marion Dirks of Tuleta. Members o f Delta Delta Delta sorority gave them selves a party last nigh t a t the chapter house. They m et fo r supper at 6 o’clock and the pledges attended a m eet­ ing a f t e r tha t. Following the meeting the whole ch ap ter played games and sang. • Satisfying suppressed desires, guests a t Pi Kappa Alpha frater­ nity dance F riday night dressed in costumes showing what they se­ cretly w anted to do or be more than a n y th in g else. Johnny Sim­ mons and his orchestra played. The house was decorated in g a r n e t and gold, fr a te r n ity colors. Black silhouettes depicting “ the good old college days before the w a r ” completed the theme. Beauties Pose A s Photo Club Deadline Nears The “Miss Photography o f 1942” contest is practically here. The Camera Club will select pic­ tures from am ong the first en­ tries at its m eeting Thursday night at 7 o’clock to put on ex­ hibit in the show cases on the ground floor o f the Main Build­ ing. The exhibit will begin Fri­ day morning. Entries will be submitted by the models to the Camera Club for about six w eeks or two month until an as yet unannounced dead­ line. The pictures m ust be made by a m a te u r U niversity photographers. They m ust b e submitted by the model, and m u s t be a t least 8 by IO inches and m ounted on a 16 by 20 pebbled m ou ntin g board. • fashion, Photographs will be subm itted under five classifications: p o rtra it, dramatic, and bathing beauty. First, second, and third place a w a rd s will be given in each class. Any num ber of pic­ tures may be entered in each classification. sports, The most photogenic girl in the entire co ntest will receive the ti­ tle of “ Miss P ho tography of 1942.’’ The grand aw ard will go to the pho to grapher subm itting the best picture of Miss Photography. Details of th e rules of the con­ test may be g otten from Marilyn Ford of Smithville, presid en t of Models’ Club; Donald Ross of E d ­ inburg, p resident of Cam era Club; A. D. Glover o f Austin, a ssistant in physics, an d H u b e rt Luckett, instructor in photography, fac u lty advisors. Greek Budgets Get .New Booking Systems The Greek brothers and sisters, attem pting to keep the budget balanced, sent representatives to discuss finances of sororities and fraternities Monday afternoon. Mrs. Kathleen Bland, assistant dean of women, pre­ sided at the m eeting and introduced gu ests and speakers. —--------------------------------- Guests introduced were Mrs. R u b y ♦ Radcliffe, s tu d e n t organizations, and R. J. Crissey, m an ag er of the Stu d en ts' Co­ operative Association. auditor fo r | \ j ^ Crissey told those present th a t the co-operative buying assoria- tion, organized last year, now serv- j tw enty-six groups with 803 ! ed | students included in the member groups. . , * , , H. R. Gipson, assistant dean of I „ . ,, . . . , , stud ent life, spoke to the students , i on tho prob lem , of t i n m e n e n d l I tho e ffe c t o f chancing ch a p te r hlTinJt , personnel on th e f m .n c .e l system I toufh with M r , P e r r y . and on morale rn the fra te rn ity . , , for A.vV.v.S. to be used as h e a d q u a r­ the proposed housing ters project fo r servicemen, Mrs. E. H. Perry Jr., president, said Monday, Plans fo r the p ro ject are still , w considerBtjJ n „ nd t , , should . , . , in , w g u n o t i , , to the also free u nder introduced Dr. Ayres deplored au d ito r of facilities for long trips. Then it will seem u tterly old-fashioned to drive to Dallas w’hen an airplane will take you there in fif ty m inutes.” the Newly-elected pledges of Thirty Club are Virginia F a rr, Jodelle Gaines, and Bonnie J ea n Titley. Pledge services will he held T h u rs­ day a fte rn o o n a t 6 o'clock in the Texas Union. Th, Travis Post American Le- He told them of th e infirmation j gion home, was first considered and m aterial available to stu d e n t as a possible location, h u t was organizations. Services offered by abandoned because of inadequate I Gipson . stu d e n t organizations, were new booking systems or changes in the present system offered to Greek organizations, or solving of ; immediate problems on a fee basis. f a c t the He t h a t A merica is so rich while so students the F r a te r n ity Sup er­ many of her people are poor. The vision Office, u nder the direction in Institution Brookings is a of Ja c k K. Colbert, This 1929 th a t factories were using booking system th a t will, fo r a only 81 per cent of their indus- small sum, take over the books, paym ent of bills, and general j trial resources. He suggested t h a t I thi* w ast* o f production power ( h a p ter financial set-up, Miss Dorothy Gebauer, dean o f mi*ht b* alleviated if income were women, spoke on the problem of diverted in some way to the un- She employed, aged, and otherwise de­ t i m e pointed out the difficulties t h a t Pen(le p t groups, faced the average college man or 18 Quite obvious th at we have Officers f o r the Klip Klub f o r woman— too much to do and too n0t , e a r n H how t0 operat* an ,n’ the fell snd spring semester ere dustrial economy. We have built little time to do it in. Elizabeth H eath, president; Cal- the industrial processes on a much higher level o f com fort than the vin Smith, vice-president; G ertru de community as a whole has en- Otto, s e cre ta ry ; and Maidel Fred- joyed.” New initiates a re H u b e rt B ra ­ den, Alice A ndreas, Steve Allen, Kay Nipper, Bill Blackburn, Mary Nee, Jack Fisher, Susie Neel, Jo Ann W hitmire, Charles Williams, Key Rice, and Edwin Holschak. Th* G O O N S . will discuss "th in g s ” s t a m eeting W ednesday the back night at 8 o ’clock room of Hilsburgs. fo r college students. i rich, tre a su re r. found in • • ' Shoe s in Vagu s are a t the Vogue LEAD A DOUBLE LI Each sorority and f ra te r n ity on the campus wag represen ted by their president, tre a su re r, chap­ eron, and alum ni financial advisor. A bulletin explaining th e F r a ­ te rn ity Supervision Office was presented to the treasu rers. I t told o f the benefits to be derived from use of the office and the efficiency of f r a te r n ity tre a s u r e r could become the busi­ ness m an a g e r of the ch a p te r ra th e r than a bookkeeper. system. The the Coach Bible - - (Continued from Page I ) Dr. L. L. Click. University in ­ structo r of English, who is a good friend of Coach Bible. A fte r being reared on a farm, Coach Bible, with four other chil­ dren, wont to college and hence into different walks of life. Until the r e tu rn o f Coach Bi­ ble, A ssistant Coaches C herry and "B ully ” Gtlstrap will have charge o f the Longhorns. Age of Airplanes— (Continued from Page I ) going to have to live much b e tte r than before if we are to absorb the products of this new mdus- j trial e quipm ent.” The age of airplanes, houea technology', plastics, an d “ living machines,” which he mentioned briefly, is ju st around the corner, Dr. Ayres fu rth e r prophesied, “ A irplsnes will probsbly be­ come as common ss automobiles j Say Campus Leaguers ... Post-War Reconstruction NeedsEffectiveEducation By DEAN FINLEY A ssociate Society E ditor I S THE W A R EFFO RT only be­ ing mn air raid warden, or ta k ­ ing courses in Red Cross nursing, or belonging to the Motor Corps? the C am pus League of Women V oters decided em phatic­ ally in its discussion group Mon­ day. No, “The war e ffo rt is finishing our education,” one member expressed it. “We are the leaders of tom or­ row— or the wives of the leaders — and we m ust be effective lead­ ers.” A nother member said th a t the is understanding the w ar e ff o r t war. When the boys in khaki come home from abroad, they will have experienced the horrors of w ar that we a t home cannot know. Un- j less the women on the home fr o n t I e nter into w ar activities and learn w hat the w a r is about as well as I how it is being fought, the gap between the soldiers and civilians will be almost unsurm ountable. justm ents and realizing the need for educated workers after th e war, decided th a t students should continue in their chosen field, con­ necting the subjects with revelant w ar topics. The group agreed t h a t one of | the biggest points of the w a r e f­ fort was giving up every non-es­ sential activity, intensifying worth- ; while work and study, and keeping physically fit. Courses in the Uni­ versity m ust be correlated to w ar work if students completing their education a re to help win the war. the past but fo r how it can help us f u tu r e ,” a co-ed ex­ with plained. j The problem of changing degree m ajors was discussed. Most of the I league, fe a rin g resulting m alad­ “ Don’t study history the for The next discussion group w ill m eet Monday a t 5 o’clock in Tex­ as Union. Mrs. H om er P. Rainey will give a general survey o f the problems of post-w'ar reconstruc­ tion. Succeeding speakers on the pe­ riod a f t e r the war will be repre­ sentatives from the departments of government, sociology’, and psy­ chology. A nother topic of discussion will be “ The Repeal of the Poll T ax.” The case fo r and against repeel will be given. Duplan Speaks At Spanish nitiation they choose it The people of the United States often misunderstand the problems of the people of Mexico and the ways to in which is these problems, and solve the task of the consular service to help bring about friendship and co-operation between the two countries. This w as the thought which Louis Duplan, Mexican consul to Sigma Delta Pi members Monday night a t 8 o’clock in Texas Union 309 a f t e r the semi-annual initia­ tion ceremonies. fo r Austin, brought Jane, New active members of society Spanish the ho no rary are Joyce Atkins, Virginia Barbour, M argaret Beilharz, lim a Bena­ vides, A lbert Donnell, Billie Mae Fahrenkam p, M a rg a re t Humlong, Elizabeth Rose Louise Kennedy, Nadyne Knight, Ruth Kreis, Laura K uykendall, G. G. L andrum , V irginia Lopez-Lira, Mary Neal, B etty Ross, B etty and Spies, Paul H. W alters, Myrtle Zamora. New a ffilia te members are Carl E lder and N orman Pauling. Punch and cookies were served initiation. Guests o f the a f te r honor w'ere Duplan Gomez-L'rquiza, stu d e n t from Mexico City. and g ra d u a te Jose law 1910- into account North Americans o fte n mis­ understand the reasons behind the Mexican Revolution o f 1920, Duplan said. They fail to take the condition of th© poorer people of Mexico before 1910 or th e changes that have been b ro ught a b o u t since time— minimum wage laws, th a t fair elections, and the restoration of land taken from the peasants during the Diaz regime and before. I Itanksgivin Dash-Abouts Cefy For ell tin# exeWngThanVsghdng f e s t V t t e s , t b s S cin ­ tilla tin g tw o -p ie c e C ' f o e . T r ' r m s d w ’th os'.; 'eaves a'-'d « corns s a a r e ss ti a t ’s rea*y differ­ ent. Junior sizes. G uest a r tis t on the Austin W o*' man’s Club program Thu rsd ay m orning a t l l o’clock will be Mrs. Beatrice W hite Joughin, fo rm e r soloist a t the F ir s t Methodist Church. Mrs. Joughin studied at the New England Conservatory in a n d Longy School of Music A budding is still needed by the | Boston a n j New y o r k . Luncheon will follow the program a t 12:30. House to Entertain . I t s O O l u l G T \ J 7 U 6 S t S i i . a*, . . . . . . B R I G H T C O L O R c o m b in a tio n s o f f s e t t he s i m p le L- 8 5 s t y l i n g c f this s e a s o n ' s e n s e m c es. the t r i m m e d w ith s h o u l d e r . H e r clo ch e o f fu chsia fe lt c a r r i e s o u t the t w o - c o l o r t h e m e . a t H e r e s e q u :n -stu d d e d is a s 'rn fu ch sia y a r n b u t t e r i es lin e d p u r p l e j e r se y f r o c k Mrs. A rth u r L. Brandon, wife of the U niversity’s director of public relations, will speak to the Newcomers Club W ednesday a f t e r ­ noon a t 3 o ’clock, a t the U niver­ sity Club. She will talk on “ I t ’s Your University Now.” Mrs. H a rry Brown is hostess. • Gretrg-Ruik C o u n t y C l u b will Bayl or Pi c t ur e s to be S h o wn seeing in Texa^ Union at 7:30 Have you missed meet o clock W ednesday night. the pictures of the Baylor game. They will be showm again T uesday night at 8 o’clock at the Windson Road Engine Company House by Blair ^ . . . Recently-elected officers of j ii- B r e c k e n r i d g e Ha l l A s s o c i a t i o n are „ , n „ Henry W ard < oilier, president; Robert Rochs, vice-president; a n d Jorge Gonzales, urer. j r b * rry , assistant football coach, secretsry -treas- D r. A. L. Chapman director of , Radio House, announced. Buy W a r Bo n ds & S ta m p s In O u r V ic to ry H o u s e Genuine Aneeende las* S4.Si R ig h t: There a re n o lim it a t io n s t o the h e a d s y o u will turn in this a d o r a b le t w o - p ie c e d re ss. O f c re p e it s trim m e d in v ir g in w o o l e m b r o id e r y . J u n io r sizes. • t h and Congree* Yaring's— Street Floor 14.95 PASE FOUR— ED1TORIAC Phons 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A ' K I — Phone 2-2473 TUESDAY, N O VEM BER 17, 1942 JleA&l W hat % e Gan 3>o to Jtelp, % ln *1lte Wa* ‘‘T h e second front runs d o w n G u a d a lu p e Street. It is time T h e University o f T e x a s declared w a r .” Elgin (Bow) Williams, former campus liberal, free­ thinker, and writer of a Daily Texan column entitled “ Win the W a r , ” made these statements last summer in Is a an editorial asking “ Do Students Know W a r ? ” [here It serves our purpose to neither endorse nor reject Williams’ philosophy. Now he is working in W ash in g­ ton for the Bureau of Agricultural Economics. W h a t is more important here is the significance which students attach to little things tha t help win ?he war. t i l t err u By little things is meant those everyday deeds and acts which require little courage and effort, and which, \ hen ta ken individually, seem to have little or no bear ­ ing on final victory. They are things whch most of us prone to ignore in the face of unprecedented gov- ici t spending and conditions of upheaval, niversify students certainly are not cowardly. News reports about exes in the service bring reassurance of this daily. And students are not selfish, as evidenced by the recent War-Community Chest drive, to which stu­ dents alone contributed more than $2,000. In most of us. as a- erage Americans, there is an inherent daring to do big things— to be the best soldier in the ranks, to be a “Sergeant York,” or to be the best man behind the man who is in the front line. W h at we fail to recog­ nize, maybe, is the little things both men and women dents can do right here on the Forty Acres. TF EIGHT THOUSAND STUDENTS DO LITTLE THINGS FOR VICTORY, THEN THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS WILL BE DOING A BIG THING! Some of the things students might do are as follows: ( I ) W e c a n s e r v e b y s t u d y i n g w i t h a n e y e t o w a r d t h e f u t u r e a d j u s t m e n t s e a c h of u s will h a v e t o m ake. the worst, al­ We can start preparing ourselves for though we hope for the best. Saying w a r is horrible SMALL TALK By M ary Brinkerhoff C a n y o u d e f i n e d i s h o n e s t y ? • c h o l a l i c c u l i n a r y C o m m i t t e e f o l de r , w h i l e t he y c o r e r t h e w h o l e p i c ­ T h a t w h a t we t hought. We t ur e we l l , m i g h t be har d f o r a s t u d e n t to a p p l y t o i nd i v i d u a l s i t u a t i o n s . Of course, mo st o f the pe o ­ ple who have been on this c a m ­ pus for four o r thre** or ev e n t h e i r way t wo y ea rs know by a r o u n d p r et t y well now. t ha n fair T hey have a b e t t e r t e ac he r s idea of what, their the Bu t legitimate. consider f r e shme n and t r an s f e r s , all of them new t o U n iv e r si t y of Texa^ ways a n d m o s t of t h em new to college life in g e n er al , ar e ce r tai nl y in nee d of s o m e ­ to go by. E f f o r t s have t hi ng bee n made t he se to c o n t a c t the d e p a r t ­ s t ud en t s is me nt s hi which c h e a t i n g this likely to occur, but most s yst em does n ot seem he to comprehensi ve e nough. t h ro ug h the Au usual, we a r e w r i t n g on s ome t hi ng t h a t we d o n ’t know a great deal about . B u t we ar e t r y i n g to write f r o m t he s t a n d ­ the a v e r a g e s tud e nt , point of ar I we believe a v e r a g e student could use a little help in cl arifying his ideas of p l a­ g a l rn and o th e r kinds of a c a ­ deme- misbehavior. And t h e re should he ways in which such cl ar if ea l i on could he a c c o m ­ plished, al t hough a n y of them mi ght deman d a F t of time an d tr oubl e on tile p a r t of peo­ ple a good dea l sinartei than we ar e. it, and Think a b o u t if you find ai v ideas developing dr op u s a line. We could use so me ­ in o ur mailbox besides t hing dust, last spiderwebs, m o n t h ’s hills. an d W lu d ljo u R a y WUU WAR STAMPS Low flying Biplan es can create a great deal of dait by strafing troops with their machine gun fire. A v.tal weapon in d e f e ^ e against them is the 50-caliber Anti-aircraft machine gun which can be * ther mounted or on a mobile base Only 24 cents in War Savings Stamps a JI buy one round of ammunition for one < f these guns but since thou- 5; nds of re iuds are needed to ket p me sh ‘ rg ii ny length of time it is jmpe r at e ttiat every dollar pos­ sible be ested rn War Savings Stamps and Bol ids. c a n ’t ei ther . f o l d e r A w e e n t i t l e d . “ S t a t e * m e n t b y D i s c i p l i n e C o m m i t t e e C o n c e r n i n g S c h o l a s t i c D t s h j n * u n d e r s t a n d e s t y , ” w h i c h t h e s u p e r ­ w a s p r e p a r e d u n d e r v i s i o n o f D e a n A m o N o w o t n y , n t h a t d i s h o n e s t y s a y s t h r e e o f u s u a l l y p l a g a r i s m , c o l l u s i o n , o r t o r n c h e a t i n g o n a n e x a m i n a t i o n o r a r e t h r e e q u i z . i n t e l l i ­ t h i n g e n t l y , a n d a s f u l l y a s t h e s i z e o f t h e f o l d e r wi l l p e r m i t . T h e s e d e f i n e d , t a k e s o n e c l e a r l y , t y p e s p a r t Th.- if ti in r e s 1 f OU wa information, with rules and the f ac t s ! he folder, go a long tht id clearing up fo g g y u n c e r t a i n t y : ar e in as to j u s t dishonesty istitutes Ices not. If t h e bo ok ­ it-r widely d b t r i b u t - lid help to a things out. lot is B u t t h e w o r d s p l a g a r i s m , i t e n o u g h ? S i m p l e a s t h e m s e l v e s s o u n d — c h e a t i n g c o l l u s i o n - c a n ’ t y o u t h i n k o f c a s e s , r e a l o r t h e o r e t i c a l , when t h e d e f i n ­ i t i o n c f a w o r d l i k e t h e s e m i g h t ■flake th * d i f f e r e n c e b e t w e e n a s t u d e n t s s c h o l a s t c g u i l t o f i n ­ t h e c o n d e n s e d , n o c e n c e ’ n e ­ g e n e r a l c e s s a r y by t h e s i z e o f t h e D i s - d e f i n i t i o n s m a d e \ n d §U)f pally tern Th papei ic p u Da y To can, student news- if T h e Universit y of Texas, bed on the c a mp us of the : v in Aust i n by Te xa s t Publications, Inc., every g i cc pt Monday. u J as second class mail at the Post Office, Austin, d r ’he Act of Congress, B offices, Journalism 3 , 101, a n d 102. Tele- 3 , 1 8 7 9 . . 2- 2 4 13 . Mein ber Plssockrlod C onep ate Press Ho fc B O B O W E N S Lie Mi Larrabee _ Bi l l T ea s d a l e A n n Gor r i ck __ Dean flak* .. Elle n Gi bs on F a t t y Miller ........ 8 ie B r a n d t .lav DuBose T he lm a Fr eiu ia J im Greer Advert Piirtmentij, U38. Ph Bg and circulation de* Journa !ism Building e 2-247:3. s u b :'SCft I P H O N RATES $0 .GO I Month I Se mast S E i t h e r in Gar rison Ha ll or U n io n , N o v e m b e r 9t h . black and gold S h a e f f e r T,tfI* T im e Pen. Reward. M arg ar et G old ­ man. 102 E a s t 1 5th. Ph one 2 - 2 7 8 4 . L A RG E S I L V E R ma n * r i n g at T ow er , S a t u r d a y n ig h t. Valu ab le for s e n t i m e n ­ for retu r n w it h no tal rea son*. R ewar d W I L L S H A R E g a r a g e a p a r t m e n t w it h s e r v ic e g r a d u a t e or p r o fe s so r . Maid R ic ha rd M orley. 8 - 5 1 3 6 E v e n i n g s . te a c h e r w ant* Y O U N G W O M A N h ou se , a p a r tm e n t, or room s m a l l in pr iv ate h om e w it h fenced hack yard w here 2 pet ca t* m a v he ke pt. A dd r e ss H e le n Ba rron. Care Au*tin H ig h Sc ho ol. L O ST : L a d ie s E lg in w atc h. Rose gold, faced. Modern d e s ig n . G e n e r ­ black . reward al ( arol P ad gett, 8 - 2 4 8 1 . L O ST : O n e K and E D r a f t in g Set. 5-6 in D r a w i n g Room Reward. P. M W e d n e s d a y E n g i n e e r i n g B uild in g. "OI. Phone 2 - 9 9 3 6 . Furnished Apartments U N U S U A L L Y a p a r tm e n t. L a rg e D E S IR A B L E — U n p lea room , b ed ­ room . N o k itch en . Tile a h ow er. p r iv a te e n tr a n c e . B illa paid, m aid ser v ic e - A c­ c o m m o d a te 8. P h o n e 2 -1 7 4 0 . liv in g LO ST : D ip lex D e c i t n g Sli de Rule. S t e n ­ cil B. Kirk. P h o n e 8 - 4 5 6 6 . R eward. 1932 B Sa n A n to n io — Apt. 7. L i v i n g ro om, be droom , bath. T w o m e n $30 a m on th . Bil ls paid. 37 2 0 . FO R B O Y S or in s tr u c to r !. S in g la ow d o u b le r o om s, p r iv a te b a th and an* tr a n c e . B etw ee n U n iv e r sity a nd C apitoL R ea so n a b le. 1 908 S p ee d w a y . 6 8 0 8 . B O Y S— m od ern ro o m s, a in g le or d o a b le , m o d er a te p r ic e s, sh o w e r s, b o ilt-in fe a ­ eu« tu r e s . p r iv a te tra n cca . g a r a g e* 8 00 E. 20. 2 -3 0 6 0 . in d iv id u a l c lo s e ts , R E A S O N A B L E jo in in g b a th P R IC E D R O O M S — A d ­ in p r iv a te h o m e. T w in beds or s in g la : p r iv a te e n tr a n c e , g a r a g e . 2 6 2 0 S p ee d w a y ea m p u a . O na P h o n e 8 -1 6 0 8 . block ROOM u p sta ir s for b o y s . L arga d e s ir a b le roo m , p o rch , c o n v e n ie n t to c a m p o s, s tu d e n t p referred . Call 6 2 8 7 . a d jo in in g B le epin g N IC E L Y F U R N IS H E D ROOM S w ith s le e p in g p o r c h e s. S h o w er b a th s. O ne block f r o m C a m p o s. P r iv a te ph one. H O I S an A n ton io . ZOOK U O A U A L U r i L O S T — A rm v C rash B r ac e le t. E n g r a v e d on back, Ftoger, Se pt. 4, 42. Reward. C o ach in g Phone 8 - 5 3 4 7 . Furnished Houses R. M. Randl*-— M at h C oac hin g 2 3 0 9 Sa n A n to n io — 2-07 61 E N G L I S H — E x p e r t t u t o r i n g . E x p e r i e n c e d t e a c h w ith M a s t e r ’s D e gre e . P h o n e 2 - 1 3 8 3 . Dancing LO ST : B r o w n le ath e r p u r s e a t S M U - d e v a s fo o t b a ll gam e. Keep m o n e y . R e­ t o 2 613 U n i v e r s i t y . P h o n e turn p u r s e * ’ 5 U j qs;T . U n i v e r s i t y o f T e t e * C he m ic al E n g i n e e r i n g 193 7 Clas* Pin. Liberal or ph one 108 rew ard. R e tu r n J. B 2 -4 7 4 1 . P a t L i g h t f o o t . bedr oom c o t t a g e T E A C H E R S : A t t r a c t i v e l y fu r n is h e d t h r e e i n ­ s t r u c t o r s or U n i v e r s i t y e m p lo y e e s . 704 W. 24 th . for fo u r w o m e n Classified Advertising RATE CARD Garage Apartments A N N E T T E D U V A L D A N C IN G SC H O O L C l a s s e s — M o n , I bu rs .-—-8i to 9 . 3 0 P.M. .,-.>086. S t u d io : 108 W . 14 th St . Ph on e I.OS T: O ne pair w in g tip speci al m ad e P l e a s e retur n to ( j vm s t o r e . U r g e n t a* u n a b le t o ob* tl| jn o th e r s . Reward. L. U. N o r w o o d room , G A R A G E A P A R T M E N T for M en : B e d ­ In H o u s e : roo m, p r iv a te e n tr a n c e , hath. AI*o s in g le room. 1 90 7 W hit i* A ve. P h o n e 33 4 4 . s t u d y , hath. For Sale L O S T : L og D uplex V e ct o r sl id e rule with it. Re wa rd. Frank B r a g a n print ed on Garage Rooms 1930 M OD EL A — c o n v e r t i b l e a n d r u m b l e f i ve seat:— -excellent m o t o r , g ood f a i r tire* f $ 5 0 c a - h . < all 22 9 6 9 . top , P h o n e 4 5 0 0 Schools and Colleges O N E S T U D E N T to ahare g a r a g e ro om . s h o w er . $16. Bloc k U n i v e r s i t y . T il e P h o n e d a y t im e . 9 1 7 1 — 378 S a m fie ld . 2 - 4 3 6 4 a f t e r 6 :3 0 P. M. COLLEGES Room Apartments ■AUSTIN-MODS TON ^ . ANTONIO:: ft worth - ha^ J N W , I In te r n a tio n a l I n v e s t i g a t e Our 1 3 - W e e k Mor se C ode R adio C ou rse. ROOM S— F o r boy*, g ir ls , c o u p le s. P r i­ v a te e n tr a n c e , c o n n e c tin g bath. S le e p ­ in g p o r c h e s. 2 06 E. 26Mi. P h o n e 2 -3 7 8 7 . Room and Board m e n t b e s t bred C H R I S T M A S P U P P I E S — L a r g e s t a s s o r t ­ in A u s t i n . M a n y sired by C h a m p io n sho w w in n e r s . W ar re n S m ith . 407 A r li ngto n . c ock er * SUSI FOR SALE— 1 6 ft. San Boat in good con- 301 dition- * 100 00- l’hone 2*7237 S an J a c i n t o St. ! P A I R B E A U T I F U L N e w N e im s n M ar ­ c u s S il v er Fo x Fur*. C a n n o t d u p lic a t e for lea* than $3 0 0 . C o st $250. Sell $ 1 0 0 t a « h . 58*3 . Lost and Found Typewriter Service T Y P E W R IT E R S .m a c h i n e s a d d i n g R e n t e d — S o l d — Repaired T y p e w r ite r Service Co. L O S T — 2 Keo. R o o k s : one, red, by K n i g h t. by Mead. R ew ard t h e other, blue * 1 .5 0 . A M ax w ell Q u ie t t Gran de . Ph one 6 2 0 1 . ' 1 9 0 7 Rio 126 W 5 th St . Th. 9 4 1 2 W I L L T H E p erro n who b o u g h t a: Wanted to Buy , , , _ a u c tio n T u e s d a y . N o v e m b e r 3rd p le a s e HIGH EST C A S H Price* paid c all A nne Folaotn, __ _ . for -TOO* old gold. L. L ev e e , 217 E. 6 th . 8 -S 4 8 8 . 8-2 7 0 2 . R e w a r d . ____________ r i m m e d th e t h e g ! a * * e * s h e l l p i n k ___ L O S T : Gold pin A B A C am p u s Guild. 8 - 6 1 3 6 aft er S u n d a y . Boh L o g a n , H I G H E S T C A S H for M i d auita, s h o e s . A S c h w a r ts. Ph. 8 -0 1 8 4 PR IC E S M C E R OOM — fo r o n e or tw o boya. P ri r a ta e n tr a n c e . TH# sh ow *?. $ 04 E ast 32nd S tr e e t. P h on e 2 -8 8 4 2 $ 1 0 e a ch Wa reserve to ndtt eopy the right to correspond with tbs style need by The Daily Tnzan. GOOD H O M E co oked m e a ls . R e a so n a b le . T w o bl ocks S a m p m . 394 W e s t 19th. A ls o room fo r one boy. 8 - 3 6 2 5 . Messenger Serries anti! 4 8 1 8 »• week-days. Counter service an ti t $ a O N E OR T W O boy*. N ic e, clean, la r ge room . P r iv a t e e n tr an c e , Tile sh ow er . T h r e e m e a ls and room , $ 37 .5 0 . 8 2 6 0 4 . 2 3 1 3 O ld ham . O N E OR T W O boy*. N ic e, clean, large roo m. P r iv a t e e n tr a n c e Tile s h o w er . T h r e e m ea l* and room, $ 3 7 .5 0 . ALL A D S C A S H IN A D V A N C E Racoon* I Me for one Ineorree* insertion only READER A D S 2 0 W o r d s—'Maximum I time I tim e s I tim e s 4 tim es 8 tim es 8 tim es - 1 .48 •$$ .7 0 .80 .00 ....................... — — 1.00 ■ Reader Ads Are To Be Run - On Consecutive Days We Charge tor Copy Change D ISPLA Y A D S I column wide by I inch deep 60c per insertion Dial 2-2473 tor further infor­ mation or messenger service. Coaching or Typing Ads Special Rates - - 2 Line A d s $ 2 .0 0 M o n tli Call 2 - 2 4 7 3 Before 4 :0 0 for iVlessenger S ervice TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1942 PKona 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Piton* 2-2473 AMUSEMENTS— TELEGXAm— PAGE FIVE Doty Plays Organ 3 0 Japs Ships Sunk 1S-19 Year Olds In Radio Series To Equal Losses In Solomons Battle Rose Bam pions Voice, Stage Presence Tops B y S U E B R A N D T A g rea t a rtist sang in H o g g A uditorium Sunday a ftern o o n . She w as Rose Ham pton, M etropolitan Opera soprano, w hose rich, mood- se n sitiv e v oice reached ou t and held a w ildly en th u sia stic audience in the palm o f her hand from the first patriotic num ber o f the last encore. D ressed in a fuchsia and purple ev en in g gow n, w ith her black hair com bed sim ply back in halo fa sh ­ ion, Miss Bam pton stood beside the grand piano on the H ogg sta g e, and sang for p atrons, stu ­ d ents, and soldiers who not only out fa ced her from fro n t, but also sat surrounding her on the platform . se a ts the In the opinion o f this review er, M iss Bam pton alone w as b etter the en tire com bination o f than “ The Barber o f S e v ille ,” w hich, to say the least, w as not bad. Her if slightly poetical a rtistry lay, term s w ill be excused , that w hen she ~ang a prayer, her voice p rayed, and th a t w hen she sang a love son g, her voice loved, and th a t w hen she sang a gay song, her voice laughed up the scales. in two S t e p h e n The f i r s t g r o u p of n u m b e r s in­ cluded “ To Lo S a i ” by Torelli, “ S p i r a t e P u r S p i r a t e ” by Don- audy, a n d F o s t e r me lodies especially a r r a n g e d f or M iss B a m p t o n bv Br ooks Smith, y o u n g c o m p o s e r : A me r i c an “ S w eetly She Sleeps” a n d “ The M erry M e r r y Mo n t h o f Ma y . ” ROSE BAMPTON Bampton Called 'Quite Unspoiled/ And Hardworking B y L e G E N E L O T T F ol l o wi ng w a s the ar i a , “ Pace, P ace, Mio Dio” f r o m V e r d i ’s “ La Forza del Dest in o, ” in w'hich L e o n ­ ora cr i e s “ P eac e, peace, my L o r d , ” i m p l o r i n g hea ve n to l e t h e r die. So a p p r e c i a t iv e was t h e au d i en ce th a t even Miss B a m p t o n wras o b ­ v io u sly ov e r wh e l me d . B ea u tifu l Rose B am pton, w ho held her A ustin a u d ien ce sp ell­ bound by her co n cert Sunday a f ­ tern oon , regards h er v oice as a m edium to exp ress th e beauty of Frederick song, according Bristol, her accom pan ist, and the person who, through his associa- The n ex t group o f selectio n s j tion w ith her, should know the to included “ B leu et” by P oulenc, the M etropolital star q uite w ell, v ery charm ing “ Dans Les R uines L e’une V ielle A b b aye” by F aure, “ F a n t o c h e s ” by Debussy, a n d the love song, “ Del Cabel lo Mas Su- t il,” by O br a do r s , which Miss t h a t f ee li n g B a m p t o n s a n g with o f voice a n d fac e a n d body which h ave a l r e a d y b ee n me n t i o ne d . A lso “ T un i ba Y L e” by O b r a ­ dors. Mr. Bristol said th a t the world is full o f b ea u tifu l voices but m a n y o f t hese voices lack a m e s ­ sage t h e i r song. Miss B a mp to n , he said, feels t h a t h e r voice is m e a n t t o b ri ng to h e r a u d i e n c es t he message of g r e a t compo ser s— a n d n ot t h a t mus i c is to am p li f y the q ua l it y o f h e r vioce. t he wo r l d t o give in three F r e d e r i c k Br ist on, h e r piano accom pan ist, played solo num bers: “ N o v e l e t t e ” by P o u ­ len c, “ V i en ne s e Dance No. I ” by F r i e d m a n - G a r t n e r , which w as p e r ­ haps hest-l iked by t h e audi enc e, t he R a i n ” by and “ G a r d e n s in Debussy. Mr. Bristol, i n c i d e n t a l ­ ly, held u p his sha re o f t h e p e r ­ did Miss f o r m a n c e as well as a c ­ B a m p t o n , and p la ye d c o m p a n i m e n t s with t he u n o b t r u s ­ ive ca pabi li t y which c h a r a c t e r i z e s a good a c co mpa n i s t . h e r Miss B a m p t o n ’s p r es c ri pt i on to the musi c s t u d e n t who w’ants a c a r e e r in music is “ hard w o r k . ” Thi s s u m m e r w hen she sang in the T a t r o Colon in B u en os A ires, Miss B a m p t o n s t a r t e d a t nine in the m o r n i n g a n d w o r k e d until one t he n e x t m o r n i n g mo r e than once. I n So u th A me r i ca , t he p e r ­ f o r m e r s m u s t s u f f e r two openi ng nights. The f i r s t is called a dr ess r e h e ar s al , b u t t h e p r es e nce o f music crit ics an d t h e i r n o t e books ma ke s it an o p e n i n g n i g h t as far Miss B a m p t o n ’s second a r i a was as t he a rt i st s a r e c o n c er ne d . f r o m Chase . D id dl e” e a me in the Chi cago t h e same o p e r a “ N u r s e r y a n d on “ II E s t Doux, ll E st B o n , ” f r o m “ H e r o d i a d e ” by Ma ssene t . • B a ro m e o , H e r l a st g r o u p of n u m b e r s was p r o f e s s o r of voice, U niversity and Miss e n t i r e l y English, b eg i n n i n g wi t h B a mp t o n s a n g t o g e t h e r f or sev- the sad “ Musi c I H e a r d W i t h era! y e a r s b ef or e Mr. Barom eo to Texas. T h e y s a n g roles Y o u ” by H a g a m a n , a n d i ncl udi ng t h e e x t r e m e l y del icate “ H e y Did- in New York d ie tour . A m on g th ese per- f o r m a n c e s was the f i r s t soprano R h y m e s ’’ by H e r b e r t Hu gh e s , f o r which Mr. Bristol played a par - j role Miss B a m p t o n sang, a fter good a c c o m p a n i m en t . ! she cha nged f r o m m ezzo-soprano. t i c ul a rl y “ Mid- T h e y have also s u n g or at or ios to- Thir d this g r ou p w a s in i u m m e r ” by MacDowell , follow­ g e t h e r with and ed by t he del ightf ul “ R a p u n z e l ” Cl eve l and S y h p n i on y Orchest ras. which is musi cal b a c k g r o u n d and In f act, Miss B a mp t o n gives B a r ­ t e x t f or the old G r i mm poet ical ome o c r e d i t for s t a r t i n g her on f a i r y t a le — a n d which Miss B a m p ­ h e r c a r e e r . ton s a n g with such expr ession t h a t the a ud i e nc e was a l mo s t w o n ­ d e r i n g anx io us l y wi t h her, “ who is t h e r e ? ” t he last selection was “ J o y ” by W i n t t e r W a t t s . A c c or di n g to h e r accom panist, Miss B a mp t o n is qui t e c o n t r a r y to the pr ovincial t c m p e r m e n t a l pri- m a do nn a . She is unspoil ed, a hard w o r k e r a n d has a g en u i n e love f o r h e r profession. H e r wide, stage f r i e n d l y smile, the o f Miss B a m p t o n ’s r eci t al the title of one of h e r l ast cores, “ L e t My Son g Fill Y o u r as did h e r d eeply e xpr e ssi ve eyes H ea rt” by E r n e s t Charles. B e fo r e t he last o ne she sang, “ No, .John, N o, ” Miss B a mp t on i n t r od u ce d a n o t h e r p a t ri o t i c note by a n n o u n c ­ i ng t h a t f o r t he d u r a t i o n she is selling all he r a u t o g r a p h s f o r 25 c e n t s a piece, the m o n e y to be given t o t he local Red Cross. Neeb to Appear On Radio House • t r u e s t des cr i pt i on en- b r o u g h t the a u d i e n c e to he r fee t, and face. -— —-------------- lay in ' m a n n e r d u r i n g t h e c o n c e r t g r a c io u s P e r h a p s in a t Miss B a mp t o n , who ma d e her t w e n t y - M e t ro p o l i t a n d e b u t is kn ow n f or h e r a r ti st i c th ree, a c c om pl i s hm e n t s fields: opera, c onc er t, or at o r io, a n d ra­ dio. S h e rec ei ve d her e a r l y m u s i ­ cal ed u c at i on in Cl eveland an d B u f f a l o a n d was l a t e r g r a d u a t e d from the Cu r t i s I n s t i t u t e , P h i l a ­ delphia. f o u r S he has been soloist with the P h i l a d e l p h ia O r c h es t r a u n d e r the d i r ec ti o n o f Leopold Stokow-ski, and he r o p e r a t i c in­ clud es some o f the most, f a m o u s roles in h is t o r y— Aida, Don Gio­ va n n i, N o r ma , La Fronza del Destino, a n d ot hers. T r o v a t o r e , r e p e r t o i r e T he f i r s t hal f h ou r of t he p r o ­ a f t e r n o o n wa« g r a m S u n d a y b r o a d c a s t ov er WOAI . 'Time Staggers' Try-Outs Nov. 23,24 T r y - o u t s f o r the onl y c a m p u s musical comedy , “ Time S t a g g e r s O n , ” will he held n e x t Mo nd a y a n d T u e s d a y a f t e r n o o n s f r o m 2 until 5 o’clock in Te x a s Union 401. in a c t ­ ing, danc i ng, dinging, pr od uc t i on crews, or a n y t h i n g c on ne ct e d vvith a st a g e show a r e u r ge d to come ov er a n d t r y out, All s t u d e n t s i n te re s t e d This y e a r ’s TSO, the se ve n t h cons ec ut i ve p r od u c t i on , was w r i t ­ and ten by Ha ywood V i n c e n t Brook* Kellar, s t u ­ two Dallas dents. Di r ec t i ng the show is Billy Ma t t he ws , who also d ir e c t ed last y e a r ’s hit. “ T i me S t a g g e r s O n ” is p r o d u c e d each y e a r by T h e t a S i g­ ma Phi, h o n o r a r y fra tern ity for women rn Radio House b eg an its weekly sc hedul e with t h e “ L i s t e n e r s ’ G r a b Ba g " Mon da y a f t e r n o o n a n d “ Un i ­ ver si t y Music T i m e , ” b ro a d c as t f ro m t h e recital hall of t he Music Bui ld i n g M on d a y night. t a k e n At its r e g u l a r time, 1:15 to 1 :30 o ’clock W e d n e s d a y a f t e r n o o n , the ‘‘R e a d i n g Is A d v e n t u r e ” p r o g ra m f r o m a sc ri pt by will he Mrs. Blithe H am i l t o n Beal “ So T h a t ’s P o e t r y , ” wi t h Marti n J. Nee b , speech i n s t r u c t o r , as com­ m e n t a t o r . J a c k Ki l gor e is p r od u ce r of t he show, and H o m e r Ulrich, musical d i r ec t o r of Radio House, is in c h a r g e of music f o r the p r o­ g ra m. F r o m 3 to 4 o ’clock W e d e n s e d a y a f t e r n o o n , “ The Music H o u r ” will he b ro a d c a s t over K T B C f r o m the Music Building. A p r o g r a m of classical musi c r e c o r d i n g s has been ' e l e c t e d by Dr. E d w i n E ugene S t e m, associate p r o f e s s o r of m u ­ sic in­ l i t e r a t u r e an d woodwind s t r u me n t s . “ The Music H o u r ” o r i g­ i na t ed f ro m Radio House until this week. the W e d n e s d a y ni g h t from 9:30 to 9:45, “ W o r k s h o p Drama S h o w ” will be b r o a d c a s t over K N OW . The script, w r i t t e n by the D u r r u m twins, is e n t i t l e d “ Tales of a T o w n . ” t he “ Women title of show which “ A n d Be au t y Shall Re T he i r s ” is in the W a r ” is p r es e nt e d T h u r s d a y a f t e r n o o n f ro m 2<15 to 2:30 o ver KTBC. T h e p r o g r a m , also w r i t t e n by the D u r r u m twins, will publicize the C l a r e T r e e M a ­ j o r plays f or chi ld r en, which will a p p e a r in H og g A u d i t o r i u m De­ c e m b e r 7. The s eventh t he series of I “ Music Is Y ours” broadcast*, pre­ d a t e d by the Texas School oI the in El e ve n othe r e n e m y ve ssel s, se ven of t he m c o mbat ships, The orchestra began the pro- we r e d a m a g e d . Fo ur c a r go transports we r e listed as “d e ­ s tr oy e d” aft e r the y ha d be e n be ac he d by the e ne my and at t ac ke d by United St ate s air and sea forces. Campus Orchtstra, Dr. Rainey on Show The fir st o f th e n ew series o f “ U n iv ersity M u s i c program s, T im e,” was broadcast from the M usic Building M onday night w ith Dr. E. W. D oty, dean o f the C ol­ le g e o f F in e A rts, as fa cu lty so ­ lo ist, and Dr. H om er P. R ainey as speaker. l l On the air from 10:30 to o ’clock , the broadcast carried the m usic o f the Radio H ouse Chorus and O rchestra, d irected by H om er U lrich , m usic d irector o f Radio H ou se, and Dr. D o ty ’s organ ren ­ d itio n s o f P a sch elb el’s “ T o ca tta ” and F ran ck ’s “ C an tab ile.” gram w ith S tra u ss’s “ Life L et U s C herish,” and the chorus san g an old anthem drawn from the serv ices o f the R ussian church, “ Lo, a V oice to H eaven Sound- : _ __ J > i n jr. ^ Dr. D oty played the organ which w as designed and constructed e s ­ p ecia l^ for the new Music B uild­ ing. A fte r his selectio n s, the Radio H ou se O rchestra played a m inu et, “ Sarab and e,” by Couperin. Dr. R ainey told the history o f the C ollege o f F in e A rts, ex p la in ­ ing its purposes and ad vantages. T he chorus and orchestra p re­ sen ted “ S oldiers C horus” from G ornod’s “ F a u st,” and the pro­ gram ended w ith th e studio au di­ en ce sin gin g “A m erica the B eau ­ tifu l.” Kreufz, Fitzgerald To Conduct Concert International Newt Service Thirty Ja pa ne s e ships, more t ha n h al f of the m w a r ­ ships, w e r e r epo r te d sunk of d a m a g e d M onday ni ght in the gr e at naval battl e o f f t he Sol omon Islands, t hus i n­ di ca ti ng a sma shi ng Am e r i c an vi ctor y on t he basis of pre ­ l iminary reports. Of t he gr and total, 19 shi ps w e r e sunk and l l of t he m we r e war shi ps. P r i z e o f the rich b ag of e ne m y se a ar mor w a s a gr e at Jap wa r s hi p that w e n t to t he bottom wit h guns blazing* Eight othe rs w e r e t ransport s l ade n wi th troops and e qui pme nt de si gn e d to buttress the Jap attac k on Am e r i ­ can forc e s at G uada l c a na l . Ame r i c a n losses w e r e listed in the Uni te d Stat es c o m ­ muni que as t wo l i ght cruisers and six destr oye rs sunk. “ Ge ne ral M ac A r th u r ^ ai rcraft w a s of gr e a t assi st anc e to our naval forces, both be for e and dur ing the naval ac ­ tions,” said the c o mm uni que . It said t he se attac ks w e r e r epor te d in c o mmu ni qu e s f rom M ac A r th ur ^ he ad qu a r ­ ters, and i ndi cated the toll t ake n by the se airme n w a s n ot inc luded in the N a v y annou nc e me nt . Duri ng the gr e at e n g a g e m e n t , e ne my in w a r ­ losses ships, othe r than th e battl eshi p, i nc luded thr ee h e a v y cruisers, t w o l ight cruisers, f ive destroyers, all sunk; and one battl eship and six destroyers, da m a g e d . Exte nt o f the loss o f Am e r i c a n l ife in t he bruising e n­ g a g e m e n t that m ay pr ove a tur ni ng poi nt in the Pac ific war , is not kno wn. But the death o f Vic e Admi r al Dani el J. Ca l l ag ha n duri ng the action w a s reported. Axis Must Hold Bizerte And as n e w s of the g r e at Ame r i c an vict or y flashe d to A rthur K reutz, a ssista n t p ro fes­ sor o f music th eo ry , and Bernard the wor l d, Hitler g a v e franti c orders to Axi s troops in m u s i^ 'e d u c a tio n /w iil’conduct''the j Tunisia to stop the Al l i e d ad va nc e towar d the gr e at naval strin g and w ind en sem b les re-I base at Bi z er te “ at all c osts.” o f 't h e ye.rin. t t 8 : i s o‘c lo c k ° W e d -1 Late st e sti ma te s pl ac e the numbe r o f Axi s troops with- n esd ay night in the R ecital H all stan di ng the Al lied ad va nc e at about 10,000 men, but F u e h r e r ’s order se e m e d to i ndi cat e de spe r a te e ffort s o f the Music B u ild in g. 1 , ,, a” Fl r in violin in the o f real val ue ap pe ar e d w a n i n g fast. " h°»sth : woul d be ma de to g e t thr ough r e info r c e m e nts. School All hope that Naz i F i e ld Marshal Erwin Romme l c oul d bachelor o f m usic d e g r e e f r o m the U n iv ersity o f W isconsin, a m aster bring his battered Afr i ka Corps, n o w f l e e i n g w e s t across o f m usic degree from Colum bia i T each ers’ C ollege, and has had 1 the Li byan desert, to t he Tunisian front in ti me to prove advanced study Br ussel s C o n s e r v a t o r y in Belgium H e is a f o r m e r f a c u l t y m e m b e r of Madison V oc a t i on a l School, in Col umbi a, T e a c h e r s ’ College a n d Geo r gi a S t a t e College, a n d is h o l d e r of in compositi on, as well as b ei ng w i n ­ n e r o f the N at i ona l Associati on o f : A m e r i c a n C o mp o se r s a n d C o n d u c t ­ or s compet i ti on w i th “ W i n t e r of t he Blue Sn o w. ” The Axi s rout thr ough Libya still c ont inues and l ead c olumns in the r e tr e at al r e a dy are we l l past El Agh e i l a. This t own on the G ul f of Sirte is 150 mil e s be yond B e n ­ g ha z i and wi thi n ten mi le s of Tr i pol it ania. The British Ei g hth A r m y c onti nued in hot pursuit but ne c e ss ty of c l e ar i n g w r e c ke d Ax i s e qui pm e nt and ex- te nd i ng the ir own c o mmuni c ati on lines ke pt the British som e di sta nc e behi nd the f l e e i n g f oe. t he P r i x de Rome _ « ,. . , , . But the fact that th e Ital o-Ge rman ar mi es abandone d B e ng h az i wi thout e v en an at t e m pt at a stand, just as a c oupl e of days e arli er t he y had de se rted their Tobruk str onghol d, sho we d the tr e m e ndo u s pressure the British wer£ put ti ng on the m. Mr. F i tz g e r a l d has a b ac h el or o f music d e g r e e f r o m Ober lin C o n ­ s e r v a t o r y in I n d ia na . He is f o r m e r he a d of the wi nd d e p a r t m e n t of J o r d a n C o n s e r v a t o r y , h e a d of t he i n s t r u m e n t a l d e p a r t m e n t o f S t a t e T e a c h e r s ’ College in Emp o r ia , It har d l y se e ms possible that Romme l now coul d at- Kans. , d ir e c t o r o f b an d s a t the U ni ve r si t y of I d ah o, an d soloist i t e m pt anyt hi ng but rearguard ac ti ons until he r e ac he s wi t h Lakeside C h a t a u q u a Orches t r a an d Hall o f St at e s , Chi cago W o r l d ’s Fair . C o m p o s e r of a n u m ­ b e r o f published co mposi t i on s f o r mi x e d voices a n d wind i n s t r u ­ me nt s, Mr. F i t z g e r a l d is n o w di ­ r e c t o r of t he M e n ’s Glee Club a n d S ymp hon i c En s e mb l e . But se nsational as w a s the British drive to the we st, the g r ow i n g c re se ndo of the battl e on the e aste rn front in North Afr i c a dr e w t h e gr e ater attention. Late di spatche s, br oa dc ast by the Al l ie d-c ontrol le d r a­ dio at Al gi ers, told of F re nc h colonial troops f or ci ng a ! Ger man r e connai ssa nc e unit to re tr eat in Tunisia, thus in- | di cating that the c ol oni al s still are resi sti ng the Axi s in Tri pol i— if he can c ont inue the retreat that far. Russian Cellist Due Here Nov. 20 force. R.A.F. Blasts Base at Genoa Citizen M e ant i me the R A F aga i n wi nge d its wa y across the Alps Pi at i gorsky, G r e g o r from Britain to blast th e Nor th Italian naval base at G eno a n o t e d Russian celli st who took his f i nal oat h o f A m e r i c a n citizen- Sun day night. It w as the l i t h air a t t a c k o n t h i s gr eat port ship on A u g u s t 29, 1942, comes to of supp l y for Axi s f or c e s in Nor th Afri ca. This raid w a s t he U n i ve r si t y on t he C o m m u n i t y f o l l o w e d M onday by an Ame r i c an fighte r pl ane s w e e p j C o n c e r t Ser ies F r i d a y night, N o ­ over Naz i -oc c up i e d Europe. Spe ci al t ar ge ts we r e Ge rman v e m b e r 20. military pe rsonne l and instal lati ons, In both raids, all the att ac ki ng pl ane s r e turned sa fe l y. O ’Daniel Calls Up Dry Zone Measure; Senate Votes It Out Fortune Wouldn’t Draft Fathers Based on I.N.S. Report$ • t * , a , 1C , TVTC\ l v r « n v v D ra ftin g o f IR and 19-year-old j * y o u th ! w ill perhaps c o m p e n s a t e ! W A S H I N G T O N , Nov. 16— ( I N S ) — In the srrim o f a fu ll-fle d g e d for our annual c a sualties and J f i l i bus t er a g a i n s t an anti-poll tax bill the S e n a t e M o n d a y re fu sed perhaps it will not. The N o ve mb e r | 43 to 1 9 » to cons i der a m e a s u r e to establ ish d r y zones around A rm y issue o f F ortun e Magazine ca r ri e s anft N a v y r ese r va t i ons. an art i cl e a b o u t the d r a f t si t uat i on j in which t h e editors also e s t i ma t e I which th at few er than 45 per c e n t o f the m arried m en w ithout children need be called. D rafting o f fath ers has not y et been authorized and m ay not be necessar y, F o r t u n e M agazine thinks. s o u t h e r n e r s this b ill to nulli fy poll t a x laws in e i g h t t h e i r appl ica­ s o u th e r n s t a te s in to election of f e d e r a l o ff i ­ tion cials, in­ vasion o f s t a te s r ights. S e n a t o r O ’Daniel ma de t h e mo ti on to t ake up the pr ohi bi t i on b ill, - -— t h e S e n a t e shor tl y b e f o r e * is a n u nc o n s t i t u t i on a l the r e c e n t nat ional el ections had r e f e r r e d the J u d i c i a r y C o m ­ m i t t e e f o r f u r t h e r con s i der at ion . Whi l e the vote on the O ’Daniel mot i on was not c o n s t r u e d as a cl ear t e s t of s e n t i m e n t on t he p r o ­ hibition bill, foes o f the m e a s u r e hailed t h e r e s u lt as a n o t h e r s e t ­ back f o r t he drys. ....... - ..... insist t h a t to I t is assum ed t h a t by t he end o f 1943 the service will r eq ui r e a m axim um ave r ag e s t r e n g t h of about t en million men, seven mil­ lion, five h un d r ed t ho u sa nd in the A r my , and two million, five h u n ­ dred thousand in t he o t h e r forces. Ten m illion means mobilizing about 8 p e r c e n t of the p op ul a­ tion. d oub t f ul t h e Un i t e d S t a t e s can w hether l ong m ore t h a n 5 to 7 per cent. Ger m any can d r aw on mo s t of E u r ­ ope; B ri t a in can d r a w on the U ni t e d St at e s . We m u - t pr od uce not ony f o r ourselves, but also fo r o u r allies. Act u a l y, s u s t ai n is it S o me Se n a t or s , known t o f av or the d r y bill, voted a g a i n s t its con ­ s ide r a t i o n Monday, bec au se t he y w er e m o r e i n t e r est e d in t r y i n g to b r e a k t he t h e ant i-poll t a x bill. f i l i b ust er a g a i n s t F a c e d by avowed to talk t h r e a t s t h e a n t ;-poll s o u t h e r n e r s a mobilization of : tax bill to dea t h , D e mo c ra t i c Ie id- e r B a r k l e y of K e n tu c ky . , s h o i t l y a f t e r 2 o ’clock for c ed an a d j o u r n ­ m e n t o f the S en a t e to T ue s d a y , when he will r en e w his mo t i on to t ake up the anti-poll t a x b JI. On t he S e n a t e f l o o r B a rk l e y ma d e an impassioned plea to sup­ p or t er s of t he bill. He said he hop­ ed for t h a t m e m b e r s who w er e the bill b e f o r e the el ec t i ons had n ot w a v e re d in t h e i r i n te re s t . in As bega n, S e n a t o r s r e c og ni zi ng f i l i bust er the series of q u o r u m calls the full bloom, smiled, 0 f 1 and t he re w e r e ripples of lau gh ­ t e r in the galleries, b u t soon, as t h e i r S en a t o r s wer e called f r o m meals the to a n s w e r p r e s e n t S e n a t e c h a m b e r smiles g a v e w ay to ir ri tat io n. in t he a n d total N i ne noon S e n a t e ’s t i me - co ns umi n g To supply these ten trillion men l east f o u r million a r e j h o u r ” — b e t we e n q u o r u m calls w e r e for c ed b y f i l i b u s t e r i n g I r eg i s t r at i o n of ; s o u t h e r n S e n a t o r s b ef or e Ba r k l ey i Today’s En te rtain m e n t we h av e a t o a d j o u r n . His p r o g r a m t h i r ty million mil itary prospects, i moved P A R A M O U N T — “ F ore» t R an - t h i r t e e n million single, a n d s e v e n - ; M o n d a y w a s to ma ke his mot i on “ m o r n i n g ger*,” with P a u l e t t e G o dda r d, teen million ma rr ie d me n. O f the j d u r i n g l a t t e r a t 2 S u s a n H a y w a r d , and F r e d Mac- childless. O f t he e s t i ma t ed single o ’clock— wh en it would n o t be de- j M u r ra y . F e a t u r e b eg i ns a t 2, 4, men, a p p r o x i m at e l y seven million, b at a b l e u n d e r S e n a t e f i v e h u n d r e d t h o u s a n d will have pr oc e du r e . been d r a f t e d o r enl isted end of t hi s yea r . T h e o t h e r million. five h u n d r e d ( o nn a l l y objected. E v e r y t i m e the single me n will have been def e r- red o r r e j e c t e d for h a v i ng neees- S e n a t e postponed c o n si d er at ion of s a r y d e p e n d e n t s , f or bei ng nece*- a bill on the ca l e ndar, a s o u t h e r n - sary, f o r illiteracy, or f o r physical j er, usua l l y S e n a t o r Russell (D) def ects, b u t F o r t u n e believes some I Ga., o f Hill (D) Ala., s u g g e s t e d of a n d the a b s e n c e of a scinded. t h e r e b y forced a roll call to a s ­ c e r t a i n w h e t h e r a m a j o r i t y o f the This S e n a t o r s w a s pr ese nt . t he S e n a t e E sc a p e F o r e v e r ,” s t a r r i n g G eo r g e B r e n t and B r e n d a Ma rs ha ll ; a t 10:16, S e n a t o r J 2 ;] J, 4:12, 6:10, 8:08, a n d 10:06. S q u a d ,” Q U E E N — “ S a b o ta g e wi t h Br uce Be nnet , a n d H ay H a r ­ ris; a t 1:40, 3:20, 5, 6: 4 0 , 8:20, a n d IO o'clock. “ Talk o f th e T o w n ” with C a ry G r a n t a n d J e a n A r t h u r ; f e a t u r e begi ns a t 2 22, 4:42, 7: 02, an d 9:22. the B u t w h en h e as k ed f o r unanf- five mous c o n s e n t to lay aside t he gen- t h o u s a n d ; era! c a l e n d a r of bills, r u l e s of 16, 8, a n d IO o’clock. t h e s e d e f e r m e n t s will be re S T A T E ___“ Y ou C a n ’t leaves a t a d j o u r n e d C A P I T O ! q u o r u m A f t e r by t he m o s t two million, five h u n d r ed t h o u s a n d to be chosen f r o m the m a r r i e d men. As m a n y as possible of these men will come f r o m the r a n k s o f the childless. U.S. Casualties 48r956r Since Dec. I W A S H I N G T O N , Nov. 16 ( IN S ) — The Of f ic e of W a r I n f o r m a t i o n I M o n d a y night placed t he t o t a l of ! a n n o u n c e d A me r ic an ca sualties since P e a r l H a r b o r af 48, 956, in­ c l udi ng 4,813 added since t he total was last a n n o u n c e d on J u l y 21. the Re fl e c t i ng V A R S I T Y — “ Mi** A n n i* Ba rk le y said he was h o p e f u l t h a t j Roone y, ” s t a r r i n g Shirl ey T e m p l e ; he w-ould be able t o o f f e r his m o ­ begi ns a t 2, 3:58, 5:56, 7:54, a n d tion f o r cons i der at ion of t h e ant'.- 9:52. poll-tax bill d u r i n g t he “ m o r n i n g h o ur , ” w h en it would n o t he d e ­ ba t ab l e an d have to be v o t e d upon i mmedi a t e l y. H o w e v e r , T E X A S — “ Y o u ’ll N e v e r Gat R ich,” wi t h Ri ta H a y w o r t h a n d F r e d A s t a i r e ; a t 2, 3 :5 4 , 5: 45 , 7:42, a n d 9:36. f i l i bu s t e r i n g s o u t h ­ e r n e r s said t he y ma y be abl e to invoke some p a r l i a m e n t a r y device to head o f f B a r k l e y ’s mo t i o n un- I til a f t e r t he “ mo r n i n g h o u r ” w h e n it w o ul d be de ba ta bl e . j One o f t h e se devices, it was in- I J o u r n a l ( heat ed, is t o insist t h at t he S e n ­ of the a t e cl er k r ea d M o n d a y ’s pr oc e ed i ng s— a f or ma l- j ity u sua ll y waived by ut a n i mo u s cons ent. t he c l er k m u s t r ea d all of :he n a m e - in all o f t he roll calls t a k e n Mon t h a t If , D R I V E - I N — “ G a m b lin g L a d y ” with B a r b a r a S t a n w y c k an d Joe l M c C r e a ; f e a t u r e a t 7: 30 a n d 9:22. Last ‘E v e o f St. M ark ’ T o n ig h t “ The E v e of St. M a r k ” will be p r es e n t e d f o r the last t i m e T ue s ­ da y night a t 8 o ’clock. T h e play was held ov er f o r t wo p e r f o r m ­ ances, M o n d a y a n d T u e s d a y , and all r es e rv a t i o n s have been t a k e n. f i erce f i gh t i n g which has been u n d e r w a y for Ame r ic an -h el d H en de rs o n ai rpor t on G u ad a l c a n a l Inland, the the able t i me will be c ons ume d. ca suaities w er e chi ef ly f i o m Pacific i r . t h e a t e r , and did n o t elude a n y f ro m the r ec ent A m e r ­ ican N o r t h Afr ican of fe nsi ve . it develops o f latest day, it was poi nt ed out. •onsider- VV ith t h r e a t e n i n g s o u t h e r n the hand to S e n a t o r s bluntl y v e t e r a n t he bill talk voiced the legi sl at or s opinion s o u t h e r n e r s would achieve t h e i r p ur p o se . The t o ni gh t the to dea t h, t h a t H U ' J I H I J -LAST DA Y ! 22c TIL 1 - JEAN RONALD COKMl • ARTHUR • GROM CARY The bulk of the e a r l i e r c a s u a l ­ ties, dead, wounded an d missing, wer e in the Philippine I slands. A total o f 29,668 Amer i c an tr oops and 11,000 Philippine scouts have been listed as missing t he r e , a r d mo s t of t h e m pr es u ma bl y a r e J a p prisoner*. The O . W .I . ’s latest compilation break­ following the included down : W a r D e p a r t m e n t ca s ua l t i e s to N o v e m b e r 12. 161 ca sualties, A r m y — 32. 429 in­ cluding 1,069 killed, 1,531 w o u n d ­ ed, and 29.668 missing. Of t he v hit led 552 have since r e t u r n e d to duly. N av y D e p a r t m e n t ca s u al t i e s to p r is oner s known O c t ob e r 31 : N a v y — dead, 3, 854; w ounded, 1,190; m issing, 9,972. Ma r i ne Corp- dead, 73 J; w ounded, 703; missing, 1,900. Coast ( i u a r d — dead, 57; w o u n d ­ ed, l l ; missing, 126. S T A R T S S U N D A Y I r o c i T T V i t B t LESLIE H O * * * 0 KU..mt S h jKKU *•1 ■ I =4 =lw N OW TEXAS N O W 17c iTiU 5 R IT A H A Y W O R T H F R E D A S T A I R E IN l l YOU'LL NEVER GET R ICH " S T A R T S T O M O R R O W T h e Lent French Pi ct ur e Coma Out of F r a m e l l DAYBREAK to l l WITH JE A N G AB I N ( E n g l i s h Su b- Ti t l aaf S t a r t * T o d a y — 2 2 c T i l l 5 SH IRLE Y T EM P LE AS ‘MISS ANNIE ROONEY’ Bo r n in Russia !n 1903, P i a t i ­ g o r s k y had suc h musical t a l en t t h a t a t 15 he w a s e n g a g ed as f i r s t cellist f o r the I mp er ia l O p er a in the Moscow. Besides p l ayi n g a t o p er a , he b e c ame a m e m b e r of the s t r i n g q u a r t e t of t he Moscow C o n ­ s e r v a t o r y o f Musi c an d f r e q u e n t l y a p p e a r e d as soloist. H e a d e d f o r a the r evo l u ­ b r i ll i an t c a r e e r w'hen tion came, t he cellist was f orced t o pl a y in c af es a n d bars to k eep alive. He decided to leave his nat ive land and develop his c a r e e r on the c o n t in e n t . In 1921 he crossed t he into P o l a n d an d has n ot b o r d e r bee n back to Rus si a since, a l ­ t h o u g h most of his f ami ly is still last ye a r t h e r e . H er e d u r i n g the P i a t i go rs k y has g i ve n con c er ts for Ru s si an W a r Relief. F r o m W a r s a w , P i at i g o r s k y went to Berlin. His rise in the musi cal w o r l d was me te o r ic , and within a s h o r t ti me his f a m e had sp re a d t h r o u g h o u t E u r o p e . H e w as 26 w h e n he ma d e his f i r s t A m erican t o u r in 1929. Since then he has p layed 125 c o nc er t s as soloist with m a j o r A me r ic an o r c h e s t r a s a n d has given 600 cello r ecital s in the U n i t e d S t at e s a n d C a n a d a . On t our . P i a t i g o r s k y plays a M o n t a g n a n a cello m a d e in 1793 and valued a t $30, 000. Air F r i d a y a f t e r n o o n f rom 1:15 t o 1: 30 o ’clock, p r e s e n t s Dr. A r ­ chie N. Jone s, p r o f e s s o r of music, a n n o u n c i n g t he mu si ca l selections. O n t he p r o g r a m , e nt it l e d “ T he Musi c Goes ’R o u n d a n d ’R o u n d , ” t he Radio House C h o r u s will sing suc h well -known old r oun ds as “ A re You S le e p in g ? ” and “ T h r e e Blind Mica.” Stalingfad Costs Axis 3,000 M e a n w h i l e in Russia three thousand Naz i o ffi c er s and men w e r e killed M on da y in fierce fi ght i ng wi thin gutte d Stal ingr ad and a l on g one sector of the V o l kho v front, so uthe ast of Le ni ngr ad, it was re veal ed offi ci al ly. W h e n the smo ke o f battle c l ear ed, t he i nvade rs had won not one foot of soil at any pl ac e al ong the e mbatt l e d front, the Sovi et mi dn i ght c omm uni que reported. aramou NOW SHOW INO Pf lh U R R S IT V C Z a Typewriter SERVICE I REPAIR Phone 6141 for Prompt Reliable Service WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER m ss® ALL M A K ES F O R H E X T $3 PER. M O . SSS Texas Bookstore M A R C H o f T I M E and L A T E S T M W S DRIVE u n T UES. WFD. T HUR S . “THREE COCKEYED SAILORS” St arr i ng T O M MI E T R I N D E R S H O R T — “ SPORT C H A M P I O N ” O K O . N E W S r % ■ R 4 rn ■*■ rn i- rn IiiIIi?Mf,I srv f t