VOLUME 45 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1944 Twelve Pages Today No, 127 T exan J h e F i r t t C o l l e g 0 D a l l y i n t h e S o u t h 3,230 Pay Deadline Is March 7 University and Navy Traditions Send IOO Officers to Sea In the traditions and spirit of the Navy with the traditions and spirit of the University, described by President Homer P. Rainey as “ a fine combination,” the com­ missioning exercises Monday night in Gregory Gym called one hun­ dred N.R.O.T.C. students to arms as Navy and Marine officers. With the ceremony of an An- j napolis graduation, but with little solemnity, these one hundred ac­ cepted their commissions from Rear Admiral C. P. Mason, his 'congratulations, and the congratu­ lations of President Ramey and Captain John Jack London. Before they were sworn in by J Captain London, the captain told them, “ You are going aboard ship prepared for duties as sea-going officers” ; P r e s i d e n t Rainey j phrased their motto as ‘‘Admiral Mason, get me a boat” ; and the admiral said, “ The Navy is as good as the men in it— and not better.” Admiral Mason, who is now Men From Ranks Boss Battalion commandant of the Naval Air area, who was the fifty-second man Station in Corpus Christi, com- ever to become a Navy flier, Forcing Japan to surrender by manded the carrier Hornet, sunk one month after General Loo- j landing troops on major surround- little and his fliers took off from ; mg islands and in Asia, the Navy its deck for Tokyo. The admiral, will save thousands of American then a captain, was awarded the men, he said. Navy Cross by Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox. “ There is nothing weak about j Japan. We cannot whip her in a Japan can be beat without land-; very few months,” he said. “ The ing troops on her mainland, be­ lieves the former commander of the Air forces in the Guadalcanal war has a long time to run. “ I like to think of the war in See U N IV E R S IT Y , Page 6 Tower Lights Plus Fun Equals Happy Officers Co-Op Profit Distribution Plan To Be Studied Student, Publisher Opinion W ill Affect Present Method Whether the Co-Op’s profits j will be distributed by the present j rebate plan or by a reduction in j textbook prices will depend on j further study of student opinion,! publisher opinion, and the effect j of a reduction on the store’s fi- 1 nances— this was the net result; of two stormy meetings of the j Co-Op Board, in which President j L. Theo Bellmont resigned and was re-elected and a plan to low-; er prices was passed and with­ drawn by the four student mem­ bers of the board. B y H E L E N E W I L K E a n d M A R I O N B R I D G E S The orange lights of the tower burned for victory for those who soon would be in “ peril on the sea.” In Gregory Gym R.O.T.C. sophomores cheered “ for those about to leave us,” and “ those about to leave” in turn cheered “ for those we leave behind.” These were traditions— a Uni­ versity tradition and a Navy tra­ dition. man what they mean, by the time the boys are sophomores they have forgotten.” Only the little boy dressed in The authors of the new plan feel that the rebate system does I not benefit a sufficient number red overalls, pop-gun in hand, and j ‘7* JJT ftn(1 a price re- “ Go Ret them Ja p .” look of de! ^ well within the Co-Op'., „nt termination seemed oblivious to > powers. The opposition does not the people around him 1 H think a price reduction financially To the strains of advisable. _ rr, , , . , A committee, composed of Lo­ ren Mozley, Curry Gilmore, and See CO-OP, Page 3 “ Anchors Aweigh” the units marched in proudly, stood at attention as the j band played their national an­ them. They laughed when President j Homer P. Rainey told the story, ; as told to him by the admiral1 himself, of a Naval admiral wear- i ing his full dress uniform stand­ ing in front of the Waldorf-As- ; toria Hotel in New York City, A drunk walked up to him, ordered, “ Get me a taxi.” “ Sir, I am an admiral of the United States Navy,” he replied. “ Fine,” said the drunk. “ Then See H A PPY , Page 6 ★ Hospital 0. K„ Regents Told Board Approves Summer Budget B r A. R. HOWARD B y H O R A C E B U S B Y Only 3,230 students, including ; 774 freshmen, transfers, and new I Naval trainees, have been regis- i tered for the Spring Semester, ac­ cording to the Bursar's office Saturday released i tabulations ♦ Registration W ins Over Basketball; How Confusin'! As if registrations in Gregory I Gym weren’t confused enough al- | ready, the Registrar almost had j I three basketball games mixed J • among the winding rows of tables I yesterday. JACK ADKINS Jack Adkins Reported Missing Ex-Ranger Editor Lost off Italy The trouble started when the | State Basketball Tournament and I Spring Registration were both A former editor of the Texas scheduled for the Gym yesterday. This was settled when the Reg­ istrar agreed to cut registration to half-a-day and morning games were shifted to the Austin High Gym. Then Austin High got into the tournament. J 4 , Ranger, Ensign Jack Scott Ad­ kins of Austin, has been reported missing in action iii the Medi­ terranean theater of war by the Navy Department. No further de­ tails have been announced. Sportswriters, coaches, players, at Northwestern University after anr* officials began to argue I ack and forth across the state. Visit­ receiving his degree here in June, ing fans suspected sinister motives Ensign Adkins was commissioned and in the excitement. last November and assigned to Coaches said they would quit the duty with the fleet. He visited tournament and head home if they the campus before reporting to had to play the local Maroons in Norfolk for service. their owrn gym. They said some other things, too. ★ Entering midshipman’s school joined As night editor, drama critic, and amusements editor of The Daily Texan, he received several awards for outstanding service. in Curtain He wras also active Club productions. " a • »• \ a/ a Navy hospital in Florida. When Seniors Duck Sophs, , aa the R.O.T.C. units marched in, the Navy V-12 band played popular music as the V-12 in the north balcony talked to I in the north balcony taiKeu to -r*! tach other, clapped their hands! I H Q I D A G G L IS W O T a A budget for the University's summer school sessions at the The most recent communica- main campus and the extension in Mexico City lions from Ensign Adkins were summer school was approved and a report from two birthday cablegrams received l . White, University super-ion February 21 by his mother, R vising architect, and W. W. D o m - 1 Mrs. Katherine Adkins, •adj®** j,- gjgn Los E, Carpenter, who is in - In orderly Naval fashion, sev­ berger, his assistant, on the condi enty-four N.R.O.T.C. sophomores tion of the west wing of the old lent. Most of them had already convoyed the one-hundred gradu main hospital building of the Med­ ‘ ating seniors and juniors to Little­ ical School in Galveston, w'hich suffered severe damages during ex-student, field Foundation for the tradi­ tional dunking of new officers a storm last Ju ly, was heard by Thursday night. February 25. One the University Board of Regents, by one, the khaki-clad ensigns February 25. f a i l e d to f i n d any .tructui»l were launched down the way., an,I the operation W M proceeding con(U t,o n s which mi(?ht i n i l u - » , e according to plan. Then .omeone fai|are „ f (hp structure.., pushed a sophomore in That meant war. Into the water went sophs, juni­ ors, and seniors to battle it out. One soph grabbed two men, tried to push them under, discovered as they ducked him the third time that the victim* were soph*, too. A senior, trapped in the middle of a brawl, submerged to swim around under water tripping the other men. Even some V-5 spec­ tators were suspected of pushing tw'o or three reluctant ensigns into the fountain. When the Mr. White wrote to H. H. Wein- ert, Seguin regent, and chairman of the Medical School committee, who, along with several other Board members, made a thorough inspection with the two architects. Lay To Speak On Taxes Fifty V-12 students left last Tuesday for midshipman school, where they will receive training for commissions as Navy ensigns after completing their specialized training at the University, Cap­ tain London has stated. 50 V-12 Students Leave For Midshipmen School Corporal William M. Coley Jr., the new 1 9 4 4 e o n h A t v i A r a m i t t h a h n ir b - J ★ * \ * I t o , So, registration was conducted quietly Saturday morning with no is now stationed at points scored. V hen the teams re- Pope Field Army A ir Base, N. C., J turned for the afternoon games where he is assigned to the First the registration clerks retired to I Troop Carrier Command. j the stage, discreetly lowered the curtain and worked on unper- William B. Hilgers, former Btu- turbed. dent from Lockhart, was commis- j — sioned a second lieutenant in lh e ip j rsf £ i d C o u rs e Army Air Forces on February 26 at the Carlsbad, n. m., Army Ail Offered Next Semester Field. ■ . a The An analysis of “ On the contrary I found Buffi- a * po r u m M o n d a y dent evidence to convince me that!MT r o r u m m o n a a I the building is today as safe as it was, structurally, immediately prior to the storm; and with the completion of the alterations, re­ modeling and structural renova­ tion* now being made to the building by the Sealy and Smith Foundation, the structure will be stronger and safer than it has been within the past several years. “ I am personally convinced that the building is amply safe, struc­ turally, for the purpose designed and the activities now housed therein,” Mr. White’s letter said Borings were made in the end timbers on the west wing supports S e e H O S P I T A L , Page 5 income tax laws including an planation of how to fill out the | 8 to IO o’clock. It will cover dress- standard individual tax returns ings and bandages, wounds, pre vention and care of shock, arti­ for last year will be given tomor ficial respiration, the use of fixed row night at the Austin Forum of Public Opinion by Dr. Chester | and traction splints, the care of burns, frost bites, poison, war F. Lay, professor of accounting gases, and the transportation of and management, at 8 o’clock in the injured. the Austin High School auditori­ um. Students will receive two se­ mester hours credit for the course. A former faculty member of Those who do not want credit may several universities in this country take the course upon payment of and abroad, Dr. Lay was recently named as official consultant on i the visitors fee, American Red Income Tax and Management at I Cross first aid certificates, both the University by the Board of j standard and advanced, will be Regents, I awarded. foam had cleared away, the graduating class was draped, officer-like, on the statues as the sophs saluted them with a very watery version of “ Anchors Aweigh.” Monday night during the com- The Weather: don asked Gres, Coleman, and I Magliolo to stand for audience j day night. Moderate recognition. Robinson left Febru- j tures. ary 26. Partly cloudy Sunday and Sun- tempera- Their Eyes W ere On U. T. The battle for Gregory brewed on. The players wanted it, the In­ terscholastic League wished they had it, and the Registrar kept it. Just to keep the argument alive, the Austin team advanced to the quarter-finals Friday night, one game away from their home court J js taking place, Dean WooWch re- f and the revolt. Then the argument was settled. Austin lost, A rapid shifting of priorities on W a r Department W ill Pay Tuition State-wide recruiting for fifty A course in American Red Cross j women to train at the University First Aid has been added by the jor civilian positions as engineer- School of Education, C, J . Alder- mg aide* at the Aircraft Radio instructor in physical and j Laboratory, Wright Field, Ohio, is son, I health education, has announced. untjer way this week, according to class, Physical Education; Rea<] (Cranberry, University co­ ti* . :__V. a. f.'.' ^,1 J A L I l a r \ t?cl r* Q I flTln I * in a .. i ex- J 213ks, will meet I uesdays from ortijnator of war training. Only civilian school of it# kind in the South to receive A.M.A, endorsement, the University pro­ gram now joins a select list of j twenty-two other schools in the nation considered by the medical See A.M.A., Page 6 ★ Spanish Teachers Study English Here tomorrow 1260 new Navy V-12 All persons paying fees after swelled yesterday’s night, but officials predicted that [ will begin officially late payment* of the registration ; morning at 8 o’clock, fees Monday and Tuesday would An unexpected increase in civ!* probably bring the total enroll-; lian enrollment for the new seme*- ment near the 6,020 mark of the ter together with an estimated trainees winter Semester. registration more than 125 above the total of new students enrolled last year at mid-term. Freshmen under draft age and a large number of dis­ charged service men accounted for much of the increase, officials explained, Tuesday, March 7, will be penaliz­ ed with loss of credit, Max Fich- tenbaum, assistant registrar, warn­ ed yesterday. He reminded stu­ dents in the College of Arts and Sciences that program changes will be made Monday and Tues­ day afternoons In the Texas Union One hundred and fifteen of tbt Main Lounge from 2 to 5 o’clock. Classe s for all students, however, new Naval trainees have been as­ signed to the Naval R.O.T.C. unit, Captain John J . London, com­ mandant, announced, to replace the IOO seniors and juniors com­ missioned last week. The re­ mainder of the new men will ba assigned to replace some 50 V-12’s sent to midshipmen’s school and other* who were sent to Naval training stations. Increase Due In War Courses ♦ A prediction that war training More Students To Take Training All new students were officially welcomed at a convocation Friday morning in Hogg Auditorium when student life leaders explained Uni- facilities and activities, courses in the nation’s colleges are i versify destined for expansion rather than i Pyschological examinations for curtailment in future months was freshmen were conducted Friday made yesterday by W. R. Wool- i ■it«noon with physical examine- » rich, dean of engineering and re- ti008 conducted yesterday. gional advisor for the Engineer- J ing, Science and Management W ar; Training Program, following A.M.A. Approves New Med Course * one-day conference of representa­ tives of eleven Texas and New Mexico colleges and universities. The drafting of skilled men from essential industry, re-con­ version of industry to civilian pro­ duction, and return to civilian life of service men and women are all factors in the demand for expand­ ed training programs, Dean Wool- rich explained. Physiotherapists Start Study Mar. 27 See IN C R EA SE, Page 3 ★ Physiotherapy training at the University Medical Branch— forg- skilled technician* for war industry ■ tng f0 recognition in speeding re- covery of poet-operatives, polio, fracture and arthritis cases— has been accorded the approval of tho American Medical Association, Dr, Chauncey D. Leake, Medical Branch vice-president and dean announced recently. Lady Engineers To Train Here One of more than ten universi­ ties selected by the War Depart­ ment to train women as replace- ers ments for men Field, The University of Texas will open the twenty-six week short course here March 20. A total of 1,040 hours of study will be re­ quired of the trainees including basic mathemat ' for radio, phy- ory, electric sics. Eight to fifteen English teach- the Spanish-speaking from leaving Wright countries of Salvador, Nicaragua, Venezuela, and Guatemala, will be­ gin study of English as a “ second language” here this week under the sponsorship of the University's committee on English as a second language. electroni See LA Page 3 Six U.T. Profs Attend N ew Mexico Conference Six University professors at­ tended the three-day fifty-second annual commencement and con- I ference exercises at the Univer­ sity of New Mexico in Albuguer- que which opened February 23, Sponsored jointly by the Insti­ tute of Latin-Amencan Studies of U n i v e r s i t y antalents He emphasized sports, and ex­ pressed the need for room where the 12.OOO students of the post- See AUSTIN* Page I “ It is a fine tradition and spirit that joins us all together into a great fellowship.” Probably fifteen thousand of the exes are in Uncle Sam’s uni­ form. Out-of-state exes gathered in New York to hear Thomas Holden, B.B., 1907, M.A., 1911, president of the F. W, Dodge Cor­ poration. Others met in Los An­ geles, San Francisco, Chicago, and Evansville, Ind., according to re­ ports to the Ex-Students’ Associa­ tion headquarters. Faculty members, members of the University Board of Regents, and ex-students addressed a nu ra­ ses E4E& £Me I PAGE TW O " Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 SUNDAY, M A RC H 5, IR44 Sunset, Nocona, Prairie Lea W in Basketball Championships Goose Creek, Austin, Waco, * Lanier Are Upset Victims l r spring I raining, Baseball Begin Class B Box Score Class A A Box Score Class A Box Score • • t n • u d i S U N S E T ( 2 9 ) N O C O N A ( 3 3 ) P R A I R I E L E A ( 3 0 ) S p r i n g f oot ba l l t r a i n i ng a nd All b a s e b a l l c a n d i d a t e s a r e | G r i d d e r s who e x p ec t to be hero F G F T P F T P ba s e b a l l p r a c t ic e a r e bot h s l at e d u r g e d to r e p o r t to C o a c h Ch e r r y f o r t h e s p r i n g t ra i ni ng gri nd will to b eg i n M o n d a y a f t e r n o o n , at the C l a r k F i e l d d i a m o n d be- be i ssued u n i f o r m s a t the Me- C o a c h e s D a n a X. B i b l e a n d C h e r r y b a r e a nn o u n c e d . B l a i r t we en 2 : 3 0 a nd 4 : 3 0 o’ clock Mon* mo r i a l S t a d i u m l oc k e r room at 3 d a y a f t e r n o o n . o ’cl ock M o n d a y a f t e r n o o n . Have a Coca-Cola = Muchas feliddades ( M A N Y C O N G R A T U L A T I O N S ) B y G E O R G E R A B O R N T e x a n C o l p o r t * Ko tor Sunset's scrappy, smooth-play- Ip erio d s to nose o u t a tow ering | Throckm orton five, 30-28, in the an u n d errated sm ootn-piay- f j rst round# and then had to han g I - *, D, mg B ison s D an as q u in tet which w as never j victory over the V oks from Sid- P ren d erg a st, exten d ed «..l ^ cto rie-s-—c a p tu ie d the ( las* I would have had sm ooth sailin g a ll W illiam s sr A A ^ a m p io n s h ip by d e fe a tia g the in th ree straigh t p lay- ney. L a n ie r Tjie T ig e rs probably T u rn er, c ___ little , on fo r d ear h f, t£) M lv ag e a l y . 17 | Folsom , jf Glen Pl#rce> th eir M itrh r„ ’ th, way . f “ P U y . r C hildress B o b c ats, j cap tain and b rillian t floorm an , , , ‘ ’ k seemed , f e » F o l d e r * . g j c Canna,lay filled Pierce's I c N ocona skoea g0 effectiv ely th a t he m ade U a C o ig h t rn G rego ry Gjrra to th - hadn., s p r a , „ ed hi, ank!c ma2L'1.i! t ------ to d e fea t the die-hard T.grrrs, who shaw t0 into a Cotton, c ____ t a t _ c l . » b f d min a le a d .ju st two minutes before the t i « —ft A crown. No- m ort record, team ed with Jam es ^ * three-point. healthy 26-20 lead at the end of C. Kitchen, * . STOW t he all-state team . eked v'Jct°ry over p0ints again st Dimmitt lh, chanlpion. - shoot Nocona H, Kitchens, f T otals ____ nm in , hrcc P l a y e r F G F T P F T P IO Ii 9 5 0 0 — 4 — I — 0 . o P l a y e r Eastup, f Crenshaw, Porter, f . Hill, c . Teague, g Downey, g F G FT PF TP 13 3 - 5 3 p l a y e r Beyer, f __ Scott, f ___ Holcomb, c Tiller, c ___ White, g __ Carlisle, g .. McMahon, g 3 7 3 4 0 13 3 0 12 6 IO 291 Totals ________ 13 7 IO 33 C H IL D R E S S (2 0 ) M T , V E R N O N (3 2 ) FG FT PF TP 4 0 0 2 2 P l a y e r FC FT PF TP 4 Cannaday, f 5 l l 2 0 Crowston, f . — I 0 i Hogan, f __ — 3 6 ! Pugh, c ____ 2 4 I Loyd, g ___ — 2 6 | Pierce, g --------------I 8 4 4 3 Totals .12 6 16 30 B L O S S O M ( 2 6 ) P l a y e r Clark, f ___ Skidmore, f Foote, c __ Pitts, c ___ Whitten, g «. Corder, g _ Moore, g .... Dunagan, g F G F T P F T P 6 2 4 2 I 3 I 14 I 0 0 l8hl But Mount V ern on 1 T u . , c v finest all-around p lay er. i I ^ P # am e* But Mount 21 f u ~ tin y Prairie Lea High school, , tied the pcore in thf last paw n by stocky \ ilbry 'White, one of thg repular gam e and of a i r evae-to come to the state Iou,-na- I perjod befo„ (hp daunfleaa tv .Id -1’ metrt. woni^th. Class B bunting by caU fin a„ w h S p in * favored Blossom, 30-26, | winniB a fw r ch arle s Whitts®. 14-year. > « ' » the ,ead d hand8 no ,ess than twelv, in the tjmps boforp p rajrj(, L p a w re a. . idiMUhob decision to the rugged HiehIard p ark-, ,napi„ d Srettiea ChJMress Bobcat^ Saturday morn- m thp fjrgt round in .tournam ent Owns id e red tile best o »VT j team r -j * a . . A t B iggest hard-luck team in th * tourney w as the pow erful Waco quintet, which boasted a decisive a D allas basketball victory last month and an I tial test of the 1944 season Friday , 3 , mPr e s s l v e a s r 8 5 n s r t ail op* when the Steers journey to La- p0F)tj0n T e x *’ T a r k i t e r , U c k i .'^ h e i f ’ n " I - * By N O R M A N M O R G A N S T E R N » Tigers fell before r. Hr. - - ^ , c . 25-24. It was wc8t * t0P , t0 m M t ,om e o f tne S,#uth- in the thirteenth Austi High g% mn a- ^ third straight year that a renewal of the Border Olymicft, l ? f £ . in we many i >-» he flo g knocked th . - o ff the b , r.ats touted 1 strong Waco team had been elim- in* ted >" thp Prelim inaria.. The untried Longhorns are ex- , peeled to receive .t i f f competition th# third-place consolation > from a quartet o f colleges con- , h< Gn#aa C r„ k G ender. Meting of T e x .. A. A m ! South- j n ^ , J E ! x ,e 8e^° the Fo r time first 8 pair nf 2 T T " ? ; , euards- Ted Hunt ; Jam es Ellis. T aylor ' *-r j ameg Elli^. Taylor and ,h“ * V T , the fir s t round o f play, 36-31. ere ,.n rr.e ..ne, tne i , , , , “ ro‘ r ,d O W HlgWend Perk irith , « M t T e x .. S ta te T « ie h .r . College, a great display of powder. 44-27. and Brownsville Ju n io r College. in three Starrin g fo r Goose Creek were , Y ersatila Ralph Ellsw orth, one .t e n s , Childress w as favored « * j ia~ k„ "giUy V .Jin r ' and‘ the two returning lettermen on the blue chips burlv win— but when lead the were on the line. the Bobcats iu 't a., Hunt u frfi __ tk- v a ttemnt to m n thp , ca.s ju i I . J “ , couldn t come through. Sunset s „ „ n e . a as tne> attem pt to cop toe on through. > .- s r t i w (ra , classic once more. L ast year's baft-hawking youn gster, grehbed , G„ „ „ r , ppk> fine team last year, m eet was won by A. & M., break­ a n ,e a r ly leaa nod held onto it and Em , , , , form er M arjnt , . ho ing a long period of Texas dom ina-! t .a ent:re sam e. *h ile their fine wa8 wounded at p e ari H arbor but , ; on ,n tba .o n e defen se shackled Childress m u „ , d t0 hiph tchoo, to b„ omP >*»» ln completely. The Bisons left toe a football and basketball stand- w ilh u . court with a 29-20 victory, the n,,t thi^d JI they had scored a total of 29 point*, and vnt5i away— still fu lly extended to the limit- a in ,;. dfmin- utive V-12 trainee from Coalinga, California, has been extending tucked v JiffC fO l AllmafQr9 IQQ/T1 , the chesty Ellsworth in recent per- form ances and will battle it out form er Alamo Height A ll-staters Bobby Folsom and * et and Ha! Turner of Sunset and flash in the 100-yard dash and the I a redo m #.t ‘ '»red» “ • * * • r iih .r f.o . Wilbur Leo Culbertson, Forw ards: Bobby Folsom of Sun- with I this y e a rs squad, will without ever being straight gam e * 1 1 c# championship .u all-stats C L A S S AA footballers the the T J i . Hal Turner sparked the Sunset Fisher Trull of Waco ( t ie d ) ; Cen- 220. In Satu rd ay'* intrasquad meet, attack as they steadily poured in te n Billy Taylor of Goose C reek ;; crip shots and tip-ins, while little G uards: Ted Hunt of Goose Creek both Ellsworth and Culbertson ran con- and Charlie Kitchens of Childress. I the IOO and the 220 in identical tow-headed Paul Mitchell trolled rebounds o ff the backboard in the and harrassod the Bobcats with indeed rem arkable for Forw ards: Bill Birdwell of Dim- j IOO was Big Charlie m itt and Lollis “ L e g s" Loyd o f an early-season running. hit Kitchens, every inch an all-state Mt. Vernon; Center: J . C. Canna- ----------------------------— — man, and his younger brother, Hu- day of Mt, Vernon; G u ards: Henry betit, played their hearts out, bu! Escobedo of Sidney Lanier and couldn’t hold the pace. torrid Sunset Milas Downey of Nocona, tim es; their time of 9.9 ball-stealing. C L A S S A C L A S S B ll Mount Vernon’* swift T ;cers, Forw ards: Roy Lee Malone of spanked by their all-state forward, S tratfo rd and Deryl® Turnbow of “ L e g s ' Loyd, played by Perrin; Center: Max Wright o f Louis f a r the m ost three H ighland; G uards: Vilbry White gam es o f the tournament. Mount of Prairie Lea and Charles Whit- Vem on overtime I ten of Blossom. strenuous needed two The Texas Book Store maintain* a complete typewriter repair and service shop, print shop and m imeograph duplicating service. All on the store premise*. Telephone 6141. We call for and deliver. 4 LA O U O u s a Longhorn Trackmen Prepare For Border Olym pics Friday Surprisingly enough, the Steers and 135 fe e t yesterday, will figure ‘ h* , fi* M eVent' ' h e,vily in Co* ch L ittle fitW . plena. .than in the dashes. John Burrus, Bob U m stattd has been round- the.other returning letterm an, will ing into form recently and is out I exan a hopes in the pole to better the records of his brother carry vault. Big Homer Smith, who was Mac the mile and half-mile throwing the discus between 130 events. in t v ' ... from Caracas to Cleveland T o strike up friendship, your Yank oil-drtller in South America says, Have a “Cake", and he’s said, I'm your pal. World-wide, Coca-Cola stands for the pause that refreshes,—has become the genial gesture o f friendliness e v e r y w h e r e just as it is at borne with Coca-Cola in your refrigerator. SOTT LED UNDER AUTHORITY Of THI COCA-COLA COMPANY SY A U S T IN C O C A - C O L A B O T T L IN G C O M P A N Y SOS San Jac in to Phono 2-2ASS IPa natural for popular name* to acquire friendly abbrev .a* non*. That’a why you hear Coca-Cola called < ~ rr Min i , Arf. ■........... - .■ Fite Nile Fun For March 25 Fighters to Train Beginning March 6 B y P A T T A Y L O R Berry Whitaker, intram ural di­ ju st announced that rector, has the training periods fo r th * box- fiji i ing and wrestling tournam ent that - ' | f begins March 15 will sta rt the fir s t11|§ day of the new sem ester, March 6. j p | thi* early j 0 Mr. Whitaker says start is necessary in order to give the fighters any time - 1 all to train before the rough competition b e -; gins. -id Lewis Hall will be in charge of the wrestling training. Wrest- : iers w ill m eet with him in the in the Gym on ; wrestling room I T S from o to 6 o’clock. H arry Leinbach i« the boxing instructor, and his group will meet on MWF from 5 to 6 o’clock. WL Mr. W hitaker also made the surprising that Navy trainees will receive P. T. I credit fo r the time spent in these training periods. announcement IM All fighters should attend as many o f these training sessions as they ran. The tournam ent will be fa s t and furious and elim ina­ tion quick for those who haven’t trained properly. The fighters who train best and then go ahead and win their bouts in the novice tournam ent will have the chance to win the champion­ ship o f the University their weight class a t all-University Kite Nile, March 26. in A fte r the week of training, fighters will weigh in on March l l and March 13. E n tries are ac-1 these weighing-in ceptable periods whether the applicants have attended training sessions or not. All contestants must have their doctors’ O.K. a t Mr. Whitaker also announced that form er intram ural champions will be allowed to compete if they enter a higher clas-. Profession­ letterm en, and other titlists als, are still barred to make the com­ petition more even. O rganizations who plan to enter fighters should see that they get to as many o f the training sessions as possible. Each group may enter as m any as eight fighters. V alu­ able the ail-} ear trophy will be awarded- trophy points towards Complete Typewriter Service & Repairs ON ALL BRANDS ★ RENT YOUR FAVORITE U N DERW O O D ROYAL L. C. SMITH R EM IN G TO N -RAN D C O R O N A N O INCREASE IN RATES — $3 PER M O N T H ★ ★ ★ RIBBONS — CARBONS — ERASERS BOND PAPER — M IMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES Texas Book Store W e are issuing agents for W ar Bonds, p , W e Cash your checks. SU N D A Y , M A R C H 5, 1944 PKon* 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N - Phone 2-2473 P A S E THREE World News at a Glance Battd (rn / AKS. Rf porta G E N E R A L M ' A R T H U R ’ 5 H E A D . Q U A R T E R S , N E W G U I N E A , M a r c h 5. — S u n d a y — T h r e e t h o u s a n d J a p s h a v e b e e n a n * n i h i l a t e d o n L o s N e g r o s I s l a n d in t he A d m i r a l t i e s a g a i n s t a l os s o f s i x t y * o n e A m e r i c a n s , G e n e r a l D o u g l a s M a c A r t h u r a n n o u n c e d t o d a y . T h e 3 , 0 0 0 J a p s w e r e w i p e d o u t F r i d a y n i g h t w h e n t h o u s a n d s o f e n e m y t r o o p s h u r l * o d t h e m s e l v e s a g a i n s t t h e s t r o n g _ p e r i m e t e r o f A m e r i c a n c a v a l r y ­ m e n a r o u n d M o m o t e A i r d r o m e on L o s N e g r o s . M O N T E V I D E O , M a r c h 4 . — R e - p o r t s r e a c h i n g M o n t e v i d e o s a i d t o n i g h t t h a t t he A r g e n t i n e g o v ­ e r n m e n t h a s “ e n e r g e t i c m e a s u r e s ” w hi c h m a y l e a d to a n o u t r i g h t o f wa r d e c l a r a t i o n a g a i n s t t he A x i s . t a k e n L O N D O N . M a r c h 5 . — ( S u n d a y ) — E s c o r t e d U . S . F o r t r e s s e s , p l o w ­ i ng s i x t h r o u g h c l o u d s n e a r l y m i l e s h i g h, s t a g e d a n A m e r i c a n b o m b i n g a t t a c k on t h e B e r l i n M e t r o p o l i t a n D i s t r i c t y e s t e r d a y a s p a r t o f a h u g e a s s a u l t t h a t a l s o p e n e t r a t e d d e e p i n t o e a s t ­ e r n G e r m a n y . M o n u m e n t to Replace Rock at W a r ’s End In f r o n t o f the s t e p * l e a d i n g t o the Mai n B u i l d i n g a w e a t h e r e d r o c k sits, a p r o mi s e m a d e by the D a u g h t e r s o f the A m e r i c a n Re vo­ lution o f the S t a t e o f T e x a s to e r e c t “ a m o n u m e n t o f a f f e c t i o n a n d g r a t i t u d e to G e o r g e W a s h i n g ­ t o n . ” A p r o j e c t o f the S t a t e S oc i e t y , the plan w a s or i g i na l l y to er ect a s u i ta b l e m o n u m e n t in c o m m e m o ­ the Wa sh i n g t on Bi ­ rat i on c e n t e n n i a l . A g r a n i t e r o ck w'as p l a ce d on the chosen site t o s erve until been e n o u g h mo n e y had rai sed to buil d the m o n u me n t . o f U n f o r t u n a t e l y , the plan wa s put a si d e d u r i n g the d e p r e s s i o n b e ­ c a u s e o f t he d i f f i c u l t y in ra i s i ng f unds . Then the w a r m a d e it n e c e s ­ s a r y to p o s t p o n e the p r o j e c t once more. t he D N B ( G e r m a n N e w s A g e n c y ) s a i d t h e f l e w “ A m e r i c a n b o m b e r s w i t h s t r o n g f i g h t e r e s c o r t o v e r t he w e s t e r n p r o v i n c e s ” o f G e r ­ m a n y a n d t ha t “ a s m a l l p r o p o r ­ r a i d e r s “ r e a c h e d t i o n ” o f t he Be r l i n t h e y “ d r o p p e d b o m b s T h e U. S. b o m b e r s , D N B s a i d , “ m e t wi t h a v i o l e n t d e f e n s e ” a n d w e r e “ h a r d - p r e s s e d b y G e r ­ m a n l o o s e d t h e i r l o a d s . a r e a " w h e r e a t f i g h t e r s ” a s r a n d o m . t he y M O S C O W , M a r c h 5. — ( S u n d a y ) R e d A r m y t r o o p s e x t e n d e d t he i r b r i d g e h e a d s o u t h w e s t o f t he a n ­ c i e n t E s t o n i a n f o r t r e s s t o wn o f N a ; v s y e s t e r d a y , a n d c l o s e d in on t he r a i l w a y c e n t e r of O s t r o v , s o m e 1 4 0 mi l e s t o t he S o u t h . T h e S o v i e t m i d n i g h t c o m m u n i q u e a n n o u n c e d t he t o w n o f N e m o y e v o , t h u s b r i n g ­ ing t he R u s s i a n s t o wi t h i n e i g h t i m p o r t a n t mi l e s o f O s t r o v , l as t N a s i b a s t i o n b a r r i n g t he p a t h t o t he L a t v i a n b o r d e r . t he c a p t u r e o f Radcliffe Offers T w o Fellowships to W o m e n T w o $ 50 0 f el l o ws hi ps a re b ei ng f o r of f er ed by Radcl i ffe Col l ege 194 4-45 to wo me n col l ege g r a d u ­ a t e s who a r c i n t er e s te d in c o u r s e s which woul d p r e p a r e t he m f or p os i ­ t i ons in pers onnel a dm i n i s t r a t i o n . T r a i n i n g f o r c a r e e r s in this field is provi de d by a ci rr i cu l um which in School is a d a p t e d to the ob j e c t i v e o f the i ndi vi dua l s t u de nt . I n s t r uct i on in­ the c l u d e s a ca d e m i c c o u r s e s Ra d cl i f f e G r a d u a t e a nd speci al s e m i n a r p r o b l e m s gi ven by m e m b e r s o f t he H a r v a r d G r a d u a t e School o f B u s i n e s s Admi ni s t r a t i on . field work c o m p r i s e s S u p e r v i s e d j f ul l - t i me a p p r e n t i c e a s s i g n m e n t s in i nd us t r i a l , b u s i ne s s , a nd govei h- me n t al o r g a ni z a t i o n s . E n r o l l me n t is open to a limited n u m b e r of g r a d u a t e s . The tuition A c a t a l o g u e m a y be I is $ 45 0 . ■ o b t a i n e d f r o m M r * D wi g h t E. j H a r k e n , di re c t or o f the t r a i n i ng I c o u r s e a dmi n i s t r a - I lion, Radcl i ffe C o l l e g e , C a m b r i d g e • .IS Ma s s a ch u s e t t s . in p e i s o n n e l lncrease Due In War Courses Co-Op Profit Plan Studied ( C o n t i n u e d f r o m P a g e I ) ( C o n t i nu e d f r o m P a g e I ) port ed, a nd the co l l e ges t r a i ni ng these wo r k er s m u s t be “ on their t o e s ” to fill a n y breach without loss o f time. In T e x a s , two t ho u s a n d men and women a r e c u r r e n t l y enrol l ed n i n e t y -tiro w a r in f a u r s e s t r a i n i n g o f f e r e d by the U n i v e r s i t y t h r o u g h ­ out the st a t e, a c c o r d i n g to Re a d t he G r a n b e r r y , c o - o r di na t or o f Uni versi t y p r o g r a m . T h e s e col ­ lege-level s h o r t c o u r s e s o f a hi gh­ ly t echni cal n a t u r e a r e f o r w o r k ­ ers a c t ua l l y e n g a g e d in war p r o ­ duct i on, Mr. G r a n b e r r y exp l ai n e d , si xt y-ni ne a dd i t i o n a l and J c o u r s e s w ill be a d d e d to the p r o ­ an g r a m shortly. Lady Engineers lo Train Here * ( C o n t i n u e d f r o m P a g e I ) m e a s u r e m e n t s , a nd si milar t ec hni ­ cal s u b j e c t s. Women, ma r r i e d or bingle, be- tween the a g e s of 18 a nd 35, with high school e d uc a t i on a nd a y e a r o f col l ege a r e eligible t o a pp l y f o r the tra i ni ng. All t ui tion will be paid by the Uni t ed S t a t e s Of f i c e of E d u c a t i o n , G r a n b e r r y e x p l a i n ­ ed, a nd t ra i ne es will recei ve $ 14 6 per mont h while at the Uni versi t y a nd a s t a g i n g s a l a r y o f $ 16 4 p e r mont h at \\ right Field. Al t hough the wo me n must pas t hei r own living e x p e n s e s while in t ra i ni ng. G r a n b e r r y r e p o r t e d that to the U n i v e r s i t y has been abl e s ecure living q u a r t e r s f or them. Dr. J , G. V m s t a t t d will co nd u c t a n e w s e m i n a r c o u r s e f or g r a d u ­ a t e s this s p r i n g on P r ob l ems o f to Col l e ge T e a c h i ng , a cc o r d i ng Dr. A. P. B r o g a n , de a n o f the g r a d u a t e school. L i st e d a s E d u c a ­ tion 2 8 2 T , the c o u r s e will s u r v e y the p r o b l ems of col l e ge t e a ch i n g s u g g e s t e d by m e m b e r s of the class. J i m m y F o g a r t i e , wa s a p p o i nt ed by to ( half man A m o N o w o t ny i nve s t i ga t e pri c e r e d u c t io ns o f v a ­ ri ous p e r c e n t a g e s on t ex t bo o k s . t o g e t h e r with a At the first me e t i ng Ma c W a l ­ lace and Gi l mo r e p r e s en t e d t heir s a m p l i n g plan, of s t u d e n t opini on which they had | ma de show ing 8-1 p r e f e r e n c e f o r lowei pri ce*. T h e plan wa s d i s­ cus s ed f or two h o ur s , at the end o f which t ime Wal l ace, Gi l mor e, F o g a rt i e , a nd E u g e n i a Dunn, the s t ude nt m e mb e r s , p as s e d it. Mr. Bel lmont, a s he had previ ous l y an- . nounced, it w a s c o n t r a r y to his j u d g m e n t a nd he did not c a r e t o “ s t a y on a ^inki ng shi p . ” One f a c u l t y m e mb e r wa s ab s e nt , and the o t he r t wo voted it, Miss G e b a u e r and Mr. a ga i ns t f u r t h e r s t u dy . Dought i e w a nt in g re s i gne d si nce ♦ f ig ur e s showi ng | record a s a g a i n s t At the second me et i n g A ud i t or Wil ey Gl aze, who had g o n e on the plan, p r e ­ t h a t the s e nt e d Co-Op would ha ve lost money on a l o per cent price reduct ion a n y y e a r but last y e a r. Th e s t u d e n t s said the exa ct p e r c en t a g e w a s a l et t e r s e c o n da r y co n s id e r a t i o n . A f r o m one o f the l ar ge publ i s hers «indi< at ed that t he y mi ght oppo s e the plan and mi gh t t ake act i on to the Co-Op did not l ower prices. T h e m e m b e r * who had opposed the plan u r g e d t h a t it be t a ken o f f . When a s u b s t i ­ t u t e plan to s t u d y the s i t u a t i o n w a s a d v a n c e d , t he s t u d e n t m e m ­ t heir ber- plan for the t ime being. By vote Mr. Bel lmont w a s a sk e d to t a ke back his r e s i g n a t i o n . He sai d he woul d s e r ve a s a c t i n g p r e s i d e n t until the boa rd de ci de d de f i ni t e l y what policy it would t a ke . to wi t hdra w a g r e e d t ha t see Those f a v o i i u g price reduct ion it will not requi r e s t u ­ s a y t h a t dent s to keep c a s h r e g i s t e r r e ­ ceipts. Not m o r e t ha n 50 p e r cent o f the s t ud e n t s who t ra de at the in envelopes, and Co-Op t u r n e d I ma n y of these did not have all their receipts. Onl y 1801 e n v e l ­ opes were t u r n e d in o u t of a b ou t in 6. 500 enrol l ment . A reduct ion p ri c e* would n o t onl y a u t o m a t ­ ically b e n e f i t all Co-Op s t ud e n t b u y e r s , t he y s a y . but woul d al so i nf l ue nc e the prier pol icy o f t h e o t he r b ook s t o l e s , t hus helping all s t u d e n t s . It woul d work t owa r d the el i mi na t i on of income t a x p a y ­ me n t , f o r which the Co-Op paid $ 3 , 9 00 l a s t y ea r . Th e y b e l i e v e that this plan r e pr e s e n t s wh a t the s t u d e n t s want , “ I f the s t u d e n t s e v e r a re c o n ­ their the Co-Op vi nced st or e, oui s a l e s will shoot u p . ” that is the s a y to s t u d e n t s i nc r e a s i n g l y s t u d e n t vote. They s m a l l e r e nrol l me nt , s h ows that r e c e i p t ha b i t ” T h o s e f a v o r i n g the p r e s en t r e ­ ba t e plan s a y t ha t it was a do p t ed i last. s p r i ng by the a ss e mb l y a nd by the fact t h a t $ 2 7 , 0 0 0 in r e c e i p t s were s ub mi t t ed in O c t ob e r a nd $ 3 2 , 00 0, in d e s p i t e a F e b r u a r y “ keep y ou r is g r o w i n g a m o n g s t u d e n t s a nd will b en e f i t an l ar g e n u mb e r . the p e r c e n t a g e of r e ­ ( B e c a u s e ce i p t * to t ot a l s a l e * is not known, the oppo s i t i on qu e s t i o n s the v a ­ f i g ure s . I R e t u r n ­ lidity o f t he s e j u s t be­ ing mo ne y is the f or e h e a v y b u y i n g p er i od * best a d v e r t i s i n g me d i um to e n ­ c o u r a g e c o nt i nu e d p a t r o n a g e , they say, If a 15 per cent reduction" in pri ces we r e a u t ho r i ze d , books w ould be sold a t a b o u t cost. B a s e d ten y e a r s , on f i g u r e s o f the l a * ’ in the Co- Op woul d be $ 10 , 0 0 0 a r r e a r s . O t he r a s e l li ng more d i ve r s i f i ed line o f g o o d s on which to ma ke a profit mi ght meet co mpe t i t i on, anil s t u d e n t s woul d f o r g e t to gi ve credit o f price r e - i duct i on to the Co-Op. Mo r e o ve r , s t u d e nt s now p a r t i c i p a t i n g in the re ba t e plan a re p l e a s e d with t h e i r 17 a nd 20 p e r cent ca s h r e f un d * . l f this plan g o e s on in the f u t u i e , the i ncome t ax can be c o m p l e t e l y or a l mo s t e l i mi na t ed , the r e ba te s u p p o r t e r s cont end. s t o l e s I o n hold Th e price t ha t the i have a c h a nce to vote on r e duct i o n a d v o c a t e s s t u d e n t s did not their plan last s p r i n g when t he y voted the r e b a t e plan onl y a s the best o f w h a t wa s o f f e r e d them. Th e y s a y that “ advt r t i s i n g ” and " c r e d i t ” a re not the C o - O p ’s aims, but a t that .price r e d u c t io n s a l s o m a k e excel s t u d e n t who lent a dv e r t i s i ng . A g e t s a 20 per c e n t d i s c o u nt is really g e t t i n g mo r e than his share, j they f r a ct i o n si nce only a o f the s t u d e n t s a re p a r t i ci pa t i n g . They a re p e r f e c t l y willing to low er t hei r p e r c e n t a g e to IO per cent, 1 t t y s a m e t ime s a y . f eel the t r e n d but a t the s a m e t ime t he y q u e s ­ tion f a i r n e s s o f c o m p u t i n g loss es by the p a s t t en yea is, since tile in b u s i ne s s ha s been s h a r pl y u p w a r d in the p a -t t hre e y e a rs . T h e Co-Op has a l a r g e re­ s e r v e the r e du ct i o n p e r c e n t a g e f r o m y e a r to y e a r . f u n d a nd can a d j u s t T h e t wo si des p r e s e n t va r i ou s r e a s o n s f o r p r e d i c t i ng wh a t b u s i ­ nes s will be like in the n e x t y e a r , Not all the a r g u m e n t s f o r ei t her *ide a re p r e s e n t e d here. Mr. B e l l ­ like t o d e ­ mont i ssue, a nd bate W a l l ac e on Wa l l a ce the l ime . ” sai d he woul d the “ N a m e s a i d, has Delta G a m m a G ra d u a te s N a tio n a l P ia n o A u d itio n s H o nore d W ith Su p p e r W ill Be J u d g e d in M a y F e b r u a r y g r a d u a t e s o f Delta G a m m a s o r o r i t y were gi ven a b u f ­ T h e Na t i o na l Pi ano F l a y i n g %&- this y e a r di ti ons will be j u d g e d . f e t s u p p e r by the a l u m n a e F e b r u ­ a r y 22 a t the home o f Mr s , Bin- f o u l A m a y , 1004 G a s t o n . D ec o r a ­ t ions we r e in red, white, a n d blue. by t ea ch er * . M o i s s a y e t he well-known pi a ni s t s a nd B >gusl aw*ki a nd C l a re n c e B u r g . Both D e a n * B u r g and Mr. Bo g u s l a w « k i ha ve T h e g r a d u a t e * at*' I r e n e Kei t h, j Be t t y J o T o m f o r d e , Ma r y Hol­ land, a nd E l i n o r He d r i ck . On F e b ­ t he y we r e ho nor ed by r u a r y 2 5 the s o r or i ty with a d i n n e r a t Old Seville. f or j u d g e d ext e ns i v el y the N a ­ tional Guild of P i a n o T e a c h e r * . f or Aus t i n a ud i t i o n * will D a t es be a nn o u nc e d l at e r . T h e y will he in 128 held in May s o me t ime musi c c e nt e r s in the c o unt ry. Remember I f s more economical to buy at a Sc and IOC MAGE’S 5c*10c and $ 1 .0 0 S t o r e "‘The Store of IGOI Items" Across from Hogg Auditorium Make One Stop and Shop C o-O p Pays Students 20 ° Cash Dividend ^15,000.00 REFUNDED DURING YEAR! COLLECT YOUR SHARE NOW! New Dividend Period Begins NOW! S AVE rn s a l ;U j l l i t i i ii r n > 1 1 Your C ash Register Receipts N E X T R E F U N D D A T E Paid June 19, 1944 R S , * £ 7 ' ; * ' T T r r r .. j , . S I rn I § (p p HK p f SSK rn ■ rn i I mm Buy Books and Supplies Here and eap the Profits REFUND PLAN: Only bonafide students may participate. Turn in receipts from your own individual purchases. Only receipts issued during this period accepted. Dividends paid in cash in June, October and February. Receipts must be presented by June 14,1944. 2 . 3. 4. 5. rn ■ .rn I U N I V E R S I T Y CO OP THE STORE THAT REFUNDS PROFITS TO STUDENTS I Controlled and Operated by Students and Faculty for Their Mutual Benefits! 'SH P it'. I r f frt. ■— . oil mntii'iliHWU*ii i — j i . M © E FOUR Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A ( L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 SUN D AY, M A R C H 5, l< Anchors Aweigh— and Godspeed 7exai 14, W on't tyon.fyei c I i 5 5 w I 9 IO Ii How Green Is My Alley 2>(h u h tf-n&iluna+t JHane By A L E N E W A L K E R about how to get h e r man hold him . F ro m tim e to t Jo h n H ill w ould app ear w it a whole bottle fille d w ith n quitoes and tu rn them lo T he m osquitoes got so te rr th a t now and then w hile I reading, C a ro ly n would grab F l it gun, sayin g , “ L e t us I our heads and sp ra y .” D H o lim an w ould ju s t sit ti and say that the most import thing in the w orld w as f tic ship. W h e n she cam e w h a t frien d sh ip had to do v it all, I do not know . in A f t e r that, I read some rn ; the etiqu ette books, in when I closed it, I saw that C olem an, B e n B a d e n , and sister, A n ita , had w ritte n T h is was too m u ch ! A t point, m y alarm clock w ent and in m y a n g e r I th re w it the flo o r and broke the crys Good m orning ! (3 ) th ey thought it w as over. A s the crow d came through the door, B i ll B r a d fie ld and a g irl I did not know w ould stop e ve ryo n e and ask them th e ir nam es fo r a story in “ The D a ily (o r as V o ln e y O ’C o n ­ T e x a n ” n or says, “ The D a ily Ex-en,” thus called fo r obvious reasons.) I w en t back to the d o rm ito ry and found C a ro ly n L e m ly m oan­ ing and g roaning because she d idn’t have a date to som ething or other (ha, th a t is a lau g h — she is one o f the most popular g irls on our flo o r ). I got m y room m ate’s etiquette book from our room and read to her fo r about h a lf an hour 7he Naval O^iceM 9t 7rained You were one hundred of the U niver­ sity’s six thousand students. You are flow one hundred of the University's ten thousand fighting exes.— T h at’s what the statistics would show. But does that tell your story? - As one hundred students you repre­ sented one hundred of the six thousand reasons for the University's existence. As one hundred exes you represent as fliany of the eighty-five thousand rea­ sons for preserving and expanding Uni­ versity traditions. As N.R.O.T.C. students you belonged to a new organization of a not-so-otd institution. But that organization writes another page each year in the Univer­ sity’s history. You wrote the most bril­ liant of those pages Monday night when N a v y traditions combined with our tra­ ditions in a ceremony which began a new chapter in your personal biog­ raphies * As Navy ensigns you become very new parts of a very old organization. You are a word or phrase of the N avy his­ tory, the history of fights for freedom and security. You have two duties now, the greater one to your immediate task, but your ever present one to your memories. An admiral who was in the front lines of the w ar before we were winning that ivar told you that you have a much bet­ ter chance to come back than your brothers had two years ago. Some of you may even come back as students, and your memories w ill make your return easier. Some of you w ill come back to see old friends— be they people or places— and your memories will make them easier to find. Some of you will find those memories sharpened by meeting again the people you once knew or the people who knew the same people and places and happen­ ings you knew. Maybe you will find these friends in meetings as the ones held over the world only Thursday, in a strange foreign city, in your own home­ town. W hat words could better gib c our wish to you than these: “ Anchors Aweigh my bo} s, Anchors Aweigh, Farew ell to college joys W e sail at break of day— Thru our last night ashore. Drink to the foam, Until we meet again Here's wishing you a happy voyage home !“ Your colors are the “ blue of Seven Seas, gold of God's great sun. But you won't forget the orange and “ The eyes of Texas are upon white. you: you cannot get aw ay!” — H E L E N E W IL K E . the Aleut SemeHel Challenge 7o Students Who Jlook Ahead Each new semester opens up many opportunities for students on the “ Forty A cres/' For freshmen it is the beginning bf a new kind of life. For the upper­ classman it is another chance to do some bf the things he has always intended to do, but that he somehow never has got around to doing. A t any rate, whatever their classifica­ tion, this new semester should be a chal­ lenge for sane, sober endeavor. The war Is still a long wa}- from being over, in spite of what some people tell us. There is a long road ahead, and it may be rocky. This semester we owe it to our­ selves and to our government as well, to dedicate ourselves anew to study, study that w ill do its part toward winning the war. There are going to be many things hat are going to distract us during this lext semester. The Sweetheart election, he Texas Relays, the Spring elections and Barton Springs are strong tempta­ tions. People w ill be asking you to d c o u r s e o f th e l i t e r a r y b's- or> o f M e x ic o a n d not a c o u rs e on he rsoi el a s h ste d in th e F i n a l A n - ouncr-m ent o f C o u rs e s . th e reg l i a r D O R O T H Y ' S C H O N S , I n s t r u c t o r . TC D E N T S a b e d id - o t p a y T e x a s L r ion v o lu n ta ry eg i r t ra t io n m n s c e n e t h e i r ca rd b y c a l l in g a t .tiion o ffic e p ay t h . t h e ir fe e d a r in g fee and th e D O R O I H Y O L S O N , D ire c to r- I ! n clo ck E R M A N 15b w h ic h w a * s c h e d u le d in th e s p r in g »erm fo " as been c h a n g e d to I f s a n d w i ll )•« " a r e d M W E a t 9. P r e r e q u is it e s a re a tm a n I o r co n se n t o f th e in s tr n c t- r th is n u rse s r * re q u e s te d to c o m # to ro om 91 M L B S t u d e n t * w ho w is h ta k e to V . P O L L A R D . r A s s is ta n t G e r m a n ic L a n g u a g e s , P r o f # ■■•r o ' F I S H M A N in e n t e r in g o n C o n t e s t ie in M P f f ire M Ti S T U D E N T S i n 'e r e n - d th e W i l m o t D e c la m * . r e g is t e r w it h ’■heuld 7 793 o r t ile b r e e c h in 2302. H . Wr. T O W N S E N D , D ir e c t o r . E V E R A L PT. A f r e , , r on v o lu n t e e r s t a f f o f T h e D a i l y T ex- i. P o s i t i o n * o f r e p o rte r, c o p t ro a d e r. >1 m o n is t , e tc ., a re or-*ti to an »*,)- {-ain so m e ex* i n t w h o w i- k e s E n ro llm e n t. •rif-nc* is j (J rn a lih m th # D e p a r tm e n t o f J o u r n a l i s m t«- in >* repaired S t u d e n t * in te r e s te d in t h e volurt- c o lu m n s , e d it o r ia ls , to c o n t a c t le e r s t a f f o r w h o d e s ir e to c o n t r i b ­ u te a re th e e d ito r b e tw e e n u rg e d 2 a n d 6 o 'c lo c k d a th J . B , 109. T h e T e x a n n e e d s goo d m a t e r ia l a n d o ffe r s e x c e lle n t o p p o r t u n it ie s to th o s e w h o q u a l i f y . e t c ., in •IA* K M A G U I R E . D a ily T e x a n E d i t o r . } h o u r c o u r& e P H Y S I C A L B O U C A T I O N 2 13 , a -eo- R e d in in C r o s s rhe w in t e r s e m e s t e r , C la s s w i ll m e e t T u e s d a y , b . j o p.m . f i r s t m d . w i ll be o f f e r e d A m e r ic a n A I H E R S O N .! P h y s i c a l a n d H e a l t h I n s t r u c t o r 0 . m E d u c a t i o n . 29 ( S ' 1* ! w i l l He o ffe r e d T H E F I R S T H A L F o f B a c t e r io lo g y th e l e c t u r e * M W 12-1 la b o r a t o r y W 2-5. T H D h a l f o f s p r in g t e r m s i t * a n d th e c o u r s e d o es not a p p e a r binal Anno-iriecment. th e in in R W I L L I A M S , P r o f e s s o r o o f B a c t e r i o l o g y . F O R T H E S P R I N G S E M E S T E R D e p a r t m e n t o f E n g l i s h th e c o u r s e n o ; in 'h r in o f f e r in g F i n a l A n ­ E n g l i s h 11 b i < M Vt F in d e ­ th e s ix - h o u r c o u r s e on s e c o n d h a lf (n o w e r e n o u n c e m e n t : 1 2 - 1 ), p e n d e n t i o f S h a k e s p e a r e . th e P H I L I P G R I M A M C h a ir m a n o f 'h e D e p a r t m e n t o f E n g l i s h . to a n d J u n e , t e x a s , T ee D a i l y in A u s t i n I e x a n , s tu d e n t n e w s p a ­ t# p er o f T h e U n i v e r s i t y o f p u b lis h e d c i l e r y m o rn in g c s c e n t M o n d a y * a n d S a t u r d a y s , S e p ­ te m b e r tw ic e w e e k ly th e s u m m e r s e s s io n u n d e r th e d u r in g t j t ie o f The S u m m e r I ex as P u b lic a t io n s , c o n t r ib u t io n s m a * be m ad e th e edi- J o u r n a l i s m B u ild in g IOO C o m p la in t s a b o u t ic s h o u ld be m a d e J o u r n a l i s m B u ild - by te le p h o n e t o n a l o f f ic e s 101. 102. a n d ( 2-24731 or ar in '.ha b u s in e s s o ffic e . I e x a n by s e r v ic e In c . j S t u d e n t N e w s ; d e li v e r y t m g IOU (2 - 2 4 7 3 ) A d v e r t is in g m a n a g e r Ola*, w h o s e h eadq uarters are b u s in e s s o ffic e . la A ) N ic h id th# Th# D a ily T e x a n c la s s m a il .rid a t A u s t in , th e p e a t o f f ic e l e x * * , b y A c t o f C o n g r e s s a t is e n te re d a i sec I M a r c h 3. 1879. M e i n D u Associated Gblle&iatp P i e r S U B S C R I P T I O N R A I L S M o n t h ly T h e * . V N o v e m b e r I to J u l y N o v e m b e r B y C a r r i e r a B y M a i l : N o v e m b e r to 60 c e n ts I J u l y to M a r c h I, t a 60 I. JU .3 0 to M a r c h I . r a t e * 2 .0 0 N o v e m b e r J I th e p la c e of d e li v e r y I e x a n w ill be d e liv e r e d in A a a- is fro m N i n e ­ i n ­ fro m R io th e w e st a n d S a n tin p ro v id e d w it h in te e n th f u s i v e , s o u th to n o rth , a n d G r a n d e S t r e e t o n J a c i n t o B o u le v a r d on lim it * , I w e n t y -ae «■ o nt h S t r e e t s th e c a r r ie r to th e e a s t. Entign John K. Pearson, 1938- 40, pilot of a N a v y torpcd plane, lias been killed in the South P a c ific . N o d etails of the in action I death have been released. A n a tive o f Houston, En sig n tw o ye a rs ago Pearson enlisted and was train ed a t C orp us C h risti and M iam i. E d it o r --- . J A C K M A G U I R E „ L d l t o f — M A K I F K A N C B S w I LouN £ * ‘ '» ta r’1 to lh # E d it o r . A R H o w a r d Ravenna Editorial Aa*i*tant* M a t h e w s , M a r jo r ie W a ib e r g . M a n - f r a n c o * W ils o n S o c i e t y E d it o r H e le n # W u k * S T A F F F O R T H I S I S S U E M A R Ih R A N T EH N ig h t E d ito r W I L S O N I f f The Record By Ed Reed M a n a g in g E d ito r fo r T h h Issue H E L E N E W I L K E A - isla n t N ig h t E d ito r „ H orace 4 I* lb M ft 14 n 19 20 21 1 23 ' ?}xfJ } 24 I 25 rn 2 b W a 2© 21 29 i so W a S i H 32 33 I 34 I 3b I 3© S9 A y/ y/A H 41 I 42 i i 43 40 I 44 4S W A W a 45 4b so 49 R Sh P 'W 4 //// .... b l 54 y/A W A 57 12 15 i& ZZ 31 SS 31 41 b 2 5 5 V t . classified ■ gibe . ring of light . run . Confederate general . worm . danger . not ever . possessed . G aelic sea deity bitter vetch a d v ersa iy anim al serpent eagle greeting chess piece* courteous fertile spot in desert a priest related through the mother m a rry apair ra w metals w rongful act pronoun to dress meadow 26 28 30 31 33 34 36 39 43 45. 46. 4 7. 48. 50. 46 triple 47. move 49 fo ld e r pit 51 crow s c ry 52.sharpen 53. Rom an road 54. consumed 55 urges 56 ch air 57. color V E R T I C A L 1 made into a compressed package 2 elephant s tusks 3. was originated 4. agreement 5. collection of sayings A n sw er to Satu rd ay's puzzle. P H J L I M E / H O R I Z O N T A L I . an apron top 4 po beyond 8 . c a v i t y 12. hail! 1 3 . s o o n 14 monkeys I D b u l k y p i e c e o f w o o d 16 s h o w c o n c e r n 17 d r e g s I** burst forth 20. male voice 2 2 unit o f e l e c ­ tric a l fo it - e 23 in this place 24. b e v e r a g e 27. peruse 29. one who c a s t s a b a l l o t 3 1 . i n b a c k o f 34 rhythm s 35. papal veil 36. saucy 3 7 . c u e k o o 3 8 h e a v e n l y b o d y 40 a lw ays 44. faith ful ' \ i T i i g e l i m e o f s o lu t io n , J I m in u te s . Dist. by K i n e f e a t u r e s Syndicate, Inc. Segregation Isn t Answer To Race Riots, Profs Say and going to school together on term s of e q u a lity can the two races solve the problem s arisin g from bi-racialism . and D ra w n from eye-witness a c ­ local new s­ in counts, stories p rim a ry other papers, sources, R ace Riot. presents a detailed d escrip tio n of the D e ­ tro it disorders, tog eth er w ith an ana lysis of th e ir eau. es and a consideration o f steps w hich m ight be tak en to p reve n t a rep etition o f the trag ed y. A R I ' J H i I * N O W S H O W IN G CLAUDETTE FRED COLBERT‘MacMURRAY D E T R O I T . Mich. — ( A C P ) Seg reg ation is not the answ er to the race problem in D e tro it or a n y w h e r e else, assert Dr. A l f r e d M e t’lung Lee and Dr. N o r m a n I ’. H u m p h re y o f W a y n e in their new book, Uni ve rsi t y R a c e R iot, On the c o n t r a r y , th ey state, looking fo rm u la to fo r a in p r e v e nt a rep etitio n o f v io le n t d i s t u r b a n c e s winch occurred here l ast J u n e , “ segregation in p a rtic u la r must be re je cte d at the ou t se t , since the o n ly p rac­ is one tica l p reve n tive course in vo lvin g thousands o f w o rk ­ able adju stm en ts which w ill in im p lem ent e ffe c t the Golden Rule a n d perm it the grow th of h ealth y r ac e re la tio n s.” Tim e and again the authors p o in t to the fa c t th a t in D e tro it the disturb ances w ere most vio ­ lent in districts w here cond i­ tion''- a pp rox im ating segregation prevail. F urth erm ore, th ey claim there was little or no trouble in areas w here N egroes and w hites live tog eth er as neigh­ bors. T he conclusion is draw n th a t livin g , w orking , through o n ly Today it ; Y o u cannot avoid this U n iv e r s ity w ill g et you in the end. E v e n in my dream s I do not leave the place, and a great m any o f the c h a ra cters in my dream s are composed not only o f persons and things I know som ething about, but also o f a bunch o f people of whom I have only heard. in F o r instance, the other night as I was slum bering, I dream ed that I had w ritte n a p la y, and fo r >onie reason the C u rta in C lub was going to present it. The g rea t night a rr iv e d ; so I jo u rn e ye d over to Hogg A u d i­ torium . The c u rta in rose on the oloven-act m elodram a. The queer thing about it a ll w as I had w ritte n the whole that Spanish, and, not thing I did not kn o w in g Spanish, know w hat I had w ritte n about. D u rin g the fir s t act I w ent from seat to seat in the crow ded building and told each person, and w ith g rea t in d iv id u a lly pride, th a t I had w ritte n the play. T h is im p o s e d no one. I w en t to the fro n t and sat down on a canerbottomed chair. S u d ­ d en ly I felt a strong j o lt from behind, and my nose, follow ed by me w ith the c h a ir on top, struck the floor. W h e n I looked back, a b e a u tifu l red-head sat g rin n in g at me. saying, “ P a r ­ don me, I w as only try in g to develop my I thoug ht I had seen him some­ place before, and sure enough I had. H e w aits on tw o o f the tables in L ittle fie ld D o rm ito ry. leg muscles.” W hen the firs t a ct w as over, som ething v e ry strange hap­ pened. E v e ry o n e — even the actors — got up and I fig u red th a t the reason fo r this w as one of the fo llo w in g : ( I ) th ey got so disgusted that th ey could stand no m ore; (2 ) they could not understand the S p a n ­ ish in w hich it was w r itt e n ; or le ft, % pm ’AP H i t ; CLASSIFIED INDEX A n n o u n c e m e n t * t r a d e * 1— - A u to * fo r san* 2—- A u t o m u t iv e 3— W a n t e d A u to m o b ile * 4— S e r v i c e S t a t io n * 6— b u * L in e * 8— D in in g a n d D a n c in g 7—- L o d g e a n d F r a t e r n i t y N o tic e * 4— L o s t en d F o u n d 9— P r o f e s s io n a l I O — P e r s o n a l* 1 0 - A — S c boo * * n d C o lle g e # Busine** Service* t a i lo r * 11— B a r b e t a bop* 12 — B e a u t y S e r v i c e I J — C le a n e r * . H a tte r # , 14— L a u n d r ie s 15 — E l e c t r i c a l S e r v ic e 1 6 — “ K ia It* ' 17 — F u r n i t u r e R e p a ir in g 15— L o c k s m it h * ' u — M o v in g . H a u lin g en d S to r a g e ■it)— P r i n t i n g . O f f i c e II — S e w in g 2 2 — S h o e R e p a ir in g 23— C a fe * fc q u ip m e o t E m p lo y m e n t 24— H e lp W a n t e d M a le 25—- S a le s m e n W a n t e d 26— H e lp W a n t e d F e m a le 27 — M a le W o r k W a n t e d 28— F e m a le W o r k W a n t e d E d u c a t io n a l 2 'J— Jn * t r u e t l o n JO — M u s ic , D a n c in g , D r a m a t is e J I — s p e e c h 32— C o a c h in g 33- A — P e t * 1 4 - A — G e n e r a l P m S a le * R e n t a l * 45— R o o m * F u r n is h e d 4 6 — R o o m * U n f u r n is h e d 47— R o o m a n d B o a r d 1 5 — F u r n is h e d A p t* 48— A — U n f u r n is h e d A p a r t m e n t * M e re b a n d i* * >3— B i c y c l e * arid M o t o r c y c le * I — h o o d a n d F o o d P r o d u e ts ,5 — h u r m t u r e a n d H o u s e h o ld G o o d * J6 — M u s ic a l a n d R a d io * i i — W a t c h e s , J e w e l r y R e p a ir I S — M is c e lla n e o u s F o r S a ie 4 9— G a r a g e A p a r t m e n t * ./0— G a r a g e R o o m * S t — R o o m * fo r B u y * 4 2— R o o m * fo r G i r l * 3‘J — " S w a p " 40— W a n t e d M e re hand is * 4 0 - A — L iv e s t o c k S u p p lie s 8— Lost and Found u . G O f tliV don H A U Gekmi D i l l Mb M N I DICT N E W S ★ C O L O R C A R T O O N r im * L O S T ( . la s s e s w it h co lo re d le a t h e r b u tto n e d ca se , lo * t in v i c i n i t y W o m e n * G y m T h u r s d a y . G a ll M a r j o r ie B o w y e r , 8-3417. in b ro w n n a t u r a l te a c h e r 6179. jAAy P A R A M O U N T R ushy N ight R ep o rte rs . H o race Bu sb y, V o ln e y O ’C onnor, F a y e L o yd C oy pres der® C harles Fo oter, Jo e H u n t, F a y e L o y d , J a c k M a ­ g u ire , M ac W a lla c e . N ig ht Sp o rts E d ito r G eorg e R ab o rn A ssistan ts L y n n B a rb e r, F o r ­ re st M cD o n ald , Ja c k G a lla g h e r, N orm an M org an stern N ight S o c ie ty E d ito r M arion Brid g e s A ssista n ts v en n a M athew s H c lc n e W ilk e , R a ­ N ig h t Am usem ents E d ito r — Ka- i ven n a M athew s A ssistant E . G a rtly Je c o N i -ht T eleg rap h E d ito r ...... Jo e H u n t A s sista n t ..... Ja c k M a g u ire T O N I T E . . . “ H E A V E N C A N W A IT ” D O N A M E C H E G E N E T I E R N E Y T e e h n ic o o r N E W S A C A R T O O N F i r a t Second Show S h o w 7 ;45 9 :4 0 Drive - In NOW SH O W IN G TUTTI Start* T o d a y S U N D A Y and M O N D A Y // H l CLAU D IA D O R O T H Y M cG u i r e R O B E R T y o u n g with A l*o C A R E Y W I L S O N P U P P E T O O N it L i t t l e L u l u C a r to o n " E G G S D O N T B O U N C E " jk mssm. S T A R T S T O D A Y E R R O L F L Y N N J U L I E B IS H O P in //INORTHERN ■// PU RSU IT1 and M O P P I N G U P — C a r t o o n a n d ★ + N E W S ★ * c a m p u s , a b ro w n L<' S T ; O n b e a rin g r a in c o a t , la b e l, in n a m e p r in te d in s id e o f c o a t. T h e k e y o n e p o c k e t to o w n e r. C a ll B i l l R o b e r ts o n , 3<>47 o r 2838 P e a r l. S a k o w itz , o f H o u lt o n is v e r y v a lu a b le L O R T : A G e o lo g y J g r a y b a r k n o te b o o k . R e t rn to R ic h a r d ( D i c k ) L y o n . P h o n e 2-6569. L O S I : I b la c k S h a e f f e r pen w it h w id e g o ld rim o n th e to p. R e t u r n to E d n a C o lt o n P h . 8-9381. L O S T : T u e s d a y — b ro w n and s i l v e r P a r ­ Je a n n e I pen. k e r If H o u s t o n a t 8-2448 fo u n d p h o n e fo r R E W A R D . For Sale I ( | R S A L E : H a r t S c h a f f n e r a n d M a r x tu x e d o , m e 38. a ll a c c e s s o r ie s . S l i g h t ­ ly u se d . P h o n e 2-4603. F O R S A L E : O r g a n ic C h e m i a t r y — 1 0 a — r e v ie w q u e s tio n s a n d a n s w e r * . E x a m 2304 T r i n i t y . P h o n e 7 99 0. F O R S A L F I : T e n n is r a c k e t $3, c a t c h e r '* m it t a n d b a s e b a ll $2.50, p a ir o f k n e e in S I , p r a c t ic e b a to n $1,50 . A l l i pa d s good c o n d itio n . D ia l 2 -7962. 47— Room and Board S E V E R A L V A C A N C I E S in S h e lt o n Co- O p f o r S p r i n g S e m e s t e r . B e t t e r l i v in g le s s m o n e y . A p p l y a t 203 E . 2 3 rd . f o r P h o n e 8-1667. B O Y 'S — Id e a l ro o m d e n t* . 2 c lo s e ts , f o r e n g in e e r in g Btu- t i l e b a th . 3 m e a ls . f o r 6 s t u d e n t * . P h . s- 60 37 . 2315 R o o m O ld h a m . V A C A N C Y : 3 b lo c k * fro m c a m p u s . 2400 R io G r a n d e . P h o n e 3 78 7. 3114 W H E E L E R S t . — R o o m a n d b o a rd f o r o n e o r t w o b o y s in p r i v a t e h o m e. 6 b lo c k s n o r t h U n i v e r s i t y . P h . 6 06 3. F O R B O Y 'S : P l e a s a n t r o o m s — 3 m e a ls d a i l y . $32.50 p e r m o n th . T e l e ­ la r g e p h o n e 2 -5770, 1906 G u a d a lu p e . C H O I C E R O O M S F O R B O Y S A ls o m e a ls . 3 b lo c k * P I E R C E H O U S E . 200 E . 2 6 % S t P h o n e 8-3887. c a m p u s . o f g 'o u p , G I R L S : T w o v a c a n c ie s M a r c h 1 s t. S m a ll t i l e b a th , m a id , f o r e x ­ i ’ h. IS O . A ls o ro o m R io G r a n d e , s in g le beds, e x c e lle n t m e a ls . t r a 2-9849. h o a rd e rs . 220 6 Business Colleges 48— Furnished Apts. BUSINESS *4 ,*»«Tin -MOUSTON -AOS O N-HOL STO N S A N A N T O N IO - FT W O n T H - H A R L f N O E N . I 23— Cafe* ZOOS G U A D A L U P E 32— Coaching M A T H C O A C H I N G — R . M R a n d le , 2309 k i n A n to n io . D ia l 8 - l l a i . R O O M . B A T H , o v e r g a ­ r a g e : 3 2 n d S t r e e t , n o r t h o f U n i v e r ­ c o u p le . U t i l i t i e s p a id . k it c h e n e t t e , s i t y . $28.50. D ia l 2-1267. S i n g l e o r 50— Garage Rooms G A R A G E R O O M : S h o w e r# , d a te o n e. C o n v e n ie n t a c c o m m o ­ to E n g , B l d g . $16 p e r m o n th . P h o n e 2-1740. 5 J — Rooms for Boys D E S I R A B L E d o u b le t w i n beds, in n e r s p r in g m a t t r e s s e s , s h o w e r , q u ie t ro o m , V a c a n t M a r c h 1 st. P h o n e 2-0916. A P P R O V E D private home— near U n i ­ v e r s i t y . o r r ^ T T lin e . s le e p in g s p o rc h e s , showers, all st u d en t needs in f u r n i t u r e . Reduced price. A ls o , s in g le ro o m . Phone 2-1078. *-6c 0 sus-*£>. JSrSN. SUSAN, THERE'S ENOU&H CONFUSION IN WASH- -TON WITHOUT YOU KEEPING ME GUESSING!" - P h o to b y N e a l D o u g Ii Let's G o for a Ride Austin Riding Stables Barton Springs Road at Riverside Drive •■4.' : 4 Sr* .LL • . v/* X‘'r\x4s-'r yyaiiyiM. U-toN-Wy , ^ T H E D A I L Y T E X A N CLASSIFIED ADS Phone 2 -2 4 7 3 for A d Taker 9 * mm iy^nggrSMHiiiti TV i E| •; 1 . VV. jWMUMg ZU Political Announcemen F o r S t a t e S e n a t o r Boys Wanted (Over 16 Years Old) N o w S e r v i n g H i* 2nd T e r m a * R e p r e s e n t a ­ t i v e fro m To Carry The Daily Texan Apply J.B. 108 T yping Done E X P E R T T Y 'P I S I d e s ire * t y p in g to be d o n e a t h o rn *. P h . 2 -4869. 45— Rooms Furnished F O R R E N T ; N ic e ly w i t h p r iv e t # h a th 106 W e a t fu r n is h e d b e d ro o m P r e f e r e t u d e n t or T e le p h o n e 82nd. 51— Rooms for Boys T W O L A R G E e a s t n e c n n g b a th . S m a ll r o o m s : L a r g e ro o m w it h I p e rs o n . P h o n e 2-8 37 6. v a t# h a th . V . 2 3rd S t M O D E R N G A R A G E R O O M S : T v c o n n e c t in g s h o w e r , m a id d e r i­ lin e . 201)4 '* v a t e e n t r a n c e , b u * in pc. P h o n e 2 *8 8 1 9 o r 5 8 3 2 . T W O S I N G E K b e d * ; p r i v a t e h e n tr a n c e . D in ) 2-0241. 3 0 th Ka R O O M S a n d a p a r t m e n t s f o r bt T a t# h a th . o ne b lo c k w e s t p u s. 2 21 2 S a n A n t o n io . D ia l 2-3 B O Y 'S : T w o la r g e u t i l i t i e s ; room '* 3 a in i t e le p h o n e : b a t h : flo o r, N e a r S u n d a y o r e v e n in g s . 1 904 N e c h e th e U n i v e r s i t y ; b 52— Room s for G irls L A R G E c o m f o r t a b le b e d ro o m s , b e d s, m a id s e r v ic e , b u * lin e . P 5 8 3 2. G I R L S : 3 v a c a n c ie s M a ' r h J u i a n d S e n io r * o n ly . M a id B e r v ie # e I F u r n a c e h e at. N e a r M u s ic I n t . d a v . 207 W . 2 1 s t S t r e e t . 2 B H O C K S C A M P U S — b r ic k v a c a n c ie s M a r c h I n d i v i d u a l c n e e . d e c o ra te d P h o n e 2-7914. K E v e r y c f u r n i t u r e , m o i $15 m o n th . 2 61 0 G U I J * f Rooms and Board for Girt1*. R o o m * fu r n is h e d in red m a p le , tv b eds. s h o w e r s a n d L ib . S le e p in g p o r c h . . 1 8 0 3 C o l o r a d o D al 2-0194 R O O M A N D B O A R D fo r g i r l s — v a in a p p ro v e d h o u s e f o r g ir l s . c ie * W e s t 2 4 th . D i a l 8-2357. I D E A L R O O M S t w in b j u s t o f f th e c a m p u s . 606 P a r k P f o r g ir l * , P h o n e 2 -6630. V A C A N C I E S in H h o a lm o n t A r m * — i h ie ro o m s , 2 c lo s e ts , t w in beds, v a le b a th s . J u n i o r a n d s e n io r g ir ls c D ia l 2 -8947. 1010 W e s t 2 1 th S t . • b o w e r. V A C A N C Y : 3 m e a ls d a i l y , rfo ub te re tu b . G la s s e d , a c re e n e d si in g p o r c h * * . C h o ic e o f p r iv a t e bat h o t. 2-0194. co ld w a t e r . 1803 C o lo ra d o . I D E A L R O O K S F O R 12 G I R O S c o o l a n d c le a n N e w s e r v ic e 2V» b lo c k s 2-8086 L a t w i n beds 5 fr o m cam pus- Room M ate W anted W O U L D L1K F1 s e n io r g ir l si t o ju n io r s . a p a r t m e n t w it h tw o 2-9876 a f t e r 6 p .m . Stocks, Bonds, Notes S a f e t y De p o s i t Boxe T O P R O T E C T YOUR WAR BONDS A n d O t h e r V a lu a b le s N o w A v a il a b l e THE CAPITAL NATIONAL BANK NDAY, M ARCH 5, 1944 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phane 2-2473 PAT5E FIVE cowboy Minstrel to Be March Will Have Take-offs on University are blackfaces Those here un! Rehearsals for the 1944 v-boy Minstrels, an a nnual af- r, will begin Tuesday. Sunny rris, in charge of production, announced th a t the minstrel I be held March 15 and 16 in gg Auditorium. This y e a r ’s leficiary will be tho World S m ­ it Service Fund. Mac Wallace, d id s t, has disclosed t h a t this the ir s program will include (with v ariations), istrel show taking-off on the outstanding its of U.T. and U.T.’ers, and eral olio acts which will be lounced later. Cinch bets for > of the endmen are veterans no Nowotny and Billy "Roos- ” Andrews. n the Cowboy istle! has become a campus in- utioh. Every year this pro- m of Vaudeville perform ances 'Stirs more than $500 fo r some trity. Last y ea r's receipts also nt to the World S tudent Serv- Fund. re c en t years, ★ ’n 1922, A m o Nowotny, head •cr leader, went to his assistant, I McGill, expressing the need a cheering organization. The dent body of five thousand had much enthusiasm as most units its size, hut it lacked the initia- in sp ired only by a co-ordi- s "S h o r ty ” interest. e stu d e n t I Bill got th e ir heads together I from th a t tete-a-tete emerged plans for the new' organiza- COW BOYS — to don blackface March 15 and 16 came Into being. The 1943-44 j heir activities were the continued give supped of tile Texas Union schedule of the Cowboys showed a I support of all University pep ral- Fee; welcoming all varsity teams vigorous w artime attitude. Among j lies and athletic contests; exten- and visiting celebrities to Austin; aid to the sponsors of the 1944 Round-Up and the Texas Relays; ushering in the Longhorn Room; election aid in tile Varsity C arn i­ val; promotion and personal help in drives fo r all worthy causes; and the traditional presentation of the Cowboy Minstrel. Church M ust Prepare For Peace—Lind em an its American people There to the organization have been the same f o r the past tw enty years. Membership is based on "scholar- for world a ' ae<* hatred and hysteria; wat j ship, service, character, and a t least two years on the campus (by constitutional one y ear during w artim e.)” in World W ar less person Requirements for entrance amendment, is much ★ the th e ir initial B y R A V E N N A M A T H E W S 3. Sooths were set up over the ipus. Inform ation blanks were de available and all eligible lea were asked to fill them in h th e ir personal data. A fte r eful consideration of the more n 300 applicants, the two or- lizers selected thirty-eight men, s establishing forty-man >ta th a t is still retained in the I tionistic militarism, anization. The church must prepare "good people” to make the moral j udgment s necessary peace in order to av ert an isola- especially the victorious nations, I strong in which will make f u tu r e wars in- Ifaking appear- evitable, Dr. E duard Lindeman, cs between halves a t the 1923 one of A m erica’s outstanding so- eo C. Haynes, secretary of the Board of Regents, has an- nounced. wit h to a good standard of living on; Regents scholarship the conclusion can be set up? Even Regents’ scholarship awards to- an ‘open door’ economic policy? taling $900 fo r the spring semes- resounded A t t e r fo r , , a t , , , appy Officers elevate (Continued from Page I ) Awards, approved by the board, [ included: to The audience was amazed find a man, reared in a Danish University fellowship. $300, to colony and unable to read until i Loyd Douglas of Austin, m a jo r­ em was 20, such an effortless, polished speaker. Dr. Lindeman was brought here by the Hogg Foundation. This ta lk was ar­ ranged by the Rev. Milton Max­ well and his committee, Isaac E dg ar Clark of S c h u le n b u rg ,; built. m ajoring in English. University fellowship, ing in English. $200, P re se n t members include: John foreman; Ted Strauss, straw this j hoBs. ,Iack H o b , Ion. horse wrang- ler; Joh n n y Davis, camp cook; H a rry Trueblood; Bill Booth, Douglas Pierce; Hull Youngblood; H. P. Hodge; Sunny H arris; Rajah Ellsworth: Frank Stephens; K ants McLaurin; Vie Crews; B ert Wol­ ford; Stanton Bundy; Kill Dirks; Phil Bolin; Joe Mobley; Fred Ealand; Meredith Roberts; Melvin Gertz; Ben Shanker; Ja me s Dp* penheimer; Larry Jones; Kill Mc­ C arthy; Bob Thrash; Howard , Swanson; Mac Wallace; Owen Derrick; Glenn p atr,. g en Haden; and Ji m Rishi, five* ------ 1------------------------------------------- Hospital 0, K., Regents Told (Continued from Page I) land they appeared to he j ust as first to sound as when they were award? to- j p aun^ e r o v . \ I l l . . • . . . avu r c i o I had VUU I v l i v e u ic it _ I* w#nM I , . _ , , . f told of O ther characteristics of the fu ­ ture religion fo r free men were I me a boat.” Captain J. J. London, m aster the nine i ceremonies, legrooms and pix bridegrooms- je among the bundled e n s i g n s . , ^ community leadership and th a t I the peking up, he had iound t h a t h , _________________ y five gr aduat es of the Rice ss were marrying, and only six i , . , the Northwestern ■ duates of is, Lfter Captain London im in the ensigns, and as t h e y , . . , eived their commissions from miral Mason, Captain London icated fifteen. One had n married two hours, an other r hours and thirty minutes. Inly fo u r o f the hundred com- sioned were not from Texas; re was one each from Okla- ia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and shington, D. C. .’he only ensign not present the commissioning exercises the it would allow its people to ex­ perience democracy by learning . it in th e ir behavior and by solv- j mg problems the democratic way. Many people who seem to have | turned to religion now are really J l l t r y n g to escape from fear, cau- •, , tioned Dr. Lindeman, who «aid he saw no signs of a great and sweeping religious revival. Many of these people join fu nd am ental­ ist are isolationism. preaching hate and Those more sophisticated join the University of Chicago’s neo-me­ dievalism, which is equally based on fear. "A pseudo-religion is one which religion. takes you away Genuine religion prepares you to ; face it.” some o f which sects, from , ,, the , - , . , , . - in liabilities s Morris Cole. He had isles. once there had been an extra cr for the m arrying ensigns, itain London called the names :he brides and brides-to-be and ed them to stand. he ceremony was much the ie as the ceremony a t Annap- , except fo r the hat-throwing lit ion. Captain London ex- ned th a t the Annapolis cere- iy was a grad uatio n and th a t boys w'cre throw ing away their j efficiency expert midshipman’s hats. j Main cause of worry was a pos- University scholarship, $100. the west wing Mary Tom Osborne of San A n - J f loofs. But the report said, "no tonio, m ajoring in English. damage to, or perceptible, shift­ ing of, any supporting m asonry or struc tura l member has been ob- two University scholarship h o ld e r s for to ! ^ l e g i f t i n g of Additional stipends n,wuiv*vm»* fo r mv»o > ” v av* „ spring semester . i .-..i____ Tune H yer of Coleman, majoring in education, and $100 to Lila Rhea Norwood of Greenville, maj oring in English. $2o0 to served.’ The did make two architects, however, recommenda- several ; tions f or the safety of the build­ ing, including the installation of a sprinkler system for fir e pro- ; t e d urn. from The Board also approved The United States Department the award of a half-year scholarship, totaling $120, the Delta Kappa Gamma Society Scholar- .hip Fund, to Miss Hazel Floyd of I of S ta te wU1 su^ Iy a J a r **‘ Po r' lion of the money to be used in Denton. the extension summer school, with the University putting up $3,- 750, f o r fou rteen s ta ff member*. Dr. H omer Price Rainey, Uni­ versity president, will go to Mexi­ co City for one or more public lec­ tures during the summer. the Girls’ Glee fo r Club will be Friday, March IO, from 4 to 6 o’clock in Texas Union 401. Miss C harlotte DuBois is director. G L E E C L U B T R Y - O U T S Try-outs Board m embers also promised, verbally, but without a recorded vote, to erect a new nurses home to replace Brackenridge Hall at the Medical School, a f te r hearing a doctor-graduate and a J u n io r nurse testify th a t the p re se n t con­ dition of Brackenridge Hall was unsuitable f o r living qu a rte rs fo r student nurses. University Payday C hange Causes Upsets to Employees A "suggestion” by The building could be repaired, bu t it was the opinion of the mem­ bers of the Board, t h a t it would the state I a f t e r the F e brua ry warrant* were ! i,e m orr economical to build an entirely new building as soon as a priority can be obtained. No .g ro c e ry bill and r e n t both come plans were discussed fo r the dis- As one ja n ito r explained, "My delivered. th a t pay war ran ts of state employees be issued , , .. company buying food and stalling the real, on estate weeks.” one to two weeks a f t e r the close due on th e jagt day o f th e m onth | posal of the old building. of each month has caused serious and I ’m going to have a hard time upsets in the financial conditions of many University employees and a survey o f campus reaction last week disclosed a rising resentm ent against the move by workers in the lower income brackets. Board members heard a re p o rt the H o g g is completing Foundation, which operation. of its th at Printed pamphlets its telling of they must depend on their oam- history were distributed to Board pus-earned money to pay regular j members and to His press. E x tra bills and they do not have enough copies can be obtained from the the e x tra rcserve the Pre3i- weeks. Most stud ent employees, d e n t’s office. the situation j - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - however, feel th a t will be adjusted for them as soon as the late pay date becomes re g u ­ lar. J. H. Cavaness, sta te auditor and efficiency expert, requested last month th a t d e p a rtm e n t heads not certify any state payroll until the end of the month, thus making delivery of pay w a rra n ts one to two weeks la te r th an usual. Student* also complained two Foundation or Thief Leaves Students W ith Dying Soldier t he workings of third from y e a r last two f o r off to l f a n employee is ill or quits a f te r the f ifte e n th of the month under the present system, his check is already certifed and he is thus paid fo r full-time service. Cavaness made his suggestion to end this practice as an economy the dep artm en t m easure and so hcads would be "telling t r u th .” Although generally sym pathe­ tic with the a u d ito r’s motive, cam­ pus workers, especially janitors, laborers, and many ployees pointed ou t checks will not he April student em* th a t March issued until IO, more the Among employees with families, though, discontent was Mike and Bob C arpenter, stu ­ ap parently growing. Several men dents from Wichita Falls, were claimed th a t the pay w arrants le ft to care f o r a dying soldier from the state are " h o t checks” near W est hit by the driver with anyway pointing out th a t the war-; whom last rants m u st be held several months Tuesday. The man said he was go- they reach full value or; ing to get a doctor, but abnn- before the else cashed at a discount by local doned the car, which he had stolen tw enty A t the present time, however, j miles from the scene of the acci- in San Antonio, a b o u t tHAv hitched a ride banks. the state au dito r has given no in­ dication or rescinded his order, emphasizing th a t w a r r a n t com­ panies could advance employees their money on the first of the to dent. The brothers hailed a passing car and took the soldier, Private Tony Schachitti of Camp Wolfers, the station hospital a t Waco than six weeks month. I where he died. to throw away I don’t th in k these young men I it their new ign’s h a ts,” he said. lost surprising event of the uing came when Captain Lon- said it ju s t occurred to him ; some of the boys in th e pre- ht had been on the H ornet i Admiral Mason or had seen ink. Seven boys stood up as audience cheered and npplaud- hem. ty custom, the firs t enlisted i to salute a new officer col­ es $1 " re w a rd .” Midshipman ,T.C. and V-12 students, tak- advantage of an “opportuni- rushed o u t o f Gregory Gym r the ceremony to catch th e ir n One reported a gain of $5, ther $4, still another $3, sev- $*. ho N.R.O.T.C. Glee Club, di­ ed by Ensign A. K. Berg- m, sang “ E te rn a l F a th e r ,” the a1 Academy hymn, which prays those "in peril on the sea.” veryone joined in as they sang Id Lang Syne” and "A nchors ?igh.” Thev sang then "T he s of T exas.” he orang*- lights of the tower ted fo r victory. Dr. Lindeman found assets and I tra n sfe rre d Fli ght Officer Wi l l i am F. Stay- ton, student in 1938-39, has been the Carlsbad the a ttitude of the Army Air Field to Las \ egas, Nev. from W I TAKE PRIDE IN A N N O U N C IN G THE SHIRTS, PAJAMAS, SPORTSWEAR, TIES AND M ANSCO UNDERWEAR To tho st discriminating gentlemen v/Fo demand the finest in appere! . . . we present the new M anhattan line for spring 1944. It is with justifiable pride that we add t h i s ’ amous label to the other equally renowned merchandise that is synony­ mous with Reynolds-Pen and . . . offering for your approval an outstanding co action o f Man­ hattan Shirts, Man-Formed to fit your figure . . . Sportswear, styled for work and leisure , , . Neckwear, brilliant In conception . , , Pa amas and Underwear, tailored ‘ or ease and comfort* * M ay we show you th'ese distinguished famous-for-quality garments? PAGE SIX University and Navy Tradition Exes Plan por pu|ure Send IOO Officers to Sea (Continued from Page I ) Europe as an Army war— the wax' flight unit, Hr. J. Alton Kin dine* ^ in the Pacific, a Navy war,” he Dean H. T. Parlin, Dean* Mated, And because of more hours Woolrich, J. A, F itzgerald, and Texag in c h in g ; Bcd mort gunnery training th* Arno Nowotny, ( ompti*olier (-Ja|veston< p r graduate* of todav have a much Simmons, and Commandci better chance of ‘returning than Friedell, executive officer of the professor of chemical engineer­ ed those of two years ago. It is Naval unit, jog; Fort Worth, Dr. L, L . Click, commission* profe?(?or of English; Tyler, Dr. Receiving no longer a story of “ too little professor of Ameri- md too late,” he believes. their were Ensigns Vt L Baghouse, A. R ; j ber of the ex-student clubs g. p Schorh. I). • . Speaking to the ensigns, Ad- K. Bergstrom, J. F. Browder, C. W. P. Webb, prolessor • in (Continued from Page I ) is to H ind Ma MHI said the g o a l o f an B. Buford Ji , R E. Burnett, can history. officer instill respect law and order in the men. "B u t Charlton, you can't fool enlisted officer needs character courage, common sense dustry.1 for W . A Burns, D. S. Caldwell, ti. T. j ( bib on, O. M IL P. He believes the H.O.T.C. is a Graves, H. Happel, H. P. San Antonio at noon and Laredo - ^ „ „ _ u Hodge, V. L. Humphrey, A. P- j good and lasting organization, that f it had been established earlier, perhaps there would have been no H. R. Howe. G. N. Martin, J . O. .prond war ' .................. ........ Johnson, T L. Jones, C. I-. Lichte. j 1 McCaldin, W. W. McGinnis, Billy Principal of the Corpus j hnsti And Admiral Mason did not McRey - Id s . C. E. Mitchell. C. W. Public Schools; Houston, Dr. C. P. W e t the families and friends of ■ Muchlbergcr. R C. Norris, M C. | Patterson, professor of govern- he officer* " I realize the sac ii- I Pearson, R. G. Peter. H. B. Rule, went at the University; Hillsboro, W von ax'e miking in sending 0. Schley, r. VV. G. Shudde, W . | Dr. A. P. Brogan, dean of the Lese young men to sea duty. But VV. Stephens, R. J . Stevenson, Graduate School, biceport, Dr. our work is not done,” he said. VV. M. Sutton, J. Wildenthal Jr., William A. Cunningham, profes- S. W inter., A. M. W olford. * V V ' ^ T v I C T V ’ s W c k e£en s- „ . , hem, „ D ____ ,, , _ ... orpus K E-°"k' s-c J r S J S S ’S A K . s. G. Allen. 0. .I Arnold Jr., C. gent*; < or-tea na, Am o Nowotny, , r a v m •• ' Captain London explained that D. Baird, F. W. Bellow s U T Bos- dean of men; Austin. Beau ford tire Texas I few of the gradual- would re- well. J K. Bo Ic , , J. C. < am, ■ .Tester, chairman of reive advanced training, but most B. F. Carroll Jr., B A. Copass, Ha. I road Commission; and New if them will go on duty imwedi- I I L M. E . Cross. L. F. ( umbie, Braunfels. ijy d e Littlefield, I itely on destroyer*, submarines, A. M. derrick Jr., G Elizondo, | versity football, track and cross- ______ *nd "various •raft." landing (). W. Fauntlerny Jr.. N. D. Ma- country coach. types of in the Graham. VV. K. ‘finest congratulations name of the University and the name of the United States Hunt Jr.. E B. Johnson, J. Savy.” dos, B. S. Fleming, R. E. Fuge, President Rainey expressed the ; E. M. Gale, O. Girdler, < . R. (trice, F. S. in ' Hastings, B. R. Hatley, P. M. ( . J Livingston. L. h. Loveless, J , E. The Navy V-12 band opened j Loveless, J. W . McKnight. G. G. he program playing the national Miller, O. G, Pate. P. G. Patton, anthem, the Rev. K. E. Rippel, R. (*. Ryan, D, ( . thomas F. Tiern.y r-poakin* .he Sanders. M. R. Scholl Jr.. S. D. Seav, H. E. Spike. M. ri. almon, invocation. followed by A.M.A. Approves New Med Course (Continued from Page I ) qualified to train Honor guests sitting on the plat- J. H. Smith, M. F. Smith. C. F. students in th.* relatively new ■ii included Dr. John N. R. jsteineger Jr., A. R. Thomas Jr., J science. 'orm score, president of Southwestern J. D. Thompson. J. L. Foppin ’ Diversity; Commander M. A. R, L. Underwood, VV. R. V an .der •Jefferman, commanding officer Veer, H. J, Wetegrove. A. P Will- •f the Marine unit at Southwest- bf rn. H. J. Williams, VV. IL W li­ mn; Lieutenant M. J. Grove, com- son, R. G. Wanters, and VV. A. nander of the University pre- | Youngblood._____________ Austin Exes Discuss Plans For Memorial to W a r Dead (Continued from Page I ) Urgent need by the Army and Navy for two thousand physio­ therapists has prompted the U ni­ versity to open a new class in phy­ siotherapy starting March 27, Dean Leake said. Only a limited number of stu­ dents will be accepted, in order to give each the maximum per­ sonal instruction. Applicants must bp graduates of accredited schools of physical education or of nurs­ ing, or college graduates who have majored in science. rnurwtf I i %nI far University could find stere*-1 atty came into its heritage of oil ion and sports. .... .....____ University facilities for instruc- ; money, when the permanent fund tjon )n physiotherapy, recently in- "The alumnae owe something was bailt UP arld the building era spected and approved by A.M.A. include rn therapeutic • their University to make it « h« u" ' „ ro p . ,, for hvdro- . . . . the j 1937t ^agt sern tJlr gcho0l expand tJherapy, both of which are con- .m veriity of the first cia** Jniversity can be the hest in the to eleven thousand enrollment and «idered valuable in treatment of ,.arjy ^ a g <•« of polio; extensive ex- drop again with the coming of the South,” said Mr. Jester. than memorials, exe- war, has seen the the beginning of ercise equipment, and X-ray and „ The present period, begun in ; pool and W hirlpool \ inspectors. Other .. . . . . , * eginmng of research. Mr. Jester described The tm - sould endow the school and set up war activities on the < ampus with I ultraviolet ray equipment, icholarships in the names of exes, the coming of the Navy and the ie suggested. The course of study has likewise Banquet entertainer, «ere the be,.„ endorMd bv th, A .M .A „ in. ■ersity of Texas in its periods of Rev W alter Kerr. who sane ' p f . , Iudin tor W a g e n e r hecime the first of ujred by |hp A M ^ lenity chairman “ Virginia re,a D 0 „ „ h , ,, „ , p .. j . ..J Si rn 9 I the • " , student - y people seen s h o u t: From 19(MI to 1910 the p « o d ;th is diet-id. r y o u n rn a n l.o o d , ody expanded and the graduate Dean and Mrs. W . E Doty. Mrs. John Mc* urd\- arn Mr? Homer •boo Hagan. T. n r- t T* / The shacK era began in 1910. P. Ramey. ( asc\ Jones, Dr. (a1- . . ivied to 1930, and saw the campo* hour-—better than never, a- i- row in student bode and graduate Frederick McAlii ten, Dr. Vernon , •bool, curriculum and staff, saw Semi ha rot, Dean iv. r, (iidley, and ... . Miss Lilia Casis. conspicuously L good . late j • I »* an A .on- „ a, -VUU , * . .. . . , , r, .. > a i * r , r , . . aiMiti„ „ . thee have extensive , , .. a a . instruction in h\drotherapy, mas- 'sage. elecLrotherapv and fever naei., Y » « > u n n , , therapy, \-ray, Kenny hot packs , and other specialized courses. , . . , A . ,, . . ' , * . through the fnst World War. r a r From 1910 to 1937, Mr. Jester ;->>-<■-i-r but mn< ne nor The I Diversity program of phy- , I, . 1942, is under the direction of escribed as the time the T nrver- wi«hr- _________________________________________________________________________Mrs. RilliP Louise Crook, techni­ cal director; Mrs. J . R. Spencer, Jr.. physiotherapist; and Dr. G. W . N. Eggers, professor of orthopedic surgery in the Medical School, who is medical director for the pro­ gram. Men From Ranks Boss Battalion . ^ installed October . (Contimied from Page 1) . j «iotherapv» .. ;' . , , Officer First Class A. Y. Old* Guidr, Petty Officer Third Drum Major, Petty Officer Sec­ Class J. VY. Love. ond Class F. J . Crow, F irat C o m p a n y T h ir d C o m p a n y ( ompany Company, Lieutenant Company Commander, Lieuten­ VV A. Jenkins. ant E. I i . Groas. Company Chief Petty Officer. Chief Pen. O fficer V. E. ( rews. Company Guidon Bearer, Pe’ iv Office! Fourth Clas* C. H. Feath- erston, F ir s t P l a t o o n Platoon Commander, Lieuten­ ant are from all over the United States, not just from Tex- ; as. a* has previously been the case in the N.R.O.T.C. unit Canteen Corps to Meet Monday Night in Union in The Red Cross Canteen Corps I will meet at I JIO o'clock Monday lh* Queen Anne Room nig \ of the Union with Miss Anna Jar,- zen, director, in charge. The corps is composed of faculty members, students, and townspeople. Miss Janzen, director of the University ; Commons, is assisted in the can­ teen corps pirogi am by Mrs, E. i G. Smith, co-director. Mexican Summer School Courses Are Announced A t e n t a t i v e announcement of the courses to be offered at the University field school in Mexico City ha* been made by Dr. Charles the W. Hackett, chairman of school. Definite announcement of course* and professor* will be made later. Preliminary announcement of I course* to be laugh are: anthro­ pology, a cour-e for junior* and one for graduate students; * junior and senior art course; two economics course*; a senior Eng­ lish course; sophomore and junior geology; sophomore history, a course; junior social junior history; junior history; graduate history; junior and graduate sociology; Spanish- junior and graduate American history. history I>atin-Amenean Peruvian Professor To Arrive Here March IO A Peruvian profes ?or of normal schools, Max H. Minano-Garcia, * iii arrive at the University F r i­ day, March IO, for a three-week* study of the primary and sec­ ondary educat ional systems of the United States, Dr. Charles VV, Hackett, chairman of the Institute of Lat in-American Studies, an­ nounced yesterday, j Wh.ie a campus guest, he will give two lectuies on the public j education system in Peru, di*cus»- I ing the history and progress from i the Peruvian point of view. Dates ; of Sr. Mina no’* talks will be an- j oounced later. -1 rn W k rn WM rn 'rn M a i Un •J Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 SUNDAY, STARCH 5, T W EVERYONE SAVES YOU SAVE NOW FOR 25 YEARS WE HAVE NOT BEEN UNDERSOLD • W IL L NOT BE UNDERSOLD rn * You Save More at Texas Book Store When we sell $200,000 in merchandise we give you $20,000 in re­ bates good now. This is probably 2 to 3 times the amount of any other store. I • • *You Save Now You do not wait to the end of a given time. You do not lose your tickets; a lapse of memory does not cause you to lose all. • • • * You Get the Profit on Your Purchase It is not placed in a lump sum and given to some other student. • • • Your Receipts on Hand are Stilj Good We have not placed a dead line. w • * You Don’t Have to Remember to cash in on a certain date. W W W * You Meet No Planned Restrictions No advertising scheme. * You Receive 40% Discount / on all used books, rn addition to your saving F O R A L L S C IE N C E C O U R S E S CORRECT BOOKS AND WE W IL L SUPPLY THE SUPPLIES. JU S T G IVE US THE COURSE NUM BER ★ LAB SETS P. I. SUPPLIES G Y M SU IT S i A T H L E T IC S I ENGINEERS’ SUPPLIES ARCHITECTS' SUPPLIES C A S H k >» B O O K S TOP PRICES PAID FOR BOOKS TO BE USED HERE AGAIN LOCKS . . DRAWING SETS . . SLIDE RULES . . TYPEWRITERS Bring in Last Term’s Books Now .. . W r Buy Discarded Books, Too On The Dreg . . . W e Cash Your Checks . . . W e A re Issuing A g e n t for W a r Bonds Texas Book Store THE FRIEN D LY STORE TH A T SERVICE BU ILT H I m ug.. In :. SUNDAY, M A R C H 5, 1944 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 Say U. T. Ensigns to Their Admirals: "G et M e a Boat PAG E // C^rda^s from new un forms an a n d coisgratulatic so lucky as y o u —- U Lieutenant ta c tic s. H ands cc a n d P. G . P atio cadets w ho becai w ho Qr<3CJU5tA Has b ecom e ar any ti -oun+a i n >k at th6H e since la; E. A i V # 3* 4-. M a n y ot th© folks cam© dow n fo r the commissi d to visit b o ys whe w ere unable to g o nom© w hr orders to rep ort fo r duty, ouch was the case rn, shown with his parents. S. Ensign D. S. Caldwell Jr., with hts name freshly stench cd his lu gga g e , walks o u t a fam iliar d o o rw ay and dow n a fam iliar ewalk as he p re p a re s to leave fo r u ndisclosed parts to g o into w ad in g c A . D. W i air SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1944 N o Girls; N o Frosh A t Freshman Dance B y H e le n e W ilk e and V o ln e y O ’C o n n or Aa traditional as registration lines, the freshman dance Satur­ day night in the Union Lounge kept— if not multiplied— it’s repu­ tation of more stags, more upper­ Freshmen? what are classmen. freshmen at a freshmen dance? The fleet was in and not a few sailors wore latest cam­ their paign ribbons, latest men’s fashion, it seems. Latest fashion for a girl was a flower in her hair, a smile on her lips, and a quick change of partners. Her for popularity was her presence. formula just back from Ben Hadon, emceeing the floor show, first introduced tenor Paul Wilkinson, the service, who sang “ You’ll Never Know” and “ Jeanie W ith the Light Brown Hair.” The little girl with the beautiful voice, Alice Munguia sang “ Besame Mucho” and “ The Man I Love.” The “ boogie- ever - peresent woogiests," Carl Mann and Je rry §tud Owens collaborated for a while. Later Mann knocked out Fats W aller’s *‘Yo’ Sox Don’t Match” and his own composition “ Ivory Jo e ” about a man in “ Big D.” “ Pigfoot Pete” was an added attraction. Among those dancing were Hunter Pickens, Kappa Alpha, with Mary Katherine Perkins . . . Betty Kallgren and Elm er Hixon sitting one out— perhaps ^iven more than one . Louis Turbeville and Miriam Croiey, both of Dallas, greeting friends . . . Roy Nun- nally dancing with Mary Robin­ son . . . Johnny Barnhart and Je r ­ ry Hood bemoaning the scarcity of co-eds. . . Bob Sorenson and Louise Muel­ ler having a very good time, ap­ parently . . . Thor Sjostrand, V- 12er, with date Mary MacDonald of Austin . . . Miro Klecka making his way among the dancers , . . Look! A freshman— Scotty Mc­ Neill from Beeville . . . A l Ragues, an ex now at Southwestern in V- 12, taking in another orientation dance to remember old times . . . Don Butcher and Colleen Jones heading for the punch bowl . . . Roy Newman and Elizabeth Jones there, too, Don Brown, R. 0. T. C. sporting a new cadet ensign’s star and stripe . . . Charlie Bell and Ed Chapman, stags, roaming around surveying the very limited field of gals . . . Bill Allen and Ruthie Lander just standing and talking . . . Allen Downey and Marie Dol- larhyde swaying to the sweet mu­ sic . . . Bennie Marroquin without June Emerson. Engineer sweetheart Anne Burk­ hart and date Red Nielson . . . Joe Gerhardt dancing with Peggy Cobb . . . S.A .E. Johnny Rader getting around^— as usual. Ray Lee, VVI 2 from C alifornia, taking down names, addresses, and phone numbers . . . Gene Hill and Irene Cohn on the veranda . . . Jane Huber* Helen Jo Owens, and Dorothy Moore, all freshmen from Port Arthur venturing out to see what Forty Acres is like on Satur­ day night, Marvin Chernosky dancing with Louise Lentsch . . . Dottie Drawe conversing with Mike Harrington, star in last year’s T. S. 0. per­ formance and just back from serv­ ice in the Navy. Leo Singleton, V-12er, with Betty Darland, transfer from L a ­ mar Jun ior College at Beaum ont . , . Norman Morgenstern “ lone wolfing" it after the basketball game *. . . Lewis Hall likewise . . . Bill Bradfield dancing— but only for a moment— with Nell Porter . . . Jerome Brady with Lurline Wall, another Port Arthur girl. B ill Libby, graduate student from Carnegie Tech recently in the service, and Hugh Thompson, another ex-service man just regis­ tering, breaking in on U. T. so­ ciety . . . Bob Armstrong and Frances Worley arriving very late. They’d been to the game. Ken Anderson dancing with Frances Jean Murphy . . . Charles Frezia, Navy dance orchestra leafier, be­ ing a participant fox* a change. MICA Sweetheart Dance to Be March 18 The M IC A sweetheart election committee will meet Tuesday a f­ ternoon at 5 o’clock in the M IC A office at the Union to consider ! nominees for the 1944 sweetheart of the organization, E. J Jones, , chairman, announced. Additional nominees will he ac ■ cepted by the committee, Jones said, and finalists will he pre- | sented Saturday night, March IP, at the annual M IC A Sweetheart Texas Union Lounge. A barn dance theme will be used. I Dance the in PAGE EIGHT Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 Something Old\ New, and Navy Blue M RS. BILL B A R N H O U S E M R S. G . G . M ILLER IV M R S. C L A U D E G R A V E S M RS. C L A Y T O N B A IR D M R S. R. E, BURNETT de. February 26, Uvalde. Ensign Sutton will report to N.O.B. Amphibious Training Base at Camp Bradford, and Mrs. Sut­ ton will go with him. H a tley-R o gers Annie Josephine Rogers of Aus­ tin to Brennon Robert Hatley of Lampasas. Mrs. Hatley is studying for a degree in interior decoration and Ensign Hatley was majoring in mathematics. For the present Mrs. Hatley will remain in Austin while Ensign Hatley goes to the Sub Chaser Training Center in Miami, Fla. * B a ir d -A le x a n d e r Dorothy Nolle Alexander of Houston to Clayton D. Baird of Houston. February 26, Houston. Mrs. Baird is an alumna of the University of Houston, where she was a member of Kappa Sigma Nu. She plans to do Red Cross work after Ensign Baird goes to sea duty. H o p p e l-R o s s M ary Sue Ross of Houston to Henry H. Koppel of Houston. Ensign Hoppel is assigned to the U .S.S. Vicksburg, a light cruiser not yet completed. He will re­ port to Newport, R. I., and Mrs. Hoppell will accompany him. M R S. H. H. H O P P E L the September, 1943, graduating class of Seton Hospital School of Nursing. She is now supervisor of the service department at Seton Hospital and has been taking twelve hours of work at the U ni­ versity on a degree in nursing ed­ ucation. The couple w ill go to San Fran ­ cisco, Cal., where Ensign Martin w ill report to the commandant of the Twelfth Naval District for temporary duty awaiting transpor­ tation to his ship. ★ S u tto n -Sm y th Sarah Belle Smyth of Uvalde to William Minims Sutton of Uval- M IS S L U L A R O SE B A R N E S Schleyer-Barnes Lula Rose Barnes of Kilgore to Otis Schleyer of San Antonio. First Presbyterian Church, K il­ gore, March 3. Miss Barnes was N.R.O.T.C. sweetheart and a Bluebonnet Belle candidate in 1943. She was an aqua queen candidate this year. The couple will live in Miami, Fla., until Ensign Schleyer fin ­ ishes his training. M r s . Schleyer will then return to the University to complete twenty hours of work on her degree. M R S. H. R, L O W E flow ers th a i bloom th e M R S. K A R L RIPPEL exquisite colors for your spring wardrobe. Enchanting white d o gw o o d , crisp periwink es, li­ lacs and a world o f other beauties captured in Jeanne Mayes, Clayton Wilson Marry Here Jeanne Harris Mayes and Clay­ ton Wilson were married Febru­ ary 27 in the First Presbyterian The Rev. Clayton H. Church. Wilson of Paris, Tenn., father of the groom, officiated, assisted by Dr. Frederick E . Brooks, pastor of the church. Mrs. Wilson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J . C. Mayes of Austin, was a member and past president of Beta Sigma Phi while in the University. She has been secre­ tary in the Department of Music during the past year. Mr. Wilson attended Northwest­ ern University, Evanston, III., where he was a member of Phi Mu Alpha and P i Kappa Lambda, music fraternities. Now a member of the University music faculty, he holds a bachelor of music and a master of music degree. A. Healy Mayes of Tyler gave the bride in marriage. The matron of honor was Mrs. George Strandtman of Austin. The only bridesmaid was Miss Mary Louise McNeese of Dallas. The groom’s attendants were Dr. Putnam Aldrich, best man, and Bub Wagner and Ira Hous­ ton, ushers. * Dr. Womack To Marry Miss Harris Mrs. Brandy Harris has an­ nounced the engagement of her daughter, Margaret Terry, to Dr. H arry Hail Womack Jr . MUs Harris attended The Uni­ versity of Texas, where she was a member of P i Beta Phi sorority. She was also a member of the Cotillion Club and the Jun ior W elfare Society of Galveston. A t present she works on the edi­ torial staff of Mademoiselle mag­ azine in New York City, Miss Harris is the daughter of Mrs. Harris and the late Mayor Brant- ly Harris of Galveston. Dr. Womack, the son of Mr. and Mrs. H arry Hall Womack of Fo rt Worth, received his bachelor of science degree from the North Texas State Teachers College and his medical degree from The U ni­ versity of Texas Medical College in Galveston, where he was a member of the Alpha Kappa Kap­ pa fraternity. At present Dr. W o­ mack is serving his interneship at the Kansas City General Hos­ pital in Kansas City, Mo. Wedding plans will be an­ nounced at a later date. * Sara Hassel, Dr. Whittington Troth Announced Dr. and Mrs. Roy Hassel Crock­ ett of San Antonio have an­ nounced the engagement of their daughter, Sara Margret, to James Conr.ellee Whittington, son of Mrs. Samuel Butler of Eastland and the late Dr. H. D. Whitting­ ton, Miss Crockett received her bachelor of arts degree from the University in June of 1941, and expects to be graduated from the School of Medicine in Galveston next June. Mr. WThittington, Medical Corps, United States Naval Reserve, also received a degree from the U ni­ versity in 1941. He is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and of Alpha Kappa Kappa. Judy-Fram es The engagement of Rosalie Frames and Aviation Cadet Rob­ ert Miller Judy has been an­ nounced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Ring. They will be married on March 14. Miss Frames is a junior stu­ dent in the University and a mem­ ber of Alpha Chi Omega sorority and the Bowling Club. Ju d y is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Lon H. Ju d y of Pilot Grove, Mo. ★ a Sarah Jo Williams of Gilmer, Jack ’43, and Lieutenant B.A. Lyles Conger of Uvalde were mar­ ried the First Janu ary 13 at Methodist Church at Gilmer. Miss Williams graduated from Stephens College in 1941. While at the University she was a mem­ ber of Kappa Alpha Theta soror­ ity, Pzatlx, Bluestockings, and Pierian Library Society. She was t e 1943 administration editor of the Cactus. Lieutenant Conger was a 1943 {TffcduHte of A. & M,, where he was a member of the Ross Volunteers. * M~!l-Matthew$ r : 'culprit of Marie WB of Houston, J. Martell of has been an­ nounced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Matthews. ..i, A. C m rrer-W iH ia m s M RS. BILLY M C R E Y N O L D S M RS. G. I L M A R T IN Here Come The Brides O f 15 Ensigns Theme song “ Anchors Aweigh” was supplemented by traditional wedding marches when fifteen of the University’s new officers were married. Because of a Navy rule that midshipmen cannot marry while in training, nine of the ensigns had to receive special orders from Washington to marry before their commissioning Monday night. Seems it all started when one of the officers-to-be and his fi­ ancee told their sad tale of not having time to marry after Mon­ day because of the bridegroom’s orders to report to his station immediately. One received permission. Eight followed suit. The other six married after Monday. ★ Barnhouse-Pierson Margaret Alvina Pierson of Gal­ veston to William Telford Barn- house of Austin. Mrs. Barnhouse attended the University in 1942-43 and was a member of Phi Mu sorority. She is now working for the recreation department of the city of Galves­ ton. Ensign Barnhouse w ill report to the commandant of the Twelfth Naval District in San Francisco for transportation to the destroyer U. S. S. Kidd. They w ill leave Texas around March l l . ★ Burne tt-Q ue b e Albert* B. Quebe of Brenham to Richard Eugene Burnett of Aus­ tin. February 26, Austin. Mrs. Burnett is a graduate nurse at Seton Hospital. They will live in Miami, Fla., wTsere Burnett will be stationed at the Sub Chaser Training Center. * G r a v e s - W alters M ary Helen Walters of Jasper to C l a u d e Graves. First Baptist Church in Jasper, February 26. Mrs. Graves is a business ad­ ministration student and will con­ tinue her studies by correspon­ dence. She will receive her degree in June. For the past year she' has been employed at the State laboratory. Health Department She is a member of the women’s honorary business administration sorority. ★ * L o w e -M a c k e y Priscilla Dawes Mackey of Aus­ tin to Howard R. Low© of Dallas. March 3. Mrs. Lowe is a member of Delta Zeta sorority. Ensign Lowe, a Phi Kappa Tau, is a past president of his N.R.O.T.C. class. His sta­ tion is the Naval Operation Base at Norfolk, Va. Mrs. Lowe will accompany him. Rippel-Bechter Olga Margaret Bechter of Yoa­ kum to Karl Edward Rippel of Borger. March I, Yoakum. Mrs. Rippel received her bach­ elor of business administration degree in February c f 1944. She was secretary of the Inter-Co-Op Council and a member of W IC A . * Miller-Henry Sara Virginia Henry of Mer­ cedes to George Guy Miller of Corpus Christi. First Methodist Church, Austin. Mrs. M iller received her degree in education in February. She was a Bluebonnet Belle nominee. She will teach school in Mercedes after Ensign Miller goes to sea duty. M c R e y n o ld s -L e w is Lezette Lewis of Midlothian to B illy McReynolds of Seymour. March I at Midlothian. Mrs. McReynolds is a member of the Homo Economics Club and the Homo Economics Guidance Council at the University, where she will return to complete work for her degree after Ensign Mc­ Reynolds goes to sea duty. E n ­ sign McReynolds was a member of M IC A , the Radio ^Workshop, and the Naval Club. Mrs. McReynolds will accompany her husband to the Great Lakes Naval Training School and later to Miami. * L iv in g s t o n -M c C u r d y Marian McCurdy of Cambridge. Mass., to Jack C. Livingston of Hutchinson, Kan. A ll Saints’ Chap­ el, Austin, February 26. Mrs. Livingston is a member of Delta Gamma sorority and is a student in the College of Arts and Sciences. Ensign Livingston is a member of Delta Sigma Pi and was a member of the swimming team. Mrs. Livingston will remain in school unless, her husband’s orders do not send him to «oa duty at once. it M artin-Pierce Laura Evelyn Pierce of Wey- burn, Saskatchewan, Canada, to Garland Ned Martin of Edinburg, March 3, Weyburn. Mrs. Martin was president of her junior class, president of the student body, and valedictorian of flow er cluster* to wear with your dressmaker suit, your spring pastels . . . you’il wear them in your hair, on your lapel, or in other in­ genious ways. ll ow er-spi ash ed p r in ts excitingly colorful prints deftly draped to mould the figure into stem-lined symmetry. Dresses with a welcome to Spring, a gay prom­ ise to summer, 10-95 - 35-00 SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1944 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 PASE NINE Marion anp/ Larry, Friends U Years, Wed at A ll Saints’ Leap-Year Day 6 Girls G e t Mortar Board, Join Parade Co-Eds, Navy Men to Take Part In Helping Hand Style Show University co-eds and Naval I be a Navy man. In the court will ( Noel, coloratura soprano with the Rossini Opera Company, will sing “The Waltz Song” from “Romeo and Juliet” at the second inter­ mission. The accelerated war-time sched­ ule at the University was respon­ sible for speeding up the “tap­ ping” of six co-eds February 21 as new members of Mortar Board, J national service orgamzat.on for senior women. m e n will take part in “The Dream: he Austin debutantes and their Life of Alice Blue Gown,” the servicemen escorts, a n n u a l J u n i o r Helping Hand Style i The Bergstrom Field orchestra show for the benefit of the Chil-! under the direction of Sergeant dren's Home to be held Tuesday I Jack Ream will play the special afternoon. March 7, at Hogg Me-; music for the production. During i the first intermission Mrs. Howard Boatwright will sing “ The Ber- Set to music, the show divides j Capped and gowned, members the ufc of Alice into gcenes. She! srereties” to the violin accompani- Specialty numbers during the show will be presented by Mise Margaret Cochran and Miss Martha Stone, dancers, and Dale Hart- ment of her husband. Miss Edith! kopf and Jean Poffard, musician*. , . mm&em invaded University classrooms in the traditional ceremony of plac­ ing the coveted mortar boards on the chosen girls. the heads of While the University tower chimes rang out “ The Eyes of Texas,” the new members were paraded around the campus in a solemn procession. first appears as a child in a toy shop, then grows up to a high school girl, a debutante, a matron, and finally, queen of the style j show. Identity of the queen will not; be revealed until her coronation i in the last act. The coronation! scene will have a Mardi Gras set­ ting, and the queen’s escort will “ We don't usually select mem- j ~ 7 to . . . . i t . . Cl the opening time of the year, ’ j Solemnity Scarce /'"*/ f > “National In University Club s hers at this Lucy Ellen Gibson of Sherman. J . explained. president, t J L headquarters granted us permis- sion to hold a special ceremony, j w QQkIv uhl/lG idQ h as under the new tri-mester plan ! these girls who have met the qual- I “ At last!— the dreams of many ideations would have graduated years!- a nightmare come true!” before the regular election, w'hich Thus read lines of will also be held next semester.” Vol. I, No. I, of The University One of the most enviable of Club Weekly Shillalagh, edited by all honors that can come to Uni­ Dr. Joseph Jones, associate pro­ versity girls, election to Mortar fessor of English and chairman Board is made on the basis of of the club’s publicity committee. high scholarship, character, lead­ “If the editor remains unassas- in campus activities, and ership it reads, sinated or un dr af t ed , ” service the University, with “ there may be more (gloomy membership limited to twenty. t hou gh t! ) ; if not, ave atque vale! e organ. of Fort Worth would conduct the; If readers co-operate, the editor- ninth annual spring revival begin- , promises to establish a “swap coi­ ning the first Sunday in April. Tho j yum” for the sale, exchange, or revival will last for a period of! riddance of “ plants, flowers, pups, ten days. S t u d e n t to C o n d u c t R e v i v a l I kittens, etc.” and Marjorie ^ the bridge Jameson S p rin g Blossom s She has a way with flow’ers, the lady-of-fashion this spring! They bloom in the prettiest places, right in her hair, on her belt, her lapel. Flowers attached to combs, 50c to 4.98. Floral tiaras, 1.98 to 3.98. Corsages. 50c to 1.98. Velvet h e ad ­ bands, 50c: with flower on bow trim, 1.00 to 2.98. Novelty chenille loop flowers and combs, 50c and 1.00. 50c to 4.98 SCARBROUGH’S FLOWERS, STREET FLOOR B y Kat hy Bland Te x a n So c i e t y S t a f f Leap year clay will always he reminiscent of Sadie Hawkins day for two of the most outstanding students of The University of Texas, for on February 29, 1914, they the crossed swords of new ensigns of the Navy R.O.T.C. unit as En­ sign and Mrs. Larry Jones. from under stepped Marion Thomas, March gradu­ ate, and Larry Jones, also a March graduate, were married in All Saints’ Episcopal Chapel Tues­ day at 8 o'clock. The Rev. Milton Maxwell, Congregational minister, read the ceremony. Following the service, a reception was held at the Chi Omega house. Marion is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Scott Thomas of Dal­ las, and Larry is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Jones, also of Dal­ las. Helen Swanson, student from Dallas, served as maid of honor, and Peggy Clark, student from Houston, and Elizabeth Ann Da­ vis of Dallas, cousin of the bride, were bridesmaids. Ensign H. M. Derrick, R.O.T.C. graduate, was best man, while groomsmen were John Hill of Kilgore, and Ralph Ellsworth of San Antonio, both members of the R.O.T.C. unit. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a white satin dress with full skirt and train. lace yoke was dotted with The seed pearl?. Her fingertip veil fell in three tiers from a heart- shaped *alin cap. H e r bridal bou­ quet was white stephanotis. The maid of honor and brides­ maids wore similar dresses of rose They were full-skirted taffeta. with fitted bodices and shirred yoke inv-!s. They carried Ameri­ can Beauty roses, and their small rose straw hats had clusters of American Beauty roses on each side. Tommie and Larry, campus as­ for four years, met at s o c i a t e * the “Y,” when Larry was presi­ dent of the Freshman Fellowship Club and Tommie was vice-presi­ dent. Although they are both resi­ dents of Dallas, they had gradu­ ated from different high schools their and had never met until freshman year. After a year of working and playing together, they decided to get pinned their sophomore year. It was the. week before Christmas when Tommie caused an uproar on her entire floor at Littlefield Dormitory, where she was an upperclass ad­ viser, by showing off her new Tejas pin. ENSIGN A N D MRS. LARRY JONES ‘Christianity and Block Voting’ O n e of Unique Hazen Topics suey or shrimp salad and maybe a piece of chocolate pie, all pur­ chased out cf a gr an t from the Hazen Foundation, from which the Suppers get their name. to block voting on What did Jesus say about “cul­ tural lag?” How does Christianity relate the campus? Does religion have any bearing on a student’s attitude and activities? at The University of Texas. They set up criteria for determining whether or not a thing is Chris­ tian. They imagine a society in which the Christian ideals could work. And finally they compare These are some questions which campus or local situations with the society and measure listen imagined them by the Christian criteria. about twenty-five students have been discussing in religious bull sessions, known by the more digni­ fied title of the “ Hazen Suppers,” once a week at the Y.M.C.A. At this time. besides being an upperclass adviser at Littlefield, Tommie wa? a member of Chi Omega sorority, a member of Or- ; ango Jackets, and president of freshman Alpha Lambda Delta, honorary’. Larry was a new mem­ ber of Cowboys, and both were still working in the “ Y.” Tommie J had aUo taken a fling in politics in the fall by being elected to the Students’ Assembly from the At T o ’clock, in a spirit of fine fellowship, you in on the “ What Can I Believe?" group, con­ ducted by Ted Ledeen, assistant The Hazen Suppers are distinc-: secretary of the Y.M.C.A. With live as religious discussions for Rex Hopper, Jr.. Shirley J emerson, several reasons. No pressure is ex- Mac Wallace. Joe Edward*, and erted on students to come. Only others, you discuss the historic ap- that a intelligent reli- while He was man. He knew the pion, are invited. Members of natural law of Cod and revealed j about equal understanding are put j the spiritual possibilities in man. “The biggest need of the U n i - 1 in groups of ten. The result is In asking for followers, someone \ ‘ W Tommie was a Blue- varsity is the provision of more discussions in which the members suggests He did not bring up ques- adequate means for helping stu- J share their ideas freely, without nous of t h e o l o g i c a l formula, but dents to around an ideal.” The Hazen Suppers have served for four years as a rather success- ful answer to the problem recen t-j their interest of Art, and Scipnc„ . I ly stated by a student government in J,1,1" " m in t of Phi I official as follows: Their junior year was a con­ tinuation of their sophomore year. Both became more and more act­ ive in campus organizations, Tom­ mie being Chi Omega president, a member of Sigma Iota Epsilon, and member of numerous com­ minces and boards. Larry became j faith. They decide whether or I these parts are applicable to Just what this “way of life” was per* attack their need by doing j mate picture of what goes on in a Libby Ledeen’s group on “Records imagine yourself of the Life of Jesus” is trying to five. or some of five, things. They Hazen evening, the at a long table, about fi o’clock work out. The “ kingdom of God,” work out what they think are they decide, is bettor expressed as important parts of the Christian ^ some Friday night in the last two not months, with twenty-five or thirty the “realm of God” and is some- life students. They are cating chop, See CHRISTIANITY, Page 12 lives fear of hurt feelings or being mis- said “ Come, follow mc,’ few. who have demonstrated proach of Jesus, deciding .......................__________ I _____ * integrate Participants in the Hazen Sup- For a more concrete and intl- College F n V ^ S 'boys’ T V bm an hon-j bonnet Belle nominee. u- 4 ________________ out my way of life.” of the Navy R.O.T.C. r/Ji _________ ^ understood. officer or „ t their in ... I j % ... member of the an unit and was a Union Board. At the end of the year, both of them were named ; a? Goodfellows in the 1943 Cac- j tus. And they became a tradition 'J? as one of the most ideal couples V on the campus. . j ‘J Their senior year, the end or their joint success story on the campus, saw Larry president of the Students* Association, and Tommie president o f the Senior Cia ? and Cap and Gown, as well as president of Chi Omega for the second year. Larry was elect­ ed to Friars, senior honorary for 1 men, and Tommie was elected to Mortar Board, senior honorary for women. Both were listed Who’s Who in American Colleges in 1944, a fit* and Universities ting climax to four years of work aru! activity in the University. | | ** y % Last week Tommie and Larry j ■•>«§ in % | , < J | laughs at their j were chosen bride and bridegroom the week by Radio Station of KTEC. Tommie leap-year wedding, that she had to wait until February 29 to get ber man. Any way you look at it, it’s a happy ending to a four-year campus romantic tale familiar to many students. saying Ensign and Mrs. Larry Jones left for Great Lakes Naval Train- ing Station where he will receive further training. ,4 I t I f Girls o f T o m o r r o w In J o e k e l Talk / Dr. S. L. Joekei, instructor in Bible, spoke at the annual m e e t-j inp of the Austin Girl Scout As­ sociation Wednesday night “Girls row.” on | the World of Tomor-, in for O ffic e rs the year were elected. They are Mrs. Edmund H einsohn, president; Dr. W. E. Gettys, vice president; Mrs. C* E. Berkmen, secretary; and Thurlow B. W’eed, treasurer. The program concluded with demonstrations by school troops. Streator* Soft. creamy pastel beauties in I DOC wool to add cheery notes to your spring w a rd ­ robe. Short sleeve pull-overs, long-sleeve card i­ gans, boxy long-sleeve pull­ overs and cardigans in plain and knubby knits. Sizes 34 to 40. regular 3.98 to 7.95 Skirts W herever you go you’ll look p retty in a pastel pleated skirt. 100rc wools and w’oolen mix­ tures in plaids and solids. Sizes 12 to 18. 5.95 to 8.95 SCARBROUGH S SPORTS SHOP, SECOND FLOOR l i m e to r i c k your Judging from the clamor for cottons w e’ve begun to hear, this will be glorious news. The 1944 crop of cotton is a bum per one, tem pting you to right n o w ! sta rt buying your cotton dresses Young, dainty linens, interpretations chambrays, ginghams, piques, seersuckers, spuns. Solids, stripes, prints, checks. Sizes 9 to 15. in spun 7.95 to 19.75 SCARBROUGH’S COLLEGE SHOP, SECOND FLOOR PAGE TEN Co-Op Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 SUNDAY, M A R C H 5, 1944 Ives Students 2 0 Per Cent Dividend e t Q oad By PAT TEARLE PA T T E A R LE F in a n c ia l to ta l a m o u n t o f s t a t e m e n t o f m a n y life in su ra n c e com panies f e a t u r e th e th e m oney to be n e fic ia rie s. Back of paid jot. s o m e w h a t these ' cold fig u re s, t h e r e is a w ealth of told * would he a saga of h u m a n e n ­ h u m a n p ath o s which, w hen im pressive, deavor. The life u n d e r w r i t e r s k n o w full i well t h a t b u t f o r th e ir p atient irt- i sistan c e only an unbelievably *111811 this e n o r m o u s f ig u re a m o u n t of would have been paid. I E n jo y th e F i n e s t a t th e M I L A M I CAFETERIA I Eat at M ila m ; y o u ’ll f i n d | th e best in s o u t h e r n f o o d I p r e p a r e d in th e m o st m o d - f e m w a y . I MILAM CAFETERIA I A u s t i n * M u t t P o p u l a r E a t i n g PUcV* I §01 Confr*** Phone 2-S.122 For C o m p l e t e S e le c t io n o f S c h o o l S u p p l i e s V i s i t H a g e 's 5 an d 10c S to re Th* 3tor* with I .OOI to Chooa* F ro m item * H A G E S Aero** (ro m H ogg A u d ito riu m 4------------------------------------------------------ Pictures Taken I At Orientation Are at Woody's N ew s tu d e n ts w ho a t te n d e d th e O rie n ta tio n dan c e last n ig h t m et f o r th e firs t tim e, W oody, Drag p h o to g r a p h e r, who th e y will soon notice, the U n iv e r s ity fu n c tio n s. He is th e re th e dances, foo tb all gam es, fo r f o r R ound-up. a n d on hand fo r rush p a rtie s, a n d b an q u e ts. is alw a y s p r e s e n t a t And. f o r most of th e stu d e n ts, m e m o ries o f a dance j u s t a r e n ’t co m p lete w ith o u t th a t p ic tu r e of the s t u d e n t and his or h e r d a t e ; th e p ic tu re t h a t W o o d y took a t the dance. W oody b r in g s his c a m e ra e q u ip ­ m e n t to the dance, sets it up, and in a few’ m in u te s, is busy ta k in g p ic tu r e s of th e m a n y couples who hav e fo rm e d a long line. * th e p ic tures Some o f the new’ stu d e n ts , who h a d th e th e i r p ic tu re m a d e a t O rie n ta tio n d an c e may be w o n d e r ­ ing w h ere th e y can g e t prints, will t h a t w ere f in d all t a k e n a t th e d ance on display on the th e w’all of W oody’s studio, s t u d e n t C a m e ra Shop. All n e e d s th e to to do studio, pick o u t favorites, a n d a copy o f the proof m ade a n d h a v e a p ic tu r e made. th e is go o v er their U n til r e c e n tly , W oody n o t only took p ic tures, b ut developed those w hich s tu d e n ts took also. He is so this r u s h e d now*, how ever, service to th e s tu d e n ts has b een d isc o ntinue d . W o o d y ’s main w ork is ta k in g p o r t r a i t p ic tu res, n o t p a r t y p ic tu res, how ever. T he C a m e ra Shop located ac ro ss the s tr e e t fro m the U nion. t h a t is t Traffic Safety Programs Reduce Insurance Rates V igorous s a f e ty p ro­ tr a f f i c g r a m s in the past few’ y e a r s have red u c e d Dallas and F o r t W o rth fro m th e h ig he st to the low est in­ s u r a n c e b rac kets, acco rd in g to J. P. Gibbs, S ta te c a su a lty in su ran c e com m issioner. In 1928 Dallas a n d F o r t W o rth w’ere in the highest in su ra n c e ra t- ] in g t e r r i t o r y and to d a y the p r iv a te p a s s e n g e r a u tom obile bodily lia­ bility policy h olders in th e se tw’o cities pay th e low est r a te s of a n y place in Texas. Students Are Urged To Keep Cash Receipts is a In these d a y s w h e r e a tw o p er c e n t dividend on a savings a c c o u n t is rem a rka b le , a tw e n ty p e r c e n t dividend t h a t is w h a t the U n iv ersity C o-opera­ tive society is p a y in g in cash to s tu d e n ts who tu r n e d in th e ir cash re g iste r f o u r- months period e n d in g F e b r u a r y 24. r a r ity . Y et rec eip ts o f th e D u rin g th e p a s t y ea r, $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 ' in cash has been r e f u n d e d to s t u - 1 dents, a n d th e r e is e v e ry indica­ tion th e b e n e f its will be g r e a t e r in th e f u t u r e . t h a t D ean A m o N o w otny, C h a irm an of th e Board of D irec tors, u rges s t u d e n ts to collect t h e i r dividends a t once. A t h i r ty - d a y period f o r collection A ny m on ey re m a in in g will be added to j th e n e x t period. a u th o riz e d . is The oniy r e q u i r e m e n t s to p a r t i ­ c ip a tio n in th e d ividend plan in to save th e cash rec eipts. A s tu d e n t is allow ed to tu r n in rec eip ts fo r only his own pu rch a ses. T h ro u g h th e n a m e of a n y s t u d e n t o r g a n iz a ­ tion, its m e m b e rs m a y su b m it r e ­ ceipts to g e th e r , if th e dividend is used f o r th e b e n e f it o f t h e m e m ­ bership of t h a t o r g a n iz a tio n . Only b o n a f id e s tu d e n ts of th e U n iv e r ­ sity a r e allow ed to p a r tic ip a te in th e plan . The p a y m e n t p erio d will be th e l a t e r p a r t of dividend n ex t The South's most unique res­ taurant with a South of the Border Atmosphere! S p e c i a l iz in g In D e lic io u s M e x ic a n S te a k an d S e a f o o d D in n e rs C o o l C o lo r fu l P a tio O p e n E v e n in g s O ld S eville 16th at G u a d a l u p e Ladies T h e N e w C O L D W A V E P e r m a n e n t Is E x c e l l e n t fo r F in e Hair MIDWAY B e a u ty S h o p ) Z270 G uadalupe < Dial 8 44S1 ( * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * At Your Favorite Interstate Theatre . . . You'll * * Find The W orld's Best Entertainment , . . A n d Excellent M o vie s AT THE P A R A M O U N T A T THE STATE In T e c h n i c o l o r ! 'The Desert Song' — W i t h — D e n n i s M o r g a n I r e n e M a n n i n g A d v e n t u r e ! 'Gung Ho!' — W i t h — R a n d o l p h S c o t t N e w s • P o p u l a r S c i e n c e To Be in the Know... Stay Tuned to KN O W j | TO THOSE LOVABLE LAUGH PROVOKERS m m a In their own unparel- leied I by I# of go o d h o rn *-spun Y a n k e e Humor. KNOW M O N D A Y , TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY IT S A BLUE NETWORK PROGRAM I 490 on Your Dial J u n e . S tu d e n ts are u r g e d to begin now to save t h e i r cash r e g is t e r r e ­ ceipts. to T he p r e s e n t plan of p a y in g cash dividends the s t u d e n t s grew f ro m a desire o f th e B o a rd of Di­ r e c to r s to m a k e th e e s ta b lis h m e n t tr u ly co-operative. T h o u g h th e co­ operation of th e S t u d e n t s ’ A ssem b­ ly, t h e s tu d e n t body was given th e o p p o r tu n ity la st s p r in g of voting on th e m e th o d of re f u n d in g . T he Rochdale p lan, now in o p e ra tio n , w as a d opted. This m e th o d is con­ sidered by m a n y a s th e m o st e f ­ fic ie n t plan a n d is in p ra c tic e a t n u m e r o u s e d u c a tio n a l in stitu tio n s th r o u g h o u t th e c o u n t r y . No o th e r pla n used h as stood th e te s t of tim e as h as th e Rochdale plan. T he U n iv ersity Co-op was o ri­ g in a te d a n d o rg a n iz e d by Dr. W. J . B a ttle in 1896. D u rin g th e last th r e e years, th e v olum e of business inc re ase d over $ 100,000 due has largely th e to th e o p e r a tio n of p r o f i t sh a rin g plan a n d the f r i e n d ­ ly in t e r e s t o f th e s t u d e n t body in th e store. T he B o a rd o f D ire c to rs is com ­ poned of f o u r f a c u lty m einbers selected by th e B o a rd o f R e g e n ts a n d f o u r s tu d e n ts a p p o in te d by the P r e s id e n t of th e S t u d e n t ’s As­ sembly, Texas Raises N a tio n ’s December Oil Output T h e n a t i o n ’s p ro d u c tio n o f p e ­ d u r in g D e c e m b e r was tr o le u m 500,000 b a r r e ls a day above th a t o f D ec em b e r a y e a r ag o — a n d T e x a s w as e n tir e ly responsible, B u r e a u of B usiness R e sea rch o f ­ ficials point out. U n ite d S ta te s p ro d u c tio n of the in D e c e m b e r was “ black g o ld ” 4,371,850 b a rre ls daily, o r 500,- t h a t o f 210 b a rre ls daily ab o v e D ecem ber, 1942. T e x a s ’s daily a v e r a g e pro d u ctio n w as 1,895,150 b arrels, or 500,600 barrels above th is s t a t e ’s o u t p u t rn D ecem ber, 1942. B oth s ta te a n d n a tio n a l p r o ­ d u c tio n showed a slight decline f ro m N ovem b e r o u tp u t, b u t the T e x a s d e c re a s e w as s m a lle r — 30,- 350 barrel* daily c o m p a re d to 41,600 f o r the n a tio n . L O O K A H E A D J T h e d a y m a y c o m e w h e n y o u wi l l w i t h y o u h a d ha d y o u r • y e t s a f e P l a y a n d h a v e t h e e x a m i n a t i o n t o d a y . A v o i d e y e - a t r a i n , the e n e m y o f g o o d wo r k . e x a m i n e d . N O W O P E N U N D E R New Management • N E W F O O D • NEW SERVICE t NEW' AT M O SP H E R E O L D M E X I C O 806 RED RIVER A? E n j o y rn T r i p U p L a k e A u t t i n D u r i n g t b a F a i l I Charter the Riverboat . . . C O M M O D O R E Th# hill* be c kon Hie new *tu de nt* t hri ll, A f t e r n o o n h i k e s sire for a re*I be c o m in g e v e r the so popular and C o m m o d o re ste p* e t m a n y be aut ifu l pi cnic an d s p o r t pla y g r o u n d * . By C har te r O nl y Dial 2 - 2 4 * 3 O ff ic e 2 - 1 2 0 1 R esi d en ce 2 - 2 4 6 2 Dock* Bubble baths a re - ’* a !wa > what they :eem especially wren from ‘ Pin-Up Girl,** lr a filmed for Technicolor, scene forthcoming tee Twentieth C entury-Fox produc­ tion, starring Betty G rab!e, chetty and Over two hundred of the men, most of whom have a1-; re ad y earned rates ranging from Seaman, Second Class to C h ief P e t t y O ff ic e r s in v a r io u s * b ra n c h e s o f th e Service, jo in e d th e ; f ig h te r es c o rt was c r e d ite d w ith N av y b e f o r e P e a r l H a r b o r. In th e rec o rd of sho o tin g a g g r e g a te th e y r e p r e s e n t a to ta l . dow n f ifty -se v e n p lanes and sink- o f 1,048 y e a r s of N aval service, j ing one ship in one h o u r a n d f i f . an a v e r a g e o f o v er arn a n d e ig h t m o n th s p e r m a n . / in en is Edm und L. ength o f service Orlicki, A v iatio n C h ief R adio m an fro m D e tro it, who has been in the N avy f o r e ig h t y e a r s a n d seven m o n th s , H a r o ld S. F a w c e tt, Chief P h o t o g r a p h e r ’s M a te, G ra fto n , W e s t V irginia , and Ralph E. W a l­ lin, A viatio n C h ief M achinist im . A m u o n M ate, N e w m a n G rov e, N e b r a s k a , | also w e a r tw o “ hash m a r k s ” on . . th e n eight y e a r s o f service apiece. . cipation v n u i . . . . Trainee Officers Scholarships Give E ven m o re in te r e s ti n g to D on­ ald W. S h u e t t th a n a b a n d o n in g ship, when to rp e d o e d o f f C a ra co a , D .W .I., was s p o tt in g N aval g u n - . f ir e f r o m an o b se rv a tio n plane fo r A p p o in tm e n t o f t r a i n e r officer* the Ignited; th e O c to b e r 5 ra id on W ak e Island a n d th e b o m b a r d m e n t of T araw a S ta te s N a v a l F lig h t P r e p a r a t o r y j School was a n n o u n c e d S a tu r d a y by on N o v em b e r 20. C hief P h o to g r a p h e r 's M ate Don- ; L ie u te n a n t (j.g.) A lb e r t E d w ard s, fo r th e r e g im e n t a t ... , | l d R> Milje r Mobile, A laba m a , „ .. .. , . r t h e A i r M e d a | f o r hia p a r t i . B a tta lio n O ffic er, 13th B attalion, . l e f t sleeve*, s ig n ify in g o \e i c ru z Islands. H e w as a b o a r d a B a tta lio n O ff ic e r in th e B a ttle of S a n ta I L ie u te n a n t (j.g.) D aniel M u rphy, f o r B a tta lio n to rp e d o plane t h a t s a n k a J a p a n - ; iA -4 4 , a n d L ie u t e n a n t (j.g .) Ralph ese h ea v y c ru ise r. He also w e a r s 0 -Connell, for B a tta lio n 2A-44. t h e P re s id e n tia l R p Johnston* AMM l r will I n it < ita tio n Those th o u s a n d y ea rs have been P e a r l H arb or th e a te r s o f this war awarded the E n te r p r is e f o r a c tio n ; cont n ue sp e n t in all t 0 serve as re g im e n ta l I in which U n ite d S ta te s ships or a t th e B a ttle of Midway. W h e n ; (.o m m a n d c r th ro u g h M arch l l w ith tr o o p s hav e p a r tic ip a te d . T w en ty - i r e t u r n i n g f r o m th e S a n ta C r u z ; R g Collins, A C M M - ( A A ) , as seven o f the men u nd ergoing in- action, he took p ic tu r e s of th e J a p str u c t io n a t th e F ligh t School w ere a t ta c k s on th e E n te r p r is e a n d th e I talion, w in g a n d p la to o n appoint- on th e r ec eiv in g end a t P e a r l H a r - ; H o rn e t. C hief H a ro ld F a w c e t t also m e r i ts whic h will two bor, b u t m o s t o f th o se sam e men sta rlin g M a r? h 6, are as a n d m a n y of th e i r s h ip m a te s have had an o p p o r tu n ity the J a p a n e s e back in kind. r e g im e n ta l ad ju tan t. O th e r b a t - 1 la s t fo r t o p ay 13th BATTALION ler - R. K R ai de r AMM 2c *—R. N. J e t e r , A v i a t i o n Va- h a s r e c o rd e d m a n y b a ttle ac tio n s w eeks in th is w ar. H e w as b ehind his ! follow! c a m e ra a t P e a r l H a r b o r. L a t e r he r e c o n n a is ­ f o r ty - f iv e co m p leted sance a n d m a p p in g m issions in invasion of f o r Bougainville, New B rita in, N ew G u in ea an d th e C e n tr a l Solomons th e W i n * - E ig h t m en g o t t h e i r ch a n c e in th e fa m o u s M arshall a n d G ilbert p r e p a r a tio n A jR a id , StJavy’s F e b r u a r y th e I , f i r s t o ffe n s iv e ac tio n of 3 94 2. orld W a r II, e ig h t m o r e g o t cam paign, A T L A N T IC C H A R T E R th e ir cha n ce a t the B a ttle o f th e ( o r a l Sea, May 3-8, 1942, w h i l e | A r j 0 B r jp n d c n b au g h , Y oem an, i - v e n t e e n p a n i c : p a l a d in t h e de- f i r t t rIasJ r e s t a t i n g B e tti e o f Midway, w hen | tj th e N av y san k f o u r J a p c a r r ie r s , w ork in r o n ju n c t jo n w ith t h e his-j th r e e d e s tro y e r s , d ow ned a t le a s t to r jc m e a tin g a t sea 2 . 5 p la n e s , d a m a g e d tw o h a,tie- ships, tw o h e a v y c ru ise rs, lig h t c r u is e r s a n d f o u r t r a n s p o r ts , j ly G u a d a lc a n a l th e m en in A u g u st, w h en P r e s i d e n t R o o sev elt t h r e e >nd P rim e M in isler C hurchill joint-1 thc A tla n iic C h a r t e r , I while B ruce M. G a n non, AMM the f i r s t class, and R o b e r t M. E v erly, , jk„ tn , e „ bpst of thp clerical E le v en o f h„ did iMUed from t h , ; I 7, in in th e J S q u a d ro n invasion o f ^ er# 0f j p a r ti c ip a tin g j G u a d a c a n a l, A u g u s t R e g im e n t h a d th e sa tis f a c tio n of ARM second class, now both m em - j t h e gam e b a tta lio n a n d 1 9 4 2 , 1 platoon a t th e N av a l F lig h t School, 0f t h e i r ex p e rie n c e s when both I while six help ed in the invasion of j A fr ic a a n d th r e e each in th e in- w ere m em bers of th e sam e P a tr o l I th e South P acific, j vasion s o f Sicily a n d Ita ly . O th e r com bat d u ty th e s e men T hese r a n g e c h ronologically fro m have seen includ e th e T okyo Raid D ec em b e r 7, 1941, a t both P e a r l ! I o f A pril 18, 1942, th e fiv e phases ( H a r b o r a n d Midway to la t e r bom b- j ( o f th e S o lo m o n s ; jn g. r a jdg on K u p a n g , T im or, L ae, j < ( B a t tle s o f Savo Island, E a s t e r n j F in sc h h a fe n , a n d S a la m a u a , spot- S olom ons, ( ape E s p e r a n c e , S a n ta | tin g a n d b o m b in g e n e m y shipping C ru z Island a n d G u a d a lc a n a l ) , the ancj s t r a f i n g J a p a n e s e a i r strips B a ttle o f phase* o f th e A le u tia n s C am paign | Jftck A Maxvrel!, A viation Chief a n d th e r e c e n t successful a c tio n s j M achinigt M a te on th c L ex in g to n in d u r ing. the B a ttle of th e C oral Sea, at r e g r e ts t h a t h e w a s w ound ed t h e i r ; t h a t ac tjon f o r th e r e a s o n t h a t , th e B ism arc k S ea, all and barracks. I a r a v a , Bougainville, a n i th e B a ttl e o f th e G ilb e rt Islands. A g e n e r a tio n f r o m now i n d c h i l d r e n will listen E t t e n - j w ^ en th e cre w a b a n d o n e d ship, he 1 C o m m a n d e r C a m p b e ll. A M M Se ( R i * h t ) — P . P l a t o o n L e a d e r s t e i n , A M M P l a t o o n L e a d e r { 1 5 ) * — ( 1 3 ) — N . B . G o l d ­ l r 15. Twargo, 1 1 T > - -R. XL Webb. ARM Sc P l a t o o n L e n d e r A R M I c W i n * C o m m a n d e r I K n h u tich , AMM ( C H ­ F!a*r><.:> L ead er AMM. i c Platoon L ea d er 11 5 ) - I)— B. W, M. P l u m b , B e t t e , P i s t o n n L e a d e r ( I S ) — D . R . W a g . BATTALION IA -44 C o m m a n d e r — D . C . G r i m w o o d , A C M M A M M 2c n o n , A C ( A A ) A d j u t a n t — IL C B a i le y , A RM 2c W i n * C o m m a n d e r ( R i g h t ) — E. W . C l a r k s o n , C Y ( A A * P l a t o o n L e a d e r ( l l — J . A . C o l l i n s , A R M I c AOM 2 c P l a t o o n L e a d e r ( 8 ) — -B. E . L u c a s , P l a t o o n L e a d e r 2 c A M M ( 8 ) — V , A . U l e n , W i n y C o m m a n d e r ( L e f t ) — C , M c ­ P l a t o o n L e a d e r ( 2 1 ——M . W . H a r k i n s , C a l l . A C A M M 2 c P l a t o o n L e a d e r AM 2c P l a t o o n L ead er A O M I e ( 4 ) — J . F , Pei f er , ( 6 ) — C, P. W h i t t l e , BATTALION ?A 44 C o m m a n d e r - I L IL F . B r o w n . A C M M I A A ) A d j u t a n t — C. P K e a s t . A R M 2c W in g C om m an der * R ig h t )— R . W . C h a p m a n , A C M M ( A A ) ( 7 I — V . B . A n d e r s o n , P l a t o o n L e a d e r Csp * A > (AA) P l a t o o n U M L e a d e r ( 0 ) — J . 2 c P. M a s o n , Platoon Leader ( l l ) — J. A, Maxwell, ACMM ( A A ) W i n g C o m m a n d e r ( L e f t ) — W . J . H a r r a h , A C MM ( A A ) L e a d e r ( s ) — W , P l a t o o n in J . H e a r d . P la to o n L ead er ( I O ) — H. N . T onne*, A MM 2 c ACM < A A) P l a t o o n L e a d e r ( 1 2 ) — D, T. W i l ­ ^ . , 4 „ p ,, in ( A A ) th j th e r i ■ l i a m s , CY ' life r a f t ; ....... —• — B o u g a i n v i l l e , tDrics o ( m in u t eg of n J. u nr ou to ‘ A b a n d o n sw appinf, f , r s t ; die P a s t e r n rib b o n ( hicago, Chief B o a U w a m s | R . J a m e s B. M ach in ist M ate D E C O R A T IO N S t h e „ m e n sit a r o u n d ' a n d h as been t h . A s ia t ic . P a d f ic , button C a n to r a t U t . , w ho P re s id e n t ia l U m t c i t a t i o n , w orn | to In a d d i tio n o n . m a n w e a r s j l o t o f an A-36 dive b o m b e r A jr Me one w e a rs th e Nay)- j th e M e d ite r r a n e a n t h e a t e r . to , , la ter, A viation k a c i o - , , t r a i n e ( , a t t h a N a v a i p l i g h t ; p le tin g eighty-one missions as p i­ tne A r u e a a i, one w e a rs rue *xavj ne w t . j . i 1 1Q «.«»*• and Marine Corps Medal, 119 wear Ex Returns to U . S. tr a d i tio n a l A f t e r 8 1 M i s s i o n s C a p ta in A lb ert S. H a r t m . n J r ., 17 s t u d e n t in I M 1-42. h a , r e tu r n e d th e U n ite d S t a t e s a f t e r com- 5vely to t h e m a n y ta le s th e y h av e , WRg „e n t t0 t h e s i c k B a y o f an os­ lo tell. A v ia tio n M a chinist M ate, c o r tin g ves8e] a n d had to depend second^ class. H a r o ld HL b a g io , Qn t jle eye f i t n e s s a c c o u n ts of his (. hief j g hium ates f o r th e p ic tu r e o f th e N ew ^ ork City, A v iation M ach in ist M a te J a c k A. Maxwell,! D anville, Va., B o a t s w a i n s M ate, u .t _ »» ‘L ex .’ se con d c i a . , , J a c k H ile m on , Br. win T e r n ,..C d x a w a i n R ay m o n d H. | Wallace, M ilwaukee, s p e n t f o u r t e e n d a y . on a rn the I n d ia n O cean a n d s n t t t L ' ^ e sh ip w re c k e d a cu e d only .. . , , sh ort time later, Aviation Radio- tim e sh o rt ' « . -. m u , D ra t c Ib m , D o nald n . Shu- . t i | 3 | ) M a te H a r r y J . Boyce, P itts b u r g h , I ^ ^ ^ V h e ^ u r o p e n n * A frican-M id- FU.',' h as been a w a r d e d A viation M ach in ist M ate, class, L e o n a r d G, Moody, M a lvern, A rk ., ail have had sh ip ” a t som e tim e in th is w ar. rn n to in Hnrtninn C a p ta in H a r tm a n , w h o is now < a p ta m n a r tm a n , c re e s R edistri- A m e r ic a n T hcR tre C a m p a ig n a t th e A rm y A ir Ko, I Miami Beach, | the Air Medal w ith nine o a k l e a f clu ste rs for! th e ir m a n y th e D istinguished F lyin g Cross, He ex p e rien c es? N o t o f te n , usu ally j p a r tic ip a te d in th e S ale rn o cam- y o u ’ll f in d th e m a r g u in g b e tw e e n paign, and has one enem y trans- the m se lves o f w hose s t a t e is r e a lly th e best. I i Louis, has th e d istin ctio n o f hav- j T e x a n s have th e ed g e in n u m b e r s I ing been a m e m b e r o f th e crew o f t h e f i r s t Allied pla n e to s ta y o v er­ n ig h t a t Bougainville. E d g a r K e n t ­ firs t field, A v iatio n R a d io m a n V a s s , C h e y e n n e , la n d e d in a plane s t R en nell Islan d in th e S olom ons g r o u p w hich h it a r e e f a n d quickly nobo d y a b o a r d to p r o te c t th e best sank. T h e crew m a d e sh o re a n d s p e n t t h r e e d ay s in tro p ic a l pleas- I urea b e f o r e b ein g “ r e s c u e d ” by a PBY . A s K e n tf ie ld h im s e lf p u ts it, “ A good tim e w as had by all.” W a lte r A. V an H o rn , A v ia tio n M a c h in ist M a te f i r s t class, H o m ­ iny, Okla., is p r o u d e s t o f h a v in g be e n a m e m b e r o f th e a i r s q u a d ­ r o n P r e s id e n t convoy ed R o o s e v e lt’s a i r mission on on e of t h e lo n g e s t o v e r - w a te r le gs o f its histo ric j o u r n e y to C a iro a n d T e­ h e r a n . Jr.. a s s ista n t ( t h i r t y - f o u r ) , b u t C a lif o r n ia n s p r o fe sso r of busin ess law, who r e ­ r u n a close a n d e q u a lly v o c ife ro u s signed to e n t e r th e a r m e d forces, tw e n ty -se v e n . N ew was r e c e n tly p ro m o te d to L ie uten- second w ith Y ork, P e n n sy lv a n ia , Illinois, R a n - 1 a n t Colonel. H e in sas a n d M a ssa c h u se tts a r e also in I th e offic e o f C hief o f S t a f f C on ­ is ora] G eorge Mar hall, a t W ash- t h e m a j o r '43, T hose who a r e f ig h tin g a losing t h e ca m p u s M onday a n d visited f o r c e r ta in a r e b a t tle t h e m en T u e s d a y while on f u r lo u g h from fro m th e D is tr ic t o f C olum bia, t'ne H a r v a r d N av a l S upply C orps M ary la n d , New Mexico a n d S o uth > g cjjoo|. E n sig n E ld e r, who also C aro lin a. I hose reg io n s a r e lop- a ^ en(jpd C o lum bia U n iv e r s ity tw o \ r e s e n te d by one tr a in e e apiece, t h e m e n e v e r a g r e e a b o u t. T h e y f o r e he gecs ac tiv e d u ty . a r e th e U nite d S ta te s , th e U n ite d i S t a t a . N avy, an.l T e x a s w omen. th e e t e r n a l q u es tio n j p o r t to his credit. ★ in te r e s ts o f D ela w are, M aine, Ne- j v ad a , V e r m o n t J o h n so n , A v iation f i r s t class, St. j m onths, will be given eig h t m o re E n sig n Carl E ld er, B.A . Ben H. Powell I h e re a r e only t h r e e s u b je c ts ington, D. C, r e c o m m e n d e d league, b u t o r W y o m in g is a u d i to r tr a i n i n g t h e r e t h a t * ^ a t H a r v a r d b e - : th e i r B u t n o t all o f th e e x p e rien c es h a v e bee n so fo re b o d in g o r p ro­ fo u n d . Som e have laughs, n o t th e le a s t o f which is th e e x ­ p e rie n c e o f G ordo n W. A ltm a n , A v iatio n M a chinist Mat© second class, B ellin g h am , W ash. While b o u n d f o r K odiak, A lask a, a b o a r d a t r a n s p o r t ship, th e w atc h sighted E v e r y o n e was a “ s u b m a r i n e . ” d to ta k e c o v e r a n d , conse- th e next hrce d a y s below decks, while th e jship an x io u sly a w a ite d th e r e s t of I th e con v o y a n d its p r o te c tio n . A f t e r t h a t tim e, th e w a tc h section discovered its m istake . T h e en e m y (“ s u b ” tu r n e d o u i to be a whale. F if t y - * e v e n P la n e s cn tly, A ltm a n s p e n t T he b o m b in g s q u a d r o n in whcih I rw in O ’Q uin n, A v iatio n class. 'J a m e s {Machinist M ate, H om erville, Ga., se rv e d a n d second V isitors on th e ca m p u s L i . u t a n . n l J . c k B ro o k ., A a .o -| la st j c i a te E d i t o r o f T h e T e x a n th is spring, is sta tio n e d w ith th e Ma- w eek w ere S econd L ie u te n a n t ani! j rjnos at F o r t B e n n in g , Ga., a n d Mrs. Bowling B y ers. L ie u te n a n t will leave this w ee k fo r Philadel- Byers, B J . ’41, received his com ­ phia, P a. F e b r u a r y 27 he will mission S a t u r d a y af S elm an Field, leave f o r a t h r e e m o n th s ’ naval a n d th e course in co m m u n ic a tio n s a t H a r ­ v a r d U n iv ersity . A rm y A ir F’orce. is now a n a v i g a to r in •k A diation C a d et J o h n F. S k in ­ A f t e r his te n - d a y leave, L ie u ­ t e n a n t B y e rs will r e p o r t f o r a c ­ tiv e d u t y a t A rd m o re , Okla., on in I F e b r u a r y 18. H e e n t e r e d th e A ir ; th e College of A m a n d Sciences J in 19 3 4 -3 8 , was a p p o in te d flig h t F o rc e s in S e p te m b e r o f 1942. th e A rm y A ir F o rc es; in F e b r u a r y com p letin g 5» b o m b a rd ie r tr a i n in g a t th e Carls-! bad, N ew M exico, A rm y A ir Field. B e fo re e n t e r i n g th e A ir F o r c e s | o f f ic e r ner, C o rp u s Christi, s t u d e n t a f t e r L ie u t e n a n t B y e rs se rve d as S p o rts e d i to r a n d city new s r e p o r t e r o f th e T y le r M o rn in g News f o r a y e a r a n d a half. A t t h e U n iv ersity he w as E d ito r ia l A ssista n t on T he Daily T e x a n , w as on the U n iv e r­ sity L ib r a r y s t a f f , a n d w as c h a ir ­ m a n o f th e T e x a s U n io n p u b lic ity co m m itte e a n d th e C u l tu r a l E n ­ te r t a i n m e n t C o m m ittee. H e w as its [ a m e m b e r of S igm a D elta Chi. F lig h t O ff ic e r S k in n e r g r a d u - j a t e d f ro m one o f th e A rm y A ir I F o r c e s ’ n e w classes o f “ t r ip le ­ t h r e a t m e n ”— a irm e n w ho have co m p leted in dead- j in s t r u c tio n re c k o n in g n a v ig a tio n a n d a e ria l; g u n n e r y in addition to th e r e g u l a r ! bom baru ie t m g course. Sunday, A\onday and A lw a ys Buy More War Bonds You A re Invited to O p e n a C h a rg e A c c o u n t a t M angel's PASE TWELVE PKon* 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 SUNDAY, M A RC H 5, 1944 March Music Includes Pianist, Choir, Sopranos, Violinist, and Harpsichordist 504 Congress Later in March an Eighteenth Century chamber music concert will be given by three artists. H el-| aula Philharmonic Orchestra of; form er lecturer and concert soloist with the Boston Symphony Or­ ena Strassburger Boatwright, so­ Newport News and first violinist chestra and Boston Chamber Mu­ prano, graduate o f Oberlin Col- with the Feldman Chamber Music sic Club, who served fou r years legee, will appear with her hus Society from 1933 to 1940, now a as assistant music critic on the band. Howard Boatwright, violin- j member of the University faculty. Boston Herald, com pletes the trio. lit* form er conductor of the Penin- Faculty member Putnam Aldrich, DR. EG O N PETRI, PIANIST One harpsichordist, one boys’ choir, one violinist, two pianists, and two sopranos are the artistic ingredients making up fine arts musical recipe on the March -schedule at the University. the March 9 Dr. Egon Petri, pianist, will be presented by the Depart­ m ent o f Fine Arts at 8:3 5 o’clock in the Recital Hall. Season a fte r season front-line critics have praised Dr. Petri for his performances, which class him as one o f the outstandin g artists in the music world. From Seattle, Wash., came this com m en t: that can “ With fingers of steel and vel-j vet summon crashing! thunderbolts or mists of color from J the keyboard, Egon Petri thrilled an audience that filled Meany Hall to its fu lle st capacity.” Son o f Henri Petri, a Dutch vio­ linist, he began his career as a concert pianist at the age of 20 upon toe urging of Paderewski and Busoni. He made his debut in Hol­ land and then began recital ap­ pearances in Holland. Dr. P etri’s recording o f the Tschaikowsky B-flat minor con­ certo is perhaps his most famous. Other favorites include the “ Moon­ ligh t” and Op. I l l o f B e eth oven and S panish Rhapsody. t h e L isst-B uso ni prmg Silhouettes H e r e is th e suit C c ■•'"ess, r e d ' . r n length jacket and t o f f e e IOO*., wool crepe a' g o to g e th e r t o rn a r.e i ’r 's c e e c f th e sm a rte st suits o f tb s season. Ifs f :i is so v e ry flattering a'so with its smart tacked shoulder line, Beige o n 7 . 24.95 506 Congress ere is the coat Because th e y ’re young, co nso rta b le, and *he newest length in coats are toppers b e c o m '- g more popular every day. W e have them in this and several other styles In passel colors. AH wool. Greetings to you old students. Welcome to you new. Hope you'll visit us often. Soprano Opens Series Today Marian Jackson Downs, lyric the Samuel soprano, will open Huston College Artist Series March 5 at 6:30 o'clock at the W esley Methodist Church, San Bernard at Hackberry Streets. Mrs. Downs, the w ife o f P resi­ dent Carl Downs, studied under Guisseppo Boghetti, teacher o f Marian Anderson. Her early m u ­ sical background was supplied by Constantia Reckling Brown, un ­ derstudy o f Madam Schuman- Heink. She has given recitals in St. Louis, Detroit, Washington, Chicago, and over a score o f uni­ versity towns. She has sung for several campus groups. Two other performances in the series will be given during March. Langston Hughes, poet, play­ wright and novelist, will speak March 19. Howard Boatw right and Helena Strassburger B o a t­ wright. University violinist and lyric soprano, wilt give a concert March 26. and there’s a trumpet break worth hearing. Methinks this is only the beginning for K enton ’s fine band, we hope. giving is good the whole “ H u r r y , H u r r y , H u r r y ” — “ P o i n ­ c i a n a ” — Benny Carter (Capitol) “ Hurry fast blues with a danceable rhythm. Carter’s alto is good. Good for the juke solo thing boxes. But is too steady, som ew hat weak and not and bouncy alto o f C arter’s much chance. No, this first one was for commercial reason’s w e ’re afraid, but when Car tor was here at ITT. last Novem ber he promised some real jazz alto was coming. The sooner the better, fo r Benny is the finest hot alto Saxman in the bis., Johnny Hodges included. that brilliant R E C O R D SESSION B y Pvt. E. G A R T L E Y J A C O March 13, the Cultural E n ter­ tainm en t Comm ittee will sponsor the Apollo Boys Choir, organized four years ago by Coleman Coop- i cr in Dallas. I Helen Traubel, one o f the lead­ ing sopranos o f the Metropolitan Opera in N ew York and thought to be one o f the finest Wagnerian sopranos America has produced, will appear March 17 under the sponsorship o f the Community Concert Series. The last two performances will in Hogg Auditorium at 8:15 be o ’clock. to Admission the Petri and chamber music concerts will be free. The Apollo Boys C hoir is 55 cents to the public and free to stud en t blanket tax holders, while is open to the Traubel program subscribers Community Concert J only, though a few separate tickets I may be available. Business is picking up in the popular recording field these days in spite of the Petrillo ban. Many n ew names are appearing on the counters, such as Beacon, Com­ modore, Hit, and Bluenote The ban has been a break for Capitol signed with Records, who ha? Petrillo to record. Less than two years old Capitol has risen to the top and, in this w riter’s estimation, is ahead of the others at this time. Sum Kenton, B enn y Carter, Johnny Mercer, Freddy Slack, Bobby Sherwood, and Paul White­ man are their best recording art­ ists and such numbers as “ Poin­ ciana,” “ Travelin' Light,” “ E lk ’s Parade,” “ G. I. J ive,” and “ Har­ lem Folk D ance” are tops in mu­ sical entertainm ent today. The ways o f war are strange. Who would have dared to think two years ago that Victor and Columbia would be subordinated to much smaller companies? At present, these two firm s have a jo in t suit against Petrillo before the WLB. But the was is likely to be over before any action is taken. So Capitol and Decca, con sen t­ ing to Petrillo’s terms, go march­ ing along while Vie and C olum bo are gnashing their teeth. I t ’s just one of those things. REV IEW S. “ D o N o t h i n * ’Ti l Y o u H e a r F r o m M e ’— “ H a r l e m F o l k D a n c e ” — Stan Kenton (Capitol “ Do Nothin” fea tu res a straight K enton piano and the ja zz sin ging o f Red Dorris, ten or sax player. Strictly a juke box nickel-catcher and good dancing. “ Harlem ” dis­ plays well the fine style o f the Kenton crew and is good jazz. Tenor solo by D o rris is plenty hot Christianity (Continued from Page 9) th in g that grows, b u t whether it is entirely w ith in th e in d iv id u a l o r may also be the sort of Utopian order that knight come after Man h a s solved his social problem s, they do not en tirely agree. N o matter. Nora Ann Carroll, Dick Ferguson, Larry Jones, Ida Mahler, Robert Miller, Frances Smith, Dorothy Tate, and Marian Thomas have found themselves so enlightened in the understanding o f J e s u s’ “ social gospel” by the use of “ integrated personality,” “ social m yth,” ‘heredity and en ­ vironm ent,” “ class stru ggle,” and other such terms, that you m ay e x ­ p ect to see their version of the ‘N e w T estam ent Translated Into Twentieth C entury Concepts” at any time now. “ It brings J esu s right In the mid­ dle of what w e stu d y every day,” says a girl, looking in her copy o f a book in which similar passages in the gospels are printed in paral­ lel columns. ideals Bringing Christian into campus situations occupies the at­ tention of the group discussing “ The Role of the Christian in the World Today,” lead by Block Smith and Mary Meaders, “ Y ” secretaries. It has set up such criteria as the interdependence of mankind and respects fo r the in- to measure which dividual by w hether or is n ot “ Christian.” som ething ★ One week the group talked about anti-Sem itism at the U n i­ versity, and the part boarding houses, for in stance, play in f o s - 1 tering it. A nother time they dis-; cussed cheating, why it existed, in ; what atmosphere it flourished, and j the resources fo r cheating, such as a misuse of fraternity and sorority ! files. Tonight A nna Buchanan, Char- I lie Graham, B e tty Norman, John | Toppins, B etty Beall, Bettie Cur- j rie, and others are talking about block voting. “ D o n ’t we have to be loyal to our g rou p ?” asks som eone. The consensus o f opinion before the hour’s end it that loyalty to a campus group is “ rigid” only when the group is working fox the good o f its members and the whole Uni- l versify as well. a n Arthur Weiss O r i g i n a l R a v e n St r i c e d a y e n o t r i p e n J, c rs c v T h e f a b r i c t h a t ’s l i g h t as silk, s o f t as w e l l — anti l e n ds i t s e l f i d e a l l y t o c a sua l l y , s oft l y t a i l o r e d d re s se s . , . in r a y on " a nd c r e a t e d by A r t h u r W e i ss I You'l l like it be st iii t h i s s t r i p e d ve rs i o n w i t h fa i l l e t r i m m i n g s ! E x a c t l y a s i l l u s t r a t e d . vii-.ikSfc.**. 25. • l o t f oitfjrpHH i i i a r l e A n l o i n p f l p O U l l P B o n n e t N o w y o u ’re going: to b u y t h e p r e t t i e s t h a t y o u e v e r o w n e d ! B e c a u s e t h i s s e a s o n ’s m i l l i n e r y is t h e m os t b e a u t i f u l e ve r c r e a t e d T h e r e ’s no l i m i t to s i l h o u e t t e v a r i e t y , so y o u ’re s u r e t o f i n d t h e m o st b e c o m i n g l ines f o r Y’O U . T h e r e is no l i m i t e i t h e r t o t h e n u m b e r o f f a b r i c s , f e l t s a n d s t r a w s — o r t o c olo r b r i l l i a nc e . T h e s e a r e all b e a u t i f u l l y d e t a i l e d h a t s , q u a l i t y t h r o u g h , t o sti ll look s t u n n i n g a f t e r m o n t h s o f w e a r . See t h e m t o m o r r o w . M e ta ’s Millinery Salon I n M a r i e A n t o i n e t t e — 50 4 C o n g r e s s