Today’s Editorial Navy Puzzla 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 W eather Colder, Cloudy VOL. 41 Z-720 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1940 S i x P a g e s T o da y No. 113 10,947 Registration 5ened(ictFund High for U.T. History Last Year's Mark Late Enrollment M ay Hit 11,000 Yet This Semester A new high in enrollment figures for the University*! fifty-eeven years of history was recorded Thursday by E. R. Cornwell, bursar, as he received fees from 108 new students, making a total o f 10,947 students having enrolled in the University for the 1939-1940 Long Session. This twenty-four*------------------------------------------------------ figure was above the official registration fi g ­ ure of 10,923 for the 1938-1939: Long Session, Mr. Cornwell pointed : out. Thursday was the final day for j Good Will Expert Speaks Tonight 951 C ard s Signed To Exceed Former Pledges By 231 When 951 pledges to the Bene­ dict Memorial Fund for a Greater University had been received at the end of registration Thursday, a record had been established by members of Mortar Board, senior organization women’s honorary sponsoring the drive. The total Thursday exceeded the number of pledges last year by 231. r r v ^ initial drive in the j Members o f the Students’ As- i sembly, meeting Thursday night, u n . B ^ as unanimously passed a resolution to 0r figure the case 1939-1940 Thursday’s registration “The International House ver­ International H ouse Edm onds's Topic sus International Hate" several : the topic discussed by Harry Ed- ; monds of N ew York, the “father saw 0f ^he international house move- registration for the second semes­ ter without a penalty assessment o f negative hours; however, as has in past years, a been number of late registrants are expected within the next f e w days. Some University officials are still optimistic in expressing beliefs that late registration will place the final figures above the 11,000 mark. ennrtncfprt th" 1?n conducted th,, year over . twenty- b# sen, , 0 p‘r„ ident Franklin three day period, the time during Roosev*lt and Texas’s delegation which students could pay fees for ^ ^ e s " t o t i n g an ammo 'NatjonaI Youth second semester registration. For two weeks members of Mortar . . . Board, assisted by Orange Jackets, will be scirv*ce *roup supporting the drive, maintained a table in the Bursar’s office where students could sign cards giving up to $1 o f their gen­ eral property deposit to the fund. 1,299 old students, or students who The Benedict Fund was created were enrolled in the University last year at the suggestion of ad­ during the first semester, pay their ministrative officials for a contin- fees, bringing the total of old stu­ uous sum of money which could Irnt>nn a ^oss dents for the second semester to Mr. Edmonds, accompanied by be used by the President o f the for University students. 8,953, as compared with 8,836 at ; his wife, has just returned from University instructed The Assembly also the end of the final day o f regis- six months in the Orient where needs, to benefit both students and Anne Finch, secretary of the Stu- he has been furthering the pro- tration last year. faculty members, for which there dents’ Association, to send a copy posal to establish an international jg no appropriation by the Legis- i of the resolution to the House of house at Tokyo. lature. The dream o f such a fund Representatives sub-committee on was long held by the late Dr. H. Y. Benedict, President for eleven j Davis reported to the Assembly fund was that the committee which has been years, j conducting an investigation of the named. . - . , , , Administration which would in­ volve a reduction of 31.5 per cent in college and graduate N.Y.A. employment in schools throughout the country. The resolution, Introduced by Keith Davis, assemblyman from the Graduate School, estimated that the proposed reduction w'ould N.Y.A. jobs 7:30 the Geology Audito- Friday night m One hundred and eight new stu­ dents paid their fees Thursday. men*,” o’clock rium. labor and social security. for general for whom . . . . . _ campus the a t . . h A roving ambassador o f good Through Thursday night, 731 ^ r' Edmonds was th® first new students had paid fees for the International second semester, making a second director semester enrollment of 9,684, a Ll°Tise of New 'York, which post figure 129 above the record of ! bp held for eleven years, and he 9.555 set on the final day last ha* als° been responsible for the year. Seven hundred and nineteen ; establishment of eleven or twelve such new students enrolled the second j period a year ago. including ones at New . ^ ork, Chicago, Berkeley, Paris, . _ Beginning Friday, any student and Geneva. worth of houses 10n d __ . . the of *?: . , . Drenner Back, Am azed at Scare; JI Fain Aloofe, Ex, Kills Himself Assembly Asks NYA Not Be Cut Freshman Ends Long Trip; Suicide's Burial Is Friday They're Not Angels M issing Boy Takes In W ashington, D. C. W hile Police Hunt Ex-Student Thought Despondent O v e r Death of Fiancee C o - O p Com m ittee To Report Feb. 22 J O E N E I S E R S T U A R T P U R C E L L . . . b u t t h e y h a v e t he • y m p t o m i . 2 More U. T. Students Sprout Arm y Wings By B OY D SINCLAIR Funeral services Robert Drenner, University stu­ dent from Flatonia who had been missing since January 28, was happy to be back in Austin Thurs- jday b u t a little surprised th a t his here late T hursday, disap pearance had caused such a fu ro r. for J. Fain Moore Jr., 26, an ex-student o f the University, will be held a t Cooledge sometime Friday, with learned burial Tho body of Moore was f o u n d T hu rsday a f te rn o o n in his room a t tu rn e d up T h u rsd a y a U niversity rooming house by his D re n n e r a f t e r an pa re n ts. Dr. and Mrs. J. F a in m o rn in g a t eleven-day absence d u r in g which Moore Sr., of Cooledge. T om he traveled more th a n th r e e thous- Jo hnson , justice of the peace, g ave and miles on $6.75. I a verd ict o f suicide by poisoning. in Mexia, I o’clock it was in to tim e G etting back j u s t Moore, who was known to m ost re g iste r f o r the second sem ester, stu d e n ts on the cam pus as “ Doc,” D re n n e r said he had s ta rte d out t h u r s d a y was rep o rted as b eing to go to New Orleans with Leo a 26-year-old sen.or in the U n i. ,c °,° c * b a 'v, A checg Ruzicka, U n iv e rsity s tu d e n t f r o m ; ' 01"51 *v ? ,! : r e c tr n M - however, A bbott, b u t th a t the two had sep- m revealed that he had not been en- arated at Smithville after UiC. . T. • * rolled in the I Diversity since tho , waited six hours for a ride. , 1934-193.) Long Session, at which i t u d e n t „ ___ they „ j u w , . „ c- , • . . to meet tjme r waj # ^ i e w" c th again in N « r O r le a n s,1 Drenner Ua.d, but after I (rot over I Louisiana-Texas from New York picked me up and left ; offered to take me all the way j their son’s room Thursday after- up there with him. I went as far noon af ter he had agreed to meet m , „f Ar. s and Scj t h e ram e could not be found on tk, fellow I 19 39 . 1940 enrollment records. Dr. and Mrs. Moore had line, a , I ^ e,nl I P°n his a af ' rnmut'r!S. investiga­ / Ul About half a day, and started back failure to appear an tion found the vouth deart in h i ^ i T T ’ there, he got a ride all the way to Flor- rived ida with a fruit trucker. Drenner related, room. Mrs. Moore had just ar- in Austin to complete ar- rangements for spending the re- “I spent about a day in Jack- mainder of the school term here “and said, on Highway sonville,” he started west through Tallahassee, Alabama, having been Mississippi and into N ew Orleans however and over to Houston. then with her son. he had been 90 Tlmre was no evidence of notes left by the youth; it was understood thai! in somewhat of a some -’m e , following the death of his for “A truck driver stopped in Hous- despondent condition ton Wednesday night and asked me if I could drive a truck. I never fiancee about three years ago. had even driven a car, but I was afraid be wouldn’t pick me up if I hursday afternoon. The body wa*; ?aken to Cooledge , . . . . . X1 The Board of Regents has con- j University Co-Op would be ready j - , I , t e d of the fund in that it must to make its report at the regular approve suggestions by the Presi- j meeting of the Assembly on Feb- Austin Friday morning for San Antonio, dent for use of the money for va-; ruary 22. nous things. j n the absence of Sydney Rea- at the Allen-Kancock Aeronautical School. Joe Neiser, associate editor of the Texas Ranger, and Stuart Pur- ‘'i ce^> wbo was a candidate for head yell leader last spring, will leave home.” From from where they will depart I j Monday for Santa Maria, Calif., to enter as Army Air Corps students I , , , - - , . i Intrim , T . f f c i It V intramural athletic field for men I Association, Roger Sullivan, v i c e - ' edjtor J ng th€ Sran’ presidert of th f Students’ Keiser, besides being associate*------------------------------------------ — t^Q Rang er> wrote , , , a ,,, ... . VK , Guest speaker Thursday night I at a New Year1, party for the o m n£ a tira\ hh registering for more than six hours . of works will be charged with two at a New Year’s party fo hours of negative credit if he pays ; Chinese students of the Un ive r- hts fees on February ii or IO. If lity ( Mr Edmond, discussed his J “ f d * ° ’ i thM of the fees are paid of February 12 experiences or 13, there wdll be an assessment of three negative hours, w’hile four half of semester hours of work will be at a luncheon to be held at Old half of Assessed on registrations made on Madrid with faculty advisers for N arsitT February 14 or after. ,n r, Chinese students of the Unlver- “I S . condition, there a . he found’thcm in the Orient and IJ the presi- 1 presented m ; foreign students and * b a v p , 3 ^ U ’ T I “ / T " . sttenHl"? ° . ' ^ r in the Texan, “Just a column is the creator of ; BreeZe " and “ "n n Congress cheerful Charlie and Doleful Dan reSDectivelv optimistic and rte .P*ss>m>stic prognosticators o f the j Texan s sports pages. Review Shows Civil Suit Delays their profits their Pr°LLs from from the th e . a"d Revue, to be WHEREAS HoSS Auditorium . this year recommended to Con- i Lurtam ^ lub» MIL A, and the A .............. To Whom It May Concern: , ^ r i n ^ ^ n r T ^ n d t e e * a the president has 0 / I.US- Mr. Edmond, will be the guest I te TS, plan, to « ntrlb'‘te the Assembly is as follows- * JJ? a third of its proceeds at Washington, D. C. «"> ^ e December Carn,va and : The re ,elution aa approved In no case, however, will U n iv e r -; dents of the various foreign s t u - 1 f ehruary, , 14* Thr€e hundred dol- j greg8 an appropriation for the Na- in sity officials allow this penalty to dents’ clubs and organizations on J ” permit a student to reduce his the campus. Dr. Chester F. Lav, Mortar Board will be turned over • w o u l d - o n the basis of present Jthe California school three months, credits for the semester to than six hours of work. »------- Besides receiving favorable c o m - ! reduction o f 31.5 per cent in col- ar,(l sixty hours m °a « y collected by ; tional Youth Administration which , Neiser and Purcell wdll be for the project. — J P ub - „ ’ - I proportional allotments involve a ’receiving ground school training, v 1 - 1 ’ less chairman of the University lie an­ Lectures Committee, nounced. The clubs to be repre­ sented are Circulo Mexicana, Mex­ ican Literary Club, Latin-Amer- ican Club, Scandinavian Club, Chinese Students Club, Czech Club, Progressive Czechs, and j Sigma Delta P i , Mexican honor­ ary fraternity. The purpose of the luncheon is to bring together - Mortar Board, made the f o l l o w i n g , ! ^ education representatives of all of the f o r - : ba tem en t at the clos* of the d r iv e : ; only through such employment in come active members until a final! . eign s t u d e n t * Hu h* unrt /»rOot« a eign students clubs and create a j spirit of friendship and peace. ments from various faculty mem- . w ? and graduate NATA emDlov- whicb thpy bers and administrative officials, J m eat, and support to Mortar Board’s work W HEREAS this w’ould involve an additional three months, was given by the Students’ A s s e m -; loss of employment for 285 s t u - 1 their bly, MICA, Alpha Phi Omega, dents in The University of Texas, wings after an additional three- month period at Kelly Field, and Interfraternity Council, Friars, and army and Orange Jackets. Suzanne Dunning, president of j on this campus and elsewhere c o l - pilots with reserve commissions is made possible : and active pay. They will not be- flight, return to Ran- jdolph Field in San Antonio for W HEREAS in many cases both will become like t o ev-nres* +n + Vin V T V A like to express to the N.Y.A students will win full-fledged I w o u l d would I and • -* * a f t e r I ,n students of the University and to In his lecture Friday night, Mr. others who have contributed, the Edmonds will discuss international thanks o f Mortar Board to those houses in terms of his connection w h o have pledged their su p p o r t: students wit ailures, arid their benefit in edu- may be assured that their money cating and creating good will and! will be used for a greater tJniver- successes and during our successful drive. They would be them, their The object o f the m eeting wnll understanding among those of dif- sity of Texas e 1 e nT r,>1!!:t nt’s __________ great man.” . in memory of a W HEREAS this body l l , . the commis- is con- sion from Washington. The entire vinced that the proposed reduction period o f training is nine months, In order to enter training for would result in a detriment to the | employed w h ic h 'army pilots, the two men had to n va m i n a ) Inn kn-Pnnn l a m i n a t i o n before thus NOW, THEREFORE, BE immeasurably greater pass a required physical examina- j than the economy of the measure tion, in which about one out of | would justify, fifteen pass. Purcell passed his IT examination at Randolph Field j RESOLVED that this body regis- last September and Neiser passed ter its wholehearted opposition to his in December. Five out of 140 the proposed reduction of N.Y.A. passed the allotments and that it recommend campus, but Neiser is the only to Congress careful and thorough one of the five going. Further re­ consideration of the matter quirements were twTo years o f col­ fore action be taken. lege work. the examination on be- The students will fly only in light training craft at the Cali­ fornia school and will not g e t ex­ p e r ie n c e with heavier craft until they come back to Texas. The i California school uses discarded flight ships from Randolph Field. ♦ W a r N e w s* F r o m I n t e r n a t i o n a l N e w * S e r v i c e Reports that Germany has perfected a new long-range, high­ speed bomber and is now* building a fle e t o f 2,000 of these planes for use in the spring, reached London along with word that the Nazi craft is specially designed for raids against the British Isles. I his disquieting news startled the British capital as the Chamber- lain government WTestled wdth two other major problems— Ireland and India. Th© d i s p u t e w i t h I n d i an n at i on a l i s t * w e n t a s t ep f u r t h e r w h e n M o h a n d a s IC. Gandhi , in a c a b l e to t he L o n d o n Dai l y He r a l d , said t hat Indi a m u s t d e t e r m i n e he r o w n n e e d s and ad d e d : ’ B r i t a i n ’* mor al v i c t o r y wi l l be a s s u r e d w h e n s he d e c i d e s bjr a m i g h t y e f f o r t to a b a n d o n h e r i m m o r a l hold on Indi a. T h e n h e r o t h e r v i c t o r y will f o l l o w as d a y f o l l o w s n i g h t . ’ —„ ---------- Non-Resident Fee Protest Overruled Barbara Mayfield, business ad­ ministration student, is a resident o f the State o f Ohio and therefore must pay her non-resident tuition fee, Justice of the Peace Sam Rogers held Thursday. But he warned that a wide gulf still separates the view of the I t€n protest When She paid the g o v /'a m e n t and the Indian nationalists who demand “ immediate freedom.” . . ' - - ' *• Usual C a se Lasts 4 ^ 2 Tears in Courts I said no; so I told him I thought I could if he would show me the If you had an average civil suit ^ears* He did, and I drove it about fortv - - to the T exss courts during the forty miles th e T exas co u rts d urin g th e I o r i y thirty years prior to 1936, it took Hempstead. It wa.* a wonderful ex- you four and one-half years to P^rience carry the case through the dis­ trict court, the court o f civil ap­ peals and the Texas Supreme Court, Drenner had some more of what he called “ wonderful experiences.” For instance, “ I slept with bums and went hungry a couple of days,” he said, “but it sure was fun. I never thought about any­ that short body missing me time though Based on 5,753 cases from Su­ preme Court files, a study of pen­ dency revealed this Thursday in from Houston / T V in V' I It 1 a n o n Law k e r n , . choel of The survey w^as made by Robert W. Stayton, law professor, and Philip Brown, re­ search assistant, under the aus­ pices of the Bureau of Research in the Social Sciences. U. T. Astronomer Ready for Eclipse time two years, Litigation in the Supreme Court j consumed more than a n y ! With three-to-one odds favoring other step in the procedure, re-: an unclouded afternoon for April quiring survey j 7, Dr. Paul Rudnick, University showed. The average case in the j astronomer, was Thursday assem- district court required 1.25 years, j while the eourt o f civil appeals bhn* .caB$ “ * o W r v » t ..r ? equip, disposed of the average case in : ™*"t for film,rig the sun in its an- approximately ten months. i nUl f , l . f C PuSe thlJ T , 1"*1 the . , . While the moon blots out for The remainder of the average I four and one-half y e a rs w a, s p e n t ) ® * in g ettin g the case from one court I int., the nex t higher. ?lin 8 ‘ h? ^ c r m * - " ,m ” - ... .......... I », G rap h, showed, however, that slowed down to only two picture- during the last ten years of the I 8 8econdl W,,TTeCOtd the !'Kht U " ' survey, district court procedure ' hot *a>*s rn the solar atmosphere, lines ap­ has speeded up, the average time Analysis o f colored I Pouring in the spectrum ace REVIEW, Page 3 on the ; film is expected to indicate the ^composition and characteristics of j the gases. • • • T h e q u e s t i o n o f I r e l an d c a m e up a n e w as p o l i ce i n v e s t i g a t e d t h e o r i e s t ha t t he Irish R e p u b l i c a n A r m y mi gh t h a v e b e e n r e ­ s p o n s i b l e f o r t he s i n k i n g o f t h e Bri t i s h m o t o r shi p M u n s t e r in t he Irish S e a W e d n e s d a y . The shi p w e n t d o wn f o l l o w i n g an e x ­ p l o s i o n b ut all 180 p a s s e n g e r s , as we l l as the c r e w m e m b e r s , w e r e r e s c ue d. While officials held that the vessel struck a mine, some survivors believed that the LR.A. might have caused the sinking in retaliation against the executions of two young Irshmen at Birmingham Wed­ nesday for their part in last August's bomb e x p lo s io n at Coventry. A French war communique, meanw’hile, reported increased ac­ tivity of French patrols along various parts of the Western Front. • A t H e l s i n k i , F i n n i s h a u t h o r i t i e s c l a i m e d a dd i t i o na l v i c t or ie s in w h i c h s o m e 1 , 8 0 0 m o r e R u s s i a n s ol di er s w e r e sai d t o h a v e b e e n k i l l ed w h i l e a f a r - f l u n g s e r i e s o f S o v i e t a t t a c k s w a s r e ­ p ul s e d . D i s p a t c h e s to L o n d o n f r o m S t o c k h o l m s ai d S w e d i s h o f ­ f i c i al s w e r e a p p r e n h e n s i v e o v e r r e po r t s t h e R u s s i a n o n ­ s l a u g h t s w e r e c r a c k i n g F i n l a n d ’* h^anne rhe i m L i n e . t ha t The German high command announced in a war communique that from the beginning o f the war up to January 31 the German navy destroyed 409 enemy and neutral merchant ships aggregat­ ing 1,493,431 tons, 463,796 tons of which were destroyed between December 31 and January 31. * First Night of 'Gone With W in d' Registers Sighs of Wonderful' Miss Mayfield, who filed a writ- By JACK DOLPH A t just about 7 :30 o'clock Thursday n;>rht, a motley^ group of people began to enter the State Theater. They were a s s e m b lin g for the fe e last fall, claimed that she had purp0se of seeing the Austin p re m ie re of “ Gone With th e Wind,” an . ^ ann1? a u n t, S e n a to r and Mrs. Earle B. Mayfield, in Tyler since 1936 and j,036 * ben D™ 0 l SeImck bou* ht the "'rc™ r'«hts to M a r e s * * w as therefore a resident of Texas, j Mitchell s epic o f the South. 0Pe n in £ which had been in the m ak in g ever since a hot July day in irk0c. „ - j ^ e i • i a 'v U v t i 4— , , , , The telescope Is driven by a I clockwork mechanism which will keep the camera trained on the sun during the eclipse. Spectra, filmed just as the moon blot ap­ pears to pinch the ring in two, will be most significant, Dr. Rudnick says. Then only will light from the atmospheric gases at the extreme I edge of the sun’s disc strike the I ^ ' c a m p u s observations will widen | U niversity activity to three fronts "f C " b t h r o w n Run e m history as the b attle of Bull during the eclipse. A t McDonald j O bservatory, an a tt e m p t will be Justice Rogers ruled, however, As th e stre a m o f people b ecam e t h a t since Miss Mayfield did not j larger another door was become 21 year* o f age until May, she had not been living in Texas the required twelve months since a^er* began to taKe tickets him- re a c h in g h e r majority. . Miss Mayfield moved to Tyler square-built following the death of her parents creased by a large grin. in U U , b u t h e r legal residence is still in Ohio, the justice said. ; The decision was the first nil- Isome one ***“ tp bim. replied ing of its kind in Texas. “N o,” he self. He had a long cigar in his { of Arts and Sciences, and James mosphere of the sun , nd K Xov}. the cit m a„. | Mayor Miller « a , there. Presi and L. Novy, th e city m an- J M ayor Miller was there. Presi- made, u sin g newly-designed tele- d e n t H om er Price Rainey, Dr. H. vision a p p a r a tu s , to a nalyze the the College solar co ro n a — ex trem e o u te r at- T. Parlin. dean of Meantime, was IH. Parke, chairm an of the De- a McDonald expedition, operatin g ! part merit of D ram a were a m o ng the gaseous atmosphere belt just f the Uni- IOO miles below the observatory in the ( bises M ountains, will study numerous. Allen I inside the corona, using infra-red very ser- | Ludden and Regina Cassidy, Cur- recording equipment designed by „ M ust be doing a big business,” : Uu1 representatives o varsity j course were face, which Stu d e n ts faculty. of . University G e ts Law Books Set in Braille iously, “I saw the show- this morn- tain Club star:S* Don Jackson, well- a staff scientist. ing. The people to n ig h t have some ________ _________ known actor; David Brown, student, and many others were if what David f on hand to see thing to look forward to.” A n d th ro u g h tho f r o n t d o o r s of Selsnick saki a b o u t Dixie was as M u s t G l v p S e h p d u U x the S ta te T h e a te r th e r e had passed i tr u e as Miss Mitchell had w ritte n. law ---------------------------------------------------- Blanket Part-Time W orkers tax pictures may ba taken at the University Co-Op Fri­ day from 4 to 6 o’clock. They will be ready Saturday, and this is the last chance for new stu­ to get their blanket tax dents A m o Nowotny, assistant dean j photo in time for the Baylor gama t h o u s - , A t intermission, which spilt, - j t h e pjc tu r e a t 10 o’clock, the opin- o f men, has re q u e ste d t h a t ail S a tu r d a y night. Several volumes of law books «.------------------------------------ printed in Braille have been sent to o f Congress. the University by the Library ;aMti people. These people were of ^ o clock m ore th a n one all classifications. These books, on the open shelf politicians I here w ere |on 0 f m ost of the audience was th e ir original blanket tax may get that if Miss Vivian Leigh had done of the Law Library, contain laws young men and gray b e a rd s, young any b e tte r in the close-out scene S tu d e n t E m p lo ym ent Bureau come duplicates w ith permission from relating to code pleading, personal ! women and older women J what in the his- d e n t Life and put their second G reg o ry Gym. B la n k e t tax photos property, partnership,: they all had in common was a de- equity, evidence, are now criminal law. insurance, and sire to see the picture which has tory o f the S ta te T h e a te r th e re sem ester schedules on their appli- taken 1 ready. stud en ts who have m ade applica- tion fo r p a rt-tim e w ork with the by the office of the Dean of Stu- the Athletic Council office become as much a part of S o u t h -1 it would have been too much. o l d stu d e n ts who have See G.W.T.W., P age 3 For the first time in business men, la s t Saturday cation blanks. t o r t s , and lost? . - These classes a r e open to any­ one who can pass a te s t involving except, for diving, over-hand strokes, breast strokes, underwater swimming, a n d floating ' « b t , of div Red Cross Class To Begin Feb. 26 T he first of a series of three courses in the senior Red Cross life saving an d water safety f o r men will begin Monday, February 26. These courses are prerequi* sites to an instructorship in Retl Cross water safety, and no f e e s will be charged and no credit given for enrollment in them . The classes will be divided into two sections, one section to m eet at 2 o ’clock on Monday, Wednes­ day, and F rida y , a n d th e o th er a# 2 o’clock on T u esd ay, Thursday* and Saturday. T h e lesson m a te ria l will be correlated betw een th e different classes; a student who has a laboratory on one of th e days w-hen his class meets will ba able to make up his class w ork with the other section. The course o f instruction and the examination will take a mini­ mum of seventeen hours to com­ plete. E ach class period will be from 2 until 3:30 o ’clock. Foreign Language Exams Set Saturday Fo re ig n la n g u a g e examinations for J u n e g r a d u a te s will be given S a tu r d a y a t 2 o ’clock, Dr. C. A. Swanson, associate professor o f Romance languages, announced T hursday. All seniors now taking their last required course in a foreign lan- n0h m*,ke * * r *da I" course “ “ a re req u ire d to er 0 ta k e the examination. The tests will be given in the following rooms: French and Ital­ ian in Biology Laboratory 12; Ger­ man in Journalism Building 212; Spanish in Garrison Had I. Paper will be supplied. and Latin Tax Photos M a d e Today O u t Tomorrow Bureau Is Seeking Student Speakers Students wishing to enroll in the Student Speakers Bureau will meet for the first time this semes­ ter Friday afternoon at 5 o'clock in B Hall 329, Jesse Villarreal, in­ structor in public speaking, super­ the bureau, has an­ visor of nounced. be to outline a program for the remainder o f the year. Function o f the bureau is to prepare speeches, which are de­ scribed In a program that is mailed to clubs and organizations within a 150-mile radius o f Austin. Or­ ganizations select speakers from the program and arrange for dates with the student speakers. like to talk about Any student who has a subject be would is eligible to enroll in the bureau, and is urged the Friday meeting, Mr. Villarreal said. to attend Last year members of the bu­ reau made more fifty speeches before clubs in Austin, New Braunfels, Temple, Marble Falls, Smithville, Taylor and San Antonio. than 'A c c id e n t' Derrick Brought to U. T. The first oil derrick ever erected on University land has arrived in Austin. It resembles an old junk pile, but it is, in reality, a million dollar junk heap, since this der­ rick represents the first step in the recent development of the University. The structure will be assembled soon and placed on exhibition near the Engineering Building. The site, in the southwestern part of Reagan County, at which the first oil well W’as completed in May, 1923, wras chosen purely by accident. The drilling party, headed by Frank Pickrell, was bogged dowrn. Since the lease wras to expire within a few hours, mem­ bers decided to drill where they were stranded. They drilled not on their own lease, but on the part o f the 2,- 000,000 acres provided by the Constitution the University for endowment and now' known as the Big Lake field. PAGE TWO T h * F ir i t C o U tg t D a ily i n th * S o u th Phone 2-2473— THE DAILY TEXAN—;—Phone 2-2473 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1940 Steers, Without Moers, Will Be Underdogs Against Bears Saturday G ray Shifts Hull to Guard; Cooley Fifth M an in Lineup B y C L Y D E L* M O T T E Tim* Sparta Editor "W hy couldn't thin have happened fem e other tim e, Jack Gray, r a p e coach, ae id b itterly yesterday. H e w a s r e f e r r i n g , o f cour se, t o t h e i n j u r y o f B o b b y Moera, who h u r t a n i n s t e p T u e s d a y , a n d ha was r e f e r r i n g to the B a y l o r gram* Trackmen Working Regularly; M eet Today J?tr°m“raL C a 9®rs Play Close All Candidates Asked to Report j Co-Ed Sports Overtim e ga m es and close scores fe a tu r e d t h e f o u r te e n in tram ural basketball g am es p layed Thursday n ig ht in Gregory Gym. Tw o g a m e s w ere decided in over tim e periods, w hile three w ere decided by m ar­ gi ns o f tw o points. 7 ________________ ' Contests, Two Overtime _________ J T h e M i n o t c h a Hotshot* had to play an e x tr a period b efore su b ­ Louis Fights Godoy Tonight d u i n g V el W a r 21-19 . D o u g Sea-4 .......................... J -........... t h e den by sh o o tin g f iv e points. — - B y M ILD R ED IN K S I S a t u r d a y ni ght . “ I d o n ’t t h i n k Bobby will get to p lay,” he m uttered gloomily. " T h e s e t o m musc l e s a r e u su a l l y alow to h ea l a n d an a t h l e t e has t o h a v e his f e e t in t he b e s t o f c o n d i­ t i o n . ” . H e bad squad, j u s t s e n t t i r e d f r o m a s t i f f w o r k - o u t , to the a h ow e r s a n d he looked a b i t w e a r y hi ms el f . the t h r o u g h a Mo e rs w o r k e d o u t y e s t e r d a y and f e w p la ys with w e n t t h e t e a m b u t g o n e w a s t h e typi cal Mo e rs b r a n d of r ip a n d hustl e. I n s t e a d , he w as m o v i n g a b o u t c a r e f u l l y a n d a t ha l f - sp e ed , t a k i n g n o c h a n c e s on h u r t i n g t he i n j u r e d f o o t f u r t h e r . I n his pl a c e G r a y p l a n s t o use Bleu Hull. m o v i n g hi m b ac k to g u a r d f r o m his u s u a l f o r w a r d p o ­ I n H u l l ’s r e g u l a r p l a ce was sition. D e n t o n C r ey. T h e r e s t of t he l i n e- up t h e s a m e w i t h S p e e d y H o u p t a t c e n t e r , Ch e at e r G r a n v i l l e a t f o r w a r d , a n d O r a n S p e a r s at g u a r d . r e m a i n e d Mo e rs s i n j u r y p l a ce s t h e L o n g ­ h o r n s in t h e r o l e of u n d e r d o g s in S a t u r d a y ’s g a m e . D e s p i t e t h e f a c t t h a t t he S t e e r s h a v e lost only once i n C o n f e r e n c e p l a y while t he Be ar s h a v e b e e n b e a t e n t h r e e times, the B a y l o r t e a m is c o n s i d e r e d as the t h e Circuit at " h o t t e s t ” in improve* p r e s e n t . m e n t , c o u p l e d wi t h t h e f a c t tha t t h e B e a r s in b e a t i n g a L o n g h o r n t e a m , p u t s t h e m in a likely spot t o u p s e t t he l e ad e rs . t a k e g r e a t del ight f i ve T h e i r r e c e n t lose S h o u l d t h e L o n g h o r n s it will t h r o w t h e r a c e i nt o a j u m b e w i t h Rice, B a y l o r , a n d T e x a s st ll In If t h e t h i c k o f t h e r u n n i n g . t h e S t e e r s w in it will shove t h e m f r o n t a n d f u r t h e r leave o n l y in a c h a l l e n g i n g po si t io n. r u t in t h e Owls C u ts Being Counted ta W o m e n s P. T. T h e r e w e r e d e n t s e n r o l l e d t r a n- i n g cl asses W e d n e s d a y , it wa s r e ­ p o r t e d by Miss M a r y Belle Mc ­ K e e , i n s t r u c t o r in physical t r a i n ­ i n g f o r w o m e n , a n d t h e r e g i s t r a ­ t i o n li ne s w e r e still f o r m i n g . B a d m i n t o n , b e g i n n e r ' * a r c h e r y , a n d golf c l asse s ar* all closed, a n d t h e r e is only o r e claas open i n f e n c i n g a n d tennis. t o gi ve r e a s o n w h y a r e g o i n g P e t e C r e s s e y , t w o - y e a r l e t t e r ­ m a n a n d a l l - C o n f e r e n c e p l a y e r , t h e B a y l o r it o n e B e a r s t h e h o n f h o r n t a g o o d f i g h t S a t u r ­ d a y n i g h t in G r e g o r y G y m . T h i t it f o o t - t h r e e W a c o y o u t h si x t h e b e t t d e f e n s i v e p e r ­ o n e of f o r m e r * t h e S o u t h w e t t C o n ­ in f e r e n c e . U IL. Resorts lo Records Two Boys Eligible For Each O ne Lost To cl inch t h e i r p o i n t t h a t Tv#xt y e a r ’s h i g h school f oo tb al l el igi­ bility r u l i n g s will t h e q u a n t i t y a n d m a i n t a i n t he q u a l i t y I of g r . d i r o n c o n t e s t a n t s , U n i v e r ­ I n t e r s c h o l a s t i c sity I *30 w o m e n s*u- L e a g u a o f f i c ia ls ca l l e d in rn physi c al i n c r e a s e T e x a s t h e of I, r e c o r d s h e r e T h u r s d a y . E f f e c t i v e S e p t e m b e r n e w l e a g u e ruling® will allow’ a school- boy gr: to don c l ea t s f o r his i r a t e r u n t i l he b ec ome s 18 a ma ’he school y e a r o p e n ­ {prior no i ng) . H e r e t o f o r e w h e n a boy com- r e t e d e i g h t semesters* a t t e n d a n c e in school he b e c am e i ne l igibl e; ag e a m i t wrag 19. H o r s e b a c k r i d i n g classes a r e to t h e n e w H c b b \ H or s e this S e v e r a l cl asses those a r e b e ­ T he swi t c h in eligibility r e q u i r e ­ n e e * a t m e n t s c a me , l e a g u e of ficials said, St abl e s. w h e n t he a c c e n t on ' ‘s e m e s t e r p a r ­ a p o r t a r e still open. All t i c i p a t io n ” w as o u t m o d e d by t he w h o have n o t re,: s t e r e d i n g c o u r t e d absent* All classes ! S t a t e E d u c a t i o n ’s r e c e n t add i ti on in- a r e n o w m e e t i n g . schools o f two n e w school s e me s t er s , Tea.- rig T e x a s f r o m l l t o 12 g r a d e s . pu bl i c in Sports Notices all c a n d i d a t e s f o r sr ■ ’ Ha T H E R E W I L L BL a m e e t i n g of t h e v a r s i t y , t e n n i s f r e s h m a n , team® I a t 5 o ’clock. I t .a i m p o r t a n t t h a t e v e r y ­ o n e a t t e r a ' in Ga rn U s i n g t h e 1939 eligibility lists a« a • a -is f o r a s t a t i s t i ca l sur vey, R. J. Ki d d , l e ag u e at h l et i cs d i r e c ­ t h a t f o r eve r y t o r , p o i n t e d o u t b oy di sq ua l i f i e d u n d e r t he n e w r u l i n g s, t w o will p a r t i c i p a t e who ineligible u n d e r Would h a v e been t he e i g h t - s e m e s t e r limit. M A U R I C E F I N C H E R , " B y s t r e s s i n g an ag e limit, we c a p t a i n S ee L E A G U E . P a g e 8 M ovie! at 4:30; M anagers Sought B y B I L L Y S A N S I N G Taxon Aporia Stuff Wi t h t he y e a r ’s f i r s t m e e t — t he B o r d e r Ol ymp i c s— o n l y a m o n t h o f f, some s e v e n t y U n i v e r s i t y of T ex as t r a c k m e n h ea d t o d a y into t he e n d of t h e i r f i r s t w ee k of r e g u l a r p r ac t i c e . try o u t to is a s k e d T h is a f t e r n o o n a t 4 : 3 0 , C o a ch C lyd o L i t t l e f i e l d w ill hold th* first o f his w e e k l y F r id a y a ft o r - n oo n m o o t in g s , a n d e v e r y o n e fo r a n y a n x i o u s av a n t to ba p r e s e n t . In a d d it io n to th o r e g u la r m e e t ­ in g, a s o u n d s l o w - m o t i o n p i c ­ t u r e w ill he s h o w s , as w e ll as la s t s o a s o n ’s T e x a s sh o t s fr o m R e la y s. t o this is g o i n g b a c k s eas on , Co ac h S t a r t i n g L i t t l e f i e l d the s ys t e m o f c o a c h i n g w h i c h he u s e d t e n y e a r s back. some e i g h t o r Its n a m e is g r o u p c oa ch i ng, a n d t he i de a c on s i s t s of di vi di ng t he t e a m i nt o n i n e cl asse s of d i f f e r e n t t ype s o f c o m p e t i t i o n , ea ch g r o u p l e a d e r a n d d e v e l o p in g h a v i n g a within itself. F u l l p a r t i c u l a r s o f t h e g r o u p t r a i n i n g p r i nc i p l e will also be e x ­ p l a i n e d a t t h e m e e t i n g . t r a c k In a d d i t i o n t o c a n d i d a t e * f o r t h e t e a m , C o a c h L i t t l e ­ fi el d a l t o w a n t s all b o y s i n t e r ­ e s t e d s o p h o m o r e h a n d l i n g a n d j u n i o r m a n a g e r s h i p s t o r e ­ p o r t t o h i m F r i d a y a f t e r n o o n . in T h o u g h V a r s i t y t r a i n i n g is still in s o m e w h a t a n a d v a n c e d st a g e . it is a l r e a d y e v i d e n t t h a t o n e of the s t r o n g e s t p o i n t - g e t t i n g devi ces f o r Co ac h L i t t l e f i e ld thi s s e a s o n will be t h e r e l a y event s, A t t he q u a r t e r , h al f, a n d mile b a t o n - p a s s ­ ing r a c es , t h e S t e e r s look t hi s y e a r to possess m o r e s t r e n g t h t h a n in s e v e r al se ason s. l e ad i ng T h e h u r d l e s , wi t h l a n k y Boyc e G a t e w o o d t h e way, a r e w el l -ba la nc ed, w i t h f o u r o r m o r e t i m b e r - t o p p e r s , wrho c an b e t t e r t he 15- sec o nd m a r k . T h # s p r i n t * will h e s t r o n g e r in y e a r * , w i t h soph* L o n ­ t h a n n i e Hill a n d C a r l t o n T e r r y l e a d ­ ing t h e b u n c h , a n d f o l l o w e d b y N e w t B ^ l e w a n d J. W . S m i t h , f i r * t - y e a r m e n w h o t w o m o r e in e a r l y h a r e L e t t e r m e n Bill S t e w a r t dri l l s. a n d B i l l y S t a y , a d d e d t h i a p a c k , g i r o C o a c h L i t t l e f i e l d p o s ­ s i bl y t h e h e s t h u n c h o f c e n t u r y t h e c o u n ­ a n d t r y . s h o w n u p w e l l f u r l o n g m e n t o in Middl e d i s t a n c e e v e n t s will be c a p a b l y h a n d l e d b y l e t t e r m e n Red B a r e f i e l d a n d J o e H a r t plus ®oph Bill F r a s e r . H a r t , wh o b a t t l e d a ca se o f p n e u m o n i a d u r i n g C h r i s t m a s hol i da ys, h as p o r t e d a n d lost s t a m i n a , j u s t r e ­ is s t a r t i n g to r e g a i n t h e ; I n t h e f iel d e v e nt s , t h e r e a r e two d e f i n i t e s t a n d o u t s . Big J a c k H u g h e s , 260 p o u n d s of t h e S o u t h ’s f i n e s t discus t h r o w e r , h a s a d d e d the shot p u t to his r e p e r t o i r e , a n d f o r a se ems h e a d e d cig y e a r . B e e f u s B r y a n , t h e w i r y v a u l t e r a n d c a p t a i n o f t he t e a m , r e p o r t e d a little o v e r w e i g h t , b u t is l osi ng it r a p i d l y . H e b e g a n v a u l t i n g f o r t h e f i r s t t i m e T h u r s d a y . Intramural- F r i d a y , F*t>. 9 , 1 9 4 0 B A S K E T B A L L CLASS A F r s t s r n i t y Division f :«*— I — P h i D e lta T h e ta e s . P h i l i m m i Dei** XI. De n s Phi . - 4 * — I — A l p h a T a u O m e g a e s . T h e t a » " 0 — I — S i g m a P h i Epsi l on vs. T a : a q — : — P i K a p p a A l p h a e s . K a p p a 7 45— i —B ill T h row ers es. De Busk MI CA Di vi s i on C L A S S B F r a t e r n i t y Division 7 OS— 8 — D e l t a T h e t a P h i e s . D e l t a 7 45— S S igm a A l p h a F.psilon e s . D e l t a T a u D elta. ft 7 0 — 2 — K appa S ( n i l es. Bet* T h eta - no— 4— Pflugerville Club es. io n* Club Division 7 4 5— 4— R i n k y Ds nks eg. R o b e r t s * g o — 4.—G a m m a D e lta es. W e .t Tega* 3 i g m a . House. C hi, Pi. o f Alee. Ka!!. Chih, C Z E C H S E L E C T O F F I C E R S Czech Cl ub , T u e s d a y . T h e y a r e P r e s i d e n t , V i ol a M a r t i n e z ; v i c e­ p r e s i d e n t , E u g e n e S l o v a c e k ; sec- r t t a r y - t r e a t t i r e r , D o r o t h y H o r a k ; a n d V i n c e n t W roble. s e r g e a n t - a t - a r m s , x S P E C IA L Low Rates to Students 1 ^ •-W I C C U Cash and Carry HL ^ ^ Discount on Laundry / IF B O U N C IN G B O B B Y M O E R S w er e a girl, he could be Just as proud o f being a m em b e r o f one o f th e six U. T . S. A. girls’ sports cl ub as he coul d o f b e i n g t h e sp arkplug o f C o a c h J ack G ray’s S o u th ­ w e s t C o n f e r e n c e b a s k e t b a l l t e a m . B u t B o u n c i n g B ob by is n o gi r l — n o r is t h e basketball team on e o f t h e six s p o r t s clubs. H o w e v e r , e n t r a n c e i nt o o n e of t h e cl ub s is j u s t a b o u t as h a r d as m a k i n g t h e f o o t b a l l t e a m or t h e b a s k e t b a l l squad. E a c h o f t he g r o u p s has its own r e q u i r e m e n t s f o r m e m b e r s h i p , but y o u c a n be s u r e t h e y a r e n o snap, and o n l y a se l e c t f e w e v e r m a k e t h e g r a d e . So i t ’s no w o n d e r t h a t m o s t o f t he t a l k in the W o m e n ’s G y m n a s i u m h a s sh if t e d f r o m i n t r a m u r a l s to club t r y - o u t s wh i ch b e g a n W e d n e s ­ day. T r y - o u t s come onl y t w i c e a y e a r , a n d i n t r a m u r a l s in s o me f o r m o r o t h e r l a s t all y e a r — t h u s t h e i n t e r e s t . OR C H E S I S , T H E W O M E N ' S d a n c e organ iza tio n, held prelim inary t r y - o u t s W e d n e s d a y a f t e r n o o n a t t h e d a n c e s tudi o. A ppl i c an t * w e r e j u d g e d on t h e i r a b i l i t y a n d t h e i r f o r m , a n d s e l e c t i on o f n ew m e m b e r s will be c o m p l e t e d n e x t W e d n e s d a y . S u cc e s s f u l c a n d i d a t e s will b e c o me a p p r e n t i c e m e m b e r s a n d will be al lowed to p r e s e n t a n or i gi na l d a n c e t o be j u d g e d b y t wo local d a n c e a u t h o r i t i e s a n d p r e s e n t cl ub m e m b e r s b e f o r e a p p r e n t i c e s c a n e n t e r . T u r t l e C l u b will Hold t h e i r t r y - o u t * a t 7: IS o ’c l o c k T h u r s d a y , F e b r u a r y 15, a n d 5 o ’c l o c k , F e b r u a r y 21 i n t h e W o m e n ’* pool . F o u r s t r o k e s a n d t h r e e d i ve * will b e t h e b a m o f j u d g i n g . E t h e l J a m e * o f A u » t i n wa* e l e c t e d i n t o t h e C l u b W e d n e s d a y . • • • t e n n i s o r g a n i z a t i o n , h as a RA C K E T CL U B, t h e g i r l s ’ l imited m e m b e r s h i p of t w e n t y , b u t a t 4 : 4 5 o ’clock W e d n e s d a y , all gir ls w h o wi sh t o t r y - o u t will g e t t h e i r c h a n c e on t h e co m p o si t i o n c o u r t s a t t he W o m e n ' s G y m n a s i u m . J u s t k n o w i n g t h e r u l e s i s n ’t e n o u g h , b u t it is a n ec es si t y. T h r e e j u d g e s , o f f i c e r s o f t h e g r o u p , will j u d g e c o n t e s t a n t s on f o r e h a n d , b a c k h a n d , s e r v e a n d g e n e r a l g a m e . F o r m is t he p r i m a r y c o n s i d e r a t io n . C a n t e r C l u b will h o l d t r y - o u t * a t H o b b y H o r * # s t a b l e s o n H a n ­ c o c k D r i v e W e d n e s d a y a t 3 : 3 0 o ’c l o c k t o fill t h r e e v a c a n c i e s . T h e j u d / ' s a r e a p p o i n t e d b y t h e s p o n s o r a n d t h e y will a s k e a c h a p p l i ­ t h e c a n t to m o u n t , d i s m o u n t , r i d e b a r e b a c k , c a n t e r , a n d m a k e f i g u r e e i g h t . B o w a n d A r r o w C l u b h a s n o v a c a n c i e s a n d will n o t b o l d t r y - o u t s , t r y - o u t s W e d n e s d a y a f t e r n o o n o v e r w h i l e t h e T e e C l u b will b ol d t h e W o m e n ’s c o u r s e . I N T R A M U R A L is e n t e r i n g s e mi - fi na l s • t o u r n a m e n t T H E G O L F wi t h M a r j o r i e M u r r a y , Scat s, D al e M a r t i n , Tr i -De l t , Viola T ho ma s , K a j f a L o r r a i n e W i n t e r s , T r i - D o r m , K a t h e r i n e L ad d , T r i D-elt, a n d N o r m a A r c h e r , Co-op, r e m a i n i n g in t h e c o m p e t i t i o n . T h e B a * k e t Ball t o u r n a m e n t b e g i n s t o d a y w i t h n i n e g a m e s t o be pl a ye d , s t a r t i n g a t 4 o ’clock T w e n t y - s e v e n e n t r i e s a r e in t h e f i el d wi t h n i n e i n d e p e n d e n t g r o u p s a n d e i g h t e e n s o r or i ti e s . j B a d m i n t o n a n d p i n g - p o n g t o u r n a m e n t s , w i t h t h e e x c e p t i o n o f b a d ­ t h e f o u r t h r o u n d whi ch m u s t i nto m i n t o n d o ubl e s, h av e a d v a n c e d P i n g - p o n g t a b l e s a r e a v a i la b l e a t all t i m e s , be p la ye d by Mo nda y. b u t t h e r e is no o p p o r t u n i t y to p l a y b a d m i n t o n e x c e p t b e t w e e n 2 a n d 3 o ’clock. Brown Bomber Is H eavy Favorite N E W Y O R K , F e b . 8.— ( I N S ) — A c r o u c h i n g , r o u g h A r t u r o Go doy, f r e s h f r o m t h e p a m p a s o f Chile, p l a n n e d only a l i gh t r o a d w o r k o u t t o d a y b e f o r e a t t e m p t i n g t h e H e r ­ t a s k o f l i f t i n g t h e h e a v y- c u l e a n | w e i g h t t i a r a f r o m c h a m p i o n J o e L ou i s w h e n t h e p a i r m e e t in 16 r o u n d s t o m o r r o w n i g h t in Ma di so n S q u a r e G a r d e n . in t he in G o d o y ’s Louis, m a k i n g t h e n i n t h d e f e n s e o f f r o m t i t le he c a p t u r e d 1937, has J i m m y B r a d d o c k I b e e n r a t e d b y B r o a d w a y b o o k m a k ­ e r s a p r o h i b i t i v e f a v o r i t e t o chill I t h e C h i l e a n — a f e a t n e v e r b e f o r e ei ght- a c c o m p l i s h e d y e a r r i n g c a r e e r . I t ' s 5 to 2, t h e y say, t h a t A r t u r o will h a v e e n o u g h by r o u n d . N e v e rt h e l e s s , B r o a d w a y will p a y a b o u t $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 to see w h a t t h e r e is of t h e s c ra p. t h e l o n g odds, L o u i s ’ b r a i n t r u s t h a s inst illed in “ C h a p ­ p i e ” t h e f e e l i n g t h a t t h e c o m i n g I f i g h t is t h e m o s t i m p o r t a n t o f his b r i l l i a n t c a r e e r . t he e n d o f D es pi te f i f t h t h e a c c e p t i n g e v e r y t h i n g J o e is t a k i n g no c h a n c e s a g a i n s t t h e Chi lea n , w h o w o n t w o d e c i ­ s ions f r o m r o t u n d T o n y Galenfco t he a f t e r N e w J e r s e y b a r k e e p e r b a d t o of* , f er . L ou is r ec al l s on l y t o o vividly T o n y ’s p u n c h whi ch p u t h i m on t h e m a t b e f o r e he a n n i h i l a t e d Ga- ! l e nt o . A n y f i g h t e r , he sa y s, who c a n b e a t G a l e n t o t w i c e is a good m a n . I of in t he f i g h t s G od oy t r o u b l e f r o m a cr ouc h , n o t u nl i ke P a u l i n o U z c u d u n . One r o u g h e s t b o x e r s t he g am e , G o d o y m a y c a u s e c o n s i d ­ e r a b l e f r e ­ q u e n t l y b e c o m e s c o n f u s e d w h e n t o f a t h o m an o p p o n e n t ’s u n a b l e style. to P l a n s call f o r A r t u r o c o n c e n t r a t e on J o e ’s mid - se ct i on in a n e f f o r t t o t h r o w h i m o u t of ge a r . t o J o e . w h o I I f i g h t i n g w e i g h t C o n f i d e n t o f k n o c k i n g J o e out, t h e C hi l ea n will c ome in a t a b o u t 203, t e n p o u n d s h e a v i e r t h a n hi? t w o y e a r s ago. H o w e v e r , h e cl ai ms t h e a d d e d w e i g h t h as i m p r o v e d his p u n c h a n d h a s n o t s l o w e d his a t t a c k . Louis will scale a b o u t 2 0 3 Vt. Al! in all, Loui s p r o b a b l y has a n o t h e r wi n t u c k e d a w a y u n d e r his bel t a n d G o d oy will col lect e n o u g h t h a n p a y as t h e a m p l y a n d t a p e a dh e s i ve b a n d a g e t o c o v e r his b a t t e r e d f e a ­ t u r e s . l os e r f o r t o m o r e 5th T e x as A q u a c a d e Declares n Season on T a n k Records s o n O n L / D C n " T " I D r e A a I Gnk K C C O r d S M o i n e s h e a v y w e i g h t , I f , as e x p e c t e d , T ^ ui s polishes j o f f G o doy , hi s n e x t b a t t l e will be t h e Des I t . w a s o f fi~ chally r e v e a l e d t o d a y by P r o m o t e r w i t h J o h n n y P a y c h e k , ■ T h . F i f t h A n n u s ! T e x . , A q u a c a d e will b a c o n , , t h . c o n i n * g u n M T ^ u T w i U b a . L g e d In April F j n n i s h R e i ^ f F u n d , a n d f o r an i m p a t i e n t a r r a y of L o n g h o r n t a n k t a l e n t w a i t i n g to sh o o t f o r ^ a new’ b at c h o f s w i m m i n g a n d e n t e r t a i n m e n t r e c o r d s in G r e g o r y G ym w jj| t h e p r o p o s e d Ma x pool, F e b r u a r y 14, 15, a n d 16. T h e t h r e e - n i g h t w a t e r e x t r a v a g a n z a R a e r . T o n y G a l e n t o f r a c a s , a c c o r d - p r o m i s e s e v e n t s in t he pool, on t h e di v i n g ♦ b o a r d s , a n d in t he air. its p r e s e n t a t i o n of n e w ' jnjr to Jacob®, l a u g h s a p l e n t y w-ith thrill s a n d r e pi a c e ^ mans k ep t the H otsh ots in fo u r te e n points firin g gam e by t h r o u g h t h e b a s ke t . J . M. P e a r c e C o m p letely la st h al f , t h e Z i p p e r s fell b efore the in the f a d in g f i na l ly p u t t h e g a m e a w a y fo r sh ootin g a c c u r a c y o f the T a y t e s t h e H o t s h o t s w i t h a basket in the Co-Op’s p layers 37-26. Bill W i ­ his f o r s h a d e d o v er t i me , I n ener gave the Zipper* a h alftim e lead o f 18-17 w i t h e l ev e n p oi n t s , m o s t l y s h o t f r o m mi d - c o u r t . In t h e s econ d h al f, Bob Glass g o t t he r a n g e f o r t h e T a y t e s Co- Op t e n p o i nt s d u r i n g a n d r olled up t h e hal f. Glass c a p t u r e d s c o r i n g l a u r e l s wi t h his f i f t e e n points, a l ­ t h o u g h W i d e n e r g a v e him a close r ac e w i th t h e o t h e r o v e r t i m e cont est , t h e C a m p u s Guild t h e H a m p t o n Co-Op 15-14 to g e t r e ­ v e n g e t h e d e f e a t t h e y had in a p r e v i o u s o v e r t i m e j s u f f e r e d t i l t wi t h t h e s a me t e a m . A r t h u r I P u g h .shot t h e w i n n i n g t wo points , whi l e high scor i ng h o n o r s w e n t to W a y n e W a g o n s e l l e r o f t h e H a m p ­ t h i r t e e n poi nt *. , t on Co- Op five w’ith e i g h t points. T h e B r y d s o n H o u s e five t r o u n c ­ J T. D. Bl edsoe of t h e A l l e y Ra t s ed t h e Co p e y H o u s e 36- 26 in o n e I i n j u r e d his a nk l e s h o o t i n g a b a s ­ o f t h e f a s t e s t g a m e s played. C. B. k e t t w o m i n u t e s o f t h e B r y d s o n H o u s e W h i t e g a v e t he pl a y as his t e a m w a s d r o p p i n g an an e a r l y t h e J o n e s :18 - to- 17 decision ball on t h e t i p - o f f on t he c e n t e r | Hou se Bl e d so e p a c e d his j u m p a n d f l i p pe d it i nt o t h e hoop t e a m m a t e s b e f o r e t h e i n j u r y with w i t h o u t losi ng c o n t r ol . A t t he e n d el even points. T r a i l i n g a t t h e B r y d s o n t h e o f : hal f, 13-9, t he J o n e s H o u s e t e a m H o u s e hel d a 21- to 7 a d v a n t a g e . ( c a m e b a c k s t r o n g t h e s e cond i a a n o t h e r close g a m e t h e T e j a s ; h a l f to win t h e g a m e . H a r o l d T u r - t he P r o g r e s s i v e j n e r of t h e J o n e s H o u s e t o o k s c o r ­ J a m e s M c C a r t h y t h e t h r o u g h ho op to l ead t h e s c o re r s in a f a s t ing h o n or s f o r t h e t i l t w i th t we l ve j d r o p p e d points. Cl ub d o w n e d C z ec h s 21-16. lead w h e n he t o o k t e n p o i n t s f i r s t ha l f , five. l a st t h e t he t o in in j F l a s h i n g a f ine d e f e n s e a n d of- g a m e t h e wh ol e w a y . in t he t h e t h e abi li t y, p a r s i n g f irst h a l f of S h o w i n g goo d t e a m w o r k and a f i ne P h i G a m m a D e l t a “ B ” t e a m d r u b b e d S i g m a Chi 27-10. u p w i t h hi* six points. f ens e t h e i r g a m e , t h e P f l u g e r v i l l e Cl ub c o n ­ q u er e d t h e R i n k y D in k s 22-16. At t h e t he e n d of t h e f i r s t h al f, P f l u g e rv i l l e p l a y er s held a 17-to- 4 a d a v n t a g e f ootbal l o v er In t h e o t h e r g a m e s p la ye d t h e pl a y er s o f t he R i n k y Dinks. How- t he t h e H o u s e o f Gl en n 29- 14, A.S.A. de- ever, t h e t h e N e w m a n Cl ub 23-17, second h a l f ; Di nks t h e t u r n e d b a c k t h e i r f i ve. J o e W i r d e n , P f l u g e r - \ P . E .M . Cl ub 17-11, t h e Allied C o ­ t h e S a b i n e S l u g g e r s lville, “ B ” points. P f l u g e rv i l l e Cl ub a n d Gilly Davis t h # W i d e n i n g o f t h e R i n k y D in ks p r e s s e d Wi r- t h e 58-4, t e a m H o u s e 27-19. a n d M e r g e l e H o u s e t r o u n c e d l e a de r s f a l t e r e d to a l l o w s c o r e r s w i t h six Op b u r i e d L e R o y M u e l l e r o f O ak G ro v e Co- Op t h e Ri nky j f e a t e d t o P r a t h e r Hal l t w e l v e p oi nt s t r a m p l e d t o s c or e t he led in T H E L A R G E S T S T O C K O F ARROW SHIRTS IN C E N T R A L T E X A S 6 1 6 C O N G R E S S A u s t i n *s L e a d i ng St or e f o r M e n Ba be P a p i c h ha* p e r f e c t e d his f a m o u s " d e a t h t r a p ’’ w h i c h f li ngs h i m a r o u n d t h e pool like a k er ne ! o f c o rn in a popper . H. B. How- a r d will be b ac k wi t h s o m e n e w s t u n t s on t he t r a p e z e . T h e T u r - j t ie Cl ub will p r e s e n t a w a t e r bal- i l e t t o t h e t u n e of t h e L o n g h o r n j B a n d . W a t e r polo will be e x ­ t r u e " E d B a r l o w " , h i b i t ed is o n e of s tyl e r o u g h e s t s po r t s on t h e hook*. to pr ov e t he its in it R e c o r d o ns l a u g h ts will b e m a d e b y such Texa® s t a r s as C a p t a i n Bob T a r l t o n , f o r e m o s t b a c k s t r o k e s w i m m e r in t h e S o u t h w e s t ; Mike S o j k a a n d Dick B e e l e r , “ f l yi ng f i s h ” b r e a s t s t r o k e e x p e r t s ; a n d H a r r i s Mc Cl a mr oc k , o n e o f t he n a t i o n ' s f a s t e s t f r e e st yl er s. To p u t t h e f i n i sh i ng t o u c h e s on t h e c a r n i v a l a t m o s p h e r e , t h e r e will be cl own acts. Miss J a n e Dillard, c o m e l y m e r ­ m a i d f r o m F o r t W o r t h a n d p r e s ­ e n t w o m a n ’s n a t i o n al b r e a s t s t r o k e c h a m p i o n a n d r e c o r d h ol de r , will See A Q U A C A D E , P a g e 3 V A L E N T IN E S L A R G E S E L E C T IO N LATEST C R E A T IO N S Do You Suffer from H E A D A C H E S ? . . M o st c ‘ *en headaches ara cauked by d e f’cient or im­ if h e a d - peded vision . aches torment you, w e sug­ gest haw eg us examine your eyes. Frequent discomforts can likely be corrected by the proper fltLn g o f glasses. ta*ry af ti* OW CONE WITH TRE WIND STATIONERY This lovely G o ne W ith the W in d Sta­ tionery embodies a 1! of the sentiment and background of the O L D S O U T H . The writ­ ing paper is watermarked with an old fash­ ioned swirl laid pattern, and has hand deckled edges. The cover portrays a picturesque map of the prewar O ld South, showing Atlanta, Charleston and Tara H a !. Blue, I v o r y and Whi t e $X ii. Special M otion Picture Edition G o n e W ith the W in d i n c o l o r s I l l y s t r a f e d A f t W “ v L rnim m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m sm ssm zm t tm J U N I V E R S I T Y CO-OP T H E S T U D E N T S ' O W N S T O R E ” ARROW R U M P Survival of the Fittest a r r o w T r u m p ’s the longest wearing and A IL the fittin’est shirt you ever put on your back. T h e superb M i toga form-fit is custom shaped to your build. T ru m p ’s sleek, good­ looking soft collar is one of A r r o w ’s best— specially w o v e n and A r r o w styled. T e ll your roommate to buy som e white T ru m p shirts today. Only two dollars each. Y o u ’ll like them— so will h e! T h e y ’re Sanforized- shrunk — fabric shrinkage less than lfc — a n ew shirt free if one e v e r shrinks out o f fit. 1 1 Iii ARROW SHIRTS A rrow Shirts Exclusively on the Drag at T H E TOGGERY 2310 G U A D A L U P E ST. J. L. Rose N e w o f f i c e r s f o r t h e s e m e s t e r t h e P r o g r e s s i v e w e r * e l e c t e d b y Ti has Bookstore An ice-cold Coca-Cola is a thing by itself,— the familiar bottle of goodness that represents four g e n ­ erations of experience in r e f r e s h i n g m i l l i o n s . I ts clean, ti ogling taste brings a delightful after-sense of real refreshment. 4 U S E T H A T R E F R E S H E S Buttled ender authority of The Oxa*f a1* < o. bf Austin Coca-Cola Bottling Co. 5 0 5 S a n J a c i n t o S t . P h o n e 2 - 2 9 8 8 5 A u S tm X a w u t> U i§ > V l f I ® S T R E ® B E y D I A ! S KM O K D N 0 ( R l S ) r S S e v e n t h St C o n g r e s s FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1940 Phone 2-2473 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-2473 The Firtt College D aily in PAGE THREE Next Falls Football Heroes Begin Spring Training This Afternoon Sixteen Lettermen Returning; Football, Hula-Hula, and Hawaiian Climate Good, Bible to Stress Fundamentals But Jud Atchison Is Back for a Texas Education to the telling of to out i ngs , a n d to c o - op e ra t i on with i t h e f e d e r a l a n d sta*e g a m e o f fi- eials, tall stories, j Katz, B y D O N P A T T E S O N Texan Astoriat* Sport* Editor G e o r g e Goldsmi th, C h a r l e s a n d Floyd McGown Jr., t he c o ns ti t u ti o n t o Wildlife Lovers Meet, Organize w e r e n a m e d c o m m i t t e e . U ni ver si t y. The, H ealani Cl ub wa* with the p r o g r e s s of t he L o n g h o r n g r o u p o f f o r m e r college s t a r s — ; footbal l t e a m l a s t f al l a n d he an d w h e n t h e P o l a r B e . ™ e n d e d t h e i r s e a s on J u d j o i n e d u p wi t h the Club. T h e y p l a y e d O r e g o n S t a t e | folioWer of ?h* in 28-0. T h e y also p la y e d F r e s n o j p o r t s f ro m the ma i n la nd a b o u t 5 S t a t e Pacific. of the losing O r a n g e an d White. “ Y e got re- t h e o ’clock eve r y S a t u r d a y a f t e r n o o n , ” t he “ P i n e a p p l e Bowl , ” , u r f d „ , h a t hp ■ t h e College of f o r t u n e s a n d as- , he said. Mazur Heads Ne w Rod and Gun C lu b U n i v e r s i t y Rod and Gun H u b wa s t h e n a m e s e lected by m e m b e r s of a new o r g a n i z a t i o n of U n iv e r - in wild life, a t a m e e t i n g hel d l a s t n i g h t in T e x a - U n i o n 209. i n t e r e s t e d s t u de nt * p o p u l a r is v e r y Of c ou r s e we w e r e in “ F oo tb a l l H a w a i i , ” J u d said, “ t h e r e w e r e 18,000 f a n s a t so me o f t he g a m e s . ' ’ i n t e r e s t e d in J u d ' s f oo t b al l c a r e e r b u t we wer e in s o m e t h i n g else. “ H ow a b o u t t h es e in H o n o l u l u ? Do hu la -h ul a girls t h e y w e a r g ra s s s ki r ts all t h e t i m e ? ” we as k ed him ea ge r l y . i n t e r e s t e d v e r y also • t o u r i s t s , ” he His a n s w e r was dis a pp oi n ti ng , “ Only in n i g h t cl ubs f o r t h e e n ­ t e r t a i n m e n t o f e x ­ pla i ned , “ O r d i n a r i ly t he y d r es s t h e m o s t c o n v e n ­ tional o f cl ot hes , ” he c o n t i n u e d . A t ch i s o n was n o t m u c h i n t e r e s t ­ t a l k i n g o f f oot bal l, ei ther . g r i n d i n g . ed in in “ But the gam es w ere b a r e l y o v er by t h a t tim e,” we o bj e c t e d . “ Oh, b u t I m e a n t 8 o' clock 510 , e *!’ a i n ^d- , a ou . o c ock <>y Texas time. S a n Ant oni o, w a s el ected d e n t of the G er al d M a zu r , law s t u d e n t f r o m el ected nre*i- c l u b O th e o f f i c e r s ? c l ub. o t h e i of fi c er * a n d Mr< W h i t e k 1 I t was el e c t e d w er e P au l M a ra bl e, vice- ( p r e s i d e n t ; Dick A n d er s on , s e c r e ­ t a r y ; a n d J o h n A r m s t r o n g , t r ea s- te ben in school h e r e At c h i so n led the S t ee r s F ol l o wi ng el ection of officer*, ! was one of the L o n gh o rn * ’ g r e a t - u r e r pr o- t e m, e s t f oo t b al l a n d t r ac k stars. He r ea ched his p ea k in M a c e in 1937 B e r r y M, W h i t a k e r , d i r e c t o r of w hen he a m a z i n g SUto-6 victor y o v er Ba yl or Bear s. t he C o n f e r e n c e b r oa d j u m p t i t l e p l e a s u r e s a n d o p p o r t u n i t i e s of- W e d n e s d a y t h r e e y e a r s a n d wo u nd up w i th t he nat ional title, Dr. H o m e r P r i c e R a i ne y , p r e s ! t he fJent Un iv e r si t y, addressed t h e {he U n i v e r s it y Religi ous Workers t he fermi to s t u d e n t s i n t e r e s t e d in this V.M.C.A. Dr. Ra ine y, form er di- t he A m e r i c a n Y o u t h t y p e of o r g a n i z a t i o n . find- t he was s e le c te d as s p o ns or of talk on A c t i n g on Mr. W h i t a k e r ' s aug- Commi ssi on, discussed t h e i n t r a m u r a l a t h le t i c s f o r me n, wh o t r a c k he w o n club, g av e a a f t e r n o o n r e c t o r of Dr. Rainey Addresses Religious Workers to a n s h o p in l r g e s t i on , t he m e m b e r s m a d e in- ings of t he commi ssi on on r eligion, f o r m a l s ugg e s t i on * f or D i v i s i o n * f o r m a l s u g g e s t i o n s f or pr ovi si ons t o be i n c l ud ed sn t h e c l u b ’s con- mi ni st e r s of c a mp u s c h ur ch e s , The The m e e t i n g was a t t e n d e d by re- K nown by a do ze n d i f f e r e n t n ic k name g here. J u d picked u p a n o t h e r ono rn s u n n y Hawai i. On e n s u n n y Hawai i, o n e o f his t e a m m a t e s , k no w i n g he was f rorn Ma r a b l e , A r m s t r o n g a n d Lloyd J r . , w e r t a p p o i n t e d as e n t e r t a i n m e n t t h e B e n t s e n m e m b e r s o f c o m mi t t e e . M e m b e r s who a t t e n d e d t he f i r s t include m e e t i n g o f t h e n e w cl ub Ma zur , M a ra bl e, A n d e r s o n , A r m ­ s t r o n g , G o ld s mi th , K at z McGown, Fl oy d H, A n d er s o n , Ben ss en, J o n e s , Re gi na l d F. G eo r g e W. Allcn R e n t o n , A r t h u r Torn 1 b1’ G a v H Wa t s o n , J U D A T C H I S O N . . T h e Cac t us Kid t he re . One o f t h e i r p r o d u c t s called P o l a r Be ar , t e a m g o t its n a m e . ” a n d t h u s was Like a t an f o r m a r eal e s t a t e sales- t h e i m a n » be ta l ked e n t h u s i a s t i c al l y of C a ct u s Kid. ’ | Hawai i. “ I ’d advi se a n y o n e to g o --------------- Fe Aa*, d ub b ed him “ T h e st i t u t i o n. P l a ns w e r e a1-> ma de ligious leader* of y o u n g people to h a v e c e r t a i n m e e t i n g s d e v o t e d arui i n t e r es t e d st ud en t s ts a n d ad u lt s. ^ ^ ^ — —— —---------------- --------------------- ---------------------- Scarbrough's Men's Store r ake O ffic e Building Elevator D ire ct to M en's C lo th in g , Second Floor. The Men's Store Spring Line-up New Sport-Trio (3-in-one Suit) Today spring fo otb all training for the T e xa s Longhorns begins and th e coaching s t a f f w ill g e t U s first op portu nity to find ou t what kind o f a team the U n iv ers ity will have in 1940. B y C L Y D E L* M O T T E Texan Sport* Editor “Yes, we had a cold spell down That Coach Bible and his assistants, Blair Cherry and Bully Gil- j the bronzed ex-Longhorn •trap, are go in g to h ave a hard tim e decidin g on just who to use ie d rop ped 'to 64 d e c r e e s " mc’r c n r y obvious. T e x a s will have material*----------------------------------------------------------I to spare and the trouble is going o be in find in g just which boys are best suited for which posi­ tions. st u dy . J a c k says he will be e l i g i - 1 f oot bal l a n d t r a c k s t a r at the U n i ­ ver si t y f o r f o u r y ea rs who r ec e nt l y hie. r e t u r n e d f r o m Hawai i. He f ini she d his eligibility ’.ast s p r i n g an d e nd e d t he O r a n g e a n d his c a r e e r in the N a t i on al Harold “ Buddy" Ju ngm ichael, t r a n s fe r from Kilgore Junior Col- Jack C r a m , J i m m y T'he speak.pr WRR Jud Atchison N oble Doss, C o - c a p t a in In the backfield f o r lege, will be one o f t he b e s t g u a r d Whi te by w i n n i n g f i r s t place c a n d i d a t e s on t h e field. He is bi g j t h e b r o a d a n d f a s t and will forc e C a p t a i n T e d Da w s o n, Chal Daniel, V. D. Ba sey, a n d Don W e e d o n to w o r k if t h e y a r e to beat, him o u t of a s t a r t i n g position. W e e d o n , h o w ­ e v e r m a y be s hi f te d t o t he t a c k l e T r a c k a n d Field M e et in C a l i f o r - 1 nia. Y e s t e r d a y he w a s in r e g i s t r a - lion line g e t t i n g se t f o r a s e m e s - 1 t e r in w’hich be h opes to c o m p l et e j w o r k on his d eg re e. j u m p a t Grubbs, P ete Layden, R. B. P a t­ rick, R. L. H a r k i n s , J o h n n y Gill, and C h a rl i e P a r r e t t are c o m i n g t e a m a l o n g t he 1939 back f r o m w ith s ome o t h er s . It w ou l d be a hard e n o u g h j o b to s e l e c t a s t a r t ­ in g b a c kf i el d f r o m t h e b o y s who have h ad s o me v a r s i t y e x p e r i e n c e j posit ion w h e r e he w o r k e d in some b u t w h e n a g r o u p o f s uc h as Roy D al e Mc Ka y , Lewis | M a y n e , W a l t e r H e a p , F r i t z Lob an d A l t o n Bos t i ck s t a r t pries, p u s h i n g t h e m , a coa ch will have t o be c l a i r v o y a n t b e s t f ou r . t r a i n i n g is to e n a b l e t he c o a che s to fall. F u n d a m e n t a l s and hard work a r e t he day a n d e v e r y t he o r d e r o f f r e s h m e n ; g a m e s last fall, T h e whole o b j e c t of t h e y are g oi n g t o wor k wi t h to choose the h av e s p r i n g ■what the see in ' n P r a c t i c a l l y the s a m e s i t ua t i on will c o n f r o n t line c oa c h Gi l st ra p. P a r k Mye rs lost A l t h o u g h he t h r o u g h J a c k g r a d u a t o r ) F r e e m a n t h r o u g h f ai l ur e in schol-1 • s t i c w o r k , Bu l l y will still h ave p l e n t y of w e e d i n g out to do. a n d b oy will h av e a c h a n c e the co a ch es w h a t he c a n do. to s ho w W h a t T e x a s will h a v e in t he wa y of a f oo tb al l t e a m sho ul d he p l a i n ­ e r a f t e r the m o n t h o f s p r in g t r a i n ­ i ng is over. I t should be a good one b u t no one, n o t eve n t he coaches, k no w s j u s t how goo d it m a y be. Besides all t he v a r s i t y m e n r e ­ t u r n i n g a n d t h e f r e s h m e n co mi n g up, t h e t e a m will he b o l s t e r e d in Other w ay s . G le nn J a c k s o n , big V a r s i t y c e n t e r in 1938, has r e t u r n ­ ed to go ou t f o r a n end posit ion. H e should f i v e Mal col m K u t n e r , J o e S ch wa r t - ing, a n d J e s s H a w t h o r n e some comp e t i t i on , a n d Mike S we e n e y , d r o p p i n g f r o m 400 d a y s to a l m o s t e n d in 1938, will be b a c k to ma ke 200. The average, e a s e ’* s t op - o v er t h e civil anneal * c o u r t "is ' 3 09 t h e boys w o r k h a r d e r , h a v i n g re-1 jn Review ( C o n t i n u e d f r o m P a g e I . ) to school a n d i n t e n d s -uv a n d He was s p e a ki ng of t he w e a t h e r in H o nol ul u d u r i n g t h e “ w i n t e r ” j he has just, s p e n t t he re . T h e r e was a s pa rk l e in his oyes as he told o f the d a y s s p e n t “ s u r f i n g , ” p l a y i n g footbal l, l o af i ng a r o u n d . ” He had g one to Ho n o l ul u last fall a t the bi d d i n g of H ug h Wo l f e , a n o t h e r e x - L o n g h o r n g r e a t , who had a c ce pt e d a j o b as coach of a sem -pro t e a m in Hawaii. Wo l f e to play f o r had a s ke d A t c h i s o n him a n d J u d ac c e pt e d. “ j u s t • l i s t e n e r asked hi m The t e a m he played f ootbal l f o r was called the P o l a r Bear s. A p u z ­ r e a ­ zled son f o r such a n a m e in such a cl ima t e and he e x pl ai ne d, “ T he t e a m was s po n s o r ed by a w o m a n who o wn e d an t h e At ch i son p l a y ed in t he t a i l ba ck r,hTr;, e ' ", ' m p h f , i c ” ]ly' “ id “ T h e r e ’s no b e t t e r place to h ave »!*t f o r t he P o l a r B e a n . T h e y won , ,o t o f fun .. w h p n as kp d if he t h r e e o f t h e i r f o u r g a m e s a n d J u d WPTe g o i ng hack, he a n s w e r e d a bit u n c e r t a i n l y . H e h a s n ’t m a d e s c or e d in ea ch. T h e y p l a y e d t.hp U n i v er si t y of any d e f i n i t e p la ns to r e t u r n yet H awai i t wi c e a n d t h e H e a la n i Club but you g e t t he idea t h a t he w o ul d twice, losing t h e i r only g a m e t o the not be h a r d to t a l k i nt o going, he ice c r e am p l a n t j c ompo sed of “ t o w n ” boys — a We a s ke d him if he k e p t up G.W.T.W. Aquacade ( C o n t i n u e d f r o m P a g e I . ) ( C o n t i n u e d i ing c a m e in the 200 y a r d b r e a s t ­ s tr oke e v e n t w h e n Dick Beel er | c a me f r o m a b o u t f ive y a r d s b eh i n d Sin t he l a s t lap to t o u c h o u t Mike Soj ka. T h e t i m e w a s 2:36. 4. f r o m P a g e 2.) B u t l e r P e r r y m a n , i * wa?! Nevil t M o i s t wa s a n o t h e r d oubl e t h e l o b b *v ’ i u s t opp osi t e t he c a n d y ; f o r m e r C o n f e r e n c e diving c h a m - I w i n n e r w hen he t o o k t h e 220 a n d s oda -pop s t a n d s e t up t h e r e plus be in l e v e r e d f r o m . k n e e i nj ur y . S ev e r a l boys who w e r e j B u t a n u p w a r d t r e n d f o r t h e ineli- f est d e c a d e of t he s u r v e y h as a1- j b e h i n d it .." IIT m ™ t h e i e still was a l a r ge r ' T k i n * pi o" f r ™ Ri c*- t h e S u - ! thp !l? hta a r * s e t t l e d d o w n f ive y e a r s s h o we d “ I t should be o b s e r v e d , ” (1rmanri t h a n C0Ui ‘ be m e t * gihle l ast y e a r will he a b l e to play ! r e a d y r e a c h e d 400 d a y s f o r c o u r t t h i s c o m i n g season. J o e J a c k Hall, | o f civil a pp e a l s disposition. T h e I Wh en t h e p i c t u r e b e g a n , all t h e b a c k f i e l d m a n w h o des pi t e his sizr last in thf> t h e a t e r w e r e t u r n e d is j u s t a b o u t t he t o u g h e s t bo y on p r e m e C o u r t r e q u i r i n g per iod* a p- c o m p l e t e ly out. O r di na r il y, some t h e s q u a d as f a r as b e i n g abl e to p r o x i m a t i n g t h e 1906 to 1936 a v- I p a r t i a l l y on, t o e n a bl e c u s t o m e r s co mi n g in t a k e it goes, has a m e n d e d his e r r ­ e r a g e o f 759 days. d u r i n g t h e mi ddl e of th ^ show to to i n g w a y s a n d t h e f ind seats. t e c h n i c o l o r pie- a u t h o r s s t a t e d , “ t h a t t he p r e s e n t t u r es , h o w ev e r, show to a b e t t e r p a p e r is p u r e l y f a c t u a l a n d ob- in c o m p le t e d ar k n e s s , a d v a n t a g e th(, „ j e e t i v e ; it does n o t a t t e m p t to as- j " j ' wi t h p e r - c e r t a i n or d ed uc e light s did a b o u t as s houl d wi t hhol d, s t u d y , a n y c on c l usi ons r e s p e c t i n g I t h e c a u s e s o f t he r e s u l t s sho wn by i n f l u e n c e s b e a r ­ this p ap e r . The i ng u p on liti­ g a t i o n a r e so n u m e r o u s an d f r e ­ q u e n t l y so i n c o n s i s t e n t t h a t h a s t y is i na dv is ­ j u d g m e n t a b ou t a b l e . ” It was r e p o r t e d t h a t G o v e r n o r W, Le e O ’Daniel did n ot a t t e n d t he o p e n i n g ni g h t , a s pr ev i o usl y e xpe ct ed. He is a v e r y f o r t u n a t e man. H e n o w has t h e exqu i si t e p l e a s u r e b e f o r e hint o f s e ei ng t he p i c t u r e f o r t h e f i r s t time. causes. One c a r e f u l t h e p e n d e n c y of in London.' m l or t h e m u nt i l T h e t h e f ec t i on , m u c h w o r k as a k i l o w a t t s t r e e t - b,e s t d i m m i n g H e a d e d by t h e v a r si t y diving tr io of Billy Br i nk , H a n k C h a p ­ m a n , and B a b e Papi c h , t h e r e will be e i g h t d iv e rs to fill t he a i r f ro m the low a n d high b oa r d s a n d the t owe r . • 440 ? * « * * » ? * -W,th the t i m e s o f 2 :31 . 8 a n d 5: 36. 7 r e Bill Cho n ilk! pl a ce d specti vely. s e cond t o Moise in b o t h ev e nt s. T h e W h i t e s qua d a v e n g e d t he me dl ey t he loss o f r ace when t h e i r t e a m of T a r l t o n , N e w ­ t h e ma n, Be el er , a n d A h r wo n 400 y a r d f r e e style r e l a y in 2:29. r e l a y Me an wh i l e t h e ^Oj*ange i n t r a ­ t h e weekly m e e t W e d n e s d a y n i g h t saw t e a m come o u t wi t h s e eme d v e r y m u c h this r esul t s of t h e 84-72 v i c t o r y o v er the Wh i t e s . I m e e t a n d said, a l t h o u g h so me of the t i m e s w e r e t oo slow, t h e t e a m “ I should be a: a p e a k f o r t he r e c o r d t h e com i ng A q u a - o n s l a u g h t s . iruo s b a Pe an i i . r Discussions on 'TI L i t e R e i v i n g v - d a S S c o mp os e d of W a d e Smi t h, Mike I i So j k a, a n d H a r r i s Mc C l a mr o ck n e g o t i a t e d t he 300 y a r ds in 3 IO.2 to win o v er prs, Bob T a r l t o n , Dick Beel er , and Leo Ahr. life sa vi ng a n d t h e Whi te c o n t e n d - . s w i m m i n g drills w e r e held a t t he f i r s t m e e t i n g of life s a vi ng a n d w a t e r s a f e t y class f o r w o me n at t he W o m e n ’s G y m n a ­ sium T u e s d a y night. The class is t he A m e r ­ j o i n t l y by s p o n so r ed t h e D e p a rt - ican Re d Cr oss a n d H a n k C h a p m a n took 1,30 p oi nt s m e n t of H e a l t h an d Physical F.du M c C l a m r o c k wa s w i n n e r o f two t h e 50 t he i ndi vi dual e ve n t s , y a r d f r e e s t y l e 100 y a r d f r e e in 64.6. t a k in g in 2 4 :5 a n d t h e s eni or “ Gone W i t h the W i n d ” e nd ed a t m i d n i g h t . Still daz ed, m a n y of the c u s t o m e r s wa l ke d o ut o f t h e t h e a t e r , m u t t e r i n g , “ Oh, i f s w o n ­ d e r f u l . ” By a c c u r a t e check, t he p i c t ur e t wo hells. t wo d a m n s a n d had This a c c u r a c y m i e h t well ha mi n. - “ "'I Eal!e P a I’,'ch wh o f i n i sh e d s e c - 1 Col lege c r e d i t in t h e diving t o b e a t Billy Br ink j cation o f the U ni ver s i t y . . ■ . in view of of . t on e d h o w ev e r, s u r p r i s i n g ^ ° r ds w a s w o n b y Bob T ar l t o n in 1:42. m o t h e r aa i d w e r e n a u g h t y a n d Mr. w j t h W a d e S m i t h a n d Rnl la,)d H a y s M i d w e r e t a boo. A n y h o w , | N e w m a n „ c ond a n d it w as a d a m n good p i c t ur e. T h e ) 5 0 t r a i l i such t h e use j o n d a n d t h i r d respe ct i vel y. , backat rok( , , ve„ t „ f ch the c o ur se which to f h , meet a t t h e s w i m m i n g pool in t he W o m e n ’s G y m n a s i u m on T u e s d a y ni gh t s f r o m 7 t o 9 o' clock, an d on F r i d a y a f t e r n o o n s f r o m 2 t o is n o t given f o r is o f f e r e d f r e e u b ] i c e c l a s s e s t hi r d . T h e cl osest r ac e of the even- 4 o ’clock. VALENTINE S DAY . FEBRUARY 14th r n T H I ENEMY STRIKES A ( r tfy a U a ■mm. St HU SP EC I AL KIDS* SHOW T h e a u t h o r s h o p e to r ea ch some c o n c l u s i o n s a* to c a u s e s in f u t u r e p r o g r e s s o f t h e y said. r es e ar ch , t he TEXAS | < ¥ A l w a y * 1 5 c T i l l 7 P . M . F R E D M C M U R R A Y M A D E L E I N E C A R R O L L IN w i t h “ Honevmoon in Bali” ALLAN JO N E S AKIM TAMI ROFF URRSIT91X1 T h e H i la r io u s MARX BROS. “AT THE CIRCUS” Martha Graham Dance Group F e b r u a r y 2 0 , 8 p. rn. G r e g o r y G y m R « * e r v e d S e a t s $ 1 . 5 0 G e n . A d m i s s i o n $ 1 . 0 0 S T U D E N T S FR E E O N B L A N K E T T A X STATE T W O M A T I N E E S T O D A Y A N D E V E R Y W E E K - D A Y 1 0 . 1 5 - 2 :1 5 1 M a tin e e * on w e e k - d a y * are c o n t i n u o u s a nd u n r e s e r v e d . C ome a n y t i m e b e ­ t w e e n IO a. rn and 2 . I S p. rn. and s e e a c o m p l e t e sh ow . Tonight 8 P. M. A L L S E A T S R E S E R V E D I N C L U D I N G T A X . $ 1 . 2 0 Iparamount N O W I 25c-35c Til 5 -*'* ' '' . -y-, I -TUrT"**"* -«■ H E R E T S THE S U P R E M E T R I U M P H . . . O F M O T I O N P I C T U R E A R T I S T R Y ! . % p N a u S I ■OF NOTRE ■ l i P l \saT THE R G H tTnG 69TH' N I T E J A M E S C A G N E Y P A T O ’B R I E N GONE W ITH THE W IND I vat. civ as Atlanta I'rt NOTE It Wilt Not Se Shewn Aitywhtrt Except st Advsocsd Priest until 1941! SEATS NOW ON SALE ■fete I Im Mal IIM ted. To. . 7 1 / M . h i Wk* fey Mat*. MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED With M O J U D behind you Y o u re Bound to W i n H e r ! • Go ahead— ajA her to be your Valentine •—but when you do, give her some Mojuds. that she'd say "yes." Let us help you choose She'll be so pleased at your thoughtfulness the Screenlite Shede she's sure to like best. OO t0 $ | 15 J&&I H > ; *»vi»Ttsit> * Ia™ $100 $| CO-ED HOSIERY SHOP Tex a s Book Store W I a t «* h i i t g f o a t St S la c k s E x ir a S la c k s $5 n m § f Scarbrough’s versatile Sport-T'io for Spring Summer—Us ensemb e ' * *h ast the r!g *t degree of smart­ informality, and comfort ness f- r the mw season. Coat and * -jse-s of Bedford cerci a~d ras*** wea^e. Contrasting cr harmonizing sacks. Coat if l o u n g e mode1. *'■''me-out-on Slacks are re a -e d and be-ed v. th z r r e r * New s c * 4- t a ,'S, b .es, greens. S zes 34 to 42, S C A R B R O U G H ’S SECOND M E N 'S “ T O R F FLOOR Smart f o o t n o t e f o r Spring S in /it ti* O x f o r d e style which ha- Here is a c le a re d th e hurdle o f m a s c u l i n e conservatism a* n ?«*s '- e p a c e In footwear for sports and cam­ 'elk'1— pus. Whit© upper 'n contra?’ ng s a n « :n brown calfskin——r©rj rubber sole. S zes 6Va to l l . $•I Scarbrough's O wn F ield H u b H at g dv. e q ■ hat. We ghs Jk, Field Club s Scarbrough's ans­ wer to Spr rig’s demands ’ or a casual approx 3 Styed medium shades of Hue, g^ey, grer>n: a^d Aar. w;tn narrow band two c j n c e s. ^ * in , MEN'S ri 'R K I S H I N G S — ST R E ET I LOOR PAGE FOUR Th$ First College Daily Cf? the South Piton* 2-2478—— THE DAILY TEXAN-— *-Phons 2-2478 Navy Puzzle * Around the Tower Clock ❖ *"r*HE CONTROVERSY going on over the A United States Navy building p r o g r a m p u z z l e s us considerably, Her e s why. One o f t h e best things we have learned from a h i g h e r education is, when in need of advice, to seek ex per t advice. W h e n faced w i t h a serious problem, let an e xp er t work it out. B ut wh at h a p p e n s when the best b ra in s in th e United States Na vy wo rk out a six- y e a r building pro g r a m a nd rec om m en d it to Congress ? Mind you, this is a p r o g r a m carefu ll y work ed out over a period of y e a r s by men who have studied navies, floated navies. W h a t built navies, and h a p p e n s ? Because the costs go up into t he billions of dollars, ev erybody smells a nigger in the woodpile, and m a g a z in e s like The Nation and n e w s p a p e r s like the N e w York Times d e m a n d an investigation a nd oppose the “ u n w a r r a n t e d " expansion. Says Oswald Garrison Vi Hard in The N a t i o n : th a t “ The Navy D e p a r t m e n t ha s a lr e a d y an­ nounc ed it w an ts two more b a t t l e ­ ships. If these are g r a n te d , the re will be ten of these mons ters building. The seventh a n d eighth ar e a lr e a d y on the way and are to cost the T r e a s u r y not less th a n $90,000,- 000 apiece. T h e Navy D e p ar t m en t, it a p ­ pe ars. is now resp ond ing to pressure from the navy man ia cs In the House and Senate for actu ally inc reasing the size of th e last two . . . The ma ni a cs say t h a t they w a n t Ame ric a to ha ve not only in c o m p a ra b l y the gre a te s t navy, but ships of so g re a t size— costing pro ba bly $150,000,000 a apiece— t h a t no country will da re to a t ­ t a c k u s / ’ By th e w ord s “ mons te rs ” and “ m a n ia cs ” you can easily see w h a t Mr. Millard thinks a b o u t the new* building prog ra m. Evidently this b a r r a g e of criticism ag ain st th e pro ­ g r a m has h a d its effects, for th e Congress is a bo ut to trim the six-year p r o g r a m to a two-year one, with a g r e a t reduction in expenditures. Now, the question in our minds is, Who knows best? The Navy pla nn in g board, or Mr. Millard et a1? If there is any reason to believe tha t the United States Navy is sold out to big business interests, or the like, then of course criticism and effects are in order. But the United States Navy the has always seemed to us as fine as United States itself, and we ha ve always th o u g h t t h a t it would re c o m m en d w h a t it for the national defense. th o u g h t best Some people ma y be woefully wron g in curtailing this time, because they may be fo r ge tt i ng the value of he eding “ e x p e r t ” advice, when e x p er t advice is needed. the building p r o g r a m at Common Sense ' - T H I N K I N G PE O PL E TODAY are r a t h e r p ro ud t h a t they cannot be t a k e n in b y p r o p a g a n d a by foreign powers or com­ m e rc ia l interests trying to promote their ow n aims. T h e ir attitude of skepticism is all well and g o od; certainly it is be tte r to d e m a n d fa ct s th a n accept emotional distortions. But th e re is one phase of p r o p a g a n d a w h i c h is not called catalogued as such, h a s never been greatly questioned, and w hic h, nonetheless, creates as many false impressions as the both obvious and odious f o r m s of p r o p a g a n d a . This pha se is the use of meaningless w o r d s to cover certain conditions in eco­ nomics, lite ra tu re , government, etc. The fo r m u la t io n of some of these words may be tra c ed to th e A merican genic* for c re at­ into ing words, which has b o o m e ra ng ed an American curse. O th e r words have come fro m E n gl an d, and have been used so much t h a t th e y have become a cce pted into the lang uage. It does not necessarily follow’, how'ever, t h a t these words me an a ny th in g. W o rd s have no mean in g unless th e y c r e a t e the sam e th o u g h t in the mind of th e r e a d e r as wa? in the mind of the w r it e r . for such T a k e , example, economics t e r m s as “ pric^ pa ri ty ,” “ economic se­ c u r i t y , ” “s t a n d a r d of living” and th e like. T h e s e terms have no basis in fact. They terms, whic h are cer tainly a r e made-up THE DAILY TEXAN l r * t»*ny J *•*»." I* p • ’ i n t u m r e r . l t y cf t h # U n i v a r a i t y at T a i s * - A t l a t l s by tb* 'le x* * S t u d e n t I ' - c .i c a t j o n a . I nc., e v e r y morn* I e * e x c e p t Mot :« i i i . a i r t d« « -paper cl t h # r * ' ‘ J* * ‘• r e c on E n t e r e l ** a ac r d e x i t mail it. a t t e r a t t h e P o a t o f f . e e , n cr i m aet of Cc o g r e * a March 8, • • *, J - i r n a . t a n B u i l d i n g 1 0 9 , IOX, a n d Ad »ert;* .- * anc C -c at ion D ep artm ent— Jo .'manana B au a - Aunt ti, T m h Eld it* r a t f‘ T e l e p h o n e 2-2 * ttsg ICI. Phone 2-24'J. l r m e n ay tfie r v e f g i t v Pr e **, A. C. W r i g h t , m a n a t e e . s u b s c r i p t i o n p a t e s B y C a r r i e r I Month 1 S e a a ( t e r ( 4 - 1 mo 2 Semester* ---------------------------- * .J® I . 6 9 mn * _______ ___ I O # , . . . B y Mall • -JO I S.OO '■SSL R E P R E S E N T E D F U R . N A T I O N A L AD*. E R H S I N G BY National Advertising Service, Inc. c j , • re r. i R e : r e e e r t a t . » 420 M A D I S O N A V E . , N E W Y O R K . N Y. C H I C A G O . B O S T O N - L O S A N G E L E S - S A H F R A N C I S C O 939 M e m b e r 1940 A s s o c i a t e d C o ; e g ’a +e Pre s s E d : tr r* r -chief Associate Editor Edit rial Ct th ____________ _ M A X B. S K E L T O N ____ La Verne Bryson _______ T om m e Call, V e r n o n Dolph, P»t H olt, Ernest Sharpe, Bo: ...La V erne Bryson, ______ Pat H o l t J a c k Do Clyde La Motte S ports Ed: rts E d i t o r ___ ...._____ -Don P a t t i s o n A sso« late Si . . . . . . . ______A nita Cook Society E d i t o r Associate Soc ♦ y E ditor — — . Christine Evans Amus* merits E d i t o r ............Jaci- Dolph ........ A s s oc i at e Ans s e me n t i E d i t o r . .. .. .. A l on zo J a m i s o n Be n K ap l a n R a d i o E d i t o r Bill N e w k i r k A social* Radio E d i t o r F e a t u r e Ed.'-.*- J a c k C. O. Brown A ssociate Xeltgrapi Bob W h i t t e n Rasociatc . Leslie C a r p e n t e r -Nella Mae S t e n s s f E x c h a r ... .... Flora Gordon A s s o t a re ........................... .......................... a r e E d i t o r Editor Editor ' T A F F FOR T H IS IS S U E N i g h t E A r i sit nti R osem ary Peer ody, El zav*e’ h Wharton P A T HOLT Hen rv Z imm erman, Night Sports E d i t 'r A e ais ta nts Al Landers, R N i g h t S oc i e t y E d i t A eaistants Ma: y Hankies N.ght Telegraph I N i g h t A o u.‘ ■■ i - A^^ihtant Nig t H a d : Ae.*-iMant \ ii P U S E d i t ( • i *, E^* Vt hit# ............ I. E O a k . ---- -----...Bill Whitmore, ansing — . Anda Cook ...Mary Rx t h Huntington, F r e d Ew rig I JI V e r n e B r y s o n G en e Barr. a ell .. . Jack Howard descriptive, but which have no m ean in g to the averag e person. One of the reasons for the chaotic con­ ditions in the United States to d a y is t h a t men ta lk in terms which in rea lity have no meaning. A few people m a y take the time and ef­ fort to digest w’hat is printed and ta lk e d by officials, but the majority have ne ith er the time nor the desire to look up words and phra ses w*hich they do not und e rs ta n d . Instead, they simply ignore th e m and in t he ir minds is c re at e d a fallacious im p r e s ­ sion. The best w’riters stick to simple English. in O. H e n ry was an au tho r wrho wrote specific details, It is easy to un d e rs ta n d him and there is not any doub t w h a t he is talkin g about. the W h y family te rm “ net Income” could not be called simply th e “ am ou nt of m o n e y a family can s p e n d ” is one of the nonsensical reasonings of the mo de rn world. The reasoning, possibly, t h a t st ra ig ht f o r w a r d words cannot be used is t h a t it ta ke s too much time to re p e a t the entire phra se. W o rd saving is a fine thing, but whe n it becomes a m a tte r fo r a lear ned scholar to in te rp re t passages on simple re ad in g matter, it w’ould be a f a r b e tt e r th ing to use the space and save the m e a n ­ ing. The thing boils down to this: It is h a r d enough to un de rs ta nd the complex pro b­ lems today w ith o ut the ad ded complexity of complex w ords. Until we can u n d e r s t a n d w h a t we are talking about, we don't have a chance to d^ anything about them. Farley T a lk I M P O R T A N T POLITICAL NOTE , which seem* to have parsed the r u m o r stage. Is t h a t Po st ma st er General F a r l e y is at out* with th*- President. In a r e c en t speech he said flatly t h a t he put loyalty to the nation above the democratic party. loyalty to Reason for the split is supposed to be F a r l e y ’g opposition to the Pr es id e n t see k­ ing a third term. Fu r th e r , it has never been th ou gh t th a t Big Jim was a real New inclines to conservatism by Dealer. He n a t u r e and by past association. A F a r le y walk-out would be a blow to the White House. Farley has a tr e m e n d o u s perso nal following— a strong and genial personality, h^ make* and keep s friends. A* h e a d of one of the most effective politi­ this cal machines country, he knows how to get results. And H o w a r d many a del ega te at the next nom ina ting convention will “ a=k J i m ” before s u p p o r t ­ ing or opposing any can didate. ever developed in A n u m b e r of political exper ts th ink t h a t the Presideent could not win ag ai n if he thu aid and backing of F a rl e y. So lost ke ep your eye on the Po s tm a st er General. Collegiate Review By A ssociated C olltgiata P r et! T h e U p si l a nt i £ W R / r £ * . rn T m B£ir ae MT yuCH intnu WST!* S T S C X -S -H tS 3 $ 3 mmu.sm.Qi S O L D - R f N T E U H L U U I L 1 26 W. 5th. Phon# 9412 T Y P I N G — T h e m e s , N o t e b o o k s , L a w o u t ­ li ne*. e t c . S t e n c i l s . J: S. Con e , 9 0 1 4 . W a n te d to Buy E A S T 1 7 t h , SO*— R o o m , b o a r d c h e a p f « r f o u r b o y * w h o r a n do s o m e w o r k . I n ­ q u i r e a f t e r 7 p m . o r S u n d a y . 1 7 7 2 . N U E C E S , I S I S — G i r l s , u p s t a i r s r o o m t w o b l o c k s w e s t o f c a m p u s . B o a r d o p t i o n a l . H I G H E S T C A S H Pr i c e * pa i d f o r y o u r R e a s o n a b l e . 2 - 7 7 4 8 . • ol d Gol d. L. L a v e s . 217 E. Atli. 9 2 2 9 . M A L K I N P A Y S M O R E fo* U s e d S u i t s C l o t h i n g a n d S h o e s 4 0 7 E a a t 6 t h . 8 - 0 2 6 8 . C A S H f o r F r r a p Gol d. R i n g s , C h a i n s . W a t c h e s , et c. *2! C o n g r e s s . 2 - 7 7 1 1 . __ Rentals Furnished A p a rtment E A S T A V E N C E , I * 0 7 — A v e i l a h l e F a b - m a r y U t , c o u p l e o r k i t c h e n e t t e , l adi es, f m n t be d* ; b a t h , bills p r i v a t e r o o m , p a i d. 725. 6517. N U E C E S , 1 9 0 S — A t t r a c t i v e r o o m a p a r t m e n t . B a t h w i t h s h o w e r . P r i v a t e i n n e r s p r i n g e n t r a n c e . T h r e e s i n g l e bed*, m a t t r e s s e s . I . a r g o c l o s e t s . 2 - 9 6 2 6 . f o u r S P E E D W A Y , s o u t h U n i v e r s i t y . S o u t h e a s t l o w e r a p a r t m e n t . r o o m s , b a t h . F r i g i d a i r e . C o u p l e s 1 9 0 8 — m b l o c k s D i r e * i t s m a l l f a m i l y . G a r a g e . t i f u l l y S P E E D W A Y , I 9 2 — B l o c k c a m p u s . B e a u ­ r o o m . T w o m e n — ( t u b - c o u p l e F u r n a c e h e s t , p r i v a t e b a t h a h o w e r ) , p r i e s t s e n t r a n c e . P h o n e 6 8 1 8 . f u r n i s h e d W E S T N o 7 0 9 — A d u l t s p e t s . N e a r U n i v e r s i t y . U p s t a i r s , p r i ­ 2 2 n d , o n l y . v a t e b a t h , r e f r i g e r a t i o n , g a r a g e . N E A R C A M P U S — N o r t h G u a d a l u p e . L o w ­ s l e e p i n g t h r e e | 3 6 , G. H . B r u s h , a p a r t m e n t , F r i g i d a i r e . r o o m s , e r p o r c h , 2 - 1 1 9 1 , 4 9 2 7 . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ W A N T E D —- O n e o r s h a r e a p a r t m e n t . N o l i g h t h o u s e k e e p i n g W a l k ­ t a i l 2 - 4 4 8 8 i ng d i s t a n c e of U n i v e r s i t y , a f t e r n o o n o r n i g h t . t w o boy* t o G a r a g e A part m e n t s ___ B e a u t i f u l W E S T 2 1 s t , 8 0 9 - - B a c h e i o r a p a r t m e n t s . in e v e r y r e s p e c t . H a * no c o o k i n g f a c i l i t i e s . 8 - 4 2 8 0 . f u r n i t u r e , N e w , m o d e r n _________________ W O O L D R I D G E D R I V E , 1 500, P e m b e r ­ t o n H e i g h t * — A p a r t m e n t f o r b o y s . L i v - r o o m , b e d r o o m , h a t h , m a i d s e r v i c e , n g p r i v a t e e n f r a n c e. *• 27 5 9. G a r a g e Rooms E N F I E L D , d r e s s i n g t w o r o o m s , f i v e w i n d o w s , boy*. Ti l e t w i n t w o c a l l i n g b e d*, j a m ’ or. M a k e s p r i n g b a t h , f a n. d a y s c o m f o r t a b l e . M r s . R a t h e r , 7 6 1 7 . bed*, L A V A C A . 1 8 0 6 — N e w b r i c k r o o m s , t w n t i l e s h o w e r s , p o r ­ t e r s e r v i c e , al l u t i l i t i e s . 2 b l o c k s s o u t h e a m p u a . 3 6 4 3 . l a r g e c l o s e t s , m o d e r n , p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e s , B A C H E L O R A P A R T M E N T S — B o y . , N e w , t i l # h e t h a - a h o w e r s , i n n e r s p r i n g m a t t r e s s e s , s t u d y , V e n e t i a n b l i n d s , k n o t t y pi n # wal l a, m a i d s e r v i c e , billa p a i d . $16 . 1 0 1 2 W e s t 2 4 t h . i n d i v i d u a l c l o s e t * S P A R K S A V E N U E , 7 0 1 — B e d r o o m , t i l e b a t h - —s h o w e r , k i t c h e n e t t e , bi l l a p a i d . Al s o b e d r o o m in p r i v a t e h o m e o f c o u p l e . Cal l 8 4 2 1 . R O B B I N S P L A C E , p i n e r o o m w i t h k n o t t y l a r g e d r e s s i n g c l o s e t . P r i v a t e Sol i d m a p l e f u r n i s h i n g* V e n e t i a n b l i n d s . ______ I # 1 3 - - N e w e n t r a n c e . s h o w e r , til# House* for Sale U N I V E R S I T Y h o m e ? Si x a a n d n o r t h e a s t o f U n i v e r s i t y , a n d a d u p l e * . G o o d v a l u e s . 6 4 6 1 . ________________________ P R O F E S S O R — W a n t h o m e * l o v e l y n e a r P E A R L , 2 5 1 5 — B o y s i n p r i v a t e b r i c k h o m e . S i n g l e b e d s , e x t r a c l o s e t s . E x c e l l e n t m e a l s . r o o m a n d h o a r d l a r g e r o o m s , R e a s o n a b l e . 2 - 5 9 0 7 . W E S T 1 7 t h . * 0 7 — B o y s H o n ' * h a s v a c a n c i e s C o - o p e r a t i v e f o r n e x t s e m e s ­ t e r . C o s t a p p r o x i m a t e l y H O p e r m o n t h . P hone 2 - 9 6 8 2 . g i r l s W E S T SS 14, 8 0 4 — T w o s o u t h r o o m s f o r f o r e v e r y q u i e t e n d h a p p i n e s s . N e w e n d m o d e r n f u r n i s h i n g s . o f f e r i n g c o m f o r t R o o m a n d s l e e p i n g p o r c h , W I C H I T A , 2 6 1 2 — V a c a n c y f o r t w o b o y s . t w i n b e d s , f r o m _ _ _ t x c e l l e n t m e a l s . I l eal h o m e . B l o c k c a m p u s . Room s for Boys BOYS: DESIRABLE R O O M FOR RENT 2603 G U AD ALU PE STREET C O N G R E S S , 1 7 0 7 — L a r g e p l e a s a n t r o o m f o r l o c a t i o n . Bi l l s p a i d . V e r y l e a t o n a b l e . P h o n e 8 - 3 2 1 9 . t w o . C o n v e n i e n t N U E f ' E S . 2 3 0 # — L o v e l y e x t r a l a r g e f r o n t r o o m . Q u i e t T w i n b e d s , s h o w e r , p l e n ­ t y c l o s e t s . Al l bil ls p a i d . I b l o c k s w e s t c a m p u s . N E W H O M E — M O D ER N T H R O U G H O U T N i c e l y f u r n i s h e d . 8 p r e t t y t i l # b a t h s , p l e n t y o f h o t w a t e r . R o o m w i t h m e a l s o r m e a l s o p t i o n a l Good m a i d s e r v i c # . P r i c e r e a s o n a b l e . 7212 PEARL 2-1368 P E A R L , boy. N i c e 1 9 0 7 — R o o m m a t e w a n t e d f o r t w i n a d j o i n i n g b a t h , q u i e t h o m e . F o u r f i v e w i n d o w s , r o o m f r o m c a m p u s , 808 7 . b e ds bi oe ka P E A R L , 2 1 0 2 — G r a d u a t e t e a c h e r . E x c e p t i o n a l l y n r q u i e t , r o o m . A d j o i n i n g h a t h . T w o i n f a m i l y , 6 8 0 6 s t u d e n t l a r g e , c o m f o r t a b l e a d u l t * o n l y R I O G R A N D E , 2 5 0 1 4 — Ni c *. c o m f o r t ­ a b l e s o u t h e a s t r o o m . S i n g l e b e d s , c o n ­ T h r e e t u b - s h o w e r . t il* b a t h , f r o m e a m p u a - 8 - 1 8 5 8 . n e c t i n g b l o c k s s o u t h S A N A N T O N I O , 1 7 0 9 — T w o bo y*. Q u i e t p r i v a t e p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e . C o n v e n i e n t t o c a m p u s a n d C a p ­ itol. 8 7 . 5 0 e a c h , 2 - 9 8 8 7 . h o m e , r o o m , U N I V E R S I T Y A V E . 1 0 0 6 , 1907 H — F e w v a c a n t r o o m * f o r b o y s . C a n t a k e a f e w t a b l e h o a r d e r * S h o w e r , i n n e r s p r i n g m a t ­ t r e s s e s . 8 - 2 0 8 8 . 8 0 4 — R o o m W E S T 2 2 n d . f o r o n e b o y in p r i v a t e h o m e . Q u i e t p l a c e t o s t u d y . Monl s o p t i o n a l . N e a r D r a g . V e r y r e a s o n ­ abl e. 2 - 6 8 0 6 . W E S T 2 3 r d , 4 0 7 — N i c e w a r m f o r b e y s V4 bl o c k west. U n i o n B u i l d i n g . R e ­ d u c e d r a t e s . All billa pa i d . Cal l 2 - 0 6 1 6 . r o o m W E S T 2 4 t h , 7 0 9 — R o o m m a t e w a n t e d f o r S e n i o r boy in p r i v a t e h o m e . P r i v a t e e n ­ t r a n c e . 2 Mi b l o c k * w e s t c a m p u s . W E S T 2 8 t h . r o o m a n d g l a s s e d - i n s l e e p i n g p o r c h . P r i v a t e s e r v i c e , a d j o i n i n g b a t h , 6 0 4 — B o y g . S t u d y e n t r a n c e , m a i d t e l e p h o n e . 9 4 1 0 . L A R G E A T T R A C T I V E R o o m i n q u i e t f o u r b l o c k s f r o m c a m p u s . R e a ­ t e r m s . M a t u r e o r g r a d u a t e a t u - h o m e s o n a b l e d s n t s p r e f e r r e d . D i a l _ 8 - 3 3 7 0 . DRISKILL HOTEL LAUNDRY I 8 - 3 3 2 7 . i T Y P I N G — C h e a p , H u m p h r e y . a c c u r a t e , q u i c k . Mr *. 2 - 8 8 7 4 , W h i t i a 2 0 9 6 8 - H O U R S E R V I C * 6444 119 Eas1 7tK I T Y P I S T , I M u r r a y , 2 2 6 4 G u a d a l u p e . 2 - 0 0 8 8 . S t e n o g r a p h e r , N o t a r y , M a e T Y P I N G A M I M E O G R A P H S E R V I C E h o l l a n d ' * b o o k s h o p I 2 1 1 8 G u a d a l u p e P h o n e 8 - 2 9 7 1 Unfurnished Houses Room s for G irls Typing S T U C C O C O T T A G E — S u i t a b l e b a c h e l o r p r o f e s s o r o r U n i v e r s i t y c o u p l e . A t t i c f a n . I n q u i r e a t R i c e C o u r t . 7 1 0 W e s t 24V*. 7 7 5 7 . ________________ Room s N U E C E S , 2 2 0 6 - 2 2 0 8 . R o o m * d u e w e s t U n i o n , R a t e s . t w o bl o c k * W E S T 21 s t , 2 0 7 — R o o m D e l i g h t f u l epinjg s l e e p i n g p o r c h . M a i d h e a t . O p p o s i t e c a m p u s . 2 - 0 1 9 0 . l a r g e s o u t h f o r o n e g i r l . s o u t h s e r v i c e . F u r n a c e r o o m, S A B I N E . 1 5 0 5 — F r o n t b a d s , p r i v a t e t w i n e v e r y ­ t h i n g f u r n i s h e d . 8 2 0 f o r t wo . 2V« b l o c k * L it t l e C a m p u s . F h o n t 2 - 8 3 8 2 . e n t r a n c e , b a t h . b e d r o o m , in W E S T 2 2 n d , 804-— R o o m f o r o n # g i r l hom e, T w i n be d s . E v e r v c o n v e n i e n c e , M ea ls o p t io n a l. V e r y r e a s o n a b l e . 2 - 6 8 0 6 . p r i v a t e q u i e t FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1940 Phone 2-2473 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Phone 2-2473 The First College Daily In the South P A G E 'FIVE H a l l 3 2 9 . The main table, at which th* speakers on interesting Miss Novy/ Bride-Elect, Given Lunch Mis* Lens Novy, whose mar riage to Earl Podolnick of Los An gelea will be March IO, was enter tained by her aunt, Mrs. Jim Novy, J with a luncheon at the Home Eeo- ! nomies Tea House Wednesday. Miss Novy is an ex-student University of the Girls’ Boarding Houses Lloyd Halpenny, . ~r I o U r g a m z e C o u n c i l *i Barbara Smith r " I Are Wed Here The Girls’ Boarding House Council will be organized and officers elected today when two representatives from each boarding house meet in Texas Union 205 at 5 o ’clock. Barbara Smith, daughter of W alter E. Smith of Washington, Iowa, wa* married to Lloyd Hal- The council will seek to be of mutual assistance in settling prob- penny, son of Mrs. A. P. Halpen- lems peculiar to the boarding houses, to sponsor joint social functions ny ° f Harlingen, Wednesday after­ noon at the University Methodist in an effort to become acquainted^- Church. The Rev. Edmund Hein- sohn officiated. cil in carrying out its objectives may be more effective. with more persons, and to sponsor .subjects . . .« i honoree was seated, was decorated for all Hoarding house residents. the the large in bridal white. A white The plan was suggested by Miss | bridal bouquet formed the eenter- | Dorothy G cbiu„ rt(,„n of wom en, piece, and white flowers were scat­ tered table, length of which was lighted by white tapers of four silver three-branch candel­ abras. The guest tables were also in white wuth touches o f yellow* and blue. and representatives were cho*en from boarding houses to attend the first meeting which was held before Christmas, An executive of Betty composed committee Woodley, Betty Wellenkamp, and Thoma«me Starnes was elected to make arrangements for this sec­ ond and larger meeting. At the end of the luncheon Miss Novy was precented with a gift which carried out the bridal idea in its wrappings. Parties compli­ menting the bride-elect have been planned for the coming weeks. Representatives of each board­ ing house are expected to be p r e s ­ ent so that the work of the coun- Deita Sigma Phis G et Bids to S.M.U. Dance Members of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity will attend the spring formal to be given by Lambda chapter o f Delta Sigma Phi at Southern Methodist University .Saturday night. The dance will be held in th* Junior Ballroom of the Adolphus Hotel in Dallas. Phil Baxt er 's o r ­ chestra will play. The churm a I* ar was decorated with white t a p e r ? and spring flow­ ers. Mr?. H alp e m y wore a corsage of white gardenias with her navy blue ensemble. A member o f Curtain Club, Mrs. Ha penny is a1-, a Bluebonnet Belie nominee, Mr. Halpenny, a senior mechanical engineer and a member of th* American Society of Mechanical Engineers. The co 1;pi* will continua in the Uni­ versity. K ippa Alpha f r a t e r n i t y an­ nounces th* pledging of Tom Da- vison Jr. of Nacogdoches. A Searbrough Valent ne.. The biggesf thrill since Candy- Heart Days. The age of childhood is gone, alas, and if fakes more fhan sugarcoated candy mottoes to win a controlling interest in His or Her Heart. But don't despair! No matter what type your Valentine is . . . Scarbrough's specializes in Valentine gifts calculated to pay perfect tribute to their charm. Today - On the Campus A fte r n o o n 2 .4 — R od CroM L ifo S a v in g fo r w o m e n , W o m e n ’t C la st G y m . 2 : 3 0 — S p r i n g f o o t b a l l t r a i n i n g , M e m o r i a l S t a d i u m . 3 : 3 0 — B o o k r e v i e w , A l p h a Ch i IOO W e s t h o u i e , O m e g a T w e n t y - t i x t h S t r e e t . 4 - 6 — B l a n k e t t a x p i c t u r e s m u s t h e m a d e , U n i v e r s i t y C o - O p . 5 — S t u d e n t S p e a k e r s B u r e a u , B . 5 — H o u s e c h a i r m e n , r e p r e s e n t ­ f o r i n g t h e h o a r d i n g h o u s e s w o m e n , T e x a s U n i o n 2 0 5 . 5 — O m i c r o n N u , r e a d i n g r o o m , H o m e E c o n o m i c s B u i l d i n g . f o r 5 : 4 5 — Y . M . C . A . s u p p e r n a n c e d r i v e w o r k e r s . f i ­ Night 7-— U n i v e r s i t y C h o r u s , o l d L i ­ b r a r y B u i l d i n g . 7 - 9 — R e d C r o s s L i f e S a v i n g C l a s s e s f o r w o m e n , W o m e n ’s G y m . 7 : 3 0 — “ T h e I n t e r n a t i o n a l H o u s e V e r s u s I n t e r n a t i o n a l H a t e ” t o h e t h e s u b j e c t o f s p e e c h b y H a r r y E d m o n d s o f N e w Y o r k , G e o l o g y A u d i t o r i u m . S O C I A L C A L E N D A R F r i d a y 8 - 1 1 — P h i G a m m a D e l t a o p e n h o u s e . 9 - 1 — F o r m a l g i v e n b y f o u r w o ­ m e n ’s r e s i d e n c e Halls, J e s s i e A n d r e w s , C a r o t h e r s , L i t t l e ­ f i e l d , a n d W o m a n ’s B u i l d ­ i ng , T e x a s U n i o n . 9 - 1 — L o n g h o r n B a n d f o r m a l , F e d e r a t e d W o m e n ' s T e x a s C l u b B ui I d i n g , S a t u r d a y 8-1 I — K a p p a A l p h a o p e n h o u s e . 8 - 1 1 — T e j a s o p e n h o u s e . 8 - 1 1 — P h i h o u s e . S i g m a D e l t a o p e n g . l l — A l p h a E p s i l o n Pi o p e n h o u s e . Dr. Conkle to Read O w n One-Act Plays At University Club Dr. E. P. Conkle, associate pro­ in the College fessor of drama of Fine Arts, will read a group of his one-act plays at the meet­ ing of the University Club, 2304 San Antonio Street, 8:15 o'clock Saturday night. at Members will participate in the reading, and Dr. Conkle, whose “Prologue to Glory” wa? included in the list of the ten best plays in 1938, produced on Broadway will preface the meeting with brief comments on the plays. Dr. and Mrs. Theodore Horn- b er ger and Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Jones will be hosts. Members are invited to bring guests. The club will hold its semi­ monthly buffet supper Sunday night, and Saturday, February 17. Dr. C. F. A rrowood, professor of education, will be inaugurated as I president of the club. He will I succeed Dr. A. P. Brogan. William Darden Heads Rusk Literary Society William Darden, sophomore in the College of Arts and Sciences, was elected president of Rusk Lit­ erary Society last night at the club’s regular meeting. Other of­ ficers selected are as follow*; Har­ vey Dibrell, first vice-president; Candler Hitchcock, second vice­ president; Robert Jordan, secre- tary-treasurer; Leslie Carpenter, reporter; Winst on Davis, sergeant- a t -a rms ; Gaul vin Parker, parlia­ mentarian; Bill Francis, orator, and Alfnedo Masquer,, forensic chairman. C A M E R A C L U B E L E C T S Austin Camera Club Wednesday night elected Professor R. F. Dawson, president and Mrs. Har­ vey A. Craig, secretary^reasarer. Future meetings will be held on the first and third Wednesdays, Formals and Playtime Tag in on New Semester Band, Dorms, Dali as Author Frats to Begin To Review Book Da noes Tonight A t Tea Today A New Creation A review of “The Waiting Room,’’ will be presented by the author, Mrs. J. C. Oehler Jr. of Dallas, before the Alpha Chi Omega Mothers’ Club ann alumnae at a tea Friday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock at chapter house. the Tickets are on sale for 60 cents. Mrs Oehler has lived in Dallas for fifteen years and is now a state officer in the King’s Daugh­ ters and a member of the Presby­ terian women's organization. “The Waiting Room” is a sat­ i r e on long hours spent in offices while waiting to see the doctor. Martha Lee, reviewer says, “ ‘The Waiting Room,’ is just what the long-suffering public has been waiting for.” Mrs. Oehler attended Goucher College, Baltimore, Md., and Col­ umbia University. She and her hus­ band lived in several Texas towns before moving to Dallas. The book is being published this month by Fortuny’s, New York, and will be displayed by the Alpha Chi Omega Mothers’ Club as soon as copies can be obtained. • Mrs. Glenn Squires of Dallas, formerly of Austin, will review Barry Benefield's new book, “ Ap­ ril Was When It Began,” Tuesday at 3 o'clock. The review wifi be sponsored by the women of the Central Christian Church, and will be held in the church community rooms. is interested Mrs. Squire? in Little Theater work and has had several plays published. Her latest “The Destiny of Mothers,” will be published in the spring. A recently published volume of her “ prose poetry” has gone into its second edition. Mrs. Squires was at one time director of drama 'or the Central Christian Church of Den ver. Alpha Epsilon Pi Initiates Pledges, Entertains Guests g o w n w o r n B o w s o f w h i t e l a c e in m i n u t e r u f f l e s a c c e n t t hi s b l a c k c r e p e J e a n d i n n e r C r a w f o r d . in t h e u n u s u a l n e c k l i n e a n d s k i r t s l i t t o t h e k n e e , w i t h h e m a n d l a c e . s l i t b o r d e r o f I n t e r e s t c e n t e r s b y 2 0 0 U. T. Students Attending Baptist Training School Here More than two hundred Univer­ sity students, members of eight student unions of the University Baptist Church, are attending the annual B a pt i s t Trai ni ng Union school which opened Monday and To g«t rid of the bitter taste lest semester’s examinations, of the Longhorn Band and four resi­ dence halls for women will give first formals of the new semester tonight. Fraternities will also dance tonight and Saturday night. • The Longhorn Band will give formal dance Friday in the Texas its annual night at 9 o ’clock Federated Woman’s Club Build- j ing, 2312 San Gabriel S tr e e t Bobby Hammack’s orchestra will play. Hammack’s newly-organized or­ Sev­ chestra has eleven pieces. eral of the men working with him formerly comprised the per­ sonnel of the old Gabe Martel orchestra, and later Jimmy Hen­ derson's band. Members of the orchestra have formed a swing quartet and will sing arrangements styled after the Merry Macs, a quartet appearing on the Fred Allen radio program. • A Valentine dance, sponsored by the University Residence Halls for Women, composed of Andrews, Carothers, W oman’s Building, and Littlefield Dormitories, will be given the Main Lounge of Texas Union Friday night from 9 to I o’clock. Clyde Mitchell’s orchestra will play. in Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity will entertain with a hou^e party at their chapter house Saturday night from 8 until 12 o’clock. • Live farm animals, including calves, horses, and chickens, will form a part of the decorations at I the barn dance at the Kappa Al- j pha chapter house Saturday night from 8 to 12 o’clock. The hou^e itself will be decorated with w’agon wheels, plows, and hay. A nickel­ odeon will furnish the music. from the house, a wagon will pick up the guests of the members and give them a hay ride to the dance. Starting San Antonio Rabbi To Speak to Mil lei Democracy “ American World Peace’ o f Dr. David Jacobsen of San A n­ tonio when he speaks at the Hills] supper Sunday night at the Foun­ dation. The supper will be served at 6:30 o’clock. Dr. Jacobsen, associate rabbi of Temple Beth El in San Antonio, wa? graduated from the Hebrew* Union College in Cincinnati. After receiving his doctorate from Cam­ bridge University, England, he was assistant rabbi of the India­ napolis Hebrew- Congregation. may be made until I o clock f r i- day afternoon, railing the Hillel Foundation. The charge will be 25 cents a plate. by will be the subject) Dr. T. C. Gardner, state sec- the and | continua* through Friday. Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity services Monday for following pledges: Harold r etar v of the B.T.U,, opened the La ski, Hou st on ; Bernie Freed, school Monday in the absence of j C»a I \ e s t o n ; Goldstein, . p e d a l T ra in ing ^ a u m o n U and L oa,. Bloom, For- A ubr ey Hear, ,, , held night at the chapter house initiation Stanley from Nashville, the f r at e r n i t y , and Union w o r k e r Attending the service? as spe- 1 enn. Unable to a t te n d t he open- elal guests were Irving N a th a n of m g session, Mr, n e a r n arrived in session, Mr. Hear?! arrived in Atlanta, member of the Supr eme Austin Tuesday to take charge of Board of Governors, the highest the school for the remainder of the body of an week. al umnus of Omicron c ha pt er at the University of Georgia; Lee Frieden, vice-chairman of t h e southern regional board and pres­ ident of the Atlanta Alumni Club of the society; Roy Tashnek, mem­ ber of Beta Deuteron chapter at Louisiana State University! and Lee Groner of Sigma chapter at Washington University. St. Louis, and Beta Deuteron, L.S.U. Alpha X i Alumnae Reservations for tho supper D j a n C o n v e n t i o n The alumnae of Alpha Xi Delta sorority made plans for the Alpha Xi Delta state convention when they met at the home of Mrs ; ( \ M. Rogers, 4413 Duval Street, : Monday night. | The convention will he held in Houston March 2 and 3 at t h e Lamar Hotel. Delegates will reg­ ister on the mezzanine floor Sat- I urday morning, March 2, and wall in the Bridge o ’clock. Other enter­ tainments scheduled for the week- . »d • r>n'- < lin en w it h e m h r o V w h i t e • b e a u t i f u l w om nn i t KT FL O O R »f an adm ir e r . a f p u r e l i n e n w i t h h an d -r o lle d b e m a o r SELECT A SUEDE BAG B r i g h t l y c o lo r ed a nd y o u r g i f t w ill b t a tipper top? cr to p ban d le ? in p r e t t v pa«*H sha^'cp. S T R E I T F L O O R t irre*? F r a m e p o u ch # * . 2 .9 8 GLOVES i* In m an v ga P la in s h p o n d o e s k in * in shad*- F L O O R . a c c e n t ru le r s (rift d e s i g n e d t a w in y o u r l a d y ’* han d. t o m a t c h or c o n t r a s t h er b ag. S T R E E T 1.9 8 VALENTINE HOSE In s p e c ia l g i f t bo x . 8 p a ir s par I 'IO. S h e e r , w i s p y i e m * m Franc V a r s i t y ’? e x q u i s i t e Su i »r-S b e e r s , ted in h e a r t - s h a p e d a 'h at w ill rn a k - he (Jadabot b o x w i t h e - tr u ly vc t c h a r g e , Iv your s , Mi*? t LOOR R E F T G i f t b o x e s so ld e e p a r a t e l y G O W N OF THE M O N T H F o r a r ea lly I m p o r t a n t V a l e ' t i n e Rem b e r g * Ke e r t r im m e d w t h e y e ­ let e m b r o i d e r y . D a i n t y im p orted V ale n c ie n n e lace. B o u d o ir Pink H e a v ­ e n l y Blue. S i t e s 82 to 88 . Feat ired rn F e b r u a r y is? -5 of Ma 'tm ciis e U e . S E C O N D F L O O R ^ A H O U S E C O A T In co ol r a y o n e r e p e w l'b g a y , w ill c h a r m her h»art awa , , c o lo r a t n p e t as a b e d r e s s * * , 12? to 20?. S E C O N D FLOOR. l i t t l e fi gu re # " v a l e n t i n e c a r d s T h # mo »t p e r a o n a l o f all r e m e m b r a n c e # s t r e a m - l i n e d v e r a i o n s . S T R E E T FLO' R GIVE A BOOK FOR V a let inc. " I m p o r t a n c e o f LI' in g ," br Tin e i n a t i n g e n d r e a d a b le . R e g u la r 3.00 c d r o F L O O R s olid c olor w it h m u lt i* T o z i p o r w r a p . ar o u n d 5 .9 5 01 d - f a * h lo n e d an d m o d e r n I c to 1.00 . ♦ a r g TVjfty, s h r e w d , f a ? - f o r l im ite d t i m e . S T R E E T 1 .3 9 t h e g ir l w h o ha? e v e r y t h i n g W a s u g g e s t , by t h e FINE PERFUMES E t c h i n g d r am : g i f t fo r . _ . S c h ia p a r e lli' s S h o c k i n g I e L o n g s O p e n i n g N i g h t ... „ G u e r l a i n ’s .Sha lim ar T ir o's R e f l e x i o n o r S u r r e n d e r __ I ’a i o u ’a M o m e n t S u p r e m e L aborit e’* W o o d lo t * or T i g r e s s S p e c ia l V a l e n t i n e c r y s t a l bul* ie in . . p e r f u m e o n l y _________________ _ GIFT VANITIES T o plea** h er b e a u t y - s e n s e a n a s s o r t m e n t o f d e s i g n s for s tr ep : h e a r t - s h a p e d g i f t box f o r y o u r d r a m ----------------------- 25 c extra In go ld aq sr* nr r.- . rd «hap e? . r *\e< in aurh 'R E F I OOI 1.98 to 4 .9 8 M USICAL POWDER BOXES In blue, g r e e n , pin k o r y e l l o w t u n e s . S T R E E T F L O O R . , t h a t will p la y her favorite popular 2 .9 8 F or H is SHIRTS In • m a r t an d u n u s u a l «*ripe? and solid co •*>,,. v - * ».;» co 'ar? A ls o *n!H w h it e Scar br ou gh'.? w id e v a r l e t . m a k e s a e . e c t i o a e a s y . Broad* c l o t h and m a d r e * . S i t e s 14 to 17 1 -2 . Valon (iift J PHONE 2-3131 T O D A Y GENUINE LEATHER BILL FOLDS in gipper or pla in s t y l e s , b la c k or br o w n co or*. TIES In r e f r e s h in g c o lo r s and p a t ' e r n s . • trip e* . S I R KET F L O O R , W id e c h o ic e In clu de* \ i g o r o u ? n e w * T h r i f t y m u s t he R eq u ested KELLY SMITH C le a n e r s — D y e r s — F u rriers — H a tters HANDKERCHIEFS Pl ai n. Ini ti al l ed l i nen. N e w c ol or e d bor de r s. D U O -G R A M JEWELRY W i t h k e y r h a i n s , t i e c h a i n ? , b e l t buck! ??, t i e clips, M E N 'S F U R N I S H I N G S , STK K F T F L O O R 1 . 0 0 1 . 0 0 50 c 1 .5 0 PAGE SIX The First College Daily in the South Phoue 2-2473 THE DAILY TEX Phone 2-2473 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1940 The Canary UNIVERSITY CO-EDS ESPECIALLY PREFER SNYDER'S Soloist, Pianist To Give Recita A rf Exhibit Follows Program Tonight Mrs. David W. H enderson, soprano, and Mrs. Q. C. Stanberry, pianist, w ill give a joint recital, which will be follow ed by an ex ­ hibit of paintings by Charles Berkeley Normann, in the Crystal Ballroom o f the Driskill H otel at 8 o’clock Friday night. ensemble The string o f the Texas School o f Fine Arts direct- | ed by Anita Storrs Gaedcke will j assist in the program. Mr. Normann, director o f the | art departm ent o f the school, will j in pastel, w ater i exhibit pictures colors, oil, colored pencil, crayon. and The pic ture s will include l a n d - 1 landscapes will life. scapes, p o rtra its , and still The include pic­ tu re s of the D elta Delta Delta so­ rority house and the U niversity Methodist Church. P o r tr a its of Douglas Corrigan, Ju d g e Isaacks, i Paderewski, E ng land sailor, and tw o of Mr. N orm ann I will be shown. a N ew D R A M A R E A D I N G Mrs. D orothy S tarnes, wife of 1 Dr. D. T. S tarnes, p ro fe sso r of English, will read a play f o r m em ­ bers of the D ram a Group of the A m erican Association of U niver­ sity Women a t a m e etin g of th e ; group T u esd ay night, F e b ru a ry rn rnii Dallas Reviewer Returns Monday Alpha Phi Sponsors 'Queen Anne Boleyn' to season Miss E velyn Oppenheimer of Dalas, noted book review er, will be in A ustin for the third time this review Francis H ackett’s “ Queen A nne B oleyn” Junior High at the U niversity School auditorium Monday night at 8 o ’clock. She is sponsored by the A ustin alum nae o f the Alpha Phi sorority. During the five years that she has been review ing books in Texas, Miss Oppenheimer has given re­ in all the large cities and views in many o f the sm aller tow ns of the Sta te . She reviews d ifferen t books several tim es a week a t Tich e-G o ettinger d e p a r tm e n t store in Dallas, w here m any a re often I tu rn e d t h e ! crowds. H e r f ir s t review in A us­ tin was th re e y e a rs ago, and large : ; crowds have tu rn e d ou t to hear ;h e r each tim e she has re tu r n e d . 1 is fic­ “ Queen A nne B oleyn” tion based on th e a c tu a l history of the lady-in-w aiting to C ath erin e of A rago n, th e fir s t w ife o f H en ry I YUI. A nn e became the second ; wife of H enry. because a w a y of T ic k e t re se rv atio n s f o r th e re-! view m a y be made with Miss Mary Lucille E ta e h le y , p u rc h a s e d ! from a n y active or a lu m n a e m em ­ ber o f A lpha Phi sorority. o r IS A W O M A N . — P a u l e t t e G o d d a r d lend* he r c h a r m a* t he p o t e n t i a l p r e y o f the m u r d e r i n g m o n s t e r t he fi l m c h o w i n g C a n a r y , ” h o r r o r Fr i d a y a nd S a t u r d a y at t he C a p ­ itol. B o b H o p e li ven* the p i c t u r e w i t h hi* g a g s . in “ T h e C a t a n d I 13, a t 7:45 o’clock, in th e home of Mrs. Ellwood Griscom, 806 W e st T hirty-second S treet. B R O W N ’n WHITE! BLUE ’n WHITE! BLACK’n WHITE! It ties at the s id e .,and it’s twice as swagger.. thrice as popular! Of W H I T E B U C K , w i t h “ saddles” in the colors y o u w a n t ! R E D o r B L U E r u b b er soles! S N Y D E R ’S A C R O S S FRO M P A R A M O U N T Southern Lovers Triumphant 'G. W. T. W. ' Fulfills Even Wildest Promises, Hopes 4 Years of Work, 5 Million Dollars, Makes Masterpiece "GONI WITH TH* WIND.”—At th# Hut#. F r o m th# »o*el br M*rr*ret M itch #’!. S creen pl*# by Sidney R e w a r d . direction by Max Steiner. Di­ rected .by Victor F l a m i e r . Trodured by David O. Selrrirk for SeltnicV-Int«rna- t ion a1. Pbotcjrrspbed by F,m#*t Haller. Technicolor direction by Ray Rennahan and Wilfrid BI. Cline. Released by Metro- G old* v n - M a y e r . Th# ca*t fo llo w * : Rhett Rutler .... R c a r ’e t t O ' H a r a ----------------- Vivien L e i t h G erald O ' H a r a __________ T horne* Mitchell A s h l e r W . I k e * _______- Le*H* H o w ard M elania H a m i l t o n _ O l i r i* de H av illan d Carren O ' H a r a U n cle P e t e r _ _____ E d d ie A n d e r s o n R em in ie c e n t Soldier — C liff Edward* Ann R u t h e r f o r d Clark Gable j By AL JAMISON A afterwit* Amueemenf* Editor At 12:10 this m orning we had seen the heralded “ Gone Ti itll the W in d .” I t was every inch the g r e a t t h a t Metro-Gold- j m otion p ic tu re w yn -M a ye r and th e ir legions o f : publicity a rtists had prom ised us it w ould be. We w ent suspecting a good p ictu re, and we w ere con- I firm e d in ou r suspicions. F riends of ours, m ade pessimistic with overdoses of fa m ilia r ballyhoo, w e n t— some w ith re lu c ta n c e — ex­ p e c tin g to be disappointed. They , w ere c onverted. NOW IN A U S T IN .— Clark G able and V iv ien L eigh , principala in “ G one W ith the W in d,” which opened la»t n igh t fo r a w eek'a run W h a t we saw re p re s e n te d almost at the S ta te T h eater. The show run* fou r hour* lo n g , w ith an in ter- fo u r yea rs o f w ork by th ou san d s o f w ork ers in the m otio n picture m ission. T hree run* o f the *how will be m ade d aily d uring its sta y in d u stry and an ou tla y o f around f iv e m illio n dollars. B u t it r e p r o - M a te d so m eth in g m ore. It repre- —__---------------- - h ere. r f * rro«d« indStV"wTib* Lack of Scenery Causes Need O f Acting in Giving Our Town in g also, on o ccasion s, an art. T A l f N t e a T * ■ • It • • * / , . . , in literatu re. If ... , m -, ev e n to th e u se o f som e earthy ^ * 7 is the U n iv e r sity here p u ttin g on T h orn ton W ild er’s dram a p r o fa n ity — the story u n fold ed by M a rg a ret M itchell in a n ovel that ‘O ur T ow n '?” Larry F letch er, a m em ber o f K ath arin e C orn ell’s com - h as b ea t a n y th in g th is gen eration p an y, asked w hen “N o T im e F or C om edy” w as here M onday, " A m a­ h s ex p er ie n c ed teu r grou p s all over the co u n try are a tte m p tin g it ,” he co n tin u ed , th e p ictu re has an y w eak n esses, “ D 0 th e y think th at b ecau se it d o esn ’t req u ire sc en er y , it w ill be ea sy *—“------------------------- — ........... ................. an d w e w er e n ot look in g for I s" ? , to produce"*” th ey a re t h . weaknesses o f t h . | n o ie ,. n o re l unreeled last nig h t t o n a »OTt*. The p icture w „ u n h u r t . ^ lik e a novel. A s in a n ovel, we liv e d d eep ly w ith th e ch aracters. fo.™ th ' eM ra P*n «» L ike a n ovel, th e p ictu re covered I "I111 n ot P " f n t , a breadth o f tim e, o f tra g e d y , or g°od dppn work ■POlwibilitjr On th e actors. T Z _ n o v el, it w as m ean t to De a WO. K r to w n * rn ft «jjmanshlD The p ictu re ow es M aster Detective' Guards Factory From Sabotage . „ ___ . "NICK c a r t e r , m a s t e r d e t e c - scen ery v in put a h e a \ie r ie - t iv e ."—At the Queen. From n story by Mil!h»u.er »nd Harold Buckley. tin. icreen play by Bertram Mil!hau*er. Pho- [ography by Char!## Lawton. Directed ..N # „ M r p „ k t and h lj C ur. u jn c lu b group would em phati- The C urtain Club l l . T h ey fu lly rea lize th at J s., ex p er ie n c e Like n ee , I was m ore o D nt'> , ■ lack , . . U . a * • . It w on ‘ Gone W ith I t . life to th e n o v el, but m ay be P rod ucers b eca ’Jse g r e a te r th an it? p aren t. A s a m o- B road w ay su ccess. Hon p ictu r e, W ind" is an a ch ie v em en t in a w ay t h e Mf v a l is B ot. Ma* y good n o v els j h a v e b een w ritten b e fo r e , b u t th e stu d en t h isto r y o f m otion p ictu r es has n o t jT o w n ’ as a call back to th e es- ” “arcs th e ch aracter b een so fr u itfu l w ith art. T he pie- a en tials. T h ey can n ot rely on a tu r e ’s cla im s to a sin g u la r great- b lu e in th e n ess are en h anced by the vastly m ache m oon fo r the e f f e c t o f a early p art o f t he cen tu ry “ N ick im proved tech n icolor th a t you w ill m oon lit n ight. W ith th e ir v o ic es r adm ire between gasp* a t the ex- and m ovements they m ust make t h e P u litz e r p rize f o r th * b e«t p la y o f Robert C h a l m e r s ________ W a i t e r Pidgeon ^ -----------------Rita Johnson H e n r y H u l l S t a n le y Ridge* Donald Meek P rod uced a p ap ier w hich thrilled y o u n g ster s Though aw ed by its d iffic u ltie s i i Doctor Franl.tc , ' CI f e ec ive» the 1 9 3 » - o 8 se a so n . ....................... P‘ "..... ‘‘Our Bartholomew ! h* c«*t follow*: r w * • / > . I Leu F«*a»bv reco g n ize backdrop t n e rn actors from M , and , T **:'n ,, i . . . ap p eals to CO;»egc ita r t t r t t t heliotrope XI* t h e p e c u lia r virtues of one Scar- of m oon ligh t on Mrs. Gibbs’s left O’H a r a . in G ro v e r', C orners, c u a r d the W e s t Coast , a h o t a g . (rf th e F ro m h e r . t o W ellesley, Mass., W a lte r Pidgeon. as th e suave sa tis fa c to ry p r o d u c in g sleuth, the W i l d e r s play, p a r t l y because they p erform ance, p a r t ic u la r ly t o those tu r n s are in a leading a i r c r a f t fa c to ry . in te reste d >se tantaG z- T h e re is an hon est h e a r t tu g un it well-dressed movie appeal, who are in w h a t th e I s t a r should V ivien L e i t h OB t h . . c r o o n is th e . a i r e hell-cat t h a t intrigued, a m a t e u r grou ps an n o y e d , ar I upset you no t* !. The p e rfo rm a n c e is excel- recognize ien .. She is ■ ne cf in g women who white yo u love them, hate them , “ O u r T o w n ” is one of those phe- a n d p ity them . ’ ase in a te you fo r an yon e who its a ud ten re in _ has a family, wear. Mr. Pidgeon is pleasing Rita Jo hn son Gils th e r o m a n ti c ! n o m e n a t h a t d ra w s re-p< nse from place, which could he occupied by N in e ty p e r cen* cf all the mo- h e a r t and mind a t once. My guess any o f the sweet yo ung th in g s on c is t ing the Hollywood la? dscape. H e n r y i lutic nary airplahe. T h e u n c o nventio nal of th e rote. “ O u r N igh t.” th e re c uld have been a n r e be fo re w ould lio n p ic tu r e far:? are said to have j8 t h a t a pecan sheller who had v e n t e d < .ark Gable a* R h e tt But- n e v e r seen any dra m a tic pe rfo rm - Hull tu r n s in a capable p e r f o r m ­ e r . A nd un d e rsta n d anfp a ' the ir v e n te r of the revo- no b e tte r Leslie H ow ar ! has been t h e sub- te c h n iq u e j e c t of sc me criticism f o r his par- 0f thi« play a t t r a c t s d ram a tic or- t r a y a l o f a most d ; f f ;cult char- g anizatio ns. I t is c w t in a form a r t e r . l r o ur cr * ion, he did well, whose n a tu ra ln e s s is s t a n k - g. The H a ttie McDaniel, as M amm y, was a n n o u n c e r, f o r exam ple, says be­ a n o u ts ta n d ng player. She th e interm ission, “ All rig!;* g r e a t acres? we belier*. Melanie, folks, you can go ou t a ’ d rra­ th e sw eet wife of Ashley W ilkes now — t h a t is if yo n like to sm oke.” p o r tu r e m om e nts help his leader. friend of the u n ­ an d devoted Jo h n Keller, a n old fathomed: e S c a r’ett, was we!! played by Olivia de H avilland. In ­ deed, in th e whole hug*- cash we did not d e te c t a bad p e rfo rm a n c e, • I* we’! don*. We ‘ : ow d e a le r , and m a k e r o f n i rth, however, is hum b le D onald Meek. M< ek plays the p a r t o f a bee m an, who tu r n s him self in to C a r te r ’s a ss ista n t. Filled with the lorf* of ail th e d etectiv e heroes, th e beem an e n te rs a t op- the p ic tu re Today's * MOVIES * The sc rip t chief f o re is a the to in to p e rm it us w ere a f ra id censors! j would m b ; us o f Fome of the best done and m o s t charact grist ■ p a r ts of the novel. The H ays off.ee, however, the deign® lu xu ry o f be ng sure th a t R h e tt B utter know® th e utility of p ro fa n ity . In th e places where th e y are d e f ­ in ite ly needed, both S c a rle tt and R h e tt throw* in a few hells and a dam n. The expensive sets t h a t you have m a d a b o u t a re w orth y of high" t com m en dation . The pho- to g i , superior. Now we have exha ted our superlatives. t h e R A D I O B y LA V E R N E B R Y S O N 7 titan A d u r n rn* nit Staff a n L ■ h I lay B r * iad way the Paycock,” Scan ro w being t h e ac- to ■ritics and public, has “ Ju n o O ’C ast yk rev iv ed < claim o f been adapted for presentation on and Madeleine “ K ate Sm ith H o u r ” over th# CBS n e tw o r k t« night if 7 o'clock fo r —— ---------------- - an hour-! ng program . tim es today.) P A R A M O U N T . — “ T h # H u n c h - b a c k o f N o t r e D a m e . ” W *h Charles F e a t u r e L a u g h to n . s t a r t s a t l l , 1:13, 3:26, 5:39, 7:52, a nd 10:05 o ’clock. (F irst tim es to da y.) S T A T E . — “ G o n e W i t h t h e W i n d . ” W ith Vivien L e i g h , C lark Gable, Leslie H ow ard, and Olivia de H avilland, F e a tu r e s t a r ts a t 10:30, 2:30, and 8 o’clock. QI E L N .— ‘‘N i c k C a r t e r , M a s ­ V. i t h W a lte r t e r D e t e c t i v e . ” Pidgeon a n d R ita Johnson, F e a ­ tu re s ta r ts a t 1:10, 2 : 3 s , 4:06, 5:34, 7:02, 8:58 o’clock. 8:30, and C A P I i O L . — ' The C a t a n d t h e C a n a r y . ” W t h Bob H o p l ­ a n d P a u le tte Goddard. (F ir s t tim es today.) V A R S I T Y . — “ A D a y a t t h e C i r c u * . ” Vi ith th e Marx B r o t h ­ ( F irs t tim es t o d a y ) . ers, T E X A S . — “ H o n e y m o o n I „ B a l i , ” W ith F r e d M a c M u r r a y C arro ll. inventor, ha? devised a m e c h an ism which enables a plane to climb very r a p - j idly as well as fly v e ry fa s t. Com ­ ing f a c t o r y f r o m Cleve­ land, w here he c o nsulte d with e n ­ gineer®, he is esc o rte d by C a r te r , played by Pidgeon, who p r e te n d s to be a new a s s is ta n t in the com ­ pany to avoid suspicion. T h ro u g h the C a r te r ’s st* ward ess’s th e plan? are k e p t fr o m th e hands of in te rn a tio n a l spies w*ho b ou gh t o f f the pilot. The sh a rp sh o o tin g and piloting, c o n tin u e s with s t o r y C a r te r ’s solving th e m u r d e r s of the in v e n to r and a pilot. T h e re 9 a g r e a t gu n b a ttle in which in a n a ir p la n e fig hts a Pidgeon ship a t sea a n d is fin a lly saved by his bee-keeping assista n t, B a r ­ tholomew, fine — J A C K ADKINS. League C on tinu ed fro m P a g e 2 lo?® 1,368 older boys who could have r e t u r n e d u n d e r th e sem es­ r u le ,” Kidd explained. “ On te r the o th e r h and , w e’ll g ain exactly 2,900 who will still be u n d e r 18, J ( F ir s t but will have com pleted eight s e - j school. I m e ste rs’ a tte n d a n c e T h a t ’s Rn increase of 1,662 or 54 in • i ^ we.r, tryiwf t0 io „ it possible f o r m o re T e x a s j make boys to play football w ith o u t low- ! ’ ,s a meaium-done detective story con- t r .o r d m .r y a n a c n f ta la H B ta and | t h , audience tee th e white peace cerning the w tli-knaw n sleuth who is called to to Cactus Studio Finally Closes Graduates, Seniors, Juniors have two Days Left to have Class Pictures Made The production schedule of The Cactus requires that all studio pictures, with the exception of Bluebonnet Belle nominees, be made by noon Satur­ day. Individuals who have reserved space in the Class Sections, but have not been photographed, are asked to com e in for sittings this week—before the stuido is finally closed for the year. If you missed your appointment, please call at Journalism Building 108 for another one. Pictures pos­ itively must be made by Saturday Noon. If you have not yet selected your proofs on class section pictures, please do so at once at Christian­ son - Leberman Studios, 906^ Congress. th T h e H o u s t o n C h r o n ic le Plans L ib ra ry R o to Pictures initial “ W hat Would You H a v e I p ro g ra m on NBG dre w ni tn 1,200 le tters, of- fit ie ' - I m o un ced. I'he Dro­ g u m is jz snow int whit strate a d if f ic u lt aons chosen f ro m the stu d io aud- g ra v u re section of lance are asked t>> t< .1 how th e j d C hn nic e I lie pro g ra m g e t out c f it. f e a t u r e on t h e ; lished in a b o u t th r e e weeks, a r e ni Vi* ■* in a series on , U 1 * 1 u ’ ’ * Gum 8:30 to ® Elwood Payne, th* < .< v< ? th p re d ic a m e n t, i University. is a ll , I h e picture?, which will be pub- o f th e tw e n ty -tw o boys on the H ou sto n pared by th e age-lim it red uctio n, | p o in tin g to th e f a c t t h a t only five t h e j 1939 all-S ta te football squad w ere the I R. Of the it maunder f o u r w c r * ' 116, t h ir te e n were 17. local p hotogra- e rin g o t h e r e d u c a tio n ’s or t h e plier, is p r e p a rin g a series o f pie- g a m e’s s ta n d a r d s .” lu re s o f th e Mira beau B. L a m a r Kidd also c o n te n d e d t h a t th e then per- Library f o r publication i s th e r o t o - : q uality of players will not be im- ' -N ,'4 III 11 n 1 1pi Wk •rn \ Si E C A C T U S Journalism Building 108 to B MI I ■ f P | rn rn Mm ■ r f 1 1 B i :l ' 5 WM ii rn I m r n H ; J,; J