Rolfe and Goldsmith To Lead Discussion H ittin g the T e x a s H ousing Con­ f e re n c e nail on th e head, P r o f e s ­ sors W a lte r T. Rolfe an d Goldwyn Goldsmith of th e D e p a rtm e n t o f I in A rc h ite c tu re will leading a discussion on “ The Re­ gional P ro b le m : T oday and To­ a t 9 m o rro w ,” which will begin the o’clock S a tu r d a y moi-ning in A r c h ite c tu re A uditoriu m . co-operate a n d L ast official g a th e r in g of the city f i f t y T exas a rc h ite c ts this m e e tin g will con- p lann ers, e n tr a te upon the problem s peculiar to this sta te , especially in design­ in g homes the e n v iro n ­ th a t f it m e n t a n d in utilizing the m a te ­ rials a t h and to c o n s tr u c t them. Today’s Editorial W h at a Pity THE DAILY TEXAN F I R S T C O L L E G E D A I L Y I N T H E S O U T H The Weather Fair and Colder VO L. 41 Z-720 AUSTIN, TEXAS, SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1940 Four Pages Today No. 164 Builders Hear H o u s i n g " ” History, Plan for Future p Texas Problemsr Topic for Today ‘Trend Is Away From Adobe, Log Performance fo End Performance fo End Entertainment of Cultural Committee L uboschu tz and N e m e n o ff, duo- § f p # j ^ 0 Steers Bomb Owls, 18-4; | | Blitzkreig Comes in Fifth McDonald Hurls His I st Victory Student’s Own Song Is Glee Club's H it W • I Once Oil Wells Once Oil Wells Disappointed Thirsty Pioneer Texans Today th e price o f a b a rre l of Pioneer Designs Were Utilitarian in a w a te r com p ared to th a t of a b a r - 1 pianists, will be p rese n te d insignificant. Time recital in Hogg M emorial Audito- red of oil th e history o f , rium M onday n ig ht a t 8 o’clock was, how ever, in the d iscovery of j | by | ta in m e n t Committee as the last of oil in a well b e in g dug f o r w a te r I th re e p ro g ra m s fo r this year. Stu- was n e a r-c ata stro p h ic . th e S tu d e n t C u ltu ral E n te r- the sta te when is “ The o bject of good housing d ents will be a d m itte d on b la n k e t: T M story ' O f w atei- a n d Th< I i , rf has alw ays rem ained the same to I taxes. Tickets a r e on sale fo r S I I it - , h” j * Texas wag the honoree of the provide for m a n ’s prog ress by min-■ a t the Texas I m o n and at Reed s j n jg|jt 0VCr th e T exas S ta te Net- evenm g. Lr. H om er P. Rainey, and the o th e r by the audion e to the istering to his physical and spirit- j Music Store, 805 Congress Ave- work as the U n iv e rsity p r e se n te d beau tifu l new ballad, “ So Deep Is My th e new ual needs. t L o v e , ” John Ore ham B u r n e tt o f Dallas, a ju n io r in the College o f series. servation from history, t h a t primi- Dr. F ine A rts. tive m an was co m p aratively cap- He was g r a d u a te d from the Con- u r ‘ the B ureau In d u stria l C hem istry, lu u i v u u o f . . . was the prin cip al speaker. is a Russian. ‘‘F r o n tie rs of P ro g re ss” se r v a to r y of Moscow. He has ap- It is an in te re stin g o b - ' nue. ,ii Auditorium -o n e by l>* Sc'hoch, d ire c to r of student-com poser of th ird p ro g ra m o f Mr. L uboschutz Glee Clubs d ra m a tiz e d tt u bu ,1.1 m g of ( F rid a y the the the to (> , . Two tributes were paid at the a n n u al spring con cert of th e com- M,,ra. c l u b „ hold and Gir, , . ,a s t m u binpt, M . „ B y F L O R E N C E H E L L E R Rice Pitchers Give Fourteen Walks By C L A R E N C E LA R O C H E W ell, anyw ay, it wa? good bat* ting practice. T h a t ’s what the final gam e In two-game series the Te.xas-Rice am o unted to y e ste rd a y afternoon. a? Bibb F a lk ’? Longhorn : po unded the Owls, 18-4. J able of providing a d e q u a te shelter, w h’le we are only begin ning to realize our own in a d e q u a te dwell­ ing conditions.” th e no t-to-far-d ist- peared as g uest a r tis t with m a n y distinguished symphonies, among a n t days w hen T ex as was still in the p ioneering era, U n iv e rsity Ra- them th e New Y ork Philharm onic ,]io W orkshop pla y e rs w e n t back W ith this generalizatio n a b o u t | O rc h estra with A rtu ro Toscanini sto ry of the 1:0 !W f l l n C orsic a na which disgusted in oil. * Lubosc u tz > or Coma f e- ^ s u t l e r s by b rin g in g R eco un ting • vt T u u * r- the U niversity, ; m e n o ff, w as born in P a ris of Rug- They w anted w a te r, the problem facing the world t o - ; as c o n d u c to r day, Hugo Le ipziger, f o r m e r Euro-1 ‘ p ean designer now doing research I a n d opened Conference F r id a y m orn in g H ogg Memorial A uditorium . the first Texas H ousing in teach in g a t sian p a r e n ts an d a tte n d e d the p a r js C onservatoire, tQUred €xtensively in E urope and the U niversity She has struggle f o r dam s, a nd th e p a r t is playing i n giy- O th er stories dra m a tiz e d T e x a s ’ W A L T E R T. R O L F E . d i r e c t s H o u s i n g C o n f e r e n c e . . . t w o - d a y T e x a s Too Early Yet For Mothballs this c o un try. It's Austin to Us, But 'El Dorado' To Poet at Yale . , ing to th e S ta te b e tte r m e th o d s of w a te r analysis and p u r ific a ­ the completion o f a tion, and P ro g re ss A d m in istra tio n Works w a te r survey which will c h a r t the occu rren ce o f u n d e rg ro u n d w a te rs in Texas. The survey, Dr. Schoch re p o rte d , him now com plete d a ta on sixty counties. d ire c t Aided by m em bers of his sta ff, P ro fe ss o r Rolfe will the discussion p e rta in in g to ‘‘P la n n in g and D esign.” He will point o u t the th in k ­ be n e fits th a t derive fro m ing ou t a housing plan and the consideratio ns th a t must e n te r into a design fo r a home. In his a fte rn o o n lec tu re in the A rc h ite c tu re A uditoriu m , M r. Leipziger used slides to show how the ancients blended th e ir build­ ings with the n a tu ra l surrou nd in gs I and with th e ir philosophy of life, la n d to illustrate a few a tte m p ts I to do the same th in g t h a t are be- in Sw itzerland, jng m ad e now J , him and dwell upo n C onstruction I the fashion on the cam pus F rid a y i Kr-c-land G erm anv F ra n c e Swe- a nd M a te r ia l,.” special «mph«,i* to w a y , in which Tex- th e n a f t „ . m i „ nrth w ind s e t tho j dm* and the th e r m o n w |e r tum bIing W inter Clothes Get Back Into Fashion P ro fe sso r Goldsmith will follow W in te r clothes i degrees T hu rsd ay ii atiu til'ChitCC" i A m inim um o f 30 degrees t u r a l h l s t o r y . 'm a in 'spe a k e r at the * " 'v ’ r „ , * j stat<,,.' The p r o g r a m s , w ritte n a n d pro- T h e orlB,naI m a " u s" ' P t Pf h'» durerl a t Radio House, are spon- Approaching th e Texas angle, J long free-verse poem “ A L e tte r j sored by th c T e x a s Indu, trial and p rom T e x a s ” has been given to I Commercial Research Council, and . the U n iversity L ib ra ry by Town- a re pre se nted every F r id a y n ig h t Samuel a., uinen n, pro of Ui eon, p r o e s s o i o a r c h jte c tu ra l desjKI1 and i ai v ii iivv i wi ai u c ’’' , , . I , * _ , . , . p re s e n t p ro d u c ts a nd resources. F o r S a tu r d a y a fte r n o o n the n!l?ht. * — and com m ittee headed bv Rolfe has a r ra n g e d f o r those who a re inte reste d a n excu rsion to sev­ new e ra l exam ples of old Texas a r c h ite c tu re in and a ro u n d Austin. On this trip th e y will see some of th e hom es which Samuel E. Gideon, profe sso r of a rc h ite c ­ tu r a l design and a r c h ite c tu ra l his- tory , had a m o n g th e slides ho used J Unites into p re m a tu r e in connection with his d ay night. Also, ^ d u rin g the , P ro fesso r and a fro s t w as expected fo r F ri- j b a n q u e t Frid ay night, pointed to send Miller, fo rm e r in stru c to r in L oin 9 until 9:30 o’clock. follow-up s e iits on n day night. The fo re c a st fo r S a t­ u r d a y is f a i r and colder. The n o r t h e r swept into A ustin the early adobe a n d log form s of English a t the U niversity and now Texas house design an d lam e n te d the tr e n d a w a y from them . Sup- E r I varsity teaching s ta f f of th e on tw elve r e c e n t p ro g r a m s dealing wit)} fu- in du stria liz a tio n possibilities j t u r e T h u rsd a y m o rn in g with a 17-mile*' p o rtin g his ideas was H arvey P. I 1 a n - h o a r w ind and a b rie f rain of Smith, San A ntonio architect, who a b o u t .05 cold spell d e c la re d : inches. The followed a w arm , balm y period of several weeks, which “ We som etim es lose sight of the lei-’g poem describes a com position notebook, Mr. Mil- weeks. I t the ro m a n tic d o r i e s of Texas people and their will t r e a t specific lulled A u s - 1 u tilita ria n , y e t a r c h ite c tu ra l b e a u -j w onders o f th e s ta te ’s sig nificant problem s r e la tin g to some o f the ’ ‘v'>‘ h re n tie rs b r i t t e n originally in pencil in series wiTl co ntin ue fo r f o u r more ^exas, *i 0 n *’v' ’n ,, . . lecture Fri- early s u m m e r w eather. The slight achieved in th e missions and i posed while he was rain helped in c re a s e A u s tin ’s av- o th e r buildings, using only a fte rn o o n , l e r a g e precip itatio n to a b o u t .30 of nieager m aterials and e qu ip m e nt the U niversity du ring long session. visions of ty t h a t th e early Spanish padres regions a n d cities. I t w as com- n a tu ra l r e s o u rc e s of the Sta te . h ere a t the the 193 8 -1 9 3 9 th e r e will be exhibited in the Ar- j an inch above normal fo r th e cur- a t hand then. c h ite c tu re Building examples o f r e n t period. O pening th e w ay f o r these la te r The ra in s a n d low te m p e ra tu re s speakers, Mr. Leipziger said Fri- esign and housing p re p a re d by j Stud en ts and by Hugo Leipziger, j were g e n e ral th r o u g h o u t th e state. I day m orn in g in s tru c to r in a r c h ite c tu re . Most of these are series o f p h otog raph s o r drawings. High winds accom panied the fall- i m u s t be an expression of a peo- did ing m e rcu ry , and sto rm w arn in gs j P ^ ’s philosophy of life, and th a t rie were hoisted a long th e coast. t h a t A tw e n ty -tw o line section of the poem tells of Austin, m entoin- the y o u n g men ing “ th e girls and a rc h ite c tu re walking in th e stre e ts— Tall- splen- easy, as wind over the prai- . . ” H e speaks, too, of “ the atmos- sq u a re to w e rs colour of sand, pu- ! eblo.” T h e passage closes with it m ust c o un te na n c e tho : phere and surroundings. C O N R A D F A T H , . . hi* s wi n g versi on o f “ T h e Old Gr ay B o n n e t ” was a p p l a u d ­ ed. Ex Is Amazed At Court Otter E. A. Locke Hints A t Refusal, Too E u g en e P. Locke, Dallas Joe Belden, g ra d u a te Belden Is Praised By C o lle g e Magazine a tto r n e y who was g r a d u a te d from in the U n iv ersity School of Law the 1904, T h u rsd a y was o f f e r e d the in highest judicial position and jo u rn a list, and his S tu d e n t State, t h a t of Chief J u s tic e of the Opinion Surv eys of A m erica re- Texas S uprem e C ourt. A tto rn e y reived n a tio n a l recognition in the General Gerald C. Mann had re- Cam pus H ead lines d e p a r tm e n t in fused the a p p ointm ent e a rlie r this the c u r r e n t edition o f V arsity , a week. s tu d e n t amaze- “ E r u d ite Belden has, by his ini- merit at the offer, aid the Cover* Mr. Locke expressed W hereas religious symbolism “ Cibola Cibola! And here I found college n ew s m agazine. ; played a large p a r t in the ancients* j it, h e a r t ’s end and El Dorado, the a rc h ite c tu ra l expression, scientific shining city, the city of gold.” rese a rc h m u s t in ou r g e n e ra tio n , he said, fo r th a t A ntonio, Amarillo, and Dallas and to fill a long f e l t need, th e accu- “ see how it would be possible is o u r “ unique c u ltu re t r a i t .” the Also spoken of are El Paso, San ceeded in establishing a m achinery m a tte r to him and th at he did not to rate com pilation of A m erican stu- accept," He said he would make sister cities, “ W e n ee d ,” Mr. Leipziger stat- w hite to w e rs tall fro m the plain.’ ” dent opinion,” said V arsity. Bel- his reply Friday, j tiative a n d business sense, sue- n^r had ne v e r m entioned F o r t W o rth , “ the its place ta k e all the lection by H. Stanley Marcus, to de- U n iv ersity L ib r a ry ’s T exas Col- b r a ry job, in addition to m a n a g in g “ A L e t t e r F ro m T e x as” was den helped w o rk his w ay th ro u g h Mr. Locke said cus of Dallas in a limited edition. Spanish d o c u m e n ts an d intima- A copy w as recently given to the rentiy em ployed in a fu ll-tim e IL tion th a t his nam e was being con- ed, “ a scientifically im partial e x - j had planation of w h a t is to be consider- published in 1939 by Neiman Mar- school by ty p in g and tr a n s la tin g never m et G overnor O ’Daniel per- ed desirab le housing and w h a t is not, u n d e r the postulate th a t we to assist evolution j w a n t velop m at; to his g r e a te s t capa- i city.” b ranches o f ; Unless to science and a rc h ite c tu re g e t the work on slums o f our urb a n ce n te rs will j fa c ilita te the d e te rio ra tio n of all • hum an instincts, which once func- tioned normally. N ot only b e tte r the condi­ rem e d y housing can tions, he cautioned, however. M IC A s President Is a One-Club Man G overnor O ’Daniel teleg raph ed Mr. Locke that; the Chief J u stic e ­ ship wa- such a great office th a t “ the job should seek the m an and j nor the man the office. I “ T h e re fo re .” the G overnor said, “w ithout consulting you, I am ten- j dering you the as I Thief Justice of Suprem e I Court of Texas.” i The vacancy was caused by the j death Monday of Chief Justice C. M. Cureton. is cur- sonallv and had had no sidered fo r the position. this now, he said, B y J A C K D O L P H a p p o in tm e n t I the poll. th a t he the to is being m ade U sing his slides th a t illustrate p ro g re ss in various countries, Mr. Leipziger t h a t study of such pic­ declared tu r e s would be of little use unless we w a n te d to le t foreign develop­ m e n t influence o u r own. “ In D e n m a rk ,” he com m ented, «. . v „ , As o f midnight, April 12, R o b e rt (Bob) Douglas of S p ea rm a n becam e p re sid e n t of M en’s In te rc o m m u n ity Association f o r 1940-41. T h e re w as no f a n f a r e and no form al cerem on y. MICA o ffic e rs elected in March ju s t ta k e office automatic ally a t the last fu n c tio n of the sp rin g session. D ouglas has big plans fo r t h e f to have a t I “ We ou ght I f u tu r e . Young Democrats To Roast Bigwigs The Y oung D emocratic Club of Travis C ounty will hold a gridiron Ned lead er.” The salute The p e rfo rm a n c e was a ded ica­ tion to Dr, Rainey as a “ friendly, scholarly to B u r n e tt came when the audien ce ( W ard-Boss) McDonald, the S te e r s ’ veteran “ nothing-ball” pitcher, held the Owl? to two hits and no run s for the fir s t six i n ­ gave its he a rtie st ovation to the nings, McDonald, with a nica h a u n tin g melody, “ So Deep K My I curve-ball added to his stock, h a d the c o m p o e r Ihe H ouston boy. popping up or Love.” p l a y e d 'b y tne ball ir to th e dirt all , hitting . la n d su n g by th e Co-Ed Trio com- | a fte rn o o n . prised of Carlie B arn es, Mary Sue Ries. and R o berta 8-truss. , One hu n d re d ! I voices combined u n d e r the direc- errors tion of Chase Barnmen, p ro fe ss o r! of voice a t the University, to pre- and , . Rice’? f o u r ru n s came th e last th r e e innings w^hen McDonald th in v-two L ' lran coasting and a lackadaisical two Texas outfield com m itteed in F o r the first one and one-third innings it was a real ball game, . s e n t the fo u rth and m o st varied a * th e ? wls‘ the Steers> and th e n the Owls again were set down rn the 0 w , pitcher> ; ord cr p ro g ra m o f its an n u a l a e n c f. Swing also had its place on th e was pitching smoothly enough, b u t p ro gram , and a modern v e r s i o n a l ? n um ero us free tickets to fir s t Pepp(,r , . . . . . * _ of “ The Old Gray B o n n e t! ” a r- | hase hoded a ? ,!1 f u tu r e ’ , rang ed by C onrad F a th , m ade a the audience. The big h it with the sung by a rr a n g e m e n t w as ! Swing Four, B etty J e a n Jones, Ro­ b e rta Struss. Bill Yates, and Paul G erm an, who were accompanied by F a th . ond were re a d y to go to work. inning, an d singled < ame the last half of the sec- the L onghorns F lo w ers” O u tsta n d in g soloists of the even­ ing w ere F r a n k G a rd n e r who sang “ S pirit “ C o rn ­ b re ad ,” and A rchie H eap who sa n g “ Old M other H u b b a r d ” and . “ W om an Is a Sometime T h in g ” in his usual c a r e f r e e m a n n e r. Both civil I w ere enthusiastically received by and tho audience A Close Call, But Day Was Saved By Professor Hall vc I i«,.I A lthough the tulle o ra n g e blossoms w ere boy and girl walked un the a -Ie a p p ro a ch in g the altar. S pecta­ to rs looked on with a fee ng of uneasiness. This couple barely knew one a no th er. T hey had m et and spoken only a few times on th e campus. T he p re a c h e r looked up from his vows of “ D early beloved . .” a n d noticed th a t the girl had a n e rv o u s look in her eye. The boy d id n 't look alto g e th e r sure o f himself. They had almost arriv ed a t the altar. A t this point, Dr. C. W. Hall, p ro fe sso r of M arriage and Mor­ als, cleared his th ro a t and sa d, “ T h a n k you. Now you two can r e tu r n to y o u r desk? and take notes on the m a rria g e vows.” The L on gh orn s Bouncing Bobby Moers, f i r s t up. a n d P ete Layderi walked. Then Booty E ck ert put; a single past f ir s t base f o r th e perfect hit-an d-ru n play, scoring Moers and sending Layden a r o u n d to Lnird. L ay den scored a m o ­ ment la te r as H eigel dropped L ea U rouchers’ long fly in r ig h t field. s tru c k hare! again in the th ird , as th re e r u n s cla tte re d across the p la te on o n ly J a c k St."-ne was hit by one hit. the pitcher, C laren ce P f e d w alked, and Moers advanced them with a cam© ice. a a tilrough w ith a t h a t •cored Stone an : P f < ii. L ay d e n •'topped a t second, i ut soon scored th ird - as F r a n k ie Carswell, Owl le t E c k e rt's g ro u n d e r long -ingle a email, Layden then get p a st him. PH i The o th e r the ball ato p • fourth i. me •• in of th© season was the highlight of th e fo urth inning. The S te e r c a p ta in tho cliff in lifted Centerfield. ru n of! the in ning cam e a? Moers walked and rode home on E c k e r t’s double. Up to this singe o f the ga m * t ’iie FTce team had been able to get tw o hits— singles by Bob Brum ley a n d Harold Palm er. The Owl pitcher, Pepper, had issued five walks a n d had hit one S te e r batsm an fo r an o th e r free trip, McDonald h ad not walked a man. to McDonald for only But the blitzkrieg came In tho fifth, as the S teers slammed P e p ­ p er’- o ffe rin g s fo r seven hits a n d ten runs. H e r e ’s how it h a p p e n e d : Charlie Haas doubled. Stone walked, and both came home on P f a i s double. Moors then doubled to sec e Pfes!. Layden walked, and E ckert singled to score Moers. Fro cher'? f y to le ft field w-ai dropped by Brum ley and every* Sec BASEBALL, Tage 2 Hears Legend as B ill Now to Play Its Lead , , , a ! r st * >»*»« I least 1.000 m e m b e r , n e x t y ear." b u ilt p a rtia lly with public funds.**; he d e c la re d „ A , a m a tte r of H ie need f o r low-cost h o u .m * on fa e * we , hould interegt ,,5 0 0 of the c o n tin en t arose from the post- in d p p e n d e n t s tu d e n ts on the e a r p overty, he explained. S u e - c a m p u s ." Smiling, he added, " O u r den, he continued, c re a te d co- J p o a j jg 2 OOO ” TI, ‘ operative building societies; a n d ; Bob was born in Dallas. His , m em bers are loaned fro m 50 per . , u - fam ily moved to W aco w hen he c e n t to 90 per c e n t of the cost o f ; __ ~ ______ .__ , u ._ , j 1 was 6 y e a rs old. He received his la newr house. e a rly schooling at home, and was I IO y e a rs old before his m other decided let the Waco schools teach him. The fam ily moved to S p e a rm a n before he e n te re d high school. lectu re, he e n ­ forum with several Follow ing his in a See HOUSING, Page 2 j c f gaged ... to ^ . , . , to- the I exas I nion As a small boy in Indiana, Bill Morgan climbed old apple tree* dinn er at night. The them e of the d in n e r; in the family orchard and heard legends o f the man who had p la n te d them ge n era tio n- before— J o h n n y Appleseed. As a sophomore will be a satire on political g re a ts in end n ear-greats. Expected guests the University, Bill Morgan is now reh earsin g fo r th e title role In a include all living ex-governors of . play about the legendary ch a ra c ter. ♦ Texa? with the exception of Ross j Sterling, and i f s possible t h a t he ! , will be present . : U nited S ta te s S e n a to r J o h n E J the Miller of Arkansas will be talk principal speaker, He will I on “ T radition al A m erican P rin ­ S e n ato r Miller is noted c i p l e s . ” i fo r his w ork on flood co ntrol and I power legislation. In “ J o h n n y Appleseed,” f o u r th m a jo r production of th e C u rta in Club. Morgan has his biggest p a r t in tw o seasons o f acting. He w i t ?een in “ Marco Mil* lions” and “ Th© F r o n t Pag e.” and had p a rts this y e a r rn “ The Devil's Disciple” and “ O ur T ow n.” last y e a r Noted Czech Composer W ill Visit Here Today J a r o m i r W ein b e rg e r, “ I w'as in the seventh g r a d e ,” he said. “ But the S p e a rm a n dis­ tric t d id n’t have th e same classi­ ficatio ns, and I was ju m p ed up a n o tc h .” He was g r a d u a te d fro m the high school there when he was 15. A f te r w orking fo r two years, he en te re d the U niversity i in 1937 to study chemical e n g i­ neering. n o te d Czechoslovakian composer, will be on th e cam pus to d a y as the g uest of Dr. and Mrs. H. J. E ttlin g e r. Mr. W einb erger is com ing from San A ntonio w h e re la st T h u rsd ay th e San A ntonio night he heard S ym phony the orc he stra world pre m ie re o f his la te st com- position, “ Prelude a n d S outhern Folk^ l u n e , ^ thc melody o f “ Dixie. ^ Mr. W einb erger incited am o ng music lovers as com- Wells, Douglas has curly hair. He said, came fr o m bookkeeping nota- wiH speak briefly. ‘Schw am la, the poser of the opera “ SchwaiUla, the js stockily built, weighing a r o u n d ; lions in a system used by M u rra y B agpiper,” and a suite which was last “ I saw w ere told they had to move. F u gu e 0,1 MICA was w hat I liked,” he said, i w a n tin g to pay high ren ts, th e y tors to Aint in, and Price Da form ed a co-operative house, with of Liberty, s ta te p r e s id e n t of based on ,.j j 0 jned r and stayed o u t of all °*ed tc to ry of the season this afternoon when it plays the net team from T ulane U n iv e rs ity on the P e n ick C ourts beginning a t 2 o’clock. 6-0 counts this season, but dropped a dual to a p o w erfu l V a n d e rb ilt A lth oug h all fo u r o f Coach E m appeared it th a t negotiations would be successfully concluded to put Dean back on the Cub mound s ta ff. The Cubs, whom Dean deserted in Kansas a fte r being fined $100 fo r violating curfew , arrive d in Basebal (C ontinued from ra g e I . ) mett P a r e ’s boys are ju s t sopho- j Chicago last night, their game yes mores, the Green W a v e rs are ex- terd ay w ith the St. Lo uis B ro w n s i Donald then struck out, distingu- peeled him self as the only man to feated A labam a and F lo rid a b y | , make two outs in one inning. B u t i co^ an<* snow* Dean " as reported n aas thought nothing of McDon- team 2-4. in been <,a n c tiied because o f ! to be tough. T h e y de- h ^ . a „ is J r . , , , P » « the No. , and in tennis, from N e w Y o rk and has a good and called H a rtn e tt both a record I , „ p layer fo r Tulane. O th e r m em - 1 , tom ato j hers of Coach P a r , ' , team a r , I R o y B a rtle tt, L u c k e tt Y a w n , and face.” also m aking the belligerent assertion that “ no one can tell me George Schneider E a r l B a r tle tt and B illy Mc- when to go to bed.” B u t a fte r a young net- two of the best the nation, are freshm en | ferent, Gehee, fers in at T u lan e and should m ake the j ---------- —— ------ ----------- G reenies extrem ely p o w erfu l next I year when they become eligible T u lan e for v a rs ity com petition. the in is defending cham pion Southeastern C onference this sea­ son. The Box Score: (4 ) ta]h w ith his w ife , all was d if­ body was safe. Jo y c e Raw e, Ste e r catcher, then caught one of P a l­ mer's fast balls and bounced it W a y n e G yg er w ill p rob ably be o ff the c lif f in right center fo r a ! on th'e m ound fo r the Y e a rlin g s to c le a r the sacks. Mc-1 with C linton G rell, third baseman, triple ready to move over to the p itch er’s box if G yg e r should weaken. The Y earlin g s have little know- , J double of the inning. then drove a b all on the c lif f fo r N 11 be F e a t l y outnumbered. a home run. This was the last o f p * reported the scoring fo r the Raw e, Haas, and Stone chalking up runs. n7 Ja c k Stone ; as *be a ile of the squads go, they It freshm en inning w ith j have over loc) candidates fo r the The Y earlin g s w ill be shooting to d ay’s , „ I game. Thus f a r this season they Ona as the Longhorns came u p | have won tw0 Kamca_ u . , 0 ovcr W atson relieved Pepper fo r the , , for a .750 average the Aggie ,, y in to bat in the last. h a lf o f the sixth. st. E d w a r d s and 14-3 over the E c k e r t w as safe on a fie ld e r’s B a y lo r frosh, and have lost one, the Crusaders from St. choice and even tu ally was pushed 2-0, to r j>. J h home as W atso n walked the next : , The sta rtin g line-up today for , three batters. W atson w alked T e x a, w i„ probably bf c h a r lt y Tt. . „ , , . . . . the seventh Heine, r f ; Carl H oera, The Owls erased the possibility jo\*sky, c f; B lin k y H e lf, fo u r men d uring the inning. This ■ Krause, 2b; Clinton G rell, Sh; Je ro m e Ha- was the last run scored by Texas. G rad y H atto n , ss; lb ; Bd lf ; Pete and i Bostick, c G yger, p. l o n g --------------------------------- o f a white-washing in inning. doubled P a lm e r romped home on W ood's single to Centerfield. came through again in the eighth as M cD onald issued his only w alk _ The Lio n s c f E a s t Texas State K a iser Teachers w ere given an edge to of the game to Watson, singled, and Pa lm e r came through ; take t honors ,n lhe Commerce with another double to send W a t - . track meet over s t hen F A u s_ son and K a is e r home. The Owls L I O N S A R E F A V O R E D C O M M E R C E A p ril 12. ^ gam Houston> ( IN S ) The fin a l Rice score came as Also on in the ninth and track and W ood scored on a double by Leigh. tripled today’s schedule are field prelim inaries of the d istrict Interscholastic League. Jo y c e R a w e , regu lar catch er o f w ith fin a ls to be held tom orrow, i —--- ----- ----— —-............. - t o b e t r o u b l e slightly* B i l l y B r o w n , at ar t r a c k m a n f o r t h # L . S . U . T i g e r * , i* r e p o r t ­ e d i n j u r e d , b u t h e ’* e x p e c t e d t o d e a l t h e S t e e r a in a n d O w l * p l e n t y o f t o d a y ’* t r i a n g u l a r m e e t a t B a t o n y e a r ’* m e e t R o u g e . A t B r o w n w a * o n t h e i n j u r e d I n t , b u t h e t a p e d u p hi* a n k l e a n d t o *et a n e w b r o a d w e n t o u t j u m p in f o r t h e h i g h j u m p , a n d r un o n a w i n n i n g r e l a y t e a m . r e c o r d , f i r*t la«t t i e Housing - ('Continued from Page I . ) of the audience. The inform al topic o f discussion was w hether a state I ke Texas should build a few large recreational centers to corn­ e r h rn re attra ctiv e outside ti, or wl (ether it should build * and scattered cen- sm a lls upporting the argu­ e r centers, a m edi­ a t e H ig h w a y D ep art­ er'd the purpose of s roadside parks, e answered, “ are fo r are not m eant to at- ; but to accommodate ff the w ant to get of hose, ,*. They people w h pele resor many tors. ment ber c m ent : the safe’ . t r a c t those r o a d. , 'n Cfi- ly u Se as a prep more hat came later, amented the o p-.ctureless ing hi* ration i Professc incoming ered hoc in ter! speech r slides Gideon tf “ our ?s with •s. abd W it h boys like Reuben Riskind, M aurice F in ch er, Jo e B ra d le y , Jo e B a ll, H e n ry B a tje r , B ill Bla lo ck , Tom m y G lenn, Bob and B ill B i l l ­ ings. Ben Nixon, L e o L a B o rd e , Harry* H ickm an, and possibly M el Lapm an read y to p lay, the L o n g ­ horns w ill be favored to take th eir eighth this afternoon, however. trium ph In th e ir seven dual meets to individual m atches out of six about f if t y played. The match that had been sched­ uled fo r yesterday afternoo n be­ tween the Texa* freshm en netters and the N orth Texas A g ric u ltu ra l College team was called o ff, bu: w ill probably be played at a later date. A f t e r tod ay’s contest w ith the Green W avers, m any of the V a r ­ sity and freshm en players are ex­ pected to go down to Houston fo r the big R iv e r Oaks tournam ent which begins M onday. w h iter rugs—-most of its extran­ eous, uninviting, and unhom e­ like.” Quoting m ostly from letters of ea rly settlers, he described the d aily life, the houses, the fu r n i­ ture. the inns, and the Germ an in ­ fluence in Texas. A f t e r showing pictures of the solid homes o f those days, he concluded w ith, “ M a y w*e y e t retu rn *o the honest, wholesome, principles o f the hon­ est pioneer.” ab R I C E 4 K *l»e r. lb — 4 Palm er. 2 b --- ... 4 Carew ell. 8b — ________4 Wood, ss lf — ........ 4 B m rn ley, .... 4 Leigh, c f ---- H iegcl, rf — _______ 4 Gerlxnd. c ---- ______ _ 8 2 P E P P E R . P ___ W A T S O N , p _ _______ 0 e h po a r 0 I 8 I I 0 8 4 8 I I I 0 2 0 2 9 8 I I 0 X 2 0 I 0 0 2 0 I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 IS 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 I — — —— — — 3 9 4 8 24 33 T o t*!* ( I * ) ab T E X AB 7 H a**, rf ----- Stone, 2 b ____ ________ 4 4 p f ' : . c f ___ o Schlegtl, c f . H oer*. Sh *.— ________ 8 ____ ___ 4 Leyden, 5 ... E c k e rt, lh ..— lb ____ I Arm strong, Croueher, #* _ ________ 4 ___ f Rawe. e M c d o n a l d , p ______ 4 ft I 4 0 I 0 4 0 8 ......... _______SS 18 13 27 15 b po a 0 0 2 « 6 I I 2 I 0 0 2 8 I 8 IO 2 0 I 0 8 I I I r 2 3 8 0 8 3 2 0 I I 0 T o tal* lf .. . ft 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 R ice ______ 0 0 O O O Texa* 0 *— 9 2 S 2 IO I 2 I — 4 I 0 0 X—-18 the 1938 championship team , was a “ surprise” starter yesterday. He handled M cD onald exceedingly w ell and tripled in the blitzkreig fifth to bat in three runs. H e also laid down a perfect sacrifice and drew three walks. (2 ) , Le yd e n Runs batted in : P a lm er (2 ) , B r im ey. (2 ) , E c k e rt (2 ), Croueber Ste ne 2 ). P fe il (2 1, H oera (2 ) . R a w * (3 ) [“wo-baae hits: Palmer (2), Leigh, M cD onald, once famous f o r his H as*. (2), McDonald, TfeiL Moer*. Haas “ nothing b a ll” and the num ber of >ase hits: Moer*, Rawe, Wood. Three- w alks he would give in a game, H om e R u n s : P fe i!. Stone. L e f t on b a s e s : a nice-breaking yesterday had Texas 14. R ice 4. Base* on b a ll*: o ff Pep* ter. * ( Leyden (2). Pfeii Rawe. Crouch- curvn and issued but one base on et, Moer*. Stone): off Watson. < M<-»e>ra. j balls. M ac Coucher. Settle gel) : o f f M cDonald, Str uck ou ts bv Pepper, I bv Watson. bv McDonald, s H it* off Pepper. 12 In fiv e inning*: off r, w .- .., pitcher. by PerneD 2 (Stone. McDonald), by M cD onald. W atson was Pasted ball: Rawe. Stone. , OlSfhth. There w ere fifte e n bases on (Bromley 2. Leigh■ bajis issued in the game: seven by h t k, Pepper, s e re * b y W a t s o n , a n d on* the w h en he drove , i n . I (M cD on ald )* j d o u b l e ^Ln tm l^ stone. h reached p itch e r’s I (Leyden Hass. base* Eckert, ( w a t s o n ) . ! out his stone): Stolen In ■ I , , . . , Rawe, Umpire* Moer*. : Lin d , Losing Gibson. hurlers, holding the Longhorns to one hit and one run in the three innings he worked. Sa c rific e p i’rh er. Pep T im ' 2 ho more e ffe c tiv e of th* two Rice Hill, Barefield On Injured List Three-Way Meet Should Be Close Todsjr at Baton Rouge, in tho annual t r angular track and field meet o f L .S .U ., Rice, and Texas. Southwest Conference fans should get an in kling a? to who should win the conference meet this year. To date, although the Owls and Steers have faced each other in several meets, neither team has been fu lly represented. This meet with and A .A M . next month— the so-called “ little conference” — w ill stamp one c f the teams as favorite. trian g u lar meet the The pow erful Louisiana squad, however*, xvi I make today's con­ tg gig three-way affairs. last year's meet on the M em orial S t a ­ dium tra ck, the Tigers finished ’ lice O w .s. soc nd ber.tr s Texas finished one point behind L .S .U . In " e and W ith Fred d ie W o lc o tt o f the Owls, B illy B ro w n t r a n k Church o f the Tigers, and Lo nnie H ill and Red B a re fie ld of the Longhorns on the in ju red list, the times m ay not he a? low as they would have bee: otherwise. Bu: H ill and B a re fie ld are the only two vt the five who w ill not com­ pete. Texas fans w ill rem em ber that the L .S .U . squad came to A u stin last A p ril bemoaning tim fa c t that B ro w n was injured, lie taped h 1 ankle, though, broad jum ped f u r ­ ther than an y man has ever br ca I jum ped on M em orial Stadium , won firs t place in t he 100-yard dash, tied fo r firs t in the high Jum p, ran on the w inning q u arter­ ns lie re lay, and “ cooled o ff ’ by Competing in the discus and 220- yard dash. Browm, W olco tt, and Freddie Ram sdell, blond little Texas spr nt star, are scheduled to meet in the 100-yard dash, the headlined event of the afternoon. Coach C lyde L i t ­ tle fie ld a ~o took C hari in R o b e” : 1 and N ew to n Bedew, stars of the 1939 Freshm an sprint re lay ’ earn, en tire N e w Orleans trip. Boyce Ga tewood m ay also enter th is race. r i ­ the 220- ill be un­ o f R ice, * le-h cl der Ramp.;lell, or G:ate- Tying form they and sibly B r e v n w ill enter the y a rd dash w here they w . be derdogs to Jo e Blagg Southw cst Conference in that ever.*. Robert Besew, and B illy Sci wood, hurdler who is st: to beat W o lco tt, w ill team the sprint re la y — an event should win. Ram sdell, Roberts throw er, Ja c k Hughes, Texas' old standby* — Beefu s ro e B r y a n and. re ­ v a u lte r and discus s p ectfu lly— are aim - •• cinches to w in firsts. Siple r f L .S lh , w ill be compot * r, B ry a n 's Hughes, one cd" tem ne men in the cou ntry at heaving th iisc, has no one to w o rry him. strongest H a r r y H afern ick Tom and P ric e , who fin is: a se ore-*wo in that order near y every Satur- da1 Will dints in the one-mile run. P i fill also run tho two-rrile as ro m ® ie Los- tar:. :;e a: Jo e S B; quarte Sparks. J W ew art w ill c “-mile v?.re a' e-re lay. Li* ti ked the iou I N T R A M U R A L S C H E D U L E ❖ matt SPF. * — Tom Wood (P h i P * l) v*. F ra n k ; Schneider ( P h i D e lt). S;40 o’Clock I C o vert ( D K E i . 1— W'm. K en n ed y (P h i Gem.) v*. R u t- ll Leonard 2— P a i l F:n ke Rap don Ja c k so n ( P i K A .), (P h i D e li). I — M ilto n Ragsdale 'S i * ’ fin (P h i Sig) va. Cor- Bob Simetncne-.t < P l K .A .). I 8:40 o Clock 5— A d rian D a v it (D e ta C h i) v*. Ken- cock (A T O ). 7 — E gene C arring to n ( S A E ) va. E d ; M ille r ( D R E ) . C h i) t i . 8— Horner M a n lier (D elt T a u ) v * . F i Blan k en b eck ler (P h i D e lt). 2— Sam F eld (S ig N u ) vs. Jo h n Han- 9— "a m W ebb ( S A E ) v». P a u l N em ir < neth Seib ert (P h i G a m ). 3— H a r ry V #r ( S P E ) vs. H oughton 10—-Jack B arth ^ lo w (P h i G a m ) v*. j S a t urday. A p ril I S B A S E B A L L F ra te rn ity D ivi*io n 2 30 o’Clock JC o rth — Del** >' hi t< Th e** X I Middle— Phi Si* Dell* v». Ph v(__ T, D KF,. 4 o’Clock j,__De -a Ta I * ta va. Tats Delta S h irle y (P h i P t s ). 4— Ja c k Herndon ( D R E ) ▼». A l Sura- (D e lt T a u ) v*. B ill -K A v*. P h i D elta Th B e ta T h 't a P i v* . S A E Horseshoe P itc h in g F r a te r n it y D lv 2 o’Clock on T a y lo r ( S I * (u> v» D avid J — R a y M N •*. ( P i K .A .) t i . E v e r e tt B ro w n le e ( S A E ) , 6— Jo e M irth (P h i S ig ) va. E rn e e t mer* (P h i P * i) . B o ti (C h i P h i). F erg Robert# Ka: 4 o’Clock (P l K A .) va. Ji m i ­ -T. V i n (P hi G a m ) v«, R o ** C h it­ 6— Die (Chi Ph 6— A llen P i K A rn. WTT F ra i- c a n t S gt v* r ar- irge r (B ig N u ), B u l W h ea t (S ;g N u ). ?. —-John Daniel * (T a u D elt) 4-~■BiJ W ll Harr * a l P h i) v*. Ja c k ( S A E ) v*. Ed W e ir - ley < P h i D e lt). 8— Bet• Dobson ( c P E ) v*. C a rter Dud- * 6— B ill R e ft *nd ( S P E ) v*. E d R a th e r (D e lta T a u ) v*. Bu* i P h i 3>vI T E N N IS S IN G L E S F r a te rn ity D ivision 2 o’Clock -as ( K A ) v*. M ik e Gains 12—>R. C a ry ( P l K A ) va. Stan B u s b y W ( S A E ) v*. B . W . IS - Norm an H o rn e t (K a p S ig ) v*. v*. Ed M iller gene Cavin (K a p S i g ) . 7--G rf ,ver I * we!l ( S P E ) v«. A l Lu cas P h i I) v*. Gardy Thorne* K n ig h t ( D e lt* T a u ). * _ W ad d y B J I ion ' P l K .A .) v». B ill Cooley r,or ( ' A M ) va, L a rk in Skin- I h—Jo h n P r r r y ( D R E ) ▼*. R alp h 2 :4 0 o ’C l e c k to C hi) v*# Jim aer (D elta Spence (C h i P h i) . I t — H erb ert J —J i m R !vin * (R a p S ig ) va. E d Ma**- H agen * D K E ) . 4:40 o'C lock I *-h ( S A M ) ▼*. Bob ( S A E ) va, Le* Sandra* I A— Ja r k c hile* ( S i t C h i) P a t 3 3— Tom C o tto n ery (P h i Kap S i * ) v*. (P h i G a m ). Fred E lliso n ( D R E ) . 11— Bob S t r e a k y F a r r a r ( B e t a ) . (A T O ) . Tom B ra d *field (P h i G a m ). 14— So l L e v in * (T a u D e lt) v*. B i l l ! Swanaon (P h i G a m ). 15— Jim M m oney ( P h i P s i ) . 16— G u y H aw kin a W h ite W s lJf * (S ig N u ), 3 7— Scott K ey (K a p S ig ) . don ( S A E ) va. C. B. ( S P E ) va. Tom ( S A E ) va. Bob L o w - ’ 18— W e b s te r Bishop (P h i D e lt) va. j 19— .lim S la to r ( K A ) va. F o rre s t R o b ­ W h itten h e rg (8 ig #C h i), f>— .John B e il Greer (P h i G a m ). 7— B ill K e n n y ( S i * C h i). Ch .rch 8— .Sam M -'Birney (C h i P h i) . M ora* 9 -Ma: lr I Corte* ( S A E ) . j Barnes 10— C IM * Gannon ( K A ) . 11— Jim B iv in a P e a vy ( P e lt S i g ) . 12— D ick Lee j (B e t a ). (S ig C h i) va. Jo h n (P h i G am ) va,. Bob ( B K E ) va. Fred (P h i B e l t ) , N ew t (K a p S i * ) va. B ill $* M e'lin g er ( S A M ) . ; C raig !4— -Seymore M eyers ( B r i t T a u ). 15— I.andon Cullem j F a rle y Roca (D e lt T a u ). IC — Runnel! Rem b ert Boh B o g arte ( A T O ) . (S A M ) vg. Jo h n (P h i G a m ) v*. (P h i D e lt) v*. IT — Boh ’I ann et (T h e ta X I ) va. Geo. 13 -J.lek Htraua (P h i S i * ) vs, Con Sm ith (P e lt S i * ) . M anning 19- Dudley B a l l e t t ( D R E ) . 20— Ken n eth Seib ert Jo h n A rm atro n g ( A T O ) , (A T O ) va. P h il (P h i G a m ) v*. i S i* N u ) v*. P h i n- a n ( S A M ) . T a . D e’t ) t * R - » * B r a ' * ' rid u) « r B. Fain (Ch) Phi G a m ). : A E ) vs, Bob lo - ' ^ A tedt ( F s C h i) v t. B ra n t y r »dow . 4 -Cha# Sharp ( P i K A -ab. K irtla n d (S i# N u t. S c o tt man ( S A M ) . ( D R E ) v * . Tom P i 'k e 't ( A T O ) . 19— W in , F ra a * r (P h i G a m ) v * . Bur- 8— Le w is (T a u B e l t ) v * ton G r atm an (T a u De’! ) . * w a id Craven A T O ) v t, B i d Jo n -* 3 o ’C lo c k 7 — H ow ard Go o r* I ' S A E ) v*. E d K e n ­ et W ilto n (P h i f l a m ) . le i Vinton ( S P E ) . (P h i D o lt) v t . Ja c k P — Ike Kamprr.an ( S A E ) va. Jo h n ( A T O ) vs, T ra v i* 9— M ton D a v it ( S A M ) ▼#. Jo # Cor* M ark* (P h i S ig ) . I — E< 3 o’Clock ( D R E • roncit t * C a rl I.sue? «— Ed R a th e r (P h i D o lt) va M. Kllen- 3 0— Rd H arp e r (B ig N u ) v*. A llen — A' P re n d e rg a ti sd (D elta Ta j?. K A Peter S o’Clock (A T O ) v*. M . C. or (T h e ta X i ) v*. E a r l S ilve rm a n I 2 Jo h n Peterson (P h i S i t ) . k Jar.-*; (S ig N u ) va. Rob W at- Sit ’OO (D e ft C h i). P h i P a l) va. D o ve Lew :* 'a 12 - Jo h n A s h le y (D o lt C h i) v*. Robt. Heaps C a rtw rig h t (K A .) v*. Bob eon (D K lr ). 13— F ra n k S in g e r (T a u D e lt) va. H . drick* (K a p S ig ). Spear* f D R E ) . bin ( D e ll T a u ). Qureau (S ig N u ). 13 — S . E t Biland ( S P D . >dmi Fred M V a a f ) P h i) - * J o! B— Jim T garte (A T O a— john < Cox (C h i P i 3 R Bronaon (P h i G a m ) va. B d K r r J .att ( P h i S ig ). P h i P s i) va. B ill H a rr:* rn (D elta T a u ). t -B I T'rowrdng (A T O ) v*. F ra n k 4 — R# ben B a rr (T h e ta X i ) vs. Floyd f nley (C h i P h i). C h i) ▼». S A;,en (K s p Sigh I — A sh le y Den to# ( P i K A . ) vs. H a rris (Delt. Sig . (S ig C h i) v». P a u l Neeee (P h i B e l t ! . 16— B ill B irch (S I# C h i) va. Tom Da- J Z iegelm eygr ( S P E ) vs. Jo h n r- «am W 'c b ( R A E ) va. Ben Dobaor vidaon ( K A ) . S P E C IA L to Studtn+c I — G erto n C ; «n (T a u D e’ t) v*. Rene 8:20 o’Clock ( S P E ) . (D e lia B ig ) va. Bobby M B ir o e y ( D K F ) . I — J e f f Apperaon (C h i P h i) va. Sam I — Clyde Sorenson (T h e ta X I ) vs. (D e lta S i * ) v§, B ill Chaa. Pa h la an ( S i * N u ). 3 7 — Chaa. M obley (B e lt T a u ) v*. Jo h n Sealy (P h i D e ft). l h — B ob S te w a rt W ilb u r B a r th if)— B e rn ie F rie d old M arsh ( K A ) , (P h i K a p S ig ) v*. (D e lt T a u ). (A E P i ) v*. H a r ­ ~ { J / 0 Cash and C a rry Discount on Laundry i = 5 AuAtinXaund>w S r m am x x asx x Ba^ ^ (T a u D e lt) v», J . Robert* (P h i B e lt ) . j Thompson ( B e t a ) , 4 — S te w a rt M o rris ( A T O ) t i , P a t 4 o’Clock 8 -G ene Jo p lin * (T h e ta X I ) v*. La m a r 20—-Blake Sim m on* ( D R E ) va. C lark N ho ac • h I, Am a <*r De a S ig ) va Clyde B u ffin g to n ( K A ) . 6 A. A nderson ( I L L / va. Ja c k Em * t Lo w e ry ( Pi K .A ./ , I Ph i P M ). t — l \ e t Lo w ie* I (D e ll T a u ) y |. P a t • KL-berg (A T O ). _ 4 6 — Jo h n Sa n ste d t ( S i* C h i) v». E a rle 6 U k e Robertson ( A T O ) va. D ick Ha) W y i A e M a tte r* (P h i P » i). W am der ( S A M ) , 3:20 o'C lock Baker ‘ Phi B e lt* . 2— B J P e a v y t Rev,.-* S A M I . ts— Jo e !■ idold B ry a n t (P h b f* . 4 J, Ro ttenb erg ( T h , Cam op Sm ith, and : pe * e in the then run in ’.eld had not i man when F r id a y stin the trsp are Ton-®:e Mc- D elavan. so is :rnprov­ should al i It Is on P u e t t ; r r e d . the trio are I — : m a r ti '. Feci )an J< Fla: We y e t pi i the Ste TU 0!*fj i r £ Half- B ill ( B i Spaddei ing cxc ra in a : a. n slats' O t h e r rn e n n a i H o m er Barnes, h la* Jacq u es hum A * and ran, ja v e lin ; Ju lia n G put and discus; Davit pole v a u lt; ai javelin. •ga Tennis H ead Scores Unpatriotic N et Stars P H I L A D E L P H I A , A p r il 12 — ( I N S ) — Joseph A. W e a r , vice ­ president cf the I S. L a w n T e r ­ m s Association, term ed “ -outrageous” the large fee-* p u r­ p orted ly charged by A m erican tennis Mar® who played in a m atch for I inrush re lie f in N ew Y o rk on M arch IO. today that “ I a mi disgusted with the whole am bunch,” asserted W e a r. “ I ashamed players couldn't v « a« patriotic as other athlete* v ser- vices. I rn glad I didn’t have a n y ­ thing to < •.''>• at*d th eir tennis - • ” A in rn. g - pa rf if* pate I B ill 7 c fps* • 3 ra j r ayers who ti < ma: h were a n i L r .:, l H O S P ! I A L L I S I 5 1 B o v id '* H o t pi tot J * « « * f. Ne W R " , t i Per • G*-* r.i. e H Qt R H o « * t 4 C I H Cho* Tc rf ;t t Jut I * * * . M * c .* b ^ rf t un* a P ra d o Dun M o rm o n Jfgfgo* . »- R o ' burn ll B ober: H olt L u r * Bed in# Seton H o tg ito l J)i : b ''ti* Lt** t m Su* Brmrkg Ed no B tu M r*. I »th#r S»*ff* V . t f . S*ott>*b R ite Dorm tory Me.cn Heern B o w y e r III et Home Mr to H'-g^e* leo I Sec Vie Lo a * M u o tfa aiery I nm** A G* B o t t * F e iv*. M cN ( it . . , Guides the footsteps of the I 1,000 students in the University of Texas who trod the campus daily In search of higher education. The Daily Texan guides the footsteps of I 1,000 students when they shop for spring innumerable clothing, hosiery, and the other articles bought during the year. Students turn to the Advertising Columns of The Texan for the newest fashions or the most economical buys. Wise Austin merchants place their adver­ tising lineage with The Texan, the one Aus­ tin newspaper giving complete coverage of "University City." ■''’■■■■J frat I S-K S '■M HK H p rn r n Bi H i p p A -q IH bi H rn ii M r n rnh rn $4 p l P rn SATURDAY, APRTU IS', 1940 Phone 2-2473* -THE DAILY TEXA N - Phone 2-2473 The Ftrst College Daffy in the South PAGE THREE Open Houses, Formals Head Social Calendar Round-Up has come and grone, but U niversity social life goes on with open houses and form al dances heading the social calendar this week-end. Residents of Brackenridge H all w ill have their spring open house Saturday night from 9 to 12 in the lounge of Roberts Hall. Refresh­ ..... ments will be served during tho*-- , evening. Music w ill be furnished: by a nickelodeon / \ r g Y q u Q ^ O I H g —-- ------ -- — # . , The present: following guests were ing Union. P i Kappa Alpha fraternity held open house Frid a y night from 8 to l l o’clock. The house was dec-; orated with spring flowers, and B o b b y Hammaek’s orchestra played for dancing. Chaperons were Mrs. J . L. Rountree, Mr. and Mrs. H arry ; Crockett, and Mrs. Bland. Kathleen F ra n ces Gal# Jo n e s M a rth a L u te M a ry J o M rA n g u s Eleanor M cC all Lo labeth M oser B e t ty Munson N orm a N icm eyer G lo ria O bar J e r r y Owen Rara Pennington J o y R a y Ja n # R io * M a ry P e a rl R o lle r S a ra N ell Savage J o A nn Stephens L illia n Stre e t R u th Spargo Anne T a lle y C o rk y A lb e rt M a rg a re t B a rro n A lice B e a s le y K it e B la ck Ja n e Copeland A rm in ta C a rter F ran ces Carpenter H elen Denrmin M ildred D elavan Je t t y De Long Ja n e D u ll D oroth y F a rm e r B e t ty Finnegan V irg in ia Ford D o ro th y F r y e r Connie G ossett H allie Groos K a y H am b lin Katherine Highama Mary Julia von Virginia Holland Betty Jones Maggie Dell Law- Dorothy Wright Margueriot Waning Blucher ranee Joyce Whaley Nat Perrine and hi? orchestra played for the Alpha X i Delta sorority Frid ay night given in the Crystal B a ll­ room of the D nskill Hotel from 9 to I o’clock. formal spring The chaperons were Mrs, K a th ­ leen Bland, Miss Dorothy Ge- I. bauer, Dean and Mrs. V. Moore, Dean and Mrs. A m o No- wotny, Mrs. M ary Gregory, Miss Florence Stullken, and Mrs. H. G. J 7:30 W heat. The following guests attended:! To Church? U N IV E R S IT Y B A P T IS T W a lte r H. McKenzie, pastor 9:45— Sunday School w ill meet in departments. l l — Dr. B. 0. H erring w ill preach on "Spirit-Moved Men Speak­ ing.” 6:45— Meeting of Baptist Train ­ 8— Dr. 13 o. H erring will preach on "Lost, Loved, and Saved." • ST. M A R T IN ’S L U T H E R A N F. G. Roesener, pastor 9:15— Sunday School. 10— Rev. Roe?ener’s Bible Class. 11— Divine Worship. (Broadcast over K T B C .) Sermon "A m erica and the W a r ." by Rev. Roesener, 7:30— Divine Worship. Sermon by Rev. Roesener, "Appreciation as a V irtu e.” • F IR S T B A P T IS T S. G. Posey, pastor l l — Observance of Lord ’s Supper. Sermon, "Communion Medita­ tion.” 8— Sermon, "G o d ’s Plan of Sal- \ alien.” U N IV E R S IT Y C H U R C H O F C H R IS T Basil D. Shilling, minister 8 Radio Program K T B C . 8 :30-— V. orship. 9:15— Bible School. 10:50— Sermon, ‘Christianity V e r­ sus Denominationalism.” 6:30— Young People’s Class. Sermon, "T h e Rich Fool.” Today - On the Campus M O R N IN G 8— Deep Eddy swimming pool to open for the summer. 9— Texas Conference on Hous­ ing, "T h e Regional Problem, Today and Tomorrow,” Archi­ tecture auditorium. 10*12— Texas Memorial Mu­ seum open. A F T E R N O O N 1— Visits to several examples of old and new housing archi­ tecture in Central Texas with architecture faculty in charge. 2-5— Texas Memorial Museum 3:30— K w ill Klub, home of Dr. and Mrs. C. H. Brownlee. N IG H T 6— Picnic supper, lawn of Grace 8:30— Box supper, University open. Hall. Club. 7— United States Senator John E. Miller of Arkansas to speak on "Traditional Am er­ ican gridiron Travis County dinner of Young Democrats, Main B a ll­ room, Texas Union. Principles," 7:30— Chancellors. dinner party and dance, Avalon, 7:30— J. Frank Dobie in to he featured tales, show and dance given by Aus­ tin High School Band Moth­ ers, Gregory Gym. folk-lore S O C IA L C A L E N D A R 7-11— Wesley Foundation leap year dance, Barton Springs pavilion. 8-11— Kappa Sigma open house. 8-11— B. Hall Association open house, Roberts Hall Lounge. 8-11 — Little Campus Dormi­ tory open house, Little Cam­ pus Gymnasium. 8-12— Swing and Turn Club folk dance, Boy Scout Hut. 9-12— Delta Phi Epsilon dance, Marie Antoinette Room, Ste­ phen F. Austin Hotel. 9-1— Sigma Chi formal, Country Club. F IR S T M E T H O D IS T C. M. Raby, pastor 9 :30— Sunday School. 10:45— Sermon by Dr. W . C. Rains of the Townes Bible Chair of the University. 6:30— Evening meetings of the Young People. 7 :30— Sermon by M urray Dickson I of the W esley Foundation. • U N IV E R S IT Y P R E S B Y T E R IA N T. W . Currie, pastor i l l — Sermon, Point." "T h e Breaking 6— Senior Young People, fellow- I ship and supper meeting. 6— Student League fellowship meeting. Dr. John H. Frederick w ill speak on relation of a Chris­ tian to the modern business ! world. j 7:1 5— Erwen Gathright, U niver­ sity student, w ill play at the or-; gan vespers, j 7 ;30— Sermon, j tion of Our K in g ." "T he Proclama- ST. P A U L ’S L U T H E R A N K, G. Manx, pastor and 10— Sunday School Bible classes, 11— W orship service. Subject,' "T he Church That God B u ilt." Subject, "The 7 :S0— Confession. Communicant’s P ray e r.” 8— ‘Worship Subject,! Service. "W itnessing for the Risen S av- ! ior." C E N T R A L C H R IS T IA N M. E. Sadler, minister l l — Sermon, "M aking the Church Triumphant.” 7 :20— Mr. Ellis Nelson, director of student work at the University Presbyterian Church, w ill speak. • A L L S A IN T S ’ C H A P E L C heater L. Hultt, pastor 6:30— H oly Communion. 7 ;3 o— H oly Communion. 11— Sermon by Rev. A rth ur B. R e s o lv in g of St. P a u l’s Church, Boston, Confirmation by Clin­ ton S. Quin, bishop of the Texas Diocese. 4— Dedication of the new chancel, Miss Jane Weinert Is Luncheon Honoree Miss Jan e Weinert, ex-student, who w ill become the bride of Ro­ land Blumbcrg, also an ex-student, April 20, was entertained by Miss Katherine Schafli with a luncheon Frid ay in the Sun Room of the Stephen F . Austin Hotel. Decorations and table appoint­ ments carried out a bridal motif with an arrangement of white flowers centering the table. A wed­ ding g ift and corsage of sweet­ heart roses were at the place of Miss W einert. A. D. P I TO IN IT IA T E Alpha Delta P i sorority will hold formal initiation services for five pledges Tuesday, April 16, at 8 o’clock at the chapter house. Those to be initiated are M ary Ann Hughes, Dorothy W illhite, La Merle Muckleroy, Marilyn Meador, and Faye Stein. R O M A N C E C L U B M E E T I N G Dr. Aaron Schaffer, professor of Romance languages, w ill give a paper on Jean Lahor, French poet and philosopher, at a meet­ ing of the Romance Club Wednes­ day afternoon at 4 o’clock in Main ______________ Building 201. organ, chancel furniture, a n d reinterment services for George Herbert former bishop of the Texas Diocese. Bishop Quin officiating. Resolving, 6— Evensong. 6:30— Sunday Club. • U N I V E R S I T Y C O M M U N I T Y IO— Rabbi Abram Vossen Good­ man w ill speak on "Dorothy Canfield’s Children’s Crusade." I ars pbell Ja c k A llen Jo e A llen Bob A m a ck e r Ted Barton Jam es Bailey Ken B igg * D avid B ra d le y Jo h n B ro w n ! eld R a y B ru to n Jo h n B ry so n P h ilip R u sk irk Jo h n n y L e s lie Carpenter L e w is ( h ris to ffrl H ugh Cloud Jim m ie C raig Hondo Crouch O. B . D avis Jo e D a iry J e f f Dent B rie n Dillon S y Dennis F e lix Drssktil F.d D unkcil erg A rth u r Dunlap H ugh Dunnagna Le w is E ic b h o lt Ed Eldridge H a r r y E lw c 'l Ro y L e t Em kcn New ton Kelps Charles F is h e r Randolph Fo ste r J . W a rd Kouts Jo e G a rre t Ju lia n G a rre tt F ra n k Goerner Ralph Graham B ru ce H e n ry Fred H en ry Ja m es H arstfield T an ner Hooker F in is Je f f e r y Bain # K e rr Jo e K iljr re W . H . Kilgore W ils o n K ludkm an H e n ry Krabben- schm idt B o y d Ladd Vernon L arson Jo h n n ie La th a m Jo e L a s s ite r Ir a L a vin E m il Lee D a vid I . issner Pa ii M cCfung F ears M rO ee F e lix M cG ivn ey B ill M cQ uillan James M cN am ara G eorge M-'Netr T o m m y Maud R ill M iller U d ell Mi.ore I ow is Morgan L e o n N o w ie rs k ! K e lts Guanine B o h Pep sea Rob Prim Don Rad tk e Charles R aley S y d n e y Reagan Ja c k Roberts f ir r y R u « s e ll H e n ry Scarborough R a y Scrug g s H e n ry Sebastian Jo h n Seale B illy Sim ons E llis o n Slau g h te r B o y d S in c la ir Robert Sn ell Owen Sm ith P in k y S te w a rt Ja c k Ston e E d Torrance Gene W h id d o n K en W oeb eil Jo h n Young Lindsay Youngblood Delta Phi Epsilon Has Formal Tonight Delta Phi Epsilon sorority will I hold its spring form al in the Marie I Antoinette Room of the Stephen | F. Austin Hotel tonight from 9 to 12 o’clock. Decorations will be in an H aw ai­ ian theme. Palm trees and spring flowers w ill decorate ball room. Leis w ill be given as favors. Clyde Mitchell and h is orchestra the will play. G A M M A P H ! P A R T Y Gamma Phi B eta sorority w ill give a “ kid p a rty " from 3:30 to 5 o’clock today, playing kid games, and serving ice-cream cones, stick candy, and peanuts. iiLl U L ililL L iU J N O W ! 25c-35c T ill 5 P.M. T W O R O U G H O U SE S A IL O R S Disney's 'Pinocchio' is Best Example of Cartoonist's Art B y F E L I X M C G IV N E Y Texan Amate,mentt Staff Replacing the former awkwardness and flatness of the cartoon character with depth and flexibility of movement, "Pinocchio” adds a new dimension to the animated motion picture. It characterizes with more vividness than any ordinary real-life film and is without ques­ tion the finest production of its kind ever made. «-------------------------------- • th® State. A t "Pinocchio.,, Produced by W a lt Disney. Folk Tales, Magic Road t0 Singapore Tuneful, . r T • i i Entertaining; Has Little Plot In bym lonight Dancing to Follow 15-Act Stage Show B y L E S L I E C A R P E N T E R Teraw A muaemmte Staff' It you are one who is interested in characterizations, then avoid "Road to Singapore," but if you are out for a refreshing afternoon— if you want two carefree hour? of laugh?, melodies, etc., then head for the Paramount. The film is composed of a story as weak as the Republicans’ 1940 political hopes, a bevy of glamour girls displaying •cenuly-clad t u i v a n d a few go A fifteen-act stage show spon­ torsos, several hit* —.............. i lines. — — — sored by the Austin High School J Band Mothers Club w ill be pre­ sented at 7 :30 o’clock, Saturday -.. Through multiplane technicolor W a lt Disney has been able to achieve a natural beauty which would have made the picture a triumph even if it lacked a story to bind its scenes together. He has given roundness and sym­ metry to his stage objects and bodily grace to his players so that they are unreal only because nothing so delicate could possibly exist. W ith this gilding touch that traits by accentuates character mere perfection of skill, Disney makes his characters approach close to human beings. Even then they are more interesting because to understand. they are easier Using simplicity and restraint and careful not to confuse motives in character delineation, the ani­ mators have given each player, both man and animal, his own in­ dividuality. So Pinocchio is a distinctive personality, although he is just a puppet brought to life through the wish of Geppetto, a wood arver. He seeks good, but he falls into temptation b uause he can­ not discriminate between right and wrong. He gains courage from his experiences, and finally his loyalty and love fo r Geppetto -ave the old shop-keeper from death in the stomach of a whale. in wis­ dom is supplied by Jim in y Cricket, his "conscience,” who provides the moral resistance of his charge against temptations. His artless­ ness, diminutive size and crisp humor enable him to steal the picture. W h at Pinocchio lacks is impressive Almost as J. Worthington Foulfellow, the vil- ; lainous fox, whose own cunning I is a humorous device because the i character has been po adroitly satirized. Although they have minor parts, Figaro, the cat, and ; Cleo, the gold fish, reveal intel­ ligent treatment on the part of the animators. I Geppetto, the woodcarver, and the puppeteer who jStromboli, J kidnaps Finochio, are opposites in personality. The former is kindly , and passive, and the latter is mer- I cenary and unscrupulous. They in j form one of ; character which are used both j widely and effectively throughout I the picture. the contrasts j a E M E E * LAST DAY “ EARL OF ff CHICAGO R O B E R T M O N T G O M E R Y E D W A R D A R N O L D PLUS EDGAR K E N N E D Y in “S LIG H TL Y AT SEA ” Color Cartoon " T H E BOOK WORM” STARTS SUNDAY C A P IT O ! K id d iericie R e v u e — Today I O 30 E N D S T O D A Y ! , r U U D C , p .m . R A D IO Edited by L A V E R N E B R Y S O N Texan Amusement* Staff TH E F IR S T Metropolitan Opera matinee broadcast of this sea- i son will be presented from Cleve­ land during the company's spring tour today at I o'clock over the The group i N BC-Blue network. is on its w ay to Dallas where it ; will be the early part of next week. Helen Jepson, soprano, will sing the role of Violetta in V e rd i’s Richard Crooks and Lawrence Tibbett w ill also be on the program. I " L a T ra via ta," I Four experts on Pan-American affairs give their answers to the question, "W h a t Can the A m er­ icas do About European W a r ? " on People’s Platform over ( ’olumbia network tonight at 6 the : o’clock. An all-Debussy program has I been chosen by Arturo Toscanini for his K B C Symphony Orchestra concert tonight at 9 o’clock over Ja rm ila j the NBC-Blue network. Novotna, Czech soprano who made her debut this season with the Metropolitan, will be soloist, sing- I ing the role of the Blessed Damo- sel in D( hussy’s cantata of the same title. University research in science’s I unrelenting battle to wipe out in­ fantile paralysis, is dramatized by ‘ the Human Adventure over Co­ lumbia network this afternoon at 4 o'clock. Dr. Jacob Heine, great Berlin specialist, was the first of the many doctors whose research forms the basis for the broad­ cast. Sabotage which nearly wrecked a great Am erican airplane plant and the efforts of a "special in- I terest" group the worth of a newly-designed pursuit ; skip, contribute to the exciting real-life inside story to be drama­ tized by Sky Blazers over C B S to- to disprove : night at 6:30 o’clock. Dr. Leo S. Rowe, director-gen­ eral of the Pan-American Union, See R A D IO , Page 4, night, in Gregory Gym. Following the stage show there will be danc­ ing with Jim m ie W e ile r’s orches­ t r a from 9:30 to 12 o’clock. J . Frank Dobie, professor of 1 English, and authority on South­ western folk-lore, will tell selected : stories following the opening of j the program by the brass sextet of ; the band. i Pupils of the Annette Duval and I Camilla Long dancing schools, i Dr. Carl F. Moore, Austin ma­ gician, jugglers, trios, and others ‘ will bring a touch of old-time the program. Pat : vaudeville : Adelman w ill be master of cere- I monies. j ----------------- to Air Travel Film Draws Big Crowd Standing room - as a luxury last night as an above-capacity 'audience attended the free motion : picture the Lindbergh I Trail,” shown in the Geology Aud- i itorium through the courtesy of j Pan-American Airways. "F ly in g The picture, an air travelogue, j was filmed by the Pan-American Airways pilots a-; the company’s airliners routine flight down the Atlantic coast of Central America, across South America and the Andes Mountains, and back to America. followed their Janeiro, The film might just as well have been named "F ly in g Down to Rio." as the Outstanding feature of the in Rio flight was the stop-over {de famed harbor and [metropolis of Brazil. A number of I south *ea included I in the flight, including H aiti and Martinique. Aside from showing a number of ancient Spanish I ruins, the picture also includes a i filmization of the interior of the I cathedral in which Christopher Columbus was at one time buried. islands were "Road to Singapore." At th® Paramount. W ith Bing Crosby, Dorothy Lamour, Bob Hope, and Je rr y Colonna. Bing Crosby maintains his rep- 11 o j u tat ion as one of Hollywood’? I Sho worst actors, but as h rig as hi voice holds out, his weekly pa; check is safe. Dot I.amour, mamny of that supercharged figure, walk Today's * MOVIES * P A R A M O U N T .— "Road to Sing- pore.” W ith Bing Crosby, Bob and Dorothy Lamour. M erry Melody cartoon, "Bear*? Tale," Feature starts at XI, 12:50, 2:40, 4:30, 6:20, 8:10, IO o'clock. Midnight Show', and — " Y o u n g E d is o n .” W i t h Mickey Rooney. T o m around in stomach-Iess .sarong.* ditto dancing costume?, a low-cu S T A T E . — "Pinocchio.” Fu ll Feature cartoon. color length off-the- starU ‘ 6:20, 8:10, and n ’ 12;3° . 2:40» 4:30» IO o ’clock. nightgown, and a ver transparent shoulder and very garb. H er voice doesn’t have to hold out. inson." VV Q U E E N — “ S w im Fam ily Rob­ K burn and Bartholomew, Feature I ’M, 3 5 : 3 7 , 7:40, i Terr luet, D=bert Montgomery and Ed- TK N A S .— " T o w e r o f L o n d o n . ’* W ith Basil Rathbone. )T AT S H N " G u l l i v e r ’ . T r a v e l . . * Besides the songs ami sarongs there are plenty of laughs. Je rry Colonna steals every scene that he is in as he rolls his eyes, bran­ dishes his mustachios, and strains t h e audience with the strains of "Careeeeeeeee, etc., Me Back to Old Virginny.” Austin Symphony Orchestra 2nd Concert 1940 A u s tin H ig h Sch o o l A u d it o r iu m T u e s d a y , A p r i l 16 8 :1 5 P . M . A d u lt s 75c C h ild r e n 25c U n iv e r s it y Stu d e n ts 35c Speedboat Rides o n N e w L a k e A u s t in F A S T R U N A B O U T S A N D C A B I N B O A T S S U N D A Y P R I C E S : 7 mile Ride SOC 20 m ile trip to n-w c ity park (8 passengers m in.) $1.00 each. M a rsh a ll Ford -14 mill' trip ($ passeneers m in.) $1,75 each. S P E C IA L R A T E S OS WEEK DAYS Leslie Crockett SPEEDBOAT HIDES Ju s t above the dam D ay and Night Ph on e $ 0198 T UI n e J e x a n C la s s ifie d , \ t l T ' T i s a I! •''N "x ' A/ -bi Announcements Announcements Coaching Records Ride A Congress Taxi >’ W h it e C a rs— New O wner W. A E . Owen* Phone 4375 I or 2 for 20c El Charro F o r Real Mexican Food Mexican Orchestra Nightly Joe Carlin, Mgr. Picnic in the Pines D ining Dancing G olfing A rc h e ry No Admission Charge to th# P a rk Log & Rock Cabins B A S T R O P Classified Advertising RATE CARD READER ADS 20 Words— Maximum t i m e __ 1 time* — 2 8 tim es ___ 4 times __ 5 time* __ times — 4 .8 .40 .56 . .70 . .80 . . .90 . 1.00 Reader Ads A re To B e Run On Consecutive Days We Charge for Copy Change DISPLAY ADS I column wide by I inch deep 60c per insertion ALL ADS CASH IN A D V A N C E Responsible for one incorrect in c e rt:o n o n ly No refunds for cancellations. Messenger Service until 4:30 p.m. service until week-days. Counter 6 p.m. Dial 2-2473 further information on messenger service. for ; S P A N IS H . French, La tin . Typing M r. j H um phrey, 204-B W . 20. 2-8674. 8-3327 H IS T O R Y 9. 4, etc. Govt. Exp teacher. Easto n . 190$ P e a rl, 8-8370 IO. M A T H — Experienced tea ’ her. Randle. A lso typ in g . 2309 San Antonio. 8-116* S P A N IS H . French. German. Italian. Exp toucher I t n t Coner.'-- 2-7 104 'T H E W O O D P E C K E R 'S S O N I ' — G lenn M ille r and i i - <‘rebater*. "S o Long'* i /-cheat ra. Record* •n «aia a t J . R . Reed M u .ic Co. i l l Con- • K- na ft- ii Rug Cleaners RUGS CLEANED GEO. WESLEY I S I S San Ja c in to F ne 2-9121 For Sale Thesis Drafting B A R G A I N S lig h t ly U T a 6.00x16 Goodrich Firestone Auto Supply and Service Station 5 th A L a v a c a Phone 2-4141 Laundries Trust Your Duds To O ’tr Suds D RISKILL HOTEL LAU N D RY 8 Hour Se-v'ce 119 East 7th Phone 6444 L I B E R A L R E W A R D for patent leather ___ Ti'.'sJS’ ; it!*!* M. : Statesm an, l l . " Ray IL .w a rd . American- j L O S T — W a lle t containing valuab le paper* i and! a sum of money near U n iv e rs ity , j Rew ard. Ph on e 2-73-7. T H E S I S D R A F T IN G . L f T I E R I N G F re e h a n d D ra w in g by p ro fe ss io n a l, 3316, Typewriters : u D E N T S — W e are n-'w offering night re g u la r t y p e w r it e r - s e rv ic e on * cr Exchange, :rpco*> at '6 E a • t 11th. Phone S-3009, Typing V O N K A D O W — i.§ 't E A S T 1st— 3025 T yp in g and M im eographing R a p id ly and reasonably done. h X !' E R i accurate. feat. \ Nueces. 8-1289* j — Cheap, accu rate, auick. M rs, 2*887 4, .'brey. VV hitis. £006 I TP IST, M u rra y. rsographer, N o tary, Ma# . Guadalupe J - b U 8 8____ R e n t a l s Furnished Apartments R I n G R A N D E , Sleeping pore —E n t ir e downstairs. •’rigidaire. Also two up* menu. Ail newly dec- ms na id S-382S. G arage Apartments ms. Blo ck es. P h o n s M rs, Rooms •THE GREAT VICTOR HERBERT* 912 Red River Phone 7735 . * : W #v*‘- Alway* 15c Till 7 P.M. ^ S T A R T IN G S U N D A Y ! Box No. S t a t e Park B a stro p , Texas Phone 9126 S W e reserve the to correspond with The D aily Texan. rlch t to edit copy the atyle used by Lost and Found L A S T DAY- B A S I L R A T H B O N E B O R IS K A R L O F F IN "Tower of London" W I T H B A R B A R A O ’N E IL Q U E E N You h a v e Read i t . Now Live It! HIRE IS THE SUPREME H TRIUMPH Of hi TIO! ! i, ! R Atturn* A uto Rentals RENT A NEW CAR. 4255 15 miles, t i.6 0 . lOe m il* over. Free Delivery Nanigan's erence*. D R E S S M A K IN G A A lteration*. C all 4599 or bring work to 1002 Rio Grande. R e f ­ Dressmaking Cafes Coaching , OF NOIRE ’ DAMI STARTS TO D A Y Any Seat 25c -. LOST-—-One pair rim less glasses in ma- W E F T 22nd. p riva te ho I roon cave in U n iv e rs ity neighborhood. Fern U lb rie h . Rew ard . 612 W e s t 82nc Phone :>ath. Mea:* — N ice eely large bedroom. f im ita te d . Tw in v. m o a t private ria) 2-1806. Y E L L O W -G O LD E lg in w ris t watch, meta! , b and . L o s t Let * -en 2600 Speed wa* . l l ui id jug. R e w a r d , M rs* B a rr:# , B io lo g y Old L ib r a r y B uild in g IO U - __ ~~re ... „ _____ _____ ___ ________________ . . b»rh C>’< «*«t place, plenty ox p a r k t r g M R S. L IN D L M S - R o o m w ith P riv a te . . Room St Board _ -.... --------- ----—— i ♦’ado. 8*01 y4- at. , a'.- r r * athens* exv-nares. Make Sum- i s t h and Colo- rh .<•. » P l u m b i n q . a. R A V E N — Since w ater heater I “ 90 - Plumbing gas piping ; '-Reges, heaters conoaited. *:» * » -ewers I J repairing I " , j , ' ' __________________ ss , rR A N S IE N T S — Koaasa. I |lo 6 % | u. 220* N eees . ..— - J-10 74. Wa nt e d t o Buy Professional D R , E E. H A R R IS Dentist - H IG H E S T C A S H P r es pa d ■ ,,’u Gold. L. Laves bi J K. nth. for your 922 J,. Phone 8-4561 . v s ! K ! \ CA Vs MUR > ' Used Suits, ! C lothing and Shoes 407 F a i t f th. 8-026*. G O V T . C O A C H IN G . Ail other subjects, best tutors D ick Newcomer. 2-9462. E N G L IS H 12 by experienced tea.*lier w ith M a ster'* degree. Phone 2-1383. U N I V E R S I T Y C O A C H IN G B U R E A U Competent Coaches ail courses. 2-5090 C O A C H IN G — A. M. 2 4. 808. 1 7a, 13b. 325, S26. Raym ond Farr, G rad uate stu ­ dent. 2 309 San Antonio, a-1158. C all 1-7 cr 8-7 P.M . M A U D E R O O S E V E L T W O O D S O N : M athem atics Ph ysics, C h em istry, 8408 Rio G rande Call 9365 1814 Norwood Bldg Dressmaking S U IT S , C O A T S, (Ires es. evening gowns two piece play su its, sp ecialty. a H ave y o u r furs repaired, relined, rem od­ eled. Reasonable. 810 Bowie. 8-3069. I ADAUTO UN6AP0RL I d ■ - B IN G C R O S B Y > B O B H O P E V IT AK DOROTHY LAMOUR «,< em .mmm CMmr*. 4 ’ M e rrie M elodic 'B e a r ’s Tala* * BRSSfcSSBsMy yamnmmB Mickey Rooney “ YO U N G TOM EDISON” A U THE MAGIC Or SNOW W H IT E...yet so different! p a t t H iM t e y ’B Bacchii tun ((NOTH MATURI IN TKMNKOtOt Special Children’s M A T IN E E To d ay, 9 A M .— 15c S T A T E E a r n A i D r o n e y in «/ A J o u r sp ar C I v p in g o r L (nu lling I • C JI. H T oin g lin e Special Ad Rates—2 Line Ads S2.00 Month Call 2-2473 before 4:30 for Messenger Service PAGE FOUH The First. College D aily Iv the South Phone 2-2473— THE DAILY TEX AN —— 'Phone 2-2473 SATURDAY. APRIL 13, 1940 What a Pity TT IS A PITY for the G erma ns themselves, ^ and for the rest of the world gen­ erally, t h a t t h e y h a d to achieve national unity so late. if Th in k w h a t would have h a p p e n e d G e r m a n y h a d s tar ted out the Ei gh te e nth C ent ury on a p a r w ith England, Fran ce , and Spain. At t h a t time, you know, the mercantilistic theory was at its heig ht and most of Europe was en gaged in a mad s cramble for colonies in the newlv-discov- ered sea. Eng land, Fr ance, and Spain were the most p o w e r ­ ful nation* in the world, and divided it up p re tty equally bet w een them. Of course, Spain lost most of her s la te r; bu t she has never seemed to be par tic ula rly u n h a p p y over it. across lands the If Ge rm a ny h a d h a d any sort of national unity then, the Ge rm a ns would have been In on the race, too; a nd could have been expected to have got their shar e of the new territories. As it was. however, the mercantilistic theories which were c u rre nt until th e last q u a r t e r of the Ei gh te e nth Cent ury and the e x p an di ng capitalistic im­ perialism which gr e w up with th e Indus­ trial Revolution in th e Nine teenth Century drove Britain and F r a n c e to gra b all the best ungrabbed territory In th e world. The United States got started much too late to do a n y good at the gam e, but our w e st e rn prairies offered an outlet until the turn of the century, and a f t e r t h a t th e r e were Cuba. P u e rt o Rico, P a n a m a , Hawaii, a nd the Philippines. By the time G e r m a n y r e a c h e d th e stage which h a d c ha r a c te ri z e d E n g l a n d in th e late E i ght een th a nd early N in e te e n th Cen­ turies, the British w ere jd s t begin ning *o settle down and e nj oy th e ir pickings. Th e re was nothing left for G e r m a n y e xcep t some fever-laden s w a m p s in Africa a nd s ou th ­ eastern Asia. Na turally , G e r m a n y d i d n ’t like it. She did the same thing Britain h a d done a c entury be fo re ; bu t m o d e rn te ch n ol og y d e ­ m a n d ed t h a t she do it on a big ge r scale. Even as the dynamic imperialisms of E n g ­ land and F r an c e h a d clashed in the N a ­ poleonic wars, the dyna mic imperialism of G e rm a n y r a n afoul the static imperialism of E ng l an d and F r a n c e in W o r l d W a r s I and II. How much nicer it would hav e been if all countries could have u n d e rg o n e d y n ­ amic time and been th ro ug h with it. imperialism at the same ii i5 ie 24 24 43 V S 39 The Numerous Enumerators T F YOU GET to thin ki ng ab out it the re are some a la rm in g aspects ab o ut this census business. J us t think, for instance, some fellow s o m e w h e r e — and he might have been a w a g at t h a t — said there are a b o u t 132,- 000,000 of us. And we say “ Yes, th er e's ab out 132,000,000 of us." T he n we begin to pinch ourselves— t h r o u g h th e United States B ure au of tlje Census. G ov ern me nt bure au s being in­ s tru m e nt s of the people and the people being th e ta r g e ts of the census t a k e r s we have ourselves pinching ourselves to see how m a n y we are. W e are also asking our ne ighbors , not directly of course, h ow much he makes, a nd w h a t kind of b a th ro o m facilities. And t h r o u g h our b r a z e n cens us serv ants we are s p re a d in g a nice thin la yer of l o questions over the land. You kn ow t h a t is about 2,OOO.OOO.OOO t h a t your best friend w o u l d n ’t tell you except t h r o u g h a licensed census t a k e r . inquiries thi ng s into A nd the re is a n o t h e r th in g t h a t worries US. With all th e census publicity sp ea ki ng of “ counting noses" we w o n d e r if some of the 120,000 e n u m e r a to r s d o n ’t develop into ex perts on nose types. W h a t ke ep s the ir noses fro m tw itc hi ng ev er y time they count one and e a r n fou r cents? Th in k of the little t r i b u t a r y of answers flowing down out of little b l e a k Idaho camps r u n n in g do w n g r e a t ru le d pag es into t ow n-b red responses to join w ith city-bred replies, all rus hi ng in a gushing t o r r e n t of to information t h a t g r e a t ca uld ro n of n um be r-f ed b u r e a u c ra ts — W ash ing ton , D. C. H ow m a n y of th em are t h e r e of us? Photo Fiesta H T H E MAIN REASO N of the Photo Fiesta **• to be held in Marlin this month is to assemble c am e ra fan s e ag er for pictures of the early spr ing wild flowers, but it has an even g r e a t e r potentiality— publiciz­ ing Te xa s as the springtime p l a y g r o u n d for w in te r tourists. C h a m b e r s of Commerce and o th e r civic organization^ have long been a w a r e of the g r e a t possibilities of a t t r a c t i n g tourists to the Lone St ar blate for spring vacations, hav ing at h a r d an infinite chain of n a t ­ ural a t t r a c t i o n s — historical buildings, land- THE DAILY TEXAN Th* D e i ly T e x * : et i d e n t n e w s p a p e r r f T h e T n i e e r e i t y of th # L iii v e r t t t y rn T e x * * , A u l t n V v th e T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n * , I n c ., e v e r y roorn - li s t e th * r a m p i i i of • on ru b is • d '".ase r r h m a t t e r a* t r * Pe. .-*, • M i Ode. E n t e r * d an #ec< A et XU • . UIS*.le r th e a r t o f C o n g r e e * M arc h 3, 1 * 7 9 . E dit or ia l o f f le ts ,, J o u r n a l i s m B u i l d i n g 1 0 9 , 1 0 1 , a n d I >. 2. T e l e p h i • f A d v e r t 2* 2 4 7 3 . ifig a Dd in * 1 ■ P hor?** 2* P r in t e d b y t h e C -c ilia t io n D e p a r t m e n t — J o u r e a Hem B u ild - r * r » .’ * P r # « s A. C. W r i g h t , m a n a g e r . I M ^a t b I G - f ■t # f I 4 ; TTT. I 2 Sr'me* I;#*r§ S U B S C R I P T I O N KAT ES B y < arr cr _________________ I 60 I T S i 9 a 0 . 1 __________________ 3 . 0 9 B y M ail .KO I T SO t oo E E P R E S E N T E D F O R N A T I O N A L A D V E R T I S I N G B I National Advertising Service, Inc. Cc leg* P-i-i »ber* Repraaeatati** * : 0 M A D I S O N A V E , N E A VORK, N . Y. C H IC A G O - BO I i . Ll A N G E L E S - S A N F R A N C I S C O J 939 M e m b e r A isccla^ed C c ec'aie Press J 940 .......... — E d i t o r - ! n - ch b r A sso c ia te E d t o r ......... ..., E d it or i a l C o u n c il C h ild e r s . J a c k D olph, Boy d Si ne. a r. E d :? n m ! A s s i s t a n t s J a c k D ol ph , J a c k How? S p o rt* E d i t o r ___ A sso ciate S p o r t s E d ito r S o c i e ty E d i t o r ....... A sso c ia te S o ci e t y E d ito r A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r .... A s s o c i at e A m u s e m e n t s E R a di o E d i t o r .............. A sso c ia te R a d io E d i t o r _ F e a t u re E d i t o r ................... A sso c iate F e a t u r e E d i t o r T e l e g r a p h E ut or Associate I E x c ha ng e Ed ' r A ssociate E x c h a n g e Edit? .. g r a p h Edit*: ............. .. MAX B. S K E L T O N ’ L a V e r n e B r y s o n •Tom m e C all, V e r n o n H o lt, E r n e s t S h a r p e , L a V e r n e B r y s o n , P a t ird. d ito r — - ...C ly d e L a M o tte D on P&tteson - .......... ......A n ita Cook ___ C h r is t in e E v a n s .— ..........— J a c k D olph .... A lo n zo J a m is o n ..............B e n K a p la n — ............ Bdl N e w k ir k ..............Ja c k H o w a r d ..._____ C. O. Brow n B o b W h i t t e n r .... L eslie C a r p e n t e r N e ll a M ae S te ussy ....— F l o r a G o rd o n _ ST A F F F O R T H I S I S S U E N ight E d i t o r A s s is ta n ts ......... . Charlo? L e a v i t t J r . E R N E S T S H A R P E G e r r y e P a y n e , N ig h t S p o r t s E d i t o r .......... . B o b M a r ti n Night S o c ie ty E d i t o r ... __ ..... C h r i s t i n e E van? A fee ii ta n ! ............. ........................ Night Telegraph E d i t o r . ..... Night A m u s e m e n t ? E d i t o r ., A s s i s t a n t s ..... ........ ....... . A n i t a Cook B l u f o r d B e s t i r ..... G a r t h A u s tin A n n W ilk in s, C l a u d e S c r u g g s . N ight R a o o E d i t o r . ... . A s s is t a n t Announcers .............. B ob Ow en# ........ . B ob O w en s .... M a r t h a W ord J o h n Hicks, . fa u n a , marks, var ia tio n of flora, a nd scenery, and possibilities fo r all kinds of vacation re c rea tio n an d activity. Little has been done, however, to organ ize a w i d e s p r e a d c a m p a ig n to promote the state as a spring pla yg ro un d. The Photo Fiesta, held for th e be nefit of c a m e ra an d floral hobbyists, ma y well ta k e the lead in s ta r ti n g such a camp ai gn. Nat ion al ly know n p h o to g ra p h ic ex pe rt s and technicians will be on the pr o g r am . T h e y m a y be the m e a n s of s p re a d in g Texas pictures over the nation, to describe, pictorially, spring in Texas. the scenic beauties of e ar ly One picture speaks a t h ou s an d words, as the sages have said. P e r h a p s the P ho to Fie st a pictures of Texas m a y s p e a k vol­ umes! P e r h a p s those pictures should be s w e pt into the national eye. P e r h a p s our isis have th e a n s w e r to the c am er a hob! question of an org a niz ed publicity c a m ­ paign for the Bluebonnet S ta te ! —y I k l I he Next Century S"** TX LESS T H A N one h u n d r e d y ear s Dal- las h a 5 grown from a village of 1,000 people to a city of more t h a n 350,000 citi­ zens. During t h a t period Texa s has grow n from frontier country to a civilized state. W h u t will the next h u n d r e d y e a r s b rin g to Tex as? continued gro w th , for Texa s ba* m a n y sources open to fu tu r e development, Th e re is room for industrial expansion, ad diti on a l mineral de vel opm ent , im pro v e ­ ments. These possibilities will a t t r a c t peo­ ple provided th e state secures sufficient publicity. should b r in g f a r m an d r a n c h It Texas climate Is a n o th e r of its m a n y a t ­ t ra c ti o n 5. T h a t has long been a d ra w in g rarrl for tourists, m a n y of w hom have b e ­ come p e r m a n e n t residents. It will continue to bring people info the state, an d with to economic po -polity of them elves, mo re will become citizens of the 5’ate. b e t t e r m e n t J e t as in pioneer days Te xa s was a land of oppo rtu ni ty , it beckons to so to d a y Ka tern capital. People of the North and East are becoming more a w a r e of the possibilities of T e xa s business as a good investment. The nex t cen tu ry will see Te xa s grow and develop. T e x a s of 1940 will be to the Texas of 2040 as the state in 1840 is to the state today* Today's Crossword Puzzle 8 4 IO ll 3 H ii 4 TT7 2 I 13 16 i 17 X IM T 21 i i 1 J; 23 27 W/i23 32 33 19 20 . : 26 30 V S S / / / , 31 3*4 33 ' 36 37 33 39 HO H I *42 *4*4 *43 *46 *47 *49 30 6>\ 3 i V/ A y / / 33 36 GO . E N E N O N E A i R E N D K : Y 5 rS i A ' f r a g * t im e o f e o l a t io n : 26 m in u te* . Distributed t>j Kine Fe*tutee Syndicate, lo*. T I Cu 8— Alpine goat 9— little child 10— absconded 1 1 — th r e a te n 2 0 — upon 2 2 — Ire la n d > 25— p e n e tr a te * 27— to w a r d 28— woodland deity 30— island in a riv e r . 33— te x tile fa b r ic 35— field of / \ , g r a n u l a r snow 36— a mystical i n t e r p r e t a ­ tion 37— three- banded arm adillos 38— unusually 39— Ind ian m a d d e r 41— displace 42— public w arehouses 45— corroded 46— sun god 49— musical in s t r u m e n t 51— sodium chloride 54— 100,000 rupees 56— n a tiv e metal 58— f a s te n OFFICIAL NOTICES P H I E T A S IG M A m e m b e r s who t h e i r k ey s in D ea n M o o r e ’s h a v e n o t o b t a i n e d m a y g e t t h e m offic e. I. E. C L A R K . p r e s id e n t. T H E P R E S E N T DAY C lub w ill m e e t M o n d a y a f t e r n o o n a t 5 to in T e x a s U n io n 309 o ’clock e l e c t o f f ic e r s . R A Y P E A R L W O O D , r e p o r t e r . I N T E R - F R A T E R N I T Y s c h o la r s h ip a p p lic a tio n b la n k s a r e a v a ila b le In D ean V. I. M o o re 's o f f i c e . A p ­ p lic a tio n s m u s t be filled r e t u r n e d b y A p ril 20. in a n d IN T E R - F R A T E R N I T V C O UN- C O M ­ C IL S C H O L A R S H I P M I T T E E A L L S T U D E N T S o f t h e College o f E n g i n e e r i n g w ho e x p e c t to re c e iv e a d e g r e e in J u n e o r A u g ­ u s t, 1941, a r e to call a t th e D e a n ’s O ffic e to le a v e t h e i r n a m e . r e q u e s te d W. R. W O O L R I C H , d e a n of e n g i n e e r i n g T H E E M P L O Y M E N T B U R E A U ha« o pe n i n g s fo r full t i m e e m ­ f o llo w i n g : A f o r t h e p l o y m e n t g r a d u a t e p h a r m a c i s t , g r a d u a t e c o n s t r u c t i o n g r a d u a t e e n g i n e e r , e ’ectrical e n g i n e e r , g r a d u a t e s a f e t y e n g i n e e r , a n d an a r c h i t e c t u r e g r a d ­ u a t e a n d sa le s m a n . T h o s e i n t e r ­ es te d should ca ll by Main B u ild in g 101M f o r a n in te rv ie w . A R N O N O W O T N Y . T H E S O U T H E A S T T e x a s Club picnic will be held S u n d a y a f t e r ­ n o o n , A p ril 14. a t B a s t r o p S t a t e P a r k . T he c r o w d will le a v e L i t t l e ­ fie ld F o u n t a i n a t 2 p. rn. a n d t r a n s p o r t a t i o n will be p r o v id e d . All s tu d e n ts f r o m S o u t h e a s t T e x a s a n d th e i r d a t e s a r e i n v it e d . R e s ­ e r v a tio n s m a y b e m a d e w ith M a r ­ g u e r i t e W a t t s b v c a llin g 3 2 5 1 . M A R G U E R I T E W A T T S . s e c r e t a r y . E A S T T E X A S S T U D E N T S a r e In­ vited to a t t e n d th e p ic n ic s p o n ­ so r e d by th e R u s k - G r e g g C o u n tie s C lub a n d t h e T y l e r C lub , S u n d a y a f t e r n o o n . T i c k e t s m a y be p u r ­ f o r 35 c e n ts p e r s t u d e n t ch ased e i t h e r F r i d a y o r S a t u r d a y a t th e ta b le s in f r o n t o f th e T e x a s U n ­ ion an d in th e M ain B u ild in g c o r ­ r id o r. T he p a r t y will le a v e f ro m L ittle f ie ld M e m o r i a l F o u n t a i n a t 3 o'clock S u n d a y a n d g o to Bull C reek. H A R D I N G L A W R E N C E , p r e s i d e n t , R u ^ k - G re g g B I L L W O O D , p r e s i d e n t , T y l e r C lub its A T T E N T I O N , F A C U L T Y M E M ­ B E R S : T h e O f f ic e o f t h e D e a n f a c iliti e s o f Men w ill m a k e av a ila b le to U n iv e r s it y s t a f f m e m ­ b e r s w ho w o u ld like to r e n t t h e i r h o m e s d u r i n g f o r th e c o m in g s u m m e r . P le a s e s e n d d e s c r ib in g to y o u r p r o p e r t y , t h e p rice o f r e n t , an d th e l e n g t h o f tim e it w ill be av a ila b le . th e o f ­ fic e in c a se t h e hou se is r e n t e d . D I C K R U B O T T O M , t h e o f f ic e a n o te t h e i r a b s e n c e P le a s e a d v ise a s s i s t a n t to th e d e a n of stu d e n t life C L U B D E M E X IC O in v ite s m e m ­ th e b e r s a n d o f fic ia ls of all o t h e r H i s p a n o - A m e r i c a n clubs a n d o r g a n i z a t i o n s to a t t e n d a n e x t r a ­ o r d i n a r y m e e ti n g t o n i g h t a t 7 :3 0 in p. rn, a t t h e U n io n B u ild in g o r d e r to discuss a n d d e t e r m i n e th e p r o g r a m o f an e v e n i n g o f H isp a n o - A m e r i c a n e n t e r t a i n m e n t t h e c o m in g m o n th . in to f r o n t o f its p ic nic Also, Club de M e x ic o w elc o m e s e v e r y b o d y to B a s­ t r o p P a r k . T h o s e a t t e n d i n g w ill m e e t rn t h e L itt le f ie ld M e m o ria l F o u n t a i n S u n d a y m o r n ­ T h e g r o u p in g a t 1 0 :3 0 s h a r p . w ill b e b a c k in A u s tin a t 6 p. rn. P l e a s e , e v e r y b o d y t h a t c a n b r i n g his c a r . G E O R G E S C H W A R Z , p r e s i d e n t . t h e d e g r e e c a r d w ith A L L J U N I O R S T U D E N T S w ho a r e c o n s id e r in g t a k i n g a b a c h e ­ l o r 's d e g r e e in th e C ollege o f A r t s c o m m e n c e ­ a n d S c ie n c e s a t t h e m e n t in J u n e or A u g u s t , 1941, s h o u l d m a k e a p p l ic a tio n a t once ■o th e R e g i s t r a r f o r a d e g r e e card. T h e r e a r e d is tin c t a d v a n t a g e s in t h e f ilin g D e a n a t th is tim e. T h is i m p o r t a n t o f c a r d sh o w s th e w h o le r e c o rd t h e t h u s allow s t h e s t u d e n t an d D e a n t o c h e c k r e q u i r e ­ d e g r e e m e n t s w ith c a r e a n d to ad vise th e s t u d e n t as to w h a t is n e c e s s a r y in f u l f i l l i n g th e r e q u i r e m e n t s f o r a g iv e n d e g r e e . All d e g r e e c a r d s a p ­ plied f o r a t th is t i m e in th e R e g ­ i s t r a r ’s O f f ic e w iii be c h e ck e d a n d r e a d y f o r th e n e x t r e g i s t r a t i o n . A s t u d e n t w ho i n t e n d s to ta k e a d e g r e e a t the J u n e o r A u g u s t c o m m e n c e m e n t in 1941 a n d who h a s n o t m a d e a p p l ic a tio n f o r a d e ­ g r e e c a r d b e f o r e t h e o p e n in g o f t h e se ssio n in S e p t e m b e r will be o b lig e d t o r e g i s t e r la te . M a n y d i f ­ f i c u l t i e s c a n th u s be a voided b y th e R e g i s t r a r f o r a to a p p l y i n g d e g r e e c a r d a t th is tim e. A s t u d e n t i n t e n d i n g to ta k e t h e B. A. d e g r e e in c o m b in a t io n w ith m e d i c i n e o r law s h o u ld file w ith t h e R e g i s t r a r an a p p l ic a tio n f o r a d e g r e e c a r d in t h e s p r i n g of his s o p h o m o r e y e a r . H. T . P A R L IN , d e a n o f t h e C olleg e o f A r t s a n d S cie n ce s. C o n t i n u e d f r o m P a g e 3 will b e g u e s t s p e a k e r on C alling All S t a m p C o l le c to r s at t o d a y th e N B i'- R e d 1 2 :1 5 o ’clock o v e r T h e p r o g r a m will be n e t w o r k . th r p e - c e n t d e v o t e d to th e s p e c ia l s t a m p in h o n o r o f th o 5 0 th A n n i v e r s a r y of th e f o u n d i n g of t h e P a n - A m e r ic a n U n io n . iss u e d A p ril 14 to be N e w m e lo d ie s a n d old r h y th m s a r e b le n d e d in a h a l f - h o u r o f p o p u l a r so n g s p r e s e n t e d by S a t ­ u r d a y N ig h t S e r e n a d e s t a r s o v e r C B S t o n i g h t a t 8 : 4 5 o ’clock. t o be p r e s e n t e d o n “ E v e r y M o t h e r ’s S o n g ,” th e s e c o n d d r a m a by G e n o O hlisch- l a e g e r th e L a n d m a r k s o f R a d io D r a m a s e ­ rie s o v e r t h e N B C -R e d n e t w o r k to ­ n i g h t a t 7 o ’clock w ith A rn o ld T h e M oss d r a m a w a s w id ely p r o d u c e d in E u r o p e a n d t h r o u g h o u t th e w o rld b e f o r e h a v i n g its A m e r i c a n p r e ­ m i e r o v e r NBG in 1 9 3 2 . t h e s t a r r i n g role. in H e l l z a p o p p i n By PAT HOLT C o n s i s t e n t r e p o r t s o f B r itis h v ic t o r i e s in t h e S c a n d i n a v ia n f i g h t ­ in g , som e o f w h ic h h a v e b e e n a d ­ in d ic a t e m i t t e d by t h e G e r m a n s , t h a t this tim e t h e N a z is ’ l i g h t n in g w a r m a y h a v e a t la s t r u n in to a g r o u n d i n g ro d . F o r th e tim e b e in g , a t le a s t, th e th e slow ed H e r r f r o m high low g e a r a n d m a y e v e n s u c ­ r o c k y c o a s ts o f N o rw a y a n d B r iti s h n a v y h a v e H i t l e r ’s w a r m a c h i n e to c e e d in s h i f t i n g it to r e v e r s e . M uch is b e i n g m a d e of t h e f a c t t h a t th e G o r m a n s a r e n o w c o n ­ f r o n t e d w ith th e d r e a d e d w a r on tw o f r o n t s , w h ic h H i t l e r in M ein K a m p f p r o m is e d w o u ld n e v e r h a p ­ p e n a g a in . W i n s to n C h u r c h ill has e v e n called it t h e d u m b e s t m il ita r y m o v e sin c e N a p o l e o n ’s tim e . I t is is, he in c o n c e iv a b le if he h a d f o r e s e e n t h a t H i t l e r w o u ld h a v e m o v e d a g a i n s t N o r ­ t h e r e ­ w a y s u lts t h a t now a p p e a r likely. S h o r t ­ s ig h te d a s h e is s m a r t e r t h a n t h a t . i t O n t h a t w ay . H i t l e r look does n o t m o ved a g a i n s t N o r w a y in o r d e r to p r o t e c t his v ita l iro n o r e su p p ly line a n d l u s t f o r to s a t i s f y his c o n q u e s t. t h e s u r f a c e , o f c o u r s e , A n o t h e r r e a s o n , a n d o n e t h a t is m o r e in line w ith G e r m a n m ili­ t a r y s t r a t e g y as it h a s b e e n evi­ d e n c e d th e I he p a s t, N o r w e g ia n e x p e d itio n w as a f e i n t to lu r e B r itis h ships a n d tr o o p s to th e n o r t h w hile a m a in G e r m a n t h a t in is THE POET'S RELEASE SACRIFICED A s on e a c h c r in k l y sp e c im e n I g az e I n o t e its n a m e a n d n u m b e r , f a m i ly a n d w a y s ; I t s s h a d e s o f p l e a s a n t colors, o n c e so v e r y H a v e v a n i s h e d f a r a w a y into t h e w i n t e r n ig h t. E a c h o n e is f a s t e n e d dow n u p o n a c a r d b o a r d T h e r e is no life r e m a in in g , it is f a r too la te . E a c h b lig h te d s e e d a n d f a d e d blossom d in g y E a c h h a s f o u g h t th e b a t tle , e a c h h a s r u n th e O u ts id e th e w o r l d is m e r r y a n d w ith e a c h idle F l i t s a little f a i r y In a n d o u t a m o n g th e tr e e s , A liv in g w o rld of b e a u ty , lin k e d e a ch to ea ch , th e s p a r k li n g F r o m t h e m o u n t a i n s h o a r y t o A s a c r i f i c e to sc ience, pickled a n d f o r lo r n , Lie? w ith in s h o r n ; t h e c u p b o a r d , f r o m its s p le n d o r O u ts id e th e s u n is shining, s p r i n g ’s in e v e r y G r e e n p l a n t s aliv e a n d sm iling, b u t th e se a r e — A L L E N B R O W N b r ig h t, p l a t e ; t a n , sp a n . b r e e z e b e a c h . b r e a s t , a t r e s t. a r m y s t r u c k in th e B a lk a n s . T h il a r g u m e n t is d e f e c t i v e in t h a t Hit! le r w as b o u n d to h a v e r e a liz e d th a i th e f e i n t m ig h t b a c k f i r e a n d th a i he w o u ld b e c o n f r o n t e d w ith Brit-! ish f r o m th e n o r tP , tr o o p s p o u r i n g in o n hir if to t h e S in ce r e a s o n a b l e to h a v e g r e a te r * t o c o m m e n d I t h a s m u c h I t is als*; t h a t he e x ­ it* h o w e v e r. T h e B a lk a n s a r e more i m p o r t a n t th e N azi economy a n d w a r m a c h in e t h a n is S c a n d i n ­ av ia, a n d H i t l e r h a s b e e n looking! to th e s o u t h e a s t m u c h m o r e th a n ! t h e n o r th . he h a s to e n t i r e l y p e c te d B r i t a i n d if f i c u lt y in la n d in g tr o o p s in N o r ­ w a y a n d in f o r c i n g th e S k a g g e r a k . it w a s a f e i n t , f e i n t , h a s b o o m e r a n g e d , h o w e v e r, t h e B a lk a n s a n d e v e n B e lg iu m a n d f e e l c o m p a r a t i v e l y H o lla n d m a y s a f e a g a in . I t h as b e e n sa id t h a t H itle r is n o w c o n f r o n t e d w ith a w a r on tw o f r o n ts . T e c h n ic a lly , y e s ; b u t p r a c tic a lly , no. T h e w a r a l o n g th e F r a n c o - G e r m a n b o r d e r is so in a c ti v e t h a t it can h a r d l y ba called a w a r ; so H i t l e r is r e a l l y f i g h t i n g on o n ly o n e f r o n t , t h a t in th e n o r th . M o r e o v e r, t h e S ieg ­ f r ie d a n d M a g in o t lin e s a r e so w ell c o n s t r u c t e d t h a t a r e l a t i v e l y (say , 2 5 0 ,0 0 0 m e n ) sm all c a n hold one o f t h e m i n d e f i n i t e l y a g a i n s t a l m o s t a n y k in d o f a t ­ ta c k , f o r c e I t H i t l e r t h e B a lk a n s, s t a r t s a n o f f e n s i v e t h e A llie s a g a i n s t in pro* m ig h t h a v e m o r e t r o u b l e t h e s t r i c k e n n a ­ v i d in g aid f o r in tio n s ; b u t it Will be p r o v id e d som e f o r m o r o th e r . I n a d d i tio n , M usso lin i a n d S t a l i n w o u ld p r o b ­ a b l y view su c h a n o f f e n s i v e v e r y u n f a v o r a b l y . I t a l y a n d R ussia h a v e b o th lo n g h a d d e s ig n s on th e B a lka ns, a n d G e r m a n y n e e d s to k e e p w h a t e v e r f r i e n d s it h a s le ft. is s t a r t e d a g a i n s t B e lg iu m a n d H o lla n d , A l­ lied aid will be even e a s i e r to in N o r w a y ’s c a s e ; p ro v id e t h e M a g in o t L ine h a s b e e n a n d s t r e n g t h e n e d a l o n g th e F r a n c o - G e r m a n b o r d e r . I f a N azi o f f e n s iv e th a n f o r H i t l e r to do It a p p e a r s , th e n , t h a t t h e o n ly is to t h i n g left f i g h t it o u t in N o r w a y a n d p r a y ! f o r v ic to r y . is d e ­ F o r f e a t e d in t h e n o r t h , he is d e f e a te d . I f o r e v e r . if he M A Y 12 For Your MOTHER a Treasure Chest 3 Poses from Cactus Negatives complete for CHRISTIANSON I i BFR MAN $5.00