T he Da T h e F i r s t C o l l e g e 7 Texan D a i l y i n t h e S o u t h VOLUME 43 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1942 Six Pages Today No. 119 rit- us- ap- 3pS Nat Till on ive on nd rd ;c- ng 'P- Z N . \$* What Qoei O h Jtesie Sunday IO— Dr. A. B. Cole leads discus­ sion on for World Order," University Com­ munity Church. Struggle “The 2— Alpha Phi Omega, Texas Un­ ion. f 1 I— Cdmmunity singsong, Hogg Memorial Auditorium. 1:15— Women’s physical class, W omen’s Gym 135. 6— Thirty Club at Old Seville. 8— Canterbury Club vesper serv­ fitness ice, supper, and program. 8:30— Sigma Delta Chi at Old 8:45— John Henry Faulk, W esley Seville. Foundation. M o n d ay 9-5— Annual Exhibit of the Col­ legiate Schools of Architecture, Architecture Building. I — Present Day Club luncheon, Queen Anne Room, Texas Un­ ion. 5— W omen’s posture contest, Wo­ 5-6— University* Question Hour, men’s Gym. Union 315-16. 7— Public Relations short course, Garrison Hall 111. 7— Chemistry 801 coaching class, W esley Bible Chair. 7— Lecture by Dr. 0 . W. Rein- muth, Physics Building 203. 7:55— Daily Texan of the Air. 8— Fifth Experimental Theater production, M.L.B. 103. 8— Austin Forum o f Public Opin­ ion, Mrs. Homer P. Rainey at Austin High School. 8:15— Eugene List concert with Austin Symphony Orchestra, H ogg Auditorium. 10:30-11— “ Guardians o f Free­ dom," Texas Quality Network. Everybody Tried To Catch a Bat In Library Saturday By JACK BROOKS A b a t was w andering around th e L ib rary periodical room yes­ te rd a y a fte rn o o n and every man and boy in the room jum ped out o f his chair and sta rte d a f t e r the elusive creatu re. Y ou’re wrong. flittin g aro und in to end It was a small the f u r r e d b a t long room from end sweeping glides which carried it / f r o m one end o f the long room to the other and back in e ffo rt­ less motion. The b a t was aroused ab o u t 4:15 o’clock and a f t e r circling the main loan desk on the second floor of the the L ibrary first periodical ■wept close lower and lower, only to swoop upw ard as some s tu de nt atte m p te d to catch it. it zoomed room where to lower and the floor, into it Soon the room was a long but the brave g a u n tle t which little c ritte r flew up frigh ten ed and down. I t was narrowly missed in the firs t trip when an anxious sophomore pitched a book, notes and all, a t the bat. He missed by a foot. Stu dents go t out their coats and began to swing them wildly in an e f f o rt to stop him. He be­ gan to fly more slowly, to sweep upward unsteadily, an d finally was floored with a coat. Nobody seemed th e r e ’s a s ta te hunting. to know th a t law against bat At First Forum Riker to Analyze Why Peace Failed Discussion Series Starts Tuesday Night at Garrison talk W hat happened to the world that brought on dictatorships and war will be analyzed by three U niversity faculty members and everyone will things over afterward Tuesday night, as the first of the public “ Victory For­ um” series gets underway at Gar­ rison Hall auditorium at 8 o’clock. There are to be eight forums in the series, which will delve into the whole background, present conduct, and peace after the war. To give the average student and citizen an all-over picture o f the it, the conflict and his part in discussions will run on successive Tuesdays through April 14. Dr. Thad W. Riker, University a u th o r and historian, will make address Tuesday, the principal “ The Breakdown o f the Old In­ ternatio nal O rd e r," a f t e r which Dr. Edward G. Lewis, governm ent instructor, and George H. Hilde­ b ra n d of the economics faculty will make short talks. University V ice-President J. Al­ the pro­ ton Burdine will open gram. peace How the old League of Nations failed to enforce after World War I, the rise and threat of militarism to th e world, and some general conclusions abou t the failure of the powers to es­ tablish a stable o rder will be am ong the topics the speakers and the audience will discuss. Dr. Clarence E. Ayres, econom­ ics professor and director of the forums, announced t h a t students and citizens from all over the state are welcome to “And everybody will g e t a chance to ta k e p a r t in the discussions," he said. attend. The forums, which are being sponsored by all the social science dep artm en ts of the University, to ­ g eth er with the Schools of Law and Business Administration and the Public Lectures Committee, will each time have three faculty mem bers in charge. The first f o u r program s will deal with the background fo r the w a r while the last fo u r will t r e a t the outcome. political philosophies Included in the discussions will be considerations o f the conflict­ th a t ing m ark the responsibilities democracies m ust take in rebuilding the world, and the economic an d social p a t­ te rn of a durable peace a f t e r the war. the present struggle, the The second forum in the series will be given the night of March 3. Four Suspended For Exam Cheating F o r scholastic infractions six stud ents are now on pro} ation and f o u r are suspended. loss of credit in Two freshm en have been found guilty of plagiarism and punished by the course and disciplinary probation f o r the r e s t of the semester, Dean V. I. Moore announced S aturday. \ Naming of Cripps 'Bow af Russia' Dr. Milton R. Gutsch, professor of English history, S a tu rd ay said the appointm ent of Sir S taffo rd Cripps to the British cabinet is “ a gesture of friendship of England tow ard Russia." “ I t re p re sen ts," he said, “ a p ro ­ labor policy of the British cab­ in et." Cripps was appointed to the cab- inet F riday in the capacity of lord privy seal and leader of commons. As he was a stro n g m em ber of the labor p a rty, Cripps’ appoint­ m ent to the cabinet causes the op­ position to the T ory p a rty to lose an articu late supporter. Moore Praises Council For Abolishing Hazing t IN S P IR E D BY L U N C E F O R D ’S pace-setting rhythm, Madeline G oolsby and Kenneth Henslee drew attention of many fantastic-trippers Friday night at the Gym , where it can well be said "a good time was had by all," if appearances mean anything . . . W hile most of the crowd watched the antics of the orchestra on a spe­ cialty number, Yvonne Kennedy and Billy M c- in carrying on with their Manemin persisted dancing. Mrs. Rainey to Tell W hy Education System Unequal Boy, Dese Heah Minstrels Sho’ Gonna Have Everything! Maybe you r mama done told ! b erta Lea of the W om en’s Phy- . . . . ln * f u “ eVenm* s enW you, but come n e x t Thursday and sical Training D epartm ent. F riday n ight a t the Cowboy’s M i n - I B u t t h a t >8 only one of m strel there s gonna be some Dark Town Strutting th a t will p o t even the Harlem hepcats in a blackout. Picture these campus cuties do­ ing a Negro cake-walk dance in appropriate disguise and candidly camouflaged costumes: R ay Ab­ ernathy, Nell Jack, Mary Frances Johnson, Betty Ja n e Slaughter, Florence Woodfin, and M arg uer­ ite Yglesias. .. ltCmS ment of top-notch campus enter­ tainers which await those who at­ tend the Third Annual Minstrel. P erform ances for both nights will begin at 8 o’clock. Tickets, selling f o r 30 cents to all, may be purchased fro m an y Cowboy. Proceeds will . , The dusky dance ro utine will be under the direction of Mrs. Ro- Chem Building Not Furnished Offices In Use, Labs Are Empty The Engineering Chemical Building, scheduled for comple- tion in the beginning of the 1941- 1942 school year, will not be used this semester. Eight offices which have been furnished are now occupied by the of faculty o f the D e p a rtm e n t Chemical E ngineering and by the Bureau of Industrial Chemistry. But the labs are empty. Tom A. Rousse, professor of speech, will act as interlocutor, and end-men Dean A m o Nowotny, Jo h n n y Seay, Kennie Seibert, Joe Gilmore, and Bill T racy will dish i out the shady jokes and com (and th a t a in ’t H ay es). Dean “ S h o rty ” is rum ored to be dickering with Barnum Bail- j ing Wire Circus to take his spec- j ta c u la r tight (and m ysterious) rope act, which he will p u t on at the Minstrel, on the road. The I only trouble seems to be th a t the ! ■ Dean is slightly indisposed a f te r I trying last to practice one day week w ithout p u ttin g the rope up. j j3ut h e ’ll be in shape and as bal- aneed as a Victory Menu come n e x t Thursday. Chase Baromeo, professor of Cole lo Lead War Panel Today voice, who was one of the biggest hits a t last y e a r ’s show, will again be on band to p u t an old S outh­ land into a num ber of Negro spirituals. flav or K e rm it Shimeall will entertain with a Cat-Piano act, and Bill Crenshaw and Bob Bush will be presented in a new tumbling novel­ ty and comedy number. A “ jelly-roll” musical will be provided by “ T h e ta ” Joe _ , , . ., , Glee Club, u n d e r the direction of T r u e tt Harris, will sing. Jimmy P i tt will also sing. 'War Training Greatest Job' Dean Says Demand For Labor Zooms N ext year to keep up expanded war production American indus­ try will have to absorb from I to trained workers. The 5 million most Germany has ever been able to train and p u t to work is 3 mil­ lion a year. Such was the w ar tra in in g out- ■ look S a tu rd a y from W. R. Wool- | rich, University dean of e n gine e r­ ing and regional director f o r the ; defense tra in in g program of the ; United S tates government. g o to the Red Cross. ! and hls Rhy‘hm Raaeals. The Men’s I ’ll Chase Rainey Profs Say Spies Said Question Hour Faculty Accuses Dean of Spying If y o u ’re trying to figure out your place in the war, the best place for you to be Monday afternoon is at the first meeting of the University Question Hour. Subject for the first three w eek s of this faculty-led informal student discussion is ‘‘Students in the War Situation.” Monday the m eeting will be from 5 to 6 o ’clock in Union 315-16. Dr. R. L. Sutherland, director of H ogg Foundation, will lead the discussion. Digesting their book-learning, talking back to pro­ fessors, and mulling over youth problems, students par­ ticipating will learn how they can apply their law, en­ gineering, and other training to social progress. ‘He Threatened To Fire Dissenters' Special to The Daily Texan GALVESTON, Feb. 21.— T h e investigation of The U niversity of Texas Medical Branch th e State House Committee on Un- American Activities developed into the story of the spider and the fly here today. by their sought Faculty members to weave a web of dam aging evi­ dence a round em battled Dean, Dr. J. W. Spies, on the sec­ ond day of the open hearing, b u t w hether the strands would hold still remained to be seen. Dr. Edw ard Randall Jr., Dr. T. G. Blocker, Dr. G. W. N. E g­ gers, and Dr. George R. H e r r ­ mann accused Dr. Spies o f every ­ thing from misuse of funds to hav­ ing Nazi views and saying he would “ chase the double-crossing president of the University (Dr. Homer P. Rainey) o ut o f th e sta te ." • W hether these alleged fa c te would hold w a te r was n o t know n here as the hearing went on into the night, with the whole school in a state of confusion and drastic regential or legislative action ap­ pearing to be the only solution to the controversy. in On the witness stand th e morning, Dr. Randall Jr. said he had correspondence about Dr. Spies’s work f o r the Rockefeller foundation in China and those let- e x a m in a tio n ^ Speaking on “ Inequalities of E ducational Opportunity," and pro­ posing federal aid to schools as a solution of the problem, Mrs. Homer P. Rainey will lead the Austin Forum of Public Opinion a t Austin High School Monday night a t 8 o’clock. Mrs. Rainey’s introductory talk will be broadcast by KNOW. The discussion will concern the factors which have made and are making local control and local support of free public schools inade­ < "» quate, and will bring ou t some ♦ of the in educational opportunity, H. H. Hoyt, director of the forum, announced S a tu r ­ day. ........-............ - inequities - ■ 'We Lose Every Battle But Last' around Free public schools have been j organized two general principles, local control and local support based primarily upon ta x ­ ation of real property, he said. As conditions have changed, this in unequal flavor ed ucational opportunities between “ America has never been in a the states and between communi­ ties within states. Such a system licked th a t she w asn’t I* now inadequate breaghe of t h e 1 until she won the last battle, and W ebb Says Don't Get Discouraged I system has resulted w ar y e t „ , the birth rate is higher in some sections than in others, the fact the nature of wealth has th a t changed from real to corporate. The United States has no cause the unequal distribution of na- for becoming discouraged over its tural the strong war e f f o rt so far> Drt Webb be_ opposition of districts within states. t h R t l thin w ar is not likely to be much i . I t Z ^ v e a l e d by a ' t t e r ^ h a t Dr. Spies had discharged from his position with the Peiping Lnion Medical College in China, tho later losing a suit against college charged in wrongful dismissal. d iffe re n t,” affirm s Dr. W alter P. Webb, University historian. l I ' e v e i b e c a u . e . to a reapportionm ent f resources, and which he been I PT <'nt 5®n “ d",e,aU’ hlis be<,n dupl'- , ‘T , eaten in noarlv c v o r v war the c ountry has fought— and Amer- i lea has never lost a war. / .....* — j , Reading from a prepared s ta te ­ the ment, Dr. Blocker explained D ean’s “ spy book” and “ spy sys­ tem ,” which he, Dr. Dr. Spies used Blocker, said to force fa c u lty 7 ^ A ™e,ripan Revolution was members into supporting him. Dr. ge annUal 8alary Per I town. During the W ar of 1 8 1 2 , a S t n n p o f defeats until Y o r k - Blocker, assistant of ; surgery, testified Dr. Spies came professor i I -a- Tho discussi on will e mp h a s i z e ; i inequal i t i es which n o w exist t he in the length of school term s in d iffe re n t states. an n u a l e x p e n d i t u r e ^ p u n iT a n d the aver aire a n mi ni J - ! in IV X 1 * teac r , Rainey Describes U. T. War Effort a f r a te rn ity dance one n ig h t the c ountry was invaded and the i capitol burned. In the World W ar . and was in Dr. Blocker’s opinion, the Allies were tim e .steadily until March, 1918. Amer- loudly proclaimed, said Blocker, ican forces were not defeated in th a t he “ could fire or pu t into the th at war, but the Allies were, a1- army any faculty member or s te ­ rnest until recalled. the end,” Dr. Webb dent of d ra ft age." • back drunk. Dr. Spies at pushed this “ In r war like this one. Amer- ! He said he could do this n o t body was really expecting Japan added that the dean told him th a t I ’ll to go to w ar; and we were deceiv- j ‘‘No m a tte r what you say, ed about Japanese str e n g th ,” the have a record of tw en ty - through the d e a n ’s historian declares. it in fou r hours,” alleged spy system. Immortal 14: They Pass French Exam told “ I hope you gentlemen realize," the committee, Dr. Blocker ’’that men in my position are sim­ ply committing academic suicide if you don’t see fit to get rid o f this dean .” took their foreign Of the thirty-two stu dents who Dr. Randall Jr., professor o f alleged recently lan- statem ents of Dr. Spies m ade to guage in French, fou rteen made him in September, 1939, approv- ing of sufficient scores to pass it, Dor- totalitarianism, H itle r’s tre a tm e n t of the Jews, the Ja p - othy Schons, chairman of the for- an- ane^e race over the Chinese, and eign 1 criticizing the British Em pire as nounced. therapeutics, committee, language repeated Those passing were Thomas P. “ outmoded.’’ Dr, Hermann, of medicine, claimed th a t the Dean Hawkins, Helen Grace H eath, Rob- made disparaging rem arks about ort Hobbs, Kirby Orr, Bill Arvin the Regents and Dr. Rainey at a Rosamond. Frances Russell. Scott meeting of the school’s executive Scager, Charles Wallace Smith, Constance E. Spenrs, Mary Agnes Stinson, and Billie J a u r e a Watson. Major J. R. Parten, See MED ROW, Page 3 committee. professor fo rm e r No funds are available for the Dr. Allan Cole, instructor equipment a t present, and priori- history, will open a panel discus- biggest ties will cause f u r th e r delay, even sion on “ The Struggle for World when the finances are settled, Dr. O rder,” a t the University Com- " 0fdncb sa*d John Griswold, professor of chem- munity Church ical engineering, said. ->nb ovcr j o’clock. today at vital Industries has in . D eclaring th a t “ it will be the labor-producing accomplished,” Dean Pearl IO H arbor the demand for labor in tb a t fdnco skilled I' The University has been able I Dr. Clarence Ayres, professor stances doubled and trebled. The publication is the jo urnal ^'■'xas Personnel conference held annually on the campus. The in many in- cdd<’r i* Mrs. Nella Mac Dieter of the I niversity’s Student Em- sue of the Texas Personnel Re­ view. , > ^ to buy most of the things it needs, of economics, Mrs. Grace Delano but each delay has been longer. Office f u rn itu r e has been deliv- of sociology, will be the other Clark, and Rex Hopper, professor ^or a conference of all regional E r e c to r s of defense in Washington March 13-14. At that tra in in g Theodore Bedeen, associate j time plans will be made to coor- ered, the electric clocks are run- speakers of the panel. ning, and w a te r has been piped into the fountains. B ut the lab- secretary of oratories are lame children, Lab 303 is an example: here is a g re a t room, empty but chairs, a desk, and rough the lead the worship service Sunday in the absence of the Rev. Milton in a forum on “ New Men for the Y.M.C.A., will dinate ,u r ( a u * He will leave early n ext month „.,m The conference was organized three years ago on the campus to in advance personnel schools and colleges, in business, industry and in general. The jo urnal was the r e ­ sult of tho need of a publication Courses have been set up under to inform the members of what a a score of cities over the state, and ^ ops on b‘ t e c i n the yearly meet- stepped-up training all over the country. the professions engineering relations two Maxwell. Mr. Maxwell is assisting Dean Wool rich’s supervision in th e j tables. F o u r sets of pipes th a t will I Christian W orld” a t the m i d w i n - some sixty will be offe re d thi.- mg! •‘This Thing Called Personnel these, D uring final exam inations eight found guilty of stu d e n ts were cheating. Of f o u r were freshm en, and fo u r were u pp er­ classmen. The freshm en were pen alized by course and were p u t on disciplin- ary probation fo r the spring sem- pressed air, steam, and hot ester. The other fo u r were sus- pended from the spring semester. into the University for j benches, stick up in some fu tu re time c a rry loss of credit concrete floor. cold w ater through two for the in com- te r conference of the Pilgrim Fel- spring, many of them a t the Un ­ versify proper. Men are and lowship in F o rt W’orth. laboratory David Clark and John H unter, fo r the the University stud ents, are attend in g armed forces, and for the radio, the conference w ith Mr. Maxwell. I aircraft, and other industries. technical positions w ’ trained R a t i o n s ” by J. W'alter Dietz and Cyrus, Martha Elizabeth Elliot! 'This South Wind Blowing S o ftly " R u th Edna Ellsworth, Billie Jo nth >y Robert Clarkson Clothier are also among tile articles. How to Save on Rubber Chemis! to Discuss Future of Vitamins BY DICK SMITH W a n ta save those tires? V. L. comes nearly slick (2) be rotated every four that tires Experim entation has shown thousand th a t driver check daily conservation aug-: for low tires, weekly fo r proper the right fro nt to the spare, the his that that the valve spare to the right rear, the right regrooved tires outlive slick tires, tires, the system which a ffo rd s the best sonable that one can save rubber mcnt of health and life in th a t! Though it might sound unrea- will The vitamin* and the role they improve- in the is as follows: shift by having ru b b e r removed f r o m w o r l d w i l l be subjects of discus- .ion when the annual University in research lectures are local cab company. M r . March by Dr. R o g e r J. Williams, th a t the slick professor of chemistry. rcar Doughtie explains tests have shown likely play given the rear to the left fore, the left fore says a to tbc loft r c a r * and tbc to the right fore. tires slip, and therefo re b u m rub- Dr . W i l l i a m s , who has Doughtie, professor of m e c h a n ic al; miles (3) en gineering offers several gestions to those perplexed auto- pressure, and (4) owners who fe a r soon be casting ab o u t for a good j Unproper wheel alignm ent bargain th e ir legs p re m a tu re training for Uncle S am ’s m arching forces. is because it not onlv 1 Because it not only j ru b h e r-h u miner fnViinn I rubb er-burn in g friction, they will; cap be left on valve. in horse-flesh, or giving b th a t y#some Dean V. I. Moore Satu rday commended the In te r-F ra te rn ity Council for its decision to abolish forms of hazing, such as long walks and o ther form s of pre- i< initiation tests. Mr. Doughtie gives as thc fo re ­ most reason for tire wear, o u t­ side of careless driving and p ark ­ im proper wheel ing practices, alignm ent. Therefo.-e, his first suggestion is th a t automobile own­ “ I think it is a very wise ac­ ers have their wheels checked for tion," he commented. “ All of the once defective alignment ab ou t be tte r fra te rn itie s are engaged thousand every in g e tting rid of pledging duties, j miles ‘hell week,’ and mock initiations; He also suggests ( I ) th a t tires I be regrooved when the tread be- o i all aorta.” ten or tw enty _ to to Though retre a d in g has become bpr m orr adds s a n s hut also wears the tire unevenly.; Periodic checkups can prevent these conditions, says Mr. Dough- tie, because well equipped garages Mr. Doughtie. This can be done I grooving would be impossible be- delivered on have alignm ent racks which car by use of the process of regroov- I cause of ad ju st wheels with curacy, step of retreading. Moreover, the ! However, this would make re- aw arded the Chandler lectureship f n lv e r s ity t h i s year, was also designated for !t 1S **'11 not impossible to 5|jp jc«,„ anfj bave g re a te r air c i r - I the University Research Profes- save old and wearing tires, says cu la tion. Of course a second re* ^or^hip. His two addresses, to be this campus March 18 ai d 19. w ill deal with “ What the nearness of ing—-which in reality is the first groove to the fabric o f the tire. Can We Expect from V itam ins?” Sig­ the itrM ved tires, which have had their medal by Columbia treads grooved out and th erefore infinite ac- rapidly little than the « P 1 il owe vc r, a certain degree of beauty of regrooving is th a t you difference for by the time toe-in is necessary, and to off-set ican t possibly cross Uncle Sam by I regrooved tire became s l i c k again, this added wear on the fabric of the tire would be Mr. Doughtie suggests a rotation ber from the tire ra th e r than adds breaking down, anyhow, a d d s Mr. 1*1© V v 6 Q t h © r : of tires every four thousand miles, j ru b b e r to it. the casing, having it done, fo r it takes rub- j Doughtie. , 4 Warm with light rain* ------ ~--------------------------------------- -— and “ The Distribution and the nificance of the ‘R Vitamins.’ " *7/te Mewl Onside Steers Turn Tables, Beat Hogs The impossible happened last night in Fayetteville. Underdog Steers deftly trounced the champion Razor- backs, 58 to 37, repaying the Hogs for their victory the previous night. . . See SPORTS, page 2. Victory Song Today • A. D. Z anzig conducts “Victory sing” today at 4 in Hogg . . . Experimental Theater presents double-head­ er Monday night . . . Pianist Eugene List to play with Austin Symphony Orchestra Monday night . . See AMUSEMENTS, page 6. . SPORTS-PAGE TW O Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — P W . 2-2*173 SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1942 Winning T ile D aily T exan Classified A d s Ok:' . 'T— ^ w v | H I A- rn S vt A? ' , , 4 A. A ,4 HW ■ ,, , Bi Bm Auto Service Auto Service Auto Service Auto Service Backs Spark W hites to W in In Intra-Squad Game, 9 -6 Kutner Leads With 14 Points Steers Hit Shots, Ahead Entire W ay By B I L L W H I T M O R E T t r a n Sport* Editor F A Y E T T E V I L L E , Ark., Fab. 21 — H ot t e r t ha n a fire, a f i gh t i ng Texas t eam p av e the might y A r k ­ an s as Razorback* a 58-37 t r o u n c ­ ing here t o n i g h t before 1,500 f a n s a n d knocked the Porkers down into a tie f o r t he Conf er ence lead. I t was the second time the A r k ­ ans as team ha° eve r been be a te n by a c o nf er e nce foe in t h e i r aix- year-old f ieldhouse, the o t h e r loss bei ng to Texas in 1940. The Steers werp ahead t he e n ­ t i r e way, l eading by a t least nine po i nt s a f t e r the start . T he y c o n ­ trolled the b a c kb o ar d all the way, hi t it was j u s t a very lovely evening for the Longhorns. their shots well— in fact, an Ther e w a s n ’t individual st a nd- ou t f o r the Longhorns. T hey all were r eady. Malcolm K u t n e r wa s again all ov er the c o u r t and ma d e 14 points, mostly on f ast br ea ks where he used his speed t o g r e a t a d v a n t a g e and l e ft the Razorback* s t a n d i n g flat-footed. J o h n Ha r gi s and Los S a n de r , the “ in” men, wer e playing in top f o r m , and o u t - fou ght the Razor- backs' Huge Gordon C a r p e n t e r on t h e backboard. t h a t t h e i r it was The A r k a n s a s gym was pe c ul ­ iarl y s i l e n t To ni g ht the L o n g h o r n s ’ g a m e all the way, an d s t u n n e d P o r ke r followers c o u l d n ’t r ealize league-leadi ng t a k i n g such a b e a t i n g cl ub was f r o m j u s t a “ so-so” Texas team. Texas used a zone def ense and it worked to g r e a t a dv an t a g e, f o r t he Ra zor bac ks d i d n ' t g et as m a n y shots as last ni ght , especially f r o m f a r out. The P o rk e rs did g et m a n y chances on like they wer e the Steer* “ sna ke- hi t . ” T h e y ’d go in— an d out. tip-ins, b u t j u s t la*t night., B y G A V I N W A T S O N Torn * sport* S t af f Individual backfield star* held I the spo t l ight as the W h i t e s again d ef e a t e d t h e O r a n g e t e am, 9-6, in the football game of in Memorial the week St adi um S a t u r d a y a f t e rn o o n . i nt r a- s qua d second t e m p o r a r y N e w co me r s to the var si t y r os t er ran a n d passed t he mse l v es into a bit of footbal l glory J bef or e a fair-sized crowd a s se m­ bled to wat c h Coach Da n a X. Bi­ ble’* prospective 1942 gridiron machine. s pa r k e d flash, two White R a y m o nd Jones, Yea r l ing star, holstered up the s t e r l i n g Whi te team with his t r i pl e - t h r e at play- f o r m e r j ing, a n d Allen Lawler, the T e x a r k a n a n u mb e r squa d. The star of J a c k i e Field shone brightly as he a n d Fra nk l i n J e f f e r s p ut on a tw o -ma n passing s ho w in the last period f o r the second O r a nge squad to set up their onlv score. The t wo b egi nni ng t e a ms played u n s p e c ta c u l a r h ut s ou nd football until the t h e y wer e replaced hy other O r a n g e and Whi te squads. to to It wa* f urnish the first game as W alton Ro b er t s passed and r an the to O r an g e line. Her e Or a n ge g u a r d Bill K e n n e d y twice sme ar ed goal -hound plays, and Ro be r t s passed to P r o c t o r on the last down. P r o ct o r was smacked on l i ne ba c ke r Ken Matthew*, a n d the O r a n g e squad took over. J a ck ie Field dropped hack to kick but instead j a ck- rab- hited a r o u n d left end in a b e a ut i ­ ful field exhi bition of br o ken stepping. In the cl ear on the 40- yard line, H ar d- L u c k Field tripped and fell. f o r f o ur - ya r d the one by the Whi tes thrill of l e ft the t e am s these Shortl y b ef or e the hal f a n o t h e r i White t h r e a t came as Ra ymon d I J o ne s pas sed to end Wally Scott, who ma de a hard catch a n d then l a t e r a l e d o f f to Joe P a r k er , who three tries, Jon es passed to Heap over the goal fo r six points, and then McKay kicked the extra point to m ake the score 9-0 w ith the W hite squad on top. The number two Orange and W hite team s cam e onto the field with som e seven m inutes o f the gam e rem aining, and Jackie Field tossed thirteen passes, com pleting nine, six first downs and six points. the O ranges to give f or from The score cam e as the Orange squad marched their own 20-yard marker to the goal line in a aerie* of passing and running plays. Field m ade the actual coun­ ter by running over center from the 6-inch line, b ut tripped again to run around as he attem pted right end the extra point. the the g a m e ended w ith And final score: White* 9, O ranges 6. Ru n n i n g ent ir ely from a sin g le­ wing hack f ormation, the o ffen siv e was still weak, h ut d efen sive play *howed up several men strong as linebackers. C e n t e r A ubrey Gill played a c r a c k e r j a ck d efen sive gamp f or the Orange team , and Ken M atthews hacked up the Or­ in convincing fashion. ange C e n te r J a c k Sachse m ade some fine tackles for the startin g Or­ ange squad. line intrasquad A U D R E Y G IL L , starting can­ ter for the first W h ite team in football Satu rd ay’s tilt. G ill played an outstand­ ing defensive gam e, m aking sev­ eral fine tackles. A returning letterman, he is being counted on heavily to hold down a center slot in the fall gridiron cam paign. whs blocked out on Hic O ran ge twen t y. J o n e s ch a rg e d to the «ix- teen hut then passed incomplete to end the advance. T he first, scoring came just as the third q u a r t e r was endi ng when Tr a vi s Raven, tailback f or the se c­ ond O r a nge t eam, faded hack over his own goal line to pass and was t r a p p e d there by c ha r g in g Whi te linemen. This the Whi tes a 2-0 lead. The White team hegan rolling again a t the first of the last q u a r ­ ter as .Jones and McKay ran over c e n t e r and o f f th* O r a n g e eleven. Stopped here f or s a f e t y gave tackles to Only casualties for the day w ere Back Meredith Roberts and End Wally Scott, both out with leg injuries but exp ected to be in top shape again for next Saturday's tilt. Coach D. X. Bible said a f t e r the g a m e t h a t he was satisfied with the way the t e a m s wer e p r o­ gressi ng and believed he had f ou r r a t h e r squads e ve nl y m atched playing in Satu rd ay’s con test. “ The o ffe n se will im prove,” Coarb Bible com m ented, “ as the training sessions continue, and we work on other o ffen siv e form a­ tion s.” Aggies W in A gain As T.C.U. Falls, 33-27 Specie! f n Th* Potty Trrttn the C O L L E G E S T A TI ON , Fob. 21. — Aggies r a n g up two victories in a row by down i n g T.C.F. Frogs, 33*27 here S a t u r d a y night in a g a m e which saw < ach hold the lead tw'ire, and the score was tied f o u r t ime s bef or e the Aggies broke loose to lead, 20-16, at. the half. Again Mike Cokinos hal ted sc or­ ing «*ar by allowing Boh Mc­ Henr y b u t t h r ee points while col­ lecting o f f M c H e n r y ’s g ua r d in g to tie with Bill H e n d e r ­ son f or high honors. e i g ht Ga me was stow sc or i ng af f ai r with f i r s t field goal of second half comi n g a f t e r eight mi nu te s of hack a n d f or t h charging. took fouls Per sonal Floppy Blackmon and L. A. Mon r oe out for the Fr o gs, hut no Aggie* were chased, rn all, twentv-pight were called. Steer Boxers Fight L.S.U. Monday Sans Heavyweights Th e L on ghorn b oxi ng team left S a t u r d a y for Baton Rouge, La., they will me et the s t r ong wher e Tigers Monday, F e b r u a r y I,..S.I 23. the The Longhorn* begin me et with a deficit of 1-0 as the t e a m ’s two hea vywei ght s ar e now in 1' nrle S a m ’s a r m e d forces. In or de r to r ound out the pro­ g r am leaving the L on gho r n s ar e Austin ei ght- str ong, two being in lO.Vpound class, anil one be ­ the ing overwei ght. Ca ptain Dick Ho ck a da y will be unabl e to make the tr ip because of illness. L.S I . will fight a r e t u r n ma t ch with the L o ng ho t ns in Austin on March 16. Here is the record of the team the ine xper i enc ed Long ­ horn* will have to f a r e : L.S.U. 4, Idaho 4; L.S. I . 5, Florida 3; L.S.U. 6, Miami 2; L.S.U, 3, S. W. La. In stitu te 5. The L on gho r n s will be r e p r e ­ sented in the bo ut by t he follow­ ing b o x e n : N o r b e r t Leve ronne , Bernes, 125 120 p o u n d s; Bill ISS pou nd s ; poun ds; J oe Ader, pou nd s ; j Duvall George P o rt e r , 155 p ou nd s ; H u ­ bert Dean, 165 p ounds; Cha rl ey Richardson, 160 pounds; and Bill The h e a vy ­ Allen, 175 pounds. weight ma t c h will have to he f o r ­ feited. Cot ton, 148 IOO L e a r n i n g R e c r e a t i o n leadershi p On e h u n d r e d Uni v er si t y s t u ­ dent s a r e enroll ed in the r e c r e a ­ in civilian d e ­ tional fense course o f f e r e d f r o m 7 to 9 o ’clock on Monda y and F r i d a y night* at. the Union Bui lding u n ­ der direction of Mrs. Gladys W. Henderson. Sa ve During Our Annual U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s ST A T IO N E R Y H ere’s your chance to get quality stationery at a savings! B U Y THE FIRST B O X A T THE U S U A L PRICE and get THE S E C O N D B O X F O R O N E C E N T M O R E ! Buy your spring and summer supply now! Your choice of Scrolled Parchment, University Seal, A rt Etched Line, All A m erican C am pus, Varsity Stationery, and University of Texas D e ­ luxe Line. SEE THEM O N OUR SPECIAL DISPLAY TABLE T he L o n g h o rn s g ot o f f to a f l y ­ i n g s t a r t in t he f ir s t half, g a i n i n g t h e lead f rom the s t a r t and h ol d­ i ng as wide a m a r g i n as 22-9 a f t e r t e n minutes. A t t h a t point J a c k Fi t zg e r al d, who made f o u r of ^ e x a s ' s seven pointe with first l ong one-hand shots, fouled o ut a n d was r epl aced by Cur tis Pop- ha m . The Razor backs pulled up t o 23-14, then P o p h am and S a n d e r s a n k a couple of f ast goals while P i t t s and A d a ms hit, tw o long one* f o r Ar k a nsas a n d the half ended, 27-18, in f a v o r o f Texas. T h e r e was an exre*sive a m o u n t r f f oul i ng in t h e f ir s t period, with t h e of ficiating looking worse t ha n usual.. The referee* took a lot of b o o ­ ing f rom the cr owd all evening. F i t z g e r a l d was a very ear ly vie- I ti m of the whistle, once when H a r ­ gis really ma de the foul. The box score: f .... T E X A S ( 5 8 ) Kutnf>r. f Hargix, G r a d v , f Watkift. f S a nd e r , r Fi t zg e r al d, sr Br a h a n e v , g Dillon, z ______ , P o p ha m, g ....____ ( * 5 4 ... . o ft „. 5 2 4 I 2 _ A R K A N S A S ( 3 7 ) h A d a ms , f ___________ 3 H o n e a , f __________ 1 C a r t e r , f _____ ___ _ 0 C a r p e n t e r , r 4 Pi t t s, sr — ................ _ 5 ..... .. _ 0 Br adl ey, g Johnson, i t, e _____ 1 Re y e n g a , g _ 0 ft 4 I 2 0 0 0 4 0 I ft 0 I I 3 3 0 I 0 pf tp 4 14 9 4 O ft ft ft I 10 4 4 1 12 2 I 5 I *P p f 6 4 3 3 3 I 4 1 I 3 13 ft 1 3 ft ft I Total* ________ .. 23 12 16 58 Total* .... 14 9 19 37 Rice Smothers S.M.U., 65-31, in Houston to Tiie Da’Jy T eto n Feh, HOL* ST ON, 21. Rice over whel med Southern Methodist. 65-31, here tor ig t, taking a 27-7 lead at the half a n d finishing up wi t h substitute*. Boh Kinney, Owl cen ter, made 23 to take scoring honor*. The Owls swept into a 13-5 ma r gi n and n o t c h e d to 21-5 fix minute* be f or e the half A f t e r led, 33-8, t h e in. the w h e n E v e r y man on fcquad sc ore d before the end. th*v substituter w ent interm ission the Rice Tennis Schedule VARSITY COURTS I C o u rt B l a i n e * . 8 — N ixon v* 8 .30— Nixon vs. 4— Nixon v*. H ickm an. * 80 — Arrington v t . Hickman 6— 'aun». ... B aleck Freshm an C ourts fr Th# ' n e g firat -aper* round of a t o . rd robin at the follow - ing tim e* t ha for 8_O rm *o«e C offin , M itchell, Zlotnik. 4— Fp m n . B ritton , W agner, F ran k ­ lin A— Hall Zinc Ward. Naber*. Nog-appearance o f an y player, ea r- • f ly or freshm an, w ill rexult in f o r fe it No ga age! let toga b e t - -en player* them - M .*ee win M anonad. t t That Squeak You Heard Was Mice Lady . . . H • • • • • ATTENTION . . . Mercury and Lincoln Owners W e have purchased a large stock of M E R ­ C U R Y and L IN C O L N P A R T S and we have C O M P L E T E E Q U IP M E N T to service these cars. VISIT O U R S H O P and try our courteous and expert service. i , N G * ‘‘Authorized Ford Dealer** 2 0 2 W . l , t . PH. 8-3457 Wanted to Buy Garage Rooms HIGHEST CASH PRICES (or coed • uits. shoes. A. Sehw art* PH 8-0184 MALKIN PAYS MORE for iJsad S u its Clothing and Shoes 407 East 6 8-0266 GARAGE ROOM— for tw o boya. P riv a te entrance, show er, phons. N ew ly d eco- Cool# •ated. Innerspring m attresses. ju iet. clo se to U.T. Ph. 8066 or 1788. Furnished Apartments Room & Board Make Your Car Fit . . . For Longer Service Now it** more im portant than ever to have your car in good running order. Drive in for a Check-up today. O u r sk ille d m e c h a n ic s will c o m p l e t e l y o v e r h a u l y o u r e a r . . . c h e c k on th e ig n i t i o n , e l e c t r i c a l s y s te m , c o o l­ in g s y s te m , a n d b a t t e r i e s . . . c h e c k y o u r t i r e s . . . r e p a i r o r r e p l a c e w o r n p a r t s to giv e y o u r e a r a d d e d y e a r s o f se r v ic e . THOMSONMOTOR COMPANY 4 t h & L A V A C A P H O N E 5 3 9 1 Beauty Shops Home Bakeries you'll really CACTUS BK AUTY SH O P— Perm anents like. F in est m aterial* used. Moat efficien t operators. 1602 La­ vaca. Phone 6-6181. WUKASCH SISTERS— C o o Ii l e a and Cakaa in Stock. 1903 W ichita. 2-6898 Cates Laundries ’’One Day Service’* DRISKILL HOTEL LAUNDRY "T ru st your duds to our S u d s” Phone 6444 I 19 East 7th. M assages W est CAPITOL CITY HATH HOUSE— 305 l i t h . Phone 8-3997. Turkish h ath -—scien tific Swedish m assages. ‘‘For particular men and wom en." Com plete beauty service. YOU CAN learn to play a Hammond Organ or Solovox with only a few leaaons. P revious m usical training is not n ecessery, $1.50 per lasaon. Phone 3531 or inquire at Hammond Organ Studio, 3rd floor J. R. REED MUSIC CO. PHONE 3531 2002 G UADALUPE Coaching WHY FAIL SPANISH A. I. or 127 Make former In. •tructor. Reasonable rate*. Phone 2-8662. early coaching Hat* with EFFECTIVE MATH COACHING PURE and APPLIED R. M. Randle 2809 San A ntonio R. W. Farr Ph. 2-0761 Dressmaking "Ev e n i n g d r e s s e s i„ r Round-Up"— a specialty. Also achoo! dreg*** and al­ fittin g*. 2001 Sa­ teration*. Excellent bina. Phone 8-3069. TAILORED A FORMAL. Costum e de­ sign in g. Phone 4725. 307 We*t 21st. CAR T I R E S WORN OUT* W e’ve b e e n for ten day-old bicycle* drafted. 2 rash. Call 2-9159. 1937 OLDSMOBILE CO TTE; five tire* radio One hundred dollar*. Phone Jean Templin, fiv e to *ix, at 4654 FOR SALE: Beautiful m uskrat fur coat, • mall aire. $75.00. Tel. 2-1643. mrh FOR SALE— L.C. Sm ith typew riter, 14- little: excellent condition. Coat g 12 6; big discount. H lohnaton. 3706 Gilbert. Aumin, Texa*. carriage: u«ed M O N E Y T O L O A N On 11 ia monde— W atch es— L u ggage— Suita T ypew riters— O vercoats— Trunk* Clarinet*— S axop h ones— Trum pets "We Pay cash for old gold" ANYTHING OF VALUE L. LAVES 117 Ea»t 6th St. Classified A d v e r tis in g RATE CARD R E A D E R A D S 20 W o rd s — Maxim um $ .46 1 2 tim es .56 3 tim es .70 4 tim es .80 5 tim es .90 6 tim es 1.00 R eader A d s A r e To Be Run On Consecutive D ays We Charge fo r C opy Change D IS P L A Y A D S I column wide by I inch d eep 60c per insertion the right Wa reserve to edit copr the sty le used by > correspond with he Daily Texan. M essenger S ervice until 4:00 p. rn. se rv ice until w eek-days. Counter 5 p. rn. A L L A D S C A S H IN A D V A N C E Dial 2-2473 for further infor­ mation or m essenger service. R esponsible for one incorrect insertion only No refund# for cancellations For Sale M usic Lessons Loans K RAVEN— S in es 1890— Plum bing. Wa range*, beatera connected, sin ae. sewer* repairing, ter beater piping gas in * topped 1606 Lavaca. Phons 676$ Plumbing Records “ IF f COULD ONLY PI AY A CONGER- T IN A ”— V ocadarce— The Four King S isters with The Rhythm “Rey*." "Ser­ er,ad e For S trin g*’'— W aits with Freddv Martin and Hi* O rchestra: records now on sale a* J. R. REED MUSIC CO., 806 C ongress. ’ALW AYS IN MY H EART"— F o x Trot with Glenn Miller and His O rchestra. ‘A S trin g of P earls”— Fox Trot with Glenn Miller and Hi# O rchestra; records now on sa le at J. R. REED MUSIC CO., 806 C ongress. Schools and Colleges B u g l o s s COLLEGES quiet, private ,1ft W EST 2 4 ’4 Rf.— A ttractive and livin g m om . bedroom com bination with a k it­ ch en ette and hath. Ring Rice bell. Ph. 7767. entrance. Hee istic apartm ent. Twin bede, W ANTED— Girl to ahare lovely m odern­ inner­ spring m a ttresses, frigidaire. Approved house. 2 blocks cam pus. $11.60 a m onth. 2-4748. 606 BE LLEVUE PLACE— Two room s. shower, and private entrance. A uto­ matic heat. Accom m odate 3 boys. Cook­ ing p rivileges. W alking distance. Billa paid. Phone Mrs. P reston at 8-1242. UNUSUALLY apartm ent. Large DESIRABLE — Duplex livin g room, bed­ room. No kitchen. Tile ehower. private entrance. Bdls paid, maid service. Ac­ com modate 3. Phone 2-1740. FIVE ROOMS— H alf bus— two from U n iversity, garage. No bills paid. block $35. Phone 2-2727. Furnished Houses U n iversity MODERN COLONIAL. to ( e a s t ). F ive room s, nice condition, innerspring m attrest.es, W est­ inghouse. $48.50. Also unfurnished c o t­ tage. sam e neighborhood. 6997. con ven ien t Furnished Rooms S n 3 iS ?S 1 8 8 2 !!J Z .„ Texas' L argest Chain of Schools W rite for Free Catalog. Typing BEDROOM, private bath. Reasonable to refined U n iversity couple capable of Spanish. su b jects! coaching Jr. High Math, etc., 2-4266. 2608 G U A D A L U PE—-L ovely for boys, men or b u sin ess women. N icely furnished, twin beds, innerspring m at­ tresses. show ers, private entrance. 8087 room maid 2-5286. TYPING— N eat A accurate. Mrs. L. 8. Fraser. 2704 O akhurst Ave. 4717. Garage Rooms EFFICIENT TY PIST— Dependable. Mrs. W asson 907 W. 22nd 2-9136. TYPING done as you like it. All kinds. Mrs. Albert Senti. 8-4367. Typewriters MASTER BUILT UNDERW OOD Type- writer. Model 3. Pica Type. Bargain at $35. Alm ost new fluorescen t desk lamp, $5. Mahon, 307 W est 26th, after 7 p.m. NICE QUIET Garage room. One stu d en t $12.50 per m onth. Share bath with one in stu d en t. Room with private bath home. 906 W est 22nd. 2-6806. E N FIE L D : M ost com fortable, a ttra c tiv e quiet room, d ressin g room, tile show er hath, ceilin g fan. maid serv ice. Mrs. Roy Rather, 7617. private ehower, GARAGE ROOMS— Double, sin g le with innerspring, garage, walking distance. N one better for seriou s stu d y and com fort. 3126 Duval. LARGE HOMEY ROOM W i t h privata s l e e p i n g porch, l a r g e c l o s e t s — for 2 or c a m p u s . Garage. M rs. 3 g i r l s . 2 blocks Bowman, owner. 4598 or 2-9709. 1909 RIO GRANDE— for Girls. E sp e­ cially a ttra c tiv e room* on ly 3 blocks from cam pus. Su b stan tial hom e-cooked meal*. Maid service. Reasonable. Phone 8-6802. private hath, maid MRS. LINDT.E Y’S — V acancies. Room w ith aervlce. M eals served. Dining room open to public. Cor­ ner 18th A Colorado. 2-0194. NICE ROOM— for one or two boys. P ri­ vate entrance. Tile show er. 804 E ast 32nd S treet. Phone 2-8842. HO each. 3114 W H EELER— Room and board for boma. P hon s in privata $26.00. two nasals two boys O n a or Room and 5063. 206 EAST 22N D — For boys. Near E n gi­ neering Building C om fortable room s hom e-cooked m eals. Reasonable. and Phone 2-1986. VACANCY— GIRLS. Two blocks Cam pus. Room and board. Maid te r r ie s. S in g le or double rooms. Reasonable rates. 1916 N ueces. Phone 2*7748. Rooms for Boys LARGE F U R N ISH ED ROOM — with p rivate entrance and bath, maid se rv - ice. furnace heat. Most a ttra c tiv e and quiet. W alking d istan ce of U n iv ersity . Phone 2 -0163. 911 W EST 19th— U n u su ally nice room with con n ectin g tile bath, twin b ed *.y * P rivate entrance in private brick home. Near U n iversity. R easonable. 7966. ATTRACTIVE— Two bedroom s— sin g le or double. Study, p rivate bath, P hone service. 2304 Leon S t. new MRS. S T U B B S HOUSE— 1912 N u eces. in hom e Two blocks cam pus. Rooms and garage room s. Twin bede, inner- sp rin gs, sh ow ers, maid, garages. Maale optional. Reasonable. Phone 2-9521. joining bath REASO NABLE PRICED ROOMS— Ad­ in privata boma. Tw in beds or sin g le ; p rivate entrance, garage, 2620 Speedw ay. One cam pus. Phone 8-1606. block Rooms for Girts U N I V E R S I T Y CO-OP O P E R A T E D A N D C O N T R O L L E D BY S T U D E N T S A N D F A C U L T Y Coaching or Typing Ads Special R ates - - 2 L ine A d s $ 2 .0 0 A ion til V t Call 2 - 2 4 7 3 B efore 4 :0 0 for A lessenger S ervice SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1942 PW .. 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T i X A N — Pinon. 2-2473 Sumatra, Bali Thought Lost* A s Allies Battle Jap Armada Colleges lo Train Navy V-1 Enlistees Fram I.N.S. Reports CHICAGO. Feb. 21— (IN S) — America’s colleges and universities tonight were invited to partici­ pate in a program designed to create a new V-1 basic training pool of 80,000 trained men for Naval service annually. The program, Joseph W. Barker, a special assistant in the Navy de­ partment, explained at a Univer­ sity of Chicago conference on pre­ induction military service, was formulated to help fill the N avy’s estimated annual need for 250,000 enlisted men, 30,000 aviation ca­ dets, and 11,000 reserve officer candidates for general deck, en­ gineering, and specialized duties. Under the plan the nation’s ac­ credited colleges and universities would their activities with those of the Navy in o ffer­ ing special training courses. A fter completion of preliminary courses those students qualifying by spe­ cial examination will receive avia­ tion, deck, engineering or special duty training, Barker, form er head of engineering at Columbia Uni­ versity, said. The others will con­ tinue their pre-induction courses and upon graduation will be as­ signed to active duty as appren­ tice seamen. integrate Declaring th a t education m u st to w a r conditions, be adjusted B arker told the conference: “ We are dangerously n e a r to losing this war, unless we awake lethargy, spit on our from ou r the handles firmly hands, grasp and plow a stra ig h t fu rro w to ­ ward victory', tu rn in g under the weeds of complacency, cocksure­ ness, cynicism, and contem pt.” As the Australian seaport city of Darwin continued eva­ cuation of civilians, United States and Dutch Air and Na­ val units tangled with a Japanese armada off the island of Bali, on the southeastern tip of Java, in one of the greatest naval battles of the war. Batavia dispatches credit the United States and Dutch forces with sinking or damaging an estimated seventeen vessels, including a cruiser blown up and a big troop-laden transport destroy­ ed. Despite such encouraging reports of successful action against the Jap swarm, however, the London Daily Mail more accurately reported from Batavia that both Bali and Sumatra ‘‘must be considered lost.” This account added the Japs have massed a large fleet of barges for a direct attack against Java, where the Dutch East Indies naval base of Surabaya is situated. Rangoon, many of whose civilians have already been evacuated, reported that combined United Nations efforts seem to have stemmed the Jap push toward the Rangoon- Lashio railway, but that the enemy planes auccessfully bombed the city of Bassein, on the Irrawaddy River. An enemy encroachment up that river would have the double purpose of outflanking Rangoon and the Burma Road to China, and at the same time, cut communications between Burma and India. The most heartening news of the fighting fronts came from a Moscow communique which claimed that the Red Army had penetrated German defense lines outside of Leningrad. The Soviet Crimean Army, according to British ladio reports, has landed sea-borne troops near the port of Theodosia amid fierce fighting. Other fronts were comparatively quiet. ■ ------------------------------------------------------------- 4 arm y MONTEVIDEO, Feb. Pro-Axis Element Loses First Round In Uruguayan Fight 21 —- stood ( I N S ) — U ru gu ay ’s guard tonight around congress­ ional buildings and the homes of nationalist (oposition) leaders a f ­ ter P re side n t Alfredo Baldomir dissolved congress today and post­ poned a national election schedul­ ed fo r March 29. His action fol­ lowed an internal fight between the anti-axis governm ent and the opposition party. Filipino Civilians Resist A W ar Department communi­ que said Saturday night that civ­ ilian resistance to the Japanese in occupied are a s o f the Philip­ pines is grow ing in intensity, and increasingly e ffe c ­ is becoming tive. The communique quoted Gen­ eral Douglas MacArthur in say­ ing that despite the harshness and severity o f the military rule im­ posed by the invaders, the spirit of the liberty-loving Filipinos re­ mains undaunted. “ Confidence in ultimate victory and hope th a t the Ja pa n e se soon may he expelled from the islands is expressed by all classes o f the people,” M acA rth ur said. FAGE THREE—GENERAL Darwin Exodus Nearly Complete Raiding Planet Bear Swastika Sign From I.N.3. Reports Evacuation from Darwin o f all civilians not needed in the d*. fense o f the city is almost com­ pleted, I.N.S. reported in a bul­ letin Saturday n ig h t from Canberra Prime Minister John Curtin de­ nied earlier reports, however, that martial low had been established at the strategic seaport city, which was bombed heavily by the Japan­ ese Thursday. landings Australia, preparing for an ex­ pected Japanese invasion attempt, received a foretaste o f the threat with reported Jap on Timor, half-Portuguese and half- Dutch 350 m iles only northwest o f Darwin. A Royal Australian Air Force communique said that Koepang, capital o f the Dutch half of Timor, was raided Friday, and an enem y convoy was sighted nearby. island Army Minister Francis M. Forde said the Australian govern­ ment had no further information regarding the situation on Timor, communication* as it is believed between Timor and Australia have been severed. Further indication o f the grad­ ually developing offensive against the Australian north coast was seen in an R.A.A.F. communique that swastika-marked planes took part in the raid Thursday against Bathurst Island, a vital point just north of Darwin, command­ ing the sea approach to that naval base. The communique character­ ized the raid as doing little dam­ age, hut did not elaborate on the swastika markings. Prime Minister Curtain charged that Jap fliers who staged the mass raids on Darwin showed “cal­ lous disregard” for the rules o f war, as they bombed a hospital ship that was clearly marked by a huge red cross, and machine gunned both B enim * and B aget hospitals, causing casualties St each. A ustralian and Dutch A Tokyo dispatch, however, re­ ported that the fliers spared a hospital ship in Darwin Harbor. troops were prep arin g to withdraw front Portuguese Timor as soon as Por­ tuguese forces arrived to Garrison the island, Curtin said. The Por­ tuguese troops were on their way when the invasion was made. • th a t t h a t Word th a t all American and British shipping had been pooled and its movements would henceforth he decided by a “ com­ bined shipping a d ju stm e n t board” operating both from London and Washington was b ro ught to Presi­ dent Roosevelt today by Admiral Emory S. Land, recently named war shipping adm inistrator. B itter rivalry flared into a de­ mand the U ruguayan vice­ president take over the cou ntry ’s a reins. This demand came stre e t meeting last night of m em ­ bers of the minority p a rty headed by Sen. Luis Alberto de H errera, foe of Pan-American co-operation, Functional chiefs of the W ash­ and vigorously opposed to the plan ington office will he Land and ; for construction of naval and air Sir A rth u r Salter of the British , bases with United S ta te s funds. Ministry of W ar T ransport. The The president, who said he London c o u n te rp a rt will he headed shortly will explain his a ttitu d e to by Lord L a t h e r s , British m inister I the people of Uruguay, declared of tra n sp o rt, and W. Averell Har- ; th a t the eiectjon had not been can ­ lend- j relied, b ut only postponed, and alman, U S. minister and lease expediter added his assurance that “ indivi- the United , d u a j liberties are not a ffected .” Disclosure a t “ Many inform ers have m yster­ iously disappeared, and a secret Meanwhile, I.N.S. London dis- society known as the “F F F ” or: patches indicated t h a t the asserted ^Fighters F o r Freedom ” has been Timor Island invasion may lead to formed to foster civil resistance,’ the Nipponese the report continued. trouble between and Portuguese governments. Japs and Portuguese The communique further said that the Japanese military au­ thorities woke up one day to find that proclamations which they had th roughout Manila and plastered the countryside been strangely altered. had all A London News Chronicle dis- patch from Lisbon said the Por­ tuguese g overnm ent is no t satis­ fied with J a p explanations regard­ ing the asserted landing of Nip­ ponese forces on the Portuguese half o f the island. He predicted that the govern­ ment must widen the powers now being used to d r a f t men for the armed forces so that m anpower I a reduction in wage rates, or at can be allocated to well. lpast a freezing o f both. industry as Board to Direct Moves Of Merchant Ships th at States, in concert with the other is d ra ftin g republics, American broad plans for the convoying of shipping within W estern Hem i­ sphere territorial w aters was made today by Acting Secretary of State Sum ner W’elles. P r o f P u b lish er B ook Publication of “ M anufacturing textbook fo r shop Processes,” a courses f o r sophomore and ju n io r engineering a n ­ nounced S a turda y by M. L. Bege- man, professor of mechanical e n ­ gineering and su p erin tendent of engineering shop laboratories a t The University of Texas. students, was C a n a r y C asu a l... Comfortable Typically University in Style RU BBER-SO LED SPO RT SHOES $ 5 a n d fceer Swimmers Defeated By Aggies in Dual Meet, 55-38 Papich, Randall Diving Stars In Th# I n t r a mu r a l S p o r t l i t e - By Bill N obli Intramural Editor A. A M. Grabs Meet Spotlight Aggie Tracksters Schedule IO Meets, Three Against U. T. COLLEGE STATION, Feb. 21. — J. W. (Dough) Rollins, head track coach at Texas A.&M. Col­ lege, announced his 1942 cinder schedule this week and it discloses that his thinly clads will take part in ten meets opening with the Border Olympics at Laredo on March 6 and close with the South­ west Conference m eet in Dallas on May 8-9. Coach Rollins has a better team than usual this year but is w oe­ fully short on performers for some events, noticeably the dashes and broad jump. Earl (Bama) Smith, his sprinter the last two seasons, developed a bad knee in football is doing little so far. Roy and B u c e k, champion hurdler, is the captain this year. conference The schedule: March 6: Border Olympics at Laredo. Varsity only. March 13: San Marcos Teachers and Sam Houston Teachers a t Col­ lege Station. V arsity only. March 21: F a t Stock Show a t F o r t Worth. V arsity and fre s h ­ men. March 28: Texas Relays at A us­ tin. Varsity and freshmen. April 2: Texas a t College S ta ­ tion. Varsity only. April l l ; North Texas Aggies and John Tarleton Plowboys a t College Station. Freshm en only. April 18: T.C.U., S.M.U., and Baylor a t College Station. V arsity only, April 21: Rice a t College S ta ­ tion. Varsity only. April 24-25: Drake Relays a t Des Moines. Iowa. Varsity only. May 2: Rice and Texas a t H ous­ ton. V arsity and freshmen. May 8-9: Southwest Conference meet a t Dallas. Intramural Schedule B A S K E T B A L L L eague P U y -O ffe C lass A Basketball is fa st drawing to a definite end now, and clearly-de­ fined favorites step into the in­ tramural sportlite. teams hustling Thursday and Friday nights, some battled through to the semi-finals which will be played next W ednesday. Both A and B teams looked hot. The Kappa Sigmas are all-out fa ­ vorites in both events, having top­ notch hustlers on both teams. barely overcame Friday night, a scrapping B quintet the A.T.O.’s, but Kappa Sigma round­ ly out-played them. It must be said here, however, that any team that can come from behind at the half, IO to I, and take the lead, 12 if only for a short period, is good. The A.T.O. cagers did just that, but were unable to hold the margin. l l , to • The game ended 16 to 15 with the K. Sig’s o u t in fro n t a f t e r a hard-fought second period. The Tejas Club, an organization usually good in tra m u ra l in all events, comes through in b asket­ ball. Their A team is rated a d e f­ inite favorite to make a good show­ ing in the final matches, as are the Rinky Dinks. In the M.I.C.A. division, the Dam Yanks and the House of Glen have shown their fire and deserve credit fo r good play. It should be a toss-up between these clubs. The Kappa Sigmas and the Dekes are the f r a te r n ity favorites. In the B league, Kappa Sigma and Phi Sigma take the lead, bu t it should clearly be the Sigs all the way. With boys like Joh n n y Dorsey, J. H. Helland, and David Belew, they can’t miss. tin top of that. Phi Sigma made a poor showing against a fighting bunch of Sig E p ’s Friday night, despite the f a c t they won, 13 to 7. W hereas the K. Sig’s handle the ball well and usually make their shots tall, the Phi Sig’s muffed m any chances fo r points. The Rinky Dinks and Gamma Delta have come through the elim­ inations to ride high in the club division, h u t P r a th e r Hall and Brackenridge are still in the r u n ­ ning, and if the gang can get big Joe Leonard and short Hudson Lockett going, they may give the fellows some trouble. Eschberger House and Mergele are tops so f a r in M.I.C.A. In intram ural boxing and w rest­ ling this week, there are quite a few boys already entered, h u t they represent comparatively few teams. These team s are going to clean up in points if others do n ot g e t waked up. The A.T.O.’s have in wrestling eight men entered alone, and the Phi Gam’s have five. The Rinky Dinks and L.C.D. lead the club division so far, and Smith House and House of Glen are taking in terest fo r M.I.C.A. In handball Robert S tre a k y , the man who stayed with Chicago champ Bunny Levett 21 to 19 the other day, is Delta T a u ’s f a ­ vorite to cop the points. Med Row— (Continued from page I ) chairman of the Board of Re­ gents, declared the board g e n e r­ ally felt in 1939 th a t the man to be appointed dean of the Medical School should have more power to carry on his adm inistrative work. 7 o ’clock— I — Pi Kappa Alph a vs. L am bda Chi Alpha. 2— B lom qu ist Swede* vs. Dam Yanks. 7:4 5— I — T arpiey T erm ite* v*. Wil- I ker son Wildcats. 8:3 0— I — S m ith H ouse v». A l l o rat*. 9 :1 5 — I — Rubicon v*. C a m pu s Guild. C lass B 7 :45— 2—Phi G am m a Delta vs. D elta Tau Delta. 8 . 3 0 — 2— B. Hall vs. P r a t h e r H all. T A B L E T E N N IS SIN G L E S 7— 2— Bob Golbeck va. George Ra - ! born. 4— J a c k Helm v*. Bob A m u n d - I sen. I McNeil. i :15— I — K en n eth Keeton vs. J a m e s Jo e l 3— J a m e s B a tc helor vs. Mayers. 4— Billy T h o m p s o n vs. O. B. 7 :30— 2— Harold S m i t h Beal* Dean. 3— Quentin Bates v*. A lbert Gu- vs. ; Parham. I diera. 7:4 5 — 2— J u a n Munoz v*. Dick r e a ­ gan. 3— W e r n e r G o ld sm ith vs. J im D u d ­ ley. 4— Bill E v e r e t t vs. L a u ro Y zsg uirre. 8 o ’clock— I — Bill A w f r i c h t v*. M a rtin S re hnik. 2— W. M. A ltm an vs. E v e r e t t H. Brown. 3— L a rr y H ago vs. Wilfred Arnold. 4— Weldon Wellm an vs. Lloyd Halbrook. 8:15 o ’clock— I — J . L. Adam s v s. M- L. Baskin. 2— Billy McM anem in v*. A. Hen son. 3— J o e G racey vs. Allan Nelson. 4— J o e G e r h a r d t vs Rus sell T ad aro . 8:30 o ’clock— I — J a c k Seriff vs. Glyn n Jo n e s. 2— Lloyd H a r v e s o n vs. Bob H u eh - ingson. 4— J a m e s B rax to n va. E dw in McKay. 8 ;45 o’clock— I — P hilip Zlotnik va. Jo h n H as n eas. 2— H a r m o n Lowm an va. J im m ie P e t e r s o n . 3— Don Dunlop vs. Aaron P u m p h r e y . 4— W illiam Roq ue - more vs. Owen F a u t l e r o y . • H A N D B A L L S IN G L E S 7 o ’clock— I — A lb ert T«ai v*. V irgil Verhey den 2— W i n n e r of G e r h a r d t va. Billy McMan em in v*. Lewis Randall. 3— J a c k Adkins vs. J a m e s B. Jo n e s . 5— Bob 7— Roy C h uoks vs. Sam Sheffield v s. E r n e s t Sehro ed er. 8-—B ee C o llett vs. w inn er of B a k e r vs. L eon P a y to n . 9— Bill Monks vs. Oliver F a n ­ nin. IO— F r a n k S in g er vs. K en n eth K ee­ ton. S u t h e r la n d . He declared t h a t some m embers of the Board o f Regents a t th a t 7:4 6— I — W iley R oo eth ve. w i n n e r of R o b e rt S t r e a k y vs. Dan J u r a n . J — W i n ­ time and local faculty m embers ner of K en n eth S eib ert vs. Diek Don- felt th a t the Medical School was I,. S im pson. 3— Ja m e a no v an v*. H. being run by a small group of Bla n c h e tte vs. H u g h Munnell. 6—Tom doctors and was under heavy local I Rhod*» v«- R ich a rd H ud s o n . 5— T o m - '’*• f r *n k K e n n e d y . 7— W in n e r ! influence of Bellm ont A Boh W a t s o n vs. Terrell “ Until Small. 9— H e n r y H u p e r vs. W a l t e r C a ­ ver). IO— Hal L a t ti m o r e vs. Rennie B a ­ ker. the Regents * tell the University the Presiden t of to straighten out this a ffa ir and he willing to back him up with em ­ phasis on ‘back him up,’ this prob­ lem will continue,” he said. 8:30 o’clock— I — Billie M cDugald va. Jim P orte r. 2— W'mner of S tan ley Gold­ stein A Ben B ritain vs. Clyde Craven. 3— Bill Randolph vs, w in n e r of Bill K in ­ ney St J o h n Seav. 6— O tis G ary va. w in ­ ner of Lewis S te p h e n s * J a e k T itu s . 5— J o h n McReynoId* vs. T obin A r m ­ st r o n g . 7— J o h n S eam an vs. George F re n d e rg a s t . 9— Tom B r ad h eld vs. w i n ­ ner of Bill S w anson A Robert Ja c k so n . IO— W'mner of Bill S t a r k A H e n r y A n ­ drew s vs. w inner of J a m e s Cox A J a m e s Hopk ms. Games This Week: Basketball schedule for the coming week: Tuesday, F e b ru a ry 24— A.&M. vs. T.C.U. a t F o r t W o rth; Baylor vs. Rice at Houston. Friday, F e b ru a ry 26— T.C.U. vs. Arkansas a t Fayetteville. Saturday, F e b ru a ry 27— S.M.U. vs. Baylor a t W aco; T.C.U. vs. Arkansas a t Fayetteville; Texas vs. Rice a t Austin. BY A. C. BECKER Teakmi Sports Editor The A ggies defeated the Long­ horn swimmers, 55-38, last night a m eet in Gregory Gym pool in dual m eet that m ight well be termed a preview of the South­ west Conference swimming meet which is but several weeks away. A.&M. monopolized the night ex­ cept for one swimming event and the diving events. This is the first time the Aggies have shown defi­ nite superiority. to A t fir s t it looked as though the Longhorns were going go places. In the 300-yard medley relay W ade Smith o f Texas gain­ ed a large lead over E rn e s t Con­ way, Aggie captain, b u t then the Aggies’ an ch or man, Bob Cowling, overcame the big lead to win the event. From then on out it was the Aggies all the way. the In the second event of the eve­ ning which was 220-yard free style Bob Taylor of A.&M. won it in a time th a t w'as b e tte r than his own conference record. Bill Johnson o f Texas placed sec­ ond in this event. Texas had the Aggies bested in the diving departm en t. Diving for Texas were Babe Papich and Louis Randall with Bob Stephens p e r­ form ing fo r the Aggies. Bob Sharpless o f Texas perform ed un­ officially fo r Texas, and the Ag­ gies had no nu m ber two diver. ^Papich won this ev en t with a to­ tal of 167.1 points with Randall coming in second and Stephens third. The crowd got a big kick out of the diving event. Ed Barlow, one of the th re e judges on the diving, would not give a n y diver more than seven points on a dive. The crowd began to kid Barlow ab ou t no t being able count higher. J u s t then Papich executed a d ifficult dive on which Barlow gave him nine points. Barlow got a bigger hand from the audience than did Papich. to the The only other event in w’hich the Longhorns captured a first back­ place was away stroke. W ade Smith from Conway and H appy Loomis who finished second and third r e ­ spectively. 100-yard ran second Bob Cowling in winning the 100-yard breaststroke came with­ in nine-tenths of a of breaking the existing conference >ecord fo r the event. Ben Holm- finished second and Ken T arlton finished third. Both are of Texas. Cowling’s time in the ev en t Was 1 :07.9 and the existing record is 1 :07.0. Oklahoma University swimmers in Austin W ednesday, will be F e b ru a ry 25, f o r a dual m eet with th e Longhorns in G regory Gym pool. The m eet will be a t 8 o’clock. official s t a r te r and Carlton T e rry was the head judge of the meet. Ed Barlow was the w grain The sum m aries: 300-yard medley re la y — won by A.&M. (Conway, Cowling, Re- n a u d ) ; second, Texas (Smith, Sie- del, H olm grain). Time, 3:18.1. 220-yard freestyle— Won by Taylor, A.&M.; second, Johnson, Texas; Kiel, A.&M., third. Time, 2:21.5. 50-yard free-style— Won by McKey, A.&M.; second, Loomis. A.&M.; third, Borowiak, Texas. Time, 0.25.1. 100-yard individual medley— won by Cowling, A.&M.; second, Beeler, T exas; third, Goodman, A.&M. Time, 1:05.0. Fancy dive— won by Papich, T exas; Randall. Texas, second; Stephens, A.&M., thir&. W in n e r’* points, 167.1. 100-yard freestyle — won by H l c K ey, A.&M.; second. Johnson, Texas; third, Beeler, Texas. Time, 0.56.8. 100-yard backstroke— won by Smith, Texas; second, Conway, Loomis, A.&M. A.&M.; Time, 1:11.5. third, 100-yard breaststrok e—won by Cowling, A.&M.; second, Holm­ grain, Tarlton, Texas. Time, I :07.9. Texas; third, 440-yard freestyle— won by Taylor, A.&M.; second, Johnson, Texas; third, Kiel, A.&M. Time, 5:33.1. 400-yard free style relay— won by A.&M. (Taylor, McKey, Re- naud, L o o m is ); second, Texas, (Beeler, Leo, Siedel, H olm grain). Time, 3:56.4. Final score: Texas A.&M., 55; Texas, 38. U. S., Britain Pool Shipping Convoys Will Copo With Enomy U-Boats F r a n U U . Report* events Meanwhile, The United States today pooled all its shipping resources with those of Great Britain and pre­ pared to convoy merchantmen En­ gaged in inter-American trade in an effort to cope with enemy U- boat attacks taking a steady toll in the territorial water* o f the Western Hemisphere. other in Washington laid ground work for a more complete war effort as Price Administrator Leon Hender­ son announced that he will outline further civilian consumption con­ trols before the Senate D efense Committee this week and Briga­ dier General Lewis B? Hershey, national draft director, predicted that all manpower in the United States m ust inevitably be allotted. Chief o f the President’s day’s activities was the preparation of a “fireside chat” to be delivered Monday night. The talk to the na­ tion will be a blast against rumors and rumor-mongers. • Labor Conscription Outlined by Hershey Inevitable conscription o f labor to produce the tools needed to win the war was envisaged tod ay by national d r a f t director Lewis B. Hershey. Pointing ou t th a t there are only 60,000,000 persons in the United States who can work, and t h a t the war industries will have to have a t least 10,000,000 more workers than a t present, Hershey declared th at the time has arrived “ when nobody can refuse to work for the go vernm ent.” for the Hershey’s statem ent, made a t a press conference, came as he was third completing plans national selective service lottery which will select the order n um ­ bers for the millions who regis­ tered last Monday. The lottery will be held in Washington some time next month on a date to be announced Monday. • Consumer Controls M ay Be Widened F u rth e r consumption civilian controls were in prospect y e ste r­ day for the nation as Price Admin­ istrator Leon Henderson a n ­ nounced t h a t he will outline a new set of controls before the Senate Defense Committee this week. Senator H erring made investigating committee. the a nnouncem ent (D.-I o w a) the to In the m eantim e Henderson in a speech at a Chicago B etter Busi­ ness Bureau meeting last night enum erated the following as pos­ the w ar e f f o r t p ro ­ sibilities as ceeds: 1. Compulsory savings program to be enforced upon every citi- j zen. 2. A more extensive rationing program. ties. 3. A w ider extension of priori­ 4. A w ider extension of price control, a t the retail level. 5. A slash in profit rates, and m n Is the Early Bird at the This Spring. T o g g e r v ^ ^ For the Best Laundry Service . you can't go wrong if you take advan­ tage o f our LOW STUDENT RATES SB Year* at Fla* I enaderiag Service MEDICALLY APPROVED EMPLOYEES DriskiU Hotel Laundry DIAL 6444 NOW Your EYES may bo causing Low Marks in School Work th in k to ch eck is m erely it At a n y re t * d o n ’t yon would be w ise th e m 7 Many tim es y o u r in a b ility to c o n ­ th * e ffe c t of c e n t r a t e fau lty e y e s ig h t. If y o u r m a r k s a r e n ’t w h a t th ey should be. have us ex a m in e yo u r eye*— m a y b e we can find a so lutio n to y o u r ell- im p o r t a n t problem. Q @ 0 @ r s S ev e n th A C o n f r aes --A New Bright Color You Will I Enjoy Wearing For every occasion— Sport Jackets and S acks ara suitable. To complete th® ensemble you w :! frtd a wide selection of A R R O W SH IR T S and TIES, IN T E R W O V E N S O C K S and A IR M A N SPO R T SH IRTS. MEN S SHOES — STREET FLOOR The TOGGERY J. I . Rose 2310 Gu a da lu pe Scarbrough & SearErougF** ruEEer soiecf shoes include severe! mod­ els Idee! tor campus and sports wear. Their rubber soles give springy action . . . their flexible uppers of­ fer lasting comfort. (1) Brown moccasin-toe ox­ fords with crepe rubber soles ................... $6 (2) Brown and white saddle oxfords with red rubber *___ $6 so le s (3) Two-tone tan moccasin toe oxfords with red $5 rubber so le s EDITORIAL— PA G E FOUR Phon. 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N - Phen* 2-2473 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1942 By W. J*. jfaApM* Amo*y Oho CeccUanyel BY DOT M ARTIN Som eth in g new in w ar-tim e foru m s is the one on “ Rom ance and M arriage in W ar Tim e” held a t th e U n iversity o f Ore­ gon la st w eek under th e leader­ ship o f Dr. Paul P op en oe, direc­ tor o f the Los A n g e les Insti­ tu te o f Fam ily R elation s. In sep arate discussion groups for men and wom en, Dr. P openoe p oin ted out the n ece ssity o f con sid erin g the u ncertain de­ fe n se em ploym ent and lack oi secu rity which fa ce th e you ng m arried couple d uring th e war. — T H E OREGON D A IL Y HER­ ALD . con trib ution s are con trib u tion b efore th e close o f b usin ess (4 o ’clock ) W ednes­ day, F eb ru ary 25. Member* re­ w hose ceived a fte r F ebruary 25 w ill call fo r th eir checks or war­ ran ts a t the B ursar’s O ffice. R eceip t fo r the cu rren t m onth ’s con trib ution to the T each er Re­ tirem en t Fund should be pre­ sen ted w hen callin g fo r salary check or w arran t C. H. SPA R E N B E R G , auditor. D ear Editor) To Eddie G r iffin ’# punch in Friday*# C ontem pt­ ending uous A ffa ir s, “ We are ail ham# a t heart,” I should like to add: Ye#, we are a1] hams a t heart except W illiam s and G riffin , who are hams clean through. j .B .S . D ear Editor: • Of course, we are all thrill­ ed that Tommy Dorsey is go in g to play for a dance at The U n i­ versity of Texas. B ut there are a great number o f us who do not dance, and who would e n ­ joy hearing Tommy his band. Two dollars and tw enty cents is too much to spend just and be to g o over and th e dancer#’ w ay w hen w e have n ot the slig h test in ten tion o f danc­ ing. in in charged Since th e dance is goin g to be held gym , why the cou ld n ’t a section on on e tide be roped o f f and th e f e e o f say a dollar be to those w ho just s it and listen. This w ould not on ly be very b en eficien t to those w ho w ant to sit them all ou t, b u t also to the d ancers th em selves. In this m anner there w ould be no clus­ ters o f people w ho not dance stan d in g around in th# d ancers’ w ay. do K EN R U BLE. Ike Poetic Pileate TH E SCHOOL OF LA W A s a stud en t in the law school, fa ce to fa c e w ith com m on law rule You find progress slow and stum bling a t th e start. You are sen ten ced like a “ life r ” w hen you sta rt ou t to decipher; Latin term s arouse a quaking in your heart. Have you ever tried to study words with very m ean ing m uddy Like stare decisis or a simple fee? Or the ancient laws o f tenure tried to study, or to lend your Talents to distinction drawn in d e f’nitely? Study out in all its detail rule about the once-used fe e tail, Or the rule of caveat emptor or the rest? Trespass quare clausum fregit, trespass servitum amisit. Put de bonis asportari to the test? Is the legal damage ample? This is but a starting sample Of why courts in equity say “ yes, ” or “ no.” Going on to the injunction, can you grant it with com punction? Tread not on the rules established long ago. Its Possession in Procedure, and you find you have to pay out Legal dictionary on each separate page. If you find a legal way out, you will find you have to pay out (For those outlines are deducted from your w a g e ) . Did the donor curb volition? Was the g ift upon condition? Inter vivos? Causa mortis? You decide. You must find reports with great ease, pick out facts and calmly state these, Showing why defendant acted bona fide. Then professors seem to lose you, do their best, and but co n fu se you, Speak o f Color (and it isn’t shade* or tin ts). Soon the lights will beam out brightly as you study problems Abstract problems— Social justice— Precedent* . . . . I suppose that when you pick up your diploma and you think up All you've done and learned within the last three years, Then it’s worth the care and trouble, bleary eyes and bearded nightly— stubble Gained by week-end “ relaxation ” over beers. JO H N D A V E N PO R T . O f f ic ia l N o t ic e plus room and board f o r rn six w eeks’ camp period. A Montana dude ranch is in­ terested in con tacting fo r aum- mer work two men student#; one as a bookkeeper and m an­ ager o f a small ranch store, th* other as a g eneral mechanic to look a fte r and operate a light plant, repair w ater pumps, drive and keep up trucks and cars. N EL LA MAE DIETER , placement secretary, S tu d en t E m ploym ent Bureau, M. B. MMM. MEMBERS o f the Teacher Re­ tirem ent System w ho have their checks or w arren ts sen t to them through F a cu lty or U. S. mail m ust pay the F eb ru ary Victory red baku trimmed with dashing red grosgrain bow ................... $5 .9 5 Just Arrived! "Jungle Book" Jewelry in turquoise and silver and colored enameled vivid pins, necklaces and ear­ rings ....... $1.00 to $4.91 The Unusual in Accessories Jewelry . . . B a g s . , . Belts Pearl Cummins 03 E. Eighth St, n J J- I'abut, U fU nian * n a Jbem e&iacy fit • G a n teH u iltU H te A lla is ti. ________________________ i v e D D , e c » » F f , n 00 Med School Mess— Can R ioted OncjfUsuf, Glean 9 t fyp? the long-burning controversy at t t a v i n g PROMISED TO CLEAR CP the University’s Medical Branch, the special House committee on un-American activi­ ties is now busy d r a g g in g out th e school’s dirty linen before the eyes of Texas and the nation. On two counts the cu rr ent investigation in Galveston would seem useless— a farce. So far the investigators have discovered only that “Somebody* lying,” as C h a i r ­ man J a c k Luxe so aptly put it. This is all they've found out. and it seems t h a t they may find out nothing more. Since the first eruptions more than two year s ago. the Board of Regents has lis­ tened to the same accusations, th e same threats, the same lies. As yet, the Regents have been unable to find the magic a n ­ swer. How can five men from the Legisla­ in one ture come closer to the solution week than the Regents have in two yea rs ? All t h a t the legislators are finding out is th a t the controversy is tightly bound by the web of confusion; they are no closer to the an sw er than they were at the begin­ ning of the investigation. As far as Cha ir ma n Love and his col­ league Yrice-Chairman A r t h u r Cato of W ea th e r f o r d are concerned, th e conclu­ sions to the ir report could just as well be written without the calling of a single wit­ ness. Since they al re ad y had been convinc­ ed t h a t Dean John W. Spies is the clean­ ha n de d victim of an or ganized sabo tag e effort l a u nc he d by the faculty, th e inves­ tigation is me rel y a formality to be used by the m as an excuse for brow -b eatin g th e Board of Regents. With all gusto and pride, Repr es ent ati ve Cato has told of how he personally p r e ­ vented the Regents from removing Dean Spies last s u m m e r and how he has stymied tither moves at te m p t ed ag ai nst th e de an by g ro ups of ex-students and Te xa s doc­ tors. Although he has openly de cl are d, “ Dean Spies knows I ’m his f r ie n d , ” th e r ep res en ta tiv e from W e a t h e r f o r d an n o u n c ­ ed the investigation as open a nd unbiased. Moreover, Representative Cato has a d ­ vocated th e removal of th e medical b r anc h from the jurisdiction of the “ b us in es sm en ” on the Board of Regents an d th e pla cing of it u n d e r the control of doctors who “ know something run n in g a medical school.” Yet, he discounts th e inquiry r e ­ port of the Association of A me ric an M edi ­ cal Colleges and expects the “ business­ men on th e Board of Regents to give p r e ­ ference to th e re po rt of his legislative com ­ mittee. If he believes in the co m p et en c y of professional opinion, can he say t h a t members of his committee know more abo ut medical school ad m ini str at ion th a n the dean of the Iowa Medical School and the secre tary of the A.A.M.C.? a b o u t Of w h at value will be th e conclusions of these legislators who have a l r e a d y d e ­ cided whe re the “ chips should f a l l ” ? — W A. N a conclusion as to whet he r public opinion s ur veys ar e a t r ue m e a s u r e of public opinion, it is nec es­ sary to define w h e t h e r such opinion includes only the mor e enl ightened g ro u p or w h e t h e r that of intellectual it reflect# the levels. ideas of people of all Gallup belittle* the so-called “ b and w a g o n ” t h e ­ or y and st a t e s t ha t it has been his I n s t i t u t e ' s ex- peiience, both in elections and issues, t h a t ev e nt s arid actions a r e inf init ely mor e p ot e n t f ac tor s in i nfl ue n ci ng the f o r ma t io n of opinion t ha n mere desire to imi tat e o n e ’s fellow citizens. It seems evi dent that tne bc*t g u a r a n t e e for the ma int a i ni ng of a vigorous d e mo c r at i c society lies not in concealing what people think, b ut in t r y i ng to find out w ha t t h e n ulti mat e pu r po s e s are, and in seeking to i n co r po r at e these pur poses in legis­ lation. If improved and c ondu c te d a* impa r t i al ly as pos­ sible. public opinion sur veys would c ont inue to supp l e me n t , not d e s t r o y the work of r e p r e s e n t a ­ tives, R e pr es e nt at i ve s will be bettei able to r e p r e ­ sent if t hey have an a c c u r a t e me a s ur e of the wishes a n d needs of d i f f e r e n t gr ou ps within the g e n er al public, r a t h e r than a dist orted p i c t ur e se nt them by t e legr aph e n t h u si a s t s and o ver z eal ous pr essur e gr oups. The ac hi e ve me nt of a real s e l f - g o v e rn me n t based on the opinion of an intelligent el ec tor a te , and the pr ese r va t i o n of d em o c r a c y f rom t o t a l i t a r i an t r e n d would seem to Ho, as Roper points out, in public opinion r ese ar ch, plus our e d uc at ional sys­ tem and a iI o f the cha nnel s for d is s emi n a ti n g in­ f o r m a t i o n . - J. E. P. t he *7/ud 94. *7*104*1it f y o *i c u t Z m e / iy e t t c y jj^ NATION, a city, or a ca m p u s ge ar in g itself to the w a r effort is almost bound to do a lot of useless things, which must lie sifted down to find those really h el p­ ful. Out of a conglomeration of first aid, canteen, knitting, driving, shooting, and h ow - to - th re a d -a-needle-in-a-blitz classes, a few arise that will pr obably prove invalu­ able to those ta ki n g them. One such class is the rec en tly -an n ou nc ­ ed air raid w a r d e n training, which will be­ gin March 9. to da y are I he stu de n ts the in school people who will be g u a r d i n g o ur cities and homes to m or ro w. Many of the m will not be in active military service fo r various reasons, but all of them will be called upon for a part before th e w a r is won. Of utmost necessity in a city u n d e r a t ­ tack are leaders who know how to m e et the em e r g e n c y ; who are able to do ev er y ­ thing possible to alleviate civilian s u f f e r ­ ing. Th ey must be trained for the job. Such tra in ing given in school, finished before the men a r e called upon to ac tu al ly serve in the capacity, is one e x am p le of far-sighte dne ss an d clear think ing t h a t will do much to event ual ly g u a r a n t e e an A m e r ­ ican victory. Waste d effort a n d en erg y—-no m a t t e r in w ha t spirit it is o f f e r e d — cannot an d must not be a pa rt of the victory drive.— E.A.W. to diacuia a it *eems evi dent I N T H E S E DAYS when that might makes right, perhaps it is overly opt i mi s­ tic its f o u n d e r b e ­ t echnique which lieves will be able to ma ke the g r e a t e s t c o n t r i b u ­ tion to the democr ati c process since the i n t r od uc ­ tion of the s e cr et ballot. The role of public opinion r ese ar ch, however, still in its swaddl ing clothes of deve l opme nt , is an important e xpe ri me nt which might well modify our existing scheme of political institutions, and therefore, deserves c a re f ul cons i der at ion by seri- oua-thinking Americans. Public opinion polls t oda y are u n d er goi ng a b a r ­ t h e m s e h e s , but is f irs t neces­ in r ag e of negative public opinion bef or e e va lua ti ng the criticisms, it s a r y to def i n e the role which these polls play o u r nat ional life. the F o r t u n e Elmo Roper, r esear ch di r ec t or of Surveys of Public Opinion, recognize* the w ea k­ nesses of the polls when he points o u t t h a t the first d u t y o f public opinion r ese ar ch is to explore the areas of public ignor ance where th e r e is too little knowledge or u nd er s ta n d i n g to s u p p or t a r e a s o n ­ able opinion. Th# poll* should also r ep o r t the opinion of the ma j o r it i e s on such m a t t e r s as the public is, because of its knowledge, fit to j udge , he says. Criticisms have arisen t h a t the wordi ng of m a n y questions in the polls over-simplifies the problem, or invites bias, and thus leads to s na p j u d g m e n t s inst ead of del iber at ed opinions. For inst ance, such a question as “ Ar e you for against labor u n i o n s ’ makes no provision w h a t ­ soever for a dozen d i f f e r e n t shades of opinion w'huh could be expressed. Other critics ma i n t a i n ’ hat the polls lead to “ band w a g o n ’’ vot i n g and are apt to d es t r o y r ep r es e n t a t i v e democracy. Lea d i n g public opinion ex p er ts a g l e e r e ­ search is still in a very e x p er i me n t a l s tage and thai some questions are “ loa ded. ” But that the weaknesses ar e co n s ta n t ly being weeded out. and insist t h a t by f u r t h e r e x p e r i me n t a ti o n in f ind­ ing out w h a t people d o n ’t know or m i s u n d e r s ta n d , t ha t public opinion baaed on i gnor ance ma c be dis c ount ed, and that the work to be done now and in the f u t u r e by e duc at ors and th ou g ht l eaders may be d ef i ne d in the most specific terms. t he y hold that Poll:-, then. make no claim to e d u c a t e ; they ly refire! educat i on or the lack of it. To me re­ active at T h e D a i l y T e x a n The Daily Texan, xh'. in Uni ver si t y of Te? of the Univer sit y Publications. Inc* , every , A i r u .‘l a r c h J 18 lh E n t e r e d a- - fr on d st ud en t n e w s p a p e r of The the c a mp us is published on A u s t i n by To va - S t u d e n t m o r n i n g e xce pt M o n d a y , cia--* mai l m a t t e r a t th* Post u ndpr thp A ci of C ong r es s offices. Journalism Building l op 101. and 10_‘ I d e p h o n e 2-24TM. Ae e n . mg na! sin Buitdin anc. circulation d e p a r t m e n t s , r l b s Phone 2-24 73. . l o u r S U B S C R I P T I O N RATES I Month I S e m e s t e r < I g S e m e s te rs (U months;) st ( a r r i e ! * 0.00 I. To 3.00 Mail JO.60 2.SO LOO \ - s oc i a t * \s*oc*iatc Edit oi Yet in< S no r t * E d i t or * So« i< v E di t or 4 ov ^ment - E di t or * inurement* Tel *»re,nh Edi t or Badin Editor Radio Editot Feat ure Ed i t o r F e a t u r e Associate S t u d en t Opinion Editor E x c h a n g e Editor Society Associate J A C K R H O W A R D Editor J I MMY PI TT V * • Becker Jr . , Bill Whi tmo r e Ma ri a nn a Sl uder J e a n n e Douglas .... Eddie Gri ff i n Roger Nuhn J e an Beshell Hugh Shaw F o rr e s t Sal t e r S ta n to n Fi t zne r Holmes Martin B i e t l e Sam Dorothy Cora S t a f f F o r This issue ELGIN WI LL I A MS ELGIN J e r r y Bell Nrrhr E d i t o r Head Copyreader \ i t a u t n -. L H let! VVhai ton, J i m Ke r r J a c k Brook*. J o Leigh Cohn, J a ck Ad- ........................... Lloyd •' ‘ - ht Sport* E d i t o r A- i - m n t , J. WL Love Nigh? Soci et y E di t o r A t t e n t # , .Ma: ijo Phipps. W a y n e Horn Night T e l e g r a p h FJditor A sa m u nt. W a l t e r Nixon Night Amu . mi n t - E di t o r Awi u ii u. , W a y n e Horn, J a c k Adkins ................... Ma ri a n na Sluder A n n Corrick J e a n n e Dougla- ‘‘Me c a n ’t buy o u r way out of this war, or pro duce our way o ut of it and the only w ay we can j‘n t e |]i ge n t * 10 I* to iig h t o u r w ay o u t byb bar(J L a : rabec o f fe ns i v e f i g h t i n g . ” — S e c r e t a r y of W a r H e n r y L. Stimson. * taxi drivers, ‘‘More and mor e w omen mu s t f ind their w a y into essential services as messenger s, e l e v at or o p e r a ­ in f ac t o r i es and o t h e r o c c u p a ­ tors, tions which will relieve men w o r k e r s . ” — E r n e s t K a n z le r of the Wat Pro d uc t i on Board calls for e m ­ pl oyme nt of women in war work. W ould Like to Purchase a Pair of Suspender*." In S a t u r d a y ’* T e x a n , we read a col umn by o ur c o n t e m ­ p o r ar y, Mr. H e n r y Herz. The message was en t itled “ Towar d F r e e d o m , ” and ha ha. evi dentl y Mr. Her z a is t h i nki ng man, an d we have r e­ spect for t hi nki ng people, co n­ s i de ri ng some of the occasions done when we should have mor e th i n k i ng and d i d n ’t. But what h he thinking, we ask in r e g a rd to his d ef ea t i s m Satur - d a y ? peculiarl y If we are to listen c a re f ul l y to Mr. Herz, who seems to have developed a dar k few weeks, outlook the past the Soviet*, the MacAr t hur *, the Allies in g e ne r al , ar e m a k ­ ing hopeless s ta nds all over the ear th. Tr ue , we' ve had r e ­ verses, and serious ones. It is in the Al­ also ver y t r ue that lied c o m ma nd s ( at f r o n t , and are t h e r e in the a r m c h a i r s ) too m a n y “ bal dheaded c o ns er v­ a t ives , ’’ b u t somehow we c a n ’t let these f acts cause us to think in t e rm s of hopeless def eatism. necessary, that to have faith in s o me t h i ng to get a n y ­ where. A t least S O M E T H I N G . Mr. Herz doesn t seem to have. take Now, possibly these and r em a r k s think suspiciously t h a t “ Co n­ t e mp t u o u s A f f a i r s ” is t r y i n g to s t a r t a feud with him, as he as­ that we serted a while back w an t e d to feud with Boh Ow­ he will to h e a rt , It s peculiar, hut the people have isn’t wor t h ens, who f e u d in g with a n yw a y. H e ’s an all right g u y lousy poet ry. spite of his in t h a t Bu t honest, H. H., we a i n ' t malicious a b o u t this. We really t hink the e x t r e m e dar k outlook you cast over o ur good n a t u r e s is a bit too dar k. We a i n ’t a f o r m e r isolationist; we a i n ’t an ostrich like L i nd b e rg h ; and w e ’re r ea d y t o face fact*. Bu t we a i n ’t sa yi ng w e’re licked. W e have a f eeling t h a t the Red S t a r ’s mi ght y a r m y will have s o me t h i ng to say a b o u t a G e r ma n a d v a nc e again. We t hi nk the g r e a t n a v y the U.S. time will ia building all the have a few salvos to hurl at the S c h ar n h o r s t, the Gneis enau. and the Pr i nz Eugen. A n d we have le ar ned w h a t it is to be Wi shful Thinkers. long since Ch e er up, Hank. W e ’re sit­ t i n g on a hot f r yi n g pan. b ut a j u m p s oon e r or l a te r might c a r r y us all beyond the fire. And a n o t h e r thing. my f r i e n d ; keep t h a t se ns a h uma , f or t h a t ’s one Amer i c an c h a r ­ acteristic which has a t r e m e n ­ dous a d v a n t a g e over the b e a t­ en, oppressed G e r m a n s and the d yi ng I talians. T h a t ’s all f o r today, Hank. t h a t And d o n ’t g e t the public a r g u m e n t s be ke pt pr ivat e in all cases. Maybe s o m e b o d y ’s exc ept us. So go ahe ad, f ire away. idea should i nt e r es t e d *7lte C ollegiate S ym p h o n y or ch e st r a won him fame, has concluded a folio of p ai nt i ng s an d d r a w i n g s made on the “ pl ayi ng fields o f Har­ v a r d . ” Gr e ason see* no i n co n ­ g r u i t y b e t we en hia choice of s ubject s. Gr a ce an d r h y t h m , he says, ar e as c h a r a c t e r i st i c o f football a* t he y a r e of playing the viola. Academi c y ea r of the Uni­ versity of V e r mo n t will H o s p May 18, a month a he ad of the pr e- wa r schedule. • Ben Oo s t e r b a an , Michigan basketball coach, r ecent f o u r ­ d em o n s t r at i o n teen consecutive foul-line shots t hr oug h hoop— w i t hou t even looking at the basket. in a swished the The United State* Nav y in a recent p e r f o r m a n c e band a t Clemson College, played “ T i g e r - Ra h , ” a pep so ng co m­ posed by FL J. F r e e m a n , Cl em­ son en g i n e e ri ng pr ofessor . • • Swa nl ey A f t e r s t u d y i n g at. in E n g ­ H o r t i cu l t u r a l College land, Hlin Eirika r e t u r n e d to her nat ive Iceland to raise h ot ­ house b an a nas , o b t a i ni ng h e a t f rom I c e l a n d ’s n a t u r a l boiling spring*. a l u m n i F'ifty-seven per c e n t o f D a r t ­ living, kn own-a nd-a c- c o n t r i b u t e d to rec or d mou th ' s tive a m o u n t s a v e r a g i ng $16. 75 the Alumni co unc i l ’s fund of $196,000. • Only f o u r wo men have been g r a d u a t e d f rom the U n iv er si t y o f W a s h i n g t o n ’s college o f e n ­ g i n e e r i n g in the last five years. • Mor e t ha n f o u r h u n d r e d Uni ­ v er sit y of Wisconsin g r a d u ­ at es ar e living or s t a t io n e d in the Pacific f ighting zone. • • l a b o r a t o r y A p r actical of democr ac y , cr eat e d a n d op­ e r a t e d by Uni v er si t y of Wi s­ be g a n w or k consin st ud e nt s, r ec en t l y on the uni ve r si ty c a m ­ s t u d e n t pus when c o u r t hea r d its first ei gh te e n cases. new the I t ’s a long s t r et ch f r o m f i r s t violin to f o u r t h down, b u t Don­ ald C. ( treas on, ar ti st, has s uc ­ cessfully br idged the gap. Gr e a- son, whose studies of the Boston ORIENTATION Council will meet at 4 o ’clock Sunday at the Union. Only active m em ­ bers are expected to attend. RALPH FREDE, chairman. the ALL MEMBERS of '42 June and August senior e n ­ gineering class may place or­ ders for “ Ramshorn” keys by contacting these officers be­ fore February 28: Rudi Guen- zel, .Joe Terril, H. C. Johnson, Joe Holt, and A. P. Clark. RUDI GUENZEL, president. ANY STL D EN TS wishing em ­ ployment as a soda skeet or butcher are asked to apply at the Student Em ploym ent Bu­ reau, M. B. KMM. NELLA MAE DIETER, placem ent secretary. AN> S T U D E N T — man or w o­ man— interested in work as ramp counselor* should call for *peoial application blanks and an interview. There is a need for men and women lifesaver*, nature study counselors, and woodcraft instructors. One large Texas camp is looking for men student* (preferably fre sh ­ men or sophomores) as coun­ selor* at a salary o f $25-$35 I ■Mr' s o t v o i l a s u i t o d d A c y 610 Congress m m m m mmmzmmmimwm&l BEAUTY SPECIALS a n*. S ham poo an d S a t M a n i c u r e * » . E y e la sh an d B row Dye ____ 50c F a c i a l ------------------------------------ BOC Permanent Wave _$1.95 DUAL ARTS BEAUTY COLLEGE •4 1 0 G uadalupe S t r a i t P hone 2-8746 T H E OLO SEVILLE l a t h A G uadalupe S t* . U nexcelled M exican Food S te a k s & S eafood Dinners D ancing A fte r • p.m . H a r t B e tty P lay Y our P a r o r i t a S election on T eleton# Phone 8-4321 for Reservations AUSTIN SY M P H O N Y ORCHESTRA Eugene List, Soloist (Tschaikowsky Piano C oncerto )^ A Monday, Feb. 23, 8:15 p.m. Hogg Memorial Auditorium Prices $2.20, $1.65, $1.10 T ax included President R o o se ve lt's ra d io a d ­ dress will be b ro a d c a st from stage at 9 p.m. SUNDAY . MONDAY STRAWBERRY BLONDE J a m e s C a g n e y a n d O liv ia D e H a v i l l a n d S E L E C T E D S H O R T S T U E S D A Y F E B R U A R Y SEATS NOW SELLING HOWARD LINDSAY1. . . HUISH CROUSE f A r t H n i /V A . PARAMOUNT filmic-OLD IACI M E W Y O R K S F U M S t U S T H I T ! B Y J O S E P H K E S S E L R I N G W IT H ♦ LAURA H O PE C R E W S * ER IC H VON S T R O H E IM * .JACK W H IT IN G * EFFIE S H A N N O N ♦ F O R R E S T O R R Price* $3.00, $2.50, $2.00, $1.50 i n c . t a x PRESENT “Austin's Original Mexican Restaurant** Y o u ’ll e n j o y o u r d e li e ie u a Mexican Food 'Jy Steaks — Sandwiches N a t i v e Music N i g h t l y 9 1 2 R e d R iv e r Phene 7735— Open l l a. rn., Close I JOE CARLIN, Mgr.