T h e D ai T e x a n Th e F i r s t C o l l a g e D a l l y I n t h a S o u t h Vol. 47 Pries Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1945 Four Pages Today No. 8 4 Days Left to File For Cheerleader s Race Parking Space Is Crowded Around Campus From 7 to 4:30 Forty Acres Shut To Motor Traffic I f y o u ’ve been w ondering where to park that Buick coupe or maybe t h a t Model-T car o f yours, you w ill save tim e by reading these rules. in On one can pass the official gate o f the F orty Acres from 7 o ’clock in the morning until 4:30 o ’clock the aftern oon unless th ey have special permits to do so. The only students or facu lty m em bers who m ay have these special permits are those who may in some w ay be afflicted . A During o f f hours and on Sun-1 days an y one m ay en ter the gates of the sprawling U niversity cam ­ pus who w ants to stay no more than a city few minutes. ordinance rules that no car can be parked on a main paved street fo r a long tim e during the night. The problem o f stud en ts and fa cu lty m em bers is where to park their cars during the mornings and aftern oons. On the w est side o f the Drag, the white signs along the curb the one-hour parking limit. indicate Only places where lengthy park­ in g is allowed are on the east side of the Drag and all around the east and south sides o f the Forty Acres. This doesn’t leave much space for parking the num erous fa c u lty and student-ow ned cars. There are still some side-streets aw ay from the campus available. The police departm ent reports that t ra ffic situations have been no more in tense since the let-up o f gas rationing. W hat is go in g to happen to the situation w h e n e x p e c t e d ; 14,000 stud en ts are registered is som ething else. the si- Seek Visual Aids To Popularize Use The com m itte on visual aids and techniques, Jesse J. Villarreal, chairman, is seeking in formation on all audio-visual aids now owned and used by the various depart­ m en ts o f the U niversity. This in­ clud es such equipm ent as phono­ graphs, films, slides, and recording instruments. Comparatively new, the com m it­ tee was set up last May. It is made up o f eight instructors, each one represen tin g depart­ d iffe r e n t m en ts in the University. film projectors, A t the present time, the picture instru­ projectors and recording m en ts are being used in some class rooms. They proved to be a ^ ^ h .c c e s s in aiding the students to understand material that cannot be easily explained otherwise. The com m ittee fee ls that many other classes would like to have these m eans o f helping to teach, but just didn’t know how to go about obtaining them. Having this in ventory the com m ittee will be in position to n otify instructors o f what, how, and where it might be obtained. 1/1*1 aday O . t iV T H U R S D A Y 8 :3 0 -6 — Blanket Tax U niversity Co-Op. pictures, F V I — A ustin Baptist A ssociation, First Baptist Church. 3-5— Speech p lacem ent screening ' test, M.B. 202. 4— Two free film s on soil by Bu­ reau o f Visual Instruction, Ex- i ten sion Building 103, Little 1 Campus. 7— Rusk Literary Society, Texas Union 301. 7— YMCA open house. 7— Radio audition finals, Radio House. 7 :3 0 — PFM, W om en’s Gym 5. 8 — “ M eet M cGonagle,” film by the Eighth Service Command, House o f Representatives. Tickets Needed to See M cD onald’s Open Nights Y o u ’ll need an admission ticket to McDonald Observatory if y o u ’re planning to visit it on its monthly “ open n ight,” Dr. Otto Struve, director, has announced. B ecau se o f the increasing n um ­ ber o f visitors t o The U niversity o f Texas observatory in the Davis M ountains, and because o f limited s' vee, Dr. Struve has announced .at no more than tw o hundred v isito rs will be permitted during th e open n ig h t which is alw ays the fourth W ednesday in each month. I Network Strikes 'Disrupt* K N O W Broadcasting of radio station K N O W — local ABC outlet — w as disrupted at 5 o ’clock W edn esd ay afternoon w hen the engineers of ABC and NBC struck in a w a g e disagree­ ment. Broadcasting w as resumed immediately, however, since KN O W engineers are not affiliated with the striking union. The two other m ajor networks and Mutual— con­ — Columbia tinued broadcasting. T h ey said their operations were not a ffe c te d by walkout. NBG said the w alkout occurred during the n egotiations with union over a new contract. A strike notice w as received at 4 :30 o ’clock W ednesday afternoon sa y ­ ing the strike would take place in thirty days in accordance with the Smith-Conally Act. But a half hour later, NBC operations were le ft halted when the studios. the engineers ★ NBC said the strike was juris­ dictional. If the demands o f the engineers union w'ere granted, it would violate a con tract signed with Jam es C. Petrillo's musicians union. Under orders o f War Labor Board, n egotiations were underway between the union and the broadcasting com pany when the engineers walked out. Unexpected Norther Paves Way to Fall A gusty, dark-cloud norther swirled out of the northwest W ednesday afternoon and across the Forty A cres— but at IO o ’clock last night the w eather bureau reported Austin had been cheated, the temperature didn’t drop according to schedule. --------------------------------------------------— Girl Engineers Finish Training Build Amplifiers, Radio Sets their A ft e r com pleting six- month training course at the U n i­ versity, the thirty-four en g in ee r­ ing aid es are about to f l y away to Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio, to aid in designing and testin g air- craft radio and radar and to as- sist army engineers. + ** , u r * J- . - i i . drawing, theory, and rru These girls have been attending ,. in mathematics, physics, classes electrical en gin eerin g circuit laboratory, shop practices, electronics, and high frequ en cy eight hours a day. T hey have absorbed the equiva­ lent o f two or three years work in six months. Thermometers stood a t 80 d e ­ grees at IO o’clock here although most o f north T e xa s— sw eltering in degree weather on Tuesday— w'as much cooler and even San Antonio had te m ­ been comforted by history-making low er IOO perature readings than Austin. The low in B exar County was 75 degrees, with counties and cities to the north o f A ustin reporting tem peratures seventies, too. the in E ven though A u stin ’s norther turned out ot be only a breeze, late evening, campusites fe lt by - v. the l u l ! fo rc\ ° , f '} I,J- ; ^een m inutes W ednesday evening as the wind swirled dust, slammed doors, blew hats, and generally raised havoc across the campus, . ’ . ,, , , , D n ,1 ■ k m a a h n b ar n n n i t All n AAH Tri Radio broadcasts announced that the norther— which hovered o f f to the northwest in a dark bank of clouds fo r m ost o f the a f t e r ­ noon— would hit at approxim ately 6:40 o ’clock. It struck the cam ­ pus at 6:38 by the Tow er clock Some o f them have been to col- lege before, some have m aster’s degrees, and a f e w have been teachers. Previous d egrees range from music to philosophy and even home economics. So sudden w'as the g u st of wind that several students took shelter in the Main Building exp ecting a storm. One girl w as reportedly blown dow'n between the Main Building and the Union, and Drag live in White drivers as well as pedestrians were a sudden fo g of dust Arms apartm ents and en jo y the blinded by privileges of seniors, as w ell as blown before the storm. a such as dances, parties, and most o f all the dormi. tories w earing sw eaters and even ; coats which proved generally out- 10 o’clock when the The j u g h t before they are to I .raoded by few extra-curricular activities; Early da>ers these girls bridge. le f t All leave, S eptem ber 21, the girls are planning a banquet at which they I will receive their diplomas. The leave on special n ext day th ey coaches for Dayton, Ohio, to begin their duties there. This third, and last, class will be placed when it arrives in D a y - 1 See CIRL E N G IN E E R S, Page 4 Cactus Studio Open, Photographing Frats temperature was still only at the “co o l” level for summer. ★ o f Prospects continued hot weather, how'ever, were slim ac­ cording to the w ea ther bureau. With fall only one week aw ay officially the forecasters indicated that the tem peratures here w'ould continue low with partial cloudi­ ness the week. the rem ainder o f for Oldtimers in A ustin have been All fraternities will be photo- predicting an early and a h a r d - this year graphed this month at the Cactus m eaning cold— w in ter the unseasonal heat Photography Studio which opened because o f this month and because o f the mild Wednesday. ten sities are now being photo- winter experienced here last year graphed: Alpha Epsilon Pi, Alpha w’hen stayed Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, and above freezin g for all but three Kappa Sigma. follow in g fra- therm om eter j days. The the More Money For Government In Blanket Tax Assembly Passes Revised Allotment In Appropriations for the enrollm ent Blanket T ax appropriations for 1945-46 were passed by the Texas S tu dents’ A ssociation Tuesday in creasing the am ount al­ night student governm ent lotted from 9% cents to 25 cents. With U niversity growing rapidly a strong stud en t govern­ m ent is necessary for a well-co- ordnated, e ffe c tiv e student body, and increased appropriation makes the Blanket Tax important not only as an accommodation to the individual student but as a support to the entire D iv er sity . Other approprations w'ere: Ath­ letic Council, $7.16; Cultural En­ tertainm ent Committee, .45; Cur­ tain Club, .12; Girl’s Glee Club, . 0 7 ^ ; U niversity Opera Com­ .35; pany, .10; Longhorn Band, Longhorn Band U niform s, .03, one-half the sum appropriated for uniforms at present; M en’s Glee .0 7 1 2 ; Oratorical A ssocia­ Club, t o r .10; and Texas Stu dent Puhi lications, $1.79. The Co-Ed Hand­ book which received .04 in 1944 included w ith Student will be the coming Publications during year. for home including tax. The Blanket Tax can still be obtained in the Bursar’s Office for $12.10 is football games, good Daily Texan, cultural entertain­ ment, and reduced rates at Cur­ tain Club and U niversity Opera productions. It The Cultural Entertainm ent Committee o f fe r s m any outstand­ ing program for the com ing sea­ son. On N ovem ber 20, Fritz Kreisler, violinist, will play at Gregory Gym. On Decem ber 5 “ Romeo and Ju liet,” a play by the National Classic Theater with Clare Tree Major, w ill be given in H ogg Auditorium. Sergei J a r o f f ’s Don Cossack Chorus and Lawrence Tibbett, baritone, will both appear in Gregory Gym dur­ in g February. On January 21 fo u r one-act plays with a Chinese cast produced by Pearl Buck will be given in H og g Auditorium. Other pro­ grams will include Andres Se­ govia, world’s grea test guitarist, and Dr. Franz Polgar, Mental S cientist and Magician. in V eterans I Blanket Tax Paid, Vets, Should Have Photo M ade the University under either the GI Bill of Rights or the Vocational Rehabilitation program have their student actL i- ties fee paid for them by the gov­ ernm ent. They should go by the Co-Op by September 21 to have their blanket-tax pictures made. The blanket-tax, which enables a student to attend all University athletic events held in Austin, has been approved as a part o f the necessary college exp en ses o f a veteran by the V eterans Adminis­ tration. Other activities covered by the fe e are a subscription fo r the year to The Daily Texan, and reduced prices for m any campus entertain­ ments. Ca pt a i n E wi n g R. Hill. who re­ ceived a degree in geology from the U niversity, is back in Austin a fte r in Europe. f ift e e n months service Ashley Entertains Micamen With Hom espun Philosophy B y M A R V I N A L I S K Y H ow few thar w ere in Heav­ The hill country o f Texas was made to in the live and breath poetry o f Carlos A shley, assistant a tto r n e y general o f Texas, who some o f his home-spun recited philosophy in verse to members o f Mica at a smoker in the Main Lounge the Texas Union Wednesday night. o f tore down The two hundred Micamen who attended nearly the house with applause at Mr. A sh ­ ley's tale o f the fam ous spotted sow of Cider Mountain, near Llano, who gained a reputation for killing dogs. In a Western tw a n g rem iniscent o f the late Will Rogers, he recited in a easy-going way the story o f how old “ S po t,” his spotted sow, ruled that m oun­ tain as the “ tough est critter in those parts.” His poem, “ A un t Cordy,” the tale o f a lovable old busybody of the hill country, recalled that: The preacher with his bible, Was w aiting ju st to tell, A n ’ how crowded ’twere in en, h - - l . A ft e r he concluded by reciting j “ P ete Woodard,” a tale o f an old settler o f Llano, A m o N owotny, I dean o f men, jumped to his fee t and proposed that the two charac­ ters in Mr. A shley’s poems, “ S pot” and “ P e te ” be elected mascots of Mica. An election took place im medi­ ately, right in the middle of the program. The two mascots were elected unanim ously. 5 Days to Drop Courses; Penalty After Sept. 18 Tuesday, Septem ber 18, is the last day for dropping courses with­ out penalty, which is contrary to the recent notice in the Texan that l l , was Wednesday, Septem ber the last day. This leaves five more days to decide that the course you , are taking is not the one you want. Dean N ow otn y spoke on the purposes o f Mica, telling o f the great need in dependent men have for an extra-curricular organiza­ tion. He fee ls that Mica keeps in­ that from dependents school consists solely in attending classes and living in a room near the campus. f e e lin g Berry Whitaker, director of m e n ’s intramurals, spoke on Mica’s athletic activities, and outlined the overall aims of the organiza­ tion. W elcom ing addresses to new Micamen were extended by Clay­ ton Blakeway, president o f the Students' A ssociation, and Jimmy Allen, president o f Mica. student Charles Dunham, assistant dean o f the ‘espirit de corps’ o f Mica, and introduced Mr. Ashley. spoke on life, A fte r the program, old and new Micamen g ot acquainted around the trays o f cigarets and amidst the billows of smoke that filled the Main Lounge, A warning th a t only four more days remain fo r prospective can ­ didates to file their intentions to run for assistant yell leader this year was issued Wednesday by Harris “J ee p ” Smith, head yell leader. Noon Monday, September 17, has been set as the final deadline for entrants to f ile their “ in te n ­ tio n s” in Colonel George E. H u rt’s m ailbox in Gregory Gym, Smith explained, and urged prospective yell leaders to “g e t the notices in as early as possible.” Applicants fo r the posts will be allow ed to lead one of four U n i­ versity yells, Smith reported, and announced that he would m ee t with the candidates at 2:30 o’clock in Memorial Monday aftern oo n Stadium to go through the yells. their choice the leadin g Whisper Yell, Color Yell, L on g­ horn Yell, or Texas yell,” Smith added. “ Candidates w ill have either o f Try-outs will be held a fte r band practice Monday night in Gregory Gym with a com m ittee Serviceman Mail Floods Registrar Slow Discharges Prevent Avalanche ! W ednesday E. J. Mathews, registrar, said that since V-J Day business in his o f fic e has picked up considerably with floods o f cor­ respondence from ex-servicemen and servicemen who have not y e t been discharged. A story carried recently in The Dallas Morning N ew s quoted Mor­ tim er Woodson o f th e Waco V e t ­ erans’ Administration as saying that Texas schools will be caught short with an avalanche o f v e t ­ eran students unless programs are im mediately expanded. - Though he does believe there i w'ill be an increase in enrollm ent j each sem ester for the n e x t tw elv e j months, R g i s t r a r M athew s d oes not expect a su d d e n av a la n c h e o f veterans. S e r v ic e m e n a r e b e in g th o s e discharged g r a d u a lly , a n d 1 men actually c o m in g to th e U ni- to j versity are not in p ro p o rtio n the large number being rele a se d . P ro b a b ly * th e only e x p a n sio n t h a t will ta k e p la ce in N o v e m b e r c u r r ic u l u m will be th e in c re ase in se c tio n s o f such r e q u ir e d s u b je c t s a s G o v e r n m e n t IO a n d H is to r y 15 a n d th e possible b rin g in g b ack o f c e r ta in s u b je c ts t h a t w ere d ro p p e d d u r i n g the w a r . M ost o f th e w o rk in th e R e g is­ t r a r ’s O ffice w ith r e g a r d to r e ­ t u r n i n g v e t e r a n s h as b ee n p r e ­ lim in a r y — ad v isin g , c o n fe re n c e s , a n d givin g in f o rm a tio n . T h e re a r e | now a p p r o x im a te ly 350 v e t e r a n s i r e g is t e r e d in th e U niversity. UT Experts Help Texas Schools P ro g re ss iv e T e x a s cities i n te r - ; es te d in m o d e rn iz in g th e ir school s y s te m s from th e ac tu a l physical p la n ts to th e ir c u r r ic u lu m a r e c a l l ­ in g upon U n iv e r s ity school e x p e r t s f o r a s sista n ce . P ro f e s s o rs f r o m th e College o f E d u c a tio n a n d th e Division o f E x ­ te n s io n have se rv e d on th e s u r v e y s t a f f which w o rk e d o u t plans f o r schools in W aco, F r e e p o r t, S h e r ­ m a n , a n d t h e P h a r r - S a n J u a n - A lam o system in th e Rio G ra n d e V alley d u r in g th e p a s t year. Now in p r o g re s s is a s u r v e y o f th e H o u sto n schoo ls which w ill be co m p leted in F e b r u a r y . Dr. H e n r y J. O tto , g r a d u a t e p r o fe s s o r o f e l e ­ m e n t a r y e d u c a tio n , Dr. H ob G ra y , as so c ia te p r o f e s s o r o f c u r r ic u lu m a n d in stru c tio n , a n d Dr. I. I. N e l­ son, p r o fe s s o r o f c u r r ic u lu m a n d th e in s tru c tio n , a r e w o rk in g on su rv e y . R e q u e sts f o r s u r v e y s d u r in g t h e co m in g y e a r h a v e a lre a d y c o m e f ro m K errville, G alveston , B u r n e t, S w e e tw a te r , a n d se veral schools in t h e Valley. “ T h e buildings o f these schools a r e studied in d e t a i l , ” Dr. O tto r e p o r te d , “ to d e t e r m in e n e c e s sa r y re h a b ilita tio n . ” Club de Mexico to Have Independence Day Dance The Club de Mexico will c e le ­ brate the 135th anniversary o f the battle for Mexican independ­ ence with an inform al dance to be held at Newm an Hall on S a tu r­ day, Septem ber 15, 9 o’clock to 12 o ’clock. All members a r e urged to com e, invite their friend?, and bring their dates. yell leader aspirants and the root­ ing section this fall, Smith is plan­ ning to start educating the newj- comers on the campus to the Uni­ versity’s football yells early next week. A t the freshman orienta­ tion night, program Tuesday Smith said he plans to distribute copies o f the yell and perhaps lead a few for the group. A t the pep rally on September 21 the mimeograph sheets will be distributed for another boost to the yelling spirit o f the University. the audience in the tryouts, that anyone in the in U niversity— according to the con­ stitution— is eligible for the job as yell leader’s assistants. Only those students who failed to make their grades last sem ester or who entered the U niversity under pro­ bation w'ill be prohibited from running. A fte r the tryouts before the members o f the special committee Monday night, eight finalists will be named for the Friday night S ee 4 DAYS, Page 4 . , _ Smith explained, in announcing facult , , . . JEEP SMITH I o f jud ges present to select the I finalists to appear at the Berg- j strom Field gam e eve pep rally on Friday night, September 21. In an e f f o r t to aid both the Ranger to Rise Not Until Fall 1946 Hope lived again W ednesday for the Ranger— onetime humor m agazine for the Forty Acres— as the Board of Publications officially set “Fall 194 6“ as a tentative date for reviving the war-maimed publication. In a crowded, two-hour session devoted mostly to routine — —— ♦ P ubliactions business, the Board After 31-2 Years In Jap Prison Hero of Java Freed by Yanks f o r c e s fro m a Word has been received by L i e u t e n a n t Os c a r W . K e i t h l y ’* w ife t h a t he has been re le a se d by allied J a p a n e s e cam p w h e r e he had been a p r is o n ­ e r f o r t h r e e a n d o n e -h a lf years. L ie u te n a n t K eith ly w as an o f f ic e r o f th e 1 31st F ield A rt ille r y o f the lost b a t ta l io n o f J a v a , which was la rg e ly m a d e up o f T e x a s n a tio n a l g u a r d s m e n . H e w as f i r s t held a t a prison c a m p in B u rm a a n d la te r moved hom eland. to one on th e T he la st w ord b e f o r e th is from L ie u te n a n t Keithly, a g raduate^ of th e U n iv e rsity , w as on J a n u a r y , ty p e d p r is o n e r of 1944, w hen a w a r c a r d f ro m T h a ila n d w as r e ­ ceived by his w ife. En s i g n T e d dy A. Klein of T o m ­ ball, is now ho m e on leave a f t e r se rv in g on a b a ttle s h ip t h a t p a r ­ tic ip a ted in the firs t s tr ik in g force E nsign Klein, a g a in s t T okyo. la te s t listed g r a d u a te , edition o f “ W h o ’s Who in A m e r i­ can Colleges a n d U n iv e r s itie s .” th e in is o f Directors voted unanimously to to appoint a com m ittee investi­ the Ranger and gate reviving make its reorganization if brought to life. J The Fall 1946 date was not a n - 1 recom m endations fo r nounced as the d efinite date for renew ing the publication but was : selected to give those interested ; “som ething to work toward.” A com m ittee of Dr. George V. Gentry, new facu lty members o f the Board, Elton Soltes. n ew A s­ sembly member, B etsey Biggs, and Cal N ew ton, director o f publica­ tions, was named to the matter. i n v e s t ig a t e ! On other counts Wednesday largely cen- j the Board's action tered the bu sin e ss side o f the Cactus and The Daily Texan. in m atters a f fe c t in g Dr. C. A u b re y S m ith was re- J a p a n e s e elec ted a s a u d i t o r f o r 1945-46 by th e B oard, an a u to m o b ile f o r p u b ­ lic a tio n s’ use w as b o u g h t, an d no m in e es w e re a p p ro v e d f o r sev­ e r a l T e x a n e d itin g positions along the with a p p r o v a l of a w a r d s to S u m m e r T e x a n s ta f f . Mrs. P e a r l G h o rm ley w as r e ­ em plo yed as T e x a n n ig h t su p e rv is ­ or, A lb e r t Leslie w as approve d as T e x a n p r o o f r e a d e r , a n d Mrs. Hazel Cross w as as C a ctu s p h o to g r a p h e r. em ployed Rabbi Baron Back To Serve Beth Israel Bailey Chosen New Advisor To Students President's Office Announces N ew Appointments Student Government g o t a new faculty advisor this w eek with the release o f names o f the standing com m ittees o f the Main Univer­ sity this week by the President’s Office. E. W. Bailey, professor of law, w'as named by Dr. T. S. Painter, . I acting president, to the post as advisor for student g 0 v- ernm ent replacing Dr. O. Douglas W eeks who is on leave to teach overseas. This change, as on m ost changes made in the long appointm ent list, represented only the filling o f a post created by the expiration o f term o f a fa cu lty m em ber who had held the position fo r several years. Many com m ittees w en t un­ changed in the usual first o f the year appointment o f new m em ­ bers. Dr. George Gentry w as nam ed to the Board of Directors o f S tu ­ dent Publications replacing Ju dge R. W. Stayton, and D. L. Miller was named to the Comm ittee on intramural athletics fo r men re­ placing Dr. Harry E. Moore. to One shift in the usual allotm ent o f positions stud en t groups came on the public relations com ­ mittee with the omission o f the Texan editor from that com m ittee. President of the stu d en t’s associa­ tion, however, will continue to rep­ resent students on the committee. Com m ittee’s directly related to student activities are listed below: Student Life Discipline: Frederick, R. C. An­ derson, S. L. Brown, Calkins, Cleveland, Dawson, S. Dodson, Du- Bois, Commander J. N. Ferguson, S ee E. W. BA ILEY , Page 4 Apply for Re-Exams By September 17 All pe rso n s w ho are planning to ta k e a d v a n c e d sta n d in g , post­ poned , o r r e - e x a m in a tio n s m ust hav e t h e i r ap p lic a tio n s in th e Reg­ i s t r a r ’s o ffic e n o t l a t e r th a n Mon­ day, S e p te m b e r 17. On T u e sd a y , S e p te m b e r 25, at 2 o ’clock, e x a m in a tio n s will be given in a r t , e n g i n e e r in g (excep t d r a w in g ) E nglish a n d speech. A n th ro p o lo g y , d r a m a , govern­ m e n t, philosophy, physics, a n d psy­ chology exa m s will be held Wed­ 2 nesday, o ’clock. S e p te m b e r 26, at A n y o n e who w a n t s to ta k e ex ­ am s in e d u c a tio n , jo u r n a lis m , and m a th e m a tic s will do so T h u r s d a y , S e p te m b e r 27, a t 2 o ’clock. F rid a y . S e p te m b e r 28, at 2 o ’clock, all la n g u a g e s, Bible, b u si­ ness a d m in is tra tio n , d r a w in g a n d p h a r m a c y exa m s will be given. T hose w ishing to ta k e e x a m s in b o ta n y , ch e m is try , econom ics, g e ­ ology. a n d m usic will do so M on­ day, O c to b e r I , a t 2 o ’clock. O n T u esd a y , O c to b e r 2 o’clock e x a m s will be g ive n in bac- te leology, biology, h isto ry , home economics, sociology, zoology, a n d o t h e r subje cts. 2, Captain Richard G. A r e nt , ex -' is s p e n d in g his la st a c ­ stu d e n t, cru e d le ave b e f o r e b eing h o n o r ­ ably d isc h a r g e d f ro m th e service on th e p o in t system . R abbi S. IL B a ron o f th e C on­ in g r e g a tio n B e th Isra el a r r iv e d A u stin r e c e n tly to p r e p a r e f o r th e ac tiv itie s o f th e new c h u r c h y e a r which b eg a n th is p a s t week. Extension Director M iss M u rra y R esigns F o r t w e n t y y e a r s d ir e c to r o f the B u rea u o f I n d u s tr ia l a n d Business E x te n sio n T r a in in g of th e U n iv e r ­ sity, Miss L a u r a M u r ra y h a s r e ­ signed, T. H. Shelby, d e a n o f the Division o f E x te n sio n , h as a n ­ nounced. Miss M u r r a y , on m odified s e rv ­ ice d u r in g th e past tw o y e a rs, has been several f o r m onths, D ean S helby said. ill h e a lth in Rabbi B a ro n , w ho se rv e d this sam e c o n g r e g a tio n f r o m 1930 to 1935, h a s ex ten siv ely t r a v e le d since he le f t A u stin . A m o n g th e v a rio u s pla ce s in w hich he has se rv e d is th e G lasgow P ro g re ss iv e S y n a g o g u e in Glasgow, S cotland. F o r th e p a s t five y e a r s he h as been on S e p te m b e r 24. se rv in g a t F o r t L a u d e rd a le , Calif., in c lu d in g H ollywood. All special e x a m in a tio n s will be given in Geology B u ild in g 14. It is im p o r ta n t t h a t a p p lic a tio n s be filed w ith th e R e g i s t r a r ’s O ffice n o t 17. E x a m in a tio n c o n flicts m u s t be re­ th e R e g i s t r a r ’s O ffice p o rte d th a n S e p te m b e r l a t e r ----- to _ . . This F r i d a y at 8 o ’clock on th e H O U S 0 L o m m i t t G e V 0 t 6 S S a b b a th of R e p e n ta n c e , w hich in- te rv e n e s b e tw e e n th e Je w ish New Y e a r an d the D ay o f A to n e m e n t, Rabbi B a ro n will deliv er a serm o n on “ R e tu r n , Oh I s r a e l i ” Jud ge -R aine y Critic-Indicted By Federal Grand Jury F o r m e r J u d g e A lb e rt W. J o h n ­ son, whose l e t t e r to th e B o a rd of R e gen t- was cited by C h a irm a n Dudley W o o d w a rd as one o f his reasons f o r dism issing Dr. R ainey from th e p resid e n c y o f th e U n i­ versity, w as indicted T u e s d a y by a f e d e ra l g r a n d j u r y in P e n n s y l­ vania on c h a r g e s o f c o n s p irin g to o b s tr u c t j u s t ic e a n d d e f r a u d in g th e g o v e r n m e n t. The j u r y c h a r g e d J o h n s o n w ith r e n d e rin g decisions in m any cases “ f a v o r in g lit ig a n t s w ho had paid sums o f m o n e y to one or m o r e of th e o th e r d e f e n d a n t s such fa v o ra b le d ecisions.” for w a r d p a r t l y based his re a so n s fo r v o tin g a g a i n s t th e r e i n s t a t e m e n t o f Dr. R ainey. in v e stig a tio n T he g r a n d j u r y w ound up a sev­ e n te e n -m o n t h in to alleged f r a u d s a g a in s t th e U n ite d S ta te s in th e P e n n sy lv a n ia m iddle in d ic te d w e r e his d istric t. Also t h r e e a t to r n e y sons, D onald, Mil­ le r a n d A lb ert, J r ., a n d six o th e r m en. Dr. Reddick to Spe a k a t W e s l e y _ Dr. D e w i t t Reddick, professor o f jo u r n a lis m and chairman o f the f a c u lty com m ittee on student re­ ligious life, will sp eak on “ Re­ ligion a t T he U niversity o f T e x a s ” a t Fellow ship H o u r Sunday night the Wesley I t was a l e t t e r fro m J u d g e J o h n ­ the son, who w a s board of t r u s t e e s of B uchnell Uni- at 6:30 o ’clock a t versity, on which Chairman Wood- k Foundation. f o r m e r ly on j Q R e f u r n f 0 $ u n T i m e W hile a T e x a n r e p o r t e r w as in ­ te rv ie w in g s t u d e n t s T u e s d a y on how th e y liked g o in g back to s u n tim e, o ffic ia ls in W a s h in g to n w ere busy clicking o f f th e i r opinions on th e su b je c t. T he H ou se I n t e r s t a t e C o m m it­ tee v o te d u n a n im o u sly to end w ar tim e a t 2 o'clock on th e m o r n in g of S e p te m b e r 30, a n d indications a r e th e S e n a te will v o te th e sam e way. T h is action will e n d th e “ f a s t ” tim e, w hich a d v a n c e d clocks on e h o u r on J a n u a r y 20, 1942, in a n e f f o r t to in crease d a y lig h t h o u rs f o r w a r tim e p r o d u c tio n a n d to save light, fu e l, a n d pow er. Local Amvet Chapter Formed By L. V. Todd Local American Veterans o f World War II met Tuesday night and founded a chapter o f the na­ tional organization. L. V. Todd, president o f the local chapter, spoke about the na­ tional and state organizations. A m eeting will be held n ext week, but no definite date has been set. Thursday, Sept. 13, 1945 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 Keglers Edge Brackenridge for Softball Title, 7-6 Rain, Wind, Darkness Hamper Both Teams Ragone and Sweet Join Graham and Nunnelly O n Injured List After Rugged Scrimmage By MARK ROBINSON S p o r t s S t a ff t 'n Tigers Split Doubleheaders; Yankees W in Two Games; Cubs Blank Phillies inning g ave A two-run rally in the lait half the of the seventh Second Company, Keglers P ra th e r, decision over 7-6 Brackenridge Hall and the trophy fo r softball all-intramural the championship. of a A little of everything including rain, wind, lightning, darkness, e rrors and walks hampered both teams so th a t neither could play its best game. The sky was over­ cast a t gametime and rain began failing the beginning of the second inning. lightly at fifth It continued to sprinkle until the sun inning when the showed its face fo r the first time in the game. However, darkness began to creep in as the B Hall boys came to hat for the sixth time, an d by the seventh stanza it became very difficult fo r either team to field the ball. Bracken­ ridge was a t a distinct disadvan­ last, tage ?ince losers and a spokesman fo r the la te r said the dorm team planned to pro te st the game. in field it whs Both pitchers, C. P. Kegans for the Keglers and Vilbry White for B Hall, hurled good games, but both have tossed better games in the past. Kegans fanned six men while White whiffed four. Brackenridge lost the toss and came to the plate first to s ta r t the ball game rolling, hut didn’t score. Only four men got to bat, three o f whom were put out by the infield and the fo u rth was walked. The first five men who came to b at for the Navy all got on base, tw o on errors, two on field­ ers choices and one by a walk, resulting in two runs. The Keg­ lers’ firs t run was scored by R. L. Ralston when Maxie Bell smacked a triple f a r out into the left field. Bell scored the sec­ ond r u n when Roy Butler got a The Keglers were soon single. re tire d as Vilbry White fanned two, leaving the score 2-0, Navy. Only four men again came to bat for B Hall in the second in­ ning. Kegans whiffed two of these and walked one, the o ther was put out at first. in the second P ra th e r again went on a r a m ­ page inning and tallied three runs bringing its lead to 5-0. These runs were in the form of Conda Kegans, S. C. “ C a t­ fish” F ryant, and R. L. Ralston, who crossed the plate for the sec­ ond time in the game. Kegans became a little wild in the third inning and walked the first three men who came up to hat. Track sta r Perry Biles, the next man to bat, cleaned the bases on an e rro r and scored himself to p u t the B Hall boys back in the game, 5-4. In the last half of the third, Brackenridge first three men who came to bat, leav­ ing the Navy ahead by one run. retired the in The fourth inning was scoreless for both sides, b u t Brackenridge came back strong the fifth. Two doubles in a row by H. J. Fowler and Barns, respectively, brought in Moon Green and F ow ­ in ler. the the in favor tally sheet reading 6-5 of B Hall. This put Brackenridge lead for the first time, From the end of the fifth to the end of the seventh, when d a r k ­ ness reigned, the game was score­ less for both teams. Both Ralston and Maxie Bell. the first two ha tte rs for the Keg­ lers, got on base with singles in the in­ last half of the seventh ning. Two singles in a row by J. E. Ken nell and Roy Butler, r e ­ spectively, brought in Ralston for the third time and Bell for the second, ending the hall game with the the score 7-6, and making Keglers in tram ural softball cham ­ pions. for her home Marifraneea Wilton, B.J. 45, in Brazoria left where she will spend a few weeks with her parents before leaving for New York. PUoHXHyi&pit R E N T A L S for PARTIES and DAN CES Call 8-6088 or 2-5094 Tom Wade 807 Va Theresa Fine Italian Foods Expertly Prepared • Spaghetti and M e a t Balls • H om e M a d e Ravioli • Salads Mexican Food o n Short Orders V I C T O R ' S C A F E W h ere Preparing Italian Food Is A n Art J u s t O ff the D r a g on 23rd St. zmmmaammtfflm w nw i: mmmm wmumr* T H E D A I L Y T E X A N CLASSIFIED ADS Phone 2-2473 for Ad Taker ....V i.. & Z M 2& Z M 2 s s Lost and Found For Sale— General LO.?7— f r "* high Behowl ring initials in vicinity of Andrew* or notify I>«rn»i*nry. “ B, A n d re* * Dorm. F’l*a*e W aiter, “ D J . E . . ” Le■ .*' • t o y th e Ph. 2 -24? I. Furnished Rooms Nicely C O M F O R T A B L E ROOMS FOP BOYS— in n e r s p r i n g m at- Brick I912 cooked i w o blocks fr-.-na canopus. f u r s shed. tr ess es. Home bouse. N’uecea. Ph on e 2-9521. BOOMS FOR GIRL lovely roc rn. s p a d o ; * and com fortable. Two 210it Nueces. blocks P hone 2-2529. ask for H ousem other. - B o a r d and from G I R L ’S ROOM— L n m t u p sta ir s Phone 9701. 2507 San Ja cinto . room. Announcem ents THESIS D R A F T I N G , ra rtographirg P h o n e 4416. 2003 Guadalupe. 52 — Room s tor Girls ROOMS blocky I OR GI RLS fro m U n iv e r sity . r-v St. >, ace for I girl. Ph. 2-3452. in brick home 4 So S I I W e s t 23rd Coaching M A T H E M A T IC S — Mr. IL M. R«nd up to $17 5 per m o n th fo r m arried to help at small s c h o o l p s r t or P h o n e 17-F2. couple full tim e. Car n ecessa ry . WE ( A S A S S I S T a n u m b e r o f men t o earn th eir w a y t h r o u g h the U n iv e r sity by w orking ex tra hour* at th e Motor R a m p R ow li ng L a n e *. A c t u # a n d t o u r * to I S 59 t h i m boys ‘ sin m ake fr o m >4 i per d a / in tbia type work. Pho ne 2-2177. By JACK GALLAGHER T te a * Sport* E d ito r Unlike the fellow in the song, D. X. Bible’s dreams a re not get­ ting b e tte r all the time. W ednesday’s rough scrimmage a t C lark Field sidelined two more acc backs, making a total of four behind-the-hne now inactive. operatives Raymond “ Rag*” Ragonc, first team wingback, was the principal casualty of the session, spraining an ankle on a ja rrin g tackle by one J. W. Neal, B te am bruiser who wreaked havoc at th e expense of the varsity all afternoon. N eal’s pile-driving play should earn him a promotion to team. Ragone’s injury came on the first play of the day. first the Neal and his co-worker at guard. Red Simmons o f Temple, kept the middle of the line jammed up and forced the varsity to resort to aerial tactics in o rd e r to score. Simmons is a year-long fix tu re On the B squad because of ineligi­ bility. Big A rth u r Sweet, groaning with the stomach pains which p re­ vented him from playing regularly a t Brackenridge High last season,! had to leave the contest a f t e r the first few minutes. George Graham, bothered with a troublesome charley horse, did no t participate in the drill no r did Guy Nunnelly, still ailing from a back injury. The fullback shortage kept Johnnie B. Rogers, fo rm e r Austin High flash, alternating with each of the teams. Graham is expected hack in a couple of days to spell o ff Rogers. Sparked by the accurate passing of letterm an Maxie Bell, the third | team exhibited the best offensive card of the day, totaling 27 points to 20 for the first team an d 19 f o r the second outfit. for Bell passed 30 yards to Jack t w i n to set up the first m arker before Gwin bucked over fo r the tally, passed 60 yards to the fleet the second, Desmond Kidd rifled a n o th e r one 30 yards, then rammed cen ter for the third tee- dee and made the final six-pointer on ano th e r smash line a f te r having put the ball in scor­ ing to by ‘‘Elsie” Slape fo r a 35-yard gain. lateraling position into the A couple of TOU products, Mon­ roe H a r r i s o n and Ransom J a c k ­ son, were the big guns in the scor­ ing e ffo rts of the first and second teams along with tailbacks Byron Gillory and Freddie Brechtel. H a r b is o n , one of the best pass- snatchers on the i-quad, grabbed ode of Gillory’i tosses and raced over the double stripe for the v a r­ sity’s first touchdown and c ontrib­ uted the best run on his te a m ’s third touchdown drive which saw Rogers piling over. Gillory’s run and a pass to Schw artzkopf com­ pleted th e first u n it’s scoring. The second team got its three tallies through the sharp ru nn in g and passing o f Brechtel. He ran 40 yards fo r one, pulled the anci ent statu e of liberty with Jackson on the receiving end for the sec­ ond and rifled a 40-yard aerial to the final the ex-Frog back for m arker. Rugged Dale Schwartzkopf, who looks b e tte r each day, highlighted the pre-scrimmage w orkout with and remarkable pivoting some pass-catching and defense against passes. Friday's Swimming Begins Fall 'Murals Sports Review By GEORGE RABORN The firs t sport on the Fall docket of the all-intram ural y ear begins Friday night a t 7 o’clock in the Gregory Gym pool. The first of three, the meet eliminate all c ontestants down to a few divi­ sional finalists. The six d ifferent events will be composed of tw o or more heats. The most recent record to be Ret in intram ural swimming was aet in 1942, when the Delta Kappa Epsi­ lon medley relay team set a 54.4 second mark. Also ’42, Joe Delta Theta tied ; Russell o f Phi Joe Demmer’a 1941 record with a 15.9 in the 100-foot free style. in The Dekes, incidentally, have undisputed claim to th ree of the six records. 1,200 Civilians Now laking Men's PI Approximately twelve hundred civilian students are registered for one of the eight physical training reported Miss classes offered, Mary Lee Anderson, secretary to L. T. Belmont, director of physi­ cal train in g for men. to required Miss Anderson also stated th a t although d i s c h a r g e d veterans would not be take PT. they could do so a t their own will. There are some th irty doing this now. She said that more th an three cuts in any PT class with- means ‘the very best.’ ” cady fail you, in that p a rtic u la r class. , ~ , x J he Navy has set up a new phy- vt . . . sical Navy tra in in g program. trainees will he required to take only ten minutes of exercises in the all swimming class, where they will be required to participate in all the activities set forth by the in­ structor. excepting classes r * PT * . , D O N ’T M ISS THE BOAT Get Your Activity Ticket B u r s a r ’s Office Breckenridge, an other autom atic district champ. t h e Wtih alw ays-interesting Texas high school football race due to get underway with 40 class AA games this weekend, it’s time we ra te d top team s o f the state in o rder to give our readers some hint as to what to expect this season. the HIGHLAND PARK TOPS H eading our ranked num ber one in the state is High Park, the hard-fighting little list and Rusty Russell-coached surprised everyone by going to the finals last season before losing to P o rt A rthu r. 20-7. in L u fk in ’s Panthers, despite the loss of five key men, have a n o th e r E ast Texas powerhouse coming up. E lectra, a “ weak sister” the rough Wichita Falls d i s t r i c t , rounds out the top ten. The rest of the list needs little explanation, except possibly the low ra tin g of the Austin Maroons. Austin High, now one of the biggest nam es in team th a t * schoolboy football, has only five last y e a r ’s strong letterm en off eleven and will he the weakest team to represent the Capital City since 1937. such in upsetting mighty the semi- Coach Russell is now directing the SMU Mustangs, hut the High­ P OTE NTI AL ALL-STATERS ano th er excellent landers have And now here are some poten­ m entor in Howard year this tial all-staters, picked a t random : Lynch. T he Scotties also have fif- ends— Williams of Waco and Wis- teen re tu rn in g lettermen, w e e n n f , w(.u o f A u s tjn . ta c k le ,— Schw artz them sta rte r s who played of San Jac in to and Tenison of stellar ball Highland P a rk ; guards— Dugas of San Angelo, 39-6, Port A rth u r and Scaliorn of fnals last fall. Brackenridge (San A n to n i o ) ; cen- „ , t e r — B ry a n t of Denison; backs— H ighland Park ,, b em e boomed a , H unt of GooM Creck Hammon of a to all-staters Port A rthur, Runnells of Lufkin, Bobby Layne o f 1943 and Doak and Moxley of Highland Park. W alker o f last year. Bill Moxley is an o th e r fine Scottie hack— and tackle Bob Tenison stands o u t in a rugged line th a t has grown into big boys now'. Below a re o u r ratings before the reason begins with each t e a m ’s district num ber in parentheses: Little Dewey W eatherford of , likely successor , _ in , , . . , GOOSE CREEK GA N D ER S W e’re picking Highland P a rk to m eet the Goose Creek G anders for the state championship in Decem­ ber. Goose Creek, with a dozen seven letterm en re tu rn in g I sta rte rs o f f last y e a r s fine team n * to P o rt i which A rthu r, 13-0, has a smooth-work­ ing, stellar tea m featured by all- state candidate Ted Hunt, a fo u rth y e a r s ta r te r and all-district man for the Ganders. and V , • . * its district lost Goose Creek will have to hustle to win its own district, though. Two o th er district 14-AA elevens, defending champion Po rt A r t h u r 1 are title-starved O range, and going tough. P o rt to be plenty A rth u r has only two s ta r te r s back, but both are excellent men. Guard A. J. Dugas was an all-stater last year and back Glenn Harriman was the top back in the district until he broke his leg late in October and was o ut fo r the re st o f the year. Orange has a dozen le tte r ­ men off last y e a r ’s plucky little j team th a t held Port A rth u r to a 20-0 score. WACO TIGERS STRONG t h e i r district IO Third best team iii the state, we believe, is Waco. The Tigers, who win title with monotonous regularity, have a in­ state end Froggie Williams back along with a host of veterans. Port A rth ur, Wichita Falls, Deni­ son, and Amarillo— fo u r pow erful names t h a t scare gridiron oppon­ by next, en ts— come followed Boll room Dancing Class 1. Highland Park ( 6 ) 2. Goose Creek ( 1 4 ) 3. Waco ( IO) 4. Port Arthur ( 1 4 ) 5. Wichita Falls ( 2 ) 6. Denison ( 5 ) 7. Amarillo ( I ) 8. Breckenridge ( 9 ) 9. Lufkin ( 1 2 ) 10. Electra ( 2 ) 11. San Angelo ( 3 ) 12. Longview ( l l ) 13. Lubbock ( I ) 14. S we et wa t e r ( 3 ) 15. Paschal ( 7 ) 16. Crosier Tech ( 8 ) 17. Sunset ( 8 ) 18. Austin ( 1 5 ) T y le r ( l l ) 20. Orange ( 1 4 ) 21. Abilene ( 3 ) 22. Stephen F. Austin ( 1 3 ) 23. Corpus Christi ( 1 5 ) 24. Marshall ( l l ) 25. Woodrow Wilson ( 8 ) 26. Greenville ( 5 ) 27. San Jacinto ( 1 3 ) 28. Kingsville ( 1 6 ) 29. Riverside ( 7 ) 30. Odessa ( 3 ) 31. Brackenridge ( S A ) ( 1 5 ) 32. Paris ( 5 ) 33. Vernon ( 2 ) 34. Plainview ( I ) 35. Galveston ( 1 4 ) 36. El Paso ( 4 ) 37. Pampa ( I ) 38. Waxahachie (IO) 39. Bryan ( IO) 40. Bowie ( E P ) ( 4 ) 41. Austin ( E P ) ( 4 ) 42. Sherman ( 5 ) 43. Brownwood ( 9 ) 44. Temple (IO) 45. Adamson ( 8 ) 46. North Side ( 7 ) 47. Thomas Jefferson 48. McKinney ( 6 ) 49. Lamar ( 1 3 ) 50. J e f f Davis ( 1 3 ) ( 1 5 ) Monday and Thursday 7 p. rn. Janet Collett SCH O O L OF DAN CIN G 23 30 Guadalupe Tel. 9956 or 6 43 0 Helen White, ex-student, visited the campus Monday. Miss White was a journalism m a jo r a n d has the advertising de- | worked i p a rtm e n t of the OPA in San A n­ tonio fo r the last vear. fo r Georgia Fields, ju n io r from De­ mopolis, Ala., is back in school a f te r an illness at St. David’s Hos­ pital. Wayne Craig, NROTC, visited I in Dallas Saturd ay and Sunday. P H IL A D E L PH IA , Sept. 12— ( I N S ) — The league-leading De­ tro it Tigers stubbornly clung to th e ir slender American League today by dividing a lead here last-place doubleheader with Athletics, winning the opener, 7-4, but bowing in the 16-inning nightcap, 3-2. th e streak, five-game In the opener, Al Benton broke a al­ losing though he had to be relieved by Howard Caster. Benton was the w inning pitcher, and York hit a inning. home run C aster the in lengthy nightcap, relieving rookie the H ank Oana, eleventh inning. Dizzy T ro u t fin ­ ished up the game fo r the Tigers and was the losing pitcher. the fo u rth appeared the sta rte r, in also in WYSE GETS I STH W I N CHICAGO, Sept 12— (IN S) — Hank W yse’s sixth atte m p t to gain victory No. 19 was successful as the Chicago Cubs to he pitched the Phila­ a 4-0 shut-out over delphia Phillies today. The Cubs grabbed all their runs in a third inning rally off Dick B arrett, who held them to seven hits while Wyse was yielding nine. The Cub o u tb u rst was fe a tu red by Andy P a fk o ’s tw o-bagger which cleaned the bases and se n t his runs b a tte d in figure to 97. Don Johnson, Cub second base­ man, collected two singles on his r e tu rn to the lineup. He had been benched since Septem ber 2 with a sprained ankle. The Cubs and Dodgers meet twice more a t Wrigley Field in the next two days. REDS EDGE GIANTS, 4-3 CINCINNATI, Sept. 12— (INS) Homers by F ra n k McCormick and THE STANDINGS ’N ATI ON A L L E A GU E T eam — W C h i c a g o ------------ 86 St. L o u i s ---------- 83 B r o o k l y n ---------- 75 P i t t s b u r g h ------- 77 New Y o r k -------- 75 ...... .......... 59 Boston C i n c i n n a t i -------- 66 Philadelphia ----- 42 L 50 63 60 65 67 77 81 98 Results Yesterday Chicago 4, Philadelphia 0. Cincinnati 4, New York 3. Pct. .633 .610 .556 .542 .529 .434 .409 .300 AMERI CAN LE AGUE W Team — 81 D etroit ------- 80 W ashington 72 New Y o r k __ 72 St. Louis ----- 67 Cleveland — 67 Chicago ------- 66 Boston ...... — Philadelphia ----- 48 L 58 61 65 66 65 74 74 90 Results Yesterday Detroit 7-2, Philadelphia 4-3. New York 3-9, Chicago 1-8. St. Louis 9, Boston 2. Pct. .582 .567 .527 .524 .508 .476 .473 .351 - O L D - S E V I L L E Now Open . • 11:30 A. M. 11:00 P. M. Closed Mondays to ★ D ins In th* Cool - Colorful P atio Aftar 8 P. M. * 1601 G u ad alu pa TsL S-4321 fid d le S u A ep k r LAST TIM ES TODAY B E i v e - S S ERROL FLY N N “Objective Burma” 2 S h ew s N ig h tly S tartin g 8 :1 5 Cartoon N ew s v n r v K JOE E. BROW N “Casanova in Burlesque” A D V E N T U R E SH O RT CARTOON— N EW S I R I S F rensndo Soler Sara Garcia “Al Son De Marim ba” S PA N ISH N E W ! — CARTOON A T R E s H ank S a u e r in th e sixth inning, good fo r three runs, today gave Cincinnati a 4-3 victory over the New York Giants in the first game of the series. H a rry Feldm an of the Giants and V e m K ennedy of th e Reds the sta rtin g pitchers, bu t were ne ith e r w en t the distance. The d e fea t was charged to Feldman. B ROWNS B E A T BOSTON, 9-2 BOSTON, Sept. 12— (INS) — the St. Louis Bob M uncrief of Brown* held the Boston Red Sox to f o u r hits today and beat them, 9-2. The Browns sewed up the game with a six-run rally in the fo u rth inning. Vern Stephens’ two-run hom er starte d it. Then outfield er Leon Culberson Sox dropped M uncrief's fly with the bases full, and M uncrief scored j on a single. Y A N K S W I N D O U BL E H E AD ER N E W YORK, Sept. 12— (INS) The New York Yankees d efeated the of the Chicago White Sox twice to­ day, 3-1 a n d 9-8. In the opener, the veteran C h a r­ ley R u ffing held the White to six hits and bested Orval Grove thanks to homers by Russ Derry and Charley Keller in th e fou rth . W : I; U U . 'I LAST DAY Spencer TRACY Katherine H E P B U R N “Without Love” — In— Also N E W S n r m E n d s T o d a y — 25c Till S P. M . L AS T DAY Laird CREGAR Linda D ARNELL — In- “Hangover Square” Alto 3 P ES TS IN A MESS And TH E COCKY B A N TA M THE S O I OP with JENNIFER JONES Academy Aw ard Winner, S T A RT I N G F RI DAY Hugo DEL CARRILL LEDESMA “La Novela De Un Joven Pobre” ( I n Spanish) — ALSO— N EWS — SPORT SCOPE ANET BLAIR IMES {LEASON ED DONALDSON A F a f c u lo ’ui Tai* of jTodayl * HUMOR HAIL On ll PO V aline A (olumbiu Picture • E NDS T ODAY- Basil R A T H B O N E In Nigel BRUCE “ THE WOMAN IN G R EE N” S I D E S P L I T T I N G ! (Ill IM OR * Jo* ciNtun tot nam / Th* h o w l i n g r a d i o I R — e . a d H a g * . h e w I | f | | g g h o o t AMM -.OafNth .«. auynjqsvyn >: MICHAEL PUNN! mon A *K i f MAM * FAY! A* AK. VQ WF JOHN Ail XAN FE* ENDS paramount TODAY JACK OAKIE — PEGGY RYAN In “THAT’S THE SPIRIT” ★ ★ ★ STARTING FRIDAY ★ ★ ★ UKutivt Hod wet I ON T H E P A RA MO U NT S TA GE FRIDAY ONLY T E X AS WAR P R I SO NE RS FROM B A T A A N TO TELL OF J A P CRUE LTI ES J ES US * S AN TO S RICHARD BA R NE S A LF RED + PHA R R m 63 Wait To Be or Not to Be — Curtain Clubbers; Probation Starts Curtain Club tryouts in Hogg Memorial Auditorium Tuesday and Wednesday resulted in ac­ ceptance o f sixty-three new men*- bara who begin probation period this week. A m eeting of old and new mem­ bers will be held Thursday at 7 in o’clock Experimental the Theater in Modern Language Building. The follow ing people have been selected as probationary members of the Curtain Club: Hugh Malcolm Oliver, Harvey Diehl, George Porter, Jerome Glassman, Robert Ray Penm an, Lewis Williams, Corkey Keyes, Jo Peebles, Geraldine Guokas, Faye Tanenbaum, R. C. Palmros, Elton Renfroe, W alter Acreman, Bee Pearce, George Daley. f- William Horne, Beverly Myers, Frank Hoylman, Coralyn Davis, Fred Herring, James Boulting- house,Henry W y n n e Pearce, Charles Clark, Jane Paullin, Lula Tiner, Paul Fuller. Jack Reese, Harold Farrington, Edith Rydell, Billy McCoy, MouA on Law, Mary Noto, Roothe Slo­ cum, Georgia Fields, Polly Watts, Rosalia L egett, Imogene Vogel, Jeanette Smith, Ray Pinkenson. Marianne Mayo, Sarah Phillips, Doris Green, Roberta Rice, Betty Dickerman, Marjorie O’Madigan, Emogene Gamble, Pat Brown, Hortense Davison, Joan Friedson. F rances Williams, Carol Gibbs, Peggy Gross, William Guild, Patricia Connor, Dottie Backen- stoe, Marilyn Freed, M arta Truog, Jam es Kippenbrock, Jo Beth Ryan, Babette Klaus, Billie Tate, Je a n n e Billings. China Is Vital To O ur Security Says Kennedy “ I know this is tr ite and has been said m any tim es before, but the tr ite things are the t r u e ones a fte r all. And a f t e r my travels I m ust say th a t we A mericans are the m ost f o rtu n a te people in the world,” L ie u ten a n t Colonel Vann M. K ennedy, stu d e n t in 1925-30, said a f t e r his r e tu r n from China and th e F a r East, who recently visited in Austin. Colonel Kennedy, who was for twelve years a capital correspon­ in A ustin as bureau dent here m an ag er of In te rn a tio n a l News Service a nd editor a n d publisher of the S tate Observer, was first struck, as most A m ericans are, by th e shock of seeing extrem e poverty of th e F a r East. sound T h a t China and the F a r E ast are vital to foreign policy and A merican security, Colonel K en­ nedy has no doubt. “A strong China is im p o rta n t to o u r in te r­ ests a n d with the burden of keep­ ing peace in the F a r E a s t falling on us, this is more tr u e th a n ever,” he stated. He added th a t as to the trouble in China between th e Com­ munists and the national govern­ ment, America is backing th e only practical a n d side both from military and political angles. The Colonel also commented on the cheerfulness of the Chinese people in spite of th e ir poverty. “ The American soldiers a re g re e t­ ed everywhere in China,” he said, “ with salute of cheerful the is pronounced ‘Tinghao’ which ‘Dinghow,’ th a t out an excuse would autom ati- take an a t ti­ tude of sym pathetic realism to ­ too ward China, being n e ith e r critical nor too starry-eyed, ac­ cording to Colonel K ennedy. America should superlative a W hen the WAC was first fo rm ­ ed, Colonel Kennedy was public In 1943 he relations officer. went overseas. R etu rning in May, 1945, he has been a tte n d in g the command and general s t a f f school at F o r t Leavenworth, Kan. He is leaving soon for a new assign­ ment. 43 Radio Hams Audition at 7 For Workshop F o rty -th re e radio-minded stu ­ dents who survived the prelim­ inary auditions fo r Radio House Workshop earlier this week are req uested to re p o rt back f o r final try ou ts a t Radio House on T h u rs ­ day, S eptem b er 13 a t 7 oclock. Audition m aterial will be fu rn ish ­ ed a t the tim e o f tryo uts. The list o f fo rty -th re e follows: Georgia Aune, L au ra Bowles, Mary F ern Bray, M ary Browning, Bob Cochran, J. A. Danklefs, P e g ­ gy Gilliam, Bob Gwyn, Corinne H anover, Buddy H arris, A udrey j Hendrickson, Mike Holberg, A s h - 1 ley H o s te tte r and Jack Johnson. I B etty Bob Knapp, Carl Lantos, j Mouzon Law’, W anda Mamon, Edis Martinelli, Bill McRae, J o Anne Millard, Catherine Morre, Bill j Nail, Ja n e Paullin, Bee Pearce, J e rry Pederson. Morton Pepper, S arah Phillips, " y Pinkerson, Mary Jo Priddy, ,i;glas Roberts, K atherine Rog­ ers, Ann Sartorius, Tibbie Sewell, and P atsy Smith. Sheila Stevens, M arth a Stone, Clare Tuohy, Mrs. W. L. T urn er, Carolyn V aughan, Mary Lib Vick, Frances Williams, and H a rrie tte McKInstry. Mr*. C la y to n C ook, t u to r in ge- ! ology, is on leave o f absence to meet C a p ta in Cook of the Navy in i San Francisco. Captain Cook has been stationed in the Pacific fo r the last eighteen months. Both Captain and Mrs. Cook are g r a n ­ ites o f the University. ★ Je»»ie W o m a c k , jun io r, a n d M a rc o E lz n e r , senior journalism major, were e n te rta in e d a t a joint birthday d in n e r p a rty S unday a t the Driskill Hotel. * Did! H a m , Delta Zeta from Corpus Christi, visited friends in San Antonio over the weekend. | Club Notes Inter-American Association Elects Student Senate The Inter-A m erican Association, designed to study Latin-American and N orth American co-operation is resuming activties fo r th e fall term and will announce its m eet­ ings in The Daily Texan. is A f e a tu re of the Inter-A m erican Association its senate, which consists o f one senator elected from each South American coun­ try and one the U nited States. The sen ate elects a presi­ dent, keeps th e co-presidents in close contact with the members of the club, and decides what activi­ ties the association shall u n d e r­ take. from Senators of the club are as fol­ lows: Bettie Root, A rgentina, president; Sartorio A rruda, B ra­ zil; Buillermo Priss, Colombia; Danilo Pineda, H on duras; N athan With This Ring . .. English Girl Is Bride O f Sgt. Rustin Paula Morris of Barry, South Wales, England, was m arried t h e r e recently to ex-student S e r - 1 ( • a n t R ob ert H. R u stin, Beta j T h e ta Pi and m em ber of Alcalde. ★ A nnouncem ent has been made the m arriage of Ruby Ja n e to S a m u e l A le x a n d e r o f Law rence H a m rs, ex-student. the following: More weddings include those of ex-students D o ris M ae S m ith and L i e u t e n a n t ( j f ) M yer F ra u m a n ; Lorine Kalmbach and L ie u te n a n t L a w r e n c e E. S ch u lz, who received a degree in Civil Engineering f r o m the U niversity; and M arjorie R u th S p o o n e e r , Alpha Chi Omega, a n d Captain Edwin John Surman. ★ A ugust weddings of ex-students included N ela G u e r r e r o of F o r t W orth to Ser­ g e a n t Jam es J a y Lindsay o f Co­ lumbus, Ohio; S aran ne Smith to H e r m a n F r e d e r ic k G en r in g Jr., Phi Gamma D elta; Je ss e Marie to Y o lto n , A lp h a Chi O m eg a , Ja m e s T. McSpadden of Shreve­ to p o r t; Florence Rita Larmee D o n a ld N o b le W h it e of San An­ tonio, mem ber of Sigma Nu; Mari- nelle Kellner of Waco to L ie u ­ t e n a n t Joh n B a c h m a n G reer, Phi Gamma D elta; and Mary E li z a ­ b e t h D a vis, Phi Mu from Cedar Rapids, Neb., to L ieu tenant Henry H offm an. ★ in A ustin Married last month were ex-students M adge Nied- e r a u e r and S e r g e a n t W illia m C. O’Donnell, both of A ustin; Je an C asparis, Zeta Tau Alpha, and ( j g ) C la ren c e H. L ie u t e n a n t S t u m p ! - Jr., m em ber of Delta Sigma P h i; M a ry Jo H u d so n and L ie u te n a n t T a n n e r H. F re e m a n ; a n d Elizabeth Ferguson and L ie u ­ t e n a n t ( j g ) H. W. G riggs. F ra nk , Mexico; Fern an do Caba- llero-Marsal, P a r a g u a y ; Edu ard o P l u c k e r , P e r u ; Mrs. P u r a Leker, Puerto Rico ;and Guadalupe Val­ des, United States. New co-presidents are N orm an Richard Pictor, civil engineering student, and Bettye Wilkes, a rts and sciences major. P icto r r e ­ cently re tu rn e d from a t o u r of eight states of the U nited States, and Bettye a ttend ed a session of the Sum m er School in Mexico City this summer. O ther officers are Bettie Root, recording Leopoldo se c re ta ry ; Arevale, assistant recording secre­ ta r y ; E du a rd o Pflucker, corre­ sponding sec re ta ry ; Marylyn Ben­ nett, a ssistant corresponding sec­ re ta r y ; Beverly Daniel, tre a s u r e r; and E rm alee Bonar, assistant treasurer. ★ its N e w m a n C lu b will h a v e monthly b re a k fa st Sunday, Sep­ tem b e r 16, a f t e r th e IO o ’clock mass. T here will be a sh ort m eet­ ing afte rw a rd s. A lp h a Ph O m e g a had group singing S u n d e r led by Bob Brame. Jim Owen played the accordian. W e rn e r Hecht, a m em ber of the Gamma Epsilon chapter o f Alpha Phi Omega a t City College, N. Y., was a visitor. Fra-Ority K appa S ig m a has announced the pledging of E d Christie, Tulsa, Okla., who is a tr a n s f e r pledge from the U niversity of Indiana, and Rex Reitz, Corsicana. New officers for the fall term are H a rry Taylor, grand m a ste r; Dick Donnelly, grand p ro c u ra to r; Charles Howard, g rand m a ste r of ceremonies; F red Bi amlet, grand scribe; Bryan Williams, grand tre a s u r e r ; Dick W hittington, inner John Shambaugh, and g u a rd ; outer guard. ★ Lam bd* Chi Alpha announces the pledging and form al pledging of H e rb e rt H arrington, A ustin; Clifford McManus, A tlan ta, Ga.; Bill McCoy, Austin; Charles E. Davis. C e n te r; H enry Hollo, Aus­ tin; F r a n k Jones, San Antonio; and Dick Seigfreid, Chicago, 111. The officers of the new pledge class are Bill McCoy, president; Ralph Weir, vice-president, and George Neil, tre a su re r. G e o r g e A n n Gilpin, president of the Glamazons during the spring semester, has w ithdraw n from school. She is visiting friends on the campus during rush week. ★ C a p ta in and M n . M a u rU a M c­ Call w ere visitors on the campus the last weekend. Mrs. McCall, '43, fo rm e r Jodelle Gaines, B.J. was employed by the Wichita Record-News while h er husband was with the Eighth Air Force overseas. Captain McCall has re ­ cently received his discharge. Forever a college stand-by . . • classic lines of sport neckline, fly front, and short sleeves. M o n o ­ gram motif on each pouch pocket and wide em broidery-embellished belt bound with nail heads. W o o l and rayon gabardine in turquoise, gold, and mellon. A M o n ty Jam es Classic. $10.95 4 , h . w i l h a w / Thursday, S e p t. TS, 1 9 4 5 THE DAILY TEXA N R aga 3 JFrom f am pu s - to D a te s D resses 8 9s 9 9 5 C le v e r little casuals you will wear and wear • . . tailored enough for cam pus . . . dressy enough for dates. In one and tw o-piece styles with novelty trims. Sizes 9 to 15. SC ARBROUGH’S DOWNSTAIRS S T O R E Menms Cam pus Clothes S p o rt C o a ti 1 4 7 S R igh t fo r cam pus wear. In re g ­ ular and long lengths. Blue, tan, brown, checks, plaids and tw o- tone. Sizes 33 to 42. S la c k P a n ts 795 899 For all casual wear. W ith plain and pleated fronts, button and zipper flys. W o o l and rayon mix­ tures. In blue, grey, brown, and navy blue. Sizes 29 to 42. M en '* C a p e s k in J a c k e ts 1 1 9 5 For co ol days on cam pus. C ap eskin jackets with plaid linings, zipper fronts and set- in pockets. Belted back with adjustable straps at sides. Tan color. Sizes 36 to 46. SCARBROUGH’S DOW NSTAIRS STORE Gay Scarves I O O 1 9 * To wear on your head or witK your fall co ats and suits* Square and long styles. Prints and solid colors in cottons and rayons. l S o m e n N G a b a r d i n e R a in co a ts •jus q93 You'll be prepared for fall showers in a water-repellent gabard in e raincoat. Boxy and belted styles with button front, sport collar and p ock­ ets. Red, blue, white and rose. Sizes 12 to 18. SCARBROUGH’S D O W N S T A IR S STORE T H E D A I L Y T E X A N Qfi&uw&id I 3 <4 * IO ll Yugoslavs Seek Reparations As 'Big 5 ’ Study Italy Treaty By b u z z Thursday, Sept. 13, 1945 THE D A ILY TEXA N Page 4 O h Ute B ide Annie Goes Academic SOME CHILDREN* ju st nev­ e r grow up. Little Orphan Annie is a t it again. Tuesday, in case you didn’t read it, the unbowed head of “ academic fre e d o m ” reared in the panels of the comic strip. Professor “ Doc” Toggle bleated out a tale about his te rm in a ­ tion of te n u re and, apparently, definitely embroiled a r t i s t Harold Gray into a month or so of pen-and-ink philosophy about higher education. CONFESSED the good pro fessor in his column, “ I . . . I w asn’t really quite honest, when I said I had resigned from the faculty at the college . . . I . . . I was fired!” (F ire d was u nder­ lined.) Daddy Warbucks, no longer wearing a tie a f te r recently lop­ ing his last surplus two billion, commented “ T hat so? V* ere you too advanced in your think ­ ing to suit th e m ? ” “ ON T H E CONTRARY,” Doc Toggle answered meekly, I . . . I guess I was too old­ fashioned . I believed, and still believe in w hat people used to call old-fash­ to be proud ioned A mericanism!” . . rose At such stirring words, Dad­ dy W arbucks from his chair, extended the long arm of U n fettered Enterprise onto professorial shoulders, and said, “ Y’know, Doc . . . I like you b e tte r every day!” T H ER E IS probably a moral to the story th a t a rtis t Gray never intended. * AT ANY RATE, in mid­ afternoon, one of the Texan the office in workers arrived with a copy of a Sunday sup- the Little lem ent carrying O rphan— Texan workers are conscious of the problems of the times, you see— and, sure enough, i f s more of the same bu t no t so bad. D addy’s a g a i n , leaving A nnie’s staying, and, oh well, since F d ito r Fulcher a t the Am erican-Statesm an seems in­ te n t o t leave Annie on his pages, why say m ore— re a d it, between Zollinger and Evans. ★ this season SPEAKING OF GIRLS, the discussion of girl yell leaders— prom inent in last y ea r— m ay n o t arise this year. Seems constitution the doesn’t give a clause about sex in the race, so anybody can try. t h a t ★ the U ndoubtedly fastest- selling p roduct to hit civilian m arkets— or the postw ar world — is the new DDT. Living off of a war reputatio n as it do< v DDT and its success may por­ tend for something other w a r born products. similar Imagine the drug store got brightly packaged q u a rt of penicillin. if some lines iii a case of jugs * * ON TH E SUBJECT, wonder what the blood bank vice-presi­ dents will say if they ever de­ cide to recruit corpuscles again. “ Send your to T o jo ?” scrap blood UNDOUBTEDLY the spiciest paragraph j e t to creep through the protocal of war criminal is the line in an INS stories from Ma­ dispatch yesterday nila. One S ergeant ( h ad e s Rexroad, onetime hangm an at San Quentin, was taken to visit prospective customer General Yamashita. Said Hangman Rexroad, “ I figure I could do a beautiful job stretching Yamashita’s fat neck, and I can’t think of a n y ­ body's I’d ra th e r stretch— ex­ cept Homma’s.” ALL THE GLEE of a calis­ thenics instructor. Official Natice.1 and R E - E X A M I N A T I O N S P o s t ­ poned and A dva nced St andi nu E x * rn- (n ation* win he g iv e n Se p tem b e r 25 th ro u g h October 2 t o ta k e e x a m in a t io n s in th:* '»r ie - m u s t he it, th e R e gis trar 's o f f i c e n ot than S e p t e m b e r 3 7. P e t i t i o n s l a t e r J . M A T H E W S , K Registrar. T H E R U L E | o r th re e r i g h t s ou t a w e e k o n ly fur freshm an girl* will not b e g in un ti l S e p t e m b e r IS. Until t h e n t h e y m ay have g o y n ig h t out. o b s e r v ­ in g th e c lo s i n g tim e rule »or upper­ classmen. DOR OT HY G E B A U E R . Dean of W o m e n . T H E R E W I L E B E F i n e A r t m a j o r * m a j o r in g b e r I ”, at 5 o ’clock of the Music Building. in a m e e t i n g of t h o s e i n c l u d i n g rad.o T u e sd a y , S e p t e m ­ in th e recital hall E. W . D OT Y . D e a n o f Fine A? T h e fyn tekm en C lote, A constructive a n d most en co u r a g in g step to w a r d the solution of the Univer sit y’s or ientation problems for new’ s tud ent s was a n no un ce d W e d n e s d a y with the outlining of a “ del aye d a c t io n ” p r o g r a m to be held next w’eek. The cr ow d ed s ch edu le of psychological exams, regis­ tration expla nat io n, and .similar necessary routine p r e ­ vented th e inclusion of r e g u l a r or ienta tion into the first of th e te r m p r o g r a m this fall. Now, by con d uc ti n g ori­ entation t h r e e w eek s later, th e or ient ation council seems to h av e f o und an idea f a r b e t te r t h a n th e original co n ­ cept of int rod uci ng new s tu d en ts to th e campus. Since orient ati on is to be held late, fr esh me n will now have an op po rt u n i ty to f r a m e questions of more im p o rt than th e usual “ W h e r e is G ar ris o n H a l l ? ” “ W h a t is A n t h r o p o l o g y ? ” t y p e question so common to t h e or ien ­ tation question sessions at th e first of the semester. Similarly, the individuals in c h a r g e of con d uc ti ng these p r o g r a m s will now be able to lead discussion of a more pr actical, constructive, an d serviceable n at u re . H ow ev er, it would still be a m is ta ke to assume t h a t one or ien ta ti o n p ro g r a m of this sort will solve all the prob lems of th e f re s h m a n class. A f r e s h m a n does not become an y t h in g else for at least a full y e a r on the cam pus . It is ju s t as essential t h a t individual and col­ lective pro ble m s be a i re d and discussed t h r o u g h o u t the w in te r a n d s pr ing as it is in the initial w eeks of the school year. In this field of “ p ro b le m s ” for th e new' students, it is p a r ti c u la r ly im po rta n t th a t the fr e s h m e n — as a n interest g r o u p — be unified and given op po rt u n i ty for e x pr es ­ sion as a sig nificant el ement in th e whole of c am p us t h o u gh t. It is ne it he r h e a l th y nor fai r t h a t the av era ge f r e s h m a n — and the m aj ori ty of the m come in this c a t e ­ gory— be depriv ed of an y mo re intelligent g u id a n ce th e ir firs t y e a r on the c am p us t h a n th e cha nc e influence of th e ir ro om in g house o r classroom acqua int an ces . A university of this size c a n g r a v e l y im pair its influence and service if it allows the unaffi li at ed s t u d e n t to “ get lost” in th e tu m ul tu ou s an d be w il de rin g m a ze of ca m pu s life. The p r o je c te d orientation plan can, in some measure, a n s w e r p a r t of th e n eed for “ continuous g u i d a n c e ” to the n ew fres hm en. Such a plan, however, needs th e organ iz ati on for self-expression of s tu d e n t views if it is successful. F u r th e r , it nee ds some op p o r tn u i ty fo r incor­ p o r a ti n g a full r a n g e of s t u d e n t activity— such as social functions— into the orientation p ro g ram . In some degree, this can be ha n dl ed by th e officials in th e d e a n ’s office and by the orientation council. The ent husiasm of the s tu de nt s concerned, th o ug h, will in­ crease direc tly in proportion to th e ir own activity in the or ientation p r o og ra m . A well established, prac tical o r ­ ga ni zat io n of th e fr es hm en is, consequently, almost an essential to the purposes of t h or ou g h orientation. The a n s w e r to this need is, obviously, a F r e s h m a n Glass— com ple te with class officers and a full activity pr og ram . A class organiz atio n for f r es h m en would s up ply th e deans a n d th e orientation officials w'ith th e st ru c t u ra l necessities for c on du ct in g a y ea r- lo ng p r o g r a m of a s ­ sistance to n ew students. In addition, the s tu d e n t s t h e m ­ selves would have the infinite a d v a n t a g e s deve lo pin g from a supervised, intelligently-directed p r o g r a m of social life, and e x t r a - c u rr ic u l a r activities. N o w t h a t the first step has be en ta k e n t o w a r d a b r o a d ­ er or ien ta ti on plan, this seems a wise time to t a k e still a second step and brin g t h e f r e s h m a n into his own as an individual meri ti ng official a n d t h or ou gh at tention of University assistance. T h e D a i l y T e x a n The Daily Texan, stu d en t new spaper of The University of Texas, is published in Austin every morning except Mondays and S a tu r ­ days, Septem ber to June, and twice weekly during the sum m er ses­ sion under the title of The Summer Texan by Texas S tud ent Publications, Inc. News contributions may be made by telephone (2-2473) or a t the editorial offices in Journalism Building 101, 102, and 109. Com­ plaints ab ou t delivery service should be made the business office, Journalism Building 108 (2-2473). in M e a beg Associated Go0e6*ate Press SUBSCRIPTION R A TE S: The Ie x a n will be delivered in Austin, provided the place of de­ livery is within the c a rrie r limits, from N ineteenth to Twenty- seventh streets, inclusive south to north, and from Rio G rande Street on the west and San Jacinto Boulevard on the east. The Daily Texan is entered as second class mail a t the post office a t Austin, Texas, by Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. E d ito r-in -C h ie f_______ Associate Editor ___ Society Editor.._______ Amusements Editor___ Sports E d ito r_________ ..HORACE BUSBY -Mickey Nebenzahl Dorothy H untington — Jim m y Grove -----------Bill Johnson Blanket Tax (Activity Ticket) Your lnsnrr«nc For Good Times B u r s a r ’s Office S T A F F F O R TH IS ISSUE Night E ditor .................. BE T SE Y BIGGS Assistant Night E d i t o r .................. Mickey Nebenzahl Night R e p o rte rs ------------------------ — Marvin Aliskj’, Horace Busby Copyreaders ------------------------------------------------------------ Ju d y Gaston Night Sports Editor — ....... George Raborn Assistant .................... — .. Mark Robinson Night Society Editor _ ............. . .. .--------------------- Betty Lu Hill I 12. 15 IS 3o 34 4 7 50 53 11 :, i i M 22 \ 29 / / / / 3» 32 i s 35 > 4 8 51 \ , 54 r n 8 14 M ' 17 20 ^ ■ J o 33 ' 37 49 52 i55 H O R I Z O N T A L 51. tw itching I. large rodent 52. new 5 . n t , re amount J L ' r a n y 55. dash V E R T I C A L I. gait 2 an astringent 3. set of bells 4. sphere of action 5. correctable 6. missing 7. to cut off LONDON, Sept. 12.— (TNS) — The Big Five Allied Council of faced with a foreign ministers, Yugoslav demand fo r sixty billion in dollars today tackled the problem of a peace tr e a ty with Italy. re parations, y e t had into Neither Italian nor Yugoslav been representatives called the conference of American, Russian, B r i t i sh, French and Chinese delegates. But both nations were hoping to p a r ­ ticipate. The foreign ministers held a two and a half hour session. Owing to the num ber of docum ents to be tra n sla te d and studied it was a n ­ nounced the n ext meeting would be a t l l a. rn. F riday in­ stead of tomorrow. th a t th e Yugoslavs Strict secrecy m arked the con­ ference with each delegate taking precautions against news “ leaks.” But in London made it clear th a t they w an t the port of Trieste and the custody of m any accused Italian w ar crimi­ nals in addition to heavy re p a r a ­ tions. The French also w ere u n d e r­ stood to be insisting on re p a r a ­ tions in principle, and the rectifi­ cation of Italian fro n tie rs in the Alps and in Africa. The Italian peace settlem ent raises so many controversial prob­ lems th a t the delegates will con­ sider it a miracle if the territorial m atte rs alone are settled within a fortn ig ht. Diplomatic Despite a British w arning th a t it was too early to speculate on the progress of the conference, re­ ports already had cropped up th a t Russia was dem anding a concur­ ren t discussion of the problem of Romania, H ungary, and Bulgaria. said, how­ ever, th a t if such an a ttitu d e was taken th a t country by Russia the minority likely would be in since it is believed th e Fren ch and Chinese will sup po rt the British and Americans who w a n t the Italian settlem ent to be achieved first. circles I t also was being hinted th a t the foreign ministers cannot expect to do more th an outline the work for the deputies and experts in the brief time a t their disposal. 1 0 1 6 . 8 a ceiling (arch.) 9 seed covering IO ratify l l . hardy 37. pocket-case 19. terminal 22. heinousness 23. weaken 24. beer 26. card game 27. opposed to phenomenal 28 feline 29 before 31. moral 25. sister of one’s father or mother 36. still 40. tarsus 41. scorch 42. sea bird 43. plexus 41, frustrate 45. bristle 46. discerned 48. of that thing bcat 12. like a wing 13. low 14 35. 16. 18. 20. 2 1 . 22. 23. 25. 30. 32. 33. 34. expanse heal particular noted fine silk net debark merr.ment salt loitering agave large snake cry loudly stat* of h av­ ing five p a rts an Indian shade 480 sheets small bird portliness a building joint of leg pier 37. 38. 39. 41. 44. 47. 49. 50. E. W . Bailey Chosen New Student Government Advisor (Continued from Page I ) P. M. Ferguson, Focht, Gregg, Guernsey, Hughes, J. J. Jones, Matsen, Otto, Rosenquist, Villa- ( rreal, L. Williams. Employment f o r Students and G raduates: Dunham, Dozier, Ge- bauer, Gidley, C. T. McCormick, McNeill, Manuel, Masley, Mrs. Reed. F a c ulty -S tud ent C a b i n e t : Arrowood, Dunham, Crowell, Flinn, Gebauer, Nowotny, Parlin, J. N. Thompson, and seven s tu ­ dents. Loans to S tu d e n ts: Nowotny, Focht, Gebauer, McGinnis, S ta y ­ ton, Winters. Religious L ife: Reddick, Albers, Beal, Black, Byboc, S r Dodson, ; E ttlinger, R. B. Fitzgerald, Mc- Laurin, Meadors, Riker, W. A. J Smith, R. J . Williams. S tu den t Activities Forensics: H ardin, Stenberg, Villarreal, R. H. Williams. Generjfl S tu d e n t O rganizations: Minter, M a rg a re t Ball, Gipson, Mrs. Spratt, and two students. Intercollegiate Athletics: Short, A. E. Cooper, C. A. Smith. Intram ural Athletics fo r M en:j i W hitaker, Alderson, A. E. Cooper, I D. L. Miller, Price. Intram ural A t h l e t i c s f o r ; W omen: Hiss, Autrey, Gebauer, Gregg, O’Gara. Official Non-Athletie S tudent Ac­ tivities: Nowotny, Chairman. A Cappella Choir: A. N. Jones. I Curtain Club: Minter. Intercollegiate Debating and Declaiming: N. E. Miller. Judges a n d Interscholastic, League C ontests: Bedichek. Longhorn B a n d : Schoch. Men’s Glee C lub: A. N. Jones. E n t e r ta i n ­ Student C ultural ment: A. N. Jones. Student G overnm ent: Bailey. Publications: P. Student J. Symphonic B and: B ernard F i t z - 1 University O p e r a Company: Thompson. gerald. Gipson. University S ingers: A. N. Jones. University Symphony Orches­ tra : von Kroisler. W omen’s Glee Club: Gebauer. Recreation: Hiss, A ld e r s o n ,1 Ball, Dunham, Gettys, A. N. Jones, Meadors, E. G. Smith, W. A. Smith, Mrs. S p ra tt, Sutherland, Whitaker. Student G overnm ent: Bailey, R. C. Anderson, M. Peck, Rathbone, Sparenberg, Southerland. Student O rganizations Main- i ta in in g Houses: Mrs. Allen, R. C. I Anderson, Gebauer, Gipson, H o p - ! per, M. Peck, and fo ur students. j J, 1 Student Publications: P. Thompson, G entry, O. B. Williams. Austin 20.000 County Children Troop Back to School and Travis County school children, num bering 20,- 000, are troo ping back to school to join the rank s of U niversity stu d e n ts who have been a tte n d in g classes all summer. Along with 17.000 Austin school pupils, 3,000 pupils of 13 cou nty schools, p a ­ rochial schools, or private col­ leges are r e tu r n in g to the class­ room. I S tudent Social A ffa irs: Ge- j bauer, Mrs. A l l e n , Minter, | Nowotny. A dministrative Committees. Public Relations: C ranberry, Black, Eddy, Frederick, McCurdy, MacCorkle, Nowotny, R o l f e , Rousse, P. J. Thompson, President of S tu d e n ts’ Association. The chairm an is an ex officio sub­ following the m ember of comm ittees: Motion Pictures and Exhibits: McCavick, Brace, C a rrs, A. B. I Cox, G. L. Evans, Hoflin, J. J. Jones, Minter, Rolfe. Reception: E. G. Smith, Mrs. Allison, Bellmont, Hiss, G. E. H urt, O lle; President and Secre ta ry of S tu d e n ts’ Association; Presidents of Alpha Phi Omega, Orange Jackets, M ortar Board; Forem an of Cowboys; Abbott of Friars. Radio: Doty’, Mrs. Beal, Eck­ h a r t , H ackett, Hardin, McCurdy, P itte n g e r, Rousse, Shelby, Ulrich. 4 Days to File For Cheerleader (Continued from Page in Gregory. A t I ) the yell rally leaders will final rally, the yell be chosen by audience applause, Smith explained, with a special faculty committee on hand to the audience response. judge Smith was an assistant leader; last year along with several men 1 and one woman still in school. Red ; May, Mike Callas, and Patsy Goff I all were assistants last year. May i is expected to tr y out again this year, and Callas was ru nn e r-u p in the race fo r the head yell le a d e r’s post this y e a r against Smith. Indication is, however, th a t new faces will be in order fo r most of the positions to be filled fo r the yell leading jobs. Smith reported interest was increasing b ut did not state w heth er or not definite com m ittm ents of candidacies have been made by any stud en ts al­ ready. Presbyterians to Open Seminary Wednesday The Austin Presbyterian T h e­ ological Seminary will open W ed­ nesday, Septem ber 19. Tuesday night, S eptem ber 18, the board of tru stee s will hold a reception for the new president of the seminarj', Dr. WL D. Stitt. Tri-State Industries To Hold Personnel Meet A personnel conference of 250 industrialists throu gh out f r o m Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana will be held in Hogg Auditorium, October 26 and 27. Dr. J. A. Fitzgerald, dean of the College of Business A dm inistra­ tion, is p e rm a n e n t chairm an, and A m o Nowotny, dean of men, is perm an ent secretary fo r this a n ­ nual conference. M. L. Begeman, professor of mechanical engineer­ ing, is chairm an of this y e a r ’s program. Girl Engineers Finish Training Build Amplifiers, Radio Sets (Continued from Page I ) ton according to the abilities of its members. They are now paid $145 a m onth and tuition by the federal governm ent. They a t ­ tend classes fo rty hours a week. One thing th ey like is t h a t they “ can w ear shorts to shop.” They began their construction careers by making amplifiers, and the proud builders of are now radio sets. Teachers, according to th e ir description, are “ w onder­ fu l.” T heir contracts are fo r the duratio n and six months, though some of them w ant to make radio a career. The aides have e n te rta in e d their instructo rs several times a t house parties. On Septem ber 2 one of the aides, Irene Heil, was m arried to S ta f f S e rg e an t Gene Reis in the patio of the dormitory. Flowers were “ borrow ed” from neighbor­ ing houses and a dinner ring was used in lieu of a wedding band. The plans were made r a th e r h u r­ riedly, the couple had planned to be m arried before S e r­ g e a n t Reis left for overseas duty two years ago. B a rb a ra Brown was bridesmaid th e Rev. Lewis P. Speaker officiated. though a nd Elaine Young is p resid en t of the gro u p ; Hazel Corley, vice-presi­ d e n t; Dorothy Moore, social chair­ m an ; and Joy E aton, scholastic chairm an. T heir housem other is Mrs. B re ta G rant. The girls now living in White Arms are Catherine B arrier, Dal­ las; Olivia B arrier, Dallas; Lois Billings, B a n de ra; Mary Brashers, San Antonio; B a rb a ra Brown, Dallas; Ja n e Burton, Knox City; Florence Chambers, Dallas; Bettye Connally, L a P o rte ; and Evelyn, Dunn, Dallas. Lillian G riffin, Dallas; Bonnie I H arm on, Greenville, Miss.; Eris Hutchinson, A tlanta, Ga.; Mary Ann Jacobs, T y ler; P a t Keen, Cor­ sicana; Dorothy Lusk, Austin; Je a n Maxwell, T errell; Fre d n a Mercer, Dallas; Marylin Miller, G ladew ater; and P a t P atterson , New Mexico. Irene Reis, Goliad; Alice Shack­ l e ^ San Antonio; C h arlotte Som­ mers, Dallas; Doris Spencer, H ous­ ton; J u a n ita S tew art, J e w e tt; Jo Stokes, Dallas; Taylor, O rang e; Elizabeth T e rry , F ort W o rth ; Dottie Wahlquist, Dallas; J a n e Williams, Dallas; and Jean Wilson, Ind ustry , 111. J e a n Cousins in Print Again, Now It’s ‘Worshipper’ E x -stud en t M a rg a re t Cousin’s story of a 13-year-old lass, “ The W orshipper,” crashes to th e fro n t in the Septem ber issue o f Good- housekeeping. A m em ber of the Goodhousekeeping s ta ff, M i s s Cousins's stories a p p e a r monthly. Pearl Harbor Genius Taken - Yank's Blood May Save Tojo TOKYO, Sept. 13— (T h u r s d a y ) —- ( I N S ) — Summary a rr e s t of the Ja p adm iral who plotted the sneak a tta c k on Pearl H arbor and the suicide of E m p e ro r Hirohito’s supreme military adviser today dram atized General Douglas M acA rthur's stern campaign to blot out Ja pa ne se militarism and terroristic organizations. Admiral Shigetaro Shimada, navy m inister in form er Prem ier Hideki Tojo’s notorious “ P earl H arbor” cabinet, readily submitted to a rr e s t a t his home south of Tokyo and w ent quietly to Mac­ A r t h u r ^ Counter-intelligence Command H eadquarters. Field Marshal General Sugiyama, top military advisor to the E m peror since F ebruary , 1944, shot himself through the head with a .45 caliber pistol bullet Wednesday afternoon. Tojo, given blood plasma, penicillin and a direct blood tra n s ­ fusion by an American arm y sergeant who said he wanted Tojo to “ live and meet the real justice coming to him,” was pronounced on the road to recovery from a self-inflicted bullet wound in the chest. 'Six Million Discharges By July, ’ Senators Here B y I n t e r n a t i o n a l N e w s S e r v i c e U n d e r s e c r e t a r y of W a r P a t t e r s o n promised the Senate Military Com m itt ee t h a t ar m y d isc ha rg es would be s tep ped up to release six million men by ne xt July. He said t h a t four million men still are o v e r-» ^ j- th a t those n ation, would b a v seas* P a tte rso n ’s s ta te m e n t was made disclosed satisfied when the whole plan is to a Congress seething with dis­ satisfaction over p resent demobil­ ization policies. He had barely told the committee t h a t te d ra ft must be continued when the House heard new demands fo r abolish­ ment of both the d r a f t and the point discharge system, committee The Senate sum­ moned high arm y officials to an s­ tom orrow on dis­ w er criticism charge plans fo r men w ithout overseas duty and fo r limited serv­ ice personnel. S enator Johnson insist (D) Colo, said he would th a t a GI be called in to present the d ra fte e 's view. President T rum an named fo rm ­ Francis er A tto rn ey General Biddle U.S. Ju dg e on the I n te r ­ to national court tr y E uropean w ar criminals this fall. Federal Jud ge John J. P a rk e r of North Carolina was chosen a lte rn a te . The chief executive Mr. T rum an said t h a t form er Supreme Court Justice Owen J. Roberts had declined the appoint­ ments The I in favor of a rest. president said he was still consid- i ering an a ppointm ent to fill Rob­ e rts ’ place on th e Supreme C o u r t . : told his; news conference th a t American | occupation forces would not use “ kid gloves” in dealing with Ja pa n. He noted th at some of the including Aus­ United Nations, tralia, had shown concern th a t United States policies would be too lenient. Mr. T ru m a n predict- i 50,000 Contracts End Since V-J, Navy Reports N E W YORK, Sept. 12.— H. S truve Hensel, assistant sec­ retary of the Navy, announced in New York today th a t the Navy has term inated nearly 50,000 w ar con­ tracts since V-J Day. All Band and String Accessories • Reeds • Drum Heads • N E W Instrument Cases E xclu sive B a ld w in P ian o D ea lers for C entral T ex a s N e w P h o n o g ra p h s and R ad ios Soon! m.jnm ON T H E DR AG IN JUST 2 TO 3 HOURS • • • GIVE YOURSELF A G^Waee $ ■25 PERMANENT PLUS 15< T A X J H I COMPLETE WITH CURLERS A N D EVERYTHING YO U NEED M other*! Cive your d au gh ter a T O N I C O L I) W A V E — Y o u ’ll he th rilled an d proud o f th e r e su lt. 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