CAUvdcU t Was it over-confidence, hidden under the unassuming ^One at at Time" slogan?, Or was it lack of confidence, inspired by injuries and a creeping fear of “the law of averages"? Or must we admit that it was a Baylor team that played better than ours— better, th a t is, for one afternoon? Just as we played better than another team last Thanksgiving? W hatever it was th a t caused the disaster which had Longhorn fans thinking they were dreaming even after they had seen the Tower burning a mixed orange and white, we’ll wager th at it won’t bother us again. Texas paid a big price Saturday afternoon— if you con­ sider material things, and in return it learned a great les­ son. The student body was sadly but forcefully reminded th at it could not shrug its collective shoulders, sit back in an easy chair or on a bleacher seat, and let the eleven men on the field do all the fighting. Most Longhorn followers thought Coach Bible had de­ veloped a football machine. Three machines, and all good ones, many said. They discovered Saturday th a t it was not just a m a­ chine, but a human being, composed of forty-odd human beings. Several thousand of these supporters, who had matter- of-factly accepted 1941 Longhorn football supremacy, admitted t h d r error last night by joining in a “welcome home" rally th a t really paid tribute to a team th a t has worked and played its heart out for the Orange and White. The tribute was fine, but too late, you might say. We wouldn’t. Texas is still strong—stronger, we’d say. And such spirit has never been shown a winning team. And the op­ portunities are still here. W e’re down, but the farthest thing from out. Black Predominates A s Color at Game B Y B E N K A P L A N MEMORIAL STADIUM, WACO, Nov. 8— This is supposed to be rn color story: all that is visible from this vantage point high in Memor­ ial Stadium is black. The dice were loaded—all they would throw was sevens black sevens. *------------------- .--------------- No rosy hues are in sight. No sugary victory praise do we hear. No orange-colomd Tower lights do we see— it’s all black. The taste in the mouth feels like cotton. We prefer to forget the last qu arter of today’s tug-of-war in which the rope broke, and think backward interesting sights, of which there were quite a few. for the Twenty-seven members of the local gendarmere saw to is that there was less fighting, less drink­ ing, fewer bumped fenders, and no stadium rejections in today’s I activities. Perhaps the tickets just weren't too desirable, but no scalpers were reported by Chief of Police C. C. Maxey. Outstanding intra-stands attrac­ tion was a checker-shirtod. feather- capped yankee who hawked pea­ nuts in a falsetto voice. As for bands and yellers, Texas got a bare draw on the former; and lost by a top-heavy margin on the latter. Texas’s yelling has yet to win a game, in fact. Formerly gold-jacketed, Raylor’s Golden Wave Band this year switched to green coats, picked up a bevy of white-skirted female all-conference flag-twirlers, added a half-dozen prancing drum ma­ jorettes, and easily stole the show' a t the half. from Their quick-shift their T-E-X-A-S to B-A-Y-L-O-R form­ ation in midfield wms as niftv as their K-T-T-R-E-L-L to C-O-L-E- the end- M-A-N combination zone— just before the blackness set in. in rendition of Swing was their specialty. Their concert-like "The Star-Spangled Banner” wras mas­ terfully done. Their version of “ That Good Old Baylor Line” dif­ fered slightly from that sung by th e%Texas students, but must have tugged at the heart-strings of ev­ ery Baylor ex. Especially at the end. Texas yell-leaders had quite a lime. Their routine was worked to perfection: “ T-T-T-E-X, out etc,” ’Em Again “ Hit H arder,” then “ Yea, Orange,” etc., then rest ten minutes, then re­ their rest pe­ peat. In between then riods, the crowd yelled. Prize for most interested and J most disinterested spectators un­ doubtedly went to Coach Frank Kimbrough and Little Joe Col­ le g e , the Baylor junior mascot. If the Texas team got man­ handled on the field it was mild in comparison to the meat-grind­ ing motions Kimbrough gave the Texas players, whose pictures were i in tile printed program he held in I his hand. Only consolation is that I the Baylor players got the same treatment. The otherwise mild-mannered Baylor mentor shuttled substitutes into to Britain. like bombers the game On the other hand, Little Joe | was bored with it all. Unlike old -Toe. who is now in retirement, ! Little Joe refused to perform. Staked out near the south eud- zone he paced up and down ner­ vously throughout the game. Classiest piece of machinery on the field today was the Baylor gold-and-green water wagon with its retraction drinking nozzles, and its inbuilt pressure system. Most modern in the conference, is the claim. Most distinguished visitor a t the game w’as Governor Carr of Colo­ rado w’ho flew in especially to see Texas play, then flew to Dallas : for a barbecue tonight, i Jack Wilson, Baylor’s crippled ’ typhoon, was probably the most colorful figure on the field. He I limped in and out with monoton- jous tape protected his ankles, yet he walked off the field at the half bare­ footed and de-taped. regularity. Inch-thick In the closing seconds, the crowd jumped the gun (which, in turn, had fired too quickly), rushed out on the field and hoisted Wilson on two sturdy shoulders. Told to clear off the field by the game officials, admirers ju st as uncere­ moniously dropped Mr. Wilson like a fourth-quarter pass. Most impartial observer of the game was the scoreboard. Painted across its top was the motto: “ May the Best Team Win.” It did. Incidentally, feature picture at Waco’s loading theater tonight is “ Birth of the Blues.” 9kuJU Toronto Debaters to Be Here for Contest Wednesday U n iv e r s ity o f T o r o n to d e b a te r s w ill h e on the c a m p u s W e d n e s ­ d a y to d eb a te th e U n iv e r s i t y tea m on th e q u estio n o f U n it e d S t a t e s e n t r y in to th e w a r . . . F in a l plans fo r the F r e sh m a n O ratorical C o n te st, s p o n s o r e d by H o g g S o c ie t y , a re a n n o u n c e d . . . M ore b lu e ­ b o n n e t belles a r e a n n o u n c e d , and the d e a d lin e se t for e n t r i e s . . • F o r m ore G E N E R A L N E W S , s e e p a g e 3. • Ours Not Only Upset of Day T h e F ig h tin g Irish c a m e th r o u g h w ith a n o th e r v ic t o r y b y k n o c k ­ in g a p o w e r fu l N a v y te a m o u t o f th e u n d e f e a t e d b ra ck e t, 2 0 - 1 3 . . . Harvard cr u sh e d A r m y , 2 0 -6 , w h ile F ord h a m , b o w l c o n te n d e r , w a s u pset, 13-0 by P itt . . . P u rdu e h eld M ichigan to a sco reless tie . . . M inn eso ta r e m a i n * u n d e f e a t e d w ith 9-0 victory o v e r N e b r a s ­ ka . . . F or m o re S P O R T S , s e c p a g e 2. W hy? Dazed Longhorn Fans Question, How? Strength and Determination Tied Texas T exan VOLUME 43 AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1941 Here’s How It Happened-- 7-7 'Moral Defeat’ Due to Baylor Line mi There you have it! Texas 7-Baylor 7. And there you have two of the greatest players in mod* em football streaming down Waco’s Municipal Stadium wearing the flashy Green and Gold of Baylor University. line MR SPIRIT AND MR. DETERMINATION gave the most outstanding performances on the gridiron of the 1941 season. Yes, Baylor had spirit and determination to the extent that they paid no heed to the University of Texas Longhorns. Playing both in the backfield and BY L. W. BROOKS Texan Sparta Editor the , in How did Baylor do it? Every supporter of the Longhorns may well look back for an explanation to*- last November— last Thanksgiving o’clock__ afternoon about 5:30 when several thousand stunned supporters broke down A.&M, with the defeat of the Aggies. Yes, it can happen here . . . it did happen here. But it wasn’t glorious — it wasn’t anything, but a great Bay­ lor line. Texas wasn’t beaten in the re­ cord book, but Frank Kimbrough’s Golden Bears reared in defiance against a hitherto unbeaten and untied football team to become moral victors. A l l post-season glory hopes of The University of Texas faded as did the Orange and White Satur­ day afternoon as the Bears gained a well-earned moral victory in the < to 7 tie. One small afternoon, one eighteen yard pass, and one great and inspired Baylor eleven stopped Dana Bible’s Longhorns. I t was on this same Municipal Stadium tu rf that a 1937 Texas underdog gored the life out of a brilliant Golden Bear. The tables were turned as the Bear of 1941 gathered floundering Long­ horn of Saturday afternoon, No­ and vember 8, into squeezed with all its might. arms the its regular The Longhorns missed three of starters— Julian their Garrett, Malcolm Kutner, and C aptain Pete Layden, who partici­ pated only in three plays. Baylor struck often, but not THE Game Pictures To Be Shown Monday th® throughout deeply, entire game, but in the last thirty sec­ onds of the ball game, they did their deep striking. Climaxing an afternoon of as brilliant football as ever witnessed, Baylor sopho­ more Kit Kittrell dropped back to the Texas thirty-yard line and arced the ball to Bill Coleman, back, who wont to fa r in the end zone and had to leap back toward the ball to make his touchdown catch. Big Jack Wilson, the Bruin senior star, limped onto the field and calmly place-kicked the tying extra point. This scoring drive outshone and outthrilled the early Texas scoro first in the last minute of the half. A substitute halfback of th® Bears had been forced to rush his kick from behind his own goal line, and the ball wobbled off his foot out of bounds on the Baylor ten. Speck Sanders, subbing for Crain, smashed off right tackle for four yards. Roy McKay, sub fullback, shot Flanagan a pass on the “ inch” line and the big half­ back was stopped a t that point. McKay rammed into the Baylor line for the score. Crain and Doss came in to perform their extra point act which put th© Steers into the 7-0 lead until the final seconds. • After the Bears had scored in the final minute, they kicked off low to Texas trying to kill time, but the Steere called for time out and the clock was In came Captain Layden to contrib­ ute what he could. The first play was a long pass to the Cowboy, flying who made a catch of the bail on Baylor’s forty yard line. sensational stopped. Texas again called Motion pictures of the Texas- football game will be tomorrow night at 7:30 Baylor shown time, but o’clock in the Open Air Theater the timer let his pistol go off p l ­ under auspices of the Texas Un- maturely and the crowd swarmed ion film and recreation commit- j out onto the field. Several min­ | utes were required to clear the c e s . the official ! gridiron and then the Steers made pictures taken by Dana X. Bible’s a coaching staff and shown as a score. Layden backed up deep and courtesy by the staff. Blair Cher- shot a pass to Doss on the goal ry, assistant coach, will comment line, but two Baylor Bears were j to knock the hall down and also on the film. the Steers’ hopes, for the game their last desperate fling for The pictures are The pictures of game were shown the Texas- I . . . last j was over. e S.M.U. week. In case of rain the film will Lewis Self, guard, Jack Russell, bo shown in the main lounge of end. Bubo Barnett, tackle, \Y. B. the Texas Union* tackle, Buddy Gate­ Godhold, other wood, center, and many white-shirted Bruins covered themselves with glory as part of the immortal Baylor line of No­ vember 8, 1941. T.C.U. Next— Seats To Be Unreserved for Blanket to reserve seats fense and defense. They tax holders will not the Texas was out-fought on of­ have lacked Texas-T.C.U. game here S a t u r - • the punch of the Longhorns who day, Ed Olle, business manager of I swept everything before them in intercollegiate athletics, said Sat- : their first six games. Texas was urday night. Holders will he ad-) undoubtedly a different ball club of : than the one that had landed on mitted top of the nation’s best with its tickets at the gate, he said. Students who wish to sit with j record through the S.M.U. game. a guest may obtain tickets a t $2.50 j Yes, a tie is a tie, but when at the Athletic Office this week, Uke Longhorns or any other un* he said. Only the west side will be defeated ball club is tied in the I reserved. See GAME, Page 2. presentation upon No. 48 There W as No Joy-1 n Locker Room B Y T E X S C H R A M M It would be hard to describe that Texas team th at slowly walk­ ed off the field and climbed into their busses late yesterday afte r­ noon. They bad been tied by an inspired Baylor eleven and it hurt them plenty deep. There were tears, yes, plenty of tears, but they were not tears that were flowing because their record had been blemished, but tears that were flowing because they bad let their coach and their school down. They had been out­ fought. The team had dressed in the near-by high school gym, and as they waited in their busses to take that long, oh so long trip back to the showers, all of them had some­ thing to say, but none of them could put it in words. Finally their great leader, Capt. Pete Layden broke the silence when he blurted out, “ The first guy that says it is his fault, I will personally beat the hell out 'uv him.” This broke the tension a little, hut they all wanted to get out there away from the crowd that was pouring out of the stands. Finally big Bully Gilstrap, the Steers’ assistant coach, came to their rescue. “ This game is over, we have T.C.U. next Saturday.” This one statement changed the whole attitude of the team. From that time on it was “wait till we get those Frogs.” their dressing Following a torturous trip back room, Bible to locked himself up with his team for a twenty minute talk. What went on behind those doors, prob­ ably nobody but Bible and bis boys will know, but you can rest assured of one thing, it will be twenty minutes thirty-five boys and a coach will never for­ got. that When this was over and the team went down to peel off their uniforms, Bible came out to give to his customary statement the press but this there were only two men there. This Satur­ day afternoon, the Baylor dressing room was the big attraction. time But Mr. Bible was the same gentleman as always. “ It’s just football. The margin of victory does not go by what you put in the paper, but goes to the team that is ready. Baylor was ready and fine game, j they played a That’s all there was to it.” On being asked about the Rose Bow!, Bible said. “ We are trying to win them one at a time. Our I big job now is T.C.U. That is what ! we will be concerned with.” At this point the likable coach “ I f s not hard got warmed up. for me Every­ to understand. body takes the records of the two See TEAM, Page 2. L e f t : P e t ® L a y d e n p l a y e d a b o u t t w o m i n u t e * o f t h e g a m e , b u t m o i l o f t h e t i m e R. L . H a r ­ k i n g f i l l e d b m s h o e * . H e r e H a r - t h r o u g h k i n * f i e r c e B e a r o p p o s i t i o n f o r 12 y a r d s f i r s t - q u a r t e r S t e e r d r i v e . f o r c e * b i s w a y in a a th e E n d ratio a t W a c o S a tu r d a y . T h e top P resto n p ic t u r e sh o w s throw F la n a g a n s n a g g i n g from M c K a y on six-inch “ lin e” to s e t up th e o n ly L o n g ­ horn sc o r e. B e lo w , N o b le D oss drops a p a ss fro m P e t e L e y d e n th at m ig h t h a r e m e a n t the w in ­ ning p o in ts. N o t e th e o p en field a hea d o f him . WUcU Qoei Oh Jlefre Sunday —Dr. Carlos E. Castaneda to de- the Knights of Columbus, St. liver the eulogy for members of Austin’s Chapel. Phi Omega picnic, —Alpha Scudder’s Ranch. 2:15— Hiking Club gross Avenue bridge. loaves Con- 2:30— Freshman Fellowship Club retreat, Rob Roy Ranch. 2:30— Mrs. Elitho Hamilton Beal address University Press to Club, Texas Union 309. 3:30— Sing-Song, Texas Union. 3:45— Grace Hall salute, KTBC. 6:30— “ The Bishop’s Candlestick,” Wesley Foundation Auditorium. 6— Alcaldes, Old Seville. 7:30— Mrs. D ew itt Baldwin lec­ ture, University Presbyterian Church. 7:45— Governor to speak on Red Cross program from Radio House. Stevenson • M o nd ay 9— Deadline for turning in entries to Freshman Oratorical con­ test, Texas Union. 5— Cap and Gown meeting, Texas Union 315-316. 7 — Omicron Nu, SOOD West Twenty-fifth Street. 6:55— Daily T"\an of the Air, See CALENDAR, Page 5, Spirit Raised to Fever Pitch For Impromptu Rally at Train B Y E L G I N W I L L I A M S a n d A R D E N H A V I S On the long ride home everybody felt the worst possible. After the rally there was more excitement than if Texas had just got the Rose Bowl bid . . . idea caught One minute afte r the final whistle of the game Hermann Reynolds called to suggest meeting tho team a t the station upon their arrival. ----- ------------------------ The , Every campus organization turned ' , out in ftill force to turn the Katy depot ' n jumping up and into something th at even Gregory Gymnasium has never down: “ Give it everything you’ve teen at a pre game pep rally. yell loader, got on ton a car and like wildfire.*- , „ , „ . . . . . got,” he shouted. , , * . . ® " , | The train was due at 9:10, hut the station and by 8:30 were filled with the milling crowd. anything I Porches smoked and lit up hastily- ; against one member o f that team, painted signs: tracks > before, anybody See RALLY, Page 5. says “ If They had never yelled like this “ Are We Downhearted? HELL No!” “ We’re With You, Boys— All the Time!” I The crowd flowed in. At first !a boy led yells from the station iroof. Then Dick Knowles, head R i g h t : A* r a i l r o a d L o n g h o r n t h e n i g h t c h e e r u p a t e a m . • e v e r ® ! t h o u s a n d r o o t e r s g a t h e r e d a t s t a t i o n S a t u r d a y a n d T e x a s d i s p i r i t e d t o w e l c o m e h o m e SPORTS— PASE TWO Phons 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phono 2-2473 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, I94f Intramural Week Round-Up Br A. C. BECKER JR. T * * n n Sport S t a f f Harvard Upsets Inspired Baylor Team Undefeated Year Held and Pushed Texas For Army, 20-6 Two major and one minor sport In intramurals wound up to a fast finish this week. Touch football went into its second week of play. and entries closed for intramural handball doubles, a maj or sport t ha t has srood carry-over value. the Gamma Delta, winner of club division softball, beat in Sigma Nu, winner of the frat erni ­ ty division, Tuesday afternoon, by a score of 9 to I. (Continued from Page I) middle of an unbeaten season re­ cord, the victory is a moral one for the underdog that rose above its head to slap the favorite* in that the face. Despite the football, Texas played the credit is due for many of Steers. Men Scott, R u i n e r s substitute, played with every possible knowledge he possessed. hit of football ( like Wally listless fact jersie*— didn’t have on orange they had on the green and gold of Baylor University, How? They beat T e x a s to the charge, they out-hustled thp Long­ horns as a whole, they had inspira­ they had a frenzied crowd tion, all hut praying for them to heat T ex as. Thp sUtigticg couM not be much closer for a tifi bal, Jfame firsf tPams coi!ectpd nim, Koth One man? No. It wasn t one , fjowng- Texas did barely out-rush ■MI man who caused the partial down- and out . pa„ thp in I fall of Texas, but eleven, and they orythin(r b oppe d with hut PV. the statis- Troublesome Bear CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 8.— ' I N S ) — H ar va r d’s gallant gridiron fending t^am would slap the of- fensive threat hark on its heels in warrior* rall«d a " a br upt halt to Army’s hope for an undefeat ed a convincing manner The Longhorns came hack at football season Saturday by rout- 20 to 6. before 'n8‘ 53,000 stunned fans. ^ a de?p, 20 to 8, the half and for the first few a ft er Baylor had kicked off, the crowd settled down to watch the effects of a certain speech made to the Texas squad during half-time, hut nothing came. Baylor again dis­ in played amazing determination stopping the high-geared Long­ horn offense. T E A M S T A T I S T I C S First downs .............. _ Rushing Passing Ponalties ... . Net yards rushing Yards Io*t Net yards forward* Forward* attempted Forwards completed „ Intercepted by Yards interceptions B 9 7 2 0 28 33 41 12 6 I T. 9 7 I 1 116 25 43 14 4 I — rji. ___ r et u r n Punts, number IO 9 Returned by ____— 3 Blocked by 0 31.7 Punts, average Kickoffs, number 3 Returned by 0 Kickoffs, average 24 Yard kicks returned 64 64 0 0 Fumbles 2 Ball 0 9 Penalties Yards lost on penalti es 60 Final score 7 I I 0 0 Touchdowns _ Conversions Goals from Field Safeties ....... Punts Kickoffs _______ Goal .......... ......... .. ..., ................. ........ lost ... __ IO 9 3 0 36.5 I 1 20 31 19 12 0 4 2 2 20 7 I I 0 0 Everything appeared to be mov­ ing as scheduled when Army pow­ ered 62 yards down the field to score midway in the first quarter. A pa-« from Hank Mazur to Jim Kelleher, a substitute end, pro­ duced the touchdown Crimson 25-yard line. from the From took over that point, the Har var d the hall game. I team I The Crimson line began to play a vicious, hard-hitting brand of de- , fensive throttled football which the Army offense with a n e t of 44 yards from rushing. The Har- j vard backs opened up with a slash­ i n g , smashing offensive which t hundered 72 yards f or a second- I quar ter touchdown; 71 yards for a j third-period marker, and 33 more yards for a third score with less than two minutes to play. Harvard scored one touchdown which was called back, and came I close on three other occasions, the last of the final them being in seconds of play, when a Crimson • thrust died on the Army ten. The second-period Cr i rn s o n I touchdown came as the climax to a drive which began on the Har- i vard 28. Captain F ra nn y Lee passed into the end zone to Don Forte, who caught in three spectacular to him. I Army backs t ry the I for the extra point, to leave the I score deadlocked at 6-all a t half- i time. fashion with clinging Henry Vandereb missed the ball Don McNicol, who also had . tics and the score, The parade of the Texas bal ks j I failed to show as it did against ' Colorado. Louisiana State, Okla­ homa, Arkansas, Rice, and S. M T ’. Cowboy Jack Crain was bottled i up. He tried, and tried hard, hut the fast-rushing Baylor line was get upon him before he j started. The Cowboy did all in his I power. Once he quick-kicked sev­ the Baylor enty-three yards to seven-yard the to see line only Bears kick out and the I/onghorn offense bog down. could an its own six-yard the Baylor eleven where Texas’s only glimpse of its old -•elf was an eighty-three yard drive from line j to the incomplete I push sank with j fourth-down pass. This wasn’t the Longhorns’ only t h r e a t without j scoring. Midway in the first pe- ! rind a poor Baylor punt went out j of bounds on the Bruins’ thirty- I six yard line and U.T. drove on j to the eleven before faltering and threat at that point. ending the field | throughout the first and second I periods. Short rushes into the line seemed to work for both clubs, hut once the pressure was put on the de- cither Baylor or Texas, It was up and down the Gamma Delta had two bits’ innings— the second and third, their nire runs were scored pine inning* Joe 0«oha. Gamma < Delta pitcher, really trot down and ; pitched the pinches and held I the frat er ni ty boys to but one run by scattering their hit*, Louis Mc­ Donald, Sigma Nu pitcher, pitched gone} ball. but the club wi nner’s were ju*t able to bunch their bits. in Sigma Nu is runner-up in intra- I their mural softball because of the victory over Oak Grove, winners of the M I.G A. division. The score of that game wa? 13-8. Net, Badminton Champs of Marshall Gordon and Tom Cot­ tier’s victory over Warren Crane and Elmer Strums Wednesday a f t ­ ernoon made them tennis doubles the University. champions Grano and Struss are runners-up in tennis doubles. Cotner and Gor­ don were winners of the club di­ vision, and Crain and Struss were winners of the M.I.C.A. division. The score of the championship match was 8-0, 6-2. Gordon and Cotner defeated Joe Gilmore and Sam McBemey, winners of the frat ernit y division. Herbert Holchak, Alpha Tau Omega, beat Gene Goodman, Sig­ ma Chi, 15-0, 15-2, Wednesday ri gh t in handball singles and is handball champion of the Univer­ sity. In the quarter-finals Holchak heat Phil Smith and Goodman heat Elgin Williams. Touch Football b a c k w h o W E L D O N B I G O N Y , one y e a r l e t t e r m a n f r o m Big S p r i n g , wa* g a v e on e B a y l o r of T e x a s t r o u b l e the B e a r * b a t t l e d T e x a s t o a 7 t o 7 tie. H e ha* Ona m o r e y e a r of el i gi bi l i t y. S a t u r d a y w h e n b a l l - c a r r i e r * lot a touch intramural Odd things happened this week in football. There were quite a number of good games, a number of games I were won on penetrations, a few . were “ track meets,” and too many I were defaults. Outstanding players this week were Grady Hatton and Stanley I Bank*. Deita Tan Delta; Grady j J ordan and Webb Bishop, Phi 1 Delta Theta; and Tex Schramm 1 of Phi Kappa Psi. The Phi Psi, Phi Sigs, and j S.R.D. Darkhorse won on penetra- j tions Thursday afternoon. But then this thing called de- j Notre Dame Beats 'Undefeated' Navy With Passes, 20-13 football brawl, BALTIMORE, Nov. 8.— (INS) - Notre Dame came through trial by fire Saturday and is «till un­ defeated. In a savage, bludgeon­ fighting ing behind Irish hammeied twice un­ to overtake hitherto beaten Navy and come out on top, 20 to 13, before a crowd of 64,- 795. the from Never on the short end of the fault*. There were just too many score, Notre Dame nevertheless this week. Af te r all the work that needed each successive touchdown is put in on intramurals by cam pus officials, teams that enter a hy DlPPy Evans, Steve Juzwik and •port their games | finally Evans again in the fourth when scheduled and not default, period to outdo the undying fury of the doughty Navy team Defaults show lack of cooperation (of th® doughty Navy team that fought, to the hitter end. and poor sportsmanship. Her e’s hoping that in the coming games we have less default*. should play Schwarting, Versatile End, Tennis Schedule Likes to Paint Pictures V a r sity C a urt* C # urt I * Holrhxk # Cunn>ngh*m ▼* Pool* A fi«und*r*. B#nnrn«nn 4. Fran klin A Crain v*. Offvr A J i n g u . v*. Anrtark A 5. Pou A Ho ffm an C n urt 2 S. Rail A Driver va. S tan * A Kilty. V Hakar A Campbell va Bradley A T h o rn b e r r y . F re s h m a n C o urts C o urt I. Wt4eh A F ra n klin va. Nelson I A Morton. C hariton. Thompaon. Meyer*. G ro hm an n. Naber*. Ga rd n ie r. 4. Ormahee A Mitchell v«. Holm an A 5. Zinn A Spilman va. L tv t r o n n * A A. Rowland A B u erh e v*. Dines A C o urt 3 4 Carroll A Htidaon v*. Karlen A f>. Coffin A W a g n e r v* Kennon A S. Britton A Zlotnik v*. Miller A C o urt A Team - - (Continued from Page I) teams and what the parley cards let that information he say and | their guide. Football is the guide. I believe them stronger, you c a n ’t make me be­ lieve they will not rise. Thorough­ breds do that way.” today will make Tt all happened when he was a freshman, the y e ar t h a t the Ye ar ­ lings heat the Varsity. The papers said that he was through, because the knee was thoroughly shot. Yet, it was too bad. And he was such a good prospect too. But someone was wrong. He wasn’t through and he did come hack, because Joe Schwarting is very much in evidence this year a t his left end position.♦---------------------------- — —---------- —■ * * m It we ' u . , , , are not ready, „ ot M l d y _ but i( they will he.” Being given up as lost to foot There ie , reel . t or y behind Joe football career. is and his doubtful if there are more than ten fine arts majors in the coun­ try that are playing football and making such a record a t it. Joe is majoring in fine arts for more than one reason. One of the , . is that he is very talented in t ha t « o h I t r u e s . T iii- direction and the next reason i , , bet t„ that he plan, on becoming a rom- : time r „ t of f m e m n l artist linen rev a /In a f m n mercial artist upon graduation. Besides playing football and go­ ing to school, this boy of wonders has his likes and dislikes in the way of entertainment. Upon be­ ing questioned about what he liked to do in his spare time, he said 1 u n I guess I like to go to shows - ■ .. _ one.' The saying goes, all work and no play makes Jack a dull “ e * • - right proportions, comeback has not been dull. hall on account of an m ju ry and boy w j „ , take up a taking courses which great deal of time, he is one of the very unusual boys on the gr eat Longhorn squad this season. By staying out of football last year, Joe has another year of eligibility. In a bull session over at Hill Hall the other afternoon, Schwart­ ing was asked what he thought of the squad in general this year. He said, “ I don’t think the t e a m will he stopped unless A.AM. does it. We found out last year t h a t the greatest of teams can he beaten When Joe h ur t his knee he him­ self did not think t ha t he would over get to play any more foot­ ball, but limb suddenly r e­ sponded to tr e at me n t and snapped I out of it. No doubt it is in top I shape now and is as sound as j before the fateful day in “ 38.” ! Judging from the g re at come- ! back he has made, it would take ; a very had knee to keep Joe out i of the game. * because , J the his w „ * b <7 It wa* Notre Dame’* fifth -traight victory ovei Navy and its twelfth victory fifteen- in game sones, as against three de­ feats. the Notre Dame exhibited one of the hest passing attacks ever seen under murky Maryland skies, as snapped A r g e l o Bertolo Bertilli the touchdown passes all field. over Tech Comes Back— Beats Creighton, 13-6 LUBBOCK, Nov. 8 — (INS) — Texas Tech’* Red Raiders scored the first and second periods in Saturday to win a 13-6 game from the Creighton Blue Jays of the Missouri Valley Conference. in the few minutes after Mullin* the kick-off and returned Tech’s 12-yard line. On down Leonard carried over. their first took it to third The Raider* got Creighton scored first Down in the showers the team was thinking of one thing, T.C.U. The first qua rt e r ran scoreless As one team member put it, “ Just and then in the second Kippy Ev­ wait until those damn frog e a t­ ans intercepted a Navy pass and ing ..........................ge t in Austin.” it forty yards to Navy’* carried Those boys are going 40-yard line. Then Bertelli whip- per out a couple of passes for somebody pay for that touchdowns. Af t e r that to make tie, they made t h a t clear. all Notre touchdown on a 65-vard drive by ! Dame all the way. Navy was never to regain the Dvoracek, Smith and Austin, with able lead. Bertelli Dvoracek carrying over from the was the big show— not only on two-yard line Smith converted. passe* hut on long runs as well. it was The Alcaldes will meet at 6 o’clock Sunday at Old Seville for an important business meeting. All members must attend. m « kr l f « , s a m a r t e n t s t y l e c r e a t i o n Meet Us at the Co-Op Where: O u r fe ow Students G a sh e r lo Purchase Their Books C o ege S u p e ies at Prices M a rk e d to M e e t O d - e ra r ng C cs^s O n / . W e A r e H a o p y to O ffe r C o u r ­ teous a r ci O e e r t u i A tte n tio n in Se rv in g You. Bill B row n Jack Hestilow J o a loewenstaln Charlo* Pat*) Roy Sn od g r at t Jack A u l a n d e r John Howard H a r o ld Brown BU! Collier C a rlo s G o m e i Ralph S pen ce G a o rga Kaith Jack Luphar Joe Schwarting C h a rles Standifer Charles W alker Student Em ployees o f the University Co-Op S U P E S . B I I C ll E S $C85 $785 to t i I MOST STYLES _ M i m w* e%*e ii m - M M e w tth e m a i m m d tppbM f a f M e ~ M - € a n r * % « m P e r t t e d M A A U S T I N i t J- D A C Y S 6 1 0 C O N G R E S S / a t SHOES A t C h am p aign — Iow a 2 1 , Il­ 1. Dan l l e g a r A H o r a k A t K n e ir ill* — T e n n e sse e 2 8, Middle— A very Aeea va. Es ch ber sr cr fund A K u ltg e n ( K S ) . S o u t h — A n derson R ouse v s . T y so n nold A Bord en ( P h i G a m ) . Red H ots. House. House. S. W. C. Scores A JkM . 2 1 , S .M .U . IO. R ice 2 1 , A rk an sas 12. T .C .U . 3 8 , C en te n a r y 7. Football Results A l A tla n ta — G eo rg ia T ech 2 0 , A t N e w O rlea n s— A lab am a 19, K e n tu c k y 13. T u la n a 14. H ow ard 6. A t B irm in gh am — M ississip p i S ta te 14, A uburn 7. A t L a fa y e tt e — P u rd u e 0, M ich­ igan S ta te 0. lin o is 0. A t F lorid a 3. D avid son 0. J a ck so n v ille— G eo rg ia 19, A t D a v id so n , N .C .— D u k e 56, N a v y 13. A t B a ltim o r e — N o tre D am e 2 0, 20, A t C am b rid ge, H arvard A t N ew Y ork—-M issouri 26, A rm y 6. N .Y .U . 0. A t N ew Y ork— M anhattan B o sto n U . 7. P r in c e to n 13. A t P r in c e to n — D a rtm o u th A t B o sto n — B o sto n C o lle g e 26, W ak e F o r e st 6. A t D e tr o it— D e tr o it 7 , M ar­ q u e tte 6. N eb rask a 0. In d ian a 14. A t M in n ea p o lis— M in n eso ta 9, A t E v a n sto n — N o r th w este r n 2 0, sparked the first Har var d drive, dived over the line from the one- yard line for the second Crimson touchdown midway in the third pe­ this time Vander E h ’s riod and kick was good to make it 13 to 6. An intercepted Army pass paved the way f or the third touchdown in the last quarter. Ha r va rd took the Army 33 and the ball on marched to a touchdown in seven plays, Johnson going over for the score. Vander Eb again con­ verted. Intramural Schedule N ovem ber IO. I M I TOUCH FOOTBALL 4 o ’Clock N n r t h — Cyclops v». Kappa Annex. Middle— Oak Grove va. Allied Co-op. S o uth — Alley B a ts va. Peck Co-op. * e ’Clock N o r t h — Speedway Independenta v s. H ANDBALL DOUBLES Club D ivision 7 e ’Clock vs. Bradley Bourland 4 Vorhies 2. L eonard 4 U p s h a w R e bo rn A Ja c o b s (R in k y D i n k s ) . ( P r o * C s s.) ( L C D ). ( P r a t h e r ) va. 8. M a her 4 S h a n n a h a n (N e w m a n ) vs. Keeton A L oveless ( T e j a s ) . 4. Dudley A Wilso n M arkley A S m ith ( L C D ). ( P r a t h e r ) vs. R. Neely A C ha rpio t ( P r a t h e r ) vs. Os- coba A S c h roeder ( G a m m a D e lta ) . MICA DIVISION 7 o’Clock 8. 0 « b o r n e A Mullins ( T y s o n ) vs. J u r e n A Ra ndall (Dixon Co-op). 7— Denson A Fitsgrerald (Oak Grov e) vs. Roland A W ilson 8. Gross A You n g (D ixon Co -op). ( E s c h b e r g e r ) vs. Hedrick A G risso m (C yclo p s). 13, 20, F raternity D ivision 7 o’Clock 8. Penick A S t r e a k y (D TD ) vs. H o e - eth A M u e h lb erg er ( B e t a ) . ». Anderson A A n derson ( P i K. S ig ) vs. P l a t t e r A H ud so n IO. K n ig h t A King ( S A E ) . (D TD ) vs. S w a n ­ son A S eibert ( P h i G.D.). 7 :45 o’Clock J. Hen derso n A K os stad t (A TO ) vs. (P hi Kappa S i g ). 2. Scudday A Downs ( D Sig .-Phi) vs. Fr.vrriire A H erefo rd C reigh ton A Ashley ( D X ). 8. Gary A McBirney gy A Denman ( L a m b d a X). 4 To w ner A M cNam ee (SX) vs. Met- zenth in A Powell (Chi P h i ) . B. H oo ks A B a ss ( K S ) va. Tallieha* A S tew ar d ( K A ) . A W a t s o n ( K A ) . 8. L yo ns A Feuille ( P K A ) vs. B ow ers 7. A b e r n a t h y A W e s t (D T D ) va. Hem - m i n g t o n A H o u s e m a n 8. S c o t t A T a t u m Couch ( A T O ) . ( P h i D e it) . ( S N ) v s. H o n e y A 9. Goodm an A J o n e s ( S X ) va. B k- 10. H u lse y A S to re y ( P D T ) va. A r ­ • : 3 0 e ’Clock 1. G a r n e r A Gober ( B e t a ) va. Boll A Campbell ( P D T ) . 2. K im p le A Osm on d ( S P E ) v s. B o b i t t A A n d erso n ( B e t a ) . 8. K arlen A McDowell ( S X ) va. H a r ­ riso n A Allen ( P K S ) . 4. J o r d a n A W y n n e ( P D T ) va. T erry A S m i t h ( D T D ) . fi. Cline .A McComb nedy A T urell ( P h i G a m ) . ( S X ) va. K e n ­ 6. Adam A G r u n d y (D T D ) va. Bruce A T h o m p s o n t K A ) . 7. L erner A Cohen (T au D elt) va Gold! A H e r r i n g ( S A M ) . 8. H u m p h r e y A H o dg e ( B e t a ) L e ft w i r h A G an n ao n ( P h i D e l t ) . ” \ 9. R o b e rts o n A Morris (A T O ) vs. B a ­ ker A H a r ri s o n ( K a p p a S i g ) . 10. R la n c h e t te A M artin ( P h i G am ) vs. Cousines & M oroney ( S A E ) . 9 :1 5 o’Clock 1. W o r t h a m A H a r m a n H arem A P r e w i t t (C hi P h i ) . 2. A r m s t r o n g A Haeflick Sim pso n A D orse y ( K S ) . ( S A E ) vs. (A T O ) va. *. Ellison A G a r r e t t ( D K E ) vs. P a c t A W in kler ( S A E ) . 4. Kulod av A R u b e n stein vs. Long A P e r r y ( P i KA). ( T a u D elt) 5. J a c k s o n A W a s h (D X ) va- Ca ven A S eam en ( \ T O ) . 6. M c N u tt A Adam s (Pi KA) vs. L e m ­ ( S A M ) . m ons A T ra v is 7. C a n to n A Carl ( P h i K S ) va. Led­ yard A Nelson (Pi KA). W heless A S l a t e r ( K A ) . 9. P e t e r s A A ndrews (Chi P h i ) va. P e te r so n A W illiam s ( P h i P s i ) . (D K E ) vs. P o r ­ 8 H opkins A G ram b lin g ( S A E ) ve. Undefeated A ggie Frosh Meet Rice Tuesday COLLEGE STATION — The Texas Aggie Freshmen w-ill play their first conference foe of the season when they meet the Rice Slimes in Houston on Armistice Day, Tuesday, a t 2:30 o’clock. Winner over the Allen Acad­ in emy Ramblers, 40-0, their opener, they will he out to pr o­ tect their undefeated record, b ut daily scrimmage against the Ag­ gie varsity and r esul ta nt injuries has cut deeply into the bunch t ha t won t h a t game. THE "STYLE" STORE FOR MEN A SHARKSKINS H e r e 's suit c o m fo rt at its B e s? — suit c o m fo rt righ t alo n g with suit style. For fall yo u c a n ’t g o w ro n g in a Sharkskin suit tailor* ed b y expert cra ftsm e n — th e y're suits with definite eye appeal, so w hy not a d d a shark­ skin to y o u r w a r d r o b e ? Y o u ’!! b e a lifetim e b o o ste r o n ce y o u do. T h e re ’s a fine selection o f colors and patterns for you to / ' N p ick from . $35 SEE OUR W IN DO W S <& a^n4r 616 CONGRESS Austin'* Leading Store for Men V I ti ti ti f w fi I I, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1941 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 4f rry m) It) sd* »ir o- ut g- es at - a Sic. bot im- ere U.T. to Debate Canada A r * On U.S. W a r Entry Dads, Mothers to Receive Official Invitations to Visit Law and Alberts Will Represent Varsity Debaters bitt I a s r * ”\ J/ f Ba. Y An international debate with representatives of the U niversity inaug­ of Toronto, Canada, w ill urate the Student Forum Series, sponsored by the U n iversity Ora- orical Society. The debate and a forum discussion w ill be held in t the Texas Union, Wednesday night at 7:30 o’clock. “ Resolved: That the United at States should declare w ar once,” is the question fo r debate. The question is interpreted to re­ quire a declaration of w ar against is construed G erm any; at once to allow a sufficient period of time for discussion. W ith letters of invitation from the President of the U niversity and from their sons and daughters who are enrolled as students, Dads and Mothers throughout the state w ill Monday begin getting word of special events being arranged for their entertainm ent in Austin S a t­ urday and Sunday, November 15 and 16. 175 Now Are Belle Nominees Entry Deadline Saturday Noon O fficial letters of invitation were being mailed Saturd ay, urg­ ing parents to attend and partici- pate in Dads and Mothers D ay on 1 the U n iversity campus next week-1 end. Program details were simultan-i eously nearing completion. Highlighted by the Texas-T.C.U. football game Satu rd ay afternoon, Pictures of Bluebonnet Belle I the folks are to be * iven a « * n ' nominees are being taken during E. S. Kirklan d and David M. this month at christianson-Lebnr H ayne, the Canadian debaters, ' w ill take the affirm a tive ; T o m La w and Harold Alberts, members of the U n iversity V a rs ity Debate Squad, w ill take the negative. man Studio. All nominees who have received their letter of no­ tification from the Texas Student Publications office should come bv . . , d nj* ; Journalism Building 108 and make Both K irk lan d and Hayne are prominent in activities on their ; . campus. K irklan d is president of j their appointment. A ll appoint­ e e V ictoria College Union, the ' ments should be made by Novem of official undergraduate body vice-president V ictoria College; of the Students Adm inistrative Council of the U n iversity of T o r­ onto. ber 15. to 175 girls. Letters have been sent Nominations must be the in j 6 , i <>tal survey of caniP us day morning w ill be given over class­ to fam ily visits, with all Satur- rooms on the campus open to fa ­ thers and mothers who w ant to go children. to school with their Tours of the 40 acres are also, being mapped. Ju s t before the football game.j the Longhorn Band w ill present a 30-minute concert at Memorial Stadium, starting at 2 p. rn. Satu rd ay night President and Cactus office before 12 o’clock Mrs\ Homf>r p - Rainey w ill receive visiting parents at an open house in the academic room of the Main Building. noon Saturday. A ll nominations the official blank must be on which may be secured in Journal- ism Building 3. 0 The following names are addi- Special services are planned at j campus churches Sunday morn- a program will be pre- t-be faculty of the de­ partment of music at Hogg Me- Dorothy A rlitt, Iva Alexander, morial Auditorium Sunday after- belle i ’5^* ^f^ H ayne has won many awards in public speaking. He holds twelve university scholarships, is an ath­ lete with an enviable record, and is qualifying for his lieutenant’s I Baldw in, M ary Elizabeth Bertch, commission as a member of t h e ! Udel Bradford, Ann Brannen, Em- Training 0gen Broaddus, M arjorie Bow yer, Canadian tions to the nominees already announced: bluebonnet O fficers’ Je a n Arm or, Jean Railes, Pearle ! noon- . D a r l i n g M a r r i e s CorP s* • : M ary Bu ll, v irg in ia k . Crawford, I Eunice Burr Sunday ! Je r r y Cullers, M arjo V . Davis, I ! Dorothy Dickinson, N ettie Dos- Eunice B u rr, student The subject fo r debate was se- Catherine Franey, W illa Mae Helen leoted by the Am erican Univer- cher, and V irg in ia Em ery, sities which the Canadians w ill visit; a comment from the Gen- Gidley, Helen e ra lS e c e rta ry of the Students Ad- Grebe, Helen Ginsburg. S h irle y , m inistrative Council of the Lni- Frances Goldberg, Martha Green, Federated W om en’s Club Building versify o f Toronto, stresses fact that the representatives from Canada in no w ay wish to in flu ­ ence United States student opin­ ion. M ary Ann Hughes, Bettie Hunter, I reception Dorothy Johnson, Nancy Je a n Karsteter, ; M arguerite Kincaid, Josephine M. Augustine u Silva Haltom, ut 3 o’clock Sunday afternoon. A the cere- the School of Education, will he m ar­ ried Sunday to Charles D arling of Bartlesville, Okla. The cere­ mony will be held in the Texas Kotzebue, j M argaret Patterson, Johnson, M ary Frances mony. the V irginia Hagan, at which I Kocurek, universities G inner, follow Oher w ill in A t the time of the coronation of K in g George and Queen E liz a ­ beth of England, Kirk lan d was se­ lected as one of the representa- tive students of Canada to attend the coronation. A K irklan d and H ayne w ill debate Adele Kvnette, Ju d y Lacy, Ja n e l I Parkin, are Iow a State Teachers College; Long, Edna M cClain, Margaret versity! U niversity of W ich ita, W ich ita M cClusky, and Hazel McCoy. Kansas; Washington U niversity, ! Lazinka M artin, Dorothy Mat- St. Louis, M o.; U n iversity of Mis- souri, Colum bia; W estm inster Col- thews, Katherine M ayfield, Nancy lege, Fulton M issouri; and Iow a Meredith, M argaretta Moss, Ruth ✓’State U niversity, Iow a C ity. Th eir Neal, Helen Nolen. V irginia Olsen, Perkins! Raymond, Gladys Reeves, N ancy Seaberry, Aubra S f " " ' D*na She'" stay in the United States w ill be Elizabeth Park, Ju d ith for about ten days. | Consumo T. „ D * Attendants of Miss B u r r will be Kathleen Davis, maid of honor, and Alice all students of the Uni- Miss Alice Rernnan of Laredo w ill also be one of the bridesmaids. Miss B u rr is the daughter of Mrs. lim a R u rr of Austin. U. T. Ex-President N ow in W ashington r - i v man, B e tty A I M *• A a w I Anne W . Taliey, Frances Ia n k s rs - year, is n o w junior economist Tax Ticket* Available Sydney Reagan, who received q ,IaT(> Sklar, Kihei his business administration degree For A.&M. Gam e Nov. 2 7 r stassinoR’ Elizabeth Strawbndge, rn 1937 and his law degree this in the Rural Rehabilitation D ivision of the Farm Secu rity Adm inistra­ tion of the Department of Agricul- turp* He was president of the > students Association dunner the 1939-1940 Ioi:g session. M r. Rea­ gan is now living in Washington, I). C. T h The Athletic Council has an-; ley, D o r i s Taylor, Frances Thet- nounced that tickets to the A .& M . f°rd . Elean or Toxey, M yra Tsehu- game w ill be available to b l a n k e t din, W anda Turner, and Cecille tax holders after November 17. I Wheat. Otherwise, seats j grid grudge were sold out three ; spahn, Mae Jo W inn, Courtney weeks ago and probably are not j " r 'STht, and Natalie Zinn. to be had for love or money. The Farm ers w ill have plenty of help S t a t . D e f i c i t I . 31 Mi l l i o n in plowing K yle F ield. r • Jiis W allace, G ort rn dp W ied^r- I i. for this great i • , , •j if a* n n \ ~ . , , , I If, however, The present deficit of the State the disappointed of Texas, according to a report would-be spectators w ant to find from the Treasurer’s Department, such consolation as they can in stands at $31,008,584.62 as cal- the T.C .U . and Oregon games, culated through November 5. Lat- tickets are not quite so scarce, est serial number on general rev- These may be had fa irly easily j enue warrants is 52,277 and the with low seats between the IO and amount of tho rail, good for all 20-yard lines and high seats be- w arrants through November 21 tween the 20 and 30-yard lines. : 1940, is $2,216,284.10 Semi-Blackout to Precede Austin Christmas Lighting An illuminated black-out” w ill take place in Austin December I, when all lights in the business section w ill be turned o ff and the ^ d e c o r a t iv e Christmas lighting turned on. This unusual variation of the theme of turning on the Christmas lights has been planned by the Austin < (lamber of Commerce with the co-operation of the Capitol officials. The U niversity of Texas, and Austin business men. STUDYING FOR HOUR QUIZZES? Do your eyes hurt w h en ­ ever you pick up th at text that just has to he studied. H elp your eyes to help yo u r grades with proper­ ly fitted glasses at— MWKD&ptEADWEtj onoififRjsrs A total black-out w ill take place at 7 o’clock, and when all lights are extinguished, the Long­ horn Band w ill begin playing Christmas carols. The hand will be divided into two groups, one to play in fro nt of the Austin Hotel and the other to wander over the city, playing at various places. The total black-out w ill last .several minutes, a fte r which all Christm as decorations will be il­ luminated. The Capitol building! this year will have its domev»ut>! lined in neon tubing, and huge de­ signs in neon lights w ill appear on ; both wings of the building. In ad-! dition to Christmas decorations, patriotic emblems made of neon tubing w ill appear on the build­ ing. - Gus Garcia and Carlos Cadena, In iversity ex-students, visited on the campus F rid a y afte r attending the Texas League o f M unicipali­ this ties convention in Temple I week. Garcia took his law degree from the U n iversity in 1937, and : Cadena receded his in 1941. They the San I are now employed in Antonio C ity A tto rn e y * office. Headquarters for UNDERWOOD Typewriters ROYAL ....................$27.50 L. C. S M IT H .............. 30.00 R EM IN G T O N ............ 35.00 RENTALS S E L E C T QUAL I T Y .SY/ P E R M O M It PAY ONLY S i A WEEK $22.50 to $74.50 Rebuilt Underw ood T e x a s B o o k S t o r e SALES & SERVICE — W E DELIVER PHONE 614 For the Best Laundry Service you can’t go wrong if you take advan­ tage of our L O W S T U D E N T R A T E S SS Years o f F i n s L a u n d e ri n g Service M E DICAL LY A P P R O V E D E M P L O Y E E S Driskill Hotel Laundry rn P A SE THREE -SPO RTS A T S C A R B R O U G H ’ S F I R S T N I G H T E R . . The Pajamas that wouldn't stay in bed $ 2 ^ 0 Pharmacist Doubts Actual Existence Of Flu Preventative The possibility of the existence of a germicide that would prevent the catching of influenza, was doubted by Dean W . F . G idley of the U n iversity’s College of P h a r­ macy. Asked about a drug named ‘‘gramicidin,” which was allegedly discovered three years ago by Dr. Rene Dubose of the Rockefeller Institute, Dean Gidley said that the college received most of the journals and modern scientific that “ surely we would have heard about it.” The germidice in question would allegedly protect its user against 10,000 doses of pneumonia germs for each one-millionth of a drop used. Vade Giles, a student during the last summer session, is now em­ ployed by the sheet metal works at Brooks Field, San Antonio. Frosh Draw Positions For Speech Contest Contestants the Freshm an in Oratorical Contest, sponsored by the Hogg Debate Society, w ill turn in entry blanks today for positions tomorrow, and begin de­ bating in preliminaries W ednes­ day. the U niversity money in oil ro y­ alties and represented the U n iv e r­ sity in a hearing which resulted in the Main Bu ild in g ’s being built .p a rtly through P W A loans. He is now a member o f the Texas La w i Review board. Drawing fo r positions w ill be Tuesday afternoon at 2 o’clock in Texas Union 316. The prelim i­ nary debates will be W ednesday at 2 b’clock in the Geology A u d i­ torium. law yer Jud g e Ralph W\ Yarborough, prominent Austin and graduate of the U niversity L a w School, will present the w inner with a sterling silver, gold-plate lined trophy. The trophy is now on display in the Main Building corridor. Second and third prizes will be medals given by the Hogg Debate Society. Judge Yarborough helped save Present plans call for the final ; debates to be held Monday, No­ vember 17, over a local radio sta- I tion. .Jimmy Allen, president of the debate society, announces the fo l­ lowing veteran members of the J \ arsity Debate Squad as judges: Kiel Boone, Ed M cK c lla r Jr ., H. R. Hodge, Dick Davis, and C lif­ ford Mitchell. Dr. Cora M artin, professor in the School of Education, has re­ turned from Paris where she ad- i dressed teachers of that ‘section I on “ Elem entary Education.” THE HIGHEST STANDARDS OF CORRECT FORMAL WEAR For years Scarbrough s has enjoyed a reputation for the highest standards of correct formal wear . , . the fault­ less tailoring . . . the fullness of c u t . . . the perfection of drape . . . the smooth flowing lapels . , , com parable to those found in higher priced formals. First nighter’* too good-looking to spend it* whole life asleep. For tho other 16 hours it can bo worn for general sports, for loung- ing, for boating and picnics. Crew neck pullover of soft combed mercerized bal­ Slack trousers tailored of fine briggan. broadcloth . . . with pleatod tops, real cuff* and roomy side pockets. W s For Chilly Nights A L L W O O L F L A N N E L R O B E S . Full cut and com­ fort a b I e. In smart s o l i d colors of royal, w i n e a n d camel. ♦5.95 Boxer Shorts on Built the same stay-up Argyle Socks Real, dear cut distinctive ar­ gyle pattern in c o mbinations of canary and brown, b l u e and b r o w n and blue and gray. 50c w a ist-h u ggin g lines as the trunks worn in the prize ring. H as tucked elastic w aist­ band. M a d e of white broadcloth, striped in bright tones. A lso in solid pastel tones. 3 for $1.75. TUXEDOS Cr FULL DRESS $2750 Cr $2950 F O R M A L wear that a d d s to the enjoyment of the o c c a ­ sion. Each detail, from the hang of the trousers to the snug fit of the collar, has been carefully and expertly executed to give the ultimate in smart, sophisticated eve ning attire. M id n ig h t blue with g ro sg ra in fa cing s a n d trouser striping to match. Softly constructed o f unfinished worsted. W it h high rise pleated trousers and full lined coats. S E C O N D F L O O R Shoes and Accessories fo* 4 < or tails—-Street Floor Kona 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — P W . 2-2473 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1941 W. JU. Hitler W arns U.S. That Nazi Torpedoes W o n ’t Miss / MUNICH, Nov. 8— (IN S )— Adolf H itler Saturday night bluntly warned the United States Navy that he had ordered his naval com­ manders to defend German warcraft immediately upon being attacked by American warships and declared that Nazi torpedoes “will hit their EDITORIAL— PASE FOUR A p ick et S ystem <7a *7lunk A bout •y v r lT H THE FO OTBALL TICKET dis- i m ­ tributi on p r o c e d u r e not m u c h ^ p r o v e d thi s y e a r b y t h e “ roll c a l l ” s y s t e m , a S t u d e n t s ’ A s s e m b l y c o m m i t t e e has c o m e t h r o u g h w i t h a p r o po s al f or a “ l o t t e r y ” s c h e m e t h a t w o u l d aboli sh lines and still g i v e e v e r y s t u d e n t an e qual c h a n c e to g e t a g o od s ea t at g a m e s w h e r e t i c k e t s m u s t b e r e se rv e d. T he i r p la n w o u l d i n v ol v e t h e b i n d i n g t o g e t h e r o f t ic k e t s in b u n c h e s o f six, p u t ­ t in g all o f t h e s e into o n e l a r g e barrel an d d r a w i n g t h e m o ut at r a n d o m as s t u d e n t s c o m e by t h e A t h l e t i c O f f i c e w it h t h e i r b l a n k e t t a xe s . A p e r s on n e e d not g e t s ix t i c k e t s at a ti me, but m a y not g e t a n y m or e . T h e i dea b eh in d t h e s c h e m e is t h a t a s t u d e n t w h o c o m e s b y t h e o f f i c e as l ate as T h u r s d a y a f t e r n o o n — w h i c h h as b e e n s e t as t h e d e a d l i n e on all g a m e s — b e f o r e a S a t u r d a y g a m e will h a v e as fa ir a c h a n c e t o d r a w a f i f t y - y a r d line s e a t or s e a t s as t h e s t u d e n t w h o is t h e r e w h e n t h e o f f i c e o p e n s on M o n d a y m o r ni n g . If t h e p la n g o e s t h r o u g h t h e A s s e m b l y m e e t i n g n ext T h u r s d a y n i g h t as t h e c o m ­ m i t t e e h o p e s , it wi ll b e i nst it ut ed f or t h e T e x a s A. & M. g a m e t h i s y e ar . W h a t t h e c o m m i t t e e al s o w a n t s b e f o r e t h e m e e t i n g i= s o m e e x p r e s s i o n o f o pi ni on from t h e s t u ­ dent b ody , N o t l o o p p o s e w h a t the c o m m i t t e e h as d o n e , b ut r a t h e r to s t i m u l a t e s o m e t h o u g h t on t h e p a rt o f t he s t u de n t s , let us put f o r ­ w a r d a n o t h e r p o s s i b l e s y s t e m t h at a t t a c k s t h e p r o b l e m from a d i f f e r e n t a n g l e : i n t e rv a l s b e f o r e U n d e r t h e p r e s e n t s et -up, p er so n s b e ­ gi n g a t h e r i n g a t G r e g o r y G y m S a t u r d a y n i g h t to b e fi rst in line t o g e t t h e i r roll call n u m b e r s a t I o ’c l o c k S u n d a y a f t e r n o o n . T h e n t h e y or t h e i r r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s h a v e to r e p o r t at s p e c i f i e d t h e n e x t m o r n i n g to k e e p t h e i r p l a c e s in line. A s h a s b e e n p o i nt e d out, t hi s n e c e s s i t y f or s t a y i n g up all n i gh t or g e t t i n g up e v e r y t w o or t h r e e h our s w o r k s a h a r d s h i p u p o n s t u ­ d e n t s -who a re not m e m b e r s o f o r g a n i z e d g r o u p s and upon girls w h o c a n n o t p o s si b l y b e r u nn i n g ar ou n d at all hour s o f t he night. So w h y not m e r e l y h a v e a l ot te r y o f t h e roll cal l t i c k e t s ? T hi s c o ul d e i t h e r be c o n ­ d u c t e d a t o n e s e t t i m e or c o ul d be c ar r ie d on t h e w e e k b e f o r e t i c k e t s a re to go on s a l e . A f t e r a s t u d e n t ha d l e a r n e d his p la ce .in line by d r a w i n g a n u m b e r o ut o f t h e b a r­ rel for w h a t e v e r e ls e m i g h t be u s e d ) , he w o u l d not h a v e to r e po r t b a c k to t h e A t h ­ letic O f f i c e w i n d o w until the t i c k e t s w e nt on s al e. He c o ul d g e t t h e r e as l ate as o n e t a k e m i n u t e b e f o r e t h e w i n d o w o p e n e d , his line, and t h i n g s w o u l d p r o c e e d as usual. U n d e r this p r o c e d u r e , e a c h p ers on c ou ld get t h e l o n g ­ ti me q u ot a of as m a n y as ten b l a n k e t tax t i c ke t s. f a i r l y - d e s i g n a t e d p l a c e in in line A p er so n w h o w a s not at t h e window' w h e n his n u m b e r w a s d u e w o u l d lose his p l a c e f a s h a p p e n s n o w ) , j u s t as p e rs o ns w i t h o u t n u m b e r s p r o p e r l y o b t a i n ­ ed coul d not g e t a n y t i c k e t s until t h o s e w h o ha d c h o s e n n u m b e r s had b een s a t i s f i e d . A s c a n be o b s e r v e d , thi s p lan h a s its d r a w b a c k s , t o o — c h i e f a m o n g t h e m b e i n g the d i f f i c u l t y in c h e c k i n g on h o w m a n y line n u m b e r s a person m i g h t d r a w b e f o r e he is s ati sfi ed w i t h his p l a c e . T h e s e d i s a d v a n ­ t a g e s mi ght be w o r k e d out, too. A ' a n y r a t e , t hi s is a n o t h e r p o s si b l e s o ­ l ut i on t h a t t h e s tu den t b o d y m i g h t t h ink a b o u t . In t h e m e a n t i m e , a lot o f prai se is t i c ke t c o m m i t t e e f or p r e s e n t i n g d u e i‘ - w e 11-th o u g h t o u t plan e a r l y e n o u g h for s t u d e n t s t o voi ce t h e i r o pini ons . ‘ he T h e D a i l y T e x a n the University Fhe Daily Texan, student newspaper of The I Diversity f Texas, is published on the campus in Austin by Texas Student Ox Publications, Inc., every morning except Monday. Entered as ^cor-d class mail m atter at the Post >. flee, Austin Texas, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. Editorial off,ce?. Journalism Building 109 101 m d 102. Telephone 2-2473. Advertising and circulation departments, Jour* a.ism Building 108. Phone 2-2473. SUBSCRIPTION RATES J Month ...... 1 Semester ( 4 H month*! 2 Sem esters (9 m o n th s) Editor. As-ociate Editor. Editorial Assistant. Sports Editor...... Sports Associate... Society Editor ... Society Associate. Amusements Editor..... Amusements Associate. Teiegraph E d itor____ Telegraph Associate— Radio Editor _______ Radio Associate .. C arri cr $0.60 ___ x.76 3,00 Mail $0.60 2.50 4.00 MACK B. HOWARD BEN Z. KAPLAN ----------- . Bob Owens L. W. Brooks — .Tones Schramm .Marianna Sluder Cora Biesele —Jeanne Douglas •Jack Adkins — Dick Bureham Roger Nuhn ....Jimmy P u t . — J e a n Beshell S T A FP FOR THIS ISSUE N ight Editor ................. -.E L IZ A B E T H WHARTON Assistants, Los Carpenter, Jack Brooks, Arden Ha via Night Sports Editor .................. .A ssistant*, Cheries Stacey, A. C. Becker Jr. ' Night Telegraph Editor ....................... Dick Bureham Night Amusements Editor Jack Adkins A ss.iU n u , Cliff Du ae, Murray JCUtar, Wayne Hora Bill Noble F o r ty Qanuuu A c r e s By Bob Owens Owed to Baylor You, You, You— A hunch of surly, grizzly bears Saturday Tied the three greatest teams in the nation. Ah, proud Bears you should be today And for all the years to come T hat you have played on the same level With the mighty Texas Longhorns, Crippled though they were. Shouting you should be today, Bears, Because you were able to fulfill Your threats of avenging 1937 W’h*n Hugh Wolfe and Jud Atchison And a scraggly hunch of Texas mavericks Battered a potent Baylor team over the field And thundered h o m e with a 9-6 triumph. You remembered th a t ’37 victory, Bears, And oh how you avenged your loss! You made hearts heavy here in Austin, Bears, In the breasts of students who had not thought Deeply of the m atter but thought only Of a mighty team that had been tied By a bunch of Waco Baptists. And last night they guzzled “ sneaky pete.” Some of the superficial ones talked About how “ sorry they played,” And “ We’ll go to S M I’, next y e a r.” Cheap they are, F u rry Ones, and They represent not the spirit and sentiment Behind the mighty team th at IS ours. We'll not. disown them, and say, “ Wait till next year and watch our smoke.” W e're fighting for the Longhorns Who have fought for us so long and valiantly. They are ours and we are proud of them. They stand for us on thp field and we stand for Them in the stands, on the campus, in Texas, And in our hearts. We take no glory from the «avage beautiful brutes Who growled in the face of the Thundering Herd And started a stampede all their own Saturday. F u rry ones, proud you should be today And tomorrow and all the years to come That you Have done what no other team Could come in twenty-eight points of doing. Perhaps you kept our second team out of the Rose Bow!— And perhaps not. Rut you made the people in Austin Who have grown so used to the orange victory lights Most “ hacked” last night. We saw a Tower, half-orange and half-white. And F u rry Ones, we did SO like the all-orange Tower! Now the team must win enogh games so th a t We can bathe the Tower in orange And run the Texan off in lurid ink! Longhorns, who started your mighty victories A year ago from yesterday's memorable game, Think not of yesterday But think of tomorrow's games Ah we SHOULD have been doing. Start that, lolling stampede again, Longhorns, And show the nation and Williamson And the others who perhaps will drop you some In their ratings Monday — Show them, mighty Steers, The might of your h o r n s . Let them hear the thunder of your hooves, Echo your victory bellows again. If they offer you roses, o. k. If they offer you sugar, o. k. If they offer you cotton, o. k. If they offer you nothing, o. k.—- You will have offered dusts with your heels To the hest teams in the nation— The fellow squad members you play every day. One M anti O pinion Tony Biddie has bpen named minister to Greece. Every time Hitler moves, Biddie get another brief case. He Now is our Ambassador to Poland and Belgium and minister to Norway, the Netherlands, Yugoslavia, Czechoslavia, and Greece. Philadelphia Tony i* our only diplomat with revert portfolios and seven league hoots. When the phone ring c in the State D epartm ent they say “ if it isn’t from Riddle it s for him.” The internal revenue department is tapping Al Capone for another $119,367. It appears th a t the wages of sin are audited. Everybody got a job when the governm ent took over Air Associates. Inc., except the president of the company. However, u n d e r the constitution, he still has his a c c u m u l a t e d f r e e d o m s and the right to pursue Happiness. They can’t do that to him, d i d n t they? Thought for the day: There is a bill in the Senate to pay soldiers and >ailors $4 2 a month. It leaked out somehow th at industry was paying higher wages for cleaner work. The weavers union in New York has decided not to support either candidate for Mayor. They won t like O ’Dwyer’s warp any better than La Guardian woof. Finally it has been established th a t the Duchess of Windsor bought five hats and two or three dresses on her c urrent visit. Now we can get back to the consideration of less im portant things. Q uotable Quoted The Amerit an people have made an unlimited commitment that there shall he free world. Aga inst th a t commitment, no individual or group sh* J prevail.” — President Roosevelt. a ‘ I hope that a second fro nt will be established in the near future, thus relieving the task of the Red Army.”— Premier Josef Stalin. In a!! our talks never once was there a word of defeatism. I he will to fight is in the Russian bean .’ — W, A. Harriman. “ D o n ’t you t h i n k i t ’s a b o u t t i m e you s t a r t e d t h i n k i n g a b o u t t he f a m i l y n a m e , F l y b a i t ? ” TIME OUT . fob7 kinhin? BY BEN KAPLAN T e x a n A ss oc ia te E d ito r BAYLOR, Texas, Nov. K.— Football doesn’t make a lot of difference in this department, where, perhaps, undue emphasis is placed on criticism. And, al­ though this is being written be­ fore the Baylor game, it seems reasonably safe to say th a t the Texas football team is almost ahove critical analysis— as a team. (Added by wire Saturday night: Like S enator Tom Con- nally, we are prepared to eat lots of words a f te r today.) I t also makes criticism a lot easier to be able to draw con­ clusions from what is poten­ tially an ideal situation. Let this he understood: If this critic thought Baylor w h s the ideal school to attend he’d he here now. He was, in fact, four year* ago as a freshman. isn’t Desirability, however, the point. For Baylor’s no- *moking-on-t.he-campus e d i c t , for its administrative n a r r o w ­ mindedness, for its fo rm er silk- stocking decrees, for its holier- than-thou attitude, and for Pat Neff in general we don’t give two de-rimmed zeros. Were it possible, Texas could learn a the way they do some around these parts. though, lot from things No fraternity-indepe n d e n t bickering, for example. Texas would be a lot more wholesome without it. This may sound like a mess of discordant notes to some ears, but we wish sin­ th ere were some cerely way of backing up and g et­ ting a nother sta r t with a sys­ it a tem th a t does not make sin politically to wear brass on his chest, and a semi-disgrace, socially, for him not to. for a man th a t It makes no difference at Baylor, since there a r e n 't any Greek c ritturs around. Which we wouldn't for Texas any means— but which, potentially, is an ideal situation. No distinction, we mean. recommend by They say hello around these parts, too— which is something th a t ’ll never seep through the ice-caked, checker-board-1 i k e into maze of group barriers which each Texas student invar­ iably falls. Defrosting of the smile wrinkles is sadly needed. They don’t worry about blan- ket-tax football tickets and all its attending evils and woes at Baylor. No lines, no death watches, no lotteries— no noth­ ing. Each student goes to the game, presents his blanket-tax card with his photograph (or a reasonable facsimile) warks in, sits down, and the game. T e sooner he show's up a t the game the n e a re r he gets to the 50-yard line in a student section w’hich extends from the tw enty to the tw enty, except for the visiting student body reservations. sees Sure, th e y ’ve got 2,000 stu­ dent* and Texas has almost 7,000 blanket-tax h o l d e r s . W e’re not so sure it wouldn’t work though. is Thej’ don’t elect a sw eetheart here. Which is to their ever­ lasting credit. True, they have a Homecoming Queen whose the same as th a t function of our Sw eetheart— hut the method of election is entirely differen t. Each group on the campus makes its nomination, nobody fools anybody with non­ campaigning the campaign is short and to the point, and the Queen can be said to represent the choice of a tru e majority. , Incidentally, we suspect some radical changes will be made restrictions, in our system shortly. And not ju st because the Assembly has got sudden th at line. ideas along Also, the yell-leaders yell around here. Their repertoire includes more two yells and a h i t-’e m-again-h a r d e r chant, and th e r e ’s only one HEAD yell-leader. More about this in a day or two. than Finally, they don’t elect their publication heads by popular vote at Baylor. As small as the campus is, as well-known a* are its students to one a n ­ other, as close as is the con­ nection of the individual to his yearbook and to his daily news­ paper (no alleged humor maga­ zine allowed!)— they still don’t consider their most responsible jobs political footballs. respective They selert their editors by a nierit-ferreting board of pub­ lications which keeps close tab on eligibility and worthiness of individual candidates from the f irst day they go to work on their publications. Of course, w e’ve only had the chance to watch this system in operation past five years, but we have yet to hear one complaint about the true outstandingness of any of the editors of the Daily Lariat or the yearly Round-Up. for the W hat's more, we have never heard of a selection having been questioned. The editors are the best men w heth er they are the best politicians or not. political How many Texas journalistic roses are doomed to blush un­ stink- seen among weeds because of the above- mentioned brass-on-the-c h e s t (and this works two ways, de­ pending upon which publica­ tion) or the sincere disinclina­ tion of »ome to become social and political-m i n d e d hypo­ crites? How’ many? Ask us in private some time. In ten conclusion, we might th a t Texas has hasten to add Baylor beat thousand in ways. We've tried to mention im portant ones, a few ra th e r though, in which we’ve been outscored by an approximate 34-0 margin. O ^ t c in l N o tic e ALL NEW STUDENTS are in­ vited to e n te r the Hogg De­ bating Society oratorical com­ petition Applications must be turned in at the Texas Union Monday; drawings will he Tuesday; and preliminaries Wednesday. now. RAYMOND MCDUFF, director. T H E F O L L O W I N G s t u d e n t * a r e r e ­ t h e R e g i s t r a r ' * to call a t q u e s t e d O f f i c e i m m e d i a t e l y : J e a n n e M ar ie J o a n A l e x a n d e r A r r o w o o d . C o n n ell, R i c h a r d E g b e r t C r o s s , B a r n e y B el le F r a n k e l . H a r d i n g S h e r m a n H e n y , G e o r g e H u l l e r , R o b e r t W . J e m i s o n , L e V e r n e Lee Jr. J e m i s o n J o h n s o n , S h i r l e y R oss J o n e s , C l a r a J e a n L o m b a r d . J o h n C u t l e r L y m a n . J o h n R o b e r t M it chel l. R o n n i e R O 'C o n n o r , D a n ie l P a t t e r s o n , R o b e r t J o h n S h a c k e n o f f E d i t h s t e g n e r . A l l e n e C a t h e r i n e W’a r d , J o h n C a r l t o n W e l l m a n , W a y n e M y ro n Z i m m e r m a n , R i c h a r d T h o m a s J o s e p h E. J . M A T H E W S . r e g istr a r . Of twenty members o f the first board 1 1 regents of the University of Michigan, created rn 18:’-7, only seven held college degrees, JlcAp**Price Control Bill May Go Through House in 2 Weeks WASHINGTON, Nov. 8— (INS) — Administration leaders Satur­ day decided to start the emascu­ through lated price control bill Congress in the hope that enough pressure can finally be brought on members to restore the legis­ lation to a form that would block the threat of inflation. Speaker Rayburn of the House says that “ some kind” of a price control bill will he passed by the lower branch within the next two weeks. He declines, however, to forecast w hether the House can be expected sions the administration claims have con­ verted President Roosevelt’s a n ti­ inflation proposals into an out­ right “boom” program. the measure w’hieh in Navy May Move In On Coast Strikers President Roosevelt look forth­ right action Saturday in one of several labor disputes after naval officials directed that striking con- their three West Coast de­ labors on fense projects by Monday. resume to eliminate provi- s t ruction workers f i n d s the Team sters and The provisions which the adm in­ Faced with the task o f dealing with a th reatened nationwide rail- road strike between now and De- istration ob {actionable | comber 5. Mr. Roosevelt twice told would allow farm prices to go 20 Daniel J. Tobin, president of the to 30 per cent higher than con­ A.F.L. affiliated T eam sters’ U n­ tem plated by the P resident and ion. th a t he m ust g e t striking would eliminate the governm en t’s members of his organization hack power to buy and sell agricultural to work in Detroit within forty- for price-pegging p u r - i eight hours. The labor dispute be- product* poses. These changes were made ! tween the by the House Banking Committee Brotherhood of Railway Clerks in before it reported the bill to the ; D etroit carries a th r e a t of a tie- !up of express freigh t in twenty- House a week ago Saturday. eight states and Mr. Roosevelt views the situation as serious. The House is going to be the scene of ano th er battle next woek when the ship-arming bill comes up on Wednesday fo r considera­ tion of Senate amendments. When the House passed the hill it provided only for Tobin’s r e q u e st th a t the Chief Executive reconsider his original order placing the Detroit dispute the hands of an emergency in last month hoard and, instead, let the A.F.L. the repeal of a N eutrality Act pro- settle its own jurisdictional mat- hibition against arm ing m erchant : ters was rejected promptly by Mr. ships. When the Senate passed the Roosevelt. The President reiter- hill last night by fifty to th irty- ated th a t he wanted the strikers seven vote it contained an addi- hack on forty-eight tional an o th e r section of the Act which forbids sending m erchant vessels struction workers on into w ar zones. Unless striking A.F. of L. con- three de- tense projects involving $10,000,- 000 n e a r San Diego, Calif., r e ­ claim they have the votes in the House the tu rn to sustain the Senate's action. B ut Navy will take control. Demanding non-interventionists assert there k higher wages, the various crafts- the j men involved walked o ff th* job a chance now of defeating bill. T hursday and Friday. their jobs Monday, repealing hours. A dministration provision— one leaders the job to in British Bomb Continent A s Hitler Speaks in Cellar British bombers by the h un ­ dreds battered the Nazi-occupied coastal regions of Europe S a tu r­ day night in a continuation of the massive aerial attacks of the night before in which Berlin, Cologne, Mannheim, and other axis centers from Norway to suffered their worst poundings. Italy While the air ministry was re ­ vealing the scope of this all-out British air offensive, Adolf Hitler imprecations a t the e ne­ roared mies of Nazi Germ any a Munich beer cellar on the eight­ eenth anniversary of the abortive Nazi putsch of 1923. from two years In the same town and upon the same occasion in which he n a r­ rowly escaped being caught in a bomb explosion ago, Hitler excoriated the “ oral s tr a t e ­ gists” of the western powers who are predicting G erm any’s defeat. He also declared that, a “ com­ mon European fr o n t” has now been formed against the “ Bolshe­ vists” of Soviet Russia, w’hich he described as “ the huns of modern times.” While H itler was claiming vic­ tory for his Nazi armies, Soviet spokesmen in Kuibyshev declared the g re a t German assault on Mos­ cow had been broken the Nazis throw’n into a desperate de­ fensive against surging Russian c ounter attacks. and But the Soviet spokesman ack­ nowledged that fighting in the im­ p o rta n t Crimean peninsula was “ particularly fierce” and hinted th a t a decisive battle for posses­ sion of the naval base of Sevasto­ pol and the port of Kerch was in progress. The G erm ans adm ittedly were smashing a t the o uter defenses of Sevastopol and were a t the e n ­ trance to the Kerch Isthmus, only a few miles from the Caucasus coast. The Germans claimed a b re a k ­ through in the Crimean fighting and were said to.*be heading for Kerch in swift advance. They said little of the Moscow battle zone, asserting th a t had w eather was hindering their troops. Berlin spokesmen acknowledged t h a t British bombers carried out heavy raids on Germany during Friday night and early S a tu r d a y Referring directly to President Roosevelt in the boldest challenge the German Fuehrer has yet flung across the embattled Atlantic, H it­ ler emphasized in a surprise speech in Munich that he had issued his command to Nazi submarine and other warship commanders to ana- wer fire with fire only after the American President had given his “ shoot on sight” order. But he said he had specifically ordere Nazi naval craft not to open any attack on American ships. to In his dramatic address deliver­ ed w ithout prior notice old Nazi p arty “ fig h te rs ” assembled in a beer cellar to celebrate the of eighteenth the anniversary abortive 1923 Munich beerhall putsch, Chancellor H itler u n d e r­ scored his anno un cem en t of the order to his navy by saying any officer who fails to fire whenever attacked by A merican vessels will be court-martialled. open “ If President Roosevelt believe* he can make us pliable th ro ug h his shooting o rders,” the Reichs- fcuehrer w arned, “ then I can only ‘P re sid e n t tell th a t g e n tle m a n : Roosevelt ordered his to ship* shoot German ships a t sight, I o r­ dered German ships not to shoot American ships a t sight, b u t to defend themselves as soon as they are attack ed .’ “ A German officer n o t defend­ ing himself will be co urt-m artiall­ ed. “ If, therefore, any American ship starts shooting in accordance with the P resid ent’s orders, it does so a t its owm risk. “ The German ship will defend itself and our torpedoes will hit their targets.” “ A grave dang er is th re a te n in g the world,” the Reichsfuehrer de­ clared later, “ and today the whole of Europe has been formed into a common f r o n t to counter t h a t danger. The whole of Europe has risen in reply to the Bolsheviks who are a p ersistent menace to civilization. “ We are determined to s tre n g th ­ en still f u r th e r the spirit of resis­ tance not only of Germany, but o f all Europe and we are able to create the defensive forces of all Europe as well as the Reich it­ self.” T A K E C H A M E S th * r isk o f r u in in g y o u r D o n 't run e ye * . h ere are m o n e y c a v in g p r ic e s on n ew e y e g l a s s e s i l i f t for . . \ MI $8.00 single vision $ 11.00 bifocal lenses H a v a y o u r p r e sc r ip tio n s low p r i c e s ! t h e s e filled a l E X A M IN A T IO N O F E Y E S IN C L U D E D DR. H. M. HODGES R e g i s t e r e d O p to m e tr ist 901 C o n g r e ss P h o n e 8 -3 9 0 0 J C I. V” / ( AjjteSi th e fyo Ju tu U i i ave*. • • .« HAVE YOUR AFTER- S I X C L O T H E S C L E A N E D A N D C A R E F U L L Y RE­ SHAPED BY KELLY- SMITH . . . R E A D Y FOR THE NEXT FOR­ MAL TELEPHONE 2-3131 Tuxedos, “Tails,” and Evening Clothes careful­ ly Reshaped and Hand Finished. K elly Smith CLEANER ‘B Y E R •H A T T E R • F U R R IE R 28 Years Serving Students V SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, T94I Bion* 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 possible Peruvian social the ex- upheaval and •'-“ ted States in lending money to the present government of Peru are important questions in that our relations with South asserts Dr. American country, In Wendell Gordon, economics, who attended summer school in Lima this year. instructor A social upheaval is imminent, believes Dr. Gordon, because o f the existence of the “Apristas,” an anti-government group in Peru, and an oversize police force. “We think Latin-American revolutions occur in large numbers and that they are completely revolution­ ary,” stated Dr. Gordon, “but they are really only changes in lead­ ership of the governm ent.” One instance of slow social upheaval is the 1910 Mexican revolution, which continued for several years and might be said to still be in existence.” In view o f such uncertain con­ ditions, the United States runs a risk in lending money to Peru be­ g ou iU -A m * M c a » N tia U o U r — Peru’s Upheavals Endanger U.S. Loans PAGE FIVE— FEATURES Gordon, who has an extrem ely OOO in loans have been made to in Peru are grouped mainly under Peru, mostly for currency stabil- two headings: the copper and the petroleum interests. Cotton, sugar, ization. the Pan-American Airways, and boyish appearance and might be steamship concerns are other in­ mistaken for a University under- terests of the United States found graduate, is a graduate o f Rice *n Pe™* Peruvian education aims toward Institute and is serving his second year at the University as an in- establishing a literate population, Gordon commented in stating that structor in economics. Calendar - Continued from page I KNOW. 7— Zeta Mothers Club, Home Eco­ nomics Teahouse. 7 — Sophomore Club Council. Y.M.C.A. The dis- tion- the United States ^ eru The Peruvian-Ecuadorian pute has never been fully settled and has always been a source of antagonism between the two coun tries, Gordon believes, puted te rrito ry “ In case of f u r th e r disputes Peru, we should not meddle as we have done in Cuba and other Latin-American countries,” insists Gordon. is mountainous. in in The Peruvians are very nation- the struggle the newspapers ^ w e r e filled with propaganda. Nazi elements naturally were active in leaflets and engaging spreading in other activities in Peru. American exploitation interests dis- !?ardly . a n y. educational e ffo rt in 7— Three R Club to hear J. Prank Latin-America has surpassed th a t the primary of Mexico, where problem is hi elementary e d u c a - 1 Dobie, Texas Union. 7 — Upperclass Club Y.M.C.A. Council, Many British interests German concerns are and active in Some danger of Nazi ac­ tivities exist, but there have been no uprisings such as have occured in other South American coun­ tries, Gordon stated. — LLOYD LARRABEE. The Lambda ch apter o f Phi Sigma Delta was host last week to Mr. Joseph Kruger, national executive secretary of Phi Sigma Delta fraternity. 7— Square dance calling class, Texas Union. i :30 — Baylor-Texas pictures, Open-Air Theater or Texas Un­ ion. 8— Roger Busfield, Austin Forum, 8 Austin High School. -Diapason Club holds first pub­ lic meeting of season with organ recital. 8— Girls’ and Men’s Glee Clubs rehearsal, Texas Union 401. 8— “ The Knight of the Burning Pestle” presented by Experi­ mental Theater. 9— Freshman Oratorical Contest. cause Peruvian governm ent being over- abatic, and during thrown. Approximately $13,000,- with Ecuador, „ possibility Taking Notes in English Is Difficult, Say Venezuelans T Toying spoken English for only two months, Salvador Arm as and A A Eduardo Acosta, University students from Zaraza, Venezuela, face the difficult problem of taking their lecture notes in English. The two South Americans, studying engineering, are attending the University with all expenses paid by Latin-American fellowships. — vador laughingly said. “ When Ed- this one seems the best. I t is send- uardo and I are in a class and the ing us to school. professor gets to talking very fast, we are lost! “ Everybody talks too fa st,” Sal-* — “ We like Texas especially,” con­ tinued Armas, “ because there are big plains, which remind us of home. “ It takes us three times as long to read a lesson here as it did in the Universidad Central de Vene­ zuela. As for reading new spapers.” exclaimed the smiling six-footer, “ we have to hu nt through three dictionaries!” Armas was sent from Venezu­ ela to the Berlitz School in New York to learn English. When he came to the University, he made th a t “ Texans are the discovery than New easier Y orkers.” to understand A fte r g ra d u a tin g from the Uni- “ We like your football very much, b ut we are used to the E n g­ lish kind, and then, too, you do not have the “ corridas de to ro s” (bullfights) th a t are so popular in Venezuela. the Texas-Oklahoma “ Eduardo and I went to Dallas for game, and we m et Ferret, who is attend- ! ing the University of Oklahoma. I He likes his college very much, but we like ours very much too. I He >s having a harder because he does not have the time, is having versidad Central de Venezuela, a roommate who both Armas and Acosta w o rk e d in I ?arne troubles as we. the oil fields of Venezuela fo r a n i American company. Then were sent to the United States. Irwin P erret, another holder of a Latni-American a l­ ready knew how to speak English when he and Acosta were sent to Seminole, Oklahoma, to work in the oil fields fo r a month before school started. During y ° u know of any student t h e y | ^ ° would like t o j e a r n to speak Spanish in re tu rn for teaching us American slang, I wish you would tell Ii im to call us. a r a m o u n i DOORS OPEN I :45 PAI, scholarship, ----------J their the summers of two college courses here, these Venezuelan students will work in the American oil fields and then will re tu rn to Venezuela for two years more em ployment with their company. A fte r th a t time they are free to seek else­ where, h ut as Armas meditated, “ I think I’ll stay with them. We companies have several English and several Venezuelan ones, but em ploym ent Y O U R Ii C A T H Y f l M U S IC A L I SCREEN M f A DV ENT UA L! Alit. FAYE j, J Carmen MIRANDA John PAYNE . (•tor ROMERO M A R C H O F T IM E ’SAILORS WITH WINGS' through, 'b linking hurried their eyes. A few reached out, slapped them on the back. Lorraine Stuts­ man watched them go by. “ They’re the best boys in the world,” she said. It was fu nn y here. Here were the boys b u t there was no con­ certed dem onstration: it was all he art-to-heart knowing th a t reach­ ed out and touched everybody. T.C.U. next. T h a t’s w hat every­ body said. No bowl, no whimper­ ing, no might-have-been talk. Ju st T.C.U. next. A fte r Bohby Bush led a yell, the crowd slowly walked to Congress Avenue. “ The eyes of Texas are upon they sang. I t came from you,” deep fine.” inside. “ Oh. Ralph Spence said. “ L e t’s sing it again.” t h a t ’s They sang it five more times, and the boy on crutches hopped along to the tune. Tom Price and to Jim m y Connor themselves, walking the track. sang soft, it was Colonel H u r t said the best th in g h e ’d ever seen in his life. Even the Tower, which had looked so fu n n y half-and-half for the first time in its history, hogan to beam. I t was ju s t spontaneous th a t everybody turned up a t Hill Hall. Somebody turned a spotlight onto the second floor porch. Jack Crain and Pete Layden and Bo Cohenour and Chai Daniel talked. A slip is a slip, they said, but you couldn’t keep Texas down. The crowd knew that. rising again. One a t a time, boys — T.C.U. n e x t,” he shouted. Soon Ed Wood climbed up on a loco­ motive. it was filled and surrounded and you couldn’t hear Betty Hill fo r cowbells. it opened her m outh and kept open: “ The best team ! The best te a m !” she kep t saying. the They came in Sadie Hawkins costumes, in tuxes, in pajamas, in ear-worn suits and housecoats. The engineers and firem an and the Cowboys who pushed the lo­ comotive o ut o f the crowd had never seen anything like it. No­ body had. Up and down a ten-car train, and an I fan s rushed students bumped to meet an und efeated team and tell them of th e ir pride. Whistles blew, cowbells clanked, torches burned, and everybody yelled, yelled, YELLED. “ I t ’s rising every time you fall th a t counts,” Shorty had said. You could look a t Ed Holcomb and all the boys who had ch artered busses to come down from their M.I.C.A. fu n c tio n .and see how quick Texas spirit rose. I t soared. I t danced. j torchlight and I bulbs a t the same time. in the I t was and flapped the dancing flash sharp Bill Blalock gazed with awe. j Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Littlefield j said they had never seen anything I like “ Y eaaaaa” over and over again and there was a g re a t bustle— the j tram was coming in! it. Maurice Adam yelled I The train stopped and the crowd surged hack and fo rth and only a few saw the players. The boys S T A T E URR5ITSCE3 "D IV E B O M B E R " STARTS TqDAY ALL TECHNICOLOR W IT H ERROL F L Y N N FRED MACMURRAY RALPH BELLAMY REGIS TOOMEY PA RA M O U N T TUES. DEC. % ONE NITE The PLAYWRIGHTS' COMPANY and The THEATRE GUILD ALFRED L Y N N LUNT F O M M ROBERT E. SHERWOOD* 1941 Pulitzer Prize Play H 0 oNiqkt- T E X A S CLARK GABLE ROSALIND RUSSELL IN “THEY MET IN BOMBAY’ 2 0 1 Renfro's *n o . r Still a Favorite! O n e E g g Bacon or Sausage Toast and Preserves C o ffee or Milk 20f* Baked Young Turkey with Vegetable Dressing Giblet Gravy and Cranberry Sauce or Grilled Veal Chops with Brown Gravy Creamed Potatoes, Small Navy Beans Green Garden Spinach O r Lettuce & Tomato Sa ad Hot Parkerhouse Rolls Hot Fudge Sundae Coffee Tea Milk 30? RENFROS ConumuHt toting Stotts Place Your Orders Now For CHRISTMAS PICTURES From Cactus Negatives S ta ftd *«/ AAI L U N T Stftprnys ku R K H APD WHORF W ith THE NEW YORK CAST, Including Sydney G reenstreet, M aurice Colbourne, Thom as G om ez MAIL ORDERS NOW ! DON’T DELAY! Sand ch ack p a y a b le to P A R A M O U N T T H E A T E R an d *alf-addra**ad • t a m p e d e n v e lo p e PRICES, TArx $3.30, $2.75, $2.20, $1.65 B e s t N o r t h o f M e x i c o ('itif MEXIC AN D IN N E R t a - ____ w J Sop * ( H ir e ) , 2 m ale*, e n c h ila d a , fried frijo le* A ch ile. Se rv e d o n s te a m in g pieta. DINE AND DANCE Doable J Corral P h on o 8 -1 3 4 4 (or Frpp D eli v e r y 2 4 2 6 G u a d a lu p e DINING and DANCING M exican and A m erican Food The Old Seville 16 th A G u ad alu p e A B l o c k * from the C a m p t i * B ut in a D i f f e r e n t C o u n t r y B E A U T Y SPECIALS S e t . S h a m p o o a n d M a n i c u r e E y e l a s h a n d B row D y e F a c ia l P e r m a n e n t W a v e 50< __________ w _ $ 1 , 9 5 ?*<- 25c D U A L A R T S B E A U TY COLLEGE 2 4 1 0 G u a d a l u p e S t r e e t P h o n e 2-8748 — j g OTNO) 6 0 9 S^IVWVJ. OMV HIHO j o o v j . • s v a v n w D N a I I V I ) ] 3NIHN3D Christmas Cards $4.00 Dozen $7.00 Two Dozen One Miniature (tinted in oils and framed) $5.00 $10.00 Three Dozen K D l CHRISTIANSON LEBERMAN 1306 Colorado OfUnioM. I Is ll p.m. C I 51% Say N I Girls Satisfied Butt). T. Men I Are Not ^ y week-night deadline * By Sam H olm es Director, Bureau of Student Opinion T t’s no mistake. A mere 29 per cent of the University co-eds think that l l p. rn. is too early. Seventy-one per cent of them it is “ju s t a b o u t right.” the figures compiled by the Texan Bureau of S tu d e n t Opinion this past week. the Percen tag es boys’ and girls’ answers show th a t by the smallest of margins a the p re s e n t time m ajo rity think limit is all right. including both is shown This in TH E Q U ESTIO N: “Do you think th* l l p .m . deadline for University girl* on week-night* i* too early or too late.” » I I I i TH E RESU LTS: Too e a r l y -------------------46% B ut About r i g h t _____ Too l a t e No opinion ___ SI -------- --...___ 2 I the significant sentim ent on both sides is seen when the boys’ answers are separated from the girls’ answers. Note the dif­ ference in these figures: GIRLS A N SW E R ED : Too early ________________ 29% About right __ __ ___ ____ 71 (No opinion and answ ers n o t included.) “ too la te ” BOYS’ A N SW ER E D : Too e a r l y About right .......... ....... ..... 41 ......... 59% (No opinion and “ too la te ” ans­ w ers n ot included.) Here is an interestin g fact. Of the ten students who answered “ too la te ”— and believe it o r not, o u t of the sample of 451 in te r­ viewed ten did give this answ er— h alf of them were boys and half were girls. Also of the fo u r or two five “ no opinion” answers were boys and two were girls. Here are some random com­ m ents by various students on the they were earn ms, made when t o t . the results of the survey: Said one boy as he eyed the r e ­ sults incredulously: “ I ’ll take one o f the twenty-nine percenters my­ se lf.” A nother said: “ These figures enough fun before l l o ’clock, a n d ! the girls can, or som ething.” He: looked confused. One boy accused the girls of j e not being as interested in the boys a* the boys were interested in the girls. lr Mournfully came this observa- j Hon: “ The girls are g ettin g old­ fashioned a gain .” Shrewdest comment was this onp; “ Boys are more a p t to tell the tru th than girls.” The lone co-ed comment corn­ ing the results was this: “ T h a t’s ju st like the boys!” The cross section used in ta k ­ ing the poll included co rrect pro­ portions of men and women and students in all colleges and schools. R a lly - (Continued from Page I ) knock his teeth out," Dean A m o Nowotny demanded, as Cowboys and excited students boosted him to the car top. “ Give ’em hell, Shorty,” they yelled. “ T here’s no fun in falling, but in th e r e ’s a helluva lot o f fun CH PU D L S T A R T I N G T O D A Y ! A l o m a . . . Pagan love prize of the South Sea* . . . N D oroth y L A M O U R J o n H A L L gS T sg A ls o ! M ic k e y M ouse C artoon and “ In fo r m a tio n P le a s e / W I = I ^ I A H O R R O R S U R P R I S E P A R T Y T H E E A S T S I D E K I D S in ‘SPOOKS RUN W ILD ” W i t h B E L A L U G O SI - A L S O C H A P T . , 4 B IX I DE RS OF DEATH VAHLE? s p e c i a l ; T EXA S vs. S.M.U. PASE SIX — S O C IE T Y Ohio Professor To Speak Here Friday Night Dr, Wa llace K. Brodie, p r e s ­ sor of o r gani c che mi s t ry a t Ohio S t a t e Univer sit y, will sp^ak “ Color a n d Chemical Cons t i t u­ tion** a t the first me et i ng of the y e a r of the Centr al Texas Sec­ tion of the Amer i c an ^Chemical Society, F ri da y at 8 o ’clock in Ch e mi st ry Building 15. Inst i t ut e Dr. Br ode was a me mb er of the P er ki ns Obser vat ory Eclipse E x ­ to Douprla^ Hill, Maine, pedition and in 1936 he was a m e m b e r of t he H a r v a r d Universit y-Massaehu- setts Technology Eclipse Expedition to Siberia. The Russian eclipse was the sixth to be observed by Dr. Brode, He is also Associate Editor of the J o u r ­ nal of America. the Optical Society of Pre ce d i n g the lecture, a t 6:30 o’clock Friday, Dr. Brode will be honor guest a t a d in ne r a t the Home Economics Te a House. BY M A R I A N N A S L U D E R T rra n Society E ditor With the samo e nt hus i a s m t h a t -he -how- while en jo yi n g one of her hobbies, a« shown in t he pic­ e a ger ly ture P eg gy B coder son tackles t he jobs which go with b e ­ ing president of Cap and Gown and being a m e mb e r of n u m e r o u s other c a mp us organizati ons. Besides leading Cap and Gowm in its funet.ion at the Univer sit y, which is “ to sti mul a t e fellowship a m o n g senior women, to assist in the or gani z at i on of the f re sh ­ man cia - for women, and also to p e r p e t u a t e of the senior women as e x - s t u d e n t s , ” is a ut oma t ic a ll y p r es i d en t the or gani z at i on o f the senior class also. t h a t H e r sor or i ty bisters in Alpha [)> ta Pi, of which Peggy is vice­ president, a dm i t t h e y have neve r yet seen an end to h e r zeal ; for life and activities a t t he Uni ­ versity. She is now in her f o u r t h y e a r her**. Born o f Peggy Diapason Club Recital To Be Given M onday in Chicago D ec emb er 17, the r e t h i r t e e n The f irs t in a series o f organ I years before h e r f a t h e r was tr ans- to Te x a s City. H e r home r e n t a i s spon so r ed by the Diapa- j ferred son Club will be given Monday f town is now La Ma rque , Texas, in night, N o v e m b e r IO, at 8 o ’clock where, when she first, a r ri v e d “ missed a t All S aints Chapel. or- the trees terribly and hid f r o m the E m m a V irginia Decherd, J the stat*., she says, she 1920. Peggy lived g ani st f o r All Saints Chapel, El­ e a n o r A n t hon y, fine a r t s student, and Fr e der ick P. Savage, choir d i r ec t or a n d o rg an i s t for St. Ma r ­ t i n ’s L u t h e ra n Chur ch, will p r e ­ sent the pr og r a m. cowboys.** she At fir-!, admi t t e d, the song m e a n t tune* of o ur school the only “ I've Be en Wo r k i n g on Railroad, to her, but she soon l ear ned to s ta nd and feel a deep school spirit when she hea r s “ The Eyes of T e x a s . ” in G The mo nt hl y o r ga n p r o g r am s will f e a t u r e compositions b y co n­ t e m p o r a r y Amer i c an composers. W h o ’s Who A mo n g S t u d en t s in Selections by Leo Sowe rby, Gar th A mer ic an C ollegeg an d U n i v e r ­ Ed mu nd s o n, Philip James, and E. s i t i e s this y ea r lists P e g g y ’s name, W. Doty will be played Monday. for besides bei ng a m e m b e r of “ Ronde F r a n c a i s e ” bv Boellman and t a ki ng a leading p a r t in Cap and “ Conc er to Ma j or , ” I and Gown and Alpha Delta Pi, she “ S o n at i n a . ” “ G o d ’s Time Is Best, ” Ii- a m e m b e r of Mo r tar Board, Co- the O rien ta tio n and “ P re l u de and F u g u e in F Mi-1 Ed Assembly, n o r , ” all by Bach, will complete Commi t t ee, and Wesley F o u n d a ­ the program. tion, of which she was a m e m b e r of in her sophomore year. In that, y e a r she was also in Bow arid Ar r ow, and in he r j u n ­ ior y e a r she ma de Te e Cl ub and was chosen j u n i o r r ep r es e nt at i ve from the Home Economic* Club. in When a f re shma n she was tile Glee ( Iub, a n d last y e a r she wa a m e m b e r of Reagan L it e r­ ary Society. She r ec ent l y took an f,( tive part the C o m mu ni t y t ’hest drive. first pledge to receive an Alpha Omi ­ the cron Pi so r or i ty “ pledge of w e e k ” bracelet. Alpha Omi c ron Pi ha* newly in­ the practice o f giving a th" o u t ­ Jean Beshell Receives Pledge Bracelet J e a n Beshell was the council the to in sti tut e d br ac el e t e v e r y week s t a n d i n g pledge. The br acelet was a wa r d e d at a and 6, b u f f e t s u p pe r given actives pledges Th ur s da y , No vembe r by Mrs. Robert VV. Wa r ner . P e g g y ’* blue eyes and i n f ormal nat ur a l - wa vy blond hair, with her a wide f riendly smile, give h e r healthy, o u t d o o r look, and they ar e not misleading. F or she lists Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1941 Smiling, Energetic Peggy Leads Co-Ed Activities C L U B Notes Cap, Gown to Hear About After-College J. E. Prewett, Gloria M cRae Married Nov. I A long- awaited talk, “ C u r r e n t P r ob l e ms in the A er o n a ut i ca l I n ­ d u s t r y , ” by Dr. M. J. T ho mps o n will be given a t t he m e et i ng of A M E R I C A N S O C I E T Y O F M E ­ CHA N I C A L E N G I N E E R S on Monda y nigh*,, N o v e m b e r IO, a t I 7 o’clock in E n g i n e e r i n g Building j 138. the mo r e Me mb er s of t he F O R T W O R T H j CL UB will m e et the tr ai n a n d of- ! f i n a l l y welcome t h a n ! one t ho u sa nd T.C.U. st ud e nt * who ! ar r i ve F r i d a y f o r t he Texas- T. C. U. football g a m e her e S a t u r d a y , Bob Scurlock said. the official T.C.U. s t u d e n t body trip. A social will be held f o r t he visi­ t ors and t he club m e m b e r s a f t e r the game. This will be • e n g i n e e ri ng P I T A U SIGMA, h o n o r a r y m e ­ chanical f r a t e r n i t y , will m e e t M on da y ni g ht a t 5:30 in E n g i n e e r i n g Bui lding 116, it was a n n o u n c ed by J. P. Weir, president. T h e Council is also p la n n i n g a! ^ Dr. R. L. S ut he r l an d , d i r e c t o r ! g e ne r a l me et i ng s d u r i n g t he sec- the f i r s t t i me havi ng t he Hog g F o u nd a t i o n , will j ond semest er . P e g g y Broderson, p re s i d e n t of i the election o f spe ak a t t h e f ir s t ge ne r a l business session of Cap a n d Gown M o n - 1 revision o f r ul es c o n ce r n i ng class d a y a f t e r n o o n a t 5 o ’clock in Tex- elections, to t r y a n d el i mi na t e t h e ‘ set-ups an d t r ad e -o u t s which keep as Union 315-316. a n y f r o m Cap and Gown, a n no u n c e d t h a t all me ani ng. The new plans will be this m e m b e r s of the or gani z at i on w er e 1 t r ied f o r u r g e d j uni or , to a t t en d, and par ti ci pa t e sPr >nK» when sophomor e, in the discussion which will follow an d s e ni or of fi c er s a r e elected, ~ ~ t he talk. T he me of the discussion will be vocational gui da nce , an d j ‘T o o M a n y O f f i c e r s * the a d j u s t m e n t which m u s t be m a d e f r o m ca mpus life to c i ti z en ­ ship. Writes Ex-Student | A pr of u si on o f officers, a scar- F i rs t m e e t i ng of Cap and Gown | city of m e n — those a r e the w ri tt e n given ^ t h r e e j s e n t i m e n t s of P a u l Ho r n , Univer - took up his a t was a t a luncheon weeks ago, a t which Mrs.* E. L. | sity e x - s t u d e n t w ho Steck spoke on “ The U n i v e r s i t y ’s duties as p a r t in Nat i onal D ef en se . ” Ca mp Ba r k e l e y N o v e m b e r I. is H o r n ’s unit, howeve r, bei ng or gani zed. Wi thi n a A t a r e c e n t m e e t i n g o f t h e Cap an- and Gown Council, it was no unce d now had a 317. j u s t f ew or gani z at i on weeks, 4,000 men a r e expe ct ed to to t a l me mb e r sh i p of be st a t i o ne d a t t he Texas camp. By D e c e mb e r 15 wo oden b ar r ac ks f o r a ' w i l l have been complet ed, b u t a t s u b ­ C hr i st ma s p a r t y b e f or e the holi-1 p r e s e n t t he condi ti ons a r e days, a bridge p a r t y and P l an s a r e bei ng ma de s e co nd - l ie u t e n a n t o t h e r 1 s t a n d a r d . t h a t the war ds P r e w e t t we r e m a r r i e d Miss Gloria McRae an d J. E d ­ t i Ba pt i s t Ch ur ch , T . S a t u r d ay , No v o mb er I. is T he bride the d a u g h t e r o f Mr. a n d Mrs. E. R. McRae o f Ne w York City an d t he g r a n d d a u g h t e r of Mr. a n d Mrs. F o r r e s t T. Mo r ­ g an o f Austin. She was g r a d u a t e d f r o m H u n t e r College High School of N e w York City a n d is a j u n i o r in t h e University. to Mr. P r e w e t t , son o f Mr. an d Mrs. J. E. P r e w e t t of Ho ust o n, came a the Uni ver si t y scholarship and was g r a d u a t e d In in 1938 wi t h honors. Ma j o ri n g Spanish, he has studi ed in Mexico City and is a t p r e s e n t a t e a c h e r of Sp ani sh in M a n o r High School. on F U R S R e s t y le d , R e p a ir e d . R elin e d , an d C le a n e d at JOE K A S P E R 109 E. 9 th St. H e D aily T exan Classified A d Announcements Cafes Cafes P H O N E 2-1135 WUKASCH SISTERS— C o o k i e a and Cakes in Stock. 1903 W ichita. 2-6898. Pleasant Service... You appreciate it all the more these w indy days— so com e in . . • refresh relax a n d yourself. You’ll real­ ly enjoy our large variety of excellen t foods. TRIPLE X X X . Steaks uA i r C o n d itio n e d ” • S a l a d s 2801 Gu adal upe P h o n e 2 - 4 0 6 4 • S a n d w i c h e s Dressmaking Loans M O NEY TO LO A N - On Diam onds— W atches— L uggage— Suits T y rew riters— O vercoats— T runks C larin ets— S axophones— Trum pets "W e Pav cash for old gold” ANYTHING OF VALUE L. LAVES 217 E ast 6th St. Music Lessons YOU CAN learn to play a Hammond Organ or Solovo* with only a few lesso n s. P reviou s m usical training is not n ecessary, $1.50 per lesson. Phone 3531 or inquire at Hammond Organ Studio, 3rd floor J. R. REED MUSIC CO. PH ON E 3531 Yacht Clubs MEET YOUR FRIENDS For Dinner and Dancing at AUSTIN YACHT CLUB On B eautiful Lake A ustin For Free Ferry Boat Service . • • Call 8-0253 (NO COVER CHARGE! POPULAR PRICES— QUALITY FOC® Rentals Furnished Apartments 19 3 2 - B SAN ANTONIO, bedroom, bath, for paid. V en etian blinds, single m a t t r e s s e s . $30.00. Owner 3720, livin g room* two boys. Bill* inersprin* D E SIR A B LE upstairs bachelor apart­ m ents. 605 W est S ixteen th . P hone 4075. LOVELY F U R N I S H E D apartm ent— N ear cam p us. Five rooms, all con ven ien ces. 1907 Pearl. P ho ne 6082. Furnished Rooms 501 W E S T 12th— New ly finished roog* with p riv ate hath and en tran ce. Qui*! and co nv en ien tly located. C losets A twin beds. Phone 7456. twin beds, LARGE, cool. newly furnished room*, innerspring m attresses. Three blocks U niversity. Meals optional. Summ er rates. 1909 Rio Grande. 8 -680*. 2608 G U A D A L U P E — Lovely fe w boys, men or b usiness women. N icely furnished, twin beds, innerspring m at­ tr e ss e s, showers, private entrance, 8087, room Garage Apartment 201 7-A RUD R IV E R — L iv ing room, d i n ­ in g room, ki tchen, 2 bedroom*, hath. in n e r s p r i n g r e fr i g e r a t o r. $40.00 four. Venetian blinds, For m a t t r e s s e s , electric 872®. F U R N I S H E D G AR AGE A P A R T M E N T - 2912 F ru th . L arg e livi ng room. sleep­ bower. K itchen and D inetta ing porch, combined. Phone 2- 1481. Phone 6444 119 East 7th. Records Plumbing Garage Rooms ter beater E. RAVEN— Since 1890— Plum bing. Wa piping repairing. ranges, heaters connected, sinka. sewers unstopped. 1605 Lavaca. Phone 6763. gas GARAGE ROOM— for two boys. Privata e n tr a n c e , shower, phone. Newly d eco­ Cool, rated. In n e rs p rin g m a t t r e s s e s . auiet, close to U.T. Ph. 3055 o r 3733. W O. HARPER, 2646 G U ADALUPE— Plum bing. Gas A Electrical contractor. Plum bing A H eating Repairs. Stove con­ necting our specialty. Phone 2-8521. and His O r c h e s tr a . 'T R O P I C A L MAGIC” — J i m m y Dorsey " C le m e n ti n e ” — Ring C r o sb y with J o h n S co tt T r o t t e r and H a O r c h e s t r a ; reco rds now on sale s t J. R. R E E D MU SIC CO.. 805 Con­ gress. ju st received. 10c each— 3 NEW STOCK PHONOGRAPH RECORDS for 25c. PETE’S PACKAGE STORE or Austin Phonograph Co., 108 E. 5th St. Student Furniture R. I*. Brooks now associated with TEXAS FURNITURE CO.. 208 E. 6th St. Typewriters Company SE E TH E WILSON T Y P E W R I T E ! typew riters for good rent New and used typewriters All makes o typew riters repaired 129 W est 7th St Phone 6060. Typing EFFICIENT T Y P I S T — Dependable. Mrs. W asson, 907 W. 22nd. 2-9135. TYPING done as you like it. All kinds. Mrs. Albert Santi. 8-4367. TYPING— Cheap, accurate, quick Mrs Hum phrey. 204-B W est 20th. 8-2049. W anted W ANTED: 6 P h o n e 9966. T h a n k s g i v i n g Tic kets. Room and Board rado. Vacancies MRS. LIN OLK Y’S— C o rner 18th St Colo­ T h re e m eals. 12 and I o’clock dinners. Phono 2-0194. for women. VACANCY— GIRLS. Two blocks Campus, Room and board. Maid service. Sin gin or double rooms. Reasonable rates. 1911 Nueces. Phone 2-7748. MRS. LINDLEY'S DINING HALL “O P E N TO P U B L IC ” 3 Meals Daily-— 12 A I o’Clock D in n ers 3 Rlocks South of F o u n tain Vacancies for Girls P h. 2-0194 3114 W H E E L E R — Room snd board fo* horner Phone in p r iv a te $25.00. two meals two boys one or Room and 5063. 206 EAST 22ND— For boys. Near E ngl- neering Building Com fortable room# home-cooked m eals. Reasonable. and P hone 2-1936. Rooms tor Boys 2603 W I C H I T A —S t u d e n t may r e n t ex­ room with double bed a n d to pay. Re asonable. Ph. t r a nice work p a r t tim e 4238. MRS. S T U B B ’S H O U S E — 1912 N ueces. in 2 blocks cam p u s. B e autiful rooms nome and g a r a g e rooms. Twin beds, i n ­ n erspring*. sh ow ers, maid, garages. Rea­ sonable. Phone 2-9521. REASONA BLE joining bath PR IC E D ROOMS— Ad- in private home. Twin bede or sin g le: private entrance, garage. 2620 Speedw ay. One cam pus. Phone 8-1506. block W anted to Buy Unfurnished Houses W ANTED TO BUY : A se t of used golf clubs in good condition. P ho ne 2-6878, W A N T E D TO Bl TY— S m a ll u p rig h t or Grand Piano. Will pay cash. Ph on e John S. Caldwell. 2-4263 or 3531. HIGHEST CASH PRICES for used sn its, shoes. A. Sch w arts PH. 8-0184 MALKIN PAYS MORE for Jeed Suits Clothing and Shoes. 407 East $. 8-0266 AN IDEAL RETREAT L ocated on a hill fr.mi r wo fireplace. R enta l only m onth. top aevPn miles the C on gress A v en ue bridge, real s tone co t t a g e with room p er $12.00 HARR ISON-W ILSON COMPANY 131 W. 7th St. Phone 2-6201 rig ann SUITS. COATS, d resses— E vening and W edding Gowns. A lterations, lined. 20] remodeled, restyled and bine. Ph. 8-3069. For Sale FOR S A L E — 4 F t . used G. E. E le ctric R e fr ig e ra to r only $29.50. J . R. R E E D MUSIC CO.. Phone 3531. Home Bakeries Laundries "O ne Day Service" DRISKILL HOTEL LAUNDRY 4,Trust your duds to our Suds” Lost and Found LOST: Tan sm ooth piecp belt. Pair of cream colored coat. Two lea­ ther gloves in pocket. Reward. 206 E ast 23rd. 2-7821. leather W ILL THE PERSON who my brown squirrel coat and left theirs by m istake at Avalon Friday night please return get to Pearlie Gordon theirs. Ph. 8-1001. took and it Classified A dvertisin g RATE CARD READER A D S 20 Words— Maximum 1 tim * 2 .tim e* 3 tim es 4 times I times I times .# .40 . .66 .70 . .80 . .90 . 1.00 Header Ads A re To Be Run On Consecutive Days ‘Oc Charge for Copy Change DISPLAY A D S I column wide by I inch deep 60c per insertion We reserve to correspond with The Daily Texan. th* rignt to adit copy th e sty le used by M essenger S ervice anti) 4 HIO p m . w eek -d ays Counter anti) > p.m. service ALL A D S C A S H IN A D V A N C E Dial 2-2473 for further information or messenger service. R esponsible for ane Incorrect insertion only No refunds for cancellations. On Your Vacation or Week­ end Trips Travel via KERRVILLE BUS C O M P A N Y , Inc. “Friendly Service” THE SHORTEST AND BEST ROUTE TO H ousto n, Beaum ont, G alveston, Victoria, C o r p u s Christi, Schul- enberg, Kerrville, San A n ge lo, Big Sp rin g , El Paso, C o lle g e Station. THREE SCH EDULES DAILY TO A.&M. C O L L E G E BRYAN St COLLEGE STATION Buses I :00 P.M.. and 8. 00 P.M. leave Austin at 9:00 A M , POINTS TO SEVEN SCH EDULES DAILY HOUSTON AND EAST. Buses leave Austin at 6 a.m ., 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m .. 2 p.m. 4 p.m., 8 p.m., 8 p.m. THREE SCHEDULES DAILY TO KERRVILLE AND WEST TEXAS leave for the W est POINTS. Buses at 7:00 a.m ., I p.m., and 6:15 p.m. THREE SCHEDULES DAILY TO SOUTH CORPUS CHRISTI AND TEXAS POINTS. Buses leave 7:10 a.m ., 1 :30 p.m. and 7 :25 p.m. Sample Low Fares A ustin To— O n - Way Rd Trip $5.00 . $ 3 . 0 0 HOUSTON 6.00 _ 4.00 CORPUS CHRISTI 8.35 4.70 SAN ANGELO COLLEGE STATION 2.10 3.80 FOR FURTHER CALL B US INFORMATION TERM INAL Autos For Rent RENT A NEW C A R $1.50 up for 15 m iles. (10c per m ile over) 1937 up N A N IG A N ’S PHONE 4255 Baths CAPITAL CITY BATH H O USE— 305 W est l i t h . Phone 8-3997. Beauty Ray (C abinet) baths. "For particular men and wom en.” Complete beauty service. Beauty Shops (LOW PRICES A QUALITY WORK— by efficien t operators. Com plete beauty I service from m anicures to perm anents, j CACTUS BEAUTY SHOP. 1602 Lavaca. 1 8 - 6 1 8 1 . Cates L y a p s 2002 G U A D A L U PE Coaching ENGLISH 12, 12Q. Experienced teacher with m aster’s degree from U n iversity for tests a ape* of Texas. Preparation cialty. Phone 2-1383. RETIRED teacher o f language* will coach modern languages. Ph. 6592. SPA N ISH , French, German. Exp. teacher, Mrs. P u g sley . 1701 Cong., 2-7104. E FFE C TIV E MATH COACHING P URE and APPLIED R. M. Randle 2309 San Antonio R. W. Fan- Ph. 2-0761 PHYSICS — MATHEMATICS. I* W heeler. 418 P hyaies Bldg. Ph. 9171— 863. L. COACHING— Math, Chem .: Joe Trauer- man. 907 W. 22nd. Ph. 2-9135. VIRGINIA BUTLER. Meeter of Art* graduate. Spanish and E nglish, wants to coach stu d en t*. T elephone 8-1746. S PA N ISH , FRENCH. Latin. Mrs. Ham- phrey. 204-B W. 20. Ph. 8-2049 GOVT -EGO.. H is G O V T .— Keo., H ist., S ociology. Harvard ~ ~ training. Ed N unnally. Ph. 7385. Dancing LEARN TO DANCE. 6 lesson s $2.50 C lasse s— Munday, T hursday, 7 :45 p.m. ANNETTE DUVAL DANCING SCHOOL 108 W est 14 S t. P hones 2 -9 0 8 6 — 8-3951 Dressmaking DRESSMAKING— A lterations, sty led , relined. 2100 N ueces. 7293. furs her f a v o r i t e s p o r t s as hobby, with music r u n n i n g a close second. She pl ays the or gan, piano, and saxophone, H er choice in clothe* r u n s to spor ty n u mb e r s ; e v e n in e ve ni ng dresses she p r e f e r s no r u f f le s and frills. “ I long, sleek, black like r ed, ” she g r i n n ed a n d ones, o r winked. H e r main weakness, she a dm i t t e d to he Mexican jewelr y. It is not, hard to u n d e r s t a n d he r i j o r i n g pet h at e -snobbish pe o p l e — when one me e t s Pegg y with her wa r m, f ri e ndl y per sonality. I ^ s t y e a r she int r a m u r a l t r op h y given won the to the best al l- ar ound i n tr amu r a l ma na g e r, cap ac i t y she served f or h e r sorori ty. in which In her f av or it e pastime, swi m­ ming, P eg gy w e a r s a r o u n d her neck a s w i mmi ng medal, not one she won herself, however. B u t it does bel ong to a tall blond. in home Most of her time, P eg g y feels, she s p e n ds in labs, for she is m a ­ scon nm irs. S h e does not d e n y that, when she g r a d ­ uat es she hopes to ma ke a p r a c ­ tical appl i cat i on of h e r m a j o r subject. S O C I A L I G H T S B y M A R I A N N A S L U D E R First o f f — w e ’d like t o hand a bunch o f orchids to t he Univer sit y co-eds who have been t a k in g such an active p a r t in the d ef ens e e n ­ t e r t a i n m e n t p r o g r a m s — to those o f you who have been a t t e n d i n g t h e 1 open houses and d a n c e s f or the boys in c a m p and a t the a i r corps! bases, to you who give ext ensi vel y and gen e r ousl y of y o ur time k n it t in g war m socks a n d s w e a t e r s , ♦-— — to you who c o n t r i b u t e yo ur ; worldly me ans to the Red Gross, j and last hut per ha ps g r ea t e s t , as { to the a m o u n t of individual j o y it Rives t he soldier, to yo u who I David's Hospital S I C K L I S T ——— -Po Marino! Caroon I h arle- Thorns --- of in S t Jo hn Per cy Malcolm Beall Ra ymond H u bb ard Malcolm K u tn er Rich ard Welch Da * io Mar*- Helen Lee Ja c k D Maronpy ml boxes a n d le t t e r s to t h e lono- some ones at r amp. Who ev e r said that the U n i v e r ­ sity w o m a n s t u d e n t was so filled with h e r own e n t e r t a i n m e n t and i mpor ta nc e t ha t she had no time as for o t h e r s ’ in terests might well r e f r a i n f rom e x pr essi on of his se nt i me nt s. We, f or one, will o nt r ad i c t him flatly. • r esp e ct s to liken Wi th all due the [sport s d e p a r t m e n t , we the knee - l engt h lisle sock to an ever- r e t u r n i n g y e t n e v er - g a i n in g f oot ­ ball t e a m which coming hack y e a r a f t e r y ea r with renew ed hope and even u n d e r a new' title, only to ma ke little or no p r og re ss keeps Seton B e tty E dm ondson Doris Holasek Kathleen H ick m an J i > v c e Levis H ospital Louis C h r iste n s o n Le onard C'ersonsky Gerry McNamee S cottish Rite Dorm itory B e tty Worn! R u t h Peake til at Home Martin S rehn ik V'prnon Miller F ra n c e - l o u i s Oheim Evelyn W’right Verlyn H en n ig er Ann F ra n ces Her ing Mary Eliza beth E vangeline S anchez Lorraine K m ffin Beatrix Antilion Dorothy C lit f*. 11 i Colvin B e tty Sue Koch F u r r h Doris E. T ay lo r Gloria Saal J a m e s D. Malone J a y Colvin J e r r y Arch Red Miss Corbin to Sing at Service the -L t he y *u . (Full** u u . j k k . j I u II>-kn 11 r ibbed In c h a r m i n g colors a n d beauti- *°r - n p a t t e r n s , , Miss M a r g a r e t Cor bin, i nst ruc- vo1ce a * the Un i v er si t y, will 'inK a t the IO o ’clock services of the I m v e r s i t y C o m m u n i t y Chur ch I Diversity S u n da y . Miss Cor bin, ac c o mp a n i e d were o f* red to last y e a r an d by Migs C h a r l ot t e DuBois, assist- lady-of-the-oampus only ver y i n f r e q u e n t l y w e r e they a n t P r e s s o r of music educat ion, seen; this y e a r in even mo r e col- I wil1 singr “ Come Now and L et Us or ful t h r e a d t h e y w e r e woven for j the co-ed, only to be r ecei ved as unen t husi a st i c al l y as bef or e. Reason T o g e t h e r ” by Stebbins. r* • •- e* A T H E N A E U M L I T E R A R Y S O ­ CIETY will me et M on d a y ni g ht a t 7:30 in Law Bui lding 105. • This y e a r ’s choice o f coats to wear t o school, w h e t h e r box-ef- fect or close-fittinp, coul d h a r dl y he o ut of style, as both styles seem to s ha r e the p o p u l a r i t y f o r the fall -eason. Ver y serviceahlo is tho broad-shouldered* u n t r i m ­ med f itted coat seen a t classes, in­ formal lunch dates, club meeti ngs, and in gene r al “ f li t t ing a b o u t . ” F o u r or five b u t t o n s on the f r o n t d r a w it snu gl y t o t he wai s t a r o u n d and ma ke it fit the hips. closely Also f e a t u r i n g br oad, p a d d e d shou l d e r s is the box-like cloak of h e r ri ng b o n e t weed, mult i- color ed tweed, or ^olid c a m e l ’s hair. We have seen n u m b e r s o f a t school an d on the s t r e e t a t a l mo s t a n y occasion. t hese • the "Very ca tc hy and i n t r i g u i n g to l oud- checkered, !he eye ar e V -necked, Scotch-plaid s w e a t e r s and sox t o match, w'hich w er e given such in f avor abl e m e n ti o n Mademoiselle e a r l y in the fall. t h a t Drag out old V-ne cke d eatei j o u r b ro t h e r wore in high school, the one he e a r n e d pl a yi ng football, rip o f f l e t t e r , a n d you have a suitable s w e a t e r f o r it class wea r, No doub t i= of a heigh’, collegiate color to add to the ones al r e ad y on the campus. t he p p s o M u m a g * CHRISTMAS CARDS 5 0 FOR M o o Your name on each card — BE SURE— • O RDER N O W • Select O ar F r o m O ur 45 Specials Texas Bookstore across caum vt, a 34a<| GUADALUPE *1 Coaching or Typing Ads $2.00 MontL essenger Service Special R ates - - 2 Line A d s Call 2 - 2 A 7 3 B efore 4 :0 0 for Set t h e N i g h t A - G l i t t e r p c - c r ;r> i* shimmer ch Hon cr L st (‘f t o f fair e g . y JOve y sr lie J r . ) formals. r e t love: • serene y in - - 0Wy / o g r>r breath­ er! ever ( M n d r mo i- 17.95 to 39.95 [ g g i i f i m n i d 7 1 6 C o n g r e s s SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 194T Hmm 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Kona 2-2473 PAGE SEVEN—SOCIETY Newman Club, Alpha Chi Omega, And Phi Sigma Delta Entertain Phi Delta Phi Elects Fifteen New Members Campus-Cut Coat Campus League of Women Ten Exes Serve eadquarters O f Army Corps BROWNWOOD, Nov. 7.— So you’re in your senior year in col- lege and the chairman of your local draft board is already cast­ ing covetous glances in your di­ rection? I f so, you’’ e probably conjured up some pretty awful visions of life in the army, and you may think you’ll be relegated to some position where your special talents will not be used. The chances, though, are that you’ll be agreeably surprised after ductiori, Lieutenant-Colonel Leo V. Warner, chief personnel officer o f the Eighth Army Corps, be­ is constantly lieves. The army seeking to fit men to tasks in which they have had special train­ ing. throughout As an example of the efficiency o f the classification system being used generally the army, Colonel W a rn e r calls a tte n ­ tion to the records o f ten ex-stu­ dents of The University of Texas now serving a t he a d qu arte rs of the Eighth Army Corps here. in The chief draftsm en of two of the general sta f f sections received their special tra in in g in the Uni­ versity and immediately found ap­ prop riate places the service. S ta ff S ergeant Ned Cole of Aus­ tin, draftsm an in th e operations train in g section, received a and bachelor of a rts degree in archi­ tecture in 1940, and S ta f f Ser­ geant Ira N. Laird of Houston, draftsm a n in the m ilitary intelli­ gence section, was aw arded a de­ gree in petroleum engineering in 1939. P rivate First Class P e te r B. N W ells of Austin, who received his bachelor of a rts and master" of art* degrees from the University and his law degree from Harvard, found a place in the judge advo­ cate general’s department before receiving appointment to officers candidate school at Fort Benning, Ga. Sergeant Irving Israel o f Gal- veiton, graduate o f 1933, discov­ ered that his degree in journalism helped him as secretary to the corps chaplain in phrasing letters reassuring worried parents of se­ journalism lectees. Two students, Corporal Charles W. New of San Marcos, a student in the summer of 1938, and Private F irst Class Bob Baskin of Sey­ mour, a graduate in 1938, are em­ ployed in the public relations of­ fice, writing army news. other O ther ex-students o f the Uni­ versity a t corps he a dq ua rte rs are Private First Class E a rn e s t Gam- mage of Houston, who took his law Newman Clubbers and their guests danced under red and white streamers, the club colors, in the Capital Room of the Stephen F. Austin Hotel Friday night at their annual fall formal. Alice Munguia sang, “Smoke Gets In Your E yes” and “Yo No Se,” and the Co-Ed Quartet was featured on the program. Bobby Hammack’s orchestra rendered various numbers from the sweet and low to the hot jives, and Mary Buchanan gave her “ Ella Fitzgerald” touch to her vo­ cal numbers. the attended following Chaperones were Father Vin­ cent F. Holden, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Hackett, Dr. and Mrs. Leo Hughes, and Miss Dorothy Gebauer. The dance: B ^ tty Lou B r o m sta d M o se Blaine E lizabeth Sem m ea Bennie Bennel R a y J o h n s o n Klenora Kocurek L ouise Con ne lly B e tty Gibbs M a r g a r e t N. L ong Ja ck E llio tt Dolores Bohn Marion Klein M ary Ann S chu - Tom Harriman J . W’a r re n Slerai- E lm er McClain M u rff McCullen J a c k Clemer T o m m y Wood Jodie Koeurek m «nn fJanek Bill Kitley E m e r y Munsil Jo s ep h M a tth e w s C harlie Uychopen Bill M e h rten Lewis T ro iano J . T. Jo h n a p e l u s Harold Sm ith Billy Lacy W. K. Williamson Tom New m an S tep h en G. Allen J r . Audelia M un g u ia B e tt y M ath ia s L ouise F a r r a r M a r i a n n a Shader Mildred Dietrich M a r g a r e t Gleason Ann Y u s t J o a n Ma rie O t t B e atrice L an g fo rd Cesare J . Calli Yolanda V a r g a Hazel Co ch ran B e tt y S t e e k e r Cora R a y C u r tis Be rn ad in e L ah ey A u g u s t W itte n b o r n Virginia L o n q u is t Hale Lam b M a ry P a t C h a atine Bill O’Melia M a ry Louise Magee J a c k D ar ro u z e t M a ry Agn es Beale Russel Wade P e g g y B rice M a r g a r e t Budnick Helen Osoba Jo s e p h i n e Kocurek M artin N a s so u r L en o re R ebstein K a t h r y n B ieter D o roth y Allen Doroth y Waler jta C lar en ce Adamietz M a rg a r e t McClusky Roy M c N aug hto n Marg ie Clan cy Delia Yznaga L a v e r n e L u r e A u d r e y E g a n M a ry A n n Town# J o a n n e H u f fn g t o n N. B. Sikes K a t h e r i n e H a r e l i p T h o m a s H. Ma her Alicia F lo res Alice M u n g u ia M a ry Ann D rake K a t h r y n Brown N an cy Cochran T h o m a s Flynn Hudson 8 c h le u t« r J o h n Bacon J a c k T ho m p so n Leonel Sim m s R. A. F lum e J r . K, O. B eth ke E r n e s t S lan in g er J o h n L arc ade Miguel A. N a v a r A. J. M u ng uia J r . J e r r y C h am b erlain Har old H ab er n ich t C harlie W arp Hip Mengden William Dannelt P a tr ic ia E v a n s Marcella S eith Mary Douglas M rs. Carlos C a s t a n e d a Virginia H u g h e s Ra lph C u s h m a n Bob Crouch T h o m a s P . I n g r a m Cha rlie Russe ll J a c k Schuelke R o bert J . Pesek P a t r ic k F. Reiss B ern ard Cocek George Scully Gilbert L a sk o w s k i Clair Green Bob A h u n s Tom Blum e Ja rv s s B e v erly P ietas H ines Dick W alto n Dan Urhanek Grady Davis Milton Den son Jo e Bradley R o be rt Allen B illy M atthews Nathon Viarc Lawrence Barlows Fred Green A. V. G oyne Claude Kennard Phil LaSalle H erschel Thom pson Bud Guidera Dannie Ward Milton W hitworth I,eon P eter Jam es O'Reilly J a m e s P. W olf Donald Ross Charlie Roberts Bill Monks Q uenton Scar* borough D ave Shanahan Edward Pesek John Ternus Ja c k C a e sa r Dr. Carlos C as­ taneda Frank Lyons Harvest time was the theme of the Alpha Chi Omega formal held S atu rday night at the Austin Country Club. Trellises of au­ tumn leaves over the doors, corn stalks and mums flanking the or­ chestra, and a tree of autumn leaves in the center of the room were the decorations carrying out the harvest-time note. The fireplace was decorated with mums and autum n leaves on the mantle with pumpkins a t the grate. Behind the orchestra rose a full harvest moon with a laugh­ ing face. A punch howl of mums frozen in ice centered the serving table which was surrounded by a log fence and iron work chairs. Dance programs of light brown with dark brown cornstalks and pumpkins printed on them f u rth e r carried out the a utum n theme. Music was furnished by Jimmy Weiler and his orchestra. Chaper­ ons were Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Power, Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Lynn, Dr. and Mrs. A. N. Jones, Mr, and Mrs. A lexander Moffit, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Brockette, and Mr. and Mrs. Claude Wild. The guest list included: J o h n Keith R o b e rt Kelly Ja c k Keyes J i m m y K rieeh bau m H a r d i n g Lawre nce George L eonard Dan L u m ian H ig h Lyle J . C. McCollum Dean Allan Bill Allen L. L. A n t h o n y Buck Arnold Jo h n n y A rnold Bual A skew Ferre ll B a k e r Boh B a r t l e t t Bill B e rt r u m degree in 1939, employed in the finance office; Private F irst Class John Olive of San Angelo, a jo u r ­ nalism m ajor working in the a d ju ­ t a n t g e n era l’s office; Private First Class H u b e rt Gage of F o rt Worth, who received his bachelor of busi­ ness administration degree in 1939 and who is now doing ad m inistra­ tive work in the office of the corps surg eon ; and Private First Class Nolan B. P ickett of Liberty, whose University training enables him to hold down a job in the finance office. 3 ,0 0 0 D ir e c to r ie s Sold Three thousand copies of the 1941-42 stu d e n t directory, more than half tho total printed, have been sold, the three campus book­ stores reported Friday afternoon. Nearly six thousand directories, the total printed, were sold last year. W arren Hughes, who received his bachelor of a rts degree from J the University is now- employed as m anager of the Kil- ( gore Chamber of Commerce for [the coming year. in 1938, Jim m y Newm an P at McMichaal A. J. Mann j mk« Morrow B illy M assey j oe Murphy Joe Neal Trad Niem an Harry N ichols Edmund N unnally p4uj c. Oberg Bob Owcna John K. Pearson Rjke P e e le r John Perry Gordon Perry Frank Phelan H arry Phillipa Major Charles Martin Backer 'Lloyd B entsoa Bill B irge Bill Blackburn Guy Borden Lacy Brady Harry Brady Johnnie B ryant Georgs Burka Neal Burleson Collins Burton Johnnie Caldwell Sam Care John C arrey Ralph Claypool Bernard Cocek John Collins Bill Cowan Jim m y Co* Jim m y Craig Mike De G eorge G. D. Reader Norris Dennard Marvin Dibrell Pat D re nasa Bob Echlin David E llis Jam es Fella Edaon Feray Vincent Ferret L eslie Flow ers Jr. Alan S cott Bill Gambral! Robert Scurlock Coleman Gardner Alfred Shepperd Jo hn Green Jo hn Greer Thad G run dy Charlie Heye W arren H iggen - Bob Robert John Roberta Archer Rudlof Avery Rush John Seam an Rob Scardina Otia S ch later Bill Schw arts W a r r e n Sligar A lva Swain A n drew T h o m p s o n Edwin T h om pso n Leland T h om pso n I,es T h o m pson bo tham Quinn Randall T a n k e rs le y C h arles T ay lo r t o m m y Holstein Billy Ja c k Mims J a c k s o n J r . Clau de Wild E dward Winn ( harles Billy W i t t e r E. J. J o n e s Fred W es to n Mason Jo h n s o n S tan Young Ike K a m p m a n n J e n n e r in Phi Sigma Delta fr a te r n ity en ­ tertained with a house party S a t­ urday night from 9 to 12 o ’clock in the chap ter house, carrying out a Parisian Latin Q u a rte r mo­ the decorations and cos­ tif tumes. Guests were as follows: Jo sephine A s h e r ( eeile Berg E thel Blankfield Ruth F rie d m a n Rosalie Gordon Eva H an d elm an Marie Holland K atherine K aufm an F ra n ces W ei n b l a t t Lucille K au fm an thai Ann Ra u c h Marilyn Rieger Sidney S t i f f t Shirley Tails! E m m y Lou M itte n - j o y c e Levis ( F ifteen second and third-year law students have been elected to in the Roberts Inn membership chapter of Phi Delta Phi, national legal fraternity, Baine Kerr, presi­ dent, has announced. The newly elected members are David Bartlett, Louis Henry Beard, Charles Rex Boyd, Rob­ ert E. Burns, John Francis Heard, Bunyan L. Hutchinson, Charles C. Loveless, Tom R. McLeroy, Wal­ lace N. Masters, James T. Rain, Clifford J. Roberts, Robert L. Smith, Ben H. Rice III, Joseph F. Weiler, and Killough K. Smith. These students are required to have a scholastic average o f sev­ enty-five in all their law courses and to be in good standing with the Texas Law Review at the time of the election. Roberts Inn, the only chapter in Texas, was founded in 1909 and named after 0 . M. Roberts, Its former governor of Texas. purpose the promotion of a higher standard of professional ethics and culture. is The School of Law’s nominating committee has named three nomi­ nees the Law School Honor Council, Crawford Cofer, president, has announced. for chairman of Those nominated were Thomas B. Rhodes, William E. Juncll, and Robert W. Decker. Election will be held Thursday. The School of Law is run en­ tirely on the honor system. P ro ­ fessors do not even atten d class during examinations. The Honor Council, which tries a l l infractions of the honor code, is made up of three representatives two from from the mid-law class, and one from the first-year class, plus the chairman. the senior law class, Voters to Install Study Group A new era in co-ed thinking has been embarked upon this week with the installation of the Study Group of the Campus League of Women Voters. This group, which will be concerned with weekly discussions on problems of interest, will meet for the first time Monday at 6 o'clock in Texas Union 311. A t this time, the first of a series o f dis­ cussions on “Possibilities for a So-* cia I Service School a t the U niver­ sity of Texas” will begin. ............. 1 "" Rex Hopper, professor of soci­ ology. and Marthann Kessler, who has done volunteer social service work in E ast Austin, will speak. There will be an open forum fol­ their presentations. All lowing girls and members of the League are urged to attend. as possible. Following the study on each subject, the group will recommendationi make which the League will undertake as projects. certain The purpose of the study group is to give women students a chance to meet and discuss problems which are pertinent and of in­ terest. . . . e, ‘ have . J C ! ■ th a t we “ r ■ ' inadequate I *?!" Next Monday Dr. Gettys will speak to the group on what the toward es­ University has done tablishing such a school. ,nd,v,do,lj wuth the vi.w .p o m t o f T m *m.' t° fJ the Lea* Ue ? * y do J? >t “ Students pride themselves on not being in a rut, yet how many of us are concerned with anything but books, dates, and committee routine of our various activities? The study group is an attempt to keep students aware of problems In explaining the problem, Liz the study leader of stated, the highest ra te of day afternoon, Miss Anna Hiss, faculty advisor, said. Sutherland, group for the League, “ Texa^ has juvenile delinquency in the United 7 States. This ie partly due to t h e : fact training. There ie no school of so- Tk , e**K in Texas, and u n t i l ! elal service such a school is provided, Texas will continue to fall short in the k G,rl;I * h° ,w field of social welfare. The study uroup will atte m p t to consider the! *h* "tudy * r0Up meetms 0I> Mon entire problem of juvenile delin quc-ncy, keeping in mind the pos­ sibility of having a school to train social workers here a t the Univer­ sity.” ’• “« the s t a t i o n , Miss Sother- , It is requested of all students The study group, which has been who have any reflU€>sts *°r clas- e goal of the Carnous L e a g u e !sical mUsic records to be bought by the Union Music Committee, to please hand these requests in a t the Union Office. the goal o f the Campus League since it was established a year ago, will meet each week at 5 o’clock and will be dismissed “ prom ptly” the at 5 :30 o ’clock. This year problems which will be taken up from Denison, left Wednesday to re- are “ S tandards which a Co-Ed Should Accept in her Social R e la - |p o r t for duty a t Camp Barkeley tions,” “ S tu d e n t G overnm ent at as lieutenant. His Work,” and several other topics to brother, Charles, also an ex-stu- j dent, arrived ’ I Austin Wednesday be determined by the group. Speakers will be persons who on an unexpected furlough from are well-informed on the subjects j Camp Polk, La., where he ii I and will consist of students, as fa r i private. H an d in Y ou r M usic R a q u ests -------------------- Paul Horn, ex-student second „ a This c o r J u ro y r e e f e r o f n a t ­ ural color in w id e w ale w e a v e w ith g reen fla n n e l binding will w e a r w ell over a w arm je rsey or w o o l dress at the n e x t cold f o o t ­ ball g a m e . H a n d -w ro u g h t sil­ v e r b u tto n s p u n c tu a t e the fr o n t this ev er-s u ita b le coat. B e ­ o f fo r sid es b eing fo r g a m es , c a m p u s w ear. is v e r y p opular a p pro p ria te it In the air corps as a private is W alker D. Faubion of Austin, fo rm e r stu den t in the University in mechanical engineering. He is stationed the gunnery school a t Las Vegas, Nev. in carbrough&Sons l ength A b o v e : Ful l - Eve ni ng Cape s for a dr amati c e n t r a n c e . Whi te , g o l d , purple, gol d e m b r o i d e r y . (Eve ni ng Coats, 12.75 to 3 9 . 5 0 ) . 1 0 .7 5 to 2 3 .0 0 Misty nets wi th bouf fant skirls for the fall formal s. Ve l ve t , jersey, t a f fe ta , or meta l cloth c ombi ne with net in gr ay, white, blue. Sequi n spr inkle d for a dde d gl amour . SCA RBRO U GH ’S COLLEGE SHOP, SECOND FLOOR 1 0 .7 3 to 2 5 .0 0 fo r th e w eek -en d o f th e T. C. gam e U n d er your furs e t the Stadium , . . charming everyone at open houie festivities a f t e r the g am e . . . young pastel colors are your newest, smartest cue. Pastel rose, blue, beige, gold, aqua . . . pale and interesting . . . in casual, light, w arm, rab b it-w o o l dresses, soft and flattering . . . in dressier crepes with touches o f gleam ing jewels. Sizes 9 to 15. SCARBROUGH'S COLLEGE SHOP SECOND FLOUR 12.75 AMUSEMENTS— PASE EIGHT Hmm J-2473 — T H E D A I C Y T E X A N — Kona 2-2473 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1941' Today’s Entertainment PA R A M O U N T— “ W ee k -e n d in H a v a n a ,” w ith Carm en M iranda, Alice F’ay, J o h n P a y n e , and C esar R om ero. F e a t u r e begins at 2, 4, 6, 8, a n d IO o ’clock. S T A T E — “ C itiaen K an e ," w ith Orson Welles. F eature begins at 2 :3 7 , 4:56, 7:15, and 9:34 o ’clock. Q U E E N — “ S p o o k . R un W ild ,” w ith Bela Lugosi. F eature begin s a t 2 :55, 4:37, 6:19, 8 :01, and 9 :4 3 o ’clock. CAPITOL — “ A lo m a o f th e S o u t h S e a * , ” w ith D orothy La- m o u r a n d J o n H all. F eature b e­ g ins a t 2:24, 4 :19, 6:14, 8:09, and 10:04 o’clock. V A R S I T Y — “ D iv e B o m b er,” wdth FIrrol Flynn and Fred Mac- M u r ra y . F’e a tu r e begins at 2, 4 :2 5 , 6:50, a n d 9:15 o ’clock. T E X A S — " T h ey M et in B o m - b a y , ” w ith Clark G able and R osa­ lind Russell. F e a t u r e a t 2 :16, 4:07 , 5 :58, 7 :4 9 , a n d 9:40 o ’clock. begins D R I V E - I N — “ Z ie g fe ld G ir l,” w ith J a m e s S te w a r t, L a n a T u r n e r , and J u d y G arla n d . F e a t u r e beg in s a t 7 a n d 9 :4 5 o’clock. Time Staggers O n 'Try-outs To Begin Monday Night Try-outs fo r the ca st o f “ Tim e S taggers On,” annual production sponsored by Theta Sigm a Phi, honorary fra ter n ity fo r w om en in journalism , w ill be held M onday and T uesday, N ovem ber 17 and 18, B illy M atthew s, director, has announced. The tim e and place o f the try-outs w ill be announced th is w eek. “ d a z e ” The script, w ritten by Mary E liz a b e th S u th e r la n d a n d L es­ lie C a r p e n te r , c o n c e r n s th e col­ lege o f N ig h tin g a le Swallow, a ll-sta te fo o tb a ll p la y e r in high school, w ho e n t e r s th e U n iv e r s ity on a g i r l ’s sc h o la r ­ ship o b ta in e d f o r him by his girl frie n d , S a n d y H a r t. S u b s e q u e n t ­ ly, ru s h e d by th e y so r o ritie s ; sta y in th e sam e b o a r d in g h o u se ( N ig h tin g a le h a s a ro o m to h im ­ self) ; N ig h tin g a le e n t e r s th e n a tio n a l s w e a t e r girl c o n te st. th e y a r e both th e y p le d g e ; A lth o u g h all p r e v io u s t h ir d a c ts o f th e “ T im e S ta g g e r s O n ” sc rip ts h a v e b een s e t in n ig h t clubs, th e S u t h e r l a n d - C a r p e n t e r s c rip t s u b s t itu te s th e L a n d of th e M id n ig h t S u n f o r local n ig h t life. T he in t h ir d a c t G re e n la n d , a t a w ee k -e n d igloo laid is party given by K itkoochka, an Eskim o stu d en t in the U n iver­ sity. Sue, an A labam a b elle, goes “ n aw th ” fo r the fir st tim e to atten d the party. She thinks “ the S outhern lady is a flo w er that bloom s a lo o f.” in clu d e “M anana S ongs f o r the show , w ritten b y R o s e m a ry T yler and M arshall in Miller, C h ic h u a c h u a ,” “ My H eart Told Me to L ove,” a blues num ber; five n o v e lty songs, “ P lu e in g ,^ “ I W a n t to W oo W ith You in V an Igloo,” “ R ing Out, W ild Bells,” “ College Cow boy,” and “ P o p u l a r G ir ls ;” love songs, “ G oodbye D a rlin g ,” “ You W e r e the O n e,” “You Seem to Be,” and “ I Searched A m ong the S t a r s . ” fo u r 'Pestle' Opens Monday Experimental Group to Produce C o m e d y by Beaum ont and Fletcher A nd here I vow n e v e r to blaze a day in quietness until I have quelled that man, or beast, or fie n d t h a t w orks such d a m a g e to all e r ­ ran t k nights,” and with these words, the K n ig ht of the B u r n in g P es­ tle, re sp le n d e n a in clan k in g a r m o r miles too la rg e , s w a g g e rs o f f the e ta g e in search o f wild ad v e n tu re . The E x p e r im e n ta l T h e a te r will tell th e sto ry Monday nig h t in Mod e r a L an g u a g e s Building 103 a t 8 o ’clock. Ralph, th e knight, c e rtainly f in d s it. F ro m one ridiculous Incident to a n o th er, he s tr u ts across the stage, vainly a t t e m p t ­ in g to rescue a t le ast one dis­ tressed damsel, and finally m a k ­ ing a heroic and hilarious end w ith a r r o w th r o u g h bis head. fo rk e d fak e a tells “ The K n ig h t of the B u rn in g P e s tle ,” the sto ry of an English tr a d e s m a n , his wife, and ap p re n tice , Ralph, who, bis while a t te n d i n g a play, “ The L ondon M e rc h a n t,” decide t h a t th e y w an t a play a b o u t the com ­ m on people and d ire c tly select R alph fo r the b ad. The r e st of th e play is the play w ithin the play, which is full of rollicking f u n an d even a p p ro a c h e s th e slapstick when Ralph a t te m p ts to tr a i n his c o m p an y of m a k e ­ s h if t soldier*, “ The K n ig h t o f th e B u r n in g P e s tle ,” is ac te d upon a m u lt i­ ple sta g e w ith five locales a t tim e. T hese a re M a s te r one M e r r y th o u g h t’s home, V e n tu r e - th e Bell T a v e rn , w ell’s home, W a lth a m F o re st, a n d the s tr e e t. in th e p la y Music f o r is S ix­ te e n th C e n tu r y a n d is light and catchy. F o r th e f i r s t tim e on cam pus, th e U n iv e r s ity the harp sic h o rd is b eing used as bac k g ro u n d music in a play. The harp sic h o rd Is b eing loaned to th e D e p a r t m e n t o f D ra m a by t h e D e p a r t m e n t of Music. J a c k F is h e r is play in g th e lyrics. T he costum es, like th e m u s i c , a r e in f i t t i n g w ith th e tim e of th e play, an d w e re m a d e by m e m b ers of th e d e p a r tm e n t . T he play r u n s M onday th r o u g h S a tu r d a y , w ith c u r ta in tim e a t 8 o ’clock. T h e r e is no c h a rg e f o r adm ission, b u t r e s ­ erv a tio n s m u s t be m ade by calling 9171-218. L e a d in g th e ca st a r e Don J a c k s o n as th e C itizen; K a t h ­ le en C a r t e r as the W ife ; Mason Jo h n so n , R a lp h ; L u re , J a c k D a­ vis; M a ster M e r r y th o u g h t, W a l­ t e r M oore; Mistress M e r r y ­ th o u g h t, G w yneth M cCorm ick; J a s p e r , E d w in Y o rk ; a n d Mi­ chael, S tan F isch e r. Also in the r*a«it a re C harles S chm idt, J o h n D an b y , Cadell J im Corley, F r e d B u rro u g h s, S h o rt, J . L. Adam s, Billy Ja c k , a n d G eorge Hals. J a c k F isch e r plays th e h arpsichord. Fernandez to Open Mexican Arf Week H eadlinin g M exican A rt Week b e g in n in g M on d a y on The U n i­ v e rsity of T exas cam pu s will be J u stin o F ern a n d e z , n ote d Mexican a r t h isto ria n and critic, it was a n ­ nounced b ere S a tu r d a y . illu strate d A p p e a rin g as an illustrativ e le c ­ t u r e r will be Gibson Danes, U n i­ versity a u t h o rity on L atin -A m e r- lcan art. T h re e le c tu re s will be given by F e r n a n d e z T uesda y, W ed n esd ay an d T h u rs d a y on d if ­ f e r e n t aspects of c o n te m p o r a r y Mexican a r t, to be follow ed T h u r s ­ day n ig h t with a n o t h e r illu stra te d le c tu r e by Gibson D anes on a n ­ cien t and colonial Mexican art. from the I n s t i t u t e de In vestigac ion de Es* th e tic a o f T he U n iv ersity of T °x as is the U n iv e r s ity of T e x a s ’s Inst. of L a tin - A m eric an S tudies, in co-operation with th e d e p a r tm e n t o f a r t of the U n iv e r ­ s ity ’s College o f F ine Arts. B rin g in g F e r n a n d e z ;te 'Spooks Run Wild' In Queen Chiller In th e la te s t Q ueen chiller, t i e p ic tu r e “ Spooks R u n W ild,” r u n s the w ay of th e spooks. I t is a g ru eso m e pi pro— about, a m o n ­ s te r who g ra b s his f o r t y w inks in a c o f f i n by day a n d guzzles h u ­ m an blood by night. Like m a n y o th e r t e r r o r e r r o r, “ Spooks R u n W ild ” relies on im­ possible situ a tio n s f o r s p in e -tin g ­ ling purposes. T he m e ch a n ics o f a h o r r o r sto r y a re sin pie given a few s e c r e t sta irw a y s, a cobw ebby cellar, some r o a m in g skeletons, a crim inally inclined ®por>k, a few m e m b ers of tile cast to be v ic tim ­ ized. a n d a d e s e r te d h o u se— the r e s u lt is a h o r r o r pic tu re. N a tu ra lly , t h e r e a re no such e s ta b lish m e n ts in N ew Y o r k ’s blast Side, so th e s c rip t ta k e s th e D ead Find Kids to a ca m p f o r u n d e r priv ile g ed boys, which is n e x t door to th e local h a u n t e d house. The Dead Find Kids seem to ha v e gone H ollyw ood, f o r th e ir “ c h e e s e ” ac c e n ts a r e m o r e forced th a n n a t u r a l, a n d th e y are g e ttin g r e f o r m school a g e — above th e y like post grad uates. look m ore the Bela Lugosi is p r o p e r ly r ' ’pul rive a* the local *pook, who pal spiders, a r o u n d w ith w altzin g d isa p ­ p e a r in g dw arf". skeletons, f lo a t in g a n d If you liko suspense, w ith o u t th e benefit, of such m in o r details as plot, and p ro b ab ility , you m ight like “ Spooks Run W ild.” - IRMA H A N S E N . The Dial Log BY E L E A N O R A N N E W I L S O N C o l u m b i a B r o a d c a s t i n g S y s t e m 12:3 0 — Visit to the fo rb id d e n city of Lhasa, T ibet, on “ This Is the L if e ,” co n d u c te d by J o h n Reed K ing. I :30— The W orld Today. 3 :3 0 —-Alec T em p leto n , pianist, is A n d r e K o stelanrtz.’s g u e s t on “ T h e Pause T h a t R e fr e s h e s on th e A ir.” •I T he F a m ily H our, s ta r r in g G ladys Sw art bout, Ross G r a ­ ham, a n d music critic, Deems Taylor. 4:45 - William L. P h ire r a n d the news. 5 — Madeleine C a rro ll s ta r s in “ The S ilv er T h e a t e r . ” Mickey R o o n e y and J u d y in “ Babes in th e Screen Guild G arla nd co- t a r A r m s ” o ver T h e a te r. 7— “ T he L a st of Mr*. C 1 e n e y ” is p re se n te d by H e le n H a y e s in lier th e a te r. 7 : 3 0 — Crime Doctor. 8— F’ord S un day E v e n in g H o u r a n d Rose It urb: Jose with H am pton. 9:30 C olum bia W o rkshop. IO-—H ea d lin e s an d Bylines. N a t i o n a l B r o a d c a s t i n g C o m p a n y I :30— “ D efense the I n v e n to r y ” will be the U n iv e rsity of Chicago R o u n d Table. topic discussed on 2:30 S am m y K a y e ’s o rch e stra. 2:45 — H, V. Kalfccnbom a n d his a n a ly sis of the se w s . 8— .lack Benny. 6 : 3 0 - Xavier C u g a t B a ndw agon. on F itch i ( barile M cCarthy an d com ­ pany. 7 :3 0 — One Man s Family* 8— W a lte r Winch©ll. 8:3 0 — A m eric an A lbum o f F a ­ m iliar Music. 9— H o u r of C harm . j .30 New Sherlock H olm es m y s ­ te r y s t a r r i n g 1 Basil R athbo ne. W e s le y Players T o Present Play W esley P layers, a f t e r several delays in th e f o r m o f p o stp o n e­ ment?, a ch a n g e of dirrcfcors and a switch in th e cast, will p r e s e n t t h eir initial o ffe rin g of th e year, “ The Bishop’s C a ndlesticks,” to ­ n ig h t a t 6:30 at the Wesley F oun- elation, T he cast f o r th e play, which has boer. u n d er the direction o f C u rta in -C lu b b e r Bill H e n r y , in ­ cludes Ray S c o tt J r , M a r g a r e t Hargis®, and H e n ry himself. Make­ u p is u n d e r the direction of Eave H olladay. convict, I he p l a y , a n a d a p ta tio n f r o m V ic to r H u g o ’s “ Lex Miserable?,” co n c e rn s a n idrhght ad v e n tu re of a k in d ly bishop and an escaped convict. T he seeking r e f u g e fro m p u r su in g policem en, asks t h e Bishop to give him shel­ t e r d u r in g the night. Then, a f t e r th e household h as re tire d , the con­ by vict, te m p ta tio n , ste a ls a p a ir o f th e old p r ie s t’s silver c a n d le stic k s a n d d isappears in to th e night. ov erc o m e T h e police c a tc h him a n d d ra g him bac k b e f o r e his la te victim. T he Bishop, n o t w ish in g to see th e co n v ic t t a k e n b ack to th e jail, c le a r s him by sa y in g t h a t th e sil­ v e r ca n d le stic k s w e r e a p erso n a l g ift. A dm is;-on Is f r e e ; a n y o n e inter­ e s te d i s welcome* Experimental Theater Ticket D e m a n d Increases Seat? for tr.e Wedr es flay n ig h t p erfo rm a n c e o f th e E x p e r im e n ta l of T h e a t e r ’s “ The K n ig h t tho B u rn in g P e s tl e ” a l r e a d y have b e e n rese rv e d , a n d tic k e ts fo r the goin g o th e r p e r f o rm a n c e s a r e f a st, the m a n a g e m e n t a n n o u n c es . This f lay will lust th r o u g h S a t ­ u rd ay night. A dm ission is D ee, b u t r e se rv a tio n s m u s t be m ade. Reservations may be m ade by M - - phoning University S atiny 218 or going to Modern L a n g u a g e B uild­ ing 2 0 8 . University Graduate Acclaimed in Music Music w ritte n by H arold M o r­ n s , a g r a d u a te o f ti e \ ..jv<,n , | tv has re c e n tly won a c c l a i m o f ea ste rn critics. ■ The p r e m i e r p e r f o rm a n c e of his ! t°; ,? ln C arru‘” if- C h a m b e r Music Hall w as h era ld ed as “ afe- ! r n .le a n t,” “ n ew .” a n d ’ i m p o r t a n t ” th e classical f o r m s of music. in New Y o rk critics said th e co m ­ position showed th a t Mr. Morris : te a com poser o f considerable in ­ te lle c tu a l powers. The f i r s t radio p e r f o rm a n c e of Mr. M orris’?. S uite fo r C ham ber O rc h e stra w as by Colum bia B r o a d ­ castin g System S ym phony, T h e a b o v e s c e n e is f r o m th e E x p e r i m e n t a l T h e a t e r ’* r e v i v a l t h e S i x t e e n t h C e n t u r y t h r i l ­ o f B u r n i n g l er , “ K n i g h t o f P e » t ! e . ” F r o m r i g h t : E d w i n Y o r k a s J a s p e r , C a d d e l l e f t t h e t o B u r r o u g h s a* F i r s t B o y ; M a ­ s o n J o h n s o n a* R a l p h ; a n d J im C o r l e y as S e c o n d B o y . F irst Call C A C T U S ass Pictu res W ith the completion of fraternity and sorority pictures, the C a c t u s Studio is reserved for C la s s photographs. Pictures are now being m ade for all C la s s Sections of the 1942 C actus. GRADUATES “SENIORS -JUNIORS “SOPHOMORES “FRESHMEN Y ou ll w ant to be represented in the only o fficial pictorial record of the University year. H ave your pictures m ade now and avoid the last m inute rush. Attention Sophomores and Freshmen The Cactus production schedule calls for the closing of Sophom ore a n d Freshman class pictures before the Thanksgiving holidays. Make Your Studio Appointments at Journalism Building 108 T H E C A C T U S t