The Daily Texan O f the Air 1490 Kilocycles Stye jSeriiu Seca# The First College Daily in the South Tune In K N O W Monday, Wednesday, Friday 9:15 o'clock VOLUME 42 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, M A Y ll, 1941 EigRt Pages Today No. 185 Steers Sweep Track Meet W ith 6 4 Points Littlefield Gang Third of U.T. / Men Expect Dubs Rice Owls Decisively To Be in Draft ’StudentPrince’Dress Pictures Heidelberg Poll Shows U. T. Pessimistic On European W ar BY DICK T A R P L E Y One-third of the University men think this they will be drafted summer, and nearly three-fourths of them believe the United States cannot stay out of the present European war, a Texan Bureau of Student Opinion poll completed Saturday shows. And one-fifth of those interviewed said they had already received their dra ft ques­ tionnaires, Nearly half of the sen­ iors say they have been classified. In answer to the question, “ Do j you think the United States can stay out of the present European the following percentage w a r?” answers were tabulated among men: Srs. I 35 j 63 2 All Yes _________________ 28 N o __________________ 72 No o p i n i o n ___________— * * Less than one per cent. Perhaps seniors are into less cer- tain of our being involved in war j because they are older and there­ fore are more likely to be induct­ ed this summer than are other college students. “ Do you think you will be j drafted this summer?” brought the following percentage answers among men: the army All Y e s ___________________ 33 N o ___________________ 64 No opinion ---------------- 3 Srs. I 66 26 1 8 ; Though seniors are more op­ timistic we can stay out of war, j they are less certain about staying out of the draft, and for good rea- See POLL, Page 5. Lone Ex Ranger Editor Returning From Argentina From South America— with its “ cerveza,” moonlit nights, and sul­ our try senoritas— Joe James, is wandering ex-Ranger coming home— for a little while, at least. editor, James, editor of the Ranger last year, and drawer of many a slaphappy cartoon for that mag­ azine, was formerly employed by World Letters, Inc. He traveled all over South America, sending back illustrated letters to school the United children all over States. Word came yesterday that * I _ The gay life of old Heidelberg— its royal atmosphere, its colorful peasant life, and its carefree student l i f e — i s reflected in the costumes j worn by members of the Light Opera Company in the production of : “ The Student Prince” presented this week Wednesday through Friday. Five complete changes of costume w i l l be worn by Billie Montan- *dan, who plays the student prince. He wrears a court costume in the prologue when Dr. Engel arrives to tell him that he is enrolled in the University of Heidelberg. The doctor’s valet, Hubert, and Lutz, the Hubert’s valet, will wear J plainest of all costumes— straight and sturdy dress with frock suits and Prince Albert coats, vests and dark trousers. the M ANNY DOUGLAS . . . He ic president of the Light Opera Company. Opening this scene are the lack- i eys, Phil Thomas, John Ferguson, I David Wheat, and Bob Walton, who are also servants of valets. • Though dressed similar to the students at Heidelberg in the first act, the prince seems to stand out Uvith his more colorful costume. I The men themselves have a mili­ tary air to their dress with striped trousers, high collars, ascot ties, many brass buttons, and spangles. At the Inn of the Three Golden Apples, w'here the students drink and sing, the peasant girls who wait on them wear gayly colored and midriffs. skirts, blouses, Kathie, played by Roberta Clark stands out here as she the prince’s sweetheart. Swinging around the ball­ room in the regal court scene of the third act are well-dressed la­ dies in the hoop skirts and bus­ tles, fashionable in the late Nine­ teenth Century styles. in is Matasha Kulisher, Mary Miku- sek, Ruth Moeller, Mary Kather­ ine Tarrant, Rowena Smith, Betty Sleeker, and Alice Mungia dance in the opening ballet and country dance. • ' “ The Student Prince.’ R O BE R TA CLARK A “gavotte,” graceful dance of the time with many bows and courtesies, is led by the Princess Margaret, betrothed of the Prince played by Edythe Schmidt, and She has the fem ale lead in I the prince after her entrance into the ballroom. Other dancers are Martin Clark, Douglas Scott, J a ­ cob Fuentes, Eleanor Brown, Al­ ma Espey, and Natasha Kulisher. a The princess and Tamitz, nobleman played by Martin Clark, dance the w'altz and sing “Just We Two” when Margaret tries to make the Prince jealous. Texan Award I I I * _______ ll _ I 02312664 Sinclair Chosen Outstanding Senior Boyd Sinclair, Ruth Minter, and Elgin Williams were given the outstanding journalism awards of the year Saturday night when i publications staff members got to- 1 gether their annual for their annual spring party in the Texas Union. Joe i v for , * . With all its elaborateness of dress and sets the operetta is a simple study of the problem of marriage. Interspersed with songs of course, it offers such well-liked aires as “ Golden Days,” sung by Baritone Jim McCormick and “ Deep in My Heart,” sung by Ro­ berta Clark. Montandan sings the “ Serenade,” while all the male students form a chorus to chant their “ Drinking Song” and school hymn, “ Gaudemus Igniter.” Post-Election Confab . the ; in situation, | secret “ dirt” sheet, may be here next week, from Harry E. Deddoe, an official of the Mediterranean Seventh-Day Adventist Council, just arrived in Austin from Trinidad. Spurred by the incentive of re ­ freshments and the scheduled dis­ tribution of a much-anticipated ^ the annual Deddoe came to New York City | „ Tjny T exan”— “ Finest Scandal Sheet in the South . . . to keep the staff informed of ‘skeletons the ciosets> ”__Texan staff workers had previously broken all and existing records for putting the on the same South America!* boat with Joe, who had left from Buenos Aires. They ate at same table together, discussed the Latin-American talked about Texas, to which they paper to bed in order to attend< j Sinclair, editor of the 1940-41 were both anxious to get back. Trinidad is a beehive of activi- Daily Texan which won an A1, reported, American p ace-Maker award for ty right now, Deddoe and he and Joe saw many a U.S. the fourth consecutive year, was naval base abuilding while theie. j presented with a special citation the j as “ outstanding graduating senior Army men are place, he said, and barracks and 0f the year," by Sigma Pelt® Chi, cantonments are going up where, under the provisions of the , Miga Minter was named “ most ninety-nine-year lease the U.S. g o t j outstanding journalism girl not on a portion of the island by the member of Theta Sigma Phi,” by members of the girls’ honorary terms of the Lend-Lease Act. journalism fraternity. proTessiona.1 journalism fraternity taking over helby Staff Back om Oklahoma . .. . M A committee of five people ep- ^ ent.ng the Division of Extoll- The third award— a golden lov­ ing cup— was given to Williams as I “ outstanding beginning journalism I student of the year," by Sigma ; Delta Chi. ; Also presented by Editor Sin- clair were some seventy gold, sil- and bronze keys for Texan raember8 for work duri 6 in of the University returned tbe yegr w m likewise ^ ven rid*, from the annual conference j I the National Umvewity Exton- by Sigma D(.iu chj t0 th# Qut. .ion Association in conference was held May 5-7 in the journaj igm department— Alice Beeman, Pat Holt, Dryden Pren- Oklahoma City Okla. Headed by T. H. Shelby, d e a n |^ ce> Wilbur Cox, D o r o t h y The hree-day. banding graduating scholars Six preceded of the Division of Extension, and s crUgi(fSt and Louise Cartman, including Dr. and Mrs. J. 0 . M ar-j Master o{ ceremonies for the berry. Miss Le Noir Dimmitt, di-Jprojfram wbjcb the presentations w a Bill rector of the Package Loan L i-jaward brary; Roy Bedichek, director of J Whjtmore, who headed an all-star the Bureau of Public School Extra cast of performers which present­ curricular Activities; and R. J. ed a series of “t&ke-offs” on fac­ Kidd, athletic director of the Texas ulty members and students of the Interscholastic League, the group department. >k an active part at the meeting. The conference consisted of seven general sessions and had as its main theme, “University Ex­ tension and Total Defense.” Considerable clo u d i n e s a and The Weather: cooler. S. W. Conference Titles Tumble In Stadium BY BILLY SAN SIN G Texan Sport• Editor A mighty squad of Texas Long­ horns stampeded their way to the Southwest Conference track cham­ pionship Saturday afternoon, the blistering sun simply adding to the heat stirred up by the Littlefield gang. The Steers scrambled together 64 points, decisively in front of the second place Rice Owls who had 4 0 Vi. Wee Fred Lee Rams- del!, who placed a brilliant finia to his career as co-captain, put together 9% of the Texas score. The Texas Aggies came in be­ hind Rice with 31 points. Be­ hind them came S.M.U. with 17 points; Arkansas, l l ; Baylor, 7 | and Texas Christian, 6V4. Three Conference records went tumbling into Memorial Stadium’s cindery dust, with one other be­ ing tied. Rice got two of those records, Texas broke one and tied the other. Umstattd set a new half-mile standard, while the 440 relay group, with Carlton Terry out, tied the Rice record of 1938. • About 3,000 fans endured ths heat of perfect track w e a th e r - cloudy, very hot, and windless— to watch Texas roll up the largest margin of victory that the meet has seen since the Longhorn squad of 1936. Adding to their third place team honors, the Texas Aggies’ Roy Btu cek, their sizeable, likeable hurdler and the only double winner of the day, took the high point honors and the award as the day’s out­ standing performer. Several Texas first places cam* as surprises. There was Harry Hafernick’s fine mile run, Bob Carmichael in the broad jump, and the day’s thrill giver, Ramsdell’e victory in the 220. The flying Michigan sophomore, Mac Umstattd, gave Texas a new conference record in the half-mile as he took his specialty in 1:53.8* Umstattd took a five-yard lead at the opening and held it uiftil the last fifty yards when he opened his margin to eight yards over Ralph Henderson of Texas A.&M. The new record marked off that held by Calvin Bell of Rice at 1 :54.2 and set in 1938. • Shortly afterward, the Texas 440-yard relay foursome, with a patched-up lineup after Terry had been withdrawn, tied another con­ ference record at 41.4. Billy Seay led Texas off to a lengthy lead, then Sparks ran another fine lap. When Seay passed the stick to Ramsdell, the only race was Texaf against time and the little dash star and Lonnie Hill made a good try. The time, which matched that of the Rice team of 1938. Jack Hughes continued his dis­ cus superiority but failed to break his own record. Hughes spun out a throw of 160 feet, 8 inches to surpass the field by about twenty feet. Hartman of Rice got sec­ ond, with his teammate Jim Deal placing third. Hughes missed the record he made last year by a little under three feet. The two Texas 100-yard dash stars staged their weekly duel in another great race to the first Texas title for the afternoon, and once again it was Terry who edged out Fred Lee Ramsdell. • Terry, running with an injured leg, missed the conference record by a bare 0.1 of a second to stage his race in 9.6. Mere inches back came Ramsdell, and they were well ahead of the field. Terry broke ahead o f the field but lost his advantage between^ the 50 and 75-yard marks. But the Talpa Terror slipped ahead in the closing strides to win. Some five yards past the finish line, Terry’p injured leg gave way and Coach Littlefield withdrew him from the 440-yard relay. But Ramsdell was not through for the day. Favored to come in behind Rice’s Joe Blagg, Freddie in an entirely different turned race from bis usual furlong M i l l to give the crowd one o f the thsiQe* of the day. He even coasted dred to See 3 and Maurice Fincher. Taking up where his talented predecessor, Frank Guernsey, left off, Rodgers turned in an amaz- ing display of power and precis­ ion to rout Cristner in straight sets, 6-1, 7-5, 6-2. The Texas star made only one feeble bid for victory, that in the third set when he was already two light­ sets down, but Rodgers’s ning-fast service sharply angled volleys pulled him out of a 2-4 third set deficit and sent him on to victory in the set and match. and Cristner’s baseline consistency vainly tried to pick out a weakness in the Rice star’s game, but for yesterday a t least there was none. Realizing his consistency was no match for Rodgers’s devastating power, Cristner played more on heart in th© third set than any superior shotmaking. Since the Conference Meet opened on Thursday Rodgers’s play has been the highlight. He was seeded fourth but won his four matches without the loss of a set. Rodgers teamed with Florida’s Dick Morris later in the afternoon to outplay Cristner and Fincher for the doubles title, 6-1, 7-5, 6-2, and complete Rice’s title mono­ poly. Play was exciting but the Rice pair’s superiority was never in doubt, even in the second set when the Texas team rallied to take a 5-4 lead before losing a t 7-5. Though missing almost as many shorts as he made, Finchcer power connected with some smashes and backhand volleys that had a rowdy group of spec­ tators cheering like they were at a baseball game. Saturday morning’s semi-final doubles matches saw Cristner and Fincher go five sets to overcome Fred Higginbotham and Bill Wil­ kins of Southern Methodist, 6-2, 6-2, 8-10, 2-6, 6-4. The Longhorn number-one duet was coasting along to an apparently easy vic­ tory in the third set before the Mustangs steadied to almost win the match. Morris and Rodgers , SEE TENNIS, Page 5, Unwinding here for hic fin d throw in Memorial Stadium, big Jack Hughes le t this discus whirl tail over 160 f e e t for another Southw est C onference first place. Hughes has never been defeated in the con feren ce competition through three years of throwing the discus. This throw fell just two feet short of his own C onference record of 163 feet. H e re’s David Small, the Longhorns’ sensational young vaulter, who came from nowhere these past two weeks to establish himself as the best vaulter in the South. Small won the C onference cham­ pionship Saturday with a vault of 13 feet, his second successful try at that height within the past week. His effort bested such entries as Lay o f Rice, Kicks of A. & M., and Berry of S.M.U. Rice Stars Reclaim Tennis Crowns Union Fee, Seemingly Settled, Now Races With Time at Capitol Steers Drop Both Singles And Doubles That the University will be able to collect a compulsory Union fee next year upon any author­ ity other than an appropriations bill rider of un­ certain constitutionality to appear doubtful. is beginning It is probable th at the University can have for the next two years the same Union fee rider that It it now has, if the University wants the rider. may get the rider whether it wants it or not. But the prospects are not very promising for the passage of a bill permitting the Board of Re­ gents to levy a compulsory fee for the support of the Union. In the first place, the end of the present session is very near, and hundreds of bills are yet to be acted on in both House and Senate. Simply be­ . . . , Umon fee bdl may be one of them. cause there won’t be time enough, many of these j bills will never reach the voting stage, and the : BY TOM D A V ISO N Jack Rodgers and Dick Morris j extended Rice Institute’s South- j wegt Conference tennis supremacy In the second place, there are a number of House i another year Saturday afternoon members who will oppose it if it ever does come on the sun-baked Penick Courts. up for a vote. This opposition will come from | Rodgers blasted his way to the members who don’t like the Union fee, from mem­ bers who don’t like fees added to regular matricu- , , .. singles title over the Longhorns’ weary Warren Christner and then teamed with Dick Morris to take from chri5tner costs’ and from members who think th a t | ^ doa))|„ . . . . .. . . , , , a compulsory hospital fee, already approved by the House, will impose a big enough burden upon students without additional new fees. No Union fee bill has been introduced in the Senate; one has been the House. It has been approved by the House educa- See UNION FEE, Page 5. introduced only in Campus Leaders to Talk Politics Whoa these heeds get together yea know that the sabject will he something shoat government, end student government in particular. As its final program of the year, the Campos League of Women Veters will held a panel discussion on campus government Monday et 4:45* o’clock in Texes Union 309. Around tho table are Key Abernathy, president of the League; Fred Nie man, president of the Students* Association; J. Ward Fonts, out-goisg president of the Students* Association; Dr. O. D. Weeks, chairman of the Department of Government; Elisabeth Sutherland, vice-president of the Students* Association; end Dr. R. L. Sutherland, directer of the Hogg Foundation. Tho purpose of the program is to educate students and faculty members who ere interested in the workings and the constitution of the student government. Dr. Weeks will lead the panel, snd the remainder of tho group will he speakers. The mein topics of discussion will be The Structure and Powers of the Student Assembly; Student Officers and Their Duties; and The Judiciary Council and its Effectiveness. All studsnts and facul­ ty members are invited to attend and participate in the discussion. A short business meeting of the League will follow, during which the new constitution of tho Leaguo will bo adopted* school the athlete i i attending may give notice of th irty days and ask for approval of the South­ west Conference committee which must give unanimous approval. The athlete w ill have only two the years of eligibility le ft school asking for his playing privi­ leges. at Taking into consideration the national em efgency and the selec­ tive service act concerning ath­ letes, the committee provided that any athlete called into the service might return with the same eligi­ b ility as he had on leaving school. “ a gentlemen’s agreement,” the coaches, athletic directors, and business managers agreed not to contact prospective athletes until afte r December 15 of each year. B y means of THE "STYLE" STORE FOR MEN SEE OUR WINDOWS JFaWaW I l l Iti I I Wa A NEW HIGH IN SUMMER SUIT COMFORT M a n y trop ica1 suits are M ornin g G lo rie s." A t 9 a.m. they are crisp and fresh . . . but a few hours later they fold and d roo p into shapelessness. . . . N o t so with Zefirettes, they are light in w eight and air cooled in weave, but this sturdy, all wool fabric 'ta u g h t" it by expert craftsm an tailors. never forgets the lines You'll look your best all day in a Zefirefte. You'll keep that alertness and d rive " that often wilt when your clothes do. Let us show you a Zefirefte now. H a r a 'a F re d L o a B a rn s d a ll, T e x a s ’ s g ra n t litt ia B l a f f a n d H a ll w a ra th a R ic a O w l a n trin * w ho co - ca p ta in dash sta r, aa ha s u rp ris e d tha South- w a ra fa v o r e d to d e f e a t R a m td a ll. F ra d d i# ra n w e « t C o n fe r e n c e tr a c k m eat w ith a v a r y succesa- a v a r y e a f y f u r lo n g • lip p in g up to o v a rh a u l tha f u l d e fe a t# o f hi* 220-yard dash title*. R a m a d a li O w ls In th a clo ain g t w a n t y y a rd * . B a rn s d a ll w a* o u tr a in Jo e B l a f f , n e a re s t to h im . an d H a ro ld H a lt. th a 440 ch a m p io n , w ho is n e x t to B l a f f . also tha high p o in t m an fo r T e x a s , sc o rin g 9 ,1*4 p o in t*. 3 Meet Records Fall A s Texas Sweeps Track 4 aw a— .sa, i n— .I a , „ T l§ ip l - T ' * * * / m r l r * Small Vaults T o Victory; Hughes W in s (Continued from Page I) I A / 1 l l I dium some Blagg. four yards behind • Then RAmsdell put on the heat, and caught Blagg in the closing tw en ty yard*. His time was 21.3 seconds. of Springing a surprise over the favored S p in ie r Arkansas, long-breathed H a rry Hafernick turned in the fastest mile run of It s career to win by about twelve S ards in the good time of 4:22.8. [aferm ck trailed the Rarorback star through the first three laps and half of the fourth. Then tha lanky distance star stretched into Jus spurt to finish well ahead. His time misaed the record by exactly one second. the capture in Young Dave Sm all turned another unexpected Texas cham­ pionship to pol# vault w ith 'a clearance of 13 feet even. His jump left his close ri­ val# far behind. L a y of Rice took Second at 12 feet, 8 inches, but JIM - L Y * star B e rry struggled into a tie for third with Coons of Rice and Ricks of A .A M . * Bob Carm ichael gave Texas an­ other surprise first place as his teap of 23 feet, 4 4 tok J i m place. Garrison of S.M .U , of took second, and Texas placed third. Slovacek inches Garland A d air got o ff his heat throw of the year to take the ja v ­ elin event Adair slung out a throw of 197 feet, 8 inches. Ja c k pea ie of Texas took second place S M U. placed and B a rn e tt of PASE TWO SUNDAY, MAY ll, 1941 Conference Track Summaries stattd, Texas; R, Henderson, A A M. J T errill, Arkansas; Riddle, Texas. Tim e: 1:33.8. One mile ru n: won by H afe r­ nick, Texas; Spencer, Arkansas; Stew art, A .A M ; Todd, Baylor. Tim e: 4:22.7. Two mile run: won by Spencer, Arkansas; Taylor, T .C .U .; Gibson, S .M .U .; Elmore, A . AM . T im e: 10:00.6. 440-yard relay; won by Texas (Seay, Sparks, Ramsdell, H ill) ; A A M .; R i c e ; T.C .U . Tim e; 41.4 (ties record.) M ile relay: won by Rice (Blagg , Zimmerman, Neath, H a l l ) ; A .A M .; Texas; Arkansas. Tim e: 3:22.2. High Jum p: won by Coffm an, Rice; W alters, B a y lo r; W atkins, A A M . ; Ricks, A .A M . Best jump by Coffm an 6 ft. 7^4 in. Broad jum p: won hy Carm ich­ ael, Texas; Garrison, S M ll . ; Slo- vacek, Texas; W ile y, Rice; and Groseclose, Best T.C .U . jump by Carmichael 23 ft, 4 4 in. tied. Pole vau lt: won by Small, Texas; Lay, Rice; Coons, Rice, Berry, S.M .U ., Ricks, A .AM ., tied. (B e s t vault by Sm all 13 feet.) Shot put: Deal, Rice; Wilson, Baylo r; Hartm an, R ice; Thoma­ son, A .& M .; (B e a t throw by Deal 50 feet.) Ja v e lin : Adair, Texas; Seale, Texas; Barnett, S .M .U .; B. Hen­ derson, A .& M . (B e s t throw by Ad air 197 feet, 8 inches.) Discus throw: Hughes, Texas; Hartm an, Rice; Deal, R ice ; H enry, A AM . (Beat throw by Hughes, 160 feet 8 inches.) Sports Notices A L L F R E S H M A N tennis squad member# who wish to try for their numerals, meet me on the freshman courts after 3 o'clock Monday afternoon, D R, D. A. P E N IC K , coach. "Relax a Little” In a New Slack Suit FR O M Toggery tjPf g S SI fflki bas* up iro n the grind. G e t a new, comfort- able s I a c k suit from the Toggery. Sport starts . . styles w i t h t w o pockets. short s eaves, two-way co 'a r . . easy Matching slacks in spun rayon. Blue, rust. green . cool shades, grey, tan . fitting. * S e l e c t a n easy - wearing sport s h i r t of r a y o n , cotton, silk, o x f o r d , or b r o a d c loth. All s'zes, many colors. 120-yard high hurdles: won b y ? Bueek, A .A M .; Davis, Texas; Tate, S M U .; Groseclose, T.C .U . T im e:} I C S 100-yard dash: won by Terry, Texas; Ramsdell, Texas; Blagg, R ice ; Smith, A AM . Tim e: 9.8. [vow hurdles: won by Bucek, A .A M .; Garrison, S .M .U .; Davis, Texas; Tate, S.M .U . Tim e: 23.5, 220-yard dash: won by Barns­ dall, Texas; Blagg, Rice; Hall, Rice; Smith, A.AM . Tim e: 21.3. ; 440-yard run: won by H ail,! Rice; Sparks, Texas; Dealev, S. 1 M .U .; Linehan, S.M .U. Tim e: 47.8 j * new record). Old record 48 by Sanders of Rice. HRO-yard ru n: won by Urn- T. H. Shelby Attending Education, W ar Meets T, H. Shelby, dean of the Divi­ sion of Extension, who returned Friday from the extension confer­ ence in Oklahoma City, left S a tu r­ day to attend a meeting of the Am erican Association for Adult Education which is being held at W a it Point, N. Y . Upon completion of the meet­ ing Mr Shelby will continue on to Washington to attend a conference on war defense and to determine h o w the Division of Extension can maintain a closer collaboration with the national defense program in general. in the mile, lost a show and was forced to drop out. In second place came Taylor, T .C .U ,J Gibson of took third, and Elmore of A .A M . took fourth. The time wa# 10:06.6 min­ utes. S.M .U . A dropped baton kicked Texas out of a mile relay chance. Ru n ­ ning very dose second at the end of the first lap, J . W . Sm ith and Mac Unurtattd had a bad exchange, the Baton falling to the track. The Steer* went ahead to finish third with L’mstattd running a brilliant quarter. Jo e Sparks ran the third lap, and Freddie Rams­ dell finished a day of great track on tha anchor lap. r INVITATIONS ^ Ara now ready for De V e ry Plain Sheet ...............10c French Fold............... 15c White Cardboard W eb Class Roll .. 25c Black and White ___ 50c With Class Roll a l l s e n i o r n e e d s a t U N I V E R S I T Y 2310 Guadalupe 616 CONGRESS AUSTIN'S LEADING STORE FOR MEN , A i r C o n d i t i o n e d S p & iti 0 ijf P a iU jfe a n 5UNQAY, M A Y ll, 1941 PA SE THREE S c a rb ro u g h 9* M en 9* S i ore Blomquist Swedes Win Baseball Championship Jack Wilson Pitches 7-2 'Mural Victory Over Czechs Subsidizing On Coast, Says Czar List Includes Four Texas H ig h School Boys in The Blomquist Swedes scored two runs in the second inning. one in the third on a homer by Eldon Mahon, and four in the last inning: on a homer by Windield Jones with three men on base, to defeat the Progressive Czechs 7-2 Saturday afternoon and win the intramural baseball championship. *---- - The crowd was small but e n -j only two runs in the fifth inning1, thusiastic as Jack Watson, Swede Holchack went pitcher, and Steve Holchak, Czech for the entire route / u‘ home runs by Jones and Mahon broke ( 7-echs l/ e r" ‘ n , hurler, kept the hits we ed throughout the pitcher struck out four men. game. Each sea er- ^ I of the Up until Saturday afternoon. silence ^a]{ g-ame. longest hits | (INTS )— A stunned SAN FRANCISCO, May IO.— in Jones’s home run lick was one most quarters and a few cries of today from five this s e a s o n , “ unfair” arose saijea far over the center field-1 Pacific Coast Conference colleges the payin g field.; charged with recruiting and subsi- dizing athletes by Coast Athletic Commissioner Edwin N. Atherton. In his second sensational crack­ down, the conference czar struck hard at Stanford, Oregon, Wash­ ington, Washington State, and Oregon State while giving a clean bill of health to the “weak” con­ ference members— Idaho and Montana. two ; er»„ ^earl ancj third baseman, was intramural sports Watson had allowed only runs during the entire intramural Saturday’s ball game brought season, one of the best pitching the 1940-41 intramural season to records of the year. Marvin B ak-jjts official close. Rules prohibit er, Swede being perhaps the outstanding player of played after May IO, the deadline the game, Besides fielding beau­ being set to allow* the hoys plenty tifully during the whole game, he of time to study for final exams. banged out two hits in four times than at bat. those that attended many of the pre-championship games. This by­ fact standers attributed that University students attend only those intramural games be­ tween fraternities, or where a f r a ­ ternity is participating. The Czechs, who Friday beat the Kappa Sigs 30-0 in an amaz­ ing scoring spree, could not get to the fast pitches of Watson and never had a chance a t the plate. They managed to push across their The crowd was smaller from the to In a c cu sed subsidization rn v irtu a l bill o f p a r t i c u ­ the lars, A th e r to n schools off a n d b a r r e d fro m c o n f e re n c e a th le tic co m p etitio n tw e n ty -tw o f r e s h ­ men a n d th ir te e n s t a r O k lah o m a a n d T ex a s high school pla y ers. When ‘Men Were M e n / M agazin e Uses Lists Legislators Used Guns Compiled by Librarian The most heated sessions of the Texas Legislature today are tame compared with the meetings of law-makers in the old days. In early Texas history, A list of the pamphlets on na tional defense and related sub jects, published after 1940, com piled by Miss LeNoir Dimmitt of | petition. the Extension Loan Library at the con­ graduate tends William Hogan, student from University, La., leg- islators preferred to l ^ h t it out University has been printed in the fpoke up with the f i r * p with pistols and fists rather than invective. From the Indian “farm ” at Palo I Alto Coach Clark Shaughnessy issue of THE TEXAS OUT- Characterizing the mass ouster against Atherton’s ruling. J LOOK. r o . ! * Hardest hit of all schools was Stanford, 1940 Pacific Coast and champions, Rose Bowl football where eight freshmen were ruled ineligible and the Oklahoma and Texas players barred from com- The Louisiana State University I The list is divided in two parts, historian has been conducting re- : The firgt part ^ veg sourceg for search in Texas history University archives here. the in “as unfair,” Shaughnessy said: “ I know nothing of the ways and means employed to get these the j h0yg jnt 0 Stanford. That isn’t my locating the pamphlets, and second part consists of the p a m -1 business. But I do know th at they are good, clean-cut youngsters and phlets themselves. The pamphlets that they, personally, are not to chosen for listing are ones which blame for th« violations which are r e p r e s e n t , v e of ^ the many witch have been, and are con­ stantly being, printed on national defense. “ The thought th at they are be­ ing penalized for something for which they are blameless offends my sense of fair play.” have take„ place> „ , cipal worry' is the Owls, for they before must clear that A.&M. And they may find that Captain Frankie Carswell and his band of Owls will be a little hard- I Station on Friday and Saturday er to beat than when the Steers in confer- clubbed in them 9-3 and 16-6 jtwo games down at Houston hurdle the But right now the Steers p r i n - ; March. ; strong in numbers. If Beefus Bryan hadn’t come that will determine {through with his surprising, but enee championship. most welcome, relief job against the Texas staff Baylor Friday, only of would have consisted Moore with Deutsch out, but now Bryan can be counted on for help. And Texas will need good pitch­ ing this coming week, for afte r two-game the Owls comes th at series with the Aggies at College j I m s s c a t a h u * ed w m D w A i m e r t i . t w a v e . v a a i T T i , i u H e r e ’s W a r r e n C h ria tn er, w ho ov e rc a m e h e a t, f a v o r ite s, a n d a b ad cold to b la st hi* w ay in to th e final* of th e S o u th w e st C o n f e r e n c e ten n is cham pionships Saturday. D e f e a te d in th e la st ro u n d s, th e little K ansan still ranks am ong tho v e r y b e s t in th e S o u th . W i th o u t so m a n y h a n d ic a p s to overcom e, he m ay v e r y well have guided th e S te e r s to a single ch a m pio nship. O nly last T h u rs d a y , he was fo rc ed o f f th e c o u r t in a m a tch by his cold, a n d a slight h e a r t a t ta c k . Hogan said he had records of at least five fights between legis- lators during the Texas Republic. One day, he reported, a shooting between two took place on the very steps of the cap­ itol— all over a m atter of legisla­ tive policy. congressmen B a se b a lls Face Owls Tuesday Riding high on a four-game winning streak, Cecil Grigg’s re­ juvenated Rice Institute baseball team comes to Austin on Tuesday to challenge Bibb Falk’s league- leading Texas Longhorns. And the Rice game will be the sta rt of a very busy week for the Longhorns— th at three games, one with the Owls and two with Texas A.&M.— which shall determine whether or not they will repeat as conference champs. play Holding only a one-game lead over the Aggies, the Steers must defeat the Feathered Flock here Tusday, and while they had no trouble with them in winning a two-game series to open the sea­ son back in March, the Longhorns may find the Owls a bit tougher now. Fred “ Bell” Pepper, the blond Mississippi boy who is also a bas­ ketball player at Rice, is counted on to slow down the Texas hitting to attack enough for the Owls win. Last year Pepper was the only pitcher in the conference to batting defeat the powerhouse the crew that ran away with Southwest title, and in the second game of at Houston, he turned in a fine re­ l i e f job against the Longhorns. Pepper uses a knuckle ball to great advantage, and already this season he holds victories over the strong A.&M. and Baylor teams. this year’s series For Texas, Udell Moore is cer­ t a i n to get the starting nod. P er­ haps the best pitcher in the con­ ference, Moore is undoubtedly the most improved. Not only is his “sinker” working well this year, but he has shown much more speed than before. And Moore has come through when very badly needed, for with Mel Deutsch suf­ fering with a sore right arm the Longhorn pitching staff isn’t very Co-Ed Sports BY ANNE STACY Texan S ports S t a ff T-Night Banquet closed the curtains for the U.T.S.A. and intra­ mural activities for the year. The burst of applause and the screams of the Kappas as teary-eyed Precious Harris ran up to receive the cup was an unforgettable final scene. “ Blub, blub, blub” was the title of the Turtle club song at T-Night. — Being equipped with strong lungs ♦-............................................. they managed to sing the loudest of any of the group. Snickers from the audience accompanied the Orchesis Club song as they waved silk scarves Bathetically and sang. fro m th e golf c o u rse w ith a s u n ­ title of b u r n e d nose a n d th e w o m e n ’s golf c h a m p th e fo r sp rin g se m e s te r . T h e T ri D elts a n d th e H om e E conom ics C lub p la y ed a d e s p e r a te g am e o f b a s e ­ ball up u n til last m in u te. th e T he H om e E conom ics Club slid th e to give in to hom e c h a m pionship, by a 9-8 score. th e m U p u n til 6 o’clock— f if t e e n m in u t e s b e f o r e th e b a n q u e t — t h e r e w e re last m in u te t o u r n a ­ m e n ts . Alice Daniel* cam* in Gym s a Fine Place For Girls to Play BY P A U L IN E A V E R A University co-eds find almost )y sporting pleasure they can i n t at the Women’s Gym, one ’ the best-equipped buildings of s kind ir. the Southwest. Finished in Cordova cream-col- ed stone, it is shaped like a hol- w square with a large grass-cov­ ed patio in the center. Around e patio are badminton courts, mcing studios, and rooms for any training asses. The building was constructed in >31—a far cry from the remod- ed history class room where the rat University women's gym see­ ms met, way back in 1899. The rw building cost nearly $400,000 id contained some $20,000 worth equipment. Funds far its roasts—tsoa wow other physical donated by ex-students, students, and friends of the University. It wa? one of the four buildings on the campus made possible through the efforts of Thomas Watt Greg­ ory, an ex-student and former a t­ torney general of the United States. On the first floor of the build­ ing are four gyms in all, large and small, and a dancing studio. Re­ ception rooms, class roms, and a department library are also located on the first floor. The ground floor contains two large dressing rooms, two locker rooms, and, the northeast in corner, a beautiful blue-tiled swim­ ming pool. Lined in beige and white, this pool is fitted with un­ derwater lighting arrangements. Five hundred people may sit in tilt balcony over the pool* Send Your Clothes to Us and Stop Worrying About Moth Damage OUR DRY CLEANING KILLS MOTHS D ry clea n in g is the ap p ro v e d m e th o d of d e s tro y in g m oths a n d m o th la rv a e in clothes. O u r m e th o d s a r e c o m p letely m o d e rn an d th o ro u g h . SANITEX BAGS To p r o te c t m o th - f re e clothes seal u ntil n ee d e d we will y o u r d r y cle a n e d clothes a n d d eliver S a n ite x D o u b le-S ea led G a r m e n t S t o r ­ a g e B ags. th e m in Call v s f o r Ce dar B ag S ervice Dial 2-1166 M a l a P la n t S O S G u a d a lu p e • r a n c h I S I S S a n J a c in to CLEANER • HATTER DYER * Keeps You Cooler and Smarter Resists Wrinkles Is Hard-Wearing $25 C O O L - T E X answers your every re­ quirement in Summer Clothes. It's C O O L E R . . . It's S M A R T E R . . . and endowed with a truly remarkable abil­ ity to remain fresh and neat through torrid temperatures and continuous wear. Smartly styled and superbly tail­ ored, C O O L -T E X suits are available in a wealth of light and dark shades, plain colors and distinctive patterns. SOLID C O LO RS AIR BLUE SPACED STRIPES TANS, BROW NS C H A L K STRIPES SKY G R A Y C L O T H IN G — S E C O N D F L O O R S u m m e r S t y l e Leaders VAL-WEAR OXFORDS ■tm w OO RYTEX-POST HASTE P R I N T E D S T A T I O N E R Y May Special! 'IOO S IN G L E SHEETS, 50 EN V ELO PE S O R O R 50 D O U B L E SHEETS, 50 E N V ELO P E S 50 M O N A R C H SHEETS, SO EN V EL O P E S New . , , New . . . New! A writing paper 'n an exhilarating S A U T E R N E color . . . or a captivating H A Z E -B L U E , , . smartly accented with printed Envelope linings in Brown, Blue or Grey. Printed with your Name, M onogram or Name and Address. A very special writing creation . . . for M a y only! Teus Bookstore Scarbrough & Sons r Q ly la it R if hi/.JU. I O fficia l Notice ROI Chirr: a t r y coaching class is now reviewing fo r the fin*} exam* May 28. every Mon­ day, Wednesday, and Friday nig h t at 7 o’clock in room 7 of the Y. M. C. A. Everyone is welcome. —J A M E S Y ET T, instructor. FO REIG N LANGUAGE RE­ QUIREM ENTS examinations will be held Saturday, May 17, a t 2 o ’clock. Petitions must be in the R e g istra r’s office not la te r than Wednesday, May 14. Rooms where examinations will be held will be announced on F rid a y and Saturday. — C. A. SWANSON, chairman. the dents: Before SOME SUGGESTIONS to stu­ session closes you should think at least a little ab out your f u tu re p a n s. 1. Discuss with a member of the departm en t sn which you expect to m ajor the courses you should take next year. to see 2. Check up if you have the needed prerequisites to the course* ahead of you. I f not, h a d n ’t you b e tte r take them the Sum m er Session or by correspondence before September? in 3. If you wish to tra n s fe r to business administration or law n ex t fall, check carefully to ne# th a t you will have ai! the requi­ site*, and apply now. 4. If you plan to tra n s f e r a t the opening of the h um m er Session from any one college or school of the University to ( a .f., from a rts and an o th e r law*, to business o r sciences you should make application immediately at the R egistrar’* Office. 6. The new requirem ents for admission to the School of Law will be in operation n e x t Sep­ tem ber. The last chance to t admission on the p resen t mini­ mum basis of sixty semester hours as specified m the c a ta ­ logue will be the first term of the S um m er Session. Those e ntering law in Septem ­ ber, 1941, and th e re a fte r m ust present as a minimum one of the th ree-year programs. 1941 this it with 6. If you have a condition o r postponed examination to take, consider which of these opportunities you p re fe r: ( I ) To take it with the class in the it finals the sem ester (2 ) To course is being given. tak e the in the da«« finals of t i t h e r term this «um- m e r if the course i* offered. (3) To take it in the special (If you series to begin J u ly 5. p re f e r this, see th a t your in­ stru c to r is to be in Austin or ask him to leave the question* with (4.) To take it in the aeries to begin Septem ber 16. In any case have your petition in the R e g i s ­ t r a r ’s Office a t least one week In advance. the R e g istrar). to go 7. If you expect to sum m er school, you will need you r record when you register. Old students should have the photographic record furnished them their last summer and g ra d e r e p o rt for the first semes­ t e r of 1940-41. New students last fall should bring the of credit record them and their fir s t sem ester grade the report. New student* of second sem ester will bring the credit record furnished them. Any stu d e n t who has lost his record may obtain a complete photographic copy for lo cents by applying at the R eg istrar’s Office, n o rth section of the in­ form ation counter. furnished 8. Please observe th a t the this sum m er fee reg istration will again be 117.50 each term, but if it is paid on the first or second day a rebate of 12.50 will be allowed; if paid on the the re b a te will be third day 11.00, and th e r e a fte r there will be no rebate, if paid E. J. MATHEWS, registrar. 8for J9oUk| Sta n Th* Dilly lo a n , dadaist for of The U lift n it T of la rife fished ob til* cam p u s of th* I'n l- *«r* its ta Acetin bf To aaa St -dent Fafel*e*tt©na, lac- ovary •onrs;n* »i* •cot Hondas. i »**# SUBSCRIPTION HATES I M o a t s ---------- ---------1 . 40 aso. ) . I TS I Seme* tar ( 4 1 6 0 t In to attar* C arnal Man IO.60 2.50 *.09 Cd! to rial off tea*, l o o r o a lu n ButJA- IO*. ISI* aod 102. Talapfeoaa tit n o . t tag S - t 471. Catered aa Saco od cia** ma;; mat­ ter a t the fromt O ffice. A aetie !«*»», •oder tibe Aet of Cohere** March I. |« 7 S Ad a*rti* i t s a lad cir- la tic a dap* ct* 10c Beild; r,g Jouraa.iam a&eats. Rhor.e i-z r r ii E ditar-ia-C ftw f Aaaoatat# Bd ter— -JACK Sports Xaitm ....... Society Editor Aoeoetate BOYD SINCLAIR DOLPH E ijr besain t CUaabrth Wharton ------------------ (Jem a Pe roe S T A F F F O R T H I S I S S U E N ight E d i t o r _ Ben Kaplan A ssistants; Mac Roy Rasor, Bob Lewis, Dick Main, Mary Brinkerhoff. N ight Sports E d i t o r Elgin Assistant: Billy Williams. Sensing. N ig h t Society Editor Elizabeth W harton. Assistant Jo Leigh Cohn. Dorothy Scruggs, Jean Beshell. N ight Telegraph Editor..A rthur C a n th a r i. Assistant: Folly Hall. N ight Am usem ents E dito r. Les- i k C arpen ter. A ssistan ts: Je a n n e Douglas, Hope Berdi­ chevsky. PAGE FOUR SUNDAY, M AY ll, 1941 Attendance a Cutesiest ofr Pntetedt T F YOU GO to see your girl, you ’re interested in her. If ^ you go downtown to the movies, you’re interested in what th ey ’re showing on the screen. If you go to the library to get a book out, y ou ’re interested in reading it. If you go out to Clark Field in the afternoon, you're in­ terested in seeing the ball game. If you are a member of the Students’ Assembly and you go to all the meetings of that body during the year, you are interested in doing the work of the body and representing the students whom you have been elected to represent. If, however, you are elected to the Students* Assembly and you never go to the meetings of the Students’ As­ sembly, there is not much room for thinking that you are interested in the students whom you represent or the legislative program which the Assembly is attempting to carry out. Here is the record of attendance of the members of Meetings - 13 A ttended Absent 0 13 ...... ........ the Assembly for the past year: Name Cecilia Wheat ... _...... Idus Murphree ....... . George Yeld<*rman .............— Jack Hatcher ............. ........................ . Mary Liz Sutherland ....... ............... Boyce Gatewood .......... .—....... Rachel Martin Horten se Yarno —,—~— .....— Sam Field _____ ___ ____ ________ Walter Caven Ralph Spence ........... John Seaman — Noal Fagan .....____....._.......— Russell Leonard Mary Ruth Huntington Tommy Cook ............................... Edna Belle Perry ....... .... Ted Bartholow John Brandenberger Denton Cooley ......... .............. ..... ....... . .......... ............ —. .......... _ ...., 13 13 13 8 13 13 5 13 13 I S 1 3 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 1 2 12 7 l l 3 l l l l l l 9 9 9 9 8 7 7 5 5 I I I 2 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 4 5 6 6 8 8 IS 18 18 13 13 4 8 a member This is not to say that each time 9 IO stayed aw ay he did so because he was not interested. There was no doubt many times when most of the assem bly­ men had good reason not to appear— on account of sickness or some other equally good bona fide reason; but. it is reasonable to think that when a list of absences overbalance attendance or even equal it that there is a corresponding lack of real interest in the Assembly and the students represented by the absent essemblyman. Students, when other students ask you for an office, be careful about voting. Study the records of those seeking an office even for the first time, but be doubly searching of those who have asked you for office before and who are asking you for another office. Congratulations to Miss Cecille Wheat on her perfect record w’hich proves her IOO per cent interest in her job and the students of the School of Education, whom she represented. Pte-JP.au*!&04f l *7/te JhaUuj, (food Pbeedl / — HARLES ALTON, Glen Norman, Donald Shields, ^ M i l l a r d Lu th er , Ed w in Lea, and Sterling Fulmore, who a r e th e new officers o f the University Pre-Law Society, and their flock of members are to be congratu­ la ted as one ca m p u s club which has for next year a pro­ g r a m of some practical value. Th er e seems to be a growing evidence on the campus t h a t th e g r ow ing s w a r m of clubs, soon to equal the combined sa nds of the des ert san d beaches, accomplish little in w or th w h il e work. Before this y ea r’s work is over, the Pre-Law Society is at wrork on next year’s program. That program is one to help th e freshman pre-law student on the cam­ p u s ; first, to find out who the freshman pre-law is, then to help him g e t s ta r t e d on the right track as to courses an d use of his time and facilities so that when the time comes for him to enter the School of Law’, he will not find himself short of required work and knowing next t o nothing a b o u t th e workings of the School of Law. Such pre-requisite wor k as this in other fields of spec­ ialized study on the campus wrould not be amiss. PatexyiapJtl Phi Beta Phi has the largest membership of any col­ lege sorority. • • • • University of T oledo’s defense program is the largest of its kind in Ohio. Special engineering courses have attracted 1,140 students. To prevent spread of tuberculosis, N ew York City’s four municipal colleges now require X-ray examinations of the chests of all entering students. A pastel drawing of Mrs. Dwight W. Morrow recent­ ly was presented to Smith College. Dr. Egbert S. Wengert of the University of Wiscon­ sin has been appointed to fill the Carter Glass chair of government at Sweet Briar College, lifo u , lifo u a n d ty o u t t E W A S A young chap. Some people thought him very handsome, others thought him interesting, still others were sure that at best he was only average look* ing. Another group pronounced him boring and stupid* W hen he entered a room he attracted attention. Some people, however, didn’t even look at him. When he talked, he either seem ed brilliant or stupid. To many he wras a symbol of self-confidence; to otS« ers he seemed the embodiment of all self-consciousnesa. He either fascinated or disappointed you. Yrou either loved him or hated him. W ho w’as this young man? W ell, you look at him w henever you comb your hair* — HENRY HERZ f o r Suitable resolution the college generation might be to restore the period when g en­ tlem an and scholar m eant one individual. t h a t Scientist report* th* brains of backward races do not d iffe r from ours. We have suspected time w® it every read the papers. BUY " W l i * r « w p a r t i c u l a r p e o p l e c o n g r e g a t e <7!alkine}, Out D e a r E d i t o r ! The L ieutenant-Colonel’s e n ­ lightening speech to male " j ” students on th<*ir fu tu re status may he summed up aa “ quote- unquote.” [E d ito r’s note: Evidently th# w riter is re fe rrin g to a speech made on the campus recently by Lieutenant-Colonel Paul L. Wakefield, press chief of S e­ lective Service on “ The S tatus of the Journalism D raftee.” ] in Texas, “ The lends the point Admittedly tight-lipped, the officer said, “ We m ust first of all he good soldiers” (or else mamma take away your pen). In response to a question of what a “ j ” stud e nt will do when fir s t drafted, he said, y e a r they may g e t in the press section.” This to to he discussed. Why don’t we stop kidding ourselves? Three- fourths (conservatively) of our army bigwigs know when the war is coming, if not. the month and day, the year. O ur psychic is waiting commander-in-chief for the necessary event* to take the step. If public opinion keeps at the desired r a te (rem em ber G reenland ?) all is ready. Once is the United S tates to again the strong-arm ed po­ become liceman who will straigh ten things out? Intoxicated by the conception of our own prowess, we will again “ save the world’’ a t the cost of, let us say, a million men. There are those who will say I am a despondent pessimist. I am not. I look forw ard with in­ terest to the fu tu re . Will I he a Lieutenant-Colonel in 1964? Will I be a peaceable American citizen telling of how we did this way hack when? A fte r all, 90 per cent come back you know. Will the nod above my head as the boots go swishing by? Will the nation ’s the hit tunes still he “ Begin B a rra g e ” the and Bombers Come Back to Picca­ dilly” ? poppies “ When This all leads us hack to the proverb, “ The dice are cast; [sic] 7 come 6,939.” — WL A. M. D e a r E d i t o r : • Jo e Brennan, The T ex an’s a r t critic, seems to have a f a ir ­ ly thorough knowledge and u n ­ derstan ding of a rt. His a r t col­ umns and a r t review's have a tinge of “ professionalism— he mentions a rtis ts’ conceptions of trees in the early Rennaissance, cubist painters, and the works of Cezanne and Van Gogh. He says th a t in “ painting trees the pain ter doesn’t have to have a nything in particular and very in g eneral.” little or nothing F rankly, this means nothing to me, but app arently he know-s what he is talking about. I do not claim to know what a “ cubist” is or neither am I fam iliar with the works of Ce­ zanne and Van Gogh; b u t as a layman and one of the vast public to which aspiring artists present their pictures, I claim the rig h t of criticism or com­ mendation of the paintings as I see them, entirely ignoring, if I choose, w h a t others may say a bout the paintings. This is the privilege of any individual who gazes a t a work of art. Does he like the way a road winds over a hill? Does he think there has been a proper mingling of colors in the sky­ line? Does the a r tis t ’s concep­ tion of a tree meet his app rov ­ al? Impressions of a r t from a is personal how art. the Can he not convey to the r e a d ­ e r his impressions of a p a in t­ ing fully un derstanding that they are “ his” impressions and do not have to be accepted by the reader? Why not, th a t is what an a r t critic does. stand po in t— th at layman judges But ap paren tly I am wrong, because I, a layman, wrote a review of a r a r t exhibition th a t ap peared in the Texan recently and was roundly chastised for some of its co nten ts by the Texan A rt E d itor in his col­ umn of May 9. — STANTON FITZNER, D e a r E d i t o r s The straw t h a t broke the cam el’s back no doubt. Are sol­ diers being equipped with com­ pound microscopes nowadays to see the enem y’s bullets? A let- in T uesday’s Texan has the fol­ lowing ph rase : “ — a ten-inch slug followed by two or th ree .37mm. ones." I wonder if the decimal point was G. K.’s or the T e x a n ’s? I f you will exam ­ ine y o u r metric units, you will ra th e r find t h a t .37mm small linear dimension. Maybe th a t is the new sec re t weapon the N azi’s fsic] have developed. — F IS H E R L. FORREST. is a V o t e * o n T i / o t e e S h a d o w ness I can not see beyond the d a rk ­ Y et I know quite well th a t There m ust be some form, Some Light beyond my very eyes, To cast a Shadow. — P E T E R MICHAEL CURRY. • C o m p e n s a tio n God gives compensations For life’s saddest things: Today Is AT THE M ILAM Mothers Dine Free w hen accom panied th eir fa m ilie s! by IF SHE’S NOT HERE TODAY, COME TO THE MILAM AND ENJOY OUR SUNDAY SPECIALS V. A. Harrison, President, Says: " M i-a m C a fe te ria s are friendly institutions with a d e e p and sincere appreciation o f the sentim ent that go e s to m eta up M o th e r s Day. M o th e rs have dined free on M o th e r s D a y every year fo r well over a decade. This sm af g e s­ ture o f app re ciation of ell M o th e rs is a perm anent part o f the M lam s friendly p ro gra m ." Free Balloen*. *m Im an* cream for all kiddie*. 3 teen J fie** et Iced tea or af coffee alway* free! IV E l% R a p e d R a y The indulged consciousness of goodness is the way to lose th at goodness. Boasting of ability is the way to lose the m erit it m ight produce. — (SHU C H IN G ). I cann ot scale the heavens, Companion with the swal­ lows. But he gave my h e a rt wings. I cannot walk, fleet-footed, From care and sorrow free; My life sometimes is weighted. B ut God m ust have forseen i t: He sent you to me. — RUBY SMITH. AT HIGHEST CASH PRICES U N I V E R S I T Y C O - O P The Classified Ad Department Of The Daily Texan Offers Beginning May I ’Ti// May 27 Special Rates to All University Housemothers Now Is the Time to Advertise Those Rooms That Will Be Vacant H ere A re th e WitI Save You Money T h e early u»e of the ad vertising column* of the Classified A d S ec­ tion w ill give you an unusual opportunity to rent all of your vacant rooms. In order to aid t h e H ousem others, T exan m akes these sp e­ cial rates to those w ho w ant room ers for the summ er session. A ll ads w ill be classi­ fied under “Rooms for Boys,” and “Room* for G irls,” u n less oth erw ise Courteous specified. m essengers w ill call for your ad. This service is as near a* your te le ­ phone. PHONE 2-2473 b e f o r e 4:00 (Maximum of 20 Words) D ate Ad A pp ears No. Tim es Ad Appear* Co*! May 1 3 ............. .........1 4 ................... o iVI i nC f * * H »* M 14 ............ tm 15 ............ .......... 12 .............. 13................. ... 2 .1 0 ... 1.95 16 ______ _____l l _________ ... 1.8 0 1.70 17 .................. ....IO .......... ...... 9 ................. _ 1.55 18 ........... tm 20 ______ _____ 8 ________ _ 1.40 tm 21 ______ 7 ________ _ 1 .20 tm 22 ___ ___ _____ 6 ________ . . . 1 . 0 0 M 23 ______ ......... 5«.............. ~ .9 0 tm 2 4 .....___ _____ 4 _____...... ... .SO tm 26 ______ _____ 3 _______...... 27 ______ _____ 2 __________~ .7 0 .55 M THE DAILY TEXAN C lassified A d D epartm ent Journalism Building 108 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I E Y T E X A N - Phone 2-2473 PAGE FIVE R.A.F. Hits Supply Routes W ashington Bans Italian Veteran Activities in U. S. B y I n t e r n a t i o n a l N e w s S e r v i c e Forces Into Hills British Drive Iraq Washington witnessed Saturday night still another anti-Axis move by this government. The State Department, in an unheralded action, revoked the funds-solicitation permits of two Italian organizations in the United States. The federation of the Italian world war veterans in the U.S.A., Inc., and one of its women’s auxiliaries, were barred “““ from further activity in this coun-*""“ I for cutting non-defense spending These g r o u p s , the department b>' $ 1 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 Representative Jenkins (R) Ohio wrote Morgen- thau to remind him that he had told thought much might be saved from certain non-defense spending items. CAIRO, May IO— (INS) — Roy­ al Air Force bombers, it was an­ nounced officially Saturday night ; try. “ heavily and successfully” bomb cd wake of a naval shelling of that qualified distributors” of Has? Libyan capital. the port of Benghazi in the announced, were found to be “ not relief as F arther east on Libya’s coast acting “ for or on behalf of” the Italian Soliciting funds for any belligerent nation is prohibited by Federal law. funds, but must be regarded the committee he government. , . , Arid acting Navy Secretary Ralph Bard makes an usuaual an­ nouncement. He said the associ­ ated shipbuilders of Seattle has voluntarily offered to return prof- . lts which, (lue to Its increased vol- orders, became excessive. That, said Bard, is a good exam- of the < copulation being ac­ corded the Navy in this defens* program. , other R. A. F. squadrons ham m er-J od the port of Derna and the big Axis airdrome at Be nina likewise j was pounded from the air. But this is only one of a multi- I tude of gathering clouds darken­ ing the relations of this govern- merit with those of the dictator Axis. A momentous declaration of ume e relations may be made by , the Cairo headquarters stat- President Roosevelt next Wednes-j The vital roads north of Bardia, the Egyptian border, and near east of Axis-besieged Tobruk, the R. A. I od, were “considerably damaged” day night before the Pan-Ameri and transport c o l u m n s moving j can union meeting, along these “ destroyed.” Diplomatic quarters were of the opinion Mr. Roosevelt would take this occasion to say something of This indicated the R. A. F. had an even more crucial nature than thoroughfares were forces and convoy issue, e m b a r k e d on a campaign to b r e a k . die supply routes of German-ltal- t h e r e b y achieve ian the double purpose of relieving w o r d <, wjn be broadcast to Bur­ the long-beleagured British gar-j risen at Tobruk and undermining the Axis drive that into Egypt has reached the Solium area. H e will address the envoys of j the Latin-American republics. His J ope and South America. I Japanese Navy Said on Move NEW YORK. May IO.— (INS) —Unusual Japanese naval activ­ ity in the Far East was revealed Saturday with the arrival of the American export freighter Ex­ brook. imperial Meanwhile, a r m y troops scored new gains in Iraq, w h e r e pro-Nazi Rashid Ali Beg I Gailany’s uprising was its; death throes. in ’ retreating From Habbaniyam, freed from; Iraqi siege, British patrols slash - 1 , , 1 Iraqi columns cd af and drove them deeper into the sandy hills. Ramadi and Fallujah were cleared of dissident troops, and the area surrounding Hab­ baniyam brought completely un­ , “ We took a cargo of salt to Koji in Japan, where the Japan­ ese have a naval base,” chief offi- r^f‘r Latish domination. cer Leif Christiansen said. “While we were in Koji we sa w four Jap ­ anese airplane carriers steam out, heading saw , twenty Japanese warships when we were nearing Singapore.” a speedy disintegration of Rashid Ali’s attempt to drive the British out of oil-producing country. All indications pointed south, and this vital later . . to — The administration is apparently concerned in the possible economic effects of this country of a Ger­ man victory in Europe. The Com­ merce Department, in an unus­ ually outspoken statement, pre­ dicted that such a development | would possibly compel this country to adopt totalitarian methods of , in (economy rn order to survive ,, the post-war world. . Internal problems still beset the administration which is bending every effort to avert a threatened strike of eleven Pacific coast ship­ is crucial because yards. This thes<* yards are working to turn out a half-billion dollars worth of ships, including four naval cruis­ ers and twenty-seven destroyers. in There are 1,900 AFL and CIO the San machinists striking Francisco area. Joint appeals by Navy Secretary Knox and Mari­ time Commission Chairman Land were depended upon to help effect a settlement, The Exbrook finished a round- the-world cruise bringing a cargo of manganese from Singapore. , , . . . ..... “ We thought a t first the bomber K i hn aa in Christiansen said that when the ship was in the Indian Ocean a big bombing plane swooped down to within fifty feet of the ship s deck.. . , , . . i ,, ,, , a n n Wa roo u n was an Italian,” he said, “and we all the threw ourselves flat on deck, our eyes glued on the bomb racks under the wings— three big I bombs under each wing.” ., T. .. lift h o n In Abyssinia, too, further gains were claimed. The Italian strong­ hold of Fort Amba Alagi was heavily bombed by planes of the Oith African air force with many direct hits on barracks and supply I dumps. , , Senator Truman, chairman of a j special Senate defense investigat- i if all o t h e r ; ing committee, said Imperial troops and their Abys­ effort* fail, he will summon both sinian allies were reported advanc- , sides for a hearing on the dispute. • mg upon this base, one of the last Another committee— the House remaining in Fascist hands, from Ways and Means group, working the north and the south. Numer­ on the huge tax bill— called on inflicted on ous casualties were the Italians in these actions and ; Treasury Secretary Morgenthau to I submit specific recommendations many prisoners captured. , t , , , . , : . , , , Summery awning stripe* in cool torte**! A smarty for promenade or playdoth**,- Strap woven with Laster* ribbed crepe sole, completely washable. I * . IL &. SM. OM. LEO N ’S T h e S t y l e S h o p o f A u s t i n 618 C o n g re ss Good New s for M o n ied M en— and- SUNDAY, W AY IT, TOT College Profs Want Us in War, Lindbergh Says Flier Holds He’s Free to Speak, Is Not Pro-Nazi Engineers and Pre-Meds May Skip Draft B Y G R I F F I N G B A N C R O F T WASHINGTON, M a y IO.— service head­ (IN S )— Selective quarters will shortly amend its regulations to provide more uni­ form draft deferments for married men, it was officially disclosed to­ day. n e r . U n i v e r s i t y s t u d e n t * n o w s t u d y i n g c h e m i s t r y , e n g i n e e r i n g , o r p r e ­ m e d i c a l c o u r s e s m a y e x p e c t t o b e t o l d b y t h e a r m y t o s t a y i n c o l ­ in a p r o f e s s i o n a l a n d t e c h n i c a l m a n ­ l e g e a n d s e r v e t h e i r c o u n t r y t o l o c a l d r a f t b o a r d s S t a t e d i r e c t o r o f s e l e c t i v e s e r v i c e G e n e r a l J . W a t t P a g e h a s t h e m o v e m e n t s u g g e s t e d n o t t o d e p l e t e t h e r e s e r v o i r o f m e n in s p e c i a l i z e d h e l d * , c o n s i d e r a ­ t i o n s h o u l d b e g i v e n in e n g i n e e r i n g — c i v i l , e l e c t r i c a l , c h e m i c a l , m e c h a n i c a l , t h e s e f o r o c c u p a t i o n a l d e f e r m e n t t o s t u d e n t s l in e w i t h f i e l d s : t h a t i n m i n i n g , a n d m e t a l u r g i c a l — a n d f o r t h o s e s t u d y i n g c h e m i s t r y , m e d i ­ c i n e , a n d d e n t i s t r y . not broader question of dependency prob- Formal disclosure that regula- lorn,” Hershey wrote. We have lion changes are planned came in been studying all aspects of this a letter from Brigadier-General problem for a long while and have Lewis B. Hershey, acting draft di- reached some definite conclusions rector, to Representative Andrews upon which modified procedure have been an outstanding While nothing official was said about details of the new regula­ tions, authorities pointed out thai both the army and national draft headquarters have a1! along ad­ vocated more liberal deferment than some local boards have been granting. MINNEAPOLIS, May Draft spokesmen said unoffi­ cially the new regulations will call for much more liberal exemptions (IKS) — Charles A. Lindburgh to- for men with working wives and night declared he would continue others whose families are to apeak his mind on the issue of "•holly dependent upon them. .. IO. , . . war or peace for America despite’ the personal attacks made on him, and emphatically denied charges that he is pro-nazi. r “ I d o n t know how much longer' (R> New York, in answer to com- will be based. is expected I L' O V n . , , ,, j . n a h a a I n /in I U r t B »*/! » l n « M 4 n « Att* plaints th at some local boards now free epeech will be allowed rn this d(-fer a[] married men whj,e other> country,” he told a capacity au ­ dience at an America First rally, “ but as long as the laws permit it, I intend telling you what I be­ lieve.” sign many of them up. National Student Opiniont “We certainly agree that question of married men and the about uniformity.” It t that existing The Hershey letter came in re­ will be amended as ply to a letter from Adrian Block. soon as possible in order to carry member of a local board in Buf­ falo, N.Y., suggesting many pos­ sible changes in d raft procedure, the out the new procedure and bring in tho j which Andrews inserted Congressional Record. Block declared that tho quos- I tionnairo upon which most draft decisions are hast'd needed clari* I fication, and Hershey in his letter said that ‘‘tilt' questionnaire is at the present time being revised, as lit is recognized that it is deficient 'n some respects.” • R e g i s t r a n t s f o r s e l e c t i v e s e r ­ v i c e h e r e a f t e r m u s t c a r r y t h e i r r e g i s t r a t i o n c e r t i f i c a t e s “ a t all t i m e s ” a n d p r e s e n t t h e m u p o n r e q u e s t o f p r o p e r a u t h o r i t i e s , D i r e c t o r J . W a t t P a g e a n n o u n c ­ e d h e r e S a t u r d a y , I n t e r n a t i o n a l N e w s S e r v i c e r e p o r t e d . “ P r o p e r a u t h o r i t i e s ” l a w e n f o r c e m e n t i n c l u d e o f f i c e r , a n y a n y s e l e c t i v e s e r v i c e o f f i c i a l o f s t a t e h e a d q u a r t e r s n a t i o n a l o r o r a n y m e m b e r o f l o c a l t h e h o a r d o f a p p e a l s o r l o c a l b o a r d . Collegians Prefer N Y A O ver Loans, Grants • Recalling that his father, the late congressman from Minnesota,^ was attacked, traduced and brand- j ed pro-German two decades ago for trying to keep America out of the first \\ orld War, Lindburgh . declared that he, the son, was get­ ting the same treatm ent today. The famous flyer reiterated his per C d lt Wdllt Jobs Continued On Campuses Late World News conviction thai Lngland cannot , student O p i n i o n S u rv e y s of A m e r i r a win the was despite American a i d 1 Today the far-flung social poli- and urged a negotiated peace as j d e s of the New Deal administra- the only sane move for all the tion to relieve unemployment and I create a brighter future are the belligerants. a r e ; battlefront for many a long and presidents college Our Germans Retaliate for Berlin Raids Germany’s Luftwaffe lashed back at London Saturday night and early Sunday in retaliation for shattering British raids upon Berlin ! and the vital industrial districts of the Rhineland with a fire blitz which apparently equalled or surpassed any the British capital has ffered. shouting for war, Just as they did bitter discussion. Often debated su t !< ( Hour after hour repeated waves of Nazi raiders droned over the before. If only we send our armies j8 the question whether govern- once more, they tell us, if only I m e n t project workers earn their I heart of tho ci%’ showering all types and sizes of incendiary and ex­ T h e enough people in Europe can be ! compensation. starved and killed, we will be able Youth Administration, to spread peace and dem ocracyj tbe p]an to ajd college students, j M o r / c G n ' t n A i d o f I r o n and our way of life over the en- bas received its share of the criti- i tire earth. People who have been cjsm There is a question whether National j plosive bombs, including! • The Budapest radio reported that German troops were arriving in I N-Y-A- aid wil1 be continu<><1, for Iraq to aid the soldiers of pro-Axis Rashid AH Beg Gailani in their , savings must be effected to pay effort to hurl the British out of this vi tai oil-producing center of the | for defense, Washington officials' \fiddle East. ; “ We have been asked to fight for the ‘four freedoms.' But there A short time after a British communique issued a t Cairo stated that the situation in Iraq was quiet, and that Rashid Ali’s troops re other freedoms our p r e s i d e n t ; and women, recently quizzed by were jn retreat. The Berlin radio reported a successful surprise coun- A majority of the college men saying that peace must be brought by war. of te r_attack upon the British Habbaniyah air base, m advanced. French Would Oppose American Seizures ‘I doubt if any country less From German-occupied Paris came news that France would fight in a combination of European powers if the United States attempted inform ed I stead of paying money for what; to s e i z e any French territorial possessions, notably the West African in should grant loans to students in termed “clock w ind-1 base of Dakar. did not mention. One is the f r e e - Student Opinion dom to vote on vital issues. A n - ! America other is the freedom of informa- tion— the right of a free nannie college aid to know where they are being led Smaller percentages believe that : as an alternative the government by their government in a national poll, be-; lieve that N.Y.A. work is the best plan yet Surveys Europe has been about the intentions of its go v-; 80rT1e have ernment than we have been here jng” j 0b8. Still less would like to in America. I doube in- country there has been more mis-j stead of jobs, led about the actual developments o f the war. any i see government scholarships The complete poll, which th at in- Euro e have been hidden from us ber 120,000 students who Any attem pt to tell them met with bcdd N.Y.A. positions, was taken ! the utmost criticism and opposi- in scores of colleges and tion. When I stated in 1938, afte r f sitiea by means of the For yTaVs, the tru e facts a b o u t1 |*ludes. °.^!y ® np^ n ° rtr ! ! a t i n T ‘ D u t c h Flyers Make Bom bing Debut Voiced by Fernand de Brinon, Vichy delegate to the Nazi authori­ ties in Paris, this warning was sounded while Vice Premier Admiral j Harlan was in Paris negotiating with Nazi officials. The bomber, however, was Brit­ ish and dropped a message to the freighter weighted in a canvas bag and reading: “ Change your course Seizing upon the first anniversary of the Nazi invasion of Holland 45 degrees to port to close in with J ^ a1J;of' war* Where arP ' • * univer- and Belgium for the debut of Dutch bomber pilots, the Royal Air I Student. p orce hammered vital enemy targets from the Norwegian coast to you bound? careful study, th a t the German Opinion Surveys sampling mach in- p ranC(, and f rom the Rhineland to Berlin. air force was stronger than any ' ery operated in co-operation with combination that could be brought against it, I was charged with be­ ing both wrong and pro-nazi. the results, by per­ campus newspapers. Here are centages: Dutch naval flyers, who thus far have been employed by the R.A.F. j in ferrying planes instead of bombing and combat patrols went into acion for the first time Friday night Said one of the Dutch pilots: “ We have waited a long time for this.” The ship obeyed in str u c tio n s and presently sighted a battleship on the horizon. They then got a “ proceed on your course order.” “ W hich c o ll e g e aid plan do y ou th in k w ou ld be b e s t — job* “ C o n tin u in g N .Y .A . in c o lle g e s . ( 6 2 % ) . “ A w a r d in g g o v e r n m e n t s c h o ­ stu d e n ts. to w o r t h y larsh ips Union Fee (Continued from Page I) ( 18 % ) . “ M a k in g g o v e r n m e n t lo an s to tion committee. Galveston to Observe National Hospital Day Sp o r ta l to th e T t x n n 5 Ships Sunk, Say Nazis GALVESTON, May IO John Sealy Hospital, medical division of the University, will conduct for the first time a program to be en­ tered in the national competition IO— UNS)—- ; for the best Hospital Day program. New inroads into Britain's avail a b l e supply of merchant ships and National Hospital Day, May 12, port* commemorate, florence N ig h tie BERLIN, May to British slight between “ When I tell you today that we men and women, as these cross- There is difference of n e e d y s t u d e n t s ( 2 0 % ) . ” only a very opinion Since its number is fairly high, be in regular order b e f o r e the bill probably will reached th* session expires. And, except I fresh damage not “ When I said in 1939 that this J * war could not be won simply by Bending a few thousand airplanes and cannon to Europe, I was ac­ cused of being misguided and un- American. When I told you in 1940 that the phrase ‘steps short of w ar’ was nothing but a mask for war itself, I was called a fifth columnist and a Hitler agent. . * x ~ are not in a position to win this war for England, I am charged with being disloyal by the same politicians and idealists who deni- ed a1! the other statement* when I made them. “ But they cannot point to ■ingle one that has not out to be tru e !” Lindbergh took occasion here to deny sympathy with Nazi aims. a turned “ I have never wanted Germany to win this war,” he said. “ But I know that England is not in a position to win it, even with our help. That is why I have con­ advocated a negotiated stantly idea th a t the entire peace. The continent of Europe be blockaded into submission is ridi­ culous. can “ Short of an internal collapse, of which there is no sign today, the only way Germany can be defeated is by invasion. Even if an invasion were possible, which resulting k l do not believe, YWevastation would be so great that Bbrope could not recover for gen­ erations, if it ever could recover at all. the • “ The developments of this war have shown bow difficult it is to forest a landing and to supply an expeditionary force on a hostile e o S t and line routed r l f we intend to invade Europe against the ©position of the same army and air force th at broke the the Maginot British forces in Norway, Flan­ ders and Greece, then the United States must become a military and regimented nation th at su r­ passes Germany herself in totali­ tarian efficiency. • “ In that case, we might as well realize that ‘our way of life’ is a that our thing of the past and children will be fortunate if they live long enough to see it again. in conditions which exist The ^Germany today will seem moder- f ate in comparison to those which will result from a prolongation of this wa*.” . . . tabulations show: C o n tin u e N .Y .A . S ch o lar sh ip s c . r U n m . M l o a n . M en W o m e n _ 6 1 % 6 4 % 18 21 19 1 7 ' P o ll- (Continued from Page I ) son when you see how many have already received their question­ naires : Even the women’s All Got q u e s tio n n a ire s 20 Have none y e t -------------------80 Srs. 46 64 intuition spells the possible fate for the men of draft age, for 62 per cent of the co-eds believe the U. S. can­ not stay out of the war. Tabula­ tions of women students shows: Can stay o u t --------------------29% Can’t stay o u t ------------------- 62 % Don’t k n o w -------------------------9% The survey was taken by regu­ lar Bureau methods that accurate­ ly predicted the results of the stu­ dent elections last month. A 3 per cent sampling of a cross-sec­ tion of the students of the Uni­ versity was taken by the Bureau's staff of six trained N. Y. A. workers. Allied Shipping Lottes Reported Much Higher „ , . I were claimed Saturday night by gale a birthday. on Mondays, a memoer usually ^ Luftwaffe, although casual*; asks for a suspension of the rules only for a bill that is very close to his heart, and one, moreover, that stands a fair chance of pas­ sage. Tarrying on an extensive cam- ties and some damage in Royal paign to make Texans aware of Air Force raids on Mannheim and the celebration, the nursing and medical students have conducted Berlin were acknowledged. ra which are under the direction port facilities along the western i of Miss Grace Carolyn Collins, in­ and southern English and eaatam j s"t‘r " ^ r ^ 'n u r a 'i n * ' Scottish coasts. Monday is the regular “suspen­ sion day” in the House, and on thin day a member can call up any bill he wants to; but in reality few bills are fortunate enough to be taken up on this day, because there is always a mad scramble for this privilege. With the exception of this Mon- day privilege, each member is per- mitted to request suspension of the rule:- only once during the ses- J sion. Consequently a member de- I liberates pretty thoroughly before j requesting a suspension. If the Union fee hill gets to the j floor, it will be because some mem- j ber thinks enough of it to use j his only suspension request. Rep­ resentative John Bell, its author, says he or some other member will ask for a suspension whenever— and if— conditions appear favor­ able for its passage. A British night that sought to intercept the German raiders was stated to have been shot down. fighter by The same rider of Seven R. A. F. raiders, the high two years command announced, were shot ago was included in the appropria­ down during the latest w-ave of tions bills drawn up both British attacks over German and Senate and House committees. But ; occupied territory. Five were said appropriations ; to have been felled in combat with when the House bill reached the floor, Union fee J Nazi night fighters and by inland ground guns, while the other two opponents succeeded in having the were shot down by naval anti- rider eliminated. The Senate did not eliminate it from its appro- j aircraft guns on occupied priations bill. Consequently the LONDON, May 10.— (IN S )— Disclosure th at 6,260,238 tons of British and allied shipping have free conference committee will de- j been lost through enemy action icide whether it will be retained in j since the outbreak of the war to­ the night added new to flames of a controversy as whether the British public has been told the entire truth about the vital merchant shipping sit­ uation. the bill for the next two yars. It seems reasonable that if the University presses inclusion of the rider, the conference committee will include it. Bitter House oppo- j breezed to a three set victory in nents may lobby I the other semi-finals over U. T.’s against it with conference Reuben Riskind and Henry Bai- committee, and if they do, it is j*r, 6-4, 6-3, 6-2. (Continued from Page I) Tennis- - This statement of losses, com­ conceivable the I coast. fuel to the ing from official sources, placed 1 hard to say what the conference the total a t a higher figure than committee will do. Even if the rider is retained in had been suppoi»edt lent the appropriations bill, it is not weight to the clamor for a “show down” on shipping losses so f a r sure, of course, that thf* Univer- as is consistent with national ae-jsity will utilize the authority it fl i n t y . 1 confers, and The morning’s strenuous dou­ bles match obviously left Christner tired for his title match with Rod­ gers, but Christner at his very best would have been unable to cope with Rodgerg’s excellent play Saturday afternoon* SENIOR RIN GS POINT OUT THAT YOU ARE A GRADUATE OF TEXAS M e n ’s I OK G old Ring Set with Garnet $18.00 Men’s Silver $10.00 Men's Silver Gold Overlay $15.00 U N I V E R S I T Y CO-OP C O L D S T O R A G E ...th e foxy thing to d o ... about your FURS and winter clothes /%» I * -J ," STORE Furs and Winter Clothes NOW ! Try our special offer which Includes a thorough d e an in gr glazing . . • insurance to $50.00, and vault stor­ age to Dec. 31, 1941 of any fur for only $ 5 °o Furs Stored for 3 % of Your Valua­ tion. M inim um of Only $2 Ladies' W o o l Dresses Cleaned and Stored Ladies* W o o l C o a ts Cleaned and Stored Ladies' Mannish Suits Cleaned and Stored Sweaters Cleaned and Stored Plain Skirts Cleaned and Stored ......... Ladies' Silk Dresses Cleaned and Stored M en's 3-Piece Suits Cleaned and Stored M en's O vercoats Cleaned and Stored.... $1.50 $1.50 . . . $ 1 . 0 0 50e up 80c $1.50 up $1.00 $1.50 Men's Sport C o a ts Cleaned and Store d ........... - .......... - ............ 75c W e A lso Store Com forts, Blankets, Drapes, Etc. D on 9t T a k e Y o u r W in te r C lo th e* H o m e ♦ • • S ta r G T h e m W ith lim! S to r e N o ir . • • P a y N e x t F a t!! nusTirI I■4llIDIDRi A N D D R Y C L E A N I N G C O M P A N Y I dial 3 5 6 6 - tOe do ’JoMutg tdaihimf • DIAL3566 ^ ■ 1 5 1 4 LAVACA STREET Retiring Zeta Head Bolivian Speaks Here Next Tuesday Three outstanding I.atin-Ampr- ican representatives will be guest* of honor at the Ifite r- A in e rk an clo«ing banquet M ay 13 in the Texas Union. Seftor Carlo* S a la ­ manca, member of the Chamber of Deputies of Bolivia and brother of the ex-prusident, who has just arrived in N ew York C ity, w ill be the guest speaker. Th** D epart­ at Washington ment of S fate wired th'1 Association Satu rd ay oJ rill hi* acceptance. The U niversity will be the first school that Seftor S a l­ amanca will vi*;t. Also invited is the Mexican Con­ sul G eneral from Jton Antonio, highest ranking diplomatic o ffi­ in Texas. W ith the Consul cial General will come General M ax­ imo A vila Camacho, older brother of the President of Mexico, just back from Johns Hopkins. Fo r the Consul General, who is a recent appointee of the new adm inistra­ tion, this will be hi* first visit. Dedicating the banquet to the I,atin Am erican In^titut* of Stu- die«, the honor guest* will be the executive com mittee: Fir. C harles W\ H ackett, F)r. J . Gloyd Me- cham, M r. Donald Coney, Dr. George I. Sanchez, Dr. C, M Fn- gerrand, and Dr. J . R. Spell. Jo e Neal, president of the Association, will a rt as master of ceremonies. All interested are weleoma to at­ tend. Os Waldo Ramirez, state presi­ dent of the Pan Am erican S t u ­ dent Forum , has written that he will also attend the banquet. North The dinner will be a candlelight affair, with cacti in bloom serv­ ing as candle holders. Pan A m er­ ican flags will decorate the tables. A t each place will be a m> nu in and the the shape of South Am erican continents, with the program and menu printed on the inside Latin Am erican music ; will furnish the background, The committee in charge has j asked that reservations be made in as they will be closed at advance 200. Price of the plate 75 cents. The banquet will begin at 6:30. is 2nd Folk Song Volume By Lomaxes on Sale A cross section of American folk balladry, poetry, and music, Since 1933 the Lomaxes have I recorded Amer ican folk songs for Folk ‘ the Archive of Am erican Songs in the L ib r a r y of Congress. They have transcribed thousands of songs, making the A rchive’s col­ lection one of the largest of its kind in the world. The Lomaxes have to gone to round-ups on cattle ranches, Negro square honky-tonks, to dances in the mountains, to lum­ ber camps in Michigan, to the rice fields in Louisiana, and to Haiti and the Bahamas in the West In ­ dies in search of Am erican folk songs. In the new volume, Miss Ruth C raw ford Seeger, young A m eri­ can composer, has transcribed the music. The hook is on -ale at hook- j -tores on the drag at $5. a1 meeting Monday night at. 7 :30 o’clock in Geology Building 301. The new officers will take charge of the meeting. for next T A U B K T A PT, honorary en­ gineering fratern ity, recently elec­ ted Carl Furgason, senior chemi­ cal engineering student, of Gould- busk, president year. Frank Pttgsley was elected vice­ president; Drexel! Carr, recording secretary; Ernest E. Ludwig, cor­ responding secretary; C* P. Ja c k ­ son, treasurer; and Ode Carlisle, cataloger. Dean Edw ard Bantel was chosen as the new member of the advisory council. B ill McDugald. junior petrol­ eum engineering student of A u s­ tin, wa* elected president of the O F A M E R IC A N for next M IN IN G E N G I N E E R S year. Other officers are Jim m y Ford, vice-president; A. P. C lark, secretary; and E . Faseler. treasurer. IN S T IT U T E J , A ll 30 C L U B members, includ­ ing the new pledges, will meet at 5:30 o’clock in the Main Lounge of the Texas Union Sunday a fte r­ noon. A ll pledges should call M ar­ ianna Sluder at 2-3388 and tell her if they are coming. S « n i ° r B l * * ® 5 V A W ® $35.50 s t * ' 0 R * NS $30.00 s s r m & f all senior needs ak U N I V E R S I T Y C O - O P Today On the Campus M ORNING: 7 :30-~Corporate communion. A ll Sa in ts’ Chapel. IO— Break fa st for Alpha Delta P; senior*,/Austin Country Club. A F T E R N O O N : 2— Alpha Chi Omega picnic Bastrop. 3:15 Greek Round-Up, K N O W . 4-6— U niversity Orchestra garden party, home of Mr*. Homer U l­ rich, 1507 Newfield Lane. 5:30— 30 Club pledge service*. Texas Union. N IG H T : 6:30— Sunday Club, Gregg House. Supper w ill follow. 7— Sigm a Delta Chi dinner. Home at Economic* Tea House. 7— P h i Kappa Sigma Fraternity banquet, Pan-Am erican Room. D riskiil Hotel. 5— Home Economies Club to elect officers fo r next year, H. E . Building 108. • M ONDAY A F T E R N O O N : 4:45— Panel discussion of student government in Union 309. J. Fred Nieman, W ard Elizabeth Sutherland, Dr. R. L, Sutherland, and Dr. O. D. W’ eek* will speak. Pouts, N IG H T : 7— Chem istry will review Y .M .C .A . 801 Coaching class fo r finals, room 7, 7— Forensics and Rusk Lite ra ry together, Texas Society meet Union. 7— Scottish Rite supper for upper­ class advisers. 7 :15— Dr. H a rr y H. Ransom, i s ­ s u a n t professor of English, and V , I. Moore, dean o f student life, to advise Freshm en O rien­ tation committee members, Texas Union 315-316. 7 :15— The establishment of an in­ ternational house for student* will be discussed by Internation­ al Relations Club, M ain Lounge, Texas Union. The T exan Classified Aa; r n rn I wk Announcem ents Announcements Laundries Cafes Cafes T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F T E X A S o f fe r s through the Extension Division 263 Courses by Correspondence Given hy I 7 Faculty Members For further ' ,'.Io r~ a d d r e s s THE EXTENSION TEA CH IN G BUREAU D IV ISIO N OF N X T F N SION LITTLE CAM PUS AUSTIN Automobiles Automobiles w n m o D E i ^ ^ S B s ip C A * p s f HAPPINESS ON EASY TERMS! — That’n what you will get, if you choose from this group of specials. Dodge sedan, radio equipped, outstanding 1939 4-door Dodge sedan, value $675.00 1939 Pi/mouth De Luxe C oup e. New tires, reconditioned .... 545.00 and ready 1939 Ford Fordor sedan. W a y above the a v e n g e 535.00 1938 Plymouth 4 door sedan. W o u ld make a wonderful fam ­ ily rar. Beautiful appearance inside and out 445.00 1938 Dodge De Luxe coupe. Sporty seat covers, radio, orig- 450.00 ina; pa nt, reconditioned and read y to drive 1936 Plymouth 4-door. O riginal finish, extra clean inferior. 295.00 Very low rn age Smfl'l Down Paym ent— Easy Budget Terms “Open Sunday and N ights'' TI fOMSON MOTOR 4th St Lavaca COMPANY Phons 5391 bend blouse*. [sundered L A D I E S F R O C K S , lin g e rie s ; lei L u x . U tm o s t ce re r iv e n eeoh f» rm » n t. M e n d in g . S a t is f a c ­ tio n g u a ran te e d . P h o n e 2-9013, 1921 S a n Antonin. Lost and Found L O S T G la s s e r — fi* .h o e s. A. S c h w a rts . Ph . 6-0184 P R I C E S fo r M A L K I N P A Y S M O R E fo r Uaed S u its. L . .C lo th in g and Shoes. 407 E a s t 6. 8-0266 rrrm :," r , ■ — -..... . --rrsr-.TT. P h o n e ; n z z z z r Western Equipment C A P I T O L S A D D L E R Y — W e s t e r n clo th e s. S ilv e r b uckle se ts, b elts, ch ap s. boots, horses and ponies. 161# L a v a c a ._________ sad dles. sp u rs, h o lsters, A ls o P H Y S I C S — M A T H E M A T I C S . L . W h e e le r. 418 P h y s ic s B ld g . 9171— 868. U N I V E R S I T Y C O A C H IN G B U R E A U A ll C o u rse s. P h . 3-6002 4 2-6090. E F F E C T I V E M A T H C O A C H IN G P u r e and A p p lied R . M. R a n d le 2809 S a n A n to n ie R , W . F a r t P h . 2-6516 S P A N I S H , F R E N C H . L a t in . M r*. H u m ­ p h re y. 204-B W . 20. P h . 8-2049. E N G L I S H T U T O R I N G by experienced te a ch e r w ith M . A. D eg ree, P h . 2-1888. 4th & San Ja c in to Ph. 2*3 l l I S P A N I S H . F re n c h . G e rm a n . Ita lia n . E x p . teach er. 1701 C o ng ress. 2-7104, Announcements Dressmaking M R S . N I C K E L — S p o rt clo th s. e ve n in g gowns, a lte ra tio n s . 2608 G uad alup e. Classified Advertising RATE CARD READER A D S 20 Words— Maximum L E A R N T O D A N C E . I Ie * .o n . 82.60 G la s s * * — M o n d a y , T h u rs d a y , 7:80 p jn . A N N E T T E D U V A L D A N C IN G S C H O O L ! IO * W e s t 14 S t. Ph o ne* 2-9086— 8 - 3 9 5 1 J Dancing For Sale tim * 1 2 tim e* 8 tim es 4 tim es 6 tim es < times i Reader Ads Ars To Be Run On Consecutive Days - I .40 .66 . .7# . .60 . . .00 . 1.00 i 94o f o r d c l u b c o u P F C o n v e rtib le *^c Charge for Copy Change in e x c e lle n t co n ditio n . R ad io , H e a te r, A u to m a tic T o p. W il l se ll C h ea p fo r cash. 2-4988. Laundries DISPLAY A D S I column wide by I inch deep 60c per insertion s m a ll, also q uiet room f o r T W O L O V E L Y a p a rtm e n t* — L a rg e and lady. P r i ­ v a te e n tra n ce, all cool, sh ad y. N e a r U n i ­ v e r s it y , 2610 Salad o . O N E B L O C K ram p u a— fo r l l * , *20. |2 2 . $25. 2206 S a n A n to n io . 2-8108. couples o r g entlem en stu d e n ts, w e st o f N I C E L Y F U R N I S H E D a p a rtm e n t, ir ig id a ir e ap a rtm e n t. Bedroo m , aire . Redu ced p rice on 22nd. 2-6806. A ls o three-room E a s t g arag e frig id - leaae, 906 W e s t tile bath, Furnished Houses C O O L , H O M E Y , co m fo rta b ly fu rn ish e d . E it h e r a w h o le house or an a p a r t ­ m ent. T w o blocks cam pus. G a ra g e . 2620 W ic h it a . M rs. B o w m a n . 4598. Furnished Rooms H ig h e s t T H E W I C H I T A — 2619 W ic h it a S tre e t. a v a il ­ ab le. S u m m e r rate s. B lo c k n o rth W o m ­ e n ’s G y m . P h o n e 2-1740. ty p e acco m m o d atio n * 2608 G U A D A L U P E — L o v e ly for boys, men o r b u sin e ss w om en. N ic e ly fu rn ish e d , tw in beds, in n e rs p rin g mat- tresses, sh ow ers, p riv a te e n tra n c e , 8087. room Light Housekeeping ’One Day Service’ DRISKILL HOTEL LAUNDRY uTrust your duds to our Suds” Phone 6444 119 East 7th. W e re s e rv e to corresp ond w ith Th* D a ily T a x * * . the rig a t to e d it eopy t h * s t y le need h r M e ssen g e r S e r v ic e a n ti] 4:06 a rn. a n ti] w eek-day*. C o u n ter s e rv ic e R O O M S and H O U S E K E E P I N G R O O M S — Sle e p in g porches, g ir l* ’ ap pro ved house. $7.59 up A ls o housekeeping fo r couples. — A p a rtm e n ts cam pus. 2-4748. b lo ck s tw o 6 p.m. ALL A D S C A S H IN A D V A N C E Dial 2-2473 for further information or messengar service. R e*po ns fbi* t o r #4 * I S M f f M t in se rtio n o n ly H o re fu n d s fo r m a c e !In tl— a. Garage Rooms B O Y S — L a rg e , coo?, fo r tw o men. a t t r a c t iv e ly fu rn ish e d , pine w a lls, e v e ry th in g p riv a te , b ills paid and p o rte r s e rv ic e paid. M rs . Bo w m an . 4598. stu d io room * M E N - — G o and see th o se u n u s u a lly a t ­ t r a c t iv e pioneer atu d io room s now be­ in g com pleted. 2004 W ic h i t a S tre e t. T w o doors cam pus. M rs . B o w m a n . 4598. Room & Board U N I . G I R L S and tra n s ie n t fa m ilie s ae* com m odated. 2206 N uecea. 8-4340. 1918 S P E E D W A Y — H u tc h is o n H o u s e - * B O Y S . D e licio u s m eals and a t t r a c t iv e room *. D e lig h t fu lly cool sleeping p orch e s. In n e rs p rin g m a ttre sse s, tile sh ow er. R e s * e l a t i o n s now a v a ila b le . P h o n s 6-8S14. Z w 2104 G U A D A L U P E — M e n o r co u p les. M a k e y o u r re s e rv a tio n * now fo r n ic e room s and e x c e lle n t m eals. 687.50 p er su m m e r se m e ste r. M r * . P a tte rs o n . P h o n e 6559. orado. R e s e rv a tio n s M R S . L I N D L E Y S ’— fo r g irls , 1803 Col- fo r su m m e r n o w a v a ila b le . M e a l tic k e ts . S le e p in g porches, sh ow ers, and m aid W e s t 18th. P h o n e 2-0194. s e rv ic e . A ls o H S Rooms for Boys 2721 G U A D A L U P E — C ool new# U n iv e r s it y . S le e p in g porch, s h o w e rs , lin e. M e als o p tio n al. $9.50 p er hom e on bus term . Ph o n e 2-1079, R E S E R V A T I O N S A V A I L A B L E fo r air- cooled room s w ith sh o w e rs. M e als op ­ tio n a l. A lso e ffic ie n c y a p a rtm e n t. b locks W h it is . cam pu s. 2-2969. fro m 4 280# 911 W E S T 19th— L o v e ly D o u b le R o o m . A ls o tin g le room . P r iv a t e b ath. P r i ­ In d iv id u a l clo sets, V e n t v a te en tra n ce. tia n b lind s. S u m m e r ra te * . 7966. M A K E R E S E R V A T I O N S C o o l. m odern, a t t r a c t iv e room s, w ith p r iv a t e e n tra n ces, clo thes clo se ts, b o o k sh e lve s, sh ow ers. S u m m e r ra te s , 800 E a s t 2 0 th. N O W . N I C E , cool roo m s, sle e p in g p o rc h e s. S u m m e r ra te s . 208 W . 18th. 2-2588. C L E A N , C O O L , S in g le bad*. optio nal. S u m m e r Ph o n e 2-8211. c o m fo rta b le ro o m s, S tee p in g porch. M eal# ra te * . 215 A r c h w a y . Unfurnished Apartments B O Y S — L a r g e m odern room , six w in ­ dow s, p r iv a t e tile s h o w e r. B ills paid, g arag e . S p e cia l su m m e r rate. 1908 S a n G a b rie l. P h o n e 2-8885. T H R E E A T T R A C T I V E R O O M S — p r iv a t e e n tra n ce, p r iv a t e bath, screened p o rch , 820. g arag e, bus. 809 M a n o r 2-6179 a ft e r fiv e . R o ad . On Your Vacation or Week­ end Trips Travel via KERRVILLE BUS C O M P A N Y , Inc. t4Frbendly Service” T H E S H O R T E S T A N D B E S T R O U T E T O Houston, Beaumont, Galveston, Victor a, Corpus Christi, Schul- enberg, Kerrville, San Angelo, Big Spring, El Paso. D A I L Y P O IN T S S C H E D U L E S D A I L Y T O S E V E N S C H E D U L E S H O L S T O N A N D E A S T . Bu s e s le a ve A u s t in at 6 a rn., 8 i . n , 10:30 a rn., 2 p.m. 4 p.m .. 6 p.m.. 3 p.m. T H R E E K E R R V I L L E P O I S I S . B u s e s at 7:00 a m., T H R E E S C H E D U L E S C O R P U S T E X A S P O IN T S . B u se s a.m ., 1 :30 p.m. and 7 :25 p.m. T O A N D W E S T T E X A S le a v e fo r the W e s t I p.m ., an d 6:15 p.m. T O S O U T H le a v e 7 HO C H R I S T I D A L L Y A N D S C H E D U L E S T W O T O B R Y A N . B u s e s le a v e A u s t in a t 1:45 p.m. and S p.m . D A I L Y L O W F A R E S T O A L L P O IN T S F O R FC R I H E R I N F O R M A T I O N C A L L B L S T E R M I N A L PH O N E 2-1135 jo lica , A N T I Q U E S fo r M O T H E R S ’ D A Y : M a ­ I a ria n , bique. m ilk s a tin and P itc h e rs , d em its*# * colored g la ssw a re . cups and saucer#, 1304 R io G ra n d * . Antiques Cafes B M O SBM CLAD ALUM Rent Rooms Now! Students are looking for Cool Summer Rooms before Final F.w»m* Call 2-2473 Before 4:00 for Messenger Service Mrs. J . C. Moulton, retiring province president of Zete Ten Alpha sorority, presented the silver service which was given upon her re* tirement, to ICoppe chapter in Austin. Mrs. Moulton was the first pledge of Kappa chapter. S ociety Sty* Patly tean P A G E SIX SU NDAY, M A Y I I, 1941 Phyllis Seals Named Newman Sweetheart *. Ju s t before the grand march at the Newman Club formal Satu rd ay ■ including more than 250 songs are " f bolk father. , on night. Phalli. S t i l l WM p r ti‘ nttd a. th. Ntwman Club S w .t t h t .r t ; . Although th i balloting took p lat. two w o k . ago. th. raiu lt WM not L . made public until last night when Father V incen t F . Holden, Chap- lain of the Club, announced that MD* Seals had been elected. „ hv th , j 0hn A and Alan . “ Am erican Ballads and in * " " T 1 '">'»"■« c u t - .. . I , , t i , A senior majoring in sociology,* I the new sweetheart has been ac­ tive in Newman Club affairs. She has been in charge o f catechism instruction for the Mexican chil­ dren in E a s t Austin for the past two years and in this capacity has worked under the direction of Fath er Holden. As vice-president of the Newman Club, she has been chairman of social activities. Sh# is the retiring treasurer of j Panhellenic and of Delta Gamma I gororitv of which she is a charter members. Miss Seals is the second sweet­ heart in the history of Newman Club. Last year, the honor went to Dorothy Fischer of Cuero who it now teaching at Seguin. P H Y L L I S S E A L S C l u b N o t e s H O M E E C O N O M IC S C L U B will at H a rre ll’s Hole. Those going are have a called meeting Monday af- requested to mer>t at Memorial Fountain at IO o’clock Sunday morning. Transportation w ill be ternoon at 5 o'clock in H. E Bull tog 108 to elect officers for next f urni7hed. year. Members of F O R E N S IC A w I. meet with members of the R U S K L I T E R A R Y S O C IE T Y at 7 o’clock M* R u i’din* 1 lh M onday night in the Texas Union. A S G FL w ill meet Monday 7J 30 ° ‘ lock !n E n * in e fr' There will be a meeting of the . p n k <” > T u w d .y .f t e r r i t 5 o'clock rn E N G IN E E R I N G A S S E M B L Y Engineering Building 116. t Bud Cheatum of R U S K L IT E R - AV**, A R Y S O C IE T Y wul “ W om en,” and some member of F O R E N S IC A will speak on •‘Men ’’ A talk also will ne given by H oward Townsend, sponsor of Forensic#. The U N I V E R S I T Y D A M E S will have th* r last meeting of the sea­ son next Wednesday, It will be an a11-day meeting at the home of Mrs, Jo e T. Stedham. The new officers for the organization will Possibilities fu r estxblishmen of an international house for n u dents w ill be discussed by IN T E R - : >•, N A T IO N A L R E L A T IO N S C L U B M onday night at 7:15 o’clock t the Main Lounge o f t> e Texas ’ r U nion. The meeting w ill be ©per to all inter?*** d in this project. E P IS C O P A L S T U D E N T S of the ! U n iversity w ill celebrate a cor-} porate communion in A ll- S a in ts '! * hap?! Sunday morning at 7 .30 of o'clock A L P H A K A P P A D E L T A , hon­ M other’s Day and then w ill be en-j ie orary sociological fraternity, will tenanted at breakfast rn Gregg entertain with a picnic Friday af- H Cavin, ternoon at 3 o'clock. Picnickers n. w ill play garnet and swim. use by Mr*. M artha thee of Grace Hall, in m em ory; commemoration of her mother. in A luncheon honoring outgoing T R I A R T H R U S , honorary Geol* members and the sponsor w ill be ogy organisation, w ill hold it* fin- given by newly-eiected member! • f M O R T A R B O A R D Thursday afternoon at I o’clock at the Horne Economics Tea House. THE SHORTEST DISTANCE The T E X A S S O U T H E A S T C L U B p icauc w ill be held Sunday BETWEEN TWO POINTS IS HEARTS-15c W a t c h C r y o U U 3 S c m a d SO C T u r n e r B r o t h e r s J e w e l e r s SSI c o n c h e s * PHONE s-seoo b o s t a l Telegraph Miss Ratchford Is Honored At Banquet Miss F a n n ie R a tc h f o r d , W r e n n l i b r a r ia n , w hose n e w book, “ T he B r o n t e s ’ W eb o f C h ild hood,” has j u s t bee n re le a se d by the p u b lis h ­ lunc h eo n er, w as h o n o r e e a t a given S a tu r d a y noon by Mrs. U p­ c h u r c h a t h e r hom e on W in d so r ; Road. F r ie n d s o f Miss R a tc h f o r d s u r ­ p rised h e r w ith sp eeches to show t h e ir a p p r e c ia tio n o f h e r w o rk as a n a u t h o r . Those on th e p r o g r a m in c lu d ed Mrs. J. B. W h a r e y , Mrs. WL E. Long, Mrs. J. F r a n k Dobie, Miss E d !cen Begg, a n d Mrs. A. N. M cCallum. Miss R a tc h fo r d h as pu b lish ed j six o th e r books, tw o of w hich also a r e on th e s u b je c t o f th e B r o n te sis te rs. A t p r e s e n t she is w o rk in g *>n a su r v e y of old homes in T exas. She has heen c o n n e c te d w ith th e j f a m o u s W r e n n L ib r a r y e v e r since ; it w as p u r c h a s e d by the U n iv e r ­ sity m o re th a n tw e n t y y e a r s ago. P la c e s w ere laid a t th e se ate d lu n c h e o n f o r t h e fo llo w in g : Mes­ d a m e s J. F r a n k Dobie, M a rk L. G oodw in, A. N. M cC allum , D. H. D oom , J . B. W h a r e y , J u lia n M ont- I g o m e ry , C h e s te r N ag le, M. C. Cook, WL R. W yse, J . T, P a t t e r ­ son, H. B. A r m s tr o n g , W. E. L ong, H. L. D arw in , R o d g e r Kel- , ly, H a r r i s B ru sh , R. A. B u f o r d , j H. P. Brow n, P a u l G o ld m a n , R ay- i m o n d Hill, E r n e s t R. H a r d in , W . G. F r a n k lin , E d F r o m m e of E l­ g in , Mrs. U p c h u r c h , a n d Mrs. W a lte r G. L acy a n d h e r s is te r , Miss N in a Glass o f W aco. Also Misses R a tc h fo r d , E d le e n Begg, A n n ie W e b b B la n to n , C la r a M ay P a r k e r , M arie B. M orrow , L illian Wrester, M a ry H u ff Ord, a n d M a r th a L ocke tt, th e hostess, ! End of School Theme Depicted A t Pi K. A. Dance G le e C lu b to Pay Baromeo Tribute F a r e w e l l t r i b u t e will be paid C h a se B a ro m eo , p r o f e s s o r o f voice and f o r t h r e e year* d ir e c to r o f th e M e n ’s Glee Club, w hen th e sin g ­ in g o r g a n iz a tio n h as its annual b a n q u e t M onda y n i g h t at 7 o ’clock in t h e E n g lish Room o f the T exas pinion. L e a d e r sin c e S e p te m b e r , 1938, w h e n he cam e to th e U n iversity, M r. B a ro m e o t h i s s p r i n g t h a t he w ould have to resign f o r lack of tim e. No su c ce sso r h a s bee n n a m e d y et. a n n o u n c e d P r e s e n t a t i o n o f a w a rd s, songs b y th e C o-Ed F o u r a n d th e L o n g ­ h o r n Q u a r te t, a n d m ov ing p ic tu r e s o f th e y e a r ’s ac tiv itie s will co m ­ p r ise th e p r o g ra m . A u stin a l u m ­ n a e hav e been a s k ed to a t t e n d . oigma a i to Install O fficers at Banquet o f H S sig m a Xi. h o n o r a r y s c i e n c e fra - ■ n ity, will hold its a n n u a l ban- ■ h ~ T u e s d a y n ig h t a t 7 o ’clock U t th e J u n i o r B a llro om th e t e x a s U nio n. I G iven in honor o f the in itia tes pnd new o ffic er s, the program in itiation o f w ill con sist o f the n ew m em bers, the in stallation o f n ew o ffic e r s, and th e p residential address by Dr. R oger W illiam s, w ho has served as p resident o f the organization fo r the past year. One hundred and f ift y g u ests are ex p ected fo r th e banquet, in ­ clud in g member* and their gu ests. Special g u ests w ill include Dr. and M n . H om er P . R ainey, Dr. and Mrs. J . A. B u rdine, and Dr. and Mr*. A. P. Brogan. This w ill be the la st m eetin g o f Sigm a Xi this year. D e lta T m to H av e S u p p e r The M others’ Club o f D elta Tau D elta fra ter n ity w ill honor m em ­ bers o f the fr a te r n ity and seniors today w ith a b u ffe t supper fo r M other's Day at the hom e o f Mr. and Mr*. Grady C handler, 602 West Thirty-third Street. SUNDAY. M AY ll. 1941 PASE SEVEN une Mr. and Mrs. M, J. Toole of m a rlin a n n o u n c e the e n g a g e m e n t of th e ir d a u g h t e r , Rose M arie, to J o e S te lz e r M oore of G reenville. ta k e place S a tu r d a y n ig h t, J u n e 7, 8 at o’clock, at All Saults* Episcopal C h u r c h in A ustin. T he w e d d in g will in J u n e . She in n u tr iti o n . She Miss Toole will g r a d u a te fro m is the U n iv ersity m a jo r in g is a m e m b e r of Z eta T a u A lpha s o r ­ ority . Cap and G own, P ie r ia n L i t ­ f o r m e r e r a r y S ociety, a n d m e m b e r of Bow a n d Arrow' club. M o o r e , w ho is an e x - s tu d e n t of th e U niversity, is a m e m b e r of Phi K appa Psi f r a t e r n i t y a n d w as a m e m b e r of th e I n t e r - f r a t e r n i t y Council. is a ROSE P O O L E Law Student Ma rries Here M ariallen M oore o f T e x a r k a n a a n d A. W. M o u rsu n d , senior law s tu d e n t from Jo h n s o n C ity, w e re m a r r i e d in a double righ c e r e m o n y a t 7 o'clock T h u r s d a y n ig h t a t th e F ir s t B a p tis t C h u rc h o f A u stin . Dr. S. G. P osey r e a d th e c e r e ­ m on y. T he couple will live in S an A n ­ to n io a f t e r Mr. M o u rsu n d r e ­ e f ive.* his bachelor o f law d eg re e th is sp ring . Phi G a m m a D eP a a n n o u n c e s th e ple d g in g of T om C r o f t of F o r t Wrorth , Doris* Flo Doss, f re s h m a n s t u ­ dent f ro m Colorado City, is v isit­ ing a t College S ta tio n this w ee k ­ end. in the.se roof c o lo r f u l fa s h io n s fro m S c a r b r o u g h 's S w o rn ! F lo o r S c a r b r o u g h ’* F u r S t o r a g e , 8 - 1 6 1 1 S t o r e y o u r fu r * n o w . P h o n e um m er # Whiff # Black # Y ellow B r o o m s tic k S k i r t a n d B lo u s e Revival of an old Indian custom . . . wash th e skirt and w rap i t around a broomstick to dry, thus producing the crinkly pleats . . . th e blouse is soft white batiste, the skirt in red, blue, brown or navy prints. IO to 16. S k i r t a n d blou se 1.98 I N E X P E N S I V E D R E S S S H O P . S E C O N D F L O O R P l a y S u its Flattering to slim young figures. 2-pc. style* in slub w eave prints. 12 to 18. SPO RTS S H O P , SECOND FLOOR U n e -p ie c e T w o-piece Flared skirts Whether you take your swim m ing seriously or play on the beach choose a Scarbrough Wi t t ! C h o o se your swim suit from our Sp orts Sh o p large collection o f styles to fit every figure budget, and swimming need. Satin lastex and wool and rayon lastex with flared or half skirts. O n e and two piece styles in solid colors and prints. Sizes 32 to 38. SPORTS’ SHOP SPORTS SHOP Eh* a i rn S la c k S a i l s • • • T h ree piece .suits with solid color slacks and blouse and striped jacket. Sizes 12 to 20. F a d e d rose, blue and rust. (O th er styles 5.95 and 7.95) S la c k S a il* Neat-fitting rayon faille, stru tter cloth, or seersucker suits in 2-pc. style with in-or-outer blouses, short .sleeves. 12 to 20, J e r s e y B lo u s e s . . . Ideal for slacks or skirts. Shortsleeves, square and round necks. Solid color, yellow, white, beige, red. combination white and dots or stripes in black, red, brown. 32 to 38. S h ir ts W hite shirts with sleeves, collars. 32 to 38. broadcloth short convertible S h o r t s . . . Seersucker shorts in striped and white. P leated style, self-belted. 12 to 18. grey SPO R T S SH O P, SECOND FLOOR On the Records By L*Gros Smith Stent T h e Mar re I Mas ca KT I O-i Erne r f .fig from bi* stric t re se r­ vations of m aking le e o rim g * . A ndre K oetelanet* h ts come forth three bn;]-ant new a ,bum* with fo r C o lu m b a . Then* ai ham s ar* Foe- titled 1 rib records. Set te r ” f Com edy Favor- M-44 2 b records, Set rte*” rtions from V;e- Si-430 U e r r (ta re # 3 2-inch re ­ to r H el M- 4 2 . Toe selections cord*, So cal of th#* e x p e rt m usical are typit rraftsrr.a f K c«tr2anetz, a ' i the ra p tu ro u s string* o f h e u « t o rch estra are a* th e ir be**. *r UM W( The m otion p ictu re “ The G reat .d* for L ie” won m any new T ^ h a r ­ the sym phonic gem u a re a 1- kow skf, and fo r tho?# J T ULM f It ready fa m ilia r with ►ffr.rt*. recalled one c f his in B-f at hi* C oncerto N um ber I M nor. W ritten d u rin g the a n t am a , the Con- m d WI was dedi- i B -fla t Minor "f rto I ■rated to N icholas R ub nstein. Bu­ a t the dtd- biri st* in wa* offended von Balow .cation, b u t a f te r H am o u r of the took it on a concert te m ev e n t- U nited S tates, Rub)bi d the o f uaily becam e enamor*' *ded as one concerto and was rega r*. Tsehai- st of it* be vised his concerto com- kowsky re I - -9 , and the final re- pleteiy in e revision is p resen ted suit o f ll " ion Sym phony Orehes- by the Lo •tf d by John Barbirolli tra condo i by A rth u r R ubinstein and playa (V ictor eight A lbum M-180, sides), in te rp re te rs, th e W a te rfro n t” A rtie Shaw score# again with an o th er b it of delightful melody built around th e old n u m ber, “ I (V ictor, Cover 27362>, A lthough in a d iffe re n t V e h a bes: recording # by u n ce “ F re n e n .” Ors the B-side is a new Rhum ba with a continental atm o*pbere. en titled “ M arine!*.” Jack L eonard, supported by Ray Bloch’s o rc h e stra , waxes lyric#; with a new B M I. tune “ Love Left T ow n,'' and on the o ther side ii the Berlin oldie, "H ow Deep Is the O cean.” Both are typical of the smooth, breathless m anner of Mr. Leonard. ►p ular new t The firs t, Sad,” is nicely d- ley’s orch estra w frain by Ray Er e ernaire* (B .uebir on the other side teat ion g vex a "P e rfid ia .” The tune* Is y^o can * rd) ng« r 363) , ), The w ar has inspired tw o pop- ag the sad side. U Will Be So e by Glen Mil* I the vocal re- e and the Mod- B -11095), and he sam e organ- wee t ren d itio n of (second o f the sad “ My S ister and I,” and have y o u r choice o f re- (V ictor, by Bea W ain (B luebird, Bob C hester ( Col im - Be ny Goodman Reinsman 36 0 22), and Leo to r, 27375). irictly on 11( bi# IV mg 1 the swing side is Glen MUI e r ’s “ Song of the Volga Boatm an (B luebird, B-110291 and Al D onahue’* “ Keep an Eye on Y our H e a rt" (Okeh, 6021). Those of you who recall the C har. lo te e r# sm ooth re of “ The Gaucho S eren ad e’ i n teres* ed to know that done it again in “ May r Love A gain,” recently i fo r Co- lum ina (35942), On r eve n e is a little d itty e titled “ Why Is a Good Gal So Hi rd to F in d ? ” W atch fo r < Tau Ie ThorhiU's re- co rding of Brab m ’ H ungarian R hapsody N rn rn b e I to be 5 soon released by Vici swell »r. This swing a rra n g e m en t fe a tu re s a solid MX-part harm ony i i the f lu 1 Mf! tion th a t is hard t I Ne h What to Expect th a t E vidently fig u rin g the H ardy Fam ily needed a boost in its spiritual basem ent. M G M, is planning to p ut Ju d y G arland, the re fre sh in g b ru n e tte qpn g et res*, in the n e x t atte m p t. Ju d y has been rn two o th er H ardy picture*, but it h a sn ’t seem ed to h u rt h e r any. “ The Shepherd of the H ills,” a technicolor production which is ‘•apposed to be one of those things of beauty, is being film ed its B.g B ear \ alley, and will sta r John W ayne, B etty F ield, and H arry Carey. Ba bs Stanw yck will be v ery very versatile in her next flicker. The to play the p a rts of a gal has sixteen-year-old girl an d a 109- year-old .ady in th e sam e produc­ tion, The idea seem# to b e th a t the p icture opens in 1941 when, as a woman o f 109, she begin* to tell h e r y arn when we. fad e back to 1848 and th e good ©Ie daze. Durn clever, th ese directors. The Man Who Played ll Duce Now in 'American Broadcast’ Screen History O f Radio Pioneers Fair Entertainment BY JACK ADKINS Jtaff f m * T h *re mr# lot* of sto n e* of a e s who came back, b a t o re who » com ing b ark a f te r som etk - g of a d u m p if a plum p, b e a r Bf ex- tw o fer by th# nam e o f Jack Oakie. Mr. Oakie arm* an established ‘ta r m tb e rn; iii* th irtie s, burt in la te r yean* around IS*1?? Mr. On via be­ hrs fa n p a ttin g on w eight t u 4 stock sta rte d flipping. T i l ORF. AI A MRP AU BROAD- ct. (Maim* t a * P a * * - C A F T . " A t bs***, R4* * fey D o s JE K n m ai*.* •.•A Merna, Im*** »• - * Bi -3 a*. R ' S is- : ESI* M** » Go t d**i Ljnrios *• I a*** k ta*** fr*; to y Umny A im s PS' I M»- a y . SivoetOfl 8 * a w r * r MMS a* Ar-fc># Mara. A** -*«♦* pra**«ar. E « a a « tl S f * - f ' » » s . A T w m tW6k-C#u- to r y P c* sM-twr* Th* "**t 1*1 k*w» ▼ f e k i A d * - * dreck Ba f l a p SU* Mer***) . Brae* d i a s ir Irk ____ Icnr ct arr .. A t t e * F a r # — J#r* Os*** P**«# C#«*r * w » * r# l e t t H a# aaa __ _- . .... Mar* --------------------- fey visibly H e did some p r e tty fo o d pic­ tu re s th a t year ( “ Radio City Rev­ els,” “ A ffa irs of A m a b e l ” “ An­ nab el Take? a T our” ) b ut hi* con­ stellation w as dim m ed. (D am n dim, to quote the guy in th* nex t booth). Then in 1940 to T uwntictb-CcTitufy he came Fox to m ake **710 Pan A lley.’' He w * nt e v e r well as pounding, com ­ poser. Stock im m ediately jum p* I when critic* acclaim ed his mock­ ery o f ll Duce in “ The D ictato r,” a* som ething of a m inor miracle. The fo rm er Wall S tre e t ru n n e r’s la te st pictu re ta “T h e Great, A m er­ ican B roadcast,” an o th e r one o f D arryl F. Z anuck’* $2,009,000 sagas of the great fre e co untry in which we live, It m akes fa ir e n te rta in m e n t. «m g-pl igging the A m uA esn& ntL t A* gbf gaily 0«can PAGE EIGHT SU NDAY, M A Y ll, 1941 Gene Autry Again Rides Range, Tunes Guitar on Scales ot Justice B Y I R M A H A N S E N 7 * m « A a m rw an t* Staff G e n e ENE AUTRY, cowboy deluxe, and pride and joy o f Republic H e ­ tars re*, evidently escaped the d ra ft, despite his crack m arkrm an- ehip. fo r he rides the range once more in “ The Singing Hill/* c u rre n tly •bow ing act the Queen T heater. fit this late*? piece, Genie is the sam e as ever. The tra d lia n a I sto ry ha# been little changed, ex - * ........................... 1 cepe that this t me, n rte ad of be­ ing team ed with a model of un­ blem ished w om anhood, his leading a ady. V irginia Da e, *w:ng« piano- w irked rhum ba, has blonde hair, With Hedy and sings a little ditty en titled “ Tum bledown Shack in H avana.” "TH?. SHfGIM G M n I ' A? t i * flu a w T ls-ntrf Scree I’, p ie# ny Oil** Cew-T-rr Pr»4a#tM)* fcit Harry t,rvf DirrCloi) ky l > « La**##** FttfttoorxeSy a-w WititM* S•■.!>!-« 7 he rn.*I. follow* '»*' * r roe J e e Fat * r —. O-r,* A atry R» .Ic# Bi*c?>*1 <4 ita l* Ni*r I n ...... .. V sr cf Mia .... ....... J A M E S S T E W A R T , t h e A c a d e m y A w a r d w i n n e r a n d d r a f t e e , is c u r r e n t l y a p p e a r i n g w i t h H e d y L a m a r r in t h # l a u g h - g e t t i n g b e d r o o m f a r c e , “ C o m * L i v e W i t h M e , ” on t h* V a r s i t y s c r e e n . Today's Entertainment M O T I O N P I C T U R E S P A R A M O U N T : G r * # t A m e r i c a n B r o a d e s t . ” ^ .th A l i c e Faye and Jack Oakie. F e a tu re he­ ir i s a t 2:11, 4:06, 6:01, 7:56, and 9 SI o’clock, S T A T E “ T h # D e v i l a n d Mix* J o n * * . ” W ith Je a n A rth u r and R obert Cumming* F e a tu re begin# it 2:30, 5:20, 6 10, 8, and 9:50 o ’clock. Q U E E N : “ T h * S i n g i n g H i l l * . ” With Gene A utry. F e a tu re start* a t 2:50, 4:40, 6.30, 8 :10, and 10:10 o'clock. “ A n d y C A PIT O L : H a r d y ’* P r i v a t e S e c r e t a r y . ” W th Mickey Rooney. F e a tu re start# at 2, 3.57, 5:64, 7:51, and 9.52 o’clock. V A R S I T Y : “ Ce rn# L i v e W i t h Me.” W th Hedy and Jam es S tew art. F e a tu re start* a t 2, 4:01, 6:02, 8:03, and 10:04 o’clock. L am arr T E X A S: “ Thi* Thing Called Love." W ith Rosalind R u«srI! and Melvyn D ouglas. F e a tu re begin# a t 2, 3:55, 5:50, 7:45, and 9:40 o’clock. D R IV E -IN T H E A T E R : “ G u n g . D is.” W ith ( ary G rant. F e a tu re sta rts at 7:45 and 9:45 o’clock. C O N C E R T S U N IV E R SIT Y M ETHODIST C H U R C H : O rgan recital by Isa ­ bel* “ Ie Sm ith at 4 o ’clock. Dolph Briscoe Elected Head of Phi Eta Sigm a Dolph Briscoe wa? elected pre#- ident of Phi E ta Sigm a, h o n o rary fresh m an fra te rn ity , a t a m eet- ing T h ursday in the T exas Union. O th e r officers elected were Rom Rhome, vice-p resid en t; Ed W inn, se c re ta ry ; Brier. Dillon, re p o rte r; and Joe D. Steed, historian. It is com m only reco gnised th a t in H lljrwood th e re are two kind* T o drop Mr, Oakie, m om entari­ o f a''tors-—those who can aet, and ly, we m ig h t m ention T w entieth th a t who -"an fulfill the fickle de­ G m C w y-Fox’s pola-ptaying, W a­ mand* o f movie audience*. Thu* hoo, N ebraska-bom Mr, Zanuck rho has been the leading Holly- « , have pa»«*d through such era* rood an m innesinger w here the h istory of A m erica is concerned. Mr. Zanuck has so fa r invented the telephone (w ith Don A rrach*’* h e lp ), haw w ritten S tephen Fos­ ter** melodies (also w ith Don Am eche'* help). Now he ha* suc­ cessfully straig h ten ed the history of Am erican r*d;o (with the help o f Oakie, Alice F ay#, the Nicholas Ink B rothers, and Spot#.) F o u r th e “ The G reat A m erican B road­ c a st’’ follow* the plot invented by A eschylus (boy meet* girl, boy lose* girl, boy get# girl b a c k .> Th* p ic tu re concern* th# pioneers of radio from the b ro ad cast of the in 1919 W iliard-D em psey fig h t nwiwr n n u iirw ii nim mum ■MMM o f dem and as the shiek ar*, the the child prodigy ga n get eg era, e ra , while the presen t dem and seem* to be a draw betw een Gene A u try and Donald Duck. While there are m any who con­ sider Mr, A utrv of no m ore Alg­ in f rari'-e than the Ie seer h a lf of t n t Bobbsey tw ins, the fa c t re ­ frains th a t hi® si tab! a supply of j fa n mail is not naif-add ra tte d . L et it suffice, then, to say, th a t f you are ar. avid fan of Mr. Au­ try , this la te st e ffo rt should live to everything fo r which he up stand*. He it still pure and sim­ ple, and he d ill tunes feta g u ita r on the sc a if * of justle Days DaVs ” - V a c a t ' ° ° C a ll for Joyce Play Shoes or spirited Low Heel Casuals AT THE FRENCH BOOT SHOP You'll Want Both Kinds for Texas Climes -eed. joyce • V C A I I * C « N I A M EXI-CO OL-EE p l a y J o y c e p l a y s h o e w h i t e , w hit* a ! o r a1 I r a t in a1! id n a t u r - I l e a t h e r . $4.95 P A G A N SA N D A L A V a d c r a f t c d a l i n w h i t e a l l w h i t e b e f ir e . s u a i garl­ t a n , a n d m o r e o r 8.95 HARLEQUIN play shoe la Joyce to u g h fa il-cloth fabric. All w hite, w ith con­ tr a s tin g d a r k e r tones. Ten different color com ­ binations. MEX!- COOL-EE P A G A N $3.95 H ARLEQUIN S E E OUR CAM PU S D I S P L A Y OPPOSITE U S I Q S DOWNTOWN 720 CONGRESS AVE Dave Fleischer, o f th e cartoon# (B e tty Boop. etc > is producing A t th e m eeting, Ralph Spence, "Superm an'* fog m ovie showings out-going p resid en t, m ade a re ­ now. S uperm an mill be the* f ir s t port on the natio n al Phi E ta Sig- ma convention in Dallas recently. **tiuiaied sh o rt to tell a stra ig h t The re p o rt included a sum m ary o f dram atic story. Also, it is planned to ut_‘bze “ quick cut-backs,” as in the c h a p te r’s n atio n al Plans w*»re also m ade fo r haiti*- r e ? ;-4r m non to be held next week. standing. ** work*. i Pr*-Medical Students See Movies Tonight Pre-m edical student# received fre e tic k e ts this w eek fo r a group o f surgical m otion p ictu res th a t will be shown F rid ay night a t 7 :30 j o’clock rn the Geology Building 14. The pictu res will be p resen ted I u n d e r th e auspices o f A lpha Ep­ silon D elta, honorary pre-m edical f r a te rn ity and provided by the Dallas c h a p te r of Phi B eta P:, m ed­ ical fra te rn ity . TEXAS 32 Represent < riff SEABO ARD LIFE INSURANCE CO. 202 N»ll« Bldg. Ph. 2-1504 How to Make a Bad Film W orse Texas Students Or, Ameche Doesn’t Have to Be a Latin History H a tte m p t to hide from anyone th* fact that the block-booking bill shouldn't happen to a dog. F o r un ad u lterated fee n o r. you can ’t improve up- ^ ead a rrj vice-chairm an of Film of State BY BERNARD SEIG LE / rOW TO MAKE a good p.c t-re rad or a bad .p ic tu re worse if a bad p ic tu re can g e t worse and I h a re my doubts is the su b je c t c f today's con­ trib u tio n to my scrap book, saints preserve it, and thank you. Th---re are way*, you know. th a t do n ot neces­ sarily involve p u ttin g h istory in th* bands of D airy] F. Zat irk or *er.d ng I*'*: Air.ec ne south - f the b o rd e r w ith tw o pair* of pants, I re fe r to those gruesom e b rim .de*, p la titu d e s, cliches and je ju n e p lo t m echanism s th a t s ta rte d years befo re D. W. Gri: gave birth to a nation and th a t have had the ap p allin g nerve to last, to hell with the critic*. j P to a i d by all oscar s including the p re se n t tim e. Aa ma e l e m e n t a r y e x a m p l e a n d o n e t h a t wi l l n o t o n l y m a k e t h* r e v i e w e r s of S c r e e n G u i d e o r M o v i e Mi r r o r c o m e as n e a r as t h e y e v e r wi l l to l o s i n g t h e . r j o b s h u t s h o u l d a l s o s t a r t a n a t i o n ­ I w i d e m a r i h u a n a e p i d e m i c a m o n g s u g g e s t thi s; P l a c e a m a d s c i e n t i s t , g i g g l i n g hi s t h e u s h e r s , i n a l a b o r a t o r y a n d s u r r o u n d bi m f o o l h e a d off w i t h t h o u s a n d s o f t e s t t u b e s h u g e v a t s o f b o i l ­ i n g w a t e r , h i g h v o l t a g e a p p a r a t u s , a n d t h e g a m u t in a s s o r t e d e l e c t r i c a l d e v i c e s . T h i s is ba d e n o u g h , h u t it w o r s e , h a v e t he s c e n e p h o t o g r a p h e d a t a t i l t e d a n g l e , a n d i f i f y o u r e a l l y w a n t t o m a k e y o u w a n t to g o t he l i mi t , l e t t he s c i e n t i s t h a v e a d a u g h t e r . And while you’re a t it, try a jur.gle epic in which th e villa n wear* thick lensed horn-rim m ed glasses, reads Sc nope n hauer, and plays with a p e t monkey. if the native* in this .same m iracle of flop speak in a lan g u ag e th a t re-err. hie* the combined et* ort* of Schiepperm aa, a tobacco au ctio n e e r, and Clem Mc­ C arthy, you're set fo r G rade B im m ortality. i dyl l o f t h e H a r v a r d g r a d u a t e w h o u n u s u p e c t i n g l y t o r c h f a l l s s i n g e r f r o m t h e B r o n x . “ I c a n g i v e y o u j e w e l s , y a c h t s , cars , f u r s c h e w i n g g u m , P e p s i - C o l a a n d l o v e w i t h a C o n s i d e r t he i n a f r e e s e t o f t h e E n c y c l o p e d i a , ” p l e a d s t h e , s t r o n g , h a n d s o m e a n d g l o r i o u s l y d u m b h e r o . “ B u t t w o d i f f e r e n t w o r l d s , ” s a y s M y r t l e , l iv e w e in w h i l e h a l f t u o u s e x o d u s , a n d t h# a u d i e n c e is m a n a g i n g a t u m u l ­ is m a k i n g n o t he m a n a g e r Kar! H oblitzelle, D allas th eatre the Wo r l d’s F a ir Commission, ,./m th , to oil the !a*t *ceae is an already b a l m usical, w here- y in th e e n tire cast convenes and collectively and T tm n 4 m y m ade avaiIable ir.dirM -.any n p m e s the bi* .o n * num ber, u ^ a .l y ^ ^ t i o n .1 with an 8 . -year-oid uncle who whimsically croaks OO! , verse or two, m ik e . . n u ltr .- r t.tc effort to S u i - s a te e n m .Ihm eter p n n t , dance w ith the leading Jady, and puts his a rm s, "A Cavalcade of Texas ’ aro u n d his daughter-in-law ’# cook, who is all smiles film will be d istrib u te d and tin g in g like mad. The b u tler is singing, the chauffeur i* singing, is fen- is singing— everyone, in fact, tic k e t ta k e r outside, who has been o ut of touch Tun* length in technicolor, and wa* with civilization fo r so long she w ouldn’t recognize produced u n d e r th e tupervision of The throng) the Visual E ducation D ep artm ert the heroine’* m o th er-in -law : 0f The U n iv ersity of Texas. “ A Cavalcade of Texas is dinging b u t the of I the a hum an being if one offered h er a penthouse. P e rm it five old bachelors to discover a baby girl I .y o k e J f T h ? G lo iT p ro d u cer of M etro. on th e ir doorstep, le t the one with the long beard w yn_Mayer Studio*. I t record fe e d h e r gin instead of milk, le t an o th er of them | historic high-light# of fire every nurse they hire, and you have a situa- s t a r S ta te 's b attle tion th a t re p re se n ts the best of T orquem ada. Or and her con trib u tio n to America s b e tte r still, contrive an episode th a t allow’* two developm ent, the old college g rad u ates to m eet fo r the fir«t tim e in twenty-five years. The first will rem ind the sec- first *CI^een 8 cr0M section of j I the S ta t e s g re a t n&- cnd of th e tim e they locked old O tto s cow in the , , tu ra l resources— oil, sulphur, lum- , • , cam e> c itru s orchards, scenic ja n ito r s garbage, aru the barn and set fire to both of them will double up in a paroxysm of n o s-; a ttra c tio n s, educational and cul- talgic h ilarity. W hen they m eet, each is to re fe r tu ra l advantages, as well as some living T exans who have to the other as “ you old dad burned son of g u n .” [ of distinguished them selves in public This is alw ays good fo r a stupendous yawn. life. It carries a m usical score of the ballads and songs of the old W est. The picture presen ts tirm’ ° ” . T . i i r ... . fo r fo r the , , j. , , • . “ I sincerely believe th a t every stu d e n t in T exas should be given an o p p o rtu n ity this pic­ tu re ,” Mr. H oblitzelle said. “ I t has e n te rta in m e n t value, b u t it is p ri­ m arily educational. to see looking for Or device a scene on a d esert island with twelve men and one woman being eaten alive by tse-tse flies, and the fia n c e s of the twelve men a t the one woman. All of the men, of course, the first M ajor are archaeologists Bowes a m a te ir to he buried alive, and the hero­ ine, although she is in the last stages of dysen­ trib u te tery, to Pere W estm ore. the young weakling who Be sure suffers for six or seven heat waves and finally grabs a gun, scream ing “ I c a n ’t stand it! Ah! Ha! H a! H a! H a! I can’t stan d it!” You have a set-up th a t m akes M adame T oussaud’s look like the rest rooms in Radio City Music Hall. is a walking include to In Before-Final Excitement, They Find Time for Music /sabelle Smith Gives Organ Recital at 4 Musical Engineer Has Recital Tuesday Giving her in te rp re ta tio n o f the C urtis Soh modes, senior engi- the fugue Beefing stu d e n t and m em ber o f the Tau B eta P.. will give a farew ell Isabelle piano recital T uesday, May 13, a t s tric t construction of a* d th e extrem e fred nm of fa n ta sia and to e a tta , Sm ith will play a recital of Bach lhe and selections from o th e r com pos- T, , He has studied m usic since be _ ers adapted to the organ a t the U niversity M ethodist C hurch Sun- was 5» studying several sum m ers with B ogjslaw eki, Chicago pianist. day a t 4 o'clock. P r i n t e d by the Diapson Club. The la st few years he has studied f a i th e d wj, h Dt w , itCT Gi!ewicfc d i w t o r H otel a t 8 o’clock. . J u r t . j ,. . , , , , , the A m erican Con- „ College She was born in A ustin and re- C onservatory o f Music, who is ceived h e r early education here p resen tin g Schm edes la his last in music, playing a t before he begins an engi- P resb y terian Church. took a degree W heaton College at W heaton, 111. C h a c o n n e -------------- B ach-B isoni the Irater she v eerin g career, of M ar>' H ardm -B aylor in m usic P ro g ra m : from F irst ^ i M « Sm ith h a , stu d y in g a t servatory in Chicago. ..... G M in o r H er program follow#: F a n ta sia and Fugue in C horale: Jesu, Jo y of Gigue P a s t o r a l e ------------------------S carlatti Bach S onata, B m inor, op. 58.-.C hopin * spriccio, op. 2 No. 4 D ohnanyi M an’s D e s i r i n g _______ Bach M instrels ___ — -------------- Debussy Villa Lobos T oeatta, from “ Gothic S u ite ” .................. H arm onies du S o i r C oncert V a ria tio n * ---------- B onnet A.P.O. Ha* D inner Dance Chorale and AI * gro, M em bers and friends o f A.P.O. K arg-E lert Le Polichinelle _r! I Im ann k* ( a m pane I. a .— P aganini-L iszt ~ 1 Boe — fro m S o n ata \ I — Mendelssohn fra te rn ity dined and danced at ~ Mc A mis tbe Y acht Club F rid a y n ight as .............. c re a m s To a W ild Rose Toccata* from Sym phony V ... M cD ow ell gmmta of M r and Mrs Charles C lark whose sons “ C huck” a n d , Bill a re m em bers of the org an i­ zation. W id o r n r i e I _ i j i i HOV h r a m o u n i N o w D o o r * O p e n 1 : 4 5 P . M . UfiRSITSED STEWART J A M E S H E D Y LAMARR rn T O M E LIVE WITH ME” W IT H J A N H U N T E R M ay-D ay Show er Saturday Honors Miss G lo ria Rollins Mi## G loria Rollins wa# hon­ ored by M 'S E thel Stasssmos and Miss Bowen* Sm ith w ith a show er from 3 to 5 o’clock S atu rd ay at Miss S m ith’s home. Miss Rollins will be m arried May 30 to W il­ liam Hoot. G ifts p resented around a m ay­ them e of th e pole carried out May-day. G uests included the follow ing: D orothy Luckey, B etty S tecker, H ildegard W upperm an, R uth She­ ar.. M arjorie H oyt, E ugenia W or­ ley, Anne A tw ell, H elen Digr.ow- ity. Also M ary A nn Schum ann, E lea­ nor Page, Alice H o tte r, M ara;ear. B rubeck, Helen Sue M ontgom ery. Lore a L ow enstein, E dith Bell, Pa* Stoll, and C hristina C hristie. Herbert Wall Baritone T eacher o f Singing Announces opening of Summer Music Colony June 10th QUETZALCOATL PALACE Mexico City Far Informal!©!*, Telephone 2*6373 or Addrest 2330 Guadalupe Au* Ila ‘F IG H T IN G 69'/,' GENE moo D a lla s H i- W ay D a? / U t - I N C w U r * * * .« a ’ n S * C A R Y G R A N T — V ie M c L A G L E N D O U G F A IR B A N K S JR lO AN F O N T A IN E N O W S H O W I N G -IN- ROSALIND RU SSELL M E L V Y N D O U G LA S IN "THIS THING CALLED LOVE1 W IT H BINNIE B AR N ES YOU M AY NOT K N O W That Your Eyes Are Bad Draft examinations have proven that many recruits have no idee of the condi­ tion of their eyes. Now, with examinations coming on, H no time to be in doubt es to the condition of your eyes. Have them examined now at • * • GU NGA DIN l l — P L U S - U G LY D UCKLING P E N N A N T CH ASER P A R A M O U N T NEWS TW O SHOWS N IG H TLY STAR TIN G 7:45 L A S T SHOW IO P.M. Moonlight Speedboat Rides on New Lake Austin FAST RUNABOUTS AND CABIN BOATS 7 Mile Ride 50c Leslie Crockett S P E E D B O A T R I D E S Ju*t abo** th* dam Day aud Night Phon* 6509 SENIORS s 9 '0 wshorf C A ^ V O U R a n d G O W N Once $150 en t:’* tim e For u n i v e r s e C O - o p