What Q o e i O k Jtene M orning 8— D r. E . C. L in d e m a n , a u t h o r i t y o n e d u c a tio n a n d social w e lf a re , l e c t u r e s a t C r y s ta l B allroom , H o g g A u d ito riu m . IO— F a c u l t y W ives Social C lub m e e tin g , a t th e ho m e o f Mrs. I. P. H ild e b ra n d . IO— A r t E x h ib itio n s, A cadem ic R oom , M ain Building. >10— D r. E. C. L in d e m a n le c tu re s , C r y s ta l B allroom , H o g g A udi- to r iu m . f r Afternoon 12— D iap a so n Club o r g a n c o n c e r t a t t h e F ir s t S o u th e r n P r e s b y t e r ­ ia n C hu rch. 1— U n iv e r s ity D am e s lu n c h eo n , A u s tin H otel. 2— P o s tp o n e d ex a m s, a n t h r o p o l­ o gy, e n g in e e rin g , g o v e r n m e n t, philoso phy, physics, psychology, a n d d r a m a in G eology B u ild­ in g 14. 2 —4— A r t E x h ib itio n s, A cadem ic R oom , Main Building. 3— J u n i o r H elping H a n d a n n u a l f a s h io n rev u e , a t H o g g M em ­ o r ia l A u d ito riu m . 4— M e n ’s V a r sity D e b a te S quad, M ain B uilding 202. 4— Dr. E . C. L in d e m a n le ctu res , C r y s ta l B allroo m , Driskill H o ­ tel. Night 7— T e x a n N e w sp a p e r Guild m e e t­ ing, J . B. IOO. 7 :3 0 — I n s titu t e fo r H o u s e m o th e r s a n d C o -O rd in a to rs o f C o - O p e r a t­ ives, G a rriso n H all 108. 7 :3 0 — L o n g h o rn D eM olay Club, T e x a s U nion 315. 8— Le C ercle F r a n c a is , T e x a s U n ­ \ ion 309. 8-11— O b s e r v a to ry o pen in Physics B uilding. 8 :1 5 — Miss s p e a k u n d e r T o w n Hall, Y.M.C.A. J e a n n e t t e M arks th e au spices o f More Engineers Needed by Navy N e w Field of Radara Requires Radio Men im m e d ia te ly The N a v y nee d s com m issioned o fficers f o r as sig n ­ m ent to the field o f highly sp e­ cialized d e v e lo p m e n t in elec tro n ics n g in e e r i n g kno w n a s r a d a r . R a ­ dar involves the use o f u ltra -h ig h frequency ra d io for lo c a to rs an d sensing devices. A d e m o c r a tic w orld m a d e u p of all n a tio n s— a f o rm o f a U n ite d S ta te s o f t h e W o r ld — is th e ideal to w a r d w hich Dr. M o n tg o m e ry leans, a n d is th e ideal w hich he believes will be th e b e s t m ove pos­ sible a f t e r th e w ar. T h e a l te r n a t iv e , he said, is some f o rm o f w o rld em pire, d o m in a te d c i th e r by th e U n ite d S t a t e s o r by G erm a n y , a n d t h a t d o es n ’t ap p e al to th e b u sh y -h a ire d d o c to r o f eco­ nomics. “ I ’d r a t h e r see th e w e a k e s t fo rm of a d e m o c r a c y ,” he said, “ th a n a s tr o n g w o rld e m p ir e .” H e f u r t h e r e s tim a te d t h a t a w orld em pire w ould la st “ a p p r o x im a te ly th ir ty o r f o r ty y e a r s . . .” H e a t t r i b u t e d th is e a rly p re d ic tio n o f a dow nfall to a d v a n c in g technology. to his G oing bac k ideal o f a u n ite d w orld association of n a ­ tions, w hich he c o m p a re d to th e b e ginn ings o f th e U n ite d S tate s, Dr. M o n tg o m e r y ex p re sse d his opinion t h a t t h e r e is no d o u b t in th e dem ocrac ies his m ind t h a t w ould win th e w ar. His rea so n s f o r th is co n c lu sio n : W e hav e the m en an d th e r a w m a teria ls. H e c o n s id ers in te r n a tio n a l com ­ m un ism as a th ir d possibility, “ B u t I c a n ’t g e t e xc ite d a b o u t a t h r e a t o f w orld co m m u n ism .” R ussia will be k e p t too b u sy de­ veloping h e r ow n c o u n t r y is the th e o r y of Dr. M o n tg o m ery , who describes t h e R ussians as “ n o t an explosive p e o p le .” B u t if G er­ m a n y should becom e co m m unistic, t h a t w ould be a n o t h e r sto ry . In t h a t case th e U n ite d S ta te s had in G e rm a n y th e m b e t t e r m e e t See M O N T G O M E R Y , P a g e 3. Author to Speak 3 Times Today Lindeman!s Topic Is Wartime Welfare A p p lic a n ts ho ld in g a d e g re e in e le c tric a l o r ra d io e n g i n e e r in g a r e p r e f e r r e d , b u t m en w ho possess d e­ g r e e s in a n y e n g i n e e rin g classifi­ cation w ith a m a th e m a ti c a l b a c k ­ g r o u n d m a y be utilized. In d ividu a ls Dr. E d u a r d C. L in d e m an o f New Y ork, n o te d a u t h o r a n d l e c tu r e r on e d u c atio n a n d social w e lf a re , le c tu re s T u e sd a y will give t h r e e w ho do n o t have such a d e g re e b u t j u n d e r th e sp o nsorsh ip o f th e H ogg a r e q u a lif ie d by p ro fe ssio n a l ex- j F o u n d a tio n . p e r ie n c e a r e also u r g e d to apply. • O f f ic e r s selected f o r this w o rk will be placed on a c tiv e d u t y an d will r ec eiv e a five m o n t h s ’ course o f in te n siv e tr a i n i n g in p r e p a r a ­ tio n f o r this special w ork. U pon c o m p le tio n of this c o u r s e th e y will be a s sig n e d to d u ty w h e r e th e i r se rv ic es m a y be r e q u ir e d . A com m ission as a r e se rv e o f ­ f ic e r in th e U. S. N av a l R eserve u n d e r th e classification A - V ( S ) , E - V ( S ) , O -V ( S ) an d C - V ( S ) fo r radaw* will be g r a n t e d th o se a p p li­ c a n ts w ho a r e a c c e p te d as being p r o fe ssio n a lly a n d physically q u a l­ ified. T h e r a n k to w hich a p p lic a n ts a r e a p p o i n te d will be co m m e n s u r- . a t e w ith th e ir a g e a n d ex p e rien c e. P a y a n d allow anc es f o r o ffic e r s o f th e N a v a l R eserve is th e sam e as t h a t o f o ffic e r s o f th e R e g u la r N avy. Men who a r e q u a lifie d in a c c o r d a n c e w ith th e ab o v e r e q u i r e ­ m e n ts a n d a r e b e tw e e n th e ages of 19 a n d 50 y e a r s a r e u r g e d to a p p ly im m ed ia te ly to th e D ire c to r of N a v a l Reserves, E ig h th Naval D istric t, N ew F e d e r a l Building, N ew O rlea ns, La., f o r app lica tio n fo rm s . T h o se in te r e s te d should f u rn is h a t this tim e c o m p lete in f o rm a tio n r e g a r d i n g age, e d u c a tio n , m a rita l s ta tu s , p r o fe ssio n a . e x p e rie n c e , in­ c lu d in g s a la r y rec eiv e d a n d such in f o r m a ti o n .as m a y seem o t h e r n e c e s sa r y fully all q u a lific a tio n s. to se t f o r t h loaned books F eb . 22 Is F a c u lty B ook D ead lin e A l e x a n d e r M o ffit, as so c ia te li­ b r a r ia n , has a n n o u n c e d t h a t F eb ­ is th e la st d ay f o r all r u a r y 22 f a c u lty r e ­ tu r n e d . Mr. M o f fit ask s t h a t all f a c u lty m e m b e rs r e t u r n bo rro w ed 2>ooks as soon as possible so t h a t ^ t h e r e c o rd s o f th e lib r a ry m ay be s t r a i g h te n e d out. T he books m ay be b o r ro w e d again a f t e r th e se r e c ­ o rd s a r e com plete. to be Th# Weather: Cold w av e due this m o r n in g . H e will le c tu r e on “ H u m a n W e l­ f a r e in T im e o f W a r , ” a n d “ The Special R e sponsibility o f E d u ­ in c a to r s and Social S c ie n tists W a r T im e,” a t 8 an d IO o ’clock, respectively , T u e s d a y m o r n in g in H o g g A u d ito riu m . His th ir d lec­ t u r e , on “ W o r k in g T o g e t h e r fo r D e f e n s e — a n d A f t e r , ” will be in th e C ry sta l B allroom o f th e Dris­ kill H o tel a t 4 o ’clock th e a f te r n o o n . in Dr. L in d e m a n , who b e g a n his c a r e e r as e d i t o r o f T he G le a n e r in D etro it, Mich., w hen he w as 21, has b e e n a m e m b e r o f the f a c u lty a t M ichigan A g r ic u ltu ra l College a n d a t N o rth C a ro lin a College. H e se rv e d as t r u s t e e of th e N a tio n a l Child L a b o r C om ­ m itte e , as c o n s u lta n t f o r th e N a ­ tio n a l Council o f P a r e n t Educa* tion, an d th e W o rk s P r o g r e s s A d ­ m in istra tio n . Dr. L in d e m an , w ho is th e a u t h o r o f “ Social D isc o v ery ” a n d “ The M ean ing of A d u lt E d u ­ c a tio n ,” tw o books d e a lin g w ith e d u c a tio n a n d social science, is es­ pecially n o te d f o r his a b ility to r e la te e d u c a tio n , social science, a n d social philosophy to th e p ro b ­ lem s of th e day. Wilmot Contest Date Tentatively March 18 th e o ld e st T h e W ilm o t D ec lam atio n C on­ speech te s t, one o f th e cam pu s, has been e v e n ts on te n ta t iv e l y sched u le d f o r March 18, C on de R. H oskins, in s t r u c to r in speech w ho is in c h a r g e o f the a f f a i r , has a n n o u n c e d . T he c o n te st, f o r which the p rize m o ney h as been d o n a t e d by Mrs. Sully B. R o b e rd e a u , is open to all f r e s h m a n s tu d e n ts w ho are in te r e s te d in speech activities. A $25 aw a rd will be given f o r the w in n e r in ea ch th e boys’ a n d the g ir ls ’ divisions. Second prizes will be $15 in books fro m th e U niver- I sity Co-Op. “ A n y r e g is te r , a n d se lec t in te r e s te d f r e s h m a n J should come by th e o ffice imm ed- ; iately , th e " a b je c t fo r his d e c la m a tio n ,” said Mr. H oskins. His office is located in Main B uilding 2503, a n d his o f ­ fice h ours a r e 9-10, 11-12, and ' 3-5 o’clock daily. The Th e Fi r $t C o l i e g e Texan D a i l y i n t h e S o u t h VOLUME 43 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, FBRUARY 17, 1942 Six Pages Today No. 114 A 'U .S. of the W orld’ Best Post-W ar Idea, Montgomery Says Dillon, Brooks, Dub to Promote 13th Round-Up B y D o r o t h y C h a t m a a ‘‘The people of the world are members of one large community, and they can’t get out of that community now,” Dr. R. H. Montgomery, professor of economics, told members of the Athenaeum Literary Society Monday night at the Law Building. 1,354 Students, Faculty And Drag Men Register Draftees Serious t t E p * Dislike of Dean Our Own Idea, MedSeniorsSay School Inquiry Report Is Sought; Legislator Censured Special to The D aily Texan G A L V E S T O N , F eb. 16.— Rep. re se n ta tiv e s o f th e 67 p e r c e n t o f th e U n iversity of T exas m e d ica l school senio r class w hich r e c e n t ­ th e Bo ard o f R e ­ ly petitio n e d g e n t s to leave D ea n J. W. Spies’* n a m e o f f th e ir diplom as asserted to d a y t h a t th e p e titio n w a s n o t in stig a te d by a f a c u lty m e m b e r. T he s t a t e m e n t w as m ade in r e ­ ply to F r i d a y ’s c h a rg e by R e p re ­ se n ta tiv e A r t h u r C a to of W e a t h ­ e r f o r d t h a t a f a c u lty m e m b e r s ta r t e d th e p etitio n a n d also a d ­ vised s tu d e n ts o f his so p h o m o re class to w ith d ra w fro m school. T he p etitio n w as s ta r t e d a n d circ u la te d solely by stu d e n ts, ac­ c o rd in g to C h a rle s T. R u m b le, t h e sp o k e sm a n E d in b u r g , gro u p . All of th e s tu d e n ts sign­ ing the p e titio n e x c e p t th e la s t o ne had a p a r t in passing it on to o the rs, he said. o f In ad d itio n • to Rum ble, o t h e r s t u d e n ts r e p r e s e n t i n g p e ti­ th e tion signe rs w e r e : T hom as A. W i t­ te n , G alv e sto n ; R. R. S h e p p e rd , L ib e rty Hill; J . L. W iggins, M u n ­ d a y ; Virgil S a n d e r s , Big S p r in g ; H u g h P. Revely, San A n to n io ; a n d O. J . R ich ardso n, Allison. P u rp o se of p r e s e n tin g th e p e ti­ tion to th e B o a rd o f R e g e n ts w a s im pression c r e a t e d to c o r r e c t an la s t su m m e r w h en th e R e g e n t s c o n te m p la te d d isp lac in g D r. Spies as dean, R u m b le explain ed. A t t h a t tim e a v o te o f th e s t u d e n t body showed t h a t a m a jo r ity h a d co n fid e n ce in Dr. Spies, b u t since th e n m a n y h a v e ch a n g e d t h e i r views, a m o n g w hom a r e sig n e rs o f th e r e c e n t p e titio n , th e spokes­ m a n alleged. S h ep p erd said a sizeable m a ­ jo r i t y of both se n io r a n d j u n i o r class a r e now' opposed to th e poli­ cies o f Dr. Spies a n d th e y w e r e “ f e d u p ” w ith th e co n tro v e rsy . A lthou gh th e petitio n w as r e ­ je c te d by th e Board of R e g e n ts, it w'as fu lly c o n s id e re d a n d t h e p e titio n e rs w’e r e n o t ig nored, t h e g ro u p of seven s t u d e n ts a d m itte d . T hey showed f ro m U n i­ v ersity P r e s i d e n t H o m e r P. Rai­ n e y an d Leslie W a g g e n e r, R e g e n t t h a t th e c h a irm a n , w hich s ta te d R e g en ts had v o te d to follow t h e usual p r o c e d u re th e d e a n sign th e diplom as. having le t t e r s in • M eanwhile, w o rd w'as te le ­ g ra p h e d here t h a t Dr. Russell Op- p e n h e im e r o f A tla n ta , e x e c u tiv e c o m m itte e c h a ir m a n of th e Asso­ ciation of A m e r ic a n Medical Col­ to say w h e th e r a leges, re fu se d r e p o r t of the J a n u a r y s u rv ey o f th e local medical school has bee n given a t a c u r r e n t m e e tin g of th e o r g an iz atio n in Chicago. A ny action w'hich m ay be ta k e n by the association w ith r e g a r d to th e U n iv ersity m e dica l school will be re p o r te d publicly a t a m e e t­ ing of th e g r o u p in O ctober, Dr. O p p en h e im e r ex p lain e d . asso cia tio n Dr. F re d Z a p f f e . s e c r e ta ry , w'ho m a d e the su r v e y w ith Dr. E. M. M cEw en o f t h e execu tiv e c o m m itte e , declined to reveal c o n te n ts o f th e r e p o r t o r t o discuss it. He e a r l i e r had said t h a t th e r e p o r t w’ould p r e s e n te d S unday. Dr. S p ies w a s also p r e s ­ e n t at the m e e tin g b u t he w ith ­ held a n y c o m m e n t on the m a t t e r . th e Uni­ in v e stig a tio n o f by th e v ersity m edical school S ta te House o f Rpresentatives* C om m ittee on U n -A m e rica n Ac­ tivities, of which R e p re se n ta tiv e C a to is a m e m b e r, is e x p e cted to See MED S C H O O L , P age 3. The be A L E X A N D E R MOFFIT, right above, associate librarian, goes to Union R-Board Num ber 2, where he is registered by Bob Yarber, volunteer, arts and sciences student from Corsicana, while Y arb e r's toy terrier, the registration mascot named ' General M a c A rth u r," looks on. Below, C h ie f Adm inistrafor Bill Clark, A . P.O. president, asks C h ie f Registrar Dean A m o Nowotny, who also had to sign up, if he has recorded the answer correctly for the loca: draft board. Seeking Interpreter's Job, Blind Student W orks on PH. D. B Y E D D I E G R I F F I N A lm ost to ta l d a r k n e s s s u r r o u n d s him, and his p ro g re ss a r o u n d the c a m p u s is slow a n d fa lte rin g , b u t th e se m a t t e r s d o n ’t h in d e r th e e f ­ ficien cy an d a m b itio n of A lcario A lem an, blind Mexican s tu d e n t fro m th e Rio G ra n d e Valley. He has d e m o n s tr a te d this fac t r e m a rk a b ly b y his w in n in g of a $100 — Will R ogers scho larsh ip re c e n tly . ♦.........................— ....... H elpe d by the service clubs o f t h e V alley, A le m a n g r a d u a t e d in 1939 fro m high school a t Alamo. U pon g r a d u a tio n , he w e n t to E d in b u r g h J u n i o r College, a n d a r ­ rived h ere in 1941 as a ju n io r . Hop'oful fo r w o rk with th e f o r ­ eign service, A le m a n stu d ie s so­ th ro w s ciology, g o v e r n m e n t, a n d the in biology and b o ta n y co m p lete schedule. H oping to r e ­ ceive his d o c t o r philosophy fro m the U n iv ersity , he will c o n ­ tin u e his w o rk th r o u g h s u m m e r sessions as well a s the L ong S e s­ sion. f o r of : can i n t e r p r e t e r . ” he says. A r e s id e n t o f L ittle Cam pus, A lem an plans to rem ain th e re as long as lie can sta y in th e U n iv er- I sity. busily A lw ays s te e r in g his course f o r some point on th e c a m ­ pus, he w as leav in g the J o u r n a l- ism Building M onday m o r n in g fo r G arriso n Hall w'hen som eone a s k e d : “ W h a t ’s all the p a p e r in y o u r h a n d ? ” “ S em e lessons I ’ve g o t to hand “ I hope I can h r a P an -A m eri- in,” he laughed. Recapped Tire Rationing Begins Midnight Feb. 19 into R a tio n in g of tir e rec a p p in g and r e tr e a d in g will go e f f e c t m id n ig h t T h u rs d a y , F e b r u a r y 19. Only those p e rso n s declared eligi­ ble by local r a ti o n in g b o a rd s will be able tire s r ec ap p ed or r e tr e a d e d . th e ir old to have F ra n k K night o f F r a n k Kn ght T ire C o m p a n y said th a t only p a s­ s e n g e r c a r tire s will p ro b a b ly be tile r a t i oni ng, since a f f e c t e d by t he re is a t pr esent a suf fi ci e n t supply of r u b b e r to r ec a p heavy t r u ck t it s. The r e -hould be m ore eligible h a y e r s u n d e r th*' new r a ­ t ioni ng t h a n u n d e r the p r e s e n t r a ­ tioni ng o f ne w Gres. O wne r s of dairy t r u c k s an d im­ p o r t a n t r etail delivery t r uc ks will pr obably be included in the r e c ap r at i oni ng, he said. *1Ue Neuti 9 nude Penick Predicts Fine Team Dr. D. A. P en ic k , U n iv e rsity te n n is coach, p red ic ts the 1942 L ongho rn not te a m to be the be>t in y ea rs , . . T w o m e m b e r s o f th e U n iv e r s it y ’* g o lf team win second and th ir d places in th e a m a ­ te u r division of tho T exas O pen . . . T he L on g h o rn b a s k e tb a ll te a m goes to F a y e tte v ille this w eek to play a tw o-gam e se rie s w ith th e A rk a n s a s Razorback*, c o n f e re n c e le ade rs . . . See S P O R T S , p age 2. M.I.C.A. Open House Feb. 28 C a m p u s Guild lists g u es ts a t th e F r id a y n ig h t V a le n tin e party . . . M.I.C.A. sets d a te fo r next open house on F e b r u a r y 28 . . . The new I n s t i t u t e fo r H o u s e m o th e r s a n d C o -O rd in a to r s of Co-Op­ e r a tiv e s m eets to n ig h t . . . See S O C IE T Y , p a g e 5. Russian Musical Film Coming; A Russian film with music by S erg ei P r o k o f ie f f will be b r o u g h t th u r s d a y by th e n ew ly -fo rm e d Foreign a n d h ere W e d n e s d a y a n d C u l tu r a l Film s C o m m itte e . . . T e x a n r e v ie w e r fo u n d the f a c u lty concert Sunday excellent . . . See AMUSEMENTS, page 6. Red Cross W ill Offer Nutrition and C a re e n in g I B e g in n in g M a rc h 9 and 16, tw o new R e g u la tio n R e d Cross D efen se I C o urses will be o f f e r e d to U niver- 1 sity W om en, it has been a n nounc ed fro m the D ean o f W o m e n ’s Office. Tho tw o new courses a re De­ fen se N u tr itio n an d Red Cross C a n te e n work. T he defense n u ­ tr itio n course will include tw e n t y le ctures, b e g in n in g March 9. I t will m e e t on M onday and Wed- | n esd ay fro m 2-4 o ’clock, a n d on ; T u e sd a y an d T h u rs d a y from 10- 12 o’clock. The ca n te en course, op en to those who have cre d it f o r n u tr iti o n courses, will include te n le ctu res , beginning March 16. I t will m eet on T u esd a y and T h u rs ­ d a y from 2-4 o'clock. C a rd s a re being s e n t o u t to be filled in a n d r e t u r n e d to Dr. J e t W inters, Home E conom ics Build­ ing 319. S tu d e n ts should in d ic a te on th e y can a t ­ te n d the classes if th e y c a n n o t at­ te n d an y o f these section*. the cards w hen Campus Committee To Get Participants For March 27, 28, 29 P la n s f o r t h e T h i r t e e n t h A n ­ ste p n u a l R o u n d -U p w e r e one c o rr a lle d M o n d a y n e a r e r being th e w ith th e a n n o u n c e m e n t co m pleted m e m b e r s h ip th e C am pus P a r tic ip a ti o n C o m m itte e by Jo h n A. M c C urd y, s e c r e t a r y o f th e E x - S tu d e n ts ’ A ssociation. o f o f S e rv in g as co-chairm en on the co m m ittee will be J a n e W o r th i n g ­ to n Duls, s o ro ritie s a n d d o r m ito ­ rie s ; C liffo rd B rie n Dillon, f r a t e r ­ nities a n d d o r m ito r ie s ; a n d J a c k Bascom Brooks, o r g a n iz a tio n s. The p a r ti c ip a tio n g ro u p s will be responsible f o r th e in v ita tio n an d re c e p tio n o f v isitin g alu m n i, p a r e n ts , a n d o t h e r an d will c o -o rd in ate th e ac tiv itie s of all c a m p u s o r g a n iz a tio n s d u r in g this y e a r ’s R oun d -U p to be held M arch 27, 28, a n d 29. g u e s ts, O th e r s tu d e n ts who will se rv e on th e c o m m itte e include th e fo l­ low ing: S o roritie s d o rm ito rie s— a n d M a ry V ir g in ia A rle d g e , B e tte P a r k , A n n a M u n g e r, P eg g y P e n n , D o ro th y C am pbell, V irg in ia C r a w ­ E liz a b e th fo rd , N u n n , a n d V irg in ia Marie. P eg g y Brice, F r a t e r n i t i e s a n d d o r m ito r ie s — B ra d le y B o u rla n d , Kiel Boone, J a m e s H op kins, Coy L ay, R o b e rt S h ep h erd , Philip Sm ith, C h a rles S to re y , a n d M u r p h y B a x te r. O rg a n iz a tio n s — Bill C lark, B ur- r u s P ugsley, D o ro th y M atth e w s, M a rjo rie S h ep h erd , M a r ia n n a Slu- der, M arion T hom a s, R o b e rt S cur- lock, R o b e r t L ee B ob b itt, Bill Rice, J a m e s N e w m a n , T r u e t t H a r ­ ris, E d H olcom b, J e a n Rawls, D o uglas Z w eine r, W a l t e r Caven, J o Leigh Cohn, F r e d K n ig h t, Ro­ S tru s s, C onnie G ossett, b e r t a R o s e m a ry S co tt, a n d M a ria n n a S m ith. T he o r g a n iz a tio n s g r o u p will 6 m e e t T u e s d a y a f t e r n o o n o ’clock in T ex a s U nion 301. a t M e m b ers o f th e S w e e th e a r t election c o m m itte e a n d th e com- j m it te e f o r th e invitation- a n d e n ­ t e r t a i n m e n t o f v isitin g S o u t h w e s t , C o n f e r e n c e s w e e th e a r ts w ere n o u n ce d F rid a y . a n ­ Neal to Organize Pan-Americans VI I I/ 17507224 ll Better Organization Than W a s ’40 R-Day By RALPH FREDE W i th an a i r se rio u s in to n e , y e t c h a r a c t e r iz e d b y basic A m e r ic a n h u m o r , 1,354 U n iv e r s ity s tu d e n ts , f a c u l t y a n d ^ sta ff m e n , a n d d r a g it y e s te r ­ b u sin e ss m a n a g e r s did d a y — m en 20 y e a r s to 45 y e a r s o f a g e signed u p w ith r e g i s t r a r s in th e U nion L o u n g e to becom e a p a r t o f th e m assive p r o s p e c t list f o r U ncle S a m ’s a r m e d forces. in A m o n g th o se r e g i s t e r i n g M on­ d ay th e th ir d n a tio n a l R-day w e re m en f ro m P e r u , Chin a, E n g ­ la nd, Mexico, G reece, V en e zu e la, b u t m ostly f r o m th e U n ite d S ta te s, in c lu d in g h u n d r e d s o f good S o u th ­ e r n T e x a n s. T o m o rro w , th e se m e n ’s ca r d s will go th e r o u n d s as d r a f t b o a r d s all o v e r th e c o u n t r y will s t a r t f ilin g a n d ship p in g a n d p r e ­ p a r in g to classify. T h e selective service g o t th e m a ll; so f a it h f u l w e r e m a n y N avy V-7 m e n , a l r e a d y in d u c te d , t h a t th e y trie d to r e g is t e r , only to have th e i r e n t r a n c e blocked o r th e ir c a r d s p u t in th e spoil list by C hief R e g i s t r a r D ean A m o N ow otny a n d C h ief A d m in i s t r a t o r Bill C lark , A .P.O. p re sid e n t. In c o n t r a s t to O ctobe r, 1940, re g is t r a tio n on th e cam pus, few r e g i s t r a n t s h ad to be called back r e d o n e ; O ra n g e to h a v e c a r d s J a c k e t , A lpha P hi O m ega, M o r ta r B o a rd , P z a tlx , A. O. Pi so rority, a n d v o lu n te e r r e g i s t r a r s g u a r d e d c a r d s checked o u t by A d m inistra - Sec D R A F T , P a g e 3. Civil Service Exams Being Held Junior Bookkeeping Positions Open I f o r C o m p etitiv e e x a m in a tio n s th e position o f J u n i o r B o o k k e ep ­ ing M achine O p e r a t o r a t $1,440 a y e a r f o r e m p lo y m e n t w ith v a ­ rio u s b r a n c h e s of g o v e r n m e n t se rv ­ in T ex a s a n d L o u isia n a a r e ice now b e in g held, th e U n ite d S ta te s Civil a n ­ Service C om m ission no unces. J o e N eal, f o r m e r t u t o r in th e speech d e p a r t m e n t o f T he U n iv e r ­ sity of T e x a s a n d c o o r d in a to r o f I n te r - A m e r ic a n s t u d e n t activities, ar r iv e d in New Y ork W e d n esd ay , F e b r u a r y l l , to c o n d u c t a s u rv ey o f th e m e th o d s a n d possibilities of s tr e n g t h e n i n g o r g a n iz a tio n a m o n g j m ilita ry p r e f e r e n c e e x c ep t s tu d e n ts o f th e U n ite d S ta te s and o f L atin A m e r ic a n c o u n trie s. Age lim its f o r th is position are 18 to 53 y e a rs. T h ese age limits do n o t apply to p e rso n s g r a n te d t h a t j such p erso n m u s t n o t have rea ch ed to j th e r e t i r e m e n t age app licable j this position. 'Need a Coalition Of All Nations' V a n Kirk's Talk Parallels Eco Prof's BY NORMAN PAULING “ God help us i f th e e n d o f this w a r sees a n A m e r ic a n C e n tu r y — o r a B ritish, G e rm a n , J a p a n e s e , o r R ussian C e n tu r y . T h e r e m u s t e m e r g e an in te r n a tio n a l so c iety— c u ltu ra l, a political, a n d sp ir itu a l union o f all c o u n ­ tr ie s . ” econom ic, T his w as th e opinion expressed M onday n ig h t by Dr. W a l t e r V an K irk, a u t h o r , le c tu r e r , a n d com ­ m e n t a t o r o f th e N B C p ro g ra m , “ Religion in th e N ew s,” in an a d ­ d ress a t H ogg M e m o rial A u d ito ­ rium . ( D r. V a n K ir k ’s address paral­ th e speech m a d e by R. H. leled M o n tg o m e ry , p r o fe s s o r o f eco­ nom ics, to th e A th e n a e u m L ite r ­ a r y S o cie ty la st n ight. See th e s to r y above.) “ T he U nite d S ta te s has in the p a s t been p ra c tic in g in te r n a tio n a l a n a r c h y by r e f u s in g to exercise its so v e re ig n r ig h ts a n d powers. in te r n a tio n a l W e h ave p r e a c h e d m o ra lity , b u t no h a s p r e a c h e d so m uch a n d do ne so lit­ tle to c a r r y o u t its ow n p r e a c h ­ ings.” c o u n t r y th e U n ite d S ta te s Dr. V an K irk p o in te d o u t the f a il u r e o f to jo in th e L e a g u e o f N a tio n s as an ex a m p le of o u r r e tic e n c e to ac­ c e p t o u r m oral responsibilities. H e ex p re sse d th e b e lie f t h a t th e n o n -m e m b e rsh ip o f th e U n ite d S t a t e s w as a m a jo r ca u se o f the L e a g u e ’s failu re . “ A w orld natio n o f v ictors a n d is n e e d e d ,” to g e t h e r v a n q u ish e d he said. “ T h e r e is no use in a l­ liance w ith a .single c o u n t r y , o r in a coalition o f d em ocracies. B e fo re we can have an in te r n a tio n a l po­ in te r n a tio n a l a n lice f o rc e , o r c o u r t, we m u s t hav e a n i n t e r n a ­ tio n a l society in w hich all n a tio n s have equ a l o p p o r tu n ity to j o in . ” Dr. Van K irk re c a lle d t h a t the in people o f a t t e m p t i n g p e r m a ­ n e n t peace, have in th e p a s t de­ v oted the m se lves to d is a rm a m e n t, th e o u tla w in g of w ar, e m b a r g o of a g g r e s s o r n a ­ w a r m a te r ia ls to tions, a n d n e u t r a l isolation. All of to b r in g p eace be­ th e s e ca u se a f r o n t a l a t t a c k on the p ro b lem w as n e v e r m ade. th e U n ite d S ta te s, to o rg a n iz e failed Victory Book Donor Ironically Gives 'Farewell to Arm s' D o n o rs to th e V ic to ry Book th in k i n g — some a r e C a m p a ig n w ishfully. th e H e has a c c e p te d th e a s s ig n m e n t f r o m I n t e r n a t i o n a l S tu d e n t S ervice o f th e U n ite d S ta te s, which has h e a d q u a r t e r s in New Y ork City. This o rg a n iz a tio n se c u re d a g r a n t f ro m th e o ffic e of Nelson R ockefeller, U n ite d S ta te s C o-or­ d in a to r o f I n te r - A m e r ic a n R e la ­ tions, to c o n d u c t th e survey. as To a c c e p t th is position, which will last a b o u t te n weeks, Mr. Neal t u t o r in speech and has been g r a n t e d a leave o f a b ­ sence by the I n s t i t u t e o f L atin A m eric an S tu d ie s w h e re he served as f a c u lty ad v iso r f o r f o re ig n s t u ­ dents. No a p p o i n tm e n t of a new f a c u lty a dvisor has y e t been a n ­ n o u n ce d by P r e s i d e n t H o m e r P. Rainey. Mr. N eal e x p e cts to he hack on th e ca m p u s late in April, The s u c ­ th e s u r v e y will d epe n d cess of upon in f o rm a tio n which can be o b ta in e d from L atin A m eric an s t u d e n ts in this c o u n try . the L a t e s t a d d ition to th e collection is E r n e s t H e m in g w a y ’s “ A F a r e - - resig n e d well to A rm s ,” which has been d e ­ posited in th e Main B u ild in g c o r­ r id o r box. M ilita n t books a p p e a r to he in vogue, alth o u g h books o f alm o st e v e r y d escrip tio n a r e b eing d o n a t­ ed. O th e r r e c e n t acq u isitio n s in ­ clude H. Irv in g H a n c o c k ’s “ Uncle S a m ’s Boys as S e r g e a n t s , ” “ Sky G y p sy ,” by C laudia C ra n s to n , “ T h e i r Y e s te r d a y s ,” by H arold Bell W rig h t, “ F rie n d s T h o u g h D ivided,” a s to r y on the Civil W a r by G. A. H e n ty . an d Taxation Better Than Bank Borrowing-1 rons BY WELDON BREWER T a x a tio n on fu n d s t h a t would be s p e n t o th e rw is e fo r goods and services is a b e t t e r s a f e g u a r d a g a in s t in fla tio n th a n b an k -b o rro w in g . W a t r o u s H. Irons, a s so cia te p r o fe sso r of b a n k in g a n d in v e stm e n t, said M on d a y n ig h t b e f o r e th e A u stin F o ru m o f P u b lic Opinion, m e e t ­ ♦ - --------------------------------- — — —--------- ing in A ustin High School. “ A su b s ta n tia l a m o u n t o f b o r­ ro w in g is in e v ita b le ,” he d ec la re d, “ b u t e v e r y e f f o r t should he given to w a r d e x h a u s tin g f irs t the pos­ sible in c re ase s o f t a x a ti o n . T a x a ­ tion c a n n o t pay th e to ta l cost o f World W a r II; th e d e fic it should be b o rro w e d fro m individuals and in s titu tio n a l in ve stors as f a r as is possible.” B ro a d c a s t over S ta tio n KNOW', th e 3 0 -m in u te a d d r e ss was on the su b je c t . “ F in a n c in g N a tio n a l D e­ f e n s e .” Dr. Iro n s led th e f r e e dis­ cussion of p roblem s t h a t followed. f in a n c in g A lth ough the m oney incom es of m a n y people will in c re ase d u r in g th e y e a r o r y e a r s to real w ea lth of th e A m eric an peo- pie will d ec reas e, Mr. Irons be­ lieves. come, th it is forced “ W a r — e v e n when upon a n a tio n — is an in v e stm e n t in d e s tru c tio n . W a r p r o s p e r ity is See T A X A T IO N , pag e 3 A p plic ations m u s t he filed w ith th e m a n a g e r , T e n t h U n ite d S ta te s Civil Service D istrict, C u s to m ­ house, New O rle a n s, La., b efo re the close of b u sin e ss on M a rc h 2, 1942. F u r t h e r i n f o r m a ti o n an d app li­ c a tio n fo rm s m a y be o b ta in e d fro m th e s e c r e ta r y , B oard of U nite d S t a t e s Civil S ervice E x a m in e rs, a t a n y f i r s t or second-class po st o f ­ fice in T exas or L ouisiana. Law School Loses 105 Since January since J a n u a r y s tu d e n ts F ig u re s r ele ase d M on d a y show t h a t th e School of L aw has lost 105 I. This leaves an e n r o ll m e n t of a p ­ p ro x im a te ly 325 s tu d e n ts , th e m in ­ im um fig u re o f an e s tim a tio n fo r t h e secon d s e m e s t e r m a de by WL P a g e K eeton, a s s i s t a n t dea n of th e School of L aw , in J a n u a r y . A t th e b e g in n in g o f la st se m ­ e s te r th e law e n r o ll m e n t w a s 500 s tu d e n ts , h u t by J a n u a r y I a p ­ p ro x im a te ly s ix t y -e ig h t had w ith ­ d r a w n . I a n d th e end of Im possibility o f a s c e r ta in in g the n u m b e r W'ho d r o p p e d o u t betw een J a n u a r y the second s e m e s t e r m a k e s it d iffic u lt to co m p a re the p r e s e n t en ro llm en t w ith a su rv ey m a de in J a n u a r y u n d e r the direc tio n o f Mr. C. T. McC ormick, d ean o f th e School of Law. The su rv ey show ed th a t 80 I p e r ce n t of the f irs t se m e s te r stu- i d e n ts “ h o p e d ” to r e t u r n this sem­ es ter. T he new e n t r a n c e r e q u ir e m e n ts th e School of Law, recently f o r the g e n e ra l f a c ­ passed upon by ulty, will not te n d to increase e n ­ r o llm e n t u n til th e b eg in n in g of th e s u m m e r session. SPORTS— PAGE TWO Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — P W 2-2473 Hogs, Owls Hold S.W .C. Lead all ence. But that, seems to B aylor has. The e n tire is built aro u n d the one man, Dwight Parks. be te a m The Aggies will p r o b a b ly win one and lo s t one this week. They should bea t S.M.U., who a t p re s­ e n t is a t the bottom o f the con­ and feren c e with no victories eight defe ats. T.C.U. «hould have little ta k in g the A ggies S a t u r d a y night. trouble T.C.U. stands to lose one and win tw o this w eek. T h ey will h e a t Baylor T uesd ay , b u t will fall to Rice Friday. T h ey should stage a romebar'k S a tu rd a y b e a tin g the A gg ies. by T he L o n g h o rn s a r e due fo r a j double d e f e a t this week, especial- I I ly since the loss a t m id-term o f ' j C r o u c h e s Ritchey, S cudday, and i W right. F rid a y an d S a tu r d a y th e I L on gh orn s play A rk a n sas, and the Razorback? have form idable by s ta r t in g five th a t is sparked a i Pitta and C a rp e n te r. The Mustang* will have another dark week-end losing to Rice and A.AM. The result* o f th e com ing w eek the m a y b r in g change* bo tto m of the c o n f e re n c e , b u t th e tw o te am s a t th e to p will only m ove f a r t h e r away fro m th e r e s t of th e team*. to w a r d • • Southwest Conference Statistics • • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, (9*2 THE "STYLE" STORE FOR MEN A t Gastons Re-Scheduled Scrimmage Is Wednesday T h e once-postponed L o n g h o rn in tr a s q u a d football gam e w as call­ tim e b y Coach ed o f f a «p(-ond D. X. Bible M onday a f te r n o o n as w eek-end rain s m uddied th e t u r f o f M em orial S tadium . T he con­ 3 :15 is now scheduled f o r test. a f t e r n o o n . I o’clock W e d n e s d a y A n o th e r sc rim m a g e I in tr a s q u a d will he held S a tu r d a y a f te r n o o n . I Q uite a crowd t u r n e d o u t f o r I thp p ro p o sed tilt as a s tr o n g a f t - j ern o o n sun raised hopes o f grid- j p la y e r s w e n t j iron fans. The th ro u g h a drill F re s h m a n I on in p rep a ration f o r W ednes- j Field d a y ’* g am e. S O U T H W E S T C O N F E R E N C E S T A N D I N G S W'. L. T p. Opp* 326 364 I ....... 7 _ A rk *n »«» ..... . .. Ri#« T G ti . Tex*# ................. . . P a v l n r . . ......... A A M ...................... .......... — S M I .' ft 4 4 4 I ft 412 24ft 3 46 392 2«3 217 3ft7 167 361 4 22 29ft 362 L E A D I N G SCOR E R S G am*# F | r P t . Tp. 14S 69 27 G A M E S T H I S T i # # d a T r b r u i r , I TU ti . a t Fo rt W o r t h . W E E K 1 7 - B a y l o r va. Friday, February 20. — .S ta ti on AAM a t Folia*- Rica a t H o u l t o n , T e x*# a t F a y e t t e v i l l e . S M U va. T .C .U . va. a A r k a n a a a S a t u r d a y , FeHr la rj r va College S t a t ion; SMU. v* AAM R o c a t H o - i i t o n ; T e m va, A r k a n a a a a t F a y e t t e v i l l e . 2 1 — T.C .U . T h a f o ll o w i n g a t a n d i n g a a r a c o m p ile d la a d in g c o n f e r e n c e aeo r cr # fo r on a a c h o f t h a c o n f e r e n c e te a m * . f i va th a H a n d a r t o n J a r r a t t .... N'abora H i f f m a n M ( " k l n o a ____ P i t t a ( a r p e n t » r A d a m # ___ H o n a a W y n n # ___ , .. __ .......9 P a r k a , B a y l o r K ln n e v , R if e _ * P a l m e r , R ir * ___ ______ 8 Pitta, A r k e m a # __ __ 8 ____ a S .M .U :-*eh#rk, H « rd e r# 'jf i, A AM. ____ 7 ____ __ 8 H a r g i a , Texa# 2ft I U 6 m I 7 2ft 1ft 22 i ft i 9ft 9ft 80 H a r g i a Sander R r a h a n a y Kutncr P o p h a m T E X A S 22 C i t r a l F g Et. T n *0 29 32 9 TX 23 I* Hi * 9 2ft S 2 12 * * .............. 8 ft .......... ft .............. M r H a r r y Blackmon Monro# Hunaphriaa B a r r o n 3 2 4 ft ft 8 44 4ft 42 39 41 29 Penick Says Steer Tennis Team Will Be One of Best in Years’ A A M . A R K A N S A S I Pf. T p I ft 9ft >#h #rk 4 H B a#e n a ft I 2» % 27 4 14 M a r k e t t * W e l c h T o m I m a o * . . ........ i i t i I 4 I t ft S M U . .................. ________ ■ RICE G a m e * P f . 39 ft a 23 ft 12 I l l • ll r t . 29 16 9 ft 9 98 «0 SS SO 27 42 92 27 I ft II 20 21 22 19 IS _ _ _ ____ ______ K in n # * P a l m e r Ft. TP. 17 lftl 64 12 6ft Glo## 4 ft 37 9 a i ................... . - La rn b a r t G o m e * _ ____ - ..... G a m e * Fg. Ft. 2ft ft 13 ft ft ft 44 s 4ft K 32 • 29 ... * 19 Boxing, W restling 'M u ra l Entries Due 77 | 4ft j 48 I T .C .U . BAYLOR P t. TP. 6ft 1ft ............... T u rk # ft SO B e l e w ................ 47 W a l t e r * ____ ___________9 3 41 3 A r n e t t 37 j F r i v a l d a k v l l G a m e # Fg. P t. 27 I 2 13 9 9 69 22 17 IS 1ft .... 9 9 ___ .... _ .............. _ _ _ _ _ 9 9 5fi 47 ' 4ft 4ft Aggies to Open at Baylor, End Baseball Season Here C O L L E G E S T A T I O N — The T ex a s A ggies baseball te a m will open its S o u th w e s t C o n f e r e n c e season th is y e a r with th e B a y lo r B e a r s in | Waco with a pair of gam es on M arch 20-21, and close it with a n o t h e r I 'wit gam es with th e T ex a s L o n g h o rn s a t A ustin on May 8-9. The schedule fo r th e n o n - c o n f e r e n c e g am es has n o t been com pleted, hut, the Aggies will sw ing into ae-© tion a g a in s t th e S h e p p a r d Field Flyers, now coached by L ie u te n ­ ant, M a rla nd J e f f r e y , f o rm e r A g­ gie o u tf ie ld e r , a t College S tation on March 4-5. The co n fe re n c e schedule fo r the A ggies: S tation. Dallas. S tatio n . S tatio n. S tation. March 20-21— B a y lo r a t Waco. M arch 2 6 — T ex a s a t College M a rc h 31-April I ■S.M.U. a t April 2— T.C.U. a t April l l — B aylor S tatio n. F o r t W orth. a t College April 18— S .M U . a t College April 21— Rice a t H ouston. April 24-25— Rice a t College M ay 1-2— T.C .U. at College May 8-9— Texas s t Austin. Marjorie I^amb, e x -s tu d e n t o f the U n iv e r sity , visited w ith friend s on the c a m p u s last w eek -en d . Miss J a m ie E aton and E n sign W illiam Y ates, fo r m er U n iv e r s ity stu d en ts, for had been M arjorie’* g u e s t s the past tw o w ee k s a t her p a r e n ts ’ home in T exa rk an a. Sports Notice T he E Q U E S T R I A N S will hold tr y - o u t s to m o rro w a t 5 o’clock a t th e H ob b y H orse Stables. POONA C L U B, U .T.S.A. b a d ­ m in to n club, will hold try -o u ta a t 7 :1 6 o ’clock W e d n e s d a y n i g h t in t h e W o m e n ’s Gym. Supply Corps A pplicants Not* f u r t h e r S tu d e n ts who a r e se ek in g c o m ­ m issions in the su p p ly corps o f th e j N a v y a n d who have a scholastic 1 a v e r a g e o f B o r b e t te r , a n d in w hom the N aval a u t h o r i tie s a r e in te r e s te d , will be notified by the N a v y h e a d q u a r te r s in New O rle a n s r e g a r d i n g ste p s which sh o u ld be ta k en in o r d e r to c o m ­ ple te J. A lton B urd in e , v ic e -p re sid e n t of the U n iversity, has a n n o u n c e d . T he U n iversity will h a n d le no f u r t h e r c o n c e r n in g th e s e a p p lic a tio n s; a f t e r th e y a r e a p p r o v e d here, th e y will be placed in th e han d s o f N av a l a u t h o r i tie s f o r co n s id eratio n . th e ir a p plica tio ns, Dr. in fo rm a tio n in th e I n t r a m u r a l boxing a n d w r e s t­ r e ­ ling e n tr ie s are now b ein g three divisions o f ceive d both sp orts. In the fr a t e r n ity d i­ vision o f both box ing and w re s t­ ling th e Tau D elta Phi an d Phi D elta T h eta fr a t e r n itie s have e n ­ tries in n e arly e v e r y w eight. T he L a m b d a Chi A lp h a a n d S ig m a Alpha E psilon f r a te r n iti e s boxing ! are a ls o en ter ed to u r n e y , In the M .I.C .A. division o f b o x in g c o n te s ts e n t r i e s j n c l u d e Earl Y o u n g o f E s c h b e r g e r H ou se, | Bill Stok e* o f the W iley M on grels, and J a m e s B rax to n o f th e R ub i­ cons. T h ere a r e no e n tr ie s as y e t in the club division o f the b o xin g j t o u r n a m e n t. the in M .I.C .A . e n tr ie s fo r w r e s tlin g j b o u ts a r e A le x M cC an d less o f t h e \ H o use o f Glen and R obert J o n e s o f th e S m ith H ou se. W restlin g t h e e n t r i e s are c o n clu d ed with club d ivision e n tr ie s o f C laren ce W e s t and J a m e s H o lt o f L.C.D., i and R. H L aG rave o f B. Hall. Bond Paper 8»/2xl I 250 Sheets Boxed Sa m e Price es Last Year! 35e TehasBookStore Atmo** rn OM u m i r t a n t r a a © © G u a d a l u p e a t *1044*01 abaue, *JUo Gnawd ut MOUA, COLLEGE C O R D S U IT as a from the Stand out crowd in your new "c o l­ lege co rd " Suit. You'll feel as streamlined and sky­ as graceful scraper! N o t only does it have looks, but heres one suit that can really "take it." It ranks tops in wearing ability and retains its shape excep­ tionally well. G e t yours casual with the new three- single breasted button coat. C o m e in t o d a y — Start your spring right. I M I N jr i, BY A. C. BECKER JR. T txa n Sport* Editor T he p ast week o f basketball in th e S o u th w e st C o n f e r e n c e left A r ­ kansan holding its firs t place lead - w ith Rice moving pant T.C.U. to g a m a b e t t e r g rip on the second place position. n e ith e r g a in ed n o r lost in standing . They a r e still in fo u rth place. T exas F ro m here on o u t th e battle f o r th e c o n fe re n ce cham pionship will be betw een A rka nsas, who is t r y in g to rep e at as a confe re nce cham pion, and Rice. T.C.U. can he ruled o u t of the p ic tu re u n ­ th ey s t a r t a w in n in g spree. less the f a c t L ongho rn s still have tw o gam es w ith A rkansas and one with Rice, the tw o «trong team s in the c o n ­ f e r e n c e , Texas, too, can he p assed e v e r as a possible title w in n e r this year. -C o n sid e r in g the t h a t is now Baylor, fo rm e rly called the c o n ­ j u s t f e r e n c e 's d arkh orse, a n o t h e r team. The dark cloud has bepn blown away and tr u e p ic tu re o f Baylor rem ains. They have a first-class hall player in is ""Dwight Park, who a t p resen t in the c o n f e r ­ the lea d in g *corer the BY BILL B E T H E A la x a n Sport S ta ll the best " I w o n ’t predict t h a t we will win the c o n fe re n ce cham pionship, b u t I do believe t h a t we will have th a t we ©ne o f y e a r s . ” So have had in several tennis said Dr. D. A. coach of the U n iv ersity , M onday m o r n in g when quizzed as to pros­ pects f o r the spring. Penick. te a m s No one boy in the g ro u p is o u t­ to pick now a* s t a n d in g enough th e n u m b e r one man the • q u a d , b u t th e re a r e some six or e ig h t who have g r e a t posBibili- tie* if th e y continue improve as th e y have in the past., co m m en t­ e d Dr. Penick. o f to E ig h t le tte rm e n of last y e a r 's • q u a d along with several of last y e a r ’s fre sh m a n team a re ex p e ct­ ed to b a ttle it ou t fo r the n u m ­ ber-one spot. R e tu r n in g fro m last y e a r ’s sq u a d are Bill Blalock, te a m c a p ta in , Billy Pou, Jo e Ball, Milton H o ffm a n , Ben N ixon, G a r ­ lan d Poole, Jo e B radley, an d C ul­ len C rain. Those of the fish te a m th a t are e x p e c te d to fu rn ish the le tte rm e n w ith p le n ty of c o m petition a r e W a l t e r D river, s ta te in te ractio n s- ; tic cham pion in 1940, Joh n H ic k m a n , r u n n e r -u p f o r the sta te c row n that. year. Coach Penick is aG o e xpe cting F ra n k A rrin g to n , a to su rp rise m any M idland boy, w ith his ability. tennis-p lay in g Several reserve le tte rm e n of last y e a r a« wed as several o th e r o f and DR D. A PENICK the boys who w ere no t o u t ' year, a re also show ing a deal o f promise. last great, " I would be willing to play a n y te am in the U nited S ta te s with a te n -m a n team , a n d would be will­ o u r ing to p redic t a victory f o r team . H ow ever, since we a r e only allowed to e n t e r a four-m an team in co n fe re n c e com petitio n , I c a n ­ c o n f e r e n c e the c h a m p i o n s h i p , since t h e y lost o n l y o n e m a n f r o m I t h e i r c h a m p i o n s h i p l ast y e a r , ” sai d Dr. P e n i c k . “ S. M. U. f o r m a y a l s o He c o u n t e d u po n s ome s t r o n g o p p o s i t i o n , but we a r e g o i n g to he in t h e r e s w i n g i n g w h e n m e e t t i me rol ls a r o u n d . ” t e a m o f n o t m a k e such a p r e d i c t i o n , ” c o n ­ t i n u e d Dr. Pe ni c k. is ‘‘T h e r e a s o n f o r s u c h a t h a t m o s t s c hool s s t a t e ­ h a ve m e n t t w o o r t h r e e o u t s t a n d i n g i nd i vi d ­ to win uals, w h o a r e e n o u g h t h e c h a m p i o n s h i p f o r t h a t p a r t i c u l a r s ch o o l , ” Dr. P e ni c k *aid. ‘‘H e r e at. t he U n i v e r s i t y we h a v e no o ne o r t w o o u t s t a n d i n g p l a y e r s , b u t o u r f i r s t t e n m e n a r e o f a b o u t e q ua l c a l i b e r a n d will c o m p a r e w i t h the f i r s t t e n o f a n y t e a m in t h e U n i t ­ ed S t a t e s . ” to d a t e T h e t e n t a t i v e s c h e d u l e t h a t has b e e n a r r a n g e d i nc l ud e s S o u t h P a s t e r n T e a c h e r s o f D u ­ r a n t . Okl a. , on >f arch 20, T u l a n e U n i v e r s i t y on M a r c h 21, N o r t h T e x a T e a c h e r s on A p r i l IO, with B a y l o r s c h e d u l e d on Apr i l l l . T h e U n i v e r s i t y o f O k l a h o m a f o l ­ low* on Apr i l 18, w i t h t he A g g i e s due Apr i l 25. T h e fit t m a t c h a w a y f r o m t he h o me e m u ! i* s c h e d u l e d f o r May 2 a g a i n t Rice, w i t h a m a t c h a g a i n s t t h e Poni es o f S . M U. on t h e c o n ­ t h e d a y b e f o r e foi t a p f e r e n c e m e e t get,* u n d e r w a y , T h e I a l l - i r a p o r i a n t me e t to he held i o n t he M u s t a n g c o u r t s on M a y 7, 8, a n d 9. " R i c e t e a m the is is j to h e a t f o r I McDonald Beats Cope In First Checker Round Archie M cD onald b e at L«wi? I Cops, and W eldon B r e w e r and A r ­ thur Holt receiv ed b y es in the first round o f the C h eck er T o u r n a m e n t st the T e x a s U n ion. Robert and Erie B u rn ett's m atch was u n ­ played. M cD onald and B rew e r will meet for the secon d round and Holt iv supposed to play the wanner o f the B u rn ett match F eb r u a ry 17 h f $ w ,n £ Sanprefers the king < & ■ > p l p e s Dr.GRABOW (Mf Ae et Pl The o n ly corre ct way to break in a pipe is to smoke it. Linkman’s mechan­ ical s m o k in g m a ­ chine Pre-sm okes every D r GRABOW with fine tobacco. • r n i t m i i r n m 4 c o . M J m a i a i H aMyaeiet P ip * C om plete Selection DR. GRABOW PIPES at your H E M F R O '* DRUG STORE Intramural Schedule t i winner b ro o k v t. G ulde n# S SO o ’Cloc k C o u r t 4— R end ing# H oua# v* K appa i » Adam# T u e s d a y . F e b r u a r y IT, I M S B A S K E T B A L L — C L A S S A 7 n'Clock I — D iv e B o m b t r i va. Lewi# 3— T r i o n H ou## Smi*h C o u r t H o rn #? *. C o u r t H au l* . C o u r t T L O K. C o u r t 3— R ih i - o n r» . L ulu*. 7 4S o ’c l o c k I — T t r p l e y T t r m i ' w »* Court 2— Buckingham Pm!*## »» Bion) s n U t Swede*. 8 : 8 0 o ’Cloek C o u r t I — L i t t l e C a m p u * D o rm v » N a v a l R O . T C . r c -i rt 2— O a k G r o v e v a . Allied Co-Op C o u r t %— Chi P h i »» S u m * Alpha E p a i l o r . CU** B 7 o ’Clock C o u r t 4— R , K i r o n rn. T h i g p e n H o ua # 7 . 4 8 o ’c l o c k C o u r t 9—- T,p to n Co-O p ** SeT*?rom 8 *# d e». Court 4—And»r»"n R* »• e t O ak G r o v e va P e r k Ho .«#. A rn# i. wha-*- B c n a ld . H A N D B A L L S I N G L E S 7 o ’Clock C o u r t I — A lb # -' Tsa i **, T - m r j F'e C o u r t 2— Gly n n Jonai v* He nry Mr- a. G racey, S t o o d C ourt 8— H a t« l w * M C ourt 4— Verna) d e i C o u r t 6 — B r a w l . , v* G a r h a a r d t . C- ir t Court 7— Rai'da'i C o u r t *— r . r o o * Court 9— Ripp.i Cour* » Camaron. B u k e . Rum mal. \ • K ing IO— A d k ’na ft— P i n y t o , Mr M a n e 'rn un. 7 48 o 'C lo tk O i f t I — Cr* n v* « Cf p at t i V # r* 11 i - C h u - k # va. H a z e lw o o d . C our* 2— B r * * # - v*. Jon## C ourt ">— Holcomb ** G i n d i e t , C o u r t C o u r t 4— -Owen i Court. 5— M id d ag h u ?•;?b i l a n d . Court ft—Sheffield t i Vog«L C o u r t 7 — D e a n v* C o u r t 8— T a i ior #. A n t h o n y . I n g r a m \ * w i n n e r of g a i n * v a . OI*. G o u r t 9— S r b r e e d e r vg. T a y lo r . C o u r t IO— C n |# t t i t i Mill*. • ISO o 'C lo c k I — T r a v t * vc B o w m a n . C o u r t ( o u r t 2 — W a l t o n »#. R a k e r C o u r t 3— M a h e r va. R a y t o n . C o u r t 4 — Rn h o rn va Monk* I our? 4— M c C o r m i c k v t . S r h n r h . C o u r t ( o u r t C o u r t 7— S c h u l t z va. F r a n k S i n g e r ( o u r t ft— W'llaon va. R u n y a n . C o u r t 9— C u l v e r »*. A rti undao n C o u r t ft— G l o v e r va. P a r h a m . ft— Oaoha v* l h — L e o n a r d v t hector*. T A B L E T E N N I S S I N G L E S F a n n in . 7 o ’C lo ck I — A * f r u - h t va L u t o n . Tmh!# T a b le 2 — H # « c n h e r k T a b le 3 —- H e n i l e c va. A l t m a n . f a b l e 4— M. B r o w n va, Lei bro c k v». S v r e h n i k 7 : 1 8 o ’C lock I — H# i m a n va. Ha ga. Table T a b le 2— B u c k n e r va . A rnold, f a b l e 3— Verhe« de n v t . W h e m a n f a b l e ( — O rv ill e v# w i n n e r of H o l ­ 7 SO o ’C lock f able I — W i n n e r o f P e a c o c k v*. F o r t T a b l e 2 — R e e k i n g v#. L e g e t t a Table Table 4 — H a r d ! *». A c h i l l * # K a p t a i n . 7 48 o ’Clock I — M c M e a n in v » H i t c h c o c k . Table Ta ble T a b l e T a b le I — M '. e n e t e r va G r a c e r . N e l t o n va. W r i t e , 3— K e e li n g v t G e r h a r d t . 4— S te e d v«. T a r d a r r o . S o ’C lo c k t — G aud ier v a . S te n n i# Table l a b ! # 2— S p e e r y v t T a b l e 3 — C a m e r o n v t Ha er«er> T a b l e 4— H u t c h i n g a o n va. B a i k i e , J o n # * . 8 : 1 8 o ’C lo ck S m i t h v t . F o r m a n . M c l. a n e va. S u a o n . B r a x t o n va B e t h e a . W i n n e r of M - K a v va Rue** »#. w i n ­ n e r o f B u * b y v« Moor# • : 3 0 o ’C lock S t e t b e n t v t . w i n n e r of Z o l t m k va. .Justi ce. P ou v* H a en a **. G u t h e r i * v a . C o w m a n . K e n n e d y va P e t e r t o n . 8 : 4 8 o'Clock D o u n lo p v*. K u n a . H u p h e r y v#. S c h a e f f e r R o o u e m o r e va. W a l t o n . S t r u t * va. F a u n t b e g . VICTORY Tennis Schedule U N I T E D S T A T E S DEFENSE BONDS STAMPS V A R S I T Y T E N N I S C o u r t I 1— Blalock v#. D n v tr . I 3ft— B la lo ck v | . P o u . <— P o u 4:8 0 — Ball va. H i c k m a n ’B r a d l e y va. Poo l*. k 30— B r a d l e y v», C r a m v * . D r t v a r . C ourt 2 v t T h o m b e r r y . I —- P e t va, T h o r n b e r r y , a .30 — D r i v e r 4— B la lo ck va. T h o r n b e r r y , 4 :3ft— Ball v*. H o f f m a n , ft— C r a i n va. A r r i n g t o n , ft :30— S a u n d e r s va . P oole . Court I 3— H i c k m a n v a . H o f f m a n . 3 :8ft— H i c k m a n va. N ix on. 4— N ix o n v*. Ball. 4 1ft— Ball va. H o f f m a n . *— ? a u n d a r a v». B r a d l e y I A t — r r a n k it* v a . A r r i n g t o n . V Y £ I • / > tm 616 CONGRESS AUSTIN'S LEADING STORE FOR MEN Wethingten Round-Up Shelling of ArubaBrings Detroit Strike May W a r to W estern W orld Affect S_*v!" plants Pram I.N J. Reports Defense production in seven plants, including the Chrysler Cor poratio n’s Tank A rsenal, was seriously imperiled Monday by an un authorized strike of U.A.W.-C.I.O. members a t the Detroit N ut Com­ pany. The strike was described by Edward M. Owen, State Labor Media corporations and $2,000,000,000 more from individual income ta x ­ payers, Congressional tax leaders disclosed Monday. The program was being whipped into shape so th a t Secretary of the T re a su ry M orgenthau can go before and the House Ways Means Committee a bout March I with a plan to provide the $7,000, President 000,000 taxation Roosevelt from general in addition to $2,000,000,000 to be raised by social security taxes. sought by tr e a s u r y While the program was still incomplete, its ta x ex­ perts w ere rep orted to be planning to ex act toll from the heaviest the income tax. • Supreme Court The Suprem e Court, in a five to one decision today served notice th a t it will n o t use its vast power to prev e n t corporations from m ak­ ing “ unconscionable” pro fits out of w ar contracts. The Court, with Justice Black delivering the opinion, rejected the g o v e rn m e n t’s appeal to over­ tu rn a World W a r I c o n tra c t u n ­ the Bethlehem Steel der which Corporation and subsidiaries won awards of $5,272,075. In te rio r Secretary of Ickes Monday laid before the Senate a proposed expansion program of mineral and power developments to in the United States called meet enorm ous demands of the n ation’s w ar production schedule. Oil Demand Takes Plunge War Neath Causa Drop, Humble Says Prom I.N.S. Reports A sharp cu rtailm en t in the de­ mand fo r Texas oil became known Monday a t the Railroad Commis­ sion’s state-wide proratio n hear­ ing. Although figures fro m the of­ fice of petroleum co-ordinator had not y et been issued, nomina­ tions filed by purchasers o f Texas oil were o ff 123,000 barrels. H ardest hit were W est Texas, off 46,892 barrels; division 4 of the Southwest Texas, down 26,- 832 barrels; and E ast Texas, off 20,529 barrels. Nor was the 123,000 barrel de­ cline all the story. Humble Oil and Refining Company’s Rex Baker told the commission t h a t if Hum­ ble is to tu rn out all the w ar pro­ ducts which its refineries are cap­ able of making, it m u st have an additional 7,600 barrels of spe­ cial crudes; which will mean a re­ duction o f its runs of other crudes by th a t amount. The unexpected trend led Com­ missioner Olin Culberson to term it “ u n g ra tify in g ” th a t a f te r fo u r­ teen months the commission had obtained fo r Texas an allowable comm ensurate w’ith reserves, only to hear the industry now ask for a cu t in allowables. F o r E a st Texas, a c u t in pro­ recommended duction also was by the commission’s expert, Dr. F. V. L. Patten , to m eet the de­ cline in pressure energy record­ ed last month. tor, as “the most serious since t h e * en try of the United S tates into the w a r.” Owen a u d th a t he was in fo rm ­ ed by a spokesman fo r th e C hrys­ ler Corporation th e plant might have to shut down on W ed­ nesday morning for a lack of nuts from the D etroit concern. th a t George Schewe, Union organiz­ er, said th a t a m a jo rity o f the company’s sixty employes w en t on strike against the advice of union leaders a f te r the n u t com pany as­ sertedly refused to negotiate fo r a contract. O ther plants affected by the strike are Continental Motors, General Motors Truck, two plants of the Spicer Corporation, Timken D etroit Axle Company and the Hercules Motor Company, Owen said. • Draft t h a t the order in which National Selective Service o ffi­ a cials predicted Monday third d r a f t lottery will be held about the middle of March to d e ­ term ine the 9,000,000 men now being regis­ tered will be called up for mili­ ta ry service. Their forecast was voiced as the final day of registration for men subject to military call u nder the new Selective Service Act was held. Approximately 9,000,000 men between the ages of 20 and 44, inclusive but exclusive of those already registered, were being signed up. In many states, regis­ tration was held on two and three d if f e re n t days. According to National D ra ft H eadquarters, a third lottery will be held the middle of n e x t month, and those given order numbers in it will be placed a t the end of the list of those already assigned order numbers two in lotteries. the first Alpha Gamma Delta sorority the pledging of has announced Eleanor Cartledge of Austin, Frances Moore of Dallas, and Shelby Frizzell of Austin. Tax Program The new tre a su ry tax program may call for raising an additional $3,000,000,000 annually f r o m Vichy Desires Friendly Relations With U. S. friendly WASHINGTON, Feb. TS. — (IN S )— Indicating Vichy** desire to maintain relatione with the United States, authorita­ tive quarters in Washington Mon­ day disclosed that Marshal Henri Petain has renewed for another six months the o f Gaston Hei>ry-Haye as French Ambassador to this country. commission Ambassador Henry-Haye’g com­ mission as French envoy to the United States technically expired January 30. As a member of the French Senate, his appointment as a diplomatic envoy must be re­ newed every six months. He has received official word of the re­ newal. Coming at a time when rela­ tions between the two countries have been strained over the ques­ tion of French aid to the Axis forces in Libya, the renewal o f Ambassador H enry-H aye’s com­ mission is seen a s a definite indi­ cation th a t Vichy, fo r its part, is not contemplating any break with the United States. Your EYES may bo causing Low Marks in School Work to eheck th in k It At any ret# don’t yon would bo wise them 7 Many tim es your Inability to con- centra ta is m erely th e effect of faulty eyesight. If your m arks a ren ’t w hat they should be. have ua exam ine your eyes— m aybe we can find a solution to your all- im portant problem. VlfKD&TREADH^ onunraislrs Seventh A C ongress For the Best Laundry Service . you can’t go wrong if you take advaa* tage of our LOW STUDENT RATES BB Years e t Pins Laundering Service MEDICALLY APPROVED EMPLOYEES Driskill Hotel Laundry TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1942 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I E Y A . Two U. T. Golfers Win Places in Texas Open War in Brief University golfers were well in the Texas Open represented in San Antonio last week-end by Bill Roden, Ed Brady, and Ernie Fortner in the classic’s amateur division. Roden finished second with 292 in a close run only four strokes behind Johnny Dawson, veteran amateur, who wound up the seventy-two hole tourney with a total o f 288 strokes. Brady follow ed close on the heels of Roden to gain the third spot with 297 strokes. The feat of the two U. T. linksmen is the best any University golfer has ever been able to attain in the Texas Open, stated Harvey Penick, Long­ horn g olf coach. Ernie Fortner climaxed the good showing of the threesome a few strokes behind at 312. The nearest approach to the trio’s showing in San Antonio was that made by Ed White several years ago in the National Open. Only th re e holdovers spark the 1942 edition of Longhorn golfers which will begin qualifying rounds in the f irs t p a r t of March, as soon as clear w eather enables the link- sters to play on dry fairw ays and greens. The three men, Ed Brady, Ja c k Helm, and E rnie F o r tn e r are expected to qualify in the elimina­ tions, as a re Bill Roden, Claude Wild, Billy Russell, Rob Watson, W. A. Moncrief, and Lawrence Skelly. The team, term ed by Penick as a “ very good team ,” is expected to hold its own a gainst o th er con­ ference squads. Ed Brady, cap­ tain, and Bill Roden are s ta n d ­ outs a t this early stage of play as the group practices daily on in golf links, com peting Austin sweepstakes whenever possible. Ex-Sfudenl Fisher To Workfor N.B.C. Sterling Fisher, ex-student of the University, has been appointed a ssistant to Dr. Jam es Rowland Angell, public service counsellor fo r the National Broadcasting Company. Mr. Fisher, who has been noted fo r his radio ^ o r k in fu rth erin g cultural u nderstanding between the Americas, will assist Dr. An­ gell in establishing a perm anent Inter-A m erican University of the Air. A fte r gettin g his bachelor of a rts degree in 1919, Mr. Fisher ta u g h t school in the University of W estern Ja p an , a t Kobe. On his re tu r n he studied the School of Journalism a t Columbia Uni­ versity and the University o f Cal­ ifornia, and tau g h t fo r a y ear at Georgia Technological Institute. in In 1924 he again ta u g h t in J a ­ in to pan, re tu rn in g to e n te r newspaper work, 1929 the Associated Pfess fir s t with and then as a w riter for the New York Times. the U. S. For the first time in this war, territory enemy within the W estern Hemisphere Monday. fell on shells The results of the shellfire, di­ rected from a submarine in the Dutch W est Indies, were in them­ selves negligible. But they served to jolt the peoples of North and South America alike into realiza­ tion that the enemy is close at hand. O ff the Island o f Aruba, a sub­ marine suddenly surfaced Monday, sent torpedoes into four tankers, and then opened fire from its deck gun upon the oil refinery of the Standard Oil Company o f New Jersey. installations Only last week a contingent of American troops disembarked and took up stations on Aruba to pro­ tect the oil there. There were no casualties on land from the shelling but loss of life aboard the torpedoed tankers— if such loss there was— was not im­ mediately made known. The re finery itself was damaged only slightly. Aruba lies w est of the Island of Curacao which is about forty miles north of the Venezuelan coast. D ra ft- (Continued from page I) tor Clark so closely th a t only two were unaccounted for, and Dean Shorty, the chief, missed his esti­ mate of re gistra nts by only forty- six. Among faculty reg istrars were A. L. Brandon, Colonel George E. H urt, Speech-Maker T. A. Rousse, Dr. J . C. Dolley, Dr. J. G. Urn- stattd and son Mac, C. R. C ra n ­ berry, Dr. Paul White of the health service, C. J. Eck hard t o f Uni­ versity utilities, Psychologist W. H. Brentlinger, Geologist F. M. Bullard, Librarian A lexander Mof- fit, Philosopher G. V. G entry; in fact. Bill Barton, serving as chief adm inistrato r with Clark might have expected Captain H. W. U n­ derwood, himself, to show up. One re g is tra n t was really per­ plexed. He showed up, g o t regis­ tered, tho ught he was 20; later came rushing back with a new birth certificate rushed through by the mailman which showed he was than he born one y ear thought; and had his registration card removed pronto. later R epresentative of the drag bus­ iness man was E. C. Rather, m an­ the University Co-Op, ag er of Last to register came Jose Deves- covi of Peru, fifteen minutes be­ fore deadline. Venezuela regis­ tr a n t was Salvador Armas of Zar- aza. Both Dr. Hal P. Bybee and Dr. F. J. Adams, A.P.O. advisors, as- He began radio work in 1937, I s'ste(* their boys a t registering and when he became director of edu- 1 checking. talks radio cation and Columbia Broadcasting System. the ! fo r .The is a registration good | thin* ’ tho ug ht Dr. D. B. Klein, an o th e r reg istrant. “ I t shows the co-operative attitu d e of the pub­ lic; it shows th a t there is no com­ placency on the p a r t of the pub­ lic which is continuing on its re g ­ ular course. J u s t they a re not yelling and asking every­ one what they can do, does not show th a t the public isn’t aware of the seriousness of the w ar.” because It also shows how a group can work together willingly without thought of pay in this service," . . . . to Proxim ity of the latest submarine th e South American a tta c k coast line is expected to strengthen even more the bonds of unity forged a t the Rio De Jan eiro con­ ference of N orth and South A m er­ ican republics a few weeks ago. Dutch East Indies In the F a r E ast, pilots of the United Nations Monday struck heavy blows a t w ater-borne J a p ­ anese invading forces seeking to extend th eir conquest of Malaya and Singapore to the rich Dutch E a st Indies. American, British and Dutch bombing planes smashed a t a con­ centration o f Ja pan ese warships and tra n sp o rts in Banka Straits, and Banka, between S um atra scoring direct hue on two J a p cruisers and five transpo rts loaded with invasion troops. A t least one of the J a p cruisers was known to have been set afire. T here was no claim th a t any or all of the enem y c r a f t had been sunk bu t direct hits constitute bad news for any ships, no m a tte r how heavily armored. A t the same time it was adm itted th a t the the Japs had occupied rich oil-producing center of Pal- em bang on S um atra but only a f te r the Dutch had applied the torch to ill the oil installations in the city. Heavy fighting was raging on S um atra between Dutch forces and Jap an ese troops who were being reinforced by newly-landed inva­ sion forces. • Philippines and ground With Jap an ese dive bombers, artillery, forces smashing a t General M a c A rth u r^ American and Filipino troops in the opening phase of the all-out a ttack th a t has been th re a te n in g for several days, military observers speculated as to w hat the Nip­ ponese planned to do about the valiant defenders of southern Lu­ zon. to The seems question regardless of be w hether the J a p s plan to use the troops and planes released from the Singapore campaign to wipe out the Americans in the Philip­ pines their own losses, or w hether they feel th a t Manila H arbor is not necessary to their E a st Indian thru st, and ex ­ pect to by-pass M acA rthur and his men until a f te r fin ­ ished their conquest of the E ast Indies. they have Repercussions Meanwhile, thunder-clouds of a brewing political storm over the loss of Singapore— with the cap­ tu re of 60.000 Imperial troops by the Japanese— continued to pile up. Despite Churchill’s plea fo r unity, it appeared th a t some of his closest w ar advisers face a d ru b ­ bing a t the hands of P arliam en­ tarian s whose w rath over the Nazi naval coup in the S trait of Dover now has been multiplied by loss the g re a t F a r Eastern base of which once was regarded as im­ pregnable. the Diet Tokyo, of course, was ju bilant over the latest J ap success. J a p ­ anese P rem ier Hideki Tojo boasted to im portant Anglo-American bases “ for e n ­ croachment against East Asia’’— as he put it— are now in Japanese hands. th a t all In ternational I ^ r *^klein stated. Most students gave th e ir home- by Dr. I *own *ddres8» le tting th e ir d r a ft board there have jurisdiction over them, and hoping th a t they would­ n ’t be called until they could get some education. Taxation - - (Continued from page I) Meanwhile, students in tb s 18 I wholly a snare and a d e lu s io n ” to 20 age bracket wondered when Mr. Irons attack ed non-defense th e ir time would eome, m any ask-j spending in general and the “al- doormen phsbetical agencies” th a t were es- ing the re g istrars when the date would be t h a t there tablished by the federal govem- would be a fo u rth addition f o r j m e n t in 1934 In particular, the prospective 8,600,000 man j a r ™r- o r Shifting Rio Grande boundary History britten by Prof A history of the 94-year-old Boundary Commission, w h i c h ever-changing marks the out boundary between the United S tates and Mexico, is included in the bulletin, “ The Boundary Commission, U n i t e d S tates and Mexico,” Charles A. Timm, specialist in in­ tern atio nal relations and p rofes­ sor of government. Dr. Timm s bulletin, containing the history and work of the Com­ mission, and published by the Uni­ versity Press, will be used as r e ­ search m aterial in legal cases. The Commission is composed of rep resentativ es from both coun­ tries, together with engineers and oth er technical experts. Their job is to keep track of the shift in bed and the c u rre n t o f stream in the Rio G rande River. Med School— (Continued from page I ) West Austin-Campus Bus Starts Running begin within the next fe w day*. The executive committee of the The Austin T ransit Company school, consisting of sixteen fac­ started a new bus ro ute Monday ulty members and the dean, was morning, with a p a rt time bus ser­ still in session late tonight. I t was expected that an unofficial sta te ­ vice from Enfield, Westenfield, T arrytow n, Sherwood F o r e s t , m ent issued today by the group Pem berton Heights, and Bryker- ur^ nl? a *a >r anf* open investiga- wood sections of the city to the tion would he approved. W hether University. Dr. Spies was back in town and present a t the m eeting could not be learned. The schedule will include two m orning trips and two afterno on trips. The first bus in the m orning leaves Enfield and Pease Roads at at 7:25 o ’clock and Tw enty-first S tre e t and Speedway a t 7 :50 o’clock. The r e tu rn trip goes by way of T w enty-fourth S tr e e t to Pease Road. arrives In a s ta te m e n t Monday the committee declared, “ We suspect th a t Representative Cato has been misled in regard to the facta in o rder to obscure o th er im p ortant issues relating to the welfare of the medical b ra n ch .” The second m orning bus goes west on Enfield Road, east on Nineteenth Street, and past Uni­ versity J u n io r High School on Red River Street. 3 Leave for Now York War Course E. J. Pfluger, senior arch itec­ tural student, will join two mem­ faculty, the University bers of Phil M. Ferguson, professor of civil engineering, and W. W. Dorn- berger, professor of architecture, in a trip to New York j City on F e b ru a ry 15 to a tte n d an bom bardm ent T wenty-first S tre e t and Speedway precautions course. This course a t 5 :10 o'clock. The first bus in the afternoon leaves Wooldridge School a t 3:10 o’clock, goes to University J u n io r High School, and finally out W ind­ sor Road. The second aftern oo n bus leaves emergency j will last about ten days. assistant aerial The speaker recommended forced savings am ong the lower income groups and few er income tax exem ptions am ong higher in­ in­ come groups as m ethods of creasing Income. g overnm ental Taxation which baa th e e ffe c t of reducing savings w ithou t re d u c ­ is ing consum er w ithout value aa an an ti-infla­ tionary device, he declared. expen ditu res Professor Irons is a u th o r of a in 1942 entitled, book published “ Commercial C redit and Collec­ tion Practice,” and of “ The In ­ ternation al Gold Crisis,” a hook published in 1937 by the U niver­ sity o f Pennsylvania. yiCTOHSj BUY U W IT E D S T A T E S DEFENSE BONDS STAMPS V \ 1/ By Bill Whitmore Texan Sports Editor A F E W LONGHORN cage fans who listened to th e broadcast o f the Texas-Baylor game over a Waco station S a tu rd a y night won­ dered w h a t the deal was when the an n o u n c e r kept talking a b o u t the play of Ritchey of Texas. Know­ ing full well th a t basketeer Ritchey le f t school a t mid-term fo r the service, they couldn’t und erstan d how he could be playing with the Steers in Waco. So it might be well to inform those wondering listeners t h a t the player whom the a n n o u n c e r was talking a bout was Soph Ja ck Fitz gerald, who is on the squad. Fitz gerald had taken over Ritchey’ n um ber 27 at mid-term, and the a nn ou ncer was using a program th a t was printed before the sea son sta rte d and still had Ritchey on the squad, so he mistook the Steer soph for the fo rm e r U. T fo rw a rd from Beeville. the the subject of th a t While on Baylor game, it would be only f a ir to say th a t one of the m ajor causes f o r the trouncing the Steer took was illness of F ra n k Brahaney. The quiet Longhorn gu ard played a good gam e against the Bears. In fact, he was high point man for Texas with eight points, b u t even then he was f a r below his usual form. it le ft him Brahaney had a touch of the flu and in a weakened condition f o r the game. If he had been feeling up to par, the close g u a rding lad from Abilene might have held Parks down a little bet­ t e r — although it is quite a job to keep the Bruin sharp-shooter from hitting the bucket a t any time W e ’re not making B ra h a n e y ’s ill­ ness an excuse fo r the Longhorn defeat. We ju s t cite th e case as an example o f w hat kept the Steers from making a b e tte r showing. long season May we urge you fans no t to give up on the Steers j u s t be cause they are now o u t of the title r un ning . All the L onghorn squad has been dogged by tough breaks, and it has been a real struggle to keep the spirit up. But the boys themselves have resolved to keep faith and work hard they might make a stro n g finish. One of the next-best thrills to winning a conference flag is keeping an o th e r team from w inning— ask Baylor o r T.C.U. a bout th a t— and so the Longhorns are e ager to get a crack a t the Arkansas Razorbacks this week­ end and tr y and put th e bee on the Hogs. t h a t I t will be quite a struggle for the Steers to finish the season with a .500 per cent average fo r con­ ference play, fo r the Longhorns have fo u r tough games left— two with Arkansas, one with Rice (here) and one with A.AM. Al­ though the Porkers a re expected the to win Longhorns are really confident they can upset the A rkansas boys even in their own backyard for at least one victory. And th a t would put them much closer to that even- steven finish. championship, the While in Waco — We g ot our first look a t Bay­ lor's famed McClean Gymnasium, a very nice place for recreation. Compares favorably with Gregory Gym except in size and the bas­ ketball stands. W'e saw' Roy Dale McKay, who stopped off on his way to Dallas to g e t in V-7 to see the game. With McKay was Billy Andrews, the ever-present freshm an m an­ ager . . . who would be a t a Long­ horn game if they were playing in Singapore tomorrow. We saw a very good Baylor freshm an team whip Kilgore in a pre­ Ju n io r College 52-36 liminary gam e to the Texas-Baylor battle. Frankie Edwards, a s ta r of the San Marcos team in last y e a r ’s state meet, was the Cub ace. Skeeter Lawrence, who played for Mount Vernon in the sta te meet, also starred. Other Cub sta rte rs were ano th e r state meet perform er with W’aco, lad Gordon Holland, and a big named Hicks. Joh nn y Appell, Montgomery— (Continued from page I ) ra th e r than G ibraltar. “ I see no reason fo r reviving the world o f 1938. W’e are in the process of burying that w orld,” said Dr. Montgomery, pointing out th a t all wars have been fo r the ^ p u r p o s e of burying a world which died y e a rs previously. / In answ er to the possibility of the U nited S tates and E n gland re ­ tu rn in g to th e same form o f peace they first World W’ar, Dr. Montgomery said th a t such an actiun would be in credibly stupid. enforced a f te r th e REMEMBER To Get Your Cactus Picture P R O O F S T O D A Y ! Select Proofs at Christianson-Leberman 1306 Colorado The absolute deadline is Wednesday at 5 p. rn. T H E 1942 Cactus EDITORIAL— PAGE FOUR Kiwi* 3-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Wien* 2-2473 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1*42 W e M ay Jteaen byO tlteU ' American Male Undergraduate Not Fit to Do His Part, Poll Shows P h s i c a l f i t n e s s — a l w a y s i m p o r t a n t , o f T h e s e c o l l e g e t r a i n e d y o u n g a in ( E d . N « t « i Tit* D a i l y T a s s * la mf s e v e n t y - t o r e • • l i e g e p u k l i c e t i e n # t h a t par* t e l e g r a p h i c t i c i p a t e d p o ll f r o m w h ic h th* U n i v e r ­ s i t y o f C k i c a g e D a i l y Ma- r o a n m a d * th e f o l l o w i n g c o n ­ c lu s i o n * r e g a r d i n g th* pre* p a r o d n o s* o f A m e r i c a n c o l ­ l e g e m e n f o r the o r d e a l a h e a d a n d w h a t i n a t i t u ti o n s ar* d o ­ in g to i m p r o v e th at p r e p a r e d ­ n e s s ) . C H I C A G O , F e b . I S — R e s u l t * o f a D a i l y M a r o o n t e l e g r a p h i c pol l o f s e v e n t y - t w o c o l l e g e a n d e d i t o r s s t u d e n t u n i v e r s i t y i n ­ t h e a v e r a g e t h a i d i c a t e c l e a r l y b a d l y m a l e u n d e i g r a d u a t e is p r e p a r e d f o r his a l m o s t i n e v i t ­ a b l e life in t h e a r m e d forc e- o f hi - c o u n t r y a n d t h a t A m e r i c a n e d u c a t i o n a l i ns t i t ut i on. ' - a r e g i v ­ i ng n o e v i d e n c e t h a t he will he a n y b e t t e r p r e p a r e d in t h e n e a r f u t u r e . t h a t s c h o o l s c u r r i e u l m t a b u l a t i o n s C o l l e g e e d i t o r s r e p o r t , h o w ­ e v e r , t h a t u n i v e r s i t i e s a n d c o l ­ i n t r o d u c e d v a s t c h a n g e s l e g e - a f t e r P e a r l in t h e H a r b o r a n d r e v e a l t h a t o v e r s e v e n t y - f o u r n e w “ d e ­ r e ­ f e n c e c o u r s e s " h a v e b e e n p o r t e d b y s e v e r i t y - t w o t h e s e s c h o o l s . T h e r e a r e r e p o r t s f r o m s e v e r a l r e q u e s t * h a v e b e r n m a d e t o t h e W a r D e ­ p a r t m e n t f o r R . 0 . T . C . u n i t s by n o n - R . O . T J . t h a t i n s t i t u t i o n s s e v e r a l h a v e a s k e d o f i n c r e a s e d . T h e t h e i r u n i t s b e t h a t W a r D e p a r t m e n t f a c i l i t y * m a d e l i m i t e d i m ­ t o e s t a b l i s h n e w u n i t s p o s s i b l e o r m a k e i n c r e a s e s s u b v t a n t i a l in t h e si z e s o f t h e u n i t s a l r e a d y e s t a b l i s h e d . R . O . T . C . t h a t r e p l i e d it s c h o o l s a n d s i z e t h e P r e - i n d u c t i o n m i l i t a t e t r a i n ­ i n g is o f t w o k i nd * , b a s i c t r a i n ­ s p e c i a l i z e d s i m i la r d e v i c e s t r a i n i n g . i n g an d t h e c l a s s i f i c a t i o n o f b a s i c I n t o p r e - i n d u c t i o n m i l i t a r y t r a i n i n g f a ll R e s e r v e O f f i c e r s T r a i n i n g C o r p s a n d t o f u n d a m e n t a l s . t e a c h m i l i t a r y l i s t e d by M o s t o f c o l l e g e “ d e f e n s e t h e s p e c i a l * c o u r s e s " p r e - i n d u c t i o n m i l i t a r y i z e d t r a i n i n g c l a s s i f i c a t i o n a* t h e y a r e c o n c e r n e d w i t h s p e c i a l i z e d A r m y e d i t o r s f a l l t h e c o u r s e s t e c h n i q u e s . i n t o a s o f t w o f i r s t y e a r s R . O . T . C , is in t h i s b a s i c c l a s s ­ i f i c a t i o n b e c a u s e a b o u t 75 p e r ­ c e n t o f i ts m a n - p o w e r t a k e o n l y t h e t h i s t r a i n i n g O n l y a b o u t 2 0 , 0 0 0 o f in a n e s t i m a t e d 6 5 0 , 0 0 0 m e n l e a r n i n g i n s t i t u t i o n * o f h i g h e r a r e a c c o m m o d a t e d t h e R O. in T . C . “ a d v a n c e d " c o u r s e , e n r o l l ­ m e n t i n w h i c h is l i m i t e d in t h e t o W a r D e p a r t m e n t . It i s w e l l n o r ? t h e c o m p l e ­ t i o n o f t h e “ a d v a n c e d " c o u r s e a r e m e n e l i g i b l e f o r c o m m i s ­ si on*. t h a t o n l y a t o f “ D e f e n s e C o u r s e s " t h e M a r o o n a r e r e p o r t e d t o t h r e e t y p e s : s p e c i a l i s e d p r e - i n d u c t i o n m i l i t a r y t r a i n i n g , b e s t e x e m p l i ­ t h e n u m e r o u s " c a r t o ­ f i e d b y g r a p h y " c o u r s e s w h i c h h a v e a i m p l i c a t i o n : d e f i n i t e m i l i t a r y f i g h t i n g ” a n d c o u r s e s “ k n i t t i n g ” i n t o a g e n e r a l c i v i l i a n d e f e n s e c l a s s i f i c a t i o n ; a n d w a r t r a i n i n g i n d u s t r i e s i n c l u d e s u c h a s “ P e r ­ c o u r s e s s o n n e l a n d A d m i n i s t r a t i o n " “ I n d u s t r i a l M i c r o - b i o l o g y . " in “ f i r e f all a f t e r I m m e d i a t e l y P e a r l H a r b o r , s t u d e n t s e x e r t e d p r e s ­ s u r e t o g e t s o m e k i n d o f b a s i c m i l i t a r y t r a i n i n g i n r a s e s w h e r e t h e r e w a s n o t r a i n i n g t o t h e m , C o l l e g e e d i ­ a v a i l a b l e tors! f r o m O h i o W e s j a y a n U n i ­ v e r s i t y . T e x a s C h r i s t i a n U n i ­ s u c h C o l l e g e s r e q u e s t i n g f o r R . O . T . C . v e r s i t y , W e s l e y a n U n i v e r s i t y , U n i v e r s i t y o f R e d l a n d s , l l n i - v a r s i t y o f N o r t h C a r o l i n a , B o s ­ t o n C o l l e g e , a n d T e m p l e U n i ­ v e r s i t y r e p o r t t h a t t h e i r s c h o o l s t h e Wra r D e ­ h a v e p e t i t i o n e d p a r t m e n t u n i t s , a n d h a v e b e e n t o l d n o n e w u n i t s w o u l d be e s t a b l i s h e d , C o l u m b i a U n i v e r s i t y a l u m n i m a g a z i n e r e ­ p o r t e d t h a t f o u r h u n d r e d n a m e s h a d b e e n o b t a i n e d t o a s t u d e n t p e t i t i o n t h e e s t a b ­ l i s h m e n t o f a m i l i t a r y t r a i n i n g c o u r s e on c a m p u s . a n d f a c e d w i t h u n i v e r s i t i e s w e r e t h e p r o b l e m o f g i v i n g t h e i r s t u d e n t s n o m i l ­ e s t a b l i s h i n g i t a r y s u c h In m o s t c a s e s t h e s c h o o l s c h o s e t o h a v e n o b a s i c m i l i t a r y t r a i n i n g a n d o f f e r e d i n ­ s t e a d “ d e f e n s e c o u r s e s . ” S t u ­ t e m p o r a r i l y d e n t p r e s s u r e w a s r e l i e v e d a s m e n all o v e r t h e c o u n t r y b e g a n t o b e c o m e e x ­ p e r t s o n “ M o r s e C o d e , " “ N e w s ­ p a p e r C h i n e s e , " “ M i l i t a r y C o m ­ m u n i c a t i o n s , ” “ M i l i t a r y M a t h e ­ m a t i c s , " “ T r u c k D r i v i n g , ” a n d o t h e r t e c h ­ n i q u e s , t r a i n i n g o r t r a i n i n g t h e i r s t u d e n t * t h e m s e l v e s . s p e c i a l i z e d a r m y t o g e t T h r e e s c h o o l s s u c c e s s f u l l y a t ­ s o m e k i n d o f t e m p t e d b a s i c m i l i t a r y T h e t r a i n i n g . U n i v e r s i t y o f N o r t h C a r o l i n a r e p a r t e t h a t a v o l u n t e e r t r a i n ­ i n g c o r p w a s o r g a n i z e d a t C h a p ­ el Hill. W a s h i n g t o n arid Ce e r e p o r t a a " v o l u n t a r y t w o s e m e s ­ f u n d a ­ t e r c o u r s e R . O . T . C . m e n t a l s u s i n g ba ic t h a i v o l u n t a r y r e p o r t s m a n u a l , " M u h l e n b e r g C o l l e g e t r a i n i n g is a v a i l a b l e t h r o u g h a l ocal ( a d e t p l a t o o n . in m i l i t a r y t h e t h e D a i l y M a r o o n a r e I n t e c o r d a o f T h e U n i v e r ­ f o u n d s i t y o f C h i c a g o ’s p r e - i n d u c t i o n ha.* m i l i t a r y t r a i n i n g w h i c h Out of tho North S o m e t h i n g J a p a n e s e T K T H E F I R S T E X C I T I N G d a y s a f t e r t h e l es son on n a t i o n a l u n i t y h a d its b e g i n n i n g , it w a s t h e n a t u r a l i m p u l s e o f m a n y t o r u s h t o t h e n e a r e s t r e c r u i t i n g o f f i c e s a n d j o i n t h e f i g h t i n g f o r c e s o f U n ­ c l e S a m — c e r t a i n l y a i n t e n t i o n . T h e n , a s t h e s e r i o u s n e s s o f t h e e m e r g e n c y t h i n k i n g o f s t u d e n t s b e g a n a n d t e a c h e r s a l i k e , o t h e r m e a n s o f h e l p i n g b e g a n t o a p p e a r . t o s h a p e l a u d a b l e t h e T h e r e is p l e n t y t o d o f o r e v e r y b o d y . L o a f i n g o r s a y i n g “ W h a t ’s t h e u s e ' ' a r e t w o o f t h e b e s t w a y s t o h e l p t h e . J a p a n e s e a n d t h e i r f e l l o w t o t a l i t a r i a n * . F o r t h e f i g h t i n g f o r c e s , o f c o u r s e , t h e t h i n g t o d o is t o c o m p l e t e t r a i n i n g f o r t h i s m o d e r n w a r o f m a c h i n e s as r a p i d l y as e f ­ f i c i e n c y p e r m i t s . F o r t h e n o n c o m b a t a n t s , e s p e c i a l l y t h o s e r i g h t h e r e in c o l l e g e , t h e r e a r e m a n y w a y s in w h i c h w e c a n h e l p U n c l e S a m w i n . H e r e a r e j u s t a f e w s u g g e s t i o n s : R e m e m b e r i n g t h a t t h e b e s t t r a i n e d m a n m a k e s t h e b e s t s o l d i e r o r o f f i c e r a s a r u l e , e v e r y s t u d e n t c a n p u t e v e r y o u n c e o f e n ­ e r g y a n d e v e r y m i n u t e o f t i m e i n t o g e t t i n g lessons. P i c t u r e e v e r y a l g e b r a p r o b ­ his lem, e v e r y E n g l i s h t h e m e , e v e r y p s y c h o l ­ o g y c a s e , e v e r y q u e s t i o n o f b i o l o g y , hi s­ t o r y , a n d e v e r y o t h e r s u b j e c t as s o m e t h i n g t o be m a s t e r e d as r a p i d l y a n d e f f i c i e n t l y as p o s s i b l e in o r d e r t o be r e a d y f o r y o u r bes t c o n t r i b u t i o n in w h a t e v e r s p o t y o u r i nu n t r y n e e d s y o u m o s t . A n d r e m e m b e r al so t h a t o n l y a r e l a t i v e ­ ly s m a l l n u m b e r o f m e n wi ll a c t u a l l y g e t i nt o t h e f i g h t i n g o r on t h e c a s u a l t y lists, A b i g j o b a h e a d t h e n is to g e t t h e m o s t a n d b e s t p o s s i b l e p r e p a r a t i o n t o w in t h e t h e w a r p e a c e a f t e r is w o n — s o m e t h i n g w e c e r t a i n l y c a n n o t d o if w e w a s t e o u r t i m e , o u r e n e r g i e s , o u r e m o t i o n s , o u r b o d i e s n o w . W e m u s t g e t r e a d y to d o o u r p a r t t o i n s u r e t h a t t h e p e a c e o f 19 42 wi l l n o t j u s t be a n o t h e r p r e l u d e t o t h e w a r o f 196 0. c o u r s e , b u t all t h e m o r e so in w a r t i m e — is a g o a l t o w a r d w h i c h e v e r y o n e c a n w o r k . L a r g e p e r c e n t a g e s o f r e j e c t i o n s in p h s i ­ cal e x a m i n a t i o n s f o r a r m y , n a v y , o r a i r s e r v i c e a r e a n i n d i c t m e n t o f b e t h o u r s c h o o l s a n d o u r p e r s o n a l l i v i n g h a b i t s . W e c a n i n v e s t o u r d i m e s , q u a r t e r s , a n d d o l l a r s in d e f e n s e s t a m p s a n d b o n d s . W e c a n s a v e ol d p a p e r s , t h e m e s , n e w s ­ p a p e r s , m a g a z i n e s , b o x e s , w r a p p i n g s , a n d o t h e r p a p e r a n d p a s t e b o a r d s u p p l i e s f o r t h e w a s t e p a p e r c o l l e c t i o n . W e c a n j o i n f i r s t a i d a n d o t h e r c l a s s e s t o be r e a d y t o d o o u r bit f o r e m e r g e n c i e s . W e c a n d o o u r p a r t t o s a v e f o o d , g a s o ­ line, t i r e s , m e t a l s , a n d o t h e r r e s o u r c e s as t h e g o v e r n m e n t d i r e c t s . A n d , f i n a l l y , if w e all k e e p o u r m e n t a l a n d e m o t i o n a l b a l a n c e , if w e w o r k u n s e l ­ f i s h l y to d o o u r bit t o w a r d t h e n a t i o n a l p u r p o s e , if w e i n f o r m o u r s e l v e s o n t h e h i s ­ t o r y a n d t h e p o s s i b i l i t i e s o f o u r n a t i o n , if w e p r a c t i c e as w e l l as p r e a c h g e n u i n e t , mocracy, if w e m a i n t a i n — as f a r as c o n s i s - 1 tent w i t h n a t i o n a l d e f e n s e — t h e l i b e r t i e s o f s p e e c h , p r e s s , w o r s h i p , a n d t h o u g h t f o r w h i c h w e is e n o u g h t o d o f o r a1! o f us .— R. O. J O N A S , H a r d i n J u n i o r C o l l e g e , W i c h i t a F a l l s . f i g h t i n g — t h e n t h e r e a r e T h e DAi£y T e x a n I he Dai l y u n i v e r s i t y of o f t h e U n i v e r s i t y t e x a n t e x a s , h o i t ea t ie n s. I nc. o t u d e n t n e w s p s p e i is p u b l i s h e d o n r h o o f t h * c a m p u s in A u s t i n bv T e x a * S t u d e n t e v e r v m o r n i n g e x c e p t M o n d a y . t h e P o s t t h e Ac t of C o n g r e s s , E n t e r e d as n kn t i s C H I C A G O ’S H U T C H IN S Anyt hi n g But a n S . A . T . C . b e e n f u n c t i o n i n g u n d e r t h e d i ­ r e c t i o n o f t h e U n i v e r s i t y ’s I n ­ s t i t u t e S t u d i e s o f M i l i t a r y a i n e e t h e a u t u m n o f 1 9 4 0 . T h e t h e e n ­ I n s t i t u t e r o l l m e n t t h e i r b a s i c c o u r s e q u a d r u p l e d a f t e r P e a r l H a r b o r . r e p o r t s in t h a t T h a t t h e c o l l e g e m a n in *p i t e o f all t h i s a c t i v i t y is s t i l l b a d l y p r e p a r e d f o r h i s p o t e n t i a l A r m y j o b is e v i d e n t f r o m t h e f a c t t h a t t h e r e h a s b e e n n o f u r t h e r a t t e m p t o n t h e p a r t o f i n s t i t u ­ t i o n s t o g i v e t h e i r m e n b a s i c m i l i t a r y t r a i n i n g , a n d t h e c o u n ­ t e r - i r r i t a n t , “ d e r e n a e c o u r s e s , ” is b e g i n n i n g t o w e a r o f f . A s t a t e m e n t b y L i e u t e n a n t G e n e r a l B e n L e a r o f t h e U n i t ­ ed S t a t e * A r m y is t h e b e s t s u b ­ s t a n t i a t i o n o f t h e fact, t h a t t h e c o l l e g e m a n ’s f i r s t c r y f o r b a s i c m i l i t a r y t r a i n i n g vvas t h e r i g h t c r y , In a n e d i t o r i a l w h i c h a p ­ p e a r e d in T h e C h i c a g o D a i l y N e w s F e b r u a r y 7, G e n e r a l L e a r , in r e s p o n s e t o a q u e r y f r o m a p a r e n t a s k i n g w h y hi s s o n w a s ­ n ’t a n o f f i c e r w h e n he h a d h a d ii c o l l e g e e d u c a t i o n , s a i d , “ A c a ­ d e m i e t r a i n i n g is n o t o f i t s e l f s u f f i c i e n t t o m a k e a s o l d i e r . k n o w l e d g e i n s t a n c e s h a v e t h e m e n in m o s t p h y s i c a l a n d m e n t a l q u t l i t i e s o f a n o f f i c e r , h u t b e c a u s e o f l a c k o f m i l i t a r y t h e y m u s t j o i n t h e g r e e n e s t r e c r u i t * . . . It i- - a d e x p e r i e n c e t o s e e m a n a f t e r m a n w i t h e x c e l l e n t a c a d e m i c q u a l i f i c a t i o n - g o i n t o r e a r r a n k s b e c a u s e o f h i s c o m ­ p l e t e l a c k o f e d u c a t i o n w h i c h t h e A r m y r e q u i r e s n o t o n l y f o r q u a l i f i e d o f f i c e r s , b u t f o r c o m ­ p e t e n t n o n - c o m m i s s i o n e d o f f i ­ c e r s . ” P e r h a p s a - o p f o r u n o b t a i n ­ a b l e m i l i t a r y d r i l l w e r e p h y s i ­ c a l c o n d i t i o n i n g p r o g r a m s . A l ­ m o s t e v e r y s c h o o l r e p o r t s s o m e k i n d o f e m p h a s i s o n p h y s i c a l c o n d i t i o n i n g . p h y s i c a l i n s u f f i c i e n t c o n d i t i o n i n g is a n T h a t O f f ic ia l A L L N A V A L R . O . T . C . f r e s h - m e n d r a w s i g n a l i n g o u t f i t . R. F. M A R T I N , L i e u t . C o m m a n d e r , U. S . N. T H E C L A S S i n P o e t r y ' , E n g l i s h V i c t o r i a n 2 2 b s , wi l l meet , W e d n e s d a y m o r n i n g f r o m in A. B. 1 0 5 IO f o r a n l e c t u r e b y M i s s J e a n n e t t e M a r k s . i l l u s t r a t e d l l o ’c l o c k t o J. B. W R A R E Y . p r o f e s s o r o f E n g l i s h . i n o f t h e D e a n g e n e r a l U n i v e r s i t y A P P L I C A T I O N b l a n k s f o r t h e F e l l o w ­ s h i p s a n d S c h o l a r s h i p s f o r 1 9 4 2 - t h # 1 9 4 3 a r e a v a i l a b l e n o w O f f i c e o f t h # G r a d u a t e S c h o o l . A n y g r a d u a t e u n d e r ­ s t u d e n t g r a d u a t e i n ­ is s t u d e n t w h o s h o w n t e r e s t e d a n d w h o h a s p r o m i s e o f r e s e a r c h a b i l i t y m a y a p p l y . u s u a l l y r a n g e f r o m $ 2 0 0 t o $ 5 0 0 e a c h . A p p l i c a t i o n * m u s t b e r e t u r n e d a d v a n c e d s t i p e n d s T h e o r t o t h e O f f i c e o f t h e D e a n o f t h e G r a d u a t e S c h o o l , M a in B u i l d ­ i n g 1 2 1 , on 01 b e f o r e M a r c h I . A . P. B R O G A N , d e a n , G r a d u a t e S c h o o l F O R E I G N L A N G U A G E q u i r e m e n t e x a m i n a t i o n s r e ­ f o r s e n i o r s w i l l be h e l d S a t u r d a y a t 2 o ’c l o c k a s f o l l o w s : F r e n c h , M .L . B . 3 0 1 ; S p a n i s h , M. B . 2 0 1 ; G e r m a n , L a t i n , G r e e k , e t c . , M, B. 2 0 2 ; C z e c h . W . H . 1 1 4 . D O R O T H Y S C H O N S , c h a i r m a n , l a n g u a g e e x a m s . f o r e i g n t e r e s t e d h a s a $ 2 5 in p a r t i c i p a t i n g A L L F R E S H M E N s t u d e n t s i n ­ in t h e W i l m o t D e c l a m a t i o n C o n ­ t e s t , w h i c h c a s h a w a r d t h e b o y s ’ a n d g i r l * ’ d i v i s i o n , p l e a s e c o m e b y M a in B u i l d i n g 2 5 0 3 a n d m a k e y o u r e n t r y f o r t h e c o n t e s t . T h e o f f i c e w i l l be o p e n f r o m 9 t o IO a n d f r o m 8 t o 5 d a i l y . in b o t h C O N D E R. H O S K I N S J R . , i n s t r u c t o r in s p e e c h . A h H O U H C € H 4 ^ - That Fay and Babe are now operating the Double “J” Corral 2426 G utd«lup« F t t K K 1 o f i v e a n d D o n u t T o d a y HOT LUNCH 3 Veg., Meet, Drink, and Dessert HOT D O G S— Luscious HAM BURGERS with melted cheese 35* 5* IO* Phone 8-1344 for prompt delivery service from 2 to l l p. rn. SAVE TIME and MONEY One BUSINESS MAN tells another — when it comes to finding Office Help: looking for a Business Opportunity; Positions Wanted; or Capital to Invest— Our Classified Columns are your best medium. The cost is small: results are usually IMMEDIATE! Get the Habit of READING the CLASSIFIED COLUMNS of The Daily Texan lf you have an A d for the Texan Classified Section Phone 2-2473 before 4 o’clock for Messenger Service \ / TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1942 Phene 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Ken* 2-2473 PAGE FIVE— SOCIETY C o -E d s and Dates Dance ’n Dine Housemother Institute A t Valentine Parties O o e n Houses Rrst Meetin9 Ton'9ht I V I w w J W 1 1 1 I Vw* I I v / » V# I I " v O U I I I v J The Campus Guild entertained with a Valentine dance Friday night. The blue-lighted living room of the “new est house in America,” 2804 Whitis, was decorated with tulips and lilies of the valley. Punch and cookies w ert served. The guests included the follow ­ ing: B a r b a r a B r n d f i e l d B e t t y H u n t M a r g a r e t M c J i m e e y B o b b ie M c C a n t a J e r r y R i c h a r d s o n B e t t y C o m p e r e M a r g a r e t O d e e n O pa l H o u s e L o u i s e H o w a r d M a r g a r e t S m ith M e r i t r a n e e s W ilson A n a Koch M a r y B o y d J e a n n e C o w a n E d n a L y n n P l u m L a u r a D arnell M a r y E a s t h a m C h r i a t e n D y e r L a d y M y r a F u l l e r I d a M a e M a d d e r N a d i n a W ilto n V i r g i n i a B u c k n er J in B a i lie J e ff ie F ish e r B e tty Donawen M a r y K. M a r k l a n d Women Geologists Organize 'Smilodon’ Women geologists on the cam ­ pus have organized a new club “ to insure a more active partici­ pation of women students in the field,” to quote G ertrud e Wiggen, president. Final arran g e m en ts fo r the new club which has eighteen c h a rte r members, were completed a t the F e b ru a ry 12 meeting, and the name, Smilodon, decided upon. Smilodon, ironically, is a geolog­ ical term fo r a genus of sab er­ tooth tiger. The officers are Miss Wiggen, president; J e a n Marie Ott, vice­ president; Floy Ottinger, secre­ ta r y ; and A rth u r Deen, professor of geology, sponsor. dergast, Mary W inton, Bette Blanchette, Mildred Norwood, Lil­ lian Spears, Juliana Dunn, Helen Reid, Betty Amidon, Helen Ruth Stieler, J u n e Olcott, Virginia Jones, Sara Penland, Ann Rife, Ann Templeton, Jewel Ward. • Sigma Phi Epsilon fr a te r n ity S a turda y night initiated Ralph Theodore Kleymeyer, Evansville, Ind.; P a t McCarty, Abilene; Billy Graves Noble, Midland; Thomas Theodore Sandel, Austin; Jam es Anderson Spain, Dallas; Edwin William Staats, New Braunfels, and Robert Vardell Yarber, Cor­ sicana. Sigma Phi Epsilon also a n ­ the pledging of Louis nounces Smith J r. of Houston. MARSHS CZ3 T HE SUR PRISE MYSTERY H IT OF THE YEAR— ‘I WAKE UP SCREAMING’ W I T H BETTY GRABLE VICTOR MATURE CAROLE LANDIS lO IN G P L A C E S ’ “ T H E B A T T L E ’* CH RITO Laat Chance! End* 'N CLUB NOTES DIA PASO N CLUB VI u Jack Fisher, organ student in the College of Fine Arts, will be presented by the Diapason Club in a recital at 12 o’clock Tuesday noon in the auditorium of the First Southern Presbyterian Church. The program will be open to the public. Fisher, a student of Dr. E. W. Doty, was recently appointed organ­ ist at the University Methodist Church. FACULTY W IVES Mrs. L P. Hildebrand will be hostess to the Faculty W ives Social Club at a IO o ’clock coffee Tuesday morning, February 17. She will be assisted by Mrs. Arnold Romberg, Mrs. J. M. Kuehne, and Mrs. R. W. Stayton. The m eeting is to be devoted to sew ing for the Red Cross. U N IV ERSITY DAMES The University o f Texas Dames will hold their annual luncheon uesday afternoon at I o’clock in the Stephen F. Austin Hotel. U N IV ERSITY PROFESSORS The University of Texas chapter of the American Association of University Professors will have a special m eeting Wednesday after­ noon at 4:30 o’clock in Garrison Hall 3 to fill the vacancy in the office o f president. CZECH AMERICANS The Foundation of Czechoslovak Americans will sponsor an open forum discussion Wednesday night at 8 o’clock in Teas Union 309. The discussion will be led by Dr. Edward Micek, professor of Sla­ vonic languages; Raymond Prasatik, Mrs. B. P. Matocha; Mr. Ben Petrusek, president of the University Czech Club; and Henry Hers, president of the Foundation. ROMANCE CLUB Miss Christina Christie, instructor in Romance languages, will speak on “ A frican Influence on Brazilian Language and Literature” a t the Romance Club meeting Wednesday afternoon at 4 o’clock in Main Building 301. N EW CO M ER’S CLUB The Newcomer’s Club will meet W ednesday afterno on at 3:30 o clock in the Women s Gymnasium. A recital by an orchestra under the direction of Miss Nora B. Staael will be the entertainm ent for the afternoon. F IR S T AID CLASS The club’s classes in First Aid will begin Friday, F eb ru a ry 20. Classes will meet from 3 to 5 o’clock every Monday and Friday a fte r- noons, the meeting place to be announced Wednesday. First aid books are available a t Red Cross H eadquarters. Joe Davis, University student, will instruct the course. K IRBY HALL New residents of Kirby Hall will be introduced to their dorm itory neighbors Thursday night a t l l o’clock when they e n terta in with a pajama party at the dormitory. Entertainm ent for the occasion is being planned by the freshm en under the direction o f Marilyn Puckett and Shirley Hiker, upperclass advisors. FO R T W ORTH CLUB The Fort Worth Club will m eet T hu rsd ay night at 7:15 ©’clock at th e Texas Union to outline its activities fo r the spring semester. The •lub will be re-organized, elect new officers, and discuss the appoint­ m ent of a girl from the club to the Co-Ed Assembly. A S H B E L LITERA RY SOCIETY Ashbel L iterary Society will m eet Thursday, F e b ru a ry 19, at 5 • ’clock at the Tri Delt house. New members will be elected a t this m eeting. • • • • • • W.I.C.A. M EETING W.I.C.A. will m eet Tuesday night a t 7 o’clock in the Texas Union to nominate girls to complete the unexpired terms of Lauro Oehler, ave le ft the University. Names subm itted will be voted upon a t the J resident, and Elizabeth W harton, publicity chairman, both of whom t Plans fo r a spring formal and several other social events will be n e x t re g u la r meeting, March 3. discussed. Greeks Hold Initiation Rites, Dinners for New Members Beta Theta Pi fraternity held formal initiation services for seven­ teen pledges Sunday afternoon at 4 o’clock in the East Room of the Stephen F. Austin Hotel. P L U S At 7 o’clock that night the chapter entertained its fifty-seventh initiation class with a dinner in the banquet room. M ajor Lee B. Thompson o f * — .................. -4. Iii Camp Berkeley, district chief o f th e fra te rn ity , was the principal speaker. H. H. Powers, faculty advisor, delivered the invocation, and L ester W. Sanders, the chap­ t e r president, made the introduc­ tions. Alumni guests included William Dow Hamm Sr. of Houston, and Richard E. Welch Sr. of Glencoe, 111. The new initiate.s are Jam es An­ derson, Houston; Erroll W arren Allen, Oklahoma City; Edward Coe Davis, H arlingen; Raymond Swezey Edmunds, Dallas; John Allen Gould, Wichita Falls; Wil­ liam Dow Hamm Jr ., Houston; oane Harwood, H arlingen; Glenn W eston Howeth, Wichita Falls; George Franklin Jr., Wichita, Kt*ns.; W alter Thomas Klopp, Omaha. Neb.; Jack Alfred L upher, Austin; E dw ard Culle Mann, Laredo; Robert Lawrence Nash, Bronxville, N. Y.; Ashley H orne Priddy, Wichita Falls; Gaston Anderson Shumate, Dallas; Lewis Dale Stephens, Wichita F alls; and Richard Enlow Welch Jr ., Glencoe, III. Johnson • Pi Beta Phi sorority held in­ itiation services Sunday and pre­ sented the award for outstanding pledges to M artha J a n e Tubb, J a n e Cheatham, aud Mary Hallett F ry. A fte r initiation a serenade was held for Phi Delta Theta. Those girls initiated were Betty Dorchester, Mary Ann Prowell, Barbara Ray Hamill, Louise Clem­ ens, Joan Miller, Connie Clark, Luetta Graham, Marilyn Carroll, Margaret Cockran, Muriel Flynn, Mollie Hart, Josephine Cockrell, Emily Ann Kennard, Nancy Pren- T E X A S — TODAY ONLY— LOLA DICK LANE PO W EL L IN ‘HOLLYWOOD HOTEL’ W IT H TED HEALY PARAMOUNT TUES., FEB. 24 ONE NIG HT ONLY SEATSALE TODAY HOWARD LINDEY** RUSSEL CROUSE /ISui hors o f "Lift with Faihtr ") / T u e* . • W e d . - T hur*. LAND of LIBERTY 137 Famous Star* SELECTED SHORTS N F W N E W , Y O R K S m JOSEPH KESSELRING *AADo£S7T FUNNIEST H IT / A STAR-STUDDED CAST LAUIAHOPf CREWS’EWO! VOWSTWH EIM JACKWHIT1N6'EFFIE SHANNON-FORRESTON A P R I C E S :y ^ S 3 . 0 0 * 2 * 0 * 2 . 0 0 *1 * 0J E X T R A ! S P E C I A L N E W S R E E L O F T H E B O M B I N G O F P E A R L H A R B O R STARTS W ED. St a r t i n g W ednt « irrrir$ * * * TW* *AH0S a d ap** i'D O U ***001111 J anuary IS S K /!a46CjM7 . . . i n a w e b o f / I N T R I G U E / BRENT-MASSEY B A S U R A T H B O N E * 1MTERNATIOM ITM wmmsmrnxnyr?* L L O C K H A R T “ SOLDIERS IN W H I T E ” FILMED AT FORT SAM HOUSTON 4 “ T A NK S” . LA TEST WAR NEWS G e r t r u d e M ille r H e le n S c h u d d e M a r y F r a n c e t U m b e n h o u r Lo u i s e T a y l o r M a r y E v e l y n B r y s o n Ar. uce na F l o r a e A n n C n r r i e k S a r a D a l k o w i t s C el ia F r a n k P o ll y S m i t h M a r g a r e t Bel l D o r o t h y H o r a h M a r g i e Sk il ea H e le n S n e a r l y A n i t a W o o d J e a n e t t e P r e u i t t J e a n F i s h e r M a r i e l l y n A n d r e w * M a r y A n n e t t e R o g e r s F r a n c e s K e lly L e ila E y o u h A n n e B u r k h a r t E d w i n H o l c o m b J o e B a k e r V a d e G il e s, S a n M a u r i c e C o b u r n , A n t o n i o B a s t r o p M r. A M r s . W a r r e n C a m p b e l l M is s M a r g a r e t P e r k M r s . W i l l i a m Mile s International Party Dr. and Mrs. A. G. Garcia ©f Austin, parents of Martha and stu­ M. N. Garcia, University dents, gave an international val­ entine party and dance for the South American student# in the University Saturday, February 14, in their home at 1214 Newning Avenue. Am ong the thirty guests were students from Brazil, Panama, Costa Rica, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, and Mexico. Out-of-town guests were Miss Maria Garcia and John Albert Garcia, ex-students of the Univer­ sity, home from New Orleans for a week-end visit with their par­ ents. Miss Garcia is supervisor and instructor of anesthesia at Charity Hospital, New Orleans. Her brother is a senior at Tulane medical school. Delta Tau Delta f r a te r n ity en­ tertain ed S atu rday with a Valen­ tine party. Central decoration was a large lace-covered h e a rt m ount­ ed over the fireplace. Each girl r e ­ ceived a sw eetheart rose as she entered. Bobby Hammack and his orchestra furnished the music. Coming Up • M.I.C.A. will hold an open house for members on Saturday, F e b ru a ry 28, in the Union. Jo hnny Simons and his orches­ dancing, tr a will play for which l l to is o’clock. Dress will be semi-formal. This dance will close the spring last from 9 the to drive fo r M.I.C.A. membership. M iss Oppenheimer Is A Book Reviewer Who Is Different1 Housemothers of all University students are invited to attend th# of Co-Operatives Institute for Housemothers and Co-Ordinators which starts Tuesday night at 7:30 o’clock in Garrison Hall 103, Dean H. R. Gipson, general chairman o f the Institute, announced Saturday. “ Since housemothers of private boarding and rooming houses are of Living” theme. for the institute’* Six weekly meetings will be held at 7:30 o’clock on each of the fol­ lowing nights: February 17, Feb­ ruary 23, March 2, March 9, March 16, and March 23. The last meet­ ing will be closed with an address by V. I. Moore, dean of studant life. not having an institute this year,*" they should feel free to attend the one planned by the housemothers of the co-operative units,” Dean Gipson said. Rex Hopper, assistant profes­ sor of sociology, will speak on the “Necessity for Education in Co- Operation” at introductory m eeting Tuesday. Wilfrid J. Arn­ old, University student from Cle­ burne, will also speak on “Pe­ culiar D ifficulties of Co-Opera­ tion in College L ife.” the Mrs. E. L. Hawkins is chairman of the program committee, which selected “The Co-Operative Way am** Rogues Select Dillon For President The office most in demand when the Rogues, campus service organ­ ization, elected officers Sunday night a t Old Seville was th a t of picnic chairman. Joh nny Mac Seay won the co­ veted post, with Jimmy Connor and Rom Rhome as his committee. Brien Dillon was elected presi­ dent. The other officers include Kiel Boone, vice-president; W al­ ton Fleming, secretary; Dick Ma­ tre a s u r e r ; and Elgin Wil­ son, liams, reporter. Ted Bellmont, be drafted, was selected a “ Special Representative to Singapore.” soon to New members will be selected at the next meeting. • SENIOR LAWS ELECT TOO The Senior Law Class recently elected Bunyan Lee Hutchinson to succeed Fred Boyer, past presi­ dent. O ther officers elected at the senior law' meeting were S tew art DeVore, vice-president; Jo e H art, secretary. Miss Virginia Grubbs was elected perm anent secretary of the class. lf You Wont A U.T. Fellowship See Dean Brogan A. P. Brogan, dean of the Grad­ uate School, has announced that application blanks for the general University fellowships and schol­ for 1942-1943 are now arships available in his office. Dean Brogan sait’ th a t any g ra d ­ uate stud en t or advanced u nder­ grad uate student who is interested and who has shown promise of re ­ search ability may apply for a scholarship. The am ount of each scholarship ranges from $200 to $500. The Dean also requests that the applications he return ed to the of­ fice of the Dean of the Graduate School, Main Building 121, on or before March I. VARSITY BARBER SHOP * 4 0 8 G u a d a l u p e H A V E U S D O Y O U R B A R B E R W O R K P* L. R a n d a l H. B a r tle y I, G. G ardenahire T. C. Barite* L a d i e s ’ M e n ’s H a i r c u t e r s r » w C around to finishing th a t novel she came home to write. “ There are too m any novel* w ritte n , any­ way,” she says. D aughter Born to Dick Burcham* A nnouncem ent has been made of the birth of a girl, Joy Allison, to Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Bur­ cham, ex-journalism students, on F e b ru a ry 4, 1942. Mrs. Burcham was M a rg a re t Lewis before her marriage. Dick left school in J a n ­ uary to join his wife in Portland, Ore., wYiere the baby was horn. initiation Sigma Delta Tau sorority held form al five Sunday afternoon a t the sorority house. A b u ffe t supper followed the initiation services. rites fo r The following girls were in­ itiated: Zella Lack, H ouston; Fan- chon Schwartz, Waco; Ethel Ben­ San Antonio; Charlotte nett, Lipoff, P o r t A rth u r; and Elaine D orfman, Brownsville. This smart new sty!# in a !! red, beige and black gabardine. See if and many other Austin- ettes in our disp ay a t 2326 G uadalupe. $795 O th ers 4.95 to 7.95 flu d w M i* - e x e a c i v l u s A T > A C V 610 Congress Evelyn Oppenheimer, newspa­ per literary critic, evolved into re­ Evelyn Oppenheimer, viewer, because her first audience reacted violently toward her. book “ Home in Dallas on a vacation, I was invited to give a book re­ view. I had never heard an oral book review, but I gave one. My first audience violently liked me or violently disliked me. A fter th a t I went to hear one. Then I reacted violently.” either Miss Oppenheimer, who review­ ed A. J. Cronin’s “ Keys to t h a Kingdom” last night in Geology Auditorium, was literary critic on the Chicago Post when she took a leave of absence to finish a novel. the She ended by delving into new profession of platform lit­ erary criticism. Now she is known in the South­ west as a book reviewer who is different. H e r platform m ann er has the simple directness of good conversation. Her diction is alive, brisk, and often blunt. H er deliv­ ery is as carefully planned as th a t of an actress perform ing her f a ­ vorite role. Her job is a favorite role with Miss Oppenheimer. To her, book in terpretation, not reviewing is story-telling; and in terpretation *of literatu re is as im portant as a n ­ alysis of w ar news. Incidentally, she never got T ile D a ily T e x a n Classified A d L a u n d r ie s Schools and Colleges Furnished Rooms — M -m ■—— — w m m m em m xm K *- E E I 3 I T C — c s s s L A W - C A C T U S B E A U T Y S H O P _ p # r m a n e n t a m a t e r i a l * u s e d . Mo*! e f f i c i e n t o p e r a t o r * . 160 3 L a - like. F i n e s t r e a l l y y o u ’ll | v a c a . P h o n e 8 - 6 1 8 1 . Cafes 3UU2 U U A U A U U P B Coaching W H Y F A I L S P A N I S H A, I . o r 1 2 T M ak e in ­ s t r u c t o r . R e a s o n a b l e r a te * . P h o n e 2 -8 8 5 2 . e a r l y c o a c h i n g Hate w i t h f o r m e r E F F E C T I V E MATW C O A C H I N G F U R E a n d A P P L I E D R. W P a r r R. M. R a n d l e 1309 S a n A n t o n i o P h . 2-0 781 Dressmaking " E V E N I N G D R E S S E S f # T R o u n d - U p ” — a » p e r i « l t v . A la n sch o o l d r e s s e s a n d a I - Ss- f i t t i n g s 2001 t e r a t i o n . . F.xcelle nt h m s . P h o n e 8 - 8 0 6 9 . T A I L O R E D A F O R M A L . C o s t u m e d e . s i g n i n g . P h o n e 4726. 30 7 W e s t 21s t. For Sal# h ra m o u n t Last C h a n c e ! Ends T o d a y ! C GfatA&n ta fit» in his new comedy I I n - 1 2 6 . b i g d i s c o u n t H J o h n s t o n , 8 705 G il b e rt, A u s t i n . T e x a s . us ed t h o r o u g h b r e d C O C K E R S P A N I E L P u p p i e s . T h r e e m o n t h s old. R e g i s t e r e d f u l l g r o w n f r o m h a n d s p r i n g solid b la c k C o c k e r fe m a le . 2 -6 9 9 3 line A ls o Hom a Bakeries W U K A S C H S I S C ER S— C o o k i e s a n d J C a k e s in S t o c k 1901 W i c h i t a . 2 - 6 8 8 8 F R E D P KT M EC K Y— LOC K SM IT H — E x - p e r t lock a n d k e y w o rk . Day o r n i g h t lo c ks. A u to k e y s . 116 T r u n k k e y s s o d L a s t 6 t h . P h o n e 2- 7 981. Lost and Found LO*!T— I adie u' H »m i! *on R e w a r d . D o r o t h y E x all, tVr-«t w a t c h . 7^6 W e s t 2 4 t h . P h o n e 2-4 7 7 4 L O S T s T a n s m o o t h piece b e lt . P a i r of ( r « M c o lo re d l e a t h e r c o a t . T w o l e a ­ la p o c k e t , R e w a rd . 10 6 E a s t t h e r glo ve* 2 3 rd . 2 -7 8 2 1 . C l a s s i f i e d A d v e r t i s i n g RATE CARD READER ADS 20 W o rd s— Maximum a I tim# .44 2 t - m e s .56 8 t im e * .70 *0 t i m e s 4 6 ti m e * .90 1.00 6 ti m e * R e n d e r A d s A r e To Re Run On C o n s e c u t i v e D a y s fOc C h a r g e f o r C o p y C h a n g e DISPLAY ADS I column w oo by I Ach d e « p 60c per ["section W e r e s e r v e to c o r r e s p o n d w i t h T h e D a il y T e s a n . t h e debt to edit cope th # a t y l a n e ed bv u n t i l M # * * e r g e r S e r v i c e u n t i l 4 44 w e e k - d a y s . C o u n t e r a a r v i c # A p. rn. ALL ADS C A S H IN ADVANCE D a 2-2473 for further infor­ mation or messenger *erv:ce. R e a p o n a ib l# f o r o n e i n c o r r e c t i n s e r t i o n o n lv N o r e f u n d s f o r c a n c e l l a t i o n # Massages GA PTTO L C IT Y p ATH Ph c ne a . 3 9 9 7 . s'-ie nti fic Aw e d i t h ma«»a r e t e nr w o m e n . ' H OI "EE — 84 6 T u r k t h " I or < o m p ' e t e l i t h We* b a th » - p e r t i e u • r me n s e r v i c e b e a u t y Musi C Lessons Y O U C A N l e a r n Ie p la y a H a m m o n d O r g a n or S o lo v o a w i t h o n ly a few t r a i n i n g le ss o n * P r e v i o u s m u s i c a l le s s o n ■ a n o t n e r e a a a r y . *!. SO p e r P h o n e 3531 or i n q u i r e a t H a m m o n d O r g a n S t u d i o , 3 r d fl o o r J. R, REED MUS I C CO. P H O N E 3531 Plumbing m R A V E N — g i n # # 1890— P l u m b t u g W a s ew e r* p a n g a s p ip in g t a t b e a t e r s co n n ec te d ! s i n k s ga* r e p a i r i n g . b e s t e r -ins t o p p e d 1606 L a v a c a P h o n s 6 7 6 * Records • A L W A Y S IN MY HT A R T " — F o x T r o t wi*h G le n n M il le r a n d Hi# O r c h e s t r a 'A S t r i n g of r,e*>U — F o y T r o t w i t h G l e n n M iler «pd Hi* G r c h y - r r a : re Ord* now R E E P M U S IC J . R ( O C rrrfiTr**# COLLEGES 2 608 GII A DA L U P E —— L o v e l y for boy*, m e n o r b u e i p e t a w o m e n Nicely f u r n i s h e d , i n n e r s p r i n g m a t ­ tr e s s e s , s h o w e r s , p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e . 8087. t w i n bed s, room vtVS t i n -nous t o n - h o u s t o n .SAN ANTONIO - PT WORTH - HARLINGEN , v ^ Texa s L a r g e s t C h a i n of S c h o o ls W r i t # fo r P r e * C a t a lo g . Typing T Y P I N G - F r a s e r - N e a t A a c c u r a t e . Mr* L. 2704 O a k h u r s t A r e . 47 1 7 . E F F I C I E N T T Y P I S T — D e p e n d a n t W a s s o n 907 W. 2 2 n d . 2 - 9 1 3 6 l i r a T Y P IN G don # a s you like it. All k in d s . Mrs. A lb e rt S a n t i . 8 -4 1 6 7 . Typewriters M A S T E R RITH T U N D E R W O O D T y p e - * r i t e r . Model 3, P ic s T y p e . B a r g a i n s t 135 A lnio»t new f l u o r e s c e n t d e s k I* rn p. >5. M a h o n , 307 W e s t 2 6 t h , a f t e r 7 p .m . W anted AN I v n i V r n U A T . w . h e e to r e n t o r b u y • Clarin** < si) a t *294 B ri d le P a t h . or P h o n s 62 90 . W I T T P S Y C A S H — o r or m e d i'i m a i t # u p r i g h t f o r s m a l l pia no * o r J ohn S C a l d - I. R. R E E D M U S IC CO.. F h o n e t r a d # s m e l l g r a n d p>»no« Call we 3531 . a t H I G H E S T C A S H P R I C E S fo r ^Ted s u it* , s h o e s . A S c h w a r t s P b * - 0 1 8 4 M A L K I N P A Y S M O R E J t e d S u t t a C l o t h i n g a n d Sh oe *. 407 E a s t f 6 - 0 8 6 6 for Furnished Apartment! a p a r t m e n t . W A N T E D — G ir l to s h a r e l o v s l v m o d e r n . in n e r - be ds, istl e * pr* >c f r ' c d s i r # Appr oved h o u s e 2 block* r t m p u s . $ 11.60 a m o n t h , 2-474* I win 606 B E L L E V U E P L A C E — T w o ro om *. s h o w e r , a r d p r iv * * - e n t r a n c e . A u t o ­ m a tic h e s t . A c c o m m o d a t e 3 ho»# C o o k ­ ing p r i \ e ge a W a l k i n g d i s t a n c e . Billa paid P h o n e Mr*. P r e s t o n a t 8-1 2 4 2 . C o m f o r t a b l e FO R C O U P L E s o u t h e a s t a p a r t m e n t , block o f c a m p s . L i g h t s , I n s p e c ­ o r w a te r , g a r a g e — f u r n i s h e d ti on 3831. a p p o i n t m e n t . Call 2-2 5 9 6 *27. by U N U S U A L L Y a p a r t m e n t , l a r g e D E S I R A B L E — Du pl e x b e d ­ I i i * s h o w e r , p r i v a t e r a i d , m a id s e r v ic e . Ac­ li v in g ro om , ro om , No k i t c h e n e n t r a n c e B la c o m m o d a t e 3. Theme 2 - 1 7 4 0 F IV E R O O M S — H a lf b u * —tw o f r o m U n iv e r # '* v g a r a g e . No billa paid. b lo ck 136. P h o n e 2*2 72 7. Furnished Houses t ' n i v e r a i t y M D D ! RN C O L O N I A L c o n v e n i e n t ( e a s t ) . F iv e to room *, nic e i n n e r s p r i n g m a t t r e a * # ' W e s t ­ 14* 6*. Also u n f u r n i s h e d c o t ­ c o n d itio n , i n g h o u s e t a g e . a a m # n e i g h b o r h o o d 69 97, Garage Rooms 1 1 1 2 . 6 0 p e r m o n t h , N ]( E QI. I F T G a r a g e ro o m O n e s t u d e n t ."hare b a t h w it h o r e in s t u d e n t p r i v a t e R o o m w i t h h o m e . 906 W e s t 22 n d . 2 - 6 * 0 6 . b a t h E N F I E L D : M o a t c o m f o r t a b l e , a t t r a c t i v e q u i e t ro o m . d r e s s i n g r o o m , tile s h o w e r b a t h , c e i li n g fa n , m a id s e r v i c e . M rs , R e v R a t h e r . 761 7. p r i v a t e G A R A G E R O O M S — D oub le , Bing!# arit h i n n e r a p r i n g , g a r a g e . w a l k i n g d i s t a n c e . N o n e b e t t e r f o r s e r i o u s s t u d y a n d c o m f o r t . 31 26 D u v a i. s h o w e r , F A R A G E R O O M — f o r tw o boy *. P r i v a t e e n t r a n c e , s h o w e r , p h o n e . N e w ly deco - Cool, - a te d . I n n e r s p r i n g m a t t r e s s # * . j u i e t . c lo se t o U.T . Ph 3 0 6 6 o r 8733. Room & Board 1349 RTO G R A N D E — f o r G ir ls . c u l l y a t t r a c t ] ' # r a m p . » J b l o r k * f r o m S u b s t a n t i a l h o m e . c ook ed meal* M aid s e r v i c e R e a s o n a b l e . P h o n e k -6 * 0 2 . - o P m* o r 1' p r i v a t * h a t h , m a id M R 5 . L I N D L S V S — V a c a n c i e s Room w i t h Meal* s e r v e d . D i n i n g ro o m o pe n to p ubli c . C o r ­ ne r 18 th A C o lo ra d o . 2 -0 1 9 4 a e r ' ' ' - # S I C E R O O M — f o r on* or t w o boy*. P r i ­ Idle s h o w e r . 30 4 E a s t v a t e e n t r a n c e . i2 n d S t r e e t . P h o n e 2-» S 4 2 H O e ac h. 811 4 W H E E L E R — R o o m a n d b o a r d on# or Room a n d 5063. t w o boy* t w o m e a ls in p r i v a t e >26.00 fo r ho m e. P b o a * 208 E A S T ‘J 2 N i b — F o r boy*. N e a r E n g i ­ r o o m a R e a s o n a b l e n e e r in g B u ild in g C o m f o r t a b l e h o m e -c o o k e d m e a l s a n d P h o n e 2 - 1 9 3 6 V A C A N C Y — G I R L S Two blo ck* C a m p u s , Room a u d h o a rd Maid s e r v i c e Sip.gl* cir d o u b le r o o m s R e a s o n a b l e r a t e s 1916 Nuace *. P h o n e 3-7 748. Rooms for Boys VA' A N C Y — B O Y S — I C o m f o r t a b l e p u a . h a ' h . H a t l e w o o d . 1 -3 3 7 6 goo d me al* Block* C a m - a d j o i n i n g r o o m R e*-O na bl* Mr# A T T K A C T U R — T w o b e d r o o m s — s i n g l e o r d ouble St :dv, p r i v a t e b a th , P h o n o 2304 L e on S t s e r r i e s new i m a id I 2-5 2 8 6 . . , Two block* c a m p u s . R o o m * M RS S T U B B'S H O U S E — 1 912 Nuaea*. in ho rn s r o o m s . T w i n ba d*. m n t r - s h o w e r * , ma id . g a r a g e s . Meal# a n d g a r a g e ->>rnnss. o p t i o n s 1. R e a s o n a b l e P h o n e 2-9 6 2 1 . R E A S O N A B L E .loinmg b a t h \ d - P R I C E D R O O M S fn p r i v a t e h ^ m a . Twin beda or s i n g ! * : p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e g a r a g e . 2620 S p e e d w a y campi;*. On# P h o n e 8 - 1 5 0 6 bloc's 2004 a ir a b l* tv [CH I T A — ’ , h i c k c am p -ia D6- a n d fo r b o y s s h o w e r . M aid s e r v i c e . R e a s o n a b l e , P h o n e 2 -8 3 9 3 . r o o m a T u b Furnished Rooms Rooms for Girls B F D R O O M p r i v a t e b a t h R e s t o r a b l e to c o u p le c a p a b l e o f S p a n i a h , s u b j e c t s i r e f i n e d U n i v e r s i t y c o a c h i n g M a ' h , etc .. 2-4 266. J r H i g h s l e e p i n g p o r c h L A R G E H O M E Y ROOM w i t h p r i v a t e la rg e t l o a e t s — fo r 2 or S gir l*. 2 blo ck* c a m p u s . G a r a g e Mr*. B o w m a n o w n e r . 459 8 o r 2 -9 7 0 9 . Locks and Keys Wanted to Buy Coaching or Typing Ads Special R ates - - 2 L ine A d s $ 2 .0 0 M o n til Call 2 - 2 4 7 3 Before 4 :0 0 for Alessenger Service A M U S E M E N T S — P A S E SIX Piton* 2-2473 — T H E D A I E Y T E X A N - B io n * 2-2473 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY IT, 1942 First Sign of 5gritg I T h e N e w S p r i n g S P O R ? S H I R T S are herei Famed Composer Prokofieff Does Music for Soviet Film BY ELGIN WILLIAMS It’* not often cam pus theater­ goers get to see a m ovie with the musical score by one o f the f o r e ­ most com posers o f o u r tim e. They will W ednesday a n d T hu rsday . A new Russian m otion picture, “A lexan d er N evsky," acclaimed by m any a critic an d even slow- to-praise T h e a te r A rts as th e best y et done by th e Russians, will show at the T e r n s W e d n es d ay and T h u rsd ay . is W hat makes this p ic ture impor- j its grandiose action and ; tant by its great music— the Sergei P ro k o fieff, living Russian composer of " P e t e r and the W olf,” "T h e Classical S ym ­ p h ony ,” and o th e r w orks r e g u la r ­ ly on symphonic p ro g ra m s, fa m e d la t t e r P r o k o f i e f f s music m ir r o rs the action of invasions the p ic tu r e : by fierce T a r ta rs , last-ditch f ig h t­ ing by pea sa nts to hold th e ir n a ­ tive land, a g r e a t b a ttle on a f r o ­ arm y zen river with a G erm a n | vanishing beneath th e ice. a failed. T he The picture h as historical I p arallel th a t has come to pass in o u r own d a y — the G erm a n blitz vainglorious, I th a t m agnifice n tly d e c o ra te d kn ights i of the Teutonic o rd er, who a re driven o u t of th e c o u n try by peo­ ple f ig h tin g f o r th e ir homes, m ay be com pared to th e inv ading fa s­ cist hordes of o u r own time. least im posing aspec t N o t the p ho tography , of the film done on an im m ense scale and g r a n d compass. T h e re are bril­ lia n t p h o tograph s of cloudy skies, ru sh in g rivers, icy, d ripping f o r ­ ests, and plains and castle walls. E specially relieving a r e the scenes o f b a ttle s — the scene is not c lu t­ te re d with too m a n y w arriors, and you can follow the action easily. is th e B ut P ro k o f ie f f is still the h it of the picture. Only he can p u t into music the thrillin g galloping o f a horse over ice, a sud de n ja r r i n g crash as horse and r id e r fall to- | geth er, the tw o sucked down into j the black w ater as the ice cracks b en e ath . "T h e B a ttle o f th e I c e ” is the epic con flict o f th e Russians, an d j co m p ares with the Boyne f o r the Irish, H astin g s f o r the British, and I A m e r ic a n s ’ own Y orktow n . In a scene r e m in is c e n t o f W a sh in g to n th e Rus­ 1242 in I tu r n e d back the in va din g T e u to n - ; ic host, with m a n y of the G erm an w a rrio rs d ro w n in g w hen ice gives way. j crossin g the D elaw are, sian people t h a t d ay th e In th e film th e d ir e c to r gives m ore th a n a su g g e stio n t h a t the ; wierd symbols on the helm ets o f th e medieval in v a d ers o f Russia a re like the sw astik a o f the T hird Reich. P ro k o f ie f f gives some s u g ­ g estions in his music, too. T he p ic ture is b ein g b ro u g h t to th e ca m pus by the new ly-fo rm ed F oreign and C u ltu ra l Film Com ­ m ittee , which is also b rin g in g a F re nch production h ere soon. Today's Entertainm ent P A R A M O U N T : “ TH. G reat Dic­ tato r,” w ith C ha rlie Chaplin, Jack Oakie, P a u l e t t e G o ddard. I F e a t u r e begins a t 12:00, 2 :28, 4:56, 7:24, a n d 9:52 o ’clock. a n d S T A T E : “ International Lady, w ith Ilona M assey, George B ren t. F e a t u r e b eg in s a t 12, 2 :30 , 5, 7:30, a n d IO o’clock. Q U E E N : " S e a le d Lip*,” w ith W illiam G a r g a n an d J u n e Clyde. F e a t u r e begins a t 1 :29, 3 :10, 4 :51, 6 :32, 8:13, a n d 9 :54 o’clock. V A R S I T Y : "I W a k e Up S crea m in g ,” with B e tty G rable a n d Vie t o r M a tu re . F e a t u r e begins at 10 :02 2:10 , 4:08, o’clock. 6 :06, 8:05, T E X A S : "H olly w o o d Hotel,* w ith Dick Powell a n d Lola L ane F e a t u r e begins a t 2, 3:55, 5 :5 0, 7:45, a n d 9 :4 0 o ’clock. C A P IT O L : "Suspicion,*' with C a ry G r a n t a n d J o a n F o n ta in e . F e a t u r e begins a t 12, 2:01, 4:02, 6:03, 8:04, a n d 10:05 o ’clock. D R I V E - I N : " L a n d o f L i b e r t y ” with 137 fa m o u s sta rs. ’ » ■fit VV, v r n ® I r n Rain Hampers Fine String Quartet Debut r n BY J E A N N E D O UG LA S P la y in g with r h e u m a tism in th e ir violin strin g s, th e n ew ly -fo rm ed its f i r s t s tr in g q u a r t e t o f th e U n iv e rsity ’s music d e p a r t m e n t gav e c o n c e rt S u n d ay a f te r n o o n in H og g A u d ito r iu m to a w ell-tra in ed , w ell­ dressed au dience of a p p r o x im a te ly tw o h u n d re d . I t would seem t h a t th e w e a th e r a f f e c t s music as well as f a r m in g . D u rin g dam p a n d ra in y w e a th e r, such as A ustin h as had d u r in g th e p a s t week, th e strin g s of violins, v i o l a s a n d cellos becom e " g o o p y .” Made of c a t gu t, the s trin g s a re lim p e r d u r in g w e t w e a th e r th a n d u r ­ in g dry. C o n sequen tly , the music S u n d a y w as lo w er p itc h ed th a n it should have been or would have been or- »-------- -------------------------------------------- dinarily. P la y in g for the first tim e to­ g e t h e r in public, A n th o n y Donato, A lb e r t L uper, David and D orothy P r a t t displayed u n u su a l un ity in t e m p e r a m e n t and techn ique. O f tw o selections, D o h n a n y i’s q u a r t e t in D f l a t c a r rie d m ore ap­ peal to th e aud ien c e the in F m ajor. B eeth oven q u a r t e t A lthough the H u n g a r ia n com poser is c o n te m p o r a r y , his music is e n ­ tire ly N in e te e n th C e n tu r y or ro ­ m a n tic music. th a n Hart, Bara Live Again in Revivals Art Film Society Shows Them Friday A T h e th e series o f in m otion p ic tu r e s d e p ic tin g the rise o f th e A m e ric a n film will be p r e ­ r o m a n tic music j gented by the U n iv e r s it y M o dern second • . r> ■ i r- lit e r a tu r e L iving as we do in th e b a c k ­ w ash of ro m a n tic is m — in a r t, mu- sift is m ore a p p e a lin g to th e av e rag e ’ » p e r s o n ’s em otional and intellec- t v tu a l make-up. We still th in k la m e - ly in te r m s o f rom an ticism - t h e I, T h ls Kroup *_ j_ a ____/_*. „_ rvsrt.t m o st p o p u la r poets in A m erica to ­ d ay, like E d n a St. V in c e n t Millay, a r e basically ro m an ticists. a . i j n ' t i " f ro m 1912 to 1918. T he . ■■'elude f o u r se- llc c t e d movies m a d e in th e period film s i p re s e n te d will be " T h e N ew Y ork J H a t ” with M a ry P ick fo rd , " T h e F u g itiv e ” with William S. H a r t, " T h e Clever D u m m y ,” a Mack S e n n e t " A Fool T h e r e W a s” w ith T h e d a Bara, com edy, a n d m ay be se c u re d by s e n d in g $1 j A d m itta n c e is lim ited to those ; h o lding m e m b e rsh ip c a r d s which to j the D e p a r t m e n t of D ra m a , M.L.B. 208 or by p h o n in g 9171. T h ese j c a r d s e n title you to see n o t o n ly ! this show, b ut a bill of th r e e o th e rs I to be given in th e spring. Temianka, Violinist To Play Friday Classicism, such as e a r ly Bee­ thoven, is too f a r p a s t to arouse the a v e r a g e l is te n e r ’s sy m pa thy a n d u n d e rsta n d in g , while he has n o t y e t rea ched the po in t of be­ ing in fu lle st accord with m odern music. " T h e U n iv ersity Is f o r t u n a t e in h a v in g a s tr in g q u a r t e t , ” said Dr. P e t e r H an sen, a s s is ta n t p ro fe sso r on th e music fa c u lty . " I t is sig­ n if ic a n t in th a t it m akes available th e la rg e st and best body of m u­ sic ev e r w ritte n , m uch of which is u n r e c o rd e d ,” he said. C om posers f ir s t b egan w riting for the s tr in g q u a r t e t d u r in g the E ig h te e n th C e n tu r y , w ith H aydn le ad in g the way. Since t h a t time th e re has been a c o n s ta n t flow of th e pens of corn- q u a r t e t s from in cluding the Po se rs . cont empo- including the rari” Ravel and Schernbertf. .. CARY GRANT may be seen currently at the Copita! as the object of his wife's suspicion, in the tense Hitchcock film of that name. Six Nights in Europe Experimental Theater Brings Scenes of Spain, Italy Here BY J A N E H A R K R ID E R “Th* Maid as M istress” a n d "A n Old Spanish C u s to m ” will a p p e a r on a double bill In th e E x p e r im e n ta l T h e a t e r of the D e p a r t m e n t o f Dram a fo r a six nigh t r u n fro m F e b r u a r y 23 th ro u g h F e b r u a r y 28. "La Serva P a d r o n a , ” a farcic al o p e r e tta by G iovanni B a ttis ta P er- fo le s i is the f o r e r u n n e r o f the m odern light op era of such com posers aa Gilbert and Sullivan. It is the s to r y o f a cle v e r maid, who, w ith a fem in in e tech n iq u e which com bines te m p e r a n d tim idity, becom es m istress of th e h o u se ­ hold. H e r plot involves a disguise fo r th e m an s e rv a n t, who is oblig­ in g but dumb. Author Apstein Is A s Unique As H is Ploys t j n na r \ f i The show has a double c a s t fo r * th* leads. T h e y will pla y a l t e r ­ nate p e r f o r m a n c e s d u r in g th e run. J o h n Collins a n d F red A iken sha re ho n o rs as Dr. P an d o lfo , erstw hile m a s te r o f th e house. Z erb in a , his maid, is played by R o s em a ry E r t e r a n d B e tty M e rrim a n , a n d Scapin. his s e rv a n t, by M arcus F u lle r. in R o sem a ry E r t e r and B e tty M er­ riman sa n g lead in g roles the recent U n iv ersity L ig h t O pera C om pany’s production o f “ Choco­ late S o ld ie r.” They p layed N a­ dine and M a rsh a respectively. Fred Aiken sa n g in the chorus o f the sam e produ ction. j V iolinist H en ri T em ian k a , who will a p p e a r on th e A u stin C o m ­ m u n ity C o n c e rt p r o g ra m F rid a y , F e b r u a r y 20, has played u n d e r the J o h n B a rb irolli, S ir b a to n s o f A d rian Boult, P ie r r e M onteux, F r it z R einer, S ir H e n r y Wood. a n d . . * . for h i. nf.v t f h' n MdrcfWinK " f o r his play, An Old Spanish Cus- [ to m ,” to be produced in the E x - L p e rim e n ta l T h e a te r of th e D epart- , fro m F e b r u a r y m e n t o f D ram a 23 th r o u g h F e b r u a r y 28 » the ' t b a t th-“ c v»ii-i c n e a t r a , ' explained Dr. E W He is hest know n a t th e Uni- c h e s tr a , ” explained Dr. E. W. —: versity Club p roduction of h IS thrCP'fliCt j com edy “ M anan a Is A n o th e r D ay,” J ------- done in collabo ration w ith Dwight Morris. anc es t ha n a full s y mp ho n y . . .„ ----- fo r X 'i* .‘ T li ' I P , . "** Born in S co tla n d o f Polish p er­ la«t y e a r ’s C u rta in Doty, dean o f the College of Fine ont8’ T cn iian k a stu d ie d w ith C arl — Flpcpfi wK A Krnnrvkf 4L» Flesch, who b r o u g h t th e y o u n g violinist to th e U n ite d S ta te s to finish his stu d ie s a t th e C u r tis I n s titu t e o f Music in P hilad e lp h ia . I n s t i t u t e ’s U pon f ir s t g r a d u a t e a r t i s t , T e m ia n k a j m a d e a highly su c ce ssfu l N ew j Y ork d eb u t, a n d th e n r e t u r n e d to E u ro p e , w h ere he r e m a in e d f o r se v eral years. New Play Setting: Air Raid Shelter b ecom ing th e He also received recogn ition and w as c o n g r a tu la t e d by th e T exas j Miss M cLaughlin rec eive d ex­ perience in the direction o f this ty p e o f o p e r e tta th ro u g h h e r pro- •taction of G ilbert and S u lliv a n ’s S ta te L egislature f o r " T h e Ameri can W a y o f L ife,” w ri tte n with T r o p i a L im ite d ” a t Yale. * We have used the o n e - a c t play Toe Baldwin a n d D w ig h t Morris T he Wesley P layers, as a p a r t Approach,” Miss McLaughlin said. , an(! p r e se n te d in T ex a s M e m o r i a l 1 The cast is m ade up e n tir e ly of S tad iu m d u rin g the in a u g u ra tio n j ° f the S u n d ay e ve ning service, will E te rn a l L if e ,” a sh o rt play by F re d E a s tm a n , 7 o’clock on March I a t th e W e s ­ ley Bible Chair. music s tu d e n ts, with th e exception 1 cerem onies of ex -G o v ern o r CV. Lee p r e s e n t “ E te rn a l Life ” • of M arcus Fuller, most o f whom O ’Daniel. have had very little a c tin g e x ­ perience. In ordo: to aid th e m in in te r p re ta tio n of t h e i r roles, the reh e arsals bv re a d in g began T he play deals w ith th e emo- 1 people ; p e o p l e ' ' oros OI th e eon^ j u s t as we S ix te e n th C e n tu r y S pain, Spain in who a r e in an a i r raid I - u - u — : sh e lte r, p o r tr a y in g those who a re A p stein is a man of m a n y ac- * Vitronf? anfi self-controlled in th e those who cru m p le h ysterically u n d e r emo tional stress. The plot and c h a r a c t e r s of the “ An Old o n e-a ct period play, S panish C u sto m ,” find th e ir origin I in the m a n n e r s ar d m o rals of late AU IIIC m a im e rs a r a m orals OI late n a .he o th e r lines. Not until t h e ' 1- - - m ovement was com pletely le a rn e d lid ti e sin ging begin.” This ty p e o f opere tta is much larder la ter, e a s y g o i n g Gilbert and Sullivan nusie. I t c o n ta in s all th e ty pical ■Piratic j u m p s and difficult forms. ......... co m plishm ents in his chosen field J face H e has b u t one am bitio n a n d one in te r e s t in life: to see and write m ore a n d b e t te r plays. He was in 1918. born A f t e r a r a th e r lim ited c a r e e r of lim ited c a r e e r or - - - a « aou.ci Mar,. M a ry F ra n c e s Seago d esigned one y e a r as a Russian citizen his tional r ea ctio n s o f some t r a PP®d a— •— ’ h er Golden Age. ’ in Kiev, Russia, d a n £ eL ar)d r r n . . . than sing the a t to c * J . T he d ire c to r o f “ E t e r n a l L if e ” is Miss N ova B r y a n t. C lara Grae- ber, J e f f Fussell, E d w a r d Hol- chak, V irginialee S tep h e n so n , F aye H olladay, and H e rsh a l W e s­ t e r f o rm th e cast. fam ily b ro u g h t him to Mexico c e backdrop ar.d wing se t. Ada W u M t a c o n Hmert / turnejT F n e i “ Ari Old An lid S panish C ustom is a . at B erkeley ’ * e r d d i d He ^ d i e d a t the N a tio n a l Uni- on th e cos- v e r i t y . The U niversity o f Texas, ar-d T h e U niversity o f C a lifo rn ia •> • r K a p p a A lpha T h e ta so ro rity has The Dial Log BY LAURA FAY GOWIN AFTERNOON I : 15- 2 :4 5 - 3 :45- 5 14 5- -T Q N — T exas School o f th e A ir. - K B C — Vie and S a d e . - M B S — Boako Carter. - B lu e — Low el l T h o m a s and th e NIGHT -Fred Waring'* Pleasure Time. fi— KB C 6 :15— Bill*— I Lo v s 6 : 1 5 — ( BS— T h e World T od a y . 7— B lu e — X avie r Cujj st 's R e v u e . ■ — N B C — J o h n n y P r e s e r .ta . 7 : 30— N B C — O sca r L e v a n t , Mystery. s o l o i s t w ith N B C s y m p h o n y . pianist, Is 7 : 6 5 — C B S — Elm er D a v i s and tho news. 8— C B S — We, th e P e o p le. 8 :30— N B C — F ib b e r M cG ee and M olly. 8 : 3 0 — C B S — Repo rt to th e N ati on . 9— N B C — Bob Hope. 9— C B S — Glenn M ille r. 9— M B S — R a y m o n d Gram Sw ing. 9 : 1 5 — C B S — Public A f f a i r s . 9 : 3 0 — N B C — Red S k e lt o n and Company. the 10— C B S — W illia m L. S h ir e r and n e w s . 1 0 : 3 0 — N R C — F r an c is C raig Serenade. 1 0 : 4 5 — C B S — B e n n y G ood m an . 1 1 — C B S — L in to n Well* and the new s. 11 :05— N B C — R oy Sh ie ld and Company. 1 1 : 5 5 — N B G— A P n e w s . V - M k J T Z Z Z ' Z I S ! f X n.‘,y and FrCTCb and a Ann n . y d a f Lubbock. ______ • His “ M a* a ” a Is A n o th e r D ay ” > y B a g e n tle s a tir e on was f ir s t p rese n ted in th e P alace Honor. Don Mendo, th e big | of F i n e " Y r Y in'' M e x i c o ' *Thp i I C urtain Club g a“ the t 'r t th C e n t u r y u p h o ld , the old duction liT the U n t o d S u S - th e n 1 { £ tt i £ , S* in t J ° * n in the t h e . We b ; ! Miss M iram ova had « > ' . ? * w Y w k * ^ his f a v o rite play f o r her, “ Cloud - . o f a S p » „ , h , tt T h c ustom o f g u a r d i n g fam ily costs. I t is his very religion. plications arise w h en eve n did it d u r in g the s u m n i Y n „ t ades fail is* th e to kee p o u t fail ade* the b e a u tif u l, or su ito rs o f a p n e ic us y o u n g d a u g h te r , L e o n o r. Don Mendo com es to th e c o n c lu ­ sion th a t sion is un- changeable, t h a t a m a n ’s resists j who sta rr e d .nee » f u tile . \ A^ r in ™ it ! AlST*r(1 ™ 1939 f o r tke ,3est Pla y k«. ,e su m m e r, and it w r itte n by a C u r ta in Club mem- Autota(>n Midpt d Y V p >aso’ lSan b e r , “ K a th e r in e of A r a g o n ,” a t a B e a u ^ o n t* : tr a g e d y in t h r e e acta. He received in B e rkeley to Mr. an d Mrs. B u r t D yke on T h u rs d a y , F e b r u a r y 12, a t S t D a v id ’s H o s ­ p ita l. T he baby has bee n n a m e d th e ir f o u r th S usan Reed, a n d ilo r n ia , he m e t Elena* Miramova* : o r t a * R ° n I * .H e a v e n ” ®n d “ S e , i - 1 S usan Reed, a n d th e ir f o u r th Dyke is a c tin g d ire c to r Crand H o te l in U n L . t d w r o W! Tw * ™ 1 g r *d “ a te j the T h a lia n A w ard A d a u g h t e r w as b o rn D ykes H av e B a b y G irl th a t a w o m a n ’s will in a p roductio n of w o r k a t The Univ u * The . child - firvt rnrt»°- While he 'u i th* is is \ I I I N t S Q U I R I M A R C H W E L C O M E as the first robin...this hand­ chief ensemble by Arrow. The fresh shirt colors some new shirt-tie-shorts and handker­ give |ust the pick-up your winter-weary ward­ robe needs. Add the clever color variations of the specicily created Arrow tie, the mated-to-the-shirt shorts, {..tuck the special Arrow handkerchief in your pocket and you’ll feel as chipper as the dawn of tomorrow! Let us show them to you today I • M IR T , $ 2 .S O T i l , $ 1 M AN DIC IB C H U T , 3 3 * SM O B T S, with Grippers 7 9 c . •• with alaitlc waistband S S * REvnoiospfnumo W e Am ericans are go in g to work hard dur* ing 1942 . . . but we must have hours of relaxation, too, in order to keep fit for the job. So let us show you the new sport shirts w e've just received for your leisure . . . every one handsomely fashioned; tailored for com ­ fort and long wear. C olors and whites. F ine R a y o n s 2.95 G a b a r d i n e s 3.95 and 5.00 .ET US SHOW YOU SOME "SPRING MAGIC...” W ill you give us fen minutes o f your time today and let us show you how we can make you look like a new m an? Spring magic! A id e d and abet­ ted by our new Spring clothes! For we give it as our opinion that the new Reynolds-Penland Clothes will make you look smarter than you've ever looked before . . . whether you choose a suit, sport coat and slacks . . . or both! Drop byj Ren wood Suits * 3 2 50 ■• *4 5 OO Sport Coats - * ’2 7 50 15 Sport Slacks - *18.50 *8.95