T h e D ai V O L 46 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TH U R SD A Y , D EC EM BER 14, 1944 Four Pages Today No. 70 T h e F i r s t C o l l e g e D a i l y I n t h e S o u t h Navy is U.T.’s Host For Saturday Hop the bell-bottomed The cam pus will be strictly Navy blue S a tu rd a y night when the boys trousers with swing out in G regory Gymnasium at the first N avy Ball to be held a t the U niversity, a t which time they will choose their Sweetheart, dance am ong some six miles o f red, white, and blue crepe paper, and drink 4,800 fre e cokes. Knowing a good thing when they see it, however, the N aval trainees have not been selfish. Invitations to the dance have been sent to the fraternities, sororities, MICA, WICA, and all organizations on the cam pus, as well as to the mem­ bers o f the faculty. All civilian couples will be adm itted on the presentation o f their auditor's re ­ and F ran k ceipts. Bob Walton Ben ard, co-chairmen o f the com­ in charge o f the dance, mittees have especially stressed the im­ portance of this. in charge o f the ball. The are chairmen o f the sub-committees are Joh n Spiker, Marshall Fisel. Joh n ny Watkins, Dick B u rg , Rich­ ard Walker, Palm er Beck, J . C. and Bob Olson. The Penwell, throne is being constructed by Alpha Chi Om ega sorority and the crown by Pi Beta Phi. Lieuten ant H arry officer-in- charge. Threlded is Carol Program Heads Activities Annual Pagent To Be Held M o n d a y ★ Keyn oting a week of Christmas celebrations, the annual Christmas carol program will be held on the steps of the Main Building under lights Monday night, the Tower The dance, sponsored, directed, December 18, beginning with a o f Christmas and paid fo r by the Navy, is being j chimes given in appreciation o f the All- music at 6 :20 o ’clock. N avy dance held by the University ! in Septem ber. The au d itor’s re ­ ceipts necessary a d ­ mittance o f civilian couples is to keep the dance a U niversity dance, according to Walton. The Naval trainees and their dates will be I admitted by uniform . The Longhorn Band and Cow­ boys will lead a Christm as torch­ light p arade over the cam pus at 6 :30 o'clock, ending with a ten minute p rogram "C h r istm a s F a n ­ ta s y , " which begins the program . Built around the theme o f com- program f o r the seahorses, The dance floor will be covered with a crepe paper canopy. Anch­ ors, steering wheels, life savers, and other nautical equipment will the crepe p ap er decorations. The gym will he indirectly lighted, with the balcony into boxes f o r the N aval o ffic e r s and wives, fac u lty m embers, and guests. tran sfo rm ed supplem ent ★ munity singing o f fav orite carols, basis this twenty-first Christm as carol | what is program in Austin, fourth f o r the I United States, University, will have as its central theme " P e a c e . " for Austin and U niversity m usi­ cians, and sin gers will join in an hour p rogram o f Ch ristm as carols, music, chimes, p rayers, and the Shepherd S to ry to c arry out the traditional color and spirit o f the holiday season. its since to 1 steps of the Main Building, Conducted as a p art o f the city local recreation departm ent and cham ber o f commerce, the growing popularity and participation in this inauguration program Christmas morning, 1924. necessi- tated moving the program to the Gene Johnson and the V-12 Or­ chestra, featu rin g Beth Butte, vocalist, Reed Stone on the piano, and Bob Ralston and his trum pet, will play f o r dancing from 8 until 12 o'clock. Promptly a t IO o ’clock, the Captain will be "p ip e d ” aboard ship in true naval tradition. A fte r Captain Valentine’s welcome the students and g u e sts, the cur-j Cap acity crowds, 1.400 in Hogg tains will p a rt amid a fa n fa r e o f Auditorium, more than 6,000 in tru m pets and the S w eeth eart o f G rego ry Gymnasium, reached a the N avy will be presented. Cap- peak in attendance in 1942 with tain R. J . Valentine will crown the winner and give her a sterling silver heart-shaped com pact as a g if t from the Navy. The sweet­ h e a r t’s cou rt will be m ade up of the rem aining ten girls. E n te r tain ­ m ent which will be announced later, will then be given for the J pre!sent "T h e Shepherd S to r y ." queen and her court. In the absence o f Dean E. W. Doty, now on tour, Erie DeLam ar- ter, U niversity organist, will play a pipe organ concert o f Christmas music. The A Capella Choir, di­ rected by Dr. Archie Jo n e s, will an attendance of 10,000. Dr. J o n e s will direct the audi­ ence in sin ging the classic carols of Christmastim e. singing The eleven contestants include Bonnie E rter, Kittie Sue Jin kins, Ja c k ie L issa u er, J o a n n e Campbell, P a t Horton, Helen Burleson, M ar­ g a r e t M cKean, Catherine Orr, Lillie Odem, M etta Abn Wilson, and Alma Street. One girl was chosen from each unit of IOO boys. Pr0Rrani w : -l A ny one person or group could m ake a nomination fo r his unit, j Council 1l u r c h e s , the Rev, Charles The chosen a fte r exam ining photographs o f all nominees. Clim axed by the Austin church "H allelu jah the choirs From the South Pacific comes C h oru s," accom panied by the Aus- word th at C a p t a i n J . T. O ’ Neal * 'n Symphony Orchestra, the hour Archer, ex ancTfo rm er Southwest- with a benefic- : ern C onference track star, piloted *jon Fv ! he president of the Austin United P ress correspondent Mac in his B-29 S uperfor- Johnston tress in a recent raid over Tokyo. Pe ck Hart , J o s e p h L L .B . figh ter pilot, ’ 42. Marine and S e a m a n S e c o n d C l a s s Cha r l es D u f f l e , 1944, are now serving in the Pacific area. C am p us activities scheduled fo r that hour, will, as in p a st years, probably be suspended so that stu ­ dents may participate in the pro­ gram . representative was Sumner. C a p t a i n The final selection of eleven girls was held last F riday by secret ballot. The counting o f the ballots w as supervised by officers. The boys then voted fo r one girl as sweetheart. The ballots have not yet been counted, and the winner S p u n Y a m , N a v y W e e k l y will not be revealed until S atu rd ay night. R . O . T . C . a n d V - 1 2 E d i t Fears Central Control to Bring Revolution Hopper Finds U. S. Follows Revolt Stages , _ The in creasing am ount o f Postmaster Received M a il O f 'M a il- L e s s ' M a n i t ’s bad when your fam ily and i frien d s don’t write, and worse i when the p ostm aster gets your mail instead o f you. T h a t’s what happened to Ray Lee, V-12. A fte r several weeks o f being "m ail-less,'' L ee that the p ostm aster's name is Ray L ee too. As a result, the p ostm aster had received L e e ’s mail. found The onlv d ifferen ce between L c e . , nam e and t h . P o stm aster’s is individual land ownership rn nit ad S tate s are working t o - j tral control and decreasing a m o u n t , thrjr mjddl(j n>me Qn L f e > d o f the wards a situation rn which a demo- cratic form of governm ent will be j i w impossible, f e a r s Dr. Rex Hopper, assistan t p rofesso r o f sociology, . gives * _______________________________ _ h„ v, no t h . Navy generously would find th at his middle >» one— None. • j, „ None „ „ th them ti d Stella Stacy Symphony Guest s t e l la S tac y , pianist and com- .h will the hypothesis I PO” r ’ w '11 j Since we live in a period o f revo- j this purpose lutionary upheaval and change, Dr. Hopper believes th at an ade- j quate understanding o f the revo­ lutionary process is o f g r e a t im- ; in j portance. With the mind, he made a study o f struggle for independence in Latin ; America, using reached by studies o f the four g reat revolutions, French, Anglo- American, Russian, English, that all revolutions p ass through fou r definite sta g e s in their develop­ m ent: toe preliminary sta g e of unrest and discontent, the popular stage o f collective excitement, the stage o f form al organization, and the stage o f institutionalization. His research, which found that what happened in Latin-Am erica followed these pattern s and that the hypothesis was valid, g iv es a fu tu re predictions of in the likely to happen L. P. Ed w ard s, author o f " N a t ­ ural History o f Revolutions," says there are two m aster sym ptoms of impending revolution. One is the tr a n sfe r of allegiance of intellec­ tuals, and the other is the emer­ gence o f a new social myth or faith. This is what happened in _______ Italy and Germany, and the s y m p - ; re se n ta tjve toms are beginning to a p p ear here. t r a n s f e r of There has been no allegiance, but the battle i * on. It can resu lt in one o f three courses o f Fine A rts in the University. — a continuance of democracy, a move to the left, or a move to the right. Dr. H opper thinks th at a move to is the most likely. lowing n um bers: William Tell Overture .....Rossini tion o f Music Clubs on the com-; mittee ■ Polka from The Golden Age. .. The orchestra will play the fol- to reinstate the right M any people have often won- J ........—------------- y e a r s dered why the United S ta te s has J Dream Pantomime from Haensel and G r e t e l .............. Humperdinck progressed so much fa r t h e r toward democracv in the last three hun-! Perpetuum Mobile .Hohann S tr a u ss Tickets are available a t J . R. dred Latin- than R e e d ’s and a t the box office. America. Dr. H opper believes it is Tickets fo r students are sold at because people came to the United reduced prices, and m embers of in which S ta te s from countries the arm ed forces are adm itted monarchy w as falling, and set up free. See C O N T R O L , Page 2 has - Sthostakovich , Archer Pilots W rite r in T o ky o Raid; J. P. H art in Pacific A C P J Papers Longhorn Cagers Play i n Release Stories i i On controversy L u b b o c k Tilers t o n i g h t t • * i i i Articles Review Student Action And Rainey’s Life The controversy between the j Board o f R egents and Dr. Homer ; P. R ainey is still m aking headlines I in the newrs columns and editorial i columns o f new spapers over the J state and from the Associated Col- i legiat© Press. In an editorial entitled " U n i ­ versity Inquiry Is V alu ab le," the Corpus Christi T im es commented on the S en ate last week. investigation Oil Research leader Here Egloff to Tell W a r Uses Tonight A s research director o f Univer­ sal Oil Products Com pany since 1917, Dr. Gustav E g l o ff, petro­ leum ex p ert who will discuss the role o f fu els in winning the war in Chem istry Building 15 a t 8:15 o ’clock T h u rsday night, has seen his company make a huge venture into scientific developments dedi- By G E O R G E R A BO RN T'tan Sporti Writer Still un d ef e a t ed , using a r ev a m pe d line-up, a nd m e e ti n g a quintet they know next to nothing a bout, Co a ch Bul ly G i l s t r a p ’s T e x a s L o n gh o r n s pl a y their third b a s k e t b a ll g a m e o f the s ea s o n tonight a t 8 o ’clock in G r e g o r y G ym a g a i n s t the in v a d in g South P la ins A r m y Air Fo r c e Flie r s of Lubb oc k. It will be h o m ec o m in g f o r ex- Lo ngh or n R oy Co x — a n d he is cer ta in to m a k e the go in g tough f or his f o r m e r t e a m ­ ma tes. L a s t y e a r Cox w a s c a pta in a nd le a d in g s c o r er on T e x a s ’s hus tling a g g r e g a ti o n . In f a ct, he w a s one o f the ......... - --...............bustiin'est players ever to wear 1 Personal Planes Seen After War . . . . . , in the i play ' cated to public welfare. Rubinstein's " P i a n o Concerto No. 4 " in D Minor, accompanied by the A us­ i t s j these revelations o f p etty doings tin Symphony Orchestra third concert o f season at a m o n g im portant men to impress H ogg Auditorium, December 16, them overmuch. The U niversity is , a finer institution than some of at 8 :1 5 o ’clock. G uest conductor for the orches-j those who have been meddling tra will be W arran t O ffic er Mil- i with its destiny would seem to ton Stew art, director o f music a t think, and a g r e a t deal more dur- San Marcos Airfield, who w i ll ! able than their puny e ffo r ts to it to their own similitude . , , ^ "T h e people of T e x a s would do I In October o f this y e a r the own- . . the niversity a disservice, ari'' ers 0f Universal Oil Products Com- themselves g r e a t injury, to permit puny created a trust, the Petro- leum Research Fund, fo r the bene Dr. John H. Frederick, profes- j fit of the American Chemical So­ sop of tran sportation and industry j ciety and turned over its net in­ who returned S a tu rd a y from an I This d ifficu lt g u a r d in g assign- come of ap p roxim ately $1,000,000 a year to the society fo r advanced I air cargo meeting and the A m en- j ment will probably go to T e x a s ’s can M arketing Association c o n - : sm allest man but g re a te st hustler, scientific education and research vention in Chicago, has brought j little Don Wooten, a calm, weli- in the petroleum field. The provi­ back the ideas that postwar avia- seasoned veteran who is only two sion was made th at every patent, tion will demand reasonable prices United S ta te s or foreign, taken fo r individual planes, more con­ out by the American Chemical So­ veniently located airports, ex ten s­ ciety "sh a ll be dedicated to the ive ground service, personnel in­ public, royalty f r e e ." struction, and a m ass sales pro­ g ram fo r small planes. Buyers W ill Find Reasonable Prices t o . u , mold in Beeth- conduct the orchestra inches taller than Cox. tdkBs into account, Longhorn some “ B u t they that ,v • . . , * an " p f ;,A r n ' donDRYS LEFT m Christmas seals All Students, ATTENTION! R e s e r v e Yo r Copy of t h e 1945 N O W ! a t J o u rn a lism B u ild in g I O 8 Copies W ill Be Ordered For Those Reserved In Advance O N LY ! H U S T L IN G LITTLE R O Y C O X , woo was Texas s basketba' captain and leading scorer last season while still a sophomore, will be pitted against his former teammates tonight when the Steers meet the South P ains A ir Force team from Lubbock in G reg o ry G ym tonight1. C o x stands only five feet s*x inches ta!! and looks like a h ’gh- schooler w'th his red ha r and freckles, but he is a g r e a t hustler, ba'i-stea er. eng a deadly shot. D o n 't be surprised if re bangs about 20 points through the hoop tonight. student B u s t e r P a r I * H, in 1943-44 who is now managing his father’s ranch at Houston, rec­ ently the Alpha Tau Omega fratern ity house. visited Cagers Sports Review By G E O R G E RABORN T f « a n S p o r t * W r it » r Tough About Austin High Maroons. B u t they couldn’t be Today there is only one unde­ expected to do such a thing when feated, untied schoolboy team left Austin had scored the winning in the state. About 55 hours from touchdown. W h a t did they do? now there w ill be none. Austin You guessed it— they called the fans had better rave and rant for the next two days because penalty against Brackenridge in- th ey’ll never smile stead of Austin and gave the Ma- after again. Their great, foot- roons their choice of the penalty ball team w ill be nothing but an of the gain. N atu rally, they took “ also ra n ” afte r eleven straight the That won the victories. game fo r Austin, 13-6. touchdown. lucky that B u t two J E F F E R S O N F I X E S A U S T I N The cocky Maroons— boasting of their perfect record and their “ impregnable defense” which the weak M cAllen Bulldogs scored touchdowns)— will come to the end of the tra il S a t­ urday afternoon in Po rt A rthur. They won’t be stomped exactly, but they’ll be derisively defeated by the mighty, high-scoring Y e l­ low Jackets. the next week, Thomas (against Jefferson pinned Austin s young ears back, beating the Maroons, 7-0, in San Antonio. And Aus­ tin High fans students actually had the nerve to com­ plain that the referees had “ rob­ bed” them of victory by not ruling pass interference when a Je f f e r ­ son player batted down a pass is that it can’t [ intended for a Maroon in the end . . . the Our only regret happen in Austin. that s beside I zone. B u t and W e wanted to see it happen j point. . . . It would have I These arc just a few instances E ven the referees, who have space doesn’t permit it. in House Park. been interesting to see how loyal of the past. W e could mention fans reacted as they watched the the Austin-Temple game and the Austin-Lamar game this pear, but "impossible” take place. In both been so generous to the Maroons these games the referees set back times in House Park and so eagle-eyed! the opposition at crucial in picking out penalties against and misjudged o u t- o f- b o u n d s the opposing teams, won’t be able punts by at least three yards to to help Austin against P o rt A r ­ thur. help the Maroons. Yes, we cite many could instances. B u t we had better not. A U S T IN P A P E R C O M M EN TS Incidentally, we were pleased j w « don’t w an* to hurt anybody’s it say teams in the Suffice they won “ misinformed WF, L I K E M A R O O N S to to know that many Austin High ^PC! njrs' students read “ Sports Review .” An extremely well-written edi- tonal High's bi-weekly newspaper, term- ourse^ves' ed us a w rite r” and pointed out how Aus­ tin had been penalized more than in House Park opposing games. that we “ Maroon,” Austin actually are an Austin High fan consider most sports- -Austin students and people swell, friendly fellows, who have a right to be proud of their fine school— in the state— one of the best their efficient coach, and their good team. W e cheered the M a­ roons on when the state in 1942. W e'd like to see them go to the finals this year, if for no other reason than to see their games, because we like to watch them play and are inter­ ested in seeing what w ill happen next. It was pretty convincing— only it didn't say that A ustin’s penal­ ties came in the center of the field after the Maroons were well ahead, while penalties against th*1 opposition always came at crucial times and really hurt their scor­ ing chances. the Austin-Bracken-i “ A u »t!1" ■<««. W e could point out many in ­ stances in the past when the ref- n m verv* obviously" helped the | Ru8ted -hen » learn consistently Maroons in House P a rk 1 w‘n! *»™ «* on luck and through E N D L E S S F O U R T H Q U A R T E R th* * uod tra ces of tho referee. lf you don’t be­ ndee game of 1941 with both! h' ve a ‘l thmk we/ » teams locked in a scoreless tie, I prejudiced, just ask any San A n ­ nealin g through a fourth quarter »*»««. Corpus C h ro n , or Houston to eon t attier *«"• They ll tell you this— and th .. i av.- ...m e a that never seemed to end. E a rlie r referees had the in called back an Austin touchdown. B u t the timekeeper made up for this “ accident” later. He permit­ ted the last quarter to go on and teams it seemed on— until would play all n ig h t F in a lly , Austin B u t we can’t help feeling dis- much more. the game ‘ hla a " d Like the in So much for that. W e V t got to get on with our high school ratings for the week. H ere’s the way w e’d la te the eight teams left in the high school race; 1. San Angelo 2. Port Arthur 3. A u s t in 4. Waco 5. L u f k i n 6. Amarillo 7. Highland Park 8. Sunset San Angelo, who has scored 439 points to 20 for the opposi­ tion, and Po rt Arthur, with 413 points against 20, are easily the scored after outplaying their opponents all over the field, kicked the extra point, and then gleefully dashed o ff the field before Brackenridge could run a single play after the kick-off. That last quarter must have lasted at least fifteen min­ utes, instead of twelve. 1942 C O R P U S G A M E The same thing happened in the in . , i . , > i hard- in - . leading, 10-7, Austin-Corpus C hristi game 1942, the year the Maroon, won : ‘ ° P te» m* >" the ..a te, Each ha, .tate champion,hip. Corpu, lo«t once San Angelo being up- the y Lubbock, 7-6, early in the season, and P o rt A rth u r fallin g was , > i . fought battle and had just stopped i a desperate A q ,tin drive on the before Lu fk in 20-6, a week later. can t f.gure out how Lnf- 1-yard line. The Corpu, captain No other asked the referee how much time to score i . j team has been able was left, and the referee signaled; . . , T gainst the powerful Yellow Ja c k ­ , against the powerful i i one and a half minutes. So C or­ ets. That's why we’re picking pus wisely gave the Maroons ani them to beat Austin after a tough the intentional struggle, Bu ts ahead, 10-9, and apparently out of danger. ln uon 1 a Kam«* , ____ .. c *_ leaving safety, i i * ... : ’ . , . A L L - S T A T E P L A Y E R S The Po rt Arthur-Austin game i should be a battle of all-state men, tw „ finch fhoic„ , , nd D>vjdout I to to to move to m o ,, and took over on downs. fiv e i fpaturi mixed two p . , « . - '. h .b o u t the the running p lay, Corpus IO, where the Bucs again) held The game surely should have been: over by over Corpn, kicked out again, and the A r*hur_ Bnd A u , tir> tw0 M aroon, back J Vt .thin they h a d ; scored the winning touchdown on w m on Dgvig a beautiful pass. and center Ben Proctor of Aus­ tin. Then there’s Ike Neumann, dynamic hack, and George it wasn’t, * - . " H 'V u . I Rolla., 230-pound tackle, for P o rt t , nd sp„ d , t , r now. o , now. — r , r) McC1, Hdon two m inute, S w t „ „ n> .urging came B u t snd F o r some reason, the game kept going. Canady, the boy who had caught the touchdown pass, inter- * ^ ce p u d a p p a r a t . Corpu, aerial Beu lah H L y o r The J u d g e s w ere Mr. J ^ s s e VU-1 te re d the c o n t e s t, _ . COLD W A V E S N«w P«rm*n*Bt — your bxir »oft • Bd cxturxl. 4 0 5 W . 2 3 r d S t. Dial 8 - 2 4 1 1 Bach Preludes A t Organ Recita Played Donald J a y G ro u t, o r g a n i s t , p r e - , w e re played on th e B a r o q u e o r g a n . the i n s tr u m e n t used by B a c h an d • Rented a p r o g r a m o f o r g a n c h o ra le - * p relu des by J . S. B a c h an d five his c o n t e m p o r a r i e s . “ P ra i s e d B e 1 o th e r r e p r e s e n t a t i v e o r g a n c o m - ! T h o u , J e s u s C h r i s t ” is a sh o rt, v i­ posers , including D ietrich B u x t e - b r a n t piece by th e m a s t e r , Sebas- hude a n d J o h a n n P ach e lb e l. The ! tia n B a c h . “ In Dulci J u b l i o ” c a m e n e x t with re c i ta l too k p lace W e d n e s d a y a f t tw o s e ttin g s , one by B a c h and one by B a c h ’s p red e ecs - ern o o n in R e c ita l H all. ,,n r* ,. j . * i T h e o r g a n ch o ra le -p re lu d e con- j sor, Dietrich B u x te h u d e . •fat* o f th e melody of the ch o ra le , which is th e n am e given hymns o f th * L u t h e r a n ch u rc h . T h re e s ettin g s o f the cho ra le the pre lu de “ F r o m H ig h e st H eav en to E a r t h I C o m e ” w e re played n e x t. to SEA M A N SECO ND CLASS AN D MRS. O. D. T H O M A S JR. F i g h t s ” an a n s w e r t o the civilian in quiry as to th e N a v y ’s need f o r c a m e r a s . I “ S i l e n c e ” shows a b attlefie ld with ; no life, no sound. T h e la s t tw o p re s e n t th e c au s es and re s u l ts of inflation in w a rtim e and th e K a n ­ san w a re h o u s e w h e re the p e rs o n a l! e f f e c t s o f the casu a ltie s a r e re K a t h r y n G risham , f o r m e r j o u r ceived and checked b efo re being nalisrn s tu d e n t , and S e a m a n Sec se n t to th e n e x t o f kin. Kathryn Grisham Marries Former V-12O . ](i , Thomas Jr. d e n t in 1 9 4 1 - 4 2 , w e re m a r rie d O c to b e r 2 6 at th e S t. J o h n ’s E p is ­ copal C h u rch in C o r s ic a n a . L i e u t e n a n t R o b e r t C . S n e e d , A r t s an d S cie n ce s t u d e n t in 1 9 4 0 - , 4 2 , has com p lete d Ins phases of in M ou n tain c o m b a t to his ov er- H om e, Idaho, p rio r tra in in g . se as assig m en t. L i e u t e n a n t S need e n te re d rn iii- 1 M rs * ! ond ( lass O. D. T h o m as J r . , w e re r e c e n t l y w ere m a r r ie d S a t u r d a y night a t 7 : 3 0 o ’clock a t the P r e s b y t e r i a n ; C a r o l i n e Co l l i n* , s t u d e n t in 1 9 3 9 - Also m a r ri e d floor. 4 0 , and L i e u t e n a n t J o h n C r o t h e r a re A f t e r t he w e d d i n g a r e c e pt i o n P r i z e r J r . J* Ro o m held a t in the the P a n - A m e r i c a n H e l e n Turn l e y , g r a d u a t e in 1 9 3 7 , w as m a r rie d to H u b e r t Thomson Driskill H otel. in T r o u t , La living in T h o m a s is now 1 n om as iS now I m n * h e r husband is sta- > , A A M m l W e ** H rRfiio t e c h n icia n at Sunman Sernnri College. S e a m a n S eco nd ' ,ass T h om as was statio n e d with ^ f rcjmQ r j f y j the v * * 2 U n i t on t h * U n iv e rs i ty S f l n r j W _ . . . L . ------------- ------------------------------------ c am p u s d u rin g 1 9 4 0 - 4 2 . , U V 1 N a i l l c u Jk. The f i r s t c h o ra le -p re lu d e w as T h e las t n u m b e r on t h e p r o g r a m t a r y s erv ic e M ay 2 0 , 1 9 4 2 , and B r y a n w h e r e c c I * n ______ T a __ w r i tt e n by th e e a rlie s t o f G erm an was th e only n u m b e r played on the has a t t e n d e d the a r m y s i r fields I . o r g a n c o m p o s ers , S a m u e l Scheldt. It is a n unim pressive com position. “ R ejo ic e Now, C h ris tian F o l k , ” by third J o h a n n B e r n a r d B a c h , th e g r e a t S e b a stian cousin o f B a c h , is a lively n u m b e r w ritte n in th e u p p e r re g i s te r . full o r g a n . I t was J . S. B a c h ’s j tra i n i n g schools a t D enver, Colo- rad©; S a n t a Ana, C a l i f o r n i a ; and “ P r a i s e God Y e C h ris tian s , W ith O n * V o i c e .” K in g m a n , A rizo n a. ------------------------------------------------------ t* . \ t. t n a , , Animation Is Mood O f 'Jack and Beanstalk' ★ * “ J e s u P rice le s s T r e a s u r e ” c h o rale - opened th e C h ris tm a s th e p re c e d i n g n u m b e rs p reludes, h avin g he^n preludes f o r advent. This com p osition , whi c h wa s w r i t ­ ten by B a c h ’s eldest son, W ilhelm F r i e d e m a n n B a c h , is q u ie t, slow, and som b er. All th e se com positions aramount M a r g a r e t L e e Ran kin of Dallas and W i l l i a m A l l y n L a n g J r . , stu- A. E. Pi Prexy p l a n n e d * * ^ * a ' ’c o m m i t te e * headed I by E d it h P a r t e n as g e n e r a l c h a i r ­ m a n . M e m b e r s will m a k e a cash Alpha Lam bda Delta Initiates Thirty-Five £• ^ j S e y m o u r S a n o v w as elected p re s id e n t o f th e Alpha Epsilon Pi f r a t e r n i t y in a su p p lem e n t e l e c ­ tion T u e s d a y night. O th er ele c te d were M endell G ra n n ff, a s sis ta n t s t e w ­ o f f ic e r s C h ris tm a s c o n trib u tio n this y e a r to j g i j^ e d T u e s d a y n igh t and o th e rs th e F a m i ly S e rv ic e B u r e a u . «,),« who a r e to s in g S u n d ay, will re- * al _• c rau • C h airm en o f t h e c o m m i tt e e s a r e * ,• j ac F r a n c e s R eal an d M a ry E a s t l a n d , ' F r a n c e s R eal an d M a r y E a s t l a n d , p r o g r a m ; M a r y B e lle S t a l ta f u * and j phnrrV * G r a c e W i e g a n d , m u s i c ; L e o t a d u e - t' . 1 r> 1 t l , t 1 >0 p i ne j hears e T h u r s d a y night a t " » } l. . J } * J Ceintral Christian w k .3 t h e c h o i r . j j • , / Gi r l * G l e e C l ub m e m b e r s ti S m all girls g e t a b re a k in “ J a c k f o r the m oo-end o f B ossy. E a c h to moo with th e play, ri g h t co m b in atio n of • ^ T h a t is, ali e x c e p t th e p lay a r e th e b ea n stalk t h a t g r o w s ma! th e D e p a r t - ism t o win the p art, said, be- j j u s t to be p roduced I d e licate a r t i s t r y and e a r t h y re al and the B e a n s t a l k , ” Miss D o ro t h y would-be cow had M c L a u g h lin , d i r e c t o r , c a u s e the D e c e m b e r 2 3 - 2 4 b y m e n t o f D r a m a , calls f o r small p erson s it g ia n t , who will be played by a b oy 6 f e e t 4 inches an d who will , r e a c h e s th e clouds which f l o a t b y ; th e Man in the M o o n : he walks, be h eigh tened 4 m o r e in ch e s by is a | he talks, he y a w n s and is a g i r l ; p l a t f o r m shoes. T h e g i a n t h u m o ro u s c h a r a t e r . n ot a t all like I and a h arp , which is also a girl, ftioMv ai* m c a wk j » a intl | vile th e m e an g i a n t in th e s to ry . This ! on e is quite n ice with only a slight Ait VHC ovcnc uov In one s cen e J a c k , th e Man in O th e r an im a te d e le m e n t* in t h e , f r o n t o f y o u r eyes until m c *u« u hi | in e a t in g t o w a r d s little t e n d e n c y boys, which he d o e s n ’t t r y to cu rb . T h e c a s t in clu des an an im a te d co w , B o ssy, who moos and can m o ve both ends. B o ss y 's a n i m a ­ tion is due to th e combined e f f o r t s a n d jo i n t c o p e r a t io n of L e i s K i r k ­ p a t r ic k and M a r g a r e t K r i e g e r who th e cow. M a r g a r e t K r i e g e r a r e b em o a n ed the f a c t t h a t she had f o r F rih o l and “ was tr ie d o u t m a d e th e back end of a c o w .” A tried out g r e a t m an y , h o w e v e r, m o on , an d the M agic Man hold a in mid co n v e r s a t io n a i r ! ( I t says h e r e .) suspended “ J a c k and th e B e a n s t a l k ” is an a d a p ta ti o n by C h a rlo t te C h orpen - ning o f the story . T h e t e n t a t i v e c a s t is as fo llo w s : J a c k played by D ottle S p a r k s ; B o ssy, L ois K ir k p a t ri c k , M a r g a r e t K r i e g e r ; W id ow , B l a n c a B la s q u e z ; Alpha L a m b d a D elta held fo r- in itiation s erv ic es a r d ; S e y m o u r S an o v , ju n io r r * P " j n a r d and M a rj o ri e T a n n o y , d eco- j I n t e r - F r a t e r n it y r a t i o n s ; E m ily Ann K e n n a r d , re- re s e n t a ti v e CouneU an d ^ S e y m o u r P anov anti f r e s h m e n ! * ; .Vita P oe, h o s te ss ; and a n d M a r g a r e t , _________ t h i r t y - B e r n a r d L e f f , Hillel S e n io r Coun- Marilyn Rowe to 'M__' fo r a t L i t t l e f i e l d f i v e n e w m e m b e r s D orm itory* M on d ay, D e c e m b e r 11, | * A ! p h s will hold opens G earin g , l^lesdamcs J o h n D. How- a t 5 o clock. as fo l lo w s : K a t h l e e n Miller, Sally house f o r S i g m a Chi F r i d a y n ig h t SOn, and J o e G rim es, Mr. an d Mrs. 8 J c . A. S w an son , and Mr. and Mrs. Klotz, P a t s y L o n g , B e t t y P o lla rd , | D e c e m b e r Ji m m i e R u th Ross, T y le en S e n - j o ’clock. A tr e e an d all th e trim - S t u a r t M acC orkle . i n c i Ufie Miss M a ry E Fhose in itiated a i s , C au gh lin , publicity. c jl r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s , fr o m 6 : 3 0 1 G u e sU Zota 15 to * t * ^ . — . . , > I C a ro ly n B la ir, B a r b a r a H e n r y , | C h ri s tm a s g a m e s an d songs. T h e annual C h ris tm a s p a r t y o f B e v e r l y Da n i e l s, M a r y L e e N a n c e , the U n i v e r s i t y D a m e * will be held C i m m i Phi B e t * a lu m n a e gave a t 3 o'c lock W e d n e s d a y a f t e r n o o n M a rjo rie Kidd, F r a n c e s Gilmore, D oro thy Th om p son , G loria G arcia, a b e n e f it t e a a t the c h a p t e r house a t home of Mrs, H. H. B la u sto n e . M a r g a r e t A n n P lu m m e r . ★ 5 f r o m 6 o ’clock Monday R o y e r e n e M a rie H ru z e k , R u th a f t e r n o o n . T h e m o n e y raised is E liz a b e th M c F a r l a n d , A dele L u - . f o r an a w a r d based on sch o la r - cille K lein , B e t t y Gene S m ith, ship an d activ itie s. A f t e r a sho rt L o r r a i n e musical p ro g ra m , t e a w as served C h a rle n e W rig h t, Ja c q u e l i n e D. N elso n , J o ; in th e d ra w in g ro o m . A " " . M i l l e d , J „ n e B r i t . D m * . S te v e n s o n , 4 until * E x p e rt Shoe Repairing the M oo n, who c o m e s o u t o f h e r j s en * F e l e c i a Goebel, P e a r l S m i t h , | mingrs will c r e a t e b a c k g r o u n d f o r i Billy P u g h ; N i e k o la ,. E t b . l C h ap - B e t t y I * u C o u r t n e y , \ * I e , r a Xii*- nihil- Tvbl M arilyn B o q u e m o r e ; C a v i n , . Roln ick, B e t t y B r a c k . B M I . B u l b . , on th e E ile e n B e c k e r m a n , S elm a Main Building and T o w e r a p p e a r the O c t o b e r ieaue o f B / u ’a loan Maro-aret H e n rv - o ld I c o v e r p h o to g ra p h of A B r a B i c r c c - A nn ot, M ary F r a n c e s I J o )r R e a ’ B e t ! y Blirg5' an d Jo h n s o n , Giant's w ife, B illy Bo h ! Buat>y-_____________________________ R a m s o n ; Giant, Gene M lecz k o ; | H a rp , Alice F a y e D o r s e y ; Man lr the Moon, M ary P r i d d y ; P e a s a n t s , I A lice R u ng e, Lila B e a r d , B e t t y I A f S i g m a Delta Pl Party Sue G otifried , M a ry Filkin J 5 f Q g e Initiated . J o y c e G erlach , an d J o a n n Millard, | #>. n J e a n . . . . f e P a n h . l l e m c G r e f k E x c h a n g e , J o u r n a l w hich c o n U m e n ew s of | f r a t e r n i t i e s and s o ro ritie s in c o l ­ leges the U nited S ta te s. c o v e r in is d e­ th e m a g a z in e a* “ A T h e s crib ed u niv e rs ities illu stratio n an d of R E A D Y F O R D E L I V E R Y With in T h r e e Day* G o o d y e ar Shoe Shop 2 3 2 6 G u a d a l u p e Columbia Records Fill Christmas Stockings with these albums Musical Comedy Favorite* by A ndre K o stelanetz— M 4 3 0 Tchaikovsky N u tcrack er Suite by Chicago Symphony O r c h e stra — M M 395 Frankie Carle at the Piano— C 23 Crosby Classics— by Bing Crosby— M 555 Grofe's Grand Canyon Suite by A ndre K o stelan etz-M 463 O P E N UN TIL 9 O ’CLOCK E V E R Y NIGHT T IL L CHRISTM AS RECORD SH O P E V E R Y T H IN G IN R E C O R D S 6 1 2 B razo s St. (N alle B ldg.) Phone 8 - 1 1 3 ! ‘W h a t Price G lo ry’ To Be Show n Dec. 18 S i g n , . D elta Pi, Spaniel -1 hon- v e r y unusual view o f a v e r y un- have its a n n u a l C h ri s t- ; usual ed u c a tio n a l in stitu tio n , The I o r a r y> m as p a r t y T h u r s d a y n ig h t a t 71 U n i v e rs i ty of T e x a s . ” o ’clock a t t h e T e x a s F e d e r a t i o n ; of W o m e n s Club Building. s a photo- th e book g r a p h o f Nilda C a s t r o - P e r e a stu- Also in I * D r, R a m o n M a r t i n e z - L o p e z , ; d e n t f r o m L im a , P e r u . in p r o f e s s o r o f Spanish a t th e U ni-i v a r sity , who f r o m Galicia, is S p ain , will speak on “ C h ris tm a s “ W h a t P r ic e G l o r y ? ” will be sho wn M o n d a y ni ght , D e ce m b e r the G eology 18, a t 7 o'clock It is one o f a s e r i e s ; in S p a in .” Au d i t o r i u m . th e De- o f p a r t m e n t s o f Ar t and D r a m a to il lu s tra te how film m a y be u s e d , Spanish C h ris tm a s carols. as a m ed iu m o f a r t . F i f t e e n new' m e m b e r s will be initiated an d the g rou p will sing film s sponsored by T h e n e x t p i ctu re , " T h e J u l i a n I S o u t h . . . t T . . „ Club T o M e . t S t r e w H a t , " c o m in g J a n u a r y 8 , ie a go od exa m p le of p r o d u c t i o n , te ch n iq u e and i n t e r p r e t a t i o n o f film s d uring the late ’2 0 ’s and e a rl y ’3 0 ‘s. S o u t h e . a t T e x a a Club will meet o ’clock rn T e x a a I m o n on the p sych ological j T h u r s d a y night._____________________ 7 .............. " ‘Y’ Upperclass Club To Hear Dr. Blake Smith Dr. Blake Sm ith, p a s t o r o f the U n i v e r s i ty B a p t i s t C h u rc h , will speak t o th e ‘Y ’ U p p e rc l a s s Club T h u r s d a y n igh t a t 7 o 'c lock on " R e l ig i o n W e e k .” S even D a y . for | A sho rt litan y and rec o g n itio n s ervice will follow th e talk. I 'I Eating Dow ntow n MN THE D A I L Y TE CLASSIFIED Phone 2-2473 for Ad a ! J B e S S K T X CLASSIFIED INDEX Axin ounce bi c a t* I —-A u to * tor bai* Z— Automat!** Trance I — W anted Automobile* *— S « r* (c * Station* 4— Bu* blo** • ■—-Dining and Dancing 7 — Lodg* ana F ratern ity Not!* I^oat and found >—• Professional E f t . « * C o n * * - &u»inc*» §«rvic«« S£r°*i*a S t e a rin g C o m m itte e M eet* a t 5 T h e S te e r in g C o m m i t te e o f the f o r A c a d e m i c F re e d o m s tu d e n t s a n n o u n c ed t h a t m e e tin g s o f re p ­ r e s e n t a t i v e s o f all c a m p u s o r ­ g a n i z a t io n will he held r e g u l a r l y ! [“ e ve ry week on T h u r s d a y begin-« ning “ Y . ” 6 o ’clock a t to d a y a t th e j { J — j ! . . , M a j o r X L T n o r r ia i * L a m a r M c* ; ^^ f i x It*' 13— Cl«an«r*-H*ttar*w Tailor* , 14— L auad ria* m . ^ I * — E le c tr k a i S arrtea _ K n igh t, s tu d e n t been p rom oted l ie u te n a n t colonel and in 1 9 3 6 - 3 9 , has 17— fnmitur* Rapalriag I t o ra n k o f th e • » < is d ep u ty | -’ Q— Printing, o w e * Zauiamant f o r supply and m a i n t e n a n c e a t s tati o n the h e a d q u a r te r s , K e e s l e r F ie ld , Miss. co m m a n d tra in in g 8— Lost and Found LOST— P air of goM -riir g l***« *. Prob - E X P E R T TUTORING CN SPA N ISH —* guarantaad. Conv«-••*won, st comooaitioa. Appl* J 0*} n**r Crrftjry i.ym. Pb. * 2 3 ” - Carlton oa.braith. — — -—— — ----------------- LOST— Gold lo<*k*t bearing Navy insigna ' —— —-------- Result* gram mar, or I S04 Mi La r a ra St. . . . . - Me r r i t t , 8 7 1 2 1 . R E W A R D . " " " ' '■'>• * f u r : . < • " » « 11 , r 4 3 T S K l hour Mr* C a** Pboaa t- l S I S , r*a. aa U eiv ersity M ethodist Church LOST— M aroon billfold Sunday between and Contained valuable Ap h * Chi hog**. p arer* with nam * of ow ner. R EW A RD Call 8*264$. Businass Jpollegei____ C^'j^rerrm - hoi j«tom >%Ltyr*i - h o u s t o n * * I M 45— Room s Furnished located TTT* C O N V EN IEN T LY couple* or grad u al* block off campus. Pb *-4101. for tta d e a ta . O aa Board v a n ity F IN E FA M ILY S T Y L E M EALS tor D e l. stu d en t*— Six day* • week. *3 6 month for S meal* a day, $86 month (or 3. SOe per single meal. Ph. 8 -0 1 0 8 . 3 8 1 6 Nuece* (aid* d o or). W anted to Buy T H E ST U D EN T EXCH A N G E W* B u r sad Sell Small Articles of Value B u y C hristm as Glfta N ow ! Phone $466 408 W. l l r d St. A PA R T M EN T W A N TED ne** campus for 4 or 8 men One grad u ate *tu» blond dent, eth er* upper classm en. Call 3 -3063 I For Sale Auto W anted FOR S A L E — Choice Spaniel pup*, Choose now. registered Cocker ideal C hristm as g ift*. Ph. 6558. 80d W. 8Dth. W ANTED TO B U Y — 1930 or ISSI Modal From owner, prefer­ Phone Louis a t 1 -8 4 7 $ . A Ford Coup*. ably. Cash. 32— Coaching Typing MATH EM A I H S — Mr R M R an d s! Fh 8 -1 1 6 8 . 8 8 0 9 San Antonio SU E X P E R IE N C E D TYPIN G— Tho* ta and tham es, C all 2 -9 4 4 4 , I s ^ s h o « B&apairing I J — C af** Co*|il*yUbute to. PeSiiUte+tce News t h a t the U n iv ersity 5* beginning Russian classes now ar e th e larg es t in the United States is a m a t t e r of some­ thi ng more th a n statistical interest. Since the course was first proposed only a few w a r years ago, th e instruction was proceeded amid dis hea rt eni ng en­ ta ng lem en ts of suspicions, prejudices, and open opposition t h a t are. u n f o r tu n ­ ately, not r ar e in the p at h of educational expansion. U n d e r th e able an d persistent g u i d ­ ance of Dr. E d u a r d Micek, however, the instruction of Russian ha s proceeded with mounting success. The ra n k in g of the classes here now, to a measure, bespea k a p p r o p r i a t e t r i b ­ initiative, ute to Dr. M icelk’s forsight, and determination. Significance of this course's prestige, however, t h a n a is so mething more m a t t e r of credit to individuals— it is a forcible r e m i n d e r a ga in of th e fig ht hig he r education must m a k e in its quest for progress. No foreign la n gua ge is to da y of more this cou nt ry academic t h a n Russian. The rise of Russia's scion- impo rta nce in tific and medical influence is m a k in g the la n gua ge a virtual prerequisite to a n internationally-avvare nation. Languages, Opposition to th e instruction of Rus­ sian, though, still has not ab a t e d nor is it likely to soon end. Prejud ice s are in­ g r ai n e d well below the venee r of reason. like fo rm u la e and t h e o ­ ries, are more d an g er ou s when not k n ow n th a n w h e n intelligently u n d e r ­ stood. Those who seek th e thoro ugh nes s ed u c a ti o n ’s h ig h e r te ach in g will succeed only in stimulating t h a t which th e y seek to suppress. limit of to So, too, should edu ca tor s and those who seek to en co ur ag e the te ach ing of full tr u t h r e m e m b e r t h a t without trial a goal is not w o r th attaining. Progress in education c an no t all be voted in committee, sanctioned in coun­ cils, or proposed in thesis. It must be f o u g h t for. Russian is not a course alone in the re al m of opposition or criticism. U n de r d if fe re nt titles an d cataloguing, though, th e criticisms and oppositions will r e ­ main p a r t of the fight of highe r e d u c a ­ tion. * 7 UU C ollegiate lAJosdd to p la n n in g ta k e p ic tu r e s o f the group. S tories will a p p e a r in th e Daily News a n d th e Sun, Miss Waskow’sky said. The m a n p o w e r p ro b lem was solved by m e an s o f a series of p ersona ls in th e c a m p u s daily asking w h ere all th e ta ll males were. An a n s w e r cam e f ro m " E d , Joe, a n d Bill," w ho claim ed th e m e n "c u rio u s they w ere o n e " was The looking n e x t d ay five m e n o ver 6 f e e t 4 th e m ­ selves. tail p r e s e n te d inches for. O th e r girls b ec am e e n th u si­ astic a t th e th o u g h t o f tall men on ca m p u s and ad d e d th e ir co m m en ts to the p erso n a l col­ um n. tall o n e s : C u rio u s O ne c a n ’t use th ree . Can I cash in on one? P a r tia l to N avy.” " J e f f ’ said, “ To Still a n o t h e r ta ll w om en had th is to sa y : " I swoon, m y senses fail me, it! T h e r e a r e a c tu a lly ta ll men on this ca m p us! Y e t— w h e r e ? " I c a n ’t believe T he a n s w e r to t h a t qu estion, Miss W askow sky said, is a t th e a f f a i r s th e G lam azon club will soon spon sor fo r its m em bers. ★ BU T YOUR S IS T E R S W E L C O M E YOU ( E D I T O R ’S N O T E : In full the s e n tim e n ts sy m p a th y w ith o f N o r t h w e s te r n ’s G lam azons, y o u r s tr u l y 5 f e e t IO inches, a n d a f a ith fu l s t a f f m em ber, 5 f e e t 8 inches, would like to h e a r fro m U. T. co-eds who would like to form a L on g h o rn c h a p te r of this cam pus. As c h a r t e r m em bers, tall g ir l— we welcom e a n y m e a n in g o ver 5 f e e t 7 inches— to come by Jo u r n a lis m B u ild­ in g 109 life a w a y .) th e Club on sign a n d her u ★ rr ★ ★ Second oldest college publi­ cation in A m erica is The Round T able a t B eloit College, f o u n d ­ ed in 1853. T h re e L ouisia n a s w e e t po­ ta t o d e h y d r a tio n p la n ts have been rec o g n ize d w ith th e f ir s t a g r i c u l t u r a l " A " a w a r d s in the in few th e s ta te a n d a m o n g T h e devel­ th e e n t i r e South. o p m e n t of is i n d u s t r y th is cr e d ite d g r e a t l y t o th e e f f o r t s o f Dr. J. C. Miller, head of S ta te U n iv e r s it y ’s L o u isia n a H o rt ic u l tu r e Research d e p a r t­ m ent. A scholarship fu n d has been p la n n e d as a "living m e m o r ia l" f o r Allen S h a f e r J r ., U n iv e r­ s ity of Wisconsin q u a r te rb a c k who died of in ju r ie s s u f f e r e d r e c e n t W isconsin-Iow a in f o o tb all gam e, th e T he love of ju s tic e is simply, in th e m a jo r ity o f men, the f e a r of s u f f e r i n g injustice. — La R ochefaucauid 'MAN S H O R T A G E NOT SO B A D ’ I f y o u ’re w orried a b o u t not g e t tin g a h u sb a n d because o f the c u r r e n t m a n -p o w e r s h o r t­ age, consult P ro f e s s o r E. N. B a n z e t a t Michigan S ta te Col­ in tr o d u c to ry so­ lege. ciology class Dr. B anzet pro­ d uced a m a tr im o n ia l b u r e a u g a z e tte an d p roceeded to read the v ario u s a d v e rtise m e n ts. In an N o t on ly did th e co-eds gasp w ith a m u s e m e n t a n d a m a z e ­ m e n t, b u t one co-ed re m a rk e d th e y w ere to h e r room. “ Take o u t leaving y o u r pen c il; w e ’ll have to g et t h a t a d d r e s s ." f rie n d as th e ★ A T L E A S T NOT U N L E S S Y O U ’RE T A L L E V A N S T O N , 111.— (A .C .P.) " I ’m sick and tir e d of g oin g o u t w ith w om en w ho a r e on ly 5 f e e t 2 inches." W h e n L udm illa de W askow- tall, o v e r ­ sky, who is 6 f e e t local h e a r d r e s t a u r a n t , th e G lam azon Club a t N o rth w e st­ e rn U n iv e rsity w as fo rm e d . this r e m a r k a t a idea th e f o r A lr e a d y t h e r e a re six m e m ­ b e rs of this club f o r ta ll wo­ m en, b u t Miss W a skow sky is c a m p a ig n in g f o r m ore. C o n ­ t a c ts w ith m a n y m e n have been m ade, a n d th e g r o u p has even s e lec ted M a ria n F o rm a n s k y , 4 f e e t l l inches, as m ascot. " A ll t h a t we n eed n o w ," th e as­ o r g a n iz e r o f s e r te d , “ is m o re w om en over 5 f e e t 7 inches t a ll. " th e g r o u p N e x t w eek p h o t o g r a p h e r s f ro m th e C hicago Daily T im es th e C hicago T ri b u n e a r e a n d t o J u n e , i s A n a t t o Th # D a lly T e x a n , s t u d e n t n e w s p w T h # D a n * T a x i s . a t o n e d B a a i n g . la p a r o f T h e U n i v e r s i t y o f T a x a a , p u b l i s h e d e v e r y m o r n i n g e x c e p t M o n d a y * a n d S a t u r d a y * . S e p ­ t w i c e w e e k l y t e m b e r d u r i n g t h e t i t l e o f T h e S o m m e r T e x a n b y T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n * . T h e D a i l y T e x a n c i a * * m a l) a n d t h e e u m m e r * e * * l o n cinder la e n t e r e d a* s e c ­ o f f i c e p o s t l e x * * , b y A e t o f C o n g r e e * . 1 87 9. o n d a t A a l t i n . I . M i r e b t h e J o e. a t N e w * t e l e p h o n e < 2 - 2 * 7 8 > o r a t c o n t r i b u t i o n * m a y be m a d * t h * e d i ­ by t o r i a l o f f i c e * in J o u r n a l i s m B u i l d i n g 1 0 1 , 10 2 . a n d 16 9 C o m p l a i n t * * b o o * to d e l i v e r y t h * b a s i n * * # o f f i c e . J o u r n a l i s m B u i l d ­ i n g 1 08 s h o u l d b e m a d e ( 2 - 2 4 7 8 ) s e r v i c e S U B S C R I P T I O N R A T E S I J u l y T h e T e x a n will l l . 4 0 ; D e r e m b e r By C a r r i e r : D e c e m b e r I t o to M a r c h I , I 1 2 . fiS. By M a .i: D e c e m b e r to M a r c h 4, 11.SO; D e c e m b e r to J u l y 3. #2.7 5 to A u s t i n , p r o v i d e d t h e pla c e o f d e l i v e r y i* w i t h i n f r o m N i n e t e e n t h 'I w e n t ? - » e v r r . t h e t re e l* i n c l u s i v e s o u t h t o n o r t h , a n d fr o m R io G r a n d e S t r e e t o n t h e w est a n d S a n t h e e a s t . J a c i n t o B o u l e v a r d o n e a r n e r to be d e l i v e r e d li m it *, th * E D I T O R - I N - C H I E F H E L E N E W I L K E A S S O C I A T E E D I T O R _ ___ ___ ---------------- M A R I F R A N ' C L S W I L S O N E d i t o r i a l As __________________ — - — H o r a c e B u l b y . Jim ir ii * G r o v e N i g h t E d i t o r * . . M a r i o n B rid ge*, H o r a c e B u s b y , R a v e n n a M a th e w * . M ic k e y N e b en tm h l, M a n f r a n t e * W il s on S o c i e t y E d i t o r------------ C i s s y S t e w a r t S o c i e t y A s s o c i a t e D o r o t h y H u n t i n g t o n E a r i a y n e B la ck A m u s e m e n t * E d i t o r NVvill- Ha y * N a v y E d i t o r W a r E d i t o r ______________ Fa-. * L oyd S p o r t s E d i t o r _ _ _ J a c k G a l l a g h e r S p o r t s A s s o c i a t e . . J o b a s o n S p o r t s W r i t e r . ___ G e o r g e R e b o r n J o h n C u n n i n g h a m I n t r a m u r a l E d i t o r . K a y T i lle r E x c h a n g e E d i t o r .Bill I S T A F F FOR t1h I S ~ I s SUE N ig h t E d ito r P R IS C IL L A C H A S E P a ts y A s s is t a n t N ig h t E d i t o r Y a rb o ro u g h N ig h t R e p o r t e r s J e a n Talley B e tty Giddens, C opyreaders, ... X e r m a Rasor, L e k B elitsky, K ay Tiller N ig h t S p o rts E d i t o r _______ G eorge R a b o rn A s s i s t a n t ------------------ Tyson P a y n e N ig h t S ociety E d i t o r ____ D orothy ! H u n tin g to n N ig h t A m u se m e n ts E d i t o r ____ --------------------------M iriam M e r r itt M u r ra y Wolowitz, A s s is t a n t® N ig h t T e le g ra p h E ditor... Ma ad ie B e tse y Biggs Algee is n o t O a r r e p e n ta n c e so m u c h r e g r e t f o r th e ill we have done ae f e a r of th e ill t h a t may h ap p e n to us in c onseque nce. — La R o c h e f a u c a u id 12 15 n SO 33 45 49 51 T h e D A ® T E X A N e n i i u M c l • f c s o c f c i e d C o d e a i d e P r e s s Z 4 ZS Zb Mew bo ism ZI ZZ 0 5 &Zb J 29 S t % 39 31 42 43 4 4 13 ie> 34 50 5 2 IO £ 19 ZO I 14- l b r n Z3 32 4& 53 | H ORIZO N TA L I. uncommon 5. slender finial 8. peel 12.repeated 14. Cupid 15. alienate 16. m acaw s 17. prin te r's m easures 18. u t t e r 20. before 21. Am erican au th o r 22. minus 24 a Pilgrim F a th e r 27. ra ttlin g noise SO. come to g e th er 31. lad 32. netw ork 33. censorious outpourings 35. loses color 36. tow ard the sheltered side 37. m outh p a r t 38. beard 40. masculine nam e 42. obstruction 45. storm 47. ren der buoyant 49. avow 50. effacements 51. couches 52. salt 53. cozy place V ERTICA L 1. m ount 2. solar disk 3. corded fabrics 4. geological age 5. Russian stockade 6. diminutive for P e te r 7. intellectually 8. edible seed 9. ta k e n into custody 10. vociferate 11. being P A nsw er to y e s terd ay ’s puzzle. S C A B iH A GI B U A N ‘ II o V E WI H o L E L I ' 6 E R A T £ I o R L E (E k. E M » ■ e]c L A T ■ I O L I T E H H i E NI o I 5 T I N G I E s T I c A W VVA N £ ■ L c £ i C A P E A R c ■ A L L E o L A R H O u G A T WLLA MHHH BA R A E l is E L A H I B R A T T I C E D U A L A C £I A L T OI R R P E E PIk Y E RIIn E E A l e n g e t i m e of s o l u t i o n 23 m i n u t e s . P u t. by Kid# Features Syndicate, loc. II-Z& 13. malicious burning 19. New Zealand p a rro t 21. corolla leaf 23. narrow flexi­ ble leather strip 24. S candinavian te rritoria l division 25. H aw aiian garland 26. crazed 27. v arie ty of lettuce 28. sum m er (Fr.) 29. thing, in law 31. insects 34. river in Scotland 35. end 37. official F rench t r a ito r 38. tent-dweiler 39. undulate 4 1 .queen of the gods 42. nude 43. sweetsop 44. repose 46. bitter vetch 48. Urge cask \ / < ? - /* / \ O u r n e w bouncer, s i r — Since he le ft the p olice fo rce i t ’s his only chance to pinch f r u it.” W o r l d N ew s Super forts Leave Jap Industries Flaming W A S H IN G T O N , Dec. 13.— ♦ ( I N S ) — The W a r D e p a r t m e n t a n ­ n oun ce d to d a y t h a t a B-*29 S uper- I f o r tr e s s raid upo n th e v a s t Mit-j subishi a i r c r a f t c e n te r a t N agoya on the J a p a n e s e m a in la n d l e f t the in f la m e s in sta lla tio n s in d u s tria l a f t e r vio le n t explosions. T he big S u p e r f o r tr e s s e s fro m th e 21st bo m b e r com m an d based on S aip a n sw arm e d o ver th e e n ­ large em y n u m b e rs th e co m m u n iq u e ac co m ­ plished visual bom bing. in a d ay lig h t raid , in d u s tria l c e n te r said, a n d in More th a n IOO S u p e r f o r tr e s s e s the w a r — — biggest b om be rs w ere u n d e r sto o d joine d in r a in i n g d e s tru c tio n to J a p a n e s e w a r ind u strie s. to have in A t h r e a t to J a p a n from B-29 bases in th e A leu tian Islan d s was s o u n d e d a t th e sam e tim e by Col. J. K. F og le of Chicago, 111., l i t h A ir F orc e o ffic e r, I who told a new s c o n f e re n c e th a t it m ig h t n ot be lon g b e f o r e such raid s a r e u n d e rw a y . intelligence ★ Hodges Arm y Nears Rhine City of Bonn c a rrie d to n ig h t P A R IS , Dec. 13.— ( I N S ) — A su rp rise new a s s a u lt by the U nited its S ta te s F i r s t A rm y so uth w ing u p t o tw o miles f o r ­ w ard t h i r t y - J t h r e e miles of th e G e rm a n Rhine city o f Bonn as it o v e r r a n th r e e th e Reich low er f la n k of th e e n e m y ’s crucial R oer R iver line. to w n s a n d to w ithin to r e in to In the c e n te r a n d u p p e r w ing of; to some tw e n ty fiv e m il e s ,1 a n o ffe n siv e f r o n t s u d d e n ly w id­ en e d L ie u te n a n t G e n e ra l C o u r tn e y H. H o d g e s’ A rm y sm a shed up to the Roer s w est b a n k opposite D u re n on a five-and-a-half-m i!e stre tc h , r e a r g u a r d suicide c lea rin g Nazi squads in S chophoven, P r e m m e r - : nich, M a ria w eiler, D erichw eiier I atid Gey. b o rd e r invasion W hile S e v e n th A rm y fo rces s tr u c k to w ithin tw o miles of the G erm a n Rhine befose I K aslshuhe a n d th e T hird A rm y e f ­ f e c te d a second thrust the s o u t h e r n S a a r l a n d , ! into H o d g es’ tro o p s lashed f o r w a r d a t j 6 o ’clock in th e m o r n in g fro m the a r e a o f th e ir orig in a l p e n e tr a ti o n into th e Reich beyond Roetgen. T he l a t t e r w as th e f i r s t G erm a n tow n c a p tu r e d by th e A m eric ans, j Ar M acA rthur s Troops Push Into Ormoc V alle y G E N E R A L MAC A R T H U R ’S j P hilippines, | H E A D Q U A R T E R S , D er. 1 4 ( T h u r s d a y ) — (IN S ) — S e v e n ty -se v e n th division d o u g h ­ boys in th e la p tu r e d O rm oc se c to r of w e s te r n L ey te w e re disclosed I to d a y to have in flic ted " e x t r a o r - i d in a rily h e a v y " ca su a ltie s on the to have b eg u n a i J a p a n e s e a n d th e Orm oc i Valley, w here th o u s a n d s of e n e m y | fo rc e s r e m a in in g on th e island a re i c o n c e n tra te d . n o r th w a r d d rive into The ju n c tio n o f tw o A m erican co lum ns in th e O rm oc a r e a t r a p ­ ped a la rg e n u m b e r of J a p a n e s e j in th e m o u n ta in s e a s t o f th e main e n e m y line an d s c a tt e r e d e lem e n ts j of th e se J a p tr o o p s w e re fig h tin g I d e s p e r a te ly to escap e o v e r m o u n ­ ta in trails. T he drive into th e O rm oc c o r ­ r id o r f ro m th e so uth w as c a r rie d in c o n c e r t w ith c o n tin u in g o u t p e s s u te applied f ro m th e n o r th by seasoned th e T w en ty - f o u r t h a n d T h irty -se c o n d Divi­ sions. tro o p s o f Labor Party Seeks End to Greek Troubles full LO N D O N , Dec. 13.— ( IN S ) — L a b o r M in iste r E r n e s t Bevin dis­ closed to d a y t h a t urn.er a L ondon- Moscow a g r e e m e n t B r ita in a s s u m ­ ed tne f o r resp o n sib ility took G re ek pro b lem a n d Russia over th e job o f reso lving th e R o­ m a n ian s itu a tio n as th e p o w erfu l B ritish L a b o r P a r t y d em a n d e d a sp e edy end to th e bloody G reek upheaval. Clyde Barrow Case Was on Bolton 'Run' r e la te d P a u l Bolton, KTBO new s a n ­ alyst, to m e m b e rs and visitors of th e J . 12b class some of his ex p e rie n c e s in "C o v e rin g th e L e g islatu re an d H ighlights in R e­ p o r tin g " w hen he spoke the J o u r n a lis m B uilding W e d n es d ay a t 12 o ’clock. in Mr. Bolton, a g r a d u a te of the U n iv ersity o f Missouri, has r e ­ p o r te d f o r A ssociated P re ss an d I n te r n a t io n a l News Service, has w orked in th e p ublic ity b u r e a u of th e S ta te D e p a r t m e n t of A g ricu l­ tu r e . He covered th e s ta te capitol of Illinois f o r tw'o y e a r s before co m ing to cover th e capitol here. " U p th e r e I called e v e ry o n e m is te r ,’* he said, " a n d I h a d n ’t been here six w eeks b efo re I was calling people by th e ir f ir s t nam es. It m a kes you realize j u s t how cold it is t h e r e ! " Mr. Bolton also w rite s f o r T im e and Life. to A u stin T elling o f his co v e rag e of th e Capitol, Mr. Bolton s ta te d t h a t he did n o t believe th a i th e political beliefs of a r e p o r t e r would cause him to color his stories. He also said tim e he w orked a t th e S t a t e Capitol, he had n e v e r been a p p ro a c h e d by a c o r p o r a tio n lo b b y ist to in flu e n ce his w ritin g . t h a t d u r in g th e ★ tip p e d o f f a b o u t The killing of C lyde B a rro w and Bonnie P a r k e r , th e no to rio u s p u b ­ lic enem ies of several y e a r s ago, by T ex a s R a n g e r F r a n k H am e r, happ e n ed d u rin g Mr. B o lto n ’s cov­ e ra g e o f the Capitol. The Capitol r e p o r te r s , th e t r a p laid by th e police, began col­ lecting b a c k g r o u n d m a te r ia l on P a r k e r , B arrow , a n d R a n g e r H a m e r , while I.N.S. r e p o r te r , T ed Read. U n iv ersity ex, w’e n t to the small L o u isia n a to w n to cover th e sto ry , Mr. Bolton said. B ecause o f th e tip - o f f th e y w e re able to have th e sto r y r e a d y alm o st im m edi­ ately a f t e r the shooting. While Mr. B olton w as w o rking in Dallas, th e S h erm an for A .P. mob lynched a N eg ro accused of a t ta c k in g a w hite girl. T he mob violence lasted f o r five hours, and th e c o u n ty c o u r th o u s e w as b u rn ed . Mr. Bolton said he w ro te c o n tin u ­ ously fro m 5:30 o ’clock u n til m id­ night, w ith a n o t h e r A .P. m an call­ ing fro m S h e r m a n e v e ry te n m in ­ u te s to give him th e la te s t develop­ m ents. th e g o v e r n m e n t T he g o v e r n o r 's daily press con­ f e r e n c e w as b egun by J im m y All- red when Mr. Bolton was covering the Capitol. B e fo re th e n , r e p o r te r s new s se cured th r o u g h m e m o r a n d a issued each d ay by th e g o v e r n o r a n d o th e r g o v e r n m e n t o fficials, Mr. Bolton said. T he c o n f e re n c e proved its w o rth u n d e r Mr. A llred and c o n ­ tin u e d f o r a while u n d e r W. Lee O ’Daniel. Hollywood Model Speaks Tonight H ow to p h o to g r a p h models and how to be a model will be discussed by Miss M a rth a Koehl, f o rm e r m e m b e r of th e C a lifo rn ia Models. th e a t a m e e tin g spo nso red by A ustin C a m e ra C lub a t 8 o ’clock to n ig h t in P h ysics B uilding 421. T he U n iv e rsity P h o to g ra p h e r s and Models Club will be h o n o r g u es ts is open to s t u ­ h u t th e m e etin g d e n ts in te r e s te d in th e values o f p h o to g r a p h y and modeling. Miss Koehl will discuss m e thods by which p h o to g r a p h e rs may m ake th e best use of models and will tell o f some b e n e fits to be derived i f ro m m odeling, such as tr a i n in g a y o u n g w o m an in social graces, a c ­ q u ir in g th e c a p a c ity to f i t in any g r o u p re g a rd le s s of social b ac k ­ g ro u n d , le a r n in g to he v ersa tile in w e a rin g d i f f e r e n t types of cos­ tum es, a n d being able to pick those c o s tu m e s which a r e m ost becoming to her. ( E D I T O R ' S N O T E : T h i s c o l u m n Is o p e n t o T e x a n r e a d e r s w h o w i s h t o s u b m i t c o n s t r u c t i v e a r t i c l e s o I i n t e r e s t t o T e x a n • t o r i e s . s u p p l e m e n t a r y C o n t r i b u t i o n s s h o u l d he a s s h o r t a s p o s s i b l e , a n d t h e E d i t o r r e s e r v e s t h # r i g h t t o c o n d e n s e . L e t t e r s m u s t b e c le a n , d e c e n t , a n d f r e e o f m a lic * T h e y m u s t b e s i g n e d , a n d t h o u g h t h a t i n i t i a l s o n l y be u s e d . ) t h e w r i t e r c a n r e q u e s t libel. ‘H O W DO YOU H E L P , MR. M U R P H Y ? ’ E d ito r, Daily T e x a n : Mr. M u rp h y , w hose le t t e r w as published rn th e D ec em b e r 12 T e x a n , has decidedly i n ­ su lted intelligence o f th e s t u d e n ts a t th e U n iv ersity , sep- e r a te ly a n d as a g ro u p , in claim ing, t h a t we, th e s tu d e n ts a r e b e in g d ic ta te d th e to. Mr. M u r p h y ev id e n tly c o n ­ siders his r e a s o n in g pow ers s u ­ p e rio r to t h a t of th e m a jo r ity o f th e s t u d e n t s ( a n d the f a c ­ u lty a n d E x -s tu d e n ts A ssocia­ tio n w ho have s u p p o r te d th e s t u d e n t " d i c t a t o r s " r e so lu tio n s r e g a r d in g th e r e i n s t a t e m e n t of D r. R a in e y ) . a lm o st Mr. M u r p h y ’s e n ­ t ir e ly n e g a tiv e p o in t o f view closely coincides w ith th e Mew re v e a le d by in a c cu satio n s, th e ir g r o u n d le ss in sin u a tio n s, g e n e r a liz a ­ a n d tio n s w hich w ere d r a w n o u t d u r in g in v e s tig a ­ tion. . . th e R e g en ts t h e S e n a te to su g g e sts Mr. M u r p h y t h a t t h a t o u r "w e shall d e m a n d its g r e a t ­ U n iv e rsity m a in ta in ness p e t ty ty r a n n i c a l e f f o r t s , " which could be c o n s tru c tiv e if it did n o t c o n f lic t w ith some of his p re v io u s claim s. to w e r above He r e f e r s to ac adem ic f r e e ­ dom b ein g used as a red h e r ­ rin g . . . to d iv e r t th e s tu d e n ts into selfish purposes. T his is In th e f ir s t place, a c a ­ a b s u rd . dem ic f r e e d o m h as bee n abu sed , a n d in th e second place Malcolm W allace, to w hom Mr. M u rp h y sup posedly r e f e r s , has " s tu c k his neck o u t" to uphold s o m e th in g th in k in g t h a t we s tu d e n ts should be in te g r a l to a n y f r e e u n ive rsity . Also, I believe Mac h as m ore to lose th a n to gain. C on sid­ e rin g th e th e m a g n itu d e of business in te r e s ts sn s y m p a th y w ith th e R e g en ts, Mac m a y have d if fic u ltie s in o b ta in in g a jo b in t h e f u tu r e . P e r h a p s Mr. M u rph y should m ake a s u g g e stio n a s to how we should c o n tin u e " t h e f ig h t f o r th e a d v a n c e m e n t o f , o u r g r e a t U n iv e r s ity .” A f t e r c a s t­ in g so m a n y do u b ts a n d a s p e r ­ th e stu d e n ts , e x - s tu ­ sions a t d en ts, a n d f a c u lty r e so lu tio n s an d policies, p erh a p s he should le t us in on how he a d v a n ce s th e in such a s u p e rio r m a n n e r . f i g h t K E N N E T H R. C U R T IS . ★ ‘A S S E M B L Y A P P O IN T M E N T U N C O N S T IT U T I O N A L ’ D e a r E ditor, in re a d L a s t w ee k t h e I T e x a n t h a t Mac W allace " h a s a p p o in te d Bill C alhoun as a n A rts a n d Science A sse m b ly m a n upo n th e advice o f C h ief J u s ­ tic e Jim m ie F o g a r tie ." I d o n ’t know Mr. F o g a r tie , b u t I do k n o w t h a t his advice a n d c o n s e n t is c o n s titu tio n a lly o f no m o re value th a n my own. . . . I a t f i r s t opposed th e a d o p ­ tion o f th e new c o n s titu tio n because I was told t h a t th e old one w as good enough. H ow ­ ev er, I a m n o t one o f those s tu d e n ts t h a t can be told a n d I in v e stig a te d f o r myself. As a r e s u l t o f m y in v e stig a tio n , I v ote d f o r th e new c o n s titu ­ tion be c a u s e I th o u g h t t h a t it p u t dow n in black a n d w hite th e p r o c e d u r e in s tu d e n t gov­ e r n m e n t t h a t h ad p rev io u sly been l e f t to th e im a g in a tio n of f ir s t one s t u d e n t and th e n a n ­ T h e r e w ere so m a n y o th e r. th in g s th e old c o n s titu tio n t h a t could be co n te ste d because of some kind o f a d o p tio n p r o ­ c e d u re t h a t h ad b ee n d is r e ­ g ard e d . in This is m y p o in t: I do n o t w a n t to see th e new c o n s titu ­ tion p u n c t u r e d with loopholes, le f t to th e im a g in a tio n of Mac W allace, o r d e p e n d e n t upon advice a n d co unsel of " t h e C hief Jim m ie F o g a r ­ J u s t ic e tie. . . T h e new c o n s titu tio n . . p ro vides th e t h a t s tu d e n ts College o f A r t s a n d S ciences shall ele c t a n u m b e r o f A s­ to be d e t e r m in e d s e m b ly m e n by its o ffic ia l e n ro llm e n t. . . in to file The c a n d id a te s f o r A ssem bly w ere sup pose d tw e n t y days b e f o r e th e election to be held on N o v e m b e r 8 a n d w e re to be elec ted u n d e r th e H a r e P ro p o r tio n a l System . W hen these c a n d id a te s filed in O c to ­ ber, it w as n e a r th e e n d o f a te rm a n d t h e r e w ere 4,132 s t u ­ in College of A r t s a n d d e n ts Sciences. d e c la re d I t wa? th e r e f o r e t h a t t h e r e w ould be five A ssem bly places f o r A rts a n d Sciences. . . . T h e e n r o llm e n t f o r th e new s e m e s t e r in c re ase d so t h a t t h e r e w e r e 4,577 s tu d e n ts in A rts a n d Sciences. Mac W a l­ lace then claim ed t h a t b ecause of th e new' e n r o llm e n t in A rts a n d Sciences, t h a t A r t s a n d S ciences should have six r a t h e r th a n five A ssem bly m en. T h e r e ­ fo re he a p p o in te d Bill C alh o u n A r t s a n d Sciences A sse m b ly ­ m an a n d broke fa ith b o th w ith the c o n s titu tio n he helped to w rite a n d w ith s t u d e n ts who e lec ted him P re s id e n t. • * th e o u r public schools cease to a d ­ vance, or decline. I t is, q u ite n a tu ra lly , useless to le c tu r e o u r G o vernor, o u r j u n i o r S e n a to r, o r c e r ta in m e m ­ bers o f th e B oard o f R e g e n ts responsible, u p o n th e s u b je c t o f academ ic f re e d o m , f r e e d o m of th o u g h t and expression, or up o n h u m a n r ig h ts a n d dignity. . . . C itizens: T hese f o r g e t t h a t you ta k e a g r e a t prid e an d joy in y o u r local schools an d its a t ta i n m e n t s , its a c c re d ite d lev­ els, a n d its c o n tin u e d services a n d c o n trib u tio n s to y o u r com ­ m unities. A few service m en on th is tin y P acific island who a re f o r ­ m e r s tu d e n ts o f vario u s colleges and u n iv e rsitie s a r e in te r e s te d in ed u c atio n , a n d it is d if fic u lt to sta n d idly while this clev er plot is p e r p e tr a te d . We do n o t wish to be com pletely lost in th e a n o n y m ity o f th e A rm e d Forces. Y et th e d ir ty w ork will have been d o n e ; tho fu rr o w will be plowed both crooked a n d sketchy. into to p u t w ords We a r e living a t the scene wrhere several f o r m e r s tu d e n ts of T he U n iv ersity of T e x a s w e n t to th e i r r ew ard s, a n d we d a re th e m o u th s of th e se dead, becau se we room ed a n d lived w ith th e m back a t school and we knew th e ir th o u g h ts . W e know’ w h a t th e y will sa y w hen th e y h e a r of up th is vio le n t o u tr a g e t h e r e : " B e t r a y a l — b e t r a y a l of all th e in stitu tio n s to which we owe o u r prin cip les f o r w hich we w en t o u t to d ie ." And we who will come back m ig h t th in k a b o u t em ploying t h a t q u a i n t poetic N avy v e r ­ n a c u la r : " S w e e p e rs, m an y o u r brooms. sw eep-dow n fo re a n d a f t . " C lean P A U L F R E I E R S.K. 3 G N avy 128, c o F.P.O , S an F ra n c isc o , Calif. PAPER MAKES PLANE VVING-TIPS Q uieted Notice*. T H E F O L L O W I N G S T U D E N T S will p le a s e r e p o r t t o t h e R e g i s t r a r ' s O f f i c e i m m e d i a t e l y J R e t h e l, C a r r y ! O . ; B r o w n . Lewi* E l d r i d g e ; t a r v » ; a l . M a r y C h r i s t i e ; D a w s o n . L e s t e r R o y ; H o o k s . Dors* R u t h ; M c L e a n , M rs. F r a n c e # H s i i ; N o r s k , J o e J r . ; O ’G r a d y , N o r m a n P ; P ie rc e , A u g u s t W a r n e r ; S e h a r f f , Loi* P a u l R a v ; W a! *'•*. J a n e . V i c k e r v , F r a n c e * E l i z a b e t h ; Y a r r m g t o n , G old* M a r i a n ; Zidell, L e a t r i c e J o y c e , E. J . M A T H E W S , R e g i s t r a r a n d D e a n o f A d m i s s i o n s . t i m e d u r i n g R E F U N D O F R E G I S T R A T I O N F E R r e g ­ S t u d e n t s w h o h a v e n o t b e e n t h e c u r ­ t e c h # r e ­ t h e R e g i s t r a t i o n t h e m , a a e x p l a i n e d o n I n f o r m a t i o n i s t e r e d a t a n y r e n t a e m e s t e r f o r a s m u c h a* s e m e s t e r h o u r s a r c e n t i t l e d f u n d of a p o r t i o n of F e e p a id by p a g e 27 o f B u l l e t i n , In o r d e r t h e s t u d e n t m u n i re c eip t s t t h a t his a n d r e f u n d , le a v e his B u r s a r ' s so r e g i s t r a t i o n c a n he c h e c k e d t h e R e g i s t r a r ' * O f f i c e t h e r e f u n d o r d e r p r e p a r e d . t h e G e n e r a l r e c e i v e to a thi* t o B u r s a r ’* R e c e i p t s m a v he s t t h e R e g i s t r a r ' * O f f i c e b e g i n n i n g D e ­ t h r o u g h J a n u a r y IS, c e m b e r IS . 1045. R e f u n d O r d e r * will be a v a i l ­ a b l e o n e w eek a f t e r r e c e i p t is fi l e d . IH I I l e f t E. J, M A T H E W S . R e g i s t r a r . As I see it, Mac W allace is g u ilty o f r e tr o a c tio n b ecause t h e n u m b e r o f A ssem blym en f ro m A r t s a n d Sciences w as c o n s titu tio n a lly d e p e n d e n t on th e offic ia l e n r o ll m e n t o f la s t se m e s te r , r e g a r d le s s o f w h a t th e e n r o llm e n t t h a t th is sem es­ t e r m ig h t have. A ccordin g to this th e o ry , if th e e n r o llm e n t o f th is se m e s te r h ad d ec reased , Mac W allace w ould have t a k e n it upon him self to rem ov e one of t h e duly elec ted A ssem bly­ m en fro m A r t s and Sciences. if Mac W allace th e w as t h a t th e new s tu d e n ts th e o ry r e p r e s e n ta t io n , w e r e w ith o u t th e he should have ap p o in te d line to th e c a n d id a te n e x t in t h a t w ere five A ssem blym en elec ted, fo r th e sixth highest r a n k in g c a n d id a te w as th e peo­ ples sixth choice. E rk le H e n ry w as six th ; Bill C alh o u n w as no t. . . sinc erely a c tin g on S econdly, T h u rs d a y n ig h t th e A ssem­ bly will m e e t if it decides to obey th e co n s titu tio n . A t t h a t tim e, th e new A ssem bly, all o f w hom have been duly elected, will have the r ig h t to exercise th e p o w er of eve ry legislative body to d e te r m in e th e s e a tin g o f its ow n m e m b ers. I t th e y should r e f u s e to s e a t Bill C a l­ houn a n d to in v e stig a te the a c ­ tions o f Mac W a llace an d Chief J u s t ic e J im m ie F o g a r tie as to th e ir c o n s titu tio n a l basis, th e n t h e n ew A ssem bly will have d one to the s tu d e n ts th e g r e a t ­ e s t service of a n y Assembly f o r m a n y m onths. T he p r a c ­ tice t h a t Mac W allace has b e ­ g u n m akes possible one o r m ore a p p o in tm e n ts by s tu d e n t p r e s id e n ts eve ry N o v em b e r so long as we m a in ta in o u r w a r ­ tim e w in te r s e m e ste rs and s u m ­ m er te rm s. . . S incerely yours, W. F. ★ ‘T E L L T H E I R NAMES, MR. M U RPH Y E d ito r , Daily T e x a n : I t is of no little conc ern to us t h a t The Daily T e x a n should be used as th e i n s t r u m e n t of su ch despicable p r o p a g a n d a as t h e D e c em b e r 12 l e t t e r of Mr. C h a rle s M urphy J r . , School o f Law. In p e r p e t r a t i n g his cheap a t ­ ta c k upon the in te g r ity of o u r conspic­ s t u d e n t le ad e rs uou sly avoided n a m in g th ose whom h e incidiously a t ­ so te m p te d to slander. he I t is obvious t h a t this le tte r w as a n a t t e m p t to u n d e rm in e t h e s p ir it a n d c o u ra g e of the s t u d e n t body the c u r r e n t in fig h t f o r academ ic fre ed o m . We challenge Mr. C harles M u r p h y J r ., School of Law an d o r his associa te s and aids to pub lish in T he Daily T e x a n th e n a m e s o f those s tu d e n t o f ­ a s­ ficials he s a u lte d a n d a c c o m p a n y those n a m e s w ith p ro o f of his m alici­ ous ac cusation. has viciously G E N E W Y A T T , C E C IL IA S H E P H E R D . ★ "C L E A N S W E E P -D O W N F O R E AND A F T ” To th e R e ad e rs and E d ito r : people’s W h e n a B oa rd o f Regents, a b e tte d by th e b e n e v o le n t n e u ­ t r a l i t y o f a " d o n o th in g " Gov­ e r n o r , can a t t a c k a n d redu ce t h e of hig h e r le a r n in g as exhibited by th e o u stin g of P r e s id e n t R am ey a t T he U n iversity o f T exas, it h as a tta c k e d a n d d e s tro y e d th e m oral f ib e r of o u r d em ocratic civilization. in s titu tio n This b e tra y a l of th e public school philosophy o f o u r n atio n is f e l t in every school in o u r sta te f r o m T ex h o m a to Z a p a ta e d u c a ­ C o u n ty because w ith tional s ta n d a r d s low ere d in o u r it h ig h e r is only th e s t a n d a r d s of tim e befo re in stitu tio n s N o t i c e : Students whose Cactus pictures bear numbers over 3100 should wait until January 2,1945 to call for proofs. There is a shortage of proof paper, and no more will be available until after the holidays. The Cactus Studio Journalism Building 3