T heTh e F i r s f C o l I e g 9 T exan Ilia S o u t h in D a l l y VOLUME 44 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 28. 1943 Four Pages Today No. 97, U.T. Seeks $2 0 0 , 0 0 0 At Test Tm Professors Are Cut In Appropriation Forgetful Too - - 19 Air Reservists Get Orders To Report as Privates Today Dr. Lopez Goes To W rong Room: But Exams Go On With fo u r days o f quizzes down, and three more to go, Dr. Ramon Martinez-Lopez added a hum or­ ous touch to his Portuguese l l fi­ nal yesterday. The visiting pro ­ fessor’s quiz was scheduled fo r S. H. 210 (Sutton H all), but Dr. Lopez mistook the S. H. for Sci­ ence Hall ar^J made his app ear­ ance a t Biology Building 210 a t 9 o’clock. His anxious students worried about him when he didn’t show up, and one boy finally found him over in the Biology Building. The professor was very upset, be­ cause he tho ugh t the en tire class had to rebelled. H u rrying over Sutton Hall, to his amazement, Dr. Lopez discovered th a t he had left the questions a t home. A stu ­ dent was sent to get them, and about one hour a f te r the sched­ uled time, the quiz was started. Here are the quizzes f o r today: • TH UR SDA Y JA N U A R Y 28, AT 9 Group VI Fewer Students, Faculty, Reduce School's Expenses Because o f an anticipated de­ crease in enrollm ent t..id a smaller teaching sta ff, The U niversity of Texas will seek a state ap prop ria­ tion approxim ately $ 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 smaller f o r each year of the n ext biennium th a n was appropriated fo r the p a st two years, Presid ent H om er P. Rainey announced to ­ day. Dr. Rainey said he would p r e ­ sent to the Senate Finance and the House Appropriations Com­ m ittees of the 48th Legislature an itemization of the needs of the total $1,- U niversity which will 993,000 as compared with a pre­ vious appropriation of $2,193,000 fo r the Main University, n ot in­ cluding extra-m ural activities. the This $200,000 reduction was made possible, Dr. Rainey said, teaching s ta ff has because been reduced considerably by the e n try into the armed services of m any members of faculty. Substitutes for some of these men have been necessary, bu t other places have not been filled, since there are few er students this year than last. the Dr. Rainey explained th a t the salaries of sta ff members on leave of absence will total $280,000 a year, whereas replacements will receive $150,000, leaving a sav­ ings of $130,000. Other econ­ omies add the o ther $70,000. Despite the lower total, neces­ in some d e p a rt­ sary expenses ments of the University will be the President antici­ increased, pated, because of the g re a t de­ mand fo r science and engineer­ ing work, and because “ some sal­ aries have been advanced in order to hold men who had b e tte r offers elsewhere.” The University’s budget cannot be reduced in proportion to the loss of students because of the cost of operation, Dr. higher Rainey claimed. He said some costs fo r equipment and supplies I are now 5 per cent to 30 per cent higher— some even more— than two years ago. He prophesied, however, th a t with economies al­ ready made and others contem­ plated, the U niversity’s war-time educational program would not su ffe r unduly with the $200,000 suggested in annual state appropriations. decrease Dean Bantel Remembers Fences That Kept Cows Out of Classes the the up-keep of B y JAY D U BO SE 1904 was the year. The Engineering Building Was completed, and took its place on the F orty Acres with the old Main Building, B. Hall, th e old Chemis­ tr y L aboratory, the Woman’s Building, and a little boiler house fo r heating purposes. hers. “ The tennis players bought th e ir entire outfits, played for the love of the game, and paid for tennis courts o u t o f their own pockets. L arge numbers of the faculty play­ ed regularly, Dr. W harey, Dr. Benedict, and Professor Villavaso being a r d e n t tennis enthusiasts. la te r became Dr. Benedict, who which now houses the D epartm ent president of the University, came near several times to winning the o f Journalism , moved the Depart state championship a t San A n­ m ents of Civil Engineering, Mining tonio.” Engineering, Electrical E n gineer­ ing, Drawing, and Applied Mathe­ matics. Two hundred engineering students used its class-rooms th a t year. Recalling the e f f e c t of World Into the E ngineering Building, who appeared on the stage. De Pachman, a famous pianist of the period and in te rp re te r of Chopin, had the habit of talking himself up to his audiences, as he did wrhen he appeared there. Madame Schumann-Heink sang there a f t e r the war. Dean Bantel says the auditorium was packed and jam med a t her recital, and little boys were sitting up on the beams across th e ceiling. The singer looked up, saw the kids, them she was smiled, and came. She was very they told popular with the audience. Most o f th a t s ta f f is now dead o r the United scattered over States, b u t th ere ia one o f them a t the University who remembers. is Edw ard Christian H enry H e Bantel, who the present is, a t time, professor of civil engineer­ ing and assistant dean o f the College of Engineering. In his forty-one years of teaching a t the University he has watched a m irac­ ulous grow th— from a handful of buildings and shacks into an enor­ mous plant of stone on a beautiful campus. Dean Bantel came to the Univer­ in 1901 from Troy, N. Y., from sity where he had g r a d u a te d Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. D r. A rthur Curtis S cott w as th* n ew ly appointed p rofessor o f e le c ­ trical en gin eerin g,’* D ean B an tel rem inisces. “A s he had very few the Board o f R egents stud en ts, charged him w ith the task o f the erection o f the new building. Dean T aylor, fam ed “Grand Old M an,” was at that tim e p rofessor o f civil en gin eerin g, and P rofessor S. P. Finch, o f the D epartm ent of C ivil E n gin eerin g, w as a senior en gin eerin g stu d en t.” the He recalls the m embers of the p re se n t University facu lty who were here when he came. As well as he can remem ber, they are Dr. W inston H enry H arper, Dr. Wil­ Jam es Battle, Dr. D. A. liam Penick, Dr. Eugene Paul Schoch, Miss Lilia Mary Casis, Professor E, J. Villavaso, Dr. M. B. Porter, Miss M ary Louise Decherd, and Dr. J. M. Kuehne. Dean Bantel rem em bers many little incidents and anecdotes of the early Tw entieth C e n tu ry Uni­ versity. There was a wooden fence on three sides of the cam pus to keep the cows ou t— Speedway Avenue was ju st a wagon track between borders of sunflowers— the English Channel was the name given the long hall on the first floor of the Main Building flanked on either side by many offices of the English faculty— and the Peri- patos, a Greek work meaning “ walk a ro u n d ,” was the mile-long side walk encircling the campus. Dr. Battle gave it t h a t name. . W ar I on the University campus, glad Dean Bantel says t h a t a long row of shacks were built f o r barracks in the fall of 1918. Practically all men stud en ts were members of . . . . the Reserve O f f s e t s T raining Corps, and were sworn in as mem­ bers of the United States Army, receiving full pay. They were all m ustered out a t the end of Decem­ ber. A t the end of the w ar they were given honorary discharges. _ , . bassador Sir A ukland G ettys, British am ­ the U nited S tates, , cam e to the A uditorium to m ake . lp „ t h . Hc ple. ded for u n d e r. to standing, toleration, and good-w ill. H e told the audience that war had le ft England hard-hit, som e com ­ in Scotland having no m unities living m ales betw een the it ngle ages o f 16 and 56. money and needed | whom Clark Field fray-h aired , soft-spoken T he p rofessor looked en thu siastically for rn map of the old U niversity, and not being able to find one, displayed a map o f the present cam pus, m arking w ith a pencil w here the old shacks used to stand. He pointed out the site o f the old C omm ons, predecessor o f the p res­ en t one. . A fte r the war, the University it Colquitt Hall, ran o ut of space,” Dean Bantel says. “ Then began the era of shacks. Near the location of Hogg Auditorium was built a shack called ‘C’ Hall. The boys named in honor of the governor in office a t the time. The D epartm ent of Home Economics was housed in a shack fo r years and years. The Men’s Gym was located in the *T’ end of the Main Building. Later, some shacks, were p u t into use for physical train in g.” A barn-like stru cture which has given way to the now E ngineer­ ing Building, was the University Auditorium, and Dean Bantel can rem em ber many of the celebrities to One President, Theodore Roose­ velt, came the Forty Acres hack in those days, and spoke in fro n t of the Main Building. An often-run candidate for the office made an address in the auditori­ um. He was William Jennings Bryan, the famed “ Silver Tongued O ra to r,” who delivered the often quoted, “ The Prince o f Peace.” j During the address the greatly fo r beloved University proctor, is named, slumped over in his seat and was carried down to his office, where he died of a cerebral hemorrhage. A fte r the w ar the citizens of Austin were threaten ed with the loss of their University. the original “ Dr. Vinson th oug ht there was too little space in Austin, and the University couldn’t g et any land Forty adjoining Acres,” he said, smiling. “ The president th re a te ne d to move the University to Dallas where it had been promised more room in which to grow. The people of Austin promptly did something about it, and bought the needed land for building.” Hero Killed By Mutineers La Salle Sighted Texas In December, 258 Years Ago the settlem ent of Texas. Although he died a t the hands of m utineers on Texas soil, Reno Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, gets credit for leading the French In 1937, 252 years a f te r influence in La Salle landed near Aransas Pass, a delegation from the now occu­ pied Republic of Fiance came to Texas to participate in ceremonies -.......................... — —— com m em orating La Salle’s plorations in what the Lone S ta r State. later became ex- ♦ 1 . _ “ A t th a t time the librarian was a m an named Benjamin Wyche (pronounced w itc h ),” Dean Bantel smiled. “ The girls prom ptly named him “ Mr. B. W yche.” Included in this group were re p ­ resentatives o f the Academy of Science in Paris, o f the Alliance Francaise, o f the Maison des N a­ the A rch­ tions Americaines, of bishop of Paris, of the Institute of P ran ce and the University of E xplaining the p reten ce o f the j Paris, and many others. To the em bankm ent around the U n iv e r -! State of Texas, as a gift from tity today, he recalled that C olonel ! France, among P rather w anted to grade the cam- o ther tributes a bronze bust of p ut to that anyone ttan d in g at ' La Salle, any point on see tho Main Building from the top right down to the bottom . A t tho and corner o f S peed w ay T w enty-secon d S treets th ey dum p­ e d m ost o f th e y had .grad ed , covering tho old fen ce and I lea v in g the high em bankm ent. Jam es V. Allred, then governor, the Texas placed Memorial Museum where it is now' on display the foyer east of the entrance. A f t e r he from an earlier trip to Canada and down the river, La Salle presented to Louis XIV his plan f o r colonizing the mouth of the Mississippi. In July, 1684, he sailed from France the men who commanding an expedition of four it,” Dean Bantel rtmem-1 ships and some fo u r hundred per- “ Tennis was considered the only those I ■deal and ethical sport in lays because of Hayed the cam pus could I they presented the statue re tu rn e d tho dirt in in including soldiers, sailors, sons, priests, friars, gentlemen adven­ turers, and families to settle the new colony. E ith e r by mistake or in tent La Salle sailed beyond the mouth of Phr. I the Mississippi and first sighted the Texas coast on December 28, 1684. He chose a site a few the present Garcitas miles from River for the settlement, naming it St. Louis. From h e r e La Salle l e d expedi- lions north and east searching r e ­ the mouth of the Mississippi. On the fourth such trip he and se\eral of his companions were murdered. Shortly a f te r La Salle’s last de­ p a rtu re from St. Louis, the settle­ m ent was destroyed by hostile Indians. A fte r much searching, the c h a r­ red remains of the buildings at St. Louis were discovered, grim reminders of the ill-fated La Salle expedition. (C lasses M eeting TTS IO) Ae. E. 80: Eng. B. 207 Ant. 301f.4: W. H. 210 Ant. 3 2 5 f : W. H. 208 A. M. 3 0 5 f .4 : J. B. 212 A. M. 3 2 5 f .4 : J. B. 201 Bac. 3 6 2 f : B. L. 21 Bib. 3 0 1 f .6 : Y. M. C. A. Bib. 3 0 1 f.8 : Texas Bible Chair Bot. 837: B. L. 301 B. A. 811.8: W. H. 316 B. A. 23.2: G. H. I B. A. 3 3 3 f : W. H. 116 B. A. 3 3 9 f : W. H. 101 B. A. 3 6 3 L f : W. H. 301 B. A. 3 7 2 R f : G. G. Aud. C. E. 2 6 3 f : Eng. B. 301 C. C. 3 0 4 f : Main B. 319 Dim. 21: M. L. B. 101 Drw. 301f.6: Eng. B. 302 Drw. 3 0 1 f .8 : Eng. B. 308 Drw. 3 0 1 f .l 0 : A. B. 310 Drw. 302f.2: Eng. B. GOO Eco. 3 1 2 f .l0 : C. B. 15 Eco. 312 f .18 : G. H. 301 Eco. 3 1 2 f.2 0 : G. H. 215 Eco. 331f : G. H. 319 Eco. 3 8 8 f : G. H. 200 Ed. 3 0 1 f .4 : S. H. 101 Ed. 311f.4 : S. H. 310 Ed. 3 1 2 f .2 : S. H. 303 Ed. 317 f .2: S. H. 204 Ed. 25.2: S. H. 110 Ed. 27.16: Mus. B. 106 Ed. 3 3 7 f : H. E. B. 127 Ed. 3 4 8 f : S. H. 206 Ed. 4 5 4 M a f: Mus. B. 105 E. E. 3 2 7 f : Eng. B. 139 E. 1.32: Main B. 204 E. 1.34: Main B. 206 E. 1.36: Main B. 208 E. 1.38: S. H. 227 E. 1.40: G. H. 113 E. 1 2 a f . l 0 : G. B. 108 E. 1 2 a f . l 2 : Main B. 28 E. 1 2 b f.6 : Main B. 202 E. 1 2 b f.8 : Main B. 301 E. 1 3 a f.2 : G. H. 7 E. 317f.4: G. B. SOI E. 337f .4: Main B. 201 E. 3 3 9 f : Main B. 311 i E. 341 f .4: Main B. 302 E. 3 6 3 f : Main B. 303 Fr. A.4: S. H. 210 Fr. 1.4: M. L. B. 301 Fr. 12.6: S. H 203 Fr. 38: M. L. B. 315 Geo. 1.2: H. M. A. Ger. 12.2: M. L. B. 202 Ger. 41: M. L. B. 312 Gov. 10.10: Physics B. 201 Gov. 3 2 3 f : G. H. 5 His. 4.4: G. H. 3 His. 9.6: G. H. 101 His. 14: G. H. 203 H. E. 3 3 l f : H. E. B. 212 H. E. 3 4 0 f : H. E. B. 331 J. 24 : J. R. 202 Pat. 1.2: Main B. 306 Mus. 454 af: Mus. B. 105 Mus. 464: Mus. B. 200 P. E. 2 0 a f .4 : P. E. B. 300 P. E. 3 2 2 f : P. E. B. 302 P. E. 3 6 5 f : P. E. B. 307 C. B. 218 Phr. 342f : C. B. 313 Phi. 3 15 f .2 : G. H. 315 Thy. 801.4: G. B. 14 Phy. 313f : Physics B. 203 Phv. 3 2 5 f : Physics B. 301 Phg. 8.37: B. L. 301 Psy. 3 1 0 f.12 J A. B. 105 r*v. 3 2 0 f : S. H. 302 P. M. 3 0 4 f.8 ; W. H. IO P. M. 3 04 f . 14 : W. H. 401 P. M. 307f.6: W. H. 14 P. M. 13.2: W. H. 3 Soc. 311f .2: G. H. i l l Soc. 3 6 2 f : G. H. 201 Spn. A.8: M. L. B. 201 Spn. 1.8: S. H. 208 Spn. 66: M. L. B. 302 Spe. 321 f : Main B. SOS Spe. 324f : Main B. ,304 Sec EXAMS, Page 2 THERE'S ONE FOR YOU More Work, Less Play Is Order of Day, Dean Says De Golyer Speaks [For kkeson Oil The w a r has not only made University of Texas students approach i Nation-wide rationing of fuel | their studies with g re a te r concentration, but it has cu t a “ terrific” slash in th e ir budgets fo r frivolities, believes A m o Nowotny, assistant oil and partial importation of the dean o f student life. country's oil supply soon was p r e­ dicted in Baltimore Monday by E. Lee De Golyer, assistant deputy petroleum administrator and f o r­ mer University professor. “ All st udent organizations this fall voluntarily c ut ou t the money I they used to spend to import ex-*— --------------------------------------------- j pensive dances,” he pointed out. orchestras their for Inexpensive social functions at i the Texas Union, student activity center, are becoming more pop­ ular, he said. j the time in non-essentials, he There is a definite tendency on to the p a rt of most students they “ whittle down” ex­ spend Int r amur al sports activ- plained. ties— regarded fi t­ as physical ness preparation for war service and as home-front morale— are at a new high. Both individual stu­ dents and organizations are giv­ ing more and more time to war projects. “ The students are learning that this isn’t a place to delay adoles­ cence,” Nowotny declared. “ They are. more and more regarding the University as a preparation f or the job t h ey ’ve got to do in winning “ ‘ V . I the war. " and ‘ ,, Jacobsen, Ex, Killed D ay of African Invasion Corpora! Eugene C. .Tacobsen, a University graduate from Aus­ tin, was killed in action in North Africa November 8, his parents disclosed Tuesday. Jacobsen Before Christmas Mr. and Mrs. a notice received A. from that the War Department their son was missing. They r e ­ c e n t l y received a letter from the Corporal’s buddy telling them t ha t the their son died November 8, date of in invasion the Allied North Africa. The buddy was severely wounded in action. I Education's Trend Is Forum Topic Mr. Gordon Worley, director of the Division of Special Problems in Negro Education of the Texas State Department of Education, will speak on “ Trends in the Edu­ cation of Minority Groups” at the next meeting of the Austin Forum of Public Opinion, Monday night a t 8 o'clock at the Austin High School. A native of Alabama, Mr. Wor ­ in ley has spent twenty years the Texas. He was e d u c a t e d rn common schools of Alabama, Ala­ bama Polytechnic Institute and the University of Alabama. He has also attended Cornell University in seminars at the University of North Caro­ lina and Vale University. has done work the Mr. Worley was a teacher and superintendent public in schools of Alabama before taking positions on the faculties of Ala­ bama Polytechnic Inst tute, Win­ throp College o f South Carolina, and Sam Houston State Teachers College in Texas. Mr. Worley plan* to discuss the report of the findings of the Texas Commission for the Study of Educational Opportunities for Negroes, and the recommendations of the commission. Texas Farm Income A Billion for First Time Corporal farm Jacobsen, who wa, (,o)!ar in du st n T PXas g was a milton- last \ e a r f o r the first time in history, the Bureau of Business Research reported this week. with the Army Medical Corp*, formerly worked as a clerk in the Austin Postoffice. He was induct­ ed into service Febr uar y 16, 1942, and was in England about six months before he went to North Africa. stationed Farm cash U. T. Finds Tungsten In Gillespie County income was com­ puted by the bureau to be $908,- 000,000 during the year as com­ pared with $616,000,000 for the year 1941. Government subsidies are expected to add an additional $75,000,000 The Bureau r e p e l t also indicates that preliminary computations of farm A source of war-vital tungsten m a r k i n g s are an understatement and scheelite and heavy deposits of from 6 to IO per cent, thus the of income the actual cash bringing manufacture of paint, paper, rah- of Texas farmers from all sources her, and plastics, have been dis- to approximately one billion dol- eovored University field crews, Dr. E. H. The increase in 1942 was nearly Sellards, director of the B u r e a u ' 5 0 per cent over 1941, while the of Economic Geology, has an- itself represented a j nouneed. in Gillespie County by j lars. latter year j substantial gain over the soapstone, required total. this to in The survey of Gillespie County j diately preceding years, the Bu- shows more than 660,000 tons of reau report pointed out. soapstone available for commer- rial development. The study is part Statewide Mineral Resources Bur- vc rn ber and 251.3 Ivey. income in December, 1912, stood a t 237 in No- in December, I niversity-W.P.A. as compared with 220.8 41241, the Bureau reported. Index figure for farm the of De Goyler appeared before the council of state governments in the place of Harold Ickes, pe­ troleum administrator, who is ill. De Golyer said the oil rationing would he to conserve oil, not rub­ ber, because United States con­ sumption has nearly reached ca­ pacity production, and war oil needs are constantly growing. As the University’* “ sixth dis­ tinguished professor,” De Golyer, I noted geophysicist, was a member the Department of Geology of from \39-’40. Musical Instruments Still Needed at Swift The call for musical instruments for a Camp Swift band has netted I only two instruments, a clarinet and a trumpet. Colonel George E. H u r t said Wednesday. new musical It is almost impossible to ob­ tain instruments. T h e s e instruments are to be f u r ­ bished stricth on a loan basis and contributors will be given a receipt signed by memorandum the Post Supply Office which instruments t h a t the guarantees the termina- | will be returned at ■ tion of service in good repair. Students w ho are willing to loan j i nstruments should bring them to The Daily Texan office or call Colonel Hu r t a t 8-2772. G overnor a n d M a y o r To Start M a rch of Dim es Governor Coke R. Stevenson and Mayor Tom Miller will speak at a rally in f ro nt of the Austin Hotel Thursday, starting a three- day “ March of Dimes” drive in behalf of the infantile paralysis fund. The two addresses will be broad­ cast over Station KNOW. The drive is under the auspices of the J uni or Chamber of Commerce, in the nationwide conjunction with Tres dent's birthday fund cam­ paign. Optimists Cough Up As 1,131 Pay Their Fees Eleven hundred and thirty-one imme- s tu d e n ts have already paid their second semester registration fees, E. R. Cornwell, Bursar, said Wed­ nesday afternoon. The by old last day for payment of students without is Febr uar y 3 ami for fees penalty new students, February 8. 2-Day Notice Given Pre-Cadets Men Report at 8 In San Antonio A t least nineteen U niversity students in the Air Force Enlisted Reserve received orders from th e San Antonio Aviation Cadet B oard Tuesday and Wednesday to re ­ port to the district recruiting of­ ficer in San Antonio by 8 o’clock Thursday. To some of the boys it was a one d ay’s notice, informing them they would be assigned to duty as privates, Air Corps unassigned, for pre-aviation cadet basic train­ ing. Each reservist’s o rd e r told him he was “ subject to military law from the date they (were) required to comply with this or­ der.” Each cadet will be reim­ bursed a t the rate of 5 cents p e r mile from his home, both ways in case of rejection. Students called were: Franklin D. Albright, John M. Barcus, Carl G. Beard, Donald L. Bentsen, Rob­ e r t B. Connor, Graham G. Cox, Allan H. D eBerry, Samuel A* Dougherty, Ja c k D. Elliott, Tom Felker, R obert R. Ferguson, Jo® R. John. Patrick H. O’Donnell, Sterling J. Price, C hester A. Shaw, W a rre n L. Sheets, H e rb e rt H. U lbricht, Roy W. W hite, and Jo h n G, Winston. Latin Relations Here Get ill .OMI Fund W ill Augm ent Spanish Program from A $17,000 g ra nt th® Office of the Coordinator of Int er - American Affai rs has been mad® to the University for conducting a program o f cooperation with in Spanish-speaking m inorities Texas, Dr. Homer P. Rainey, University president, announced. The University is the only in­ stitution selected by the national agency to car ry on such a pro­ gram, Dr. Rainey said, t hough similar projects may be assigned later in other states. It is designed to “ bring about in promoting closer cooperation the war ef for t, advancing hemi­ spheric o ther ­ wise stimulating support for inter- American ideals,” he explained. solidarity and As the program is set up a t the University, the project will be an inter-departmental one with a director in charge and an eight- member committee working as a governing board. • Members of the committee, n am­ ed by Dr. Rainey, are Dr. R. L. Sutherland, Hogg Foundation di­ rector, chairman; C. E, Castaneda, Latin-American hi>torian and li­ brarian; T. H. Shelby, dean of extension; Dr. W. E. Gettys, pro­ fessor of sociology; Dr. C. W. Hackett, executive chairman of tha Institute of Latin-American Stud ­ ies; Rex Hopper, assistant pro­ fessor of sociology; Dr. H. T. Manuel, professor of education and director of research for tho Texas Commission on Coordina­ tion in Education, an authority on education of Spanish-speaking children; and Dr. G, I. Sanchez, professor of Latin- Vmerican edu­ cation. “ T e x a s , wit h its large popula­ tion of Spanish-speaking peoples,” Dr. Rainey pointed out, “ is ideally situated fo r such a program. location a dj a ce nt “ The University, because of its strategic to Mexico and nearness to the o th e r Latin-American countries and be­ cause of the vast amount of work that has already been done in this field by University s ta f f members, through Institute of Latin- American Studies and through re­ search and welfare activities o f individuals, is in a position to take the this kind.” in a program of lead the Specific objectives of the under­ taking are to develop more friend­ ly and cordial relations between and Spanish English speaking elements the various commu­ in nities of Texas; to a ffe c t tangible living and improvement th® educational to Spanish-speaking minorities; th® “ plan with” not “plan fo r ” in affecting minorities, im­ this to analyze critically provement; tile progress made rn kb® program, in standards the of P A S E T W O - S P O R T S —G E N E R A L Wilkinson Malone in Defeats Tourney Chicago Cubs Buy Derringer From Reds Lawyers Had Mustaches Thou From Basement to Library Schools' History Is Shown Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N - Phone 2-2473 M i d d l e w e i g h t * * W H U - w , o a U . u . U “ n ^ f " ti" , W W decision in the opening m.tch. o f the L m v m r t y ' r , r e m t h e C i n c i n n a t i A T h t ? e I « nr n ? d T h V r T h ,r t o r e p r i n t t h . Austin district in the , Reih w„ announced . t a i middleweight finals to be held in Fort Worth, since O .hc rt Jimmy ton ight hy f ; . | | , ghar. general man- Lassberg, only remaining A ustin*- ’ “ ~ Chom p Cardinals To Lose Series Star Kurowski Thus Wilkinson earned a berth in the finals of the Austin division. 0*berg La ss berg, A ustin s civilian team middleweight has received . rn, „ c o .,.. his air corps call and has with- drawn, so Malone may substitute Qeorg P Kurowski, star third base l o r him in the finals. ST. LOUIS, Jan. 27 UNS). Other entrants from r # the Uni­ versity a re : Gene Ehrlich, w elter­ weight; and James Butcher, feath­ er weight. Ted Manzano, Uni­ versity student who had entered the tourney as a member of the Austin team has withdrawn. semi-final na! marcher of the to urnam ent will be beld in Gregory Gym, Saturday, I Ja n u a ry 30. As an added attrap tions, the Longhorn Band will play between bout®. f i n a l u n a and and The Admission will be 25 cents for blanket tax holders, 55 cents gen­ eral admission, and $1.10 for ringside seats. All proceeds from gate receipts will be given to the Austin U.S.O. man for the St. Louis Cardinals, one of the heroes of their World Series triumph over the V ankees, revealed tonight he expects to be inducted into the Army soon. “ I’d like to play ball again this summer,” he said, “ but you can t | ^ PverythiTls: you w»nt to in times is Whatever happens , all right with me.1 A f f i e - B a y l o r G a m e P o s t p o n e d COLLEGE STATION, Jan. 27. The Southwest Conference basket­ ball game between Baylor and Texas A. & M. originally sched­ uled here tonight, has been post­ poned until Monday, February I ager of the Chicago Cubs. Tho dual was a stra ig h t cash ,*aid, with transaction, Gallagher no other players involved. The cash outlay for the veteran righthander was not revealed. Bv the acquisition of D erringer, Gallagher said, “ We figure we arc strengthening ourselves fo r w hat­ ever p en nant fight there may he the coming season.” Asked comment on said: if he had any fu rth e r the deal, Gallagher “ No. We needed a pitcher, and we got. one. T h a t’s all.” “ Oom” Paul, a veteran of alsv- : en years of big league baseball is 36 years old. Long I chucking, a mainstay of the Reds hurling corps, the six foot four inch, 200- ! pound K entuckian was instrum en­ tal in getting Cincinnati into the World Series of 1939 and 1910. The form er year he won twenty- < five games against seven losses, tw enty and in ’40 he won and lost twelve. The 9Mural Scene . Girls Will Take Over When Reservists G o B y R A L P H L E A C H In tra m u ra l E d ito r Baseball Salaries Not to Be Frozen B y JACK MAHON I N S Sp o rt* W r i t e r it was in 19 43, NEW YORK, Jan. 2 7— Major league baseball salaries will not be frozen, the Bureau of Internal Revenue will treat the «port just like any other business and the magnates can look forward to their usual full quota of holdout head­ learned aches tonight. authoritative From learned baseball will source we be advised this week-end t h a t i t may carry on negotiations with in the all players ju st as it did their past, regardless of what it ad- 1 salaries may be, provided heres laid to a down by the B.I.R. few regulations a most Presidents Ford Frick of the National League and Will Harridge of the American have written to the B.I.R. requesting a ruling on the m a tte r of negotiations for the coming season and our informant their an­ Isays they will receive swers in a few days. formal approval Said answers will point out: Club owners will n o t need to the gain I Bureau in o rder to g r a n t indivi- ' dual wage increases if the increase ’ comes within the normal salary | i schedule operated by the club in j ! the past or last year. from The clubs will he requested to file with the Bureau of Internal -alary schedule Revenue a j covering the range of salaries paid j in the past. full the basketbajl tournaments, is the table tennis singles tourney, en tries for which close Thursday, l l . Volleyball comes February next, with a deadline five days later. A fter struggling through box­ ing. wrestling, fencing, and horse- ' shoe doubles, the winter quarter will close on March 17 with Fite Nit*. If He can’t find any I boys left for th a t annual a ffair, | maybe Mr. W hitaker will get some girls to contend for the hair- pulling championship. First on the program for the to the and the e f f e r t only ' spring quarter, spring qu a rte r aport whiiih is > scheduled to begin before April I, i is baseball. Although some time ago I made a few enemies with harsh words th at the N.R.O.T.C. didn’t deserve a it all separate division, I hack now. The Navy boys will probably run away with all the baseball titles. No oth er group will have enough men for a team. And if bad comes to even worse perhaps we could substitute some of indoor sports suggested by Sports Sense Boh Owens yes­ terday. Like settee badminton, or midnight rugby. And Bill Tcas- take the j dale will always suggest chess. For the third stra ig h t week we find all quiet on the intram ural front, with just the earliest signs life as exam-weary students of heads, raise straighten by writing, and throw out the coffee pot. their b a tt e r e d fingers cramped Of course, the only student* do­ ing the above ay early as this are those who were lucky enough to have four exams in two days and such stu ff so that they’re finished now. Lucky M ay Rest So now those lucky people have nothing to do but rest, and look forw ard to the next few weeks, which will bring, besides registra­ tion, payment of fees and tele­ grams home so said payment can he made, new freshm en, and the ienewal of classes, the resump­ tion of basketball play. All this depends, of course, on ju«t. when the governm ent decides the of­ the reserves— if to call ficials ever do make up their mind*. There’s been much discus­ sion as to which is worse— final exams, or constant worrying over conflicting reports, straight dope from Washington, newsflashes, et cetera. If all the reserves— E.R.C., V-l-5-7, Marine, Air Force— were to be calle, it could make quite of mess of the intram ural program. A bout all to do th a t’d be would be to turn everything over to things— and j concentrate on women's ’murals. the girls— dear left instead of em ph asizing 1 Then, the more would have to co t with deck tennis, field all. Except for those of ' and the Kappas. At least we can count on them to keep the great sport of touch football alive. strenuous * Professors O. M. Roberts and R. S. Gould comprised the first teaching staff and handled all d a tic . t h . term of 1893, when Professor the R. staff. I.. Batts was added instruction until ,.f to Interesting are the styles of clothing worn by the seniors of 1885, and the deadly serious, al­ most belligerent, expressions on their faces. Mustaches were prac­ tically a must for the seniors of th a t day, and almost to a man they had their hair cut with the “ b a rte n d e r’s roach.” Membership in the senior class the relatively stable fo r stayed the high point nex t five years, th ere were being in 1890 when the thirty-one seniors. number increased to thirty-eight, but 1893 saw it decline by seven. In 1892 In t h e f a l l o f 1 8 9 6 J u d g e Jo h n C. T o w n e * b e c a m e a m e m ­ b e r o f the f a c u l t y , a n d hi* p i c ­ t u r e f ret a p p e a r * w i t h t h e cia** o f 1 8 9 7 . H e b e c a m e d e a n o f the s c h o o l in 1 9 0 7 , n e r v in g u n t il hi* d e a t h in 1 9 2 3 . A s d e a n , hi* p u r p o s e wa* “ no t to m a k e m o r e la w y e r * bu t b e t t e r l a w y e r * . ” In 1 9 0 9 he wa* e l e c t e d p r e s i d e n t o f t h e A m e r i c a n A s s o c i a t i o n o f L a w S c h o o l* , th e f i r s t s o u t h e r n ­ e r t o h old th e p o s t . The class of 1897 was the larg­ est up until th a t time, and num­ bered among its members several men who were to achieve fame. Will C. Hogg, son of form er gov­ ernor Jam es Stephen Hogg and millionaire benefactor of the Uni­ versity and several other schools, was a member of th a t class, as were late Morris Sheppard, United State*- Senator from Tex- j as, and P a t M. Neff, form er g o v -; ernor of Texas and now p r e s id e n t’ of Baylor University. the Tom Connally, United States Senator from Texas, was one of the forty-five seniors in the class of 1898. In 1900 Professor Ira P. Hilde­ brand graduated from the School of Law, and in 1907 he became a member of the teaching staff. He served as dean of the school from 1924 until his resignation in 1939. Judge W. S. Simkins joined the in September of 1899, faculty Howdy, Sport [ m i . . ____ ^ By BILL TEASDALE A e eooiate Sport# E dito r ______ strenuous W«ito wa th# editorial page lately, nd | probably already occurred th a t the sports and editorial staff tw< g P* havp chanKe(1 somewhat. Y esterday’s sports column was the -» the last year or feeen rea(jjnK pionships in the last decade. His it has value two has to you been less because of inactivity and the onrush of younger Yankees, hut he should have enough games left in him to make a worthwhile investment for tho Braves. • to , dragging the editorial page Cadets Replace Groans things of University and life have degenerated begin Army or Navy service few months and don’t a written by the editor while columns on which are supposed to discuss the bigger world name calling and honor defending. ‘ you’re in the hest possible physical learned writer and shape, probably the best thing for by first one the then the other. next for Fighting should be conf.nod to defense conditioning course If you know you are about to in think A fte r this week the groans of students themselves through the horrors of finals may be replace on the F orty Acres by tread of march- resounding the ing as pre-pre-flight cadet*, feet C.A A. cadets, loves both w’ho-pa'-sed-the-exam - and - were- I Maguire and Turner. For pugilistic en tertainm ent the Golden try sent-back-to-?chool take over. Of Gloves tournam ent this week-end course our gay co-eds will still be in Gregory Gym, here— thosp the W A ACs, WAVES, or SPARS, that is. The poor girls that are loft won’t be able to date teasippers | anymore; they'll have to content themselves with uniforms. fiiend of that he never mine has written realized how poor shape he was tho Army showed him. in until to get He advised anyone ahnut in a war to physical training course if one is Not much mention was made available because it will make tho lots I the sports page, but everyone on 1 the sports page thing and semester. is happy about A J u m p s 3 0 F e e t recently-drafted and reservists- is sign up the Army th at don’t the whole to do take join you life . . And the paces intram ural program a mark for Clyde Littlefield’s men But, depending on whom you believe and what th ey’re saying today, there’ll probably be some men students left until June any ­ how. Or is it April I. Intramurals Carry On last one will carry on until the leave* for the services, pushing! to the bitter end its double-bar­ to pro­ reled program designed vide recreation and build up your body for the day when the army finally gets around to you. First on the docket, forgetting fo r a while the continuation of to military of it in the sports pages, hut a changeover now record in the broad jum p was ; easier. chalked up a couple of weeks ago | For the first few days running when Flash Gordon leaped through ; over the course or climbing the fire for a thirty-foot jump. It; barriers won’t he exactly easy, but because ; the discipline won t bo quite as later find in the tho pains to make a strict as you’ll showing exactly where j from. T h a t’s certainly j it for keeps, you'll go through tho a lot more confidently and is Fla#h took little mark j he jumped officially recorded expertly. Army, and when you are doing to aim a t this # .... pring. Bad little boys with B B guns could have had a field day this robins week when hundreds of descended on Austin apparently on their way north. No casualties were a ferocious mockingbird scattered the red-breasted fowl fa r and wide. But they came back and dug around for a few more worms. reported except when Shaugnessy Goes To Pitt as Coach W ASHINGTON, J a n . 27. CHICAGO, J*n. 26 One of the oldest-timers in the H igh School Basketball Losing 5 % Jo W ar ( I N S ) — Clark Shaugnessy, head ^ ....................... ............. . football coach at the University of big leagues took his first step to- Maryland, had accepted an offer to take over the coaching position ward oblivion I niversity of Pittsburgh. Lefty Gomez was sold by the New a t (INS) — York Yankees, exponent Only 5 per cent of the nation’s f a m e d outfit he ever played for, to the of the T-formatlon, started his high school basketball teams are Boston Braves. That may not mean college coaching career at Chicago war casualties, H. V. Porter, v»Hr serretarv of the National Fedora- i he’s through, bu t i f s certainly not and left when th a t school ne-em M AVinC? t A S tA D tion of State High School Athletic a ^arj sign. Associations, announced tonight. ~^— * uueiuii ui at co. i uav t h e Shaugnessy, the only m ajor; a1_a _ _ U — I i this week when laBueiviciry **• I i i L U i ’ - — i i e. ••• a - I * * V i i . . . (Continued from Page I) Zoo. 320f: B. L. 12 Zoo. 72: Physics B 421 T H U R S D A Y JANUARY 28. AT 2 G r o u p s XII a n d X I V (Classes Meeting TTS 2 e n d TTS 3) Arc. IO: A. B. 212 Arc. 10E: A. B. 212 Arc. lO b f: A, B. 212 Arc. lO Ebf: A. B. 212 B. A. 2 2 2 f : VV. H. 101 B. A. 94: VV. H. 112 Ch. 801 (all sections): C. B. 15, G. B. 14, G. G. Aud., H. M. A., Physics B. 201 Ch. 5 (both section s): G. H. I, H. E. B. 105 C. E. 219.2; Eng. B. 217 C. E. 224.2: Eng. B. 138 C. E. 224.4: Eng. B. 138 C. E. 2 6 7 f : Eng. B. 141 Dim. 30: M. L. B. 213 Ed. 20Kbf.4: S. H. 204 Ed. 3 5 5 f : S. H. ICI Ed. 380Pf J S. H. 210 E. 3 9 2 f : Main B. 204 Fr. 3 8 3 f : Main B. 206 H. E. 328f: H. E. B. 127 M. E. 21 l f . ” : Eng. B. 3 0 1 M. E. 21 lf.4 : Eng. B. 301 Mus. 219: Mus. B. 106 P. Ed. 2 1 8 f: S. H. HO I Soc. "o a f: G. H. 217 Electrical Engineers Speed Up Courses By D A V E T I P T O N A pictorial record of the growth in size and im portance of the two University School of Law from instructors to its present pre-eminent position among the aw sc oo s of the nation hangs on the walls of the Law Building. the days when it had only In the form of pictures of senior classes, the record starts in a Mb j ■ . 4 is “ h ad t h a t t w e n t y - o n e c l a s t w h ic h m e m b e r s , a m o n g i ___ . a I nnn A f Vii« T h e e a r l i e s t p i c t u r e the oiliest professor o f t h e s e n i o r c l a s t o f ISA S, a basement room with the earliest* •lass pictures and ends in the Ii- and his picture first appears with l . the senior class of 1900. At his brary with the most re c jn t. death in 1929 at the age of 86, he WM in the University and a professor School of Law, emeritus in the meeting classes when able. He nerved with the Confederate Army during the Civil W ar, and is said to have fired the first shot for •dates’ rights. The pictures show typical him old southern colonel with long white flowing hair and a drooping white mustache. He devised the colorful term, ‘‘jackass laws,” for the first-year law class. c a m e a t t o r n e y g e n e r a l o f U n i t e d 1 9 1 4 W o o d r o w W i l s o n . the f r o m to 1 9 1 9 u n d e r P r e s i d e n t G y m w a s n a m e d . H e f o r w h o m G r e g o r y to have been t h e m T . W . G r e g o r y , l a t e r b e ­ s e r v i n g S t a t e s , the Joan Thompson o f Clarendon, in in Feb­ who will receive her degree business administration ruary, will leave immediately for a hostess airline training course in Dallas. After a six-week train­ ing period, abe will ba ampleyad as an airline hostess by Branlff Air Line in Dallas. THURSDAY, JANUARY Ii, T W DAI LY T E X A N CLASSIFIED Phone 2-2473 for Ad Taker ,t. ____ mmm. | M B B ' * - - — - C LASSIFIED INDEX 1— A u to s for S al# 2— 'A u t o m o t i v e T r a d e s S W a n t e d A u t o m o b i l e s 4 — S e r v ic e S ta tio n s A n n o u n c e m e n ts ft— Bu* Line* A— D i n i n g s n d D a n c i n g 7 L o d g e s n d F r a t e r n i t y N o t i e s # 8— L o s t a n d F o u n d 9— P r o f e s s ional 10— P e r s o n a l * I O . A — Sc ho ol* a n d C oll ege# B u s i n e a s S e r v i c e s 11 — B a r b e r S h o p e 1 2 — B e a u t y S e r v i c e I;}—-C le a n e r s -H a tte r s . T a ilo rs 1 4 — L a u n d r i e s 15— E l e c t r i c a l S e r v ic e t 6 — “ F ix I t " 1 7 — F u r n i t u r e R e p a i r i n g 1 8 — L o c k s m i t h s 1 9 M o v in g , H a u l i n g a n d S t o r a g e e n P r i n t i n g . O f f i c e E q u i p m e n t 2 1 — S e w i n g 2 2 — S h o e R e p a i r i n g 2 3 — C afe* E m p l o y m e n t 2 4 — H e lp W a n t e d M ale 2ft— S a l e s m e n W a n t e d 2 <5— H e l p W a n t e d F e m a l e 2 7 — M ale W o r k W a n t e d 2 8 — F e m a l e W o r k W a n t e d E d u c a tio n a l 29— I n s t r u c t i o n 30 — M usic , D a n c i n g . D r a m a t i c * 31 — Sp e e c h 32— C o a c h i n g 3 3 —A— P e t* : 3 4 - A — G e n e r a l f a r S a le M e r c h a n d i s e i SS B ic yc le # a n d M o to r c y c l e * 34 — F o o d a n d F o o d P r o d u c t * j 5 F u r n i t u r e a n d H o u s e h o l d Goods 3 5— M u s ic s ) s n d R a d i o s 27 — W a t c h e s , J e w e l r y R e p a i r 38— M i s c e l l a n e o u s F o r Sa l* 3 9 — " S w a p ” 4 0 — W a n t e d M e r c h a n d i s e F in a n c ia l 4 1 — A u t o L o a n * _______ _____ 4 2 — B a n k L o a n * 43— Busine#* Opportunities 44— Businesses Wanted Rentals For Rent 51—-Rooms for Boys FO R R E N T : and h a lf ft blk *. U n iv e r s it y . R oom in S - r - r - - S h o w e r , t o ile t b asin , ga*, w a te r , lig h t* . * 1 5 tw o. L e** f f r on e. 903 W . 26% S t. PH. 3 174.___________________________ _ fo r tw o or on # FO R R E N T : B o y s. T w o n ic e ly fu rn ish ed , c lean s o u th r o o m s ; m od ern c o n v e n i­ s e r v ic e . Call e n c e# . s ta ll 8 8 9 1 7 . A d d r e ss 602 W e st 1 7 th . sh ow er. M aid Furnished Houses U N E X P E C T E D V A C A N C Y : L a r g a ro a m . g la s s e d a le e p in g porch, p r iv a te b a th , e n tr a n c e , ideal q u iet place. P r ic e m o s t r e a so n a b le. 290 2 N o r th G uad alupe. 2 * 6 0 3 . B O Y S’ ROOM . Ida*! fo r e n g in e e r in g s t u ­ d e n ts , hoard n e x t door, p r iv a te e n ­ tr a n c e , te le p h o n e, tw o c lo s e ts , til# b a th , o n ly l l * . M aid s e r v ic e . 2 8 1 5 O ldham . in n ew rock h o m e. fou r b o y s ROOM S and a p a r tm e n ts fo r b o y s . Ona ca m p u s. P r iv a te b a th s. block from 2 2 1 2 S an A n to n io . P b . 8 2 8 9 1 . 193 2 San A n to n io S t .: tw o h ath *, fu rn ish ed fo r 18 pardons. W ould r en t to co -o p grou p . 19 0 m o n th ly . 8 7 2 0 . IO room *, V A C A N C Y h a th . A lco room fo r on # b o y . w ith p r iv a te s o u t h ­ tw o fo r in e a s t room , in d iv id u a l c lo s e ts . 2 1 7 9 4 . 45— Rooms Furnished L A R G E S o u t h e a s t r o o m f o r r e n t . N e a r c a m p u s , v e r y r e a s o n a b l e . P r i v a t e f a m ­ ily. 2 216 R io G r a n d e . 2 2 8 3 9 . D O U B L E R O O M f o r boy * o r c o u p le . T w o blo ck* n o r t h C h e m i a t r y B u i l d i n g . C lo se to p h o n e a n d b a t h . Q u ie t, d e s i r a b l e . 203 A r c h w a y . R O O M : Q u iet, c o m fo r ta b le, p r iv a te bath, 710 W . r e a so n a b le . P r ie s g a r a g e . 2 3 r d . 28 3 7 * . bed*, M O S T D E S I R A B L E q u i e t t w i n b a t h , t e l e p h o n e . *10 e a c h . F o u r b lo c k s n o r t h . 2 8 0 6 N u e c e * St. r o o m , s h o w e r c lo s e t* , c l o t h e * O U T S I D E R O O M S , t w i n bed*, s h o w e r * . m a i d s e r v i c e , te l e p h o n e , f o r boy** Also c o u p le . 281 0 a p a r t m e n t f o r f u r n i s h e d N u e c e * . 9 3 6 7 . S T U D IO U S y o u n g m an w ill sh a r a nfe# room , tw in b ed s, c lo s e ts , sh o w er h a th , te le p h o n e . H O ea ch . F ou r b lo c k s n o r th . 2 8 0 6 N u e c e s . T W O G A R A G E ROOM S fo r 2 o r 4 h oy#. P o r t e r s e r v i c e . 8 b l o c k s f r o m c a m p u s. 1 9 1 0 R io G r a n d e . 8 4 2 7 1 . b ed s, 914 W E S T 2 2 — S o u th e a s t room , in n e r sp r in g m a ttr e s s* * . tw in tw o c lo se t* , a d jo in in g b ath , w e ll v e n tila te d . 2 0 9 1 6 . N IC E A C C O M O D A T IO N S fo r fo u r b o y s , 2 6 0 5 W ic h ita . P h . 2 9 8 2 6 . Cool F O U R C L E A N , w e ll-v e n tila ta d room#. in w in te r . Vt blork from bu* *top and b u sin e** ean tar. 2 8 4 5 9 .______________________ in su m m er, w arm N E A R C A M P U S : T w o room *, s in g le and d o u b le , clean and c o m fo r ta b le . P r iv a te e n tr a n c e . R e a so n a b le . P h . 4 7 9 7 . F U R N I S H E D R O O M w i t h p r i v a t e b a t h , f u r n a c e h e a t , k i t c h e n p r i v i ­ f r o m lo c a tio n . T w o bl ock* g a r a g e , le g e s . Q u i e t bu* s to p . 9 0 6 7 . 800 E. 2 0 : V a c a n c ie s n ow . d e a n a tt r a c ­ t i v e room *, m od ern, •h e w e r s, in d iv id u a l s in g le beds. W a lk in g d is ta n c e c lo s e t* , U n iv e r s it y . G a r a g e s. 2 3 0 6 0 . L A R G E R O O M , p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e , b a t h . A t t a c h e d t o g a r a g e . T w i n be d*, d o u b le c l o s e t s . Id ea! fo r t w o p e r s o n s o r c o u p le . _____ 2 9 671 o r 3 2 0 9 . N E A R C A M P U S : R oom s fo r b o y s . S in g le room a v a ila b le w ith p r iv a te e n tr a n c e S e v e r a l v a c a n c ie s. R e a so n ­ and b ath . ab le. 1 907 W h itia . 8 * 4 4 . By 1904 enrollment in the senior b u l the d ej h t . „ following year only twenty men graduated. _ A* c o m e it ha* t o a l m o s t all p r o f e s s i o n s , t h e f e m a l e o f t h e s p e c i e s b e g a n m a k i n g i n r o a d s on t h e p r o d c c o f l a w , a a d t w o g ir ls w e r e g r a d u a t e d f r o m t h e U n i v e r s i t y ’s S c h o o l o f L a w in 1 9 1 4 . M is s e s R o s e Z e l o s k y a n d I r e n e G. B r o w n w e r e t h e f i r s t o f t h e i r s e x to a c h i e v e t h i s d i s ­ t i n c t i o n . T e x a s j u d g e s w h o lis­ t e n e d t h e m w e r e p e r h a p s s t a r t l e d a t h e a r i n g a c a s e p l e a d ­ ed t h e c u s t o m a r y b a s s a n d b a r i t o n e . t h e r e h a v e b e e n S i n c e fr o m o n e to s e v e n g ir ls in a l ­ m o s t e v e r y s e n i o r c la s s . i n s t e a d o f s o p r a n o 1 9 1 4 t o in E r n e s t O. T h o m p s o n , n o w a m e m b e r o f t h e R a i l r o a d C o m m i s ­ s i o n , w a s p r e s i d e n t o f t h e e i g h t y - ' t h r e e m e m b e r s o f t h e c l a s s o f l o 1 « 191 ! • A l t h o u g h t h e S p a n i s h - A m e r i e a n W a r did n o t c a u s e a n o t i c e a b l e t 45— Room* Furnished drop in the enrollment of seniors, t7_RooTn ,. ,, , . 1 48— Room* Unfurnished . , L t h i r t y - s e v e n t h e f i r s t W o r ld W a r did, a s s h o w n l # art s o in t h e c l a s s o f 1 9 1 8 , W h i c h n u m - ^ Garage Apartment* be r e d o n l y n m A i n c l u d i n g t h e s e v e n g ir ls. M e m b e r - , 52_ Room* for Girl* sh ip o f t h e c l a s s w a s still f a r f r o m ; n o r m a l o n l y j 1 9 1 9 , t h i r t y - f o u r s e n i o r s , m o s t o f t h e m s e n i o r s , j so— Garage Room* SI— Room* for Boy* h a v i n g . i in l B o a r d i s — Furnished Apt*. 4 * - A — U n f u r n i s h e d A p a r t m e n t # 8 — L o f t f i n d F o u n d in u n i f o r m . Senior class enrollment climbed steadily the period following World War I, reaching a peak of 169 in 1939, and World W ar II began to show its effect in 1940. In 1942 the num ber of seniors had decreased to 115. L O S T : T a n r e v e r s i b l e r a i n c o a t a t A lp h a to f o r m a l . R e w a r d . R e t u r n D e lta Pi E d w i n H o l c h a k . 2 6 8 9 8 . b r a c e l e t . N a v y e m b l e m on L O S T : S t e r l i n g s i l v e r N a v y id e n t i f i c a t i o n f r o n t , e n ­ -IOT g r a v i n g on h ack . M. C. B a r k e r , N u e c e s . 2 2 7 4 7 . R e w a r d . L O S T : S m a l l ye ll ow go ld b r a c e l e t w i t h S h a r o n w r i t t e n o n L o s t on d r a g . R e w a r d . 8 8 8 2 1 . i d e n t i f i c a t i o n it. F O U N D : F e m a l e C o c k e r - * p a n i e l p u p p y . C al l H e l e n a t 2 0 3 8 0 . s i t y s e n i o r r in g . R E W A R D : *5. 00 f o r r e t u r n of U n i v e r ­ l e t t e r s B. S. in Ch. E. on o u t s i d e . B lu e s t o n e . I n i t i a l s O. C. in s id e . Call O s c a r G illi la n d . 2 9 2 9 1 . G. L O S T - S M A L L , c o f t , b la c k t i p ­ p e r p u r s e . P h y s i c B u i l d i n g , c o n t a i n s s e a s o n b l a n k e t a u d i t o r ’s t i c k e t . M o n e y . P h o n e 8 - 7 4 4 3 - T e t l e y . lea th er, r e c e i p t , t a x L O S T : O n e b r o w n bil lf old. No q u e s t i o n s a s k e d if f i n d e r will r e t u r n c r e d e n t i a l s t o T o m B a r r o w , 1 910 N u e c e a . P h. 28 360. L O S T : G r e y c h e m i s t r y n o t e b o o k . L i b e r a l r e w a r d . H e r m a n Ta ylo r. 42 91 . SH O A L M O N T A R M S stu d e n t* B a ch elo r A p a r tm e n t* , In vited . A ll ro o m s w ith p r iv a te b e th . R oom * hy day. w eek or m o n th . P orter and m aid s e r v ic e . U n d er n ew m a n a g em en t. 1 010 W . 2 4 th . P h o n e 8 0 4 7 7 .___________ G IR L S : Board and room . q u ie t, "«** U n iv e r s it y . Feb. 1 s t. B o y s : T w o-room p r iv a te b a th . R eed y n ow . __________ a p a r tm en t, P h o n s 2 -8 5 7 5 . F U R N IS H E D ROOM S n ic e ly L A R G E , room . T il# S h ow er, p r iv a te e n tr a n c e , a m p le c lo s e t •p a c e , e x c e lle n t bed*. M aid B ervie*. 1 9 0 8 S a n G abriel. * 717._____________ fu r n ish e d 47 — Room and Board G I R L S : V a c a n c i e s 1 9 0 7 ' j U n i v e r s i t y C o p e l a n d . ROOM a n d b o a r d m o n t h . 8 m e a l s - 2 1 0 4 G u a d a l u p e . at 1 9 0 5 . 1 9 0 7 . and A v e n u e . M rs, J . D. p e r f o r h o y a . *27 - | 2 * . 2 m e a l # — *18. B O Y S : R O O M S a n d b o a r d . C o n v e n i e n t lo c a tio n n e a r E n g i n e e r i n g B u ild in g * . H o m e - c o o k e d m e a l* o p t i o n a l . 1 8 6 .5 0 I n ­ 206 E. 2 2 n d . 2 1 9 8 6 . c l u d e s t h r e e m e a ls . G I R L S : R o o m a n d b o a r d . T h r e e w e ll­ r o o m s . 1909 b a la n c e d m e a l s , c o m f o r t a b l e s e r v i c e . N e a r U n i v e r s i t y . M a id R io G r a n d e . 8 6 8 0 2 . B O Y S : B o a r d a n d c o o k ed m eal* . L a r g e C o n v e n i e n t 1 9 0 6 G u a d a l u p e . 2 5 7 7 0 . r o o m . T h r e e h o m e - r o o m * . lo c a tio n . 1 3 2 . 6 0 p e r m o n t h . s u n n y G I R L S — R o o m a n d b o a rd . N e a r U n i v e r ­ s i t y . S m e l l g r o u p . G o o d b e d s . w ell b a l a n c e d , h o m e c o o k e d m e a l* . M aid s e r v - line. 2 - 9 8 4 9 . 2 2 0 6 Rio G r a n d e . ice. B u s room . N E W L Y D E C O R A T E D , p r iv a te , q u ia ! S in g le or dou b le. P r iv a t e e n ­ s e m i-p r iv a te b ath, g a r a g e . N a tr a n c e , o th e r r o o m e rs. 2 1 0 F O ldham , 8 5 8 8 2 . D E S IR A B L E RO O M S in ap p ro v e d b om a. W a lk in g d ia ta n ca U n iv e r s it y , s h o w e r s , s in g le b ed s, a ll s tu d e n t n eed s. R e a so n ­ a b le. A v a ila b le F e b . l e t . 2 1 8 7 8 . M O V IN G C L O S E R ? C o m fo r ta b le r oom # a t 2 5 1 2 G u ad alu p e. O n ly k io s k an d h a lf fr o m c a m p u s. S h e w e r s s a d s le e p in g p o r e h . C om e s e e . 2 7 9 1 4 . B O O M S. T ile sh o w e r s , in b r isk a p a r tm e n t b u ild in g . U tilit ie s . P o r te r s e r v ic e . I M S L a v a ca . 8 5 4 8 . T W O F U R N I S H E D g a n g * m a m a fa g boy*. B a th b e tw e e n w ith h a t w a tan . In q u ire 1 8 1 2 C o n g r e s s A v e n n * . 8 8 4 8 . r o o m s, w e ll B O Y S : T w o n ie* la r g e c o m fo r ta b le s o u th fu r n ish e d , b a th sh a w * * , to U n iv e r s it y , C a p ito l S M c o n v e n ie n t to w n . 602 W . 1 7 th . P h . 8 8 8 1 7 . C L E A N , fo r h e y * w ith or w ith o u t board. M r*. B e a r ­ c o m fo r ta b le ro o m s w ood . 2 6 1 ? U n iv . A v o . 8 8 8 7 6 . Q U IE T S O U T H E A S T room . A v a w in d o w s . p r iv a te e n tr a n c e , tw in b e d s, b a th a n a a h o w e r . H O aaeh . 208 E lm w o o d . F h o n # 3 0 9 3 r e s ., or s to r e 6 6 8 2 . C L E A N , fo r h o r n . W ith or w ith o u t board. M r*. H . A . c o m fo r ta b le ro o m s P a in * . 2 1 0 0 R io G rand*. P h . 8 -9 1 T 1 . D E S IR A B L E ROOM S fo r b o y * . D on b lo or s in g le in n ic e h o m e . R oom fo r tw o In yard, ga* h e a t. 2 -8 2 2 8 . 2 8 0 8 R io _________ G rande. tr a c tiv e 800 E. 2 0 th . V a c a n c ie s n ow . C lea n , a t ­ in ­ s in g le b e d s. W a lk in g d iv id u a l d is ta n c e U n iv e r s it y . G a ra g es. 8 -8 0 6 8 . r o o m * . M odern s h o w e r s , c lo s e ts , F R O N T s p o t le s s ly c l e a n h om e, on* block n orth o f c a m ­ s o u th e a s t room in p u s . 2 618 W ic h ita . 2 -3 7 2 1 or 8 -4 7 6 8 . S U I T E : L a r g e c h e e r y room *. P r iv e t# b ath . U tilitie a . A c co m m o d a te 4 b o y s . 1 9 0 4 N e a r U n iv e r s it y , C apitol, N e ch e* . A fte r 6 or S u n d a y . to w n . M O ST D E S IR A B L E . Q u iet r o o m . In b rick h o m e . T w in b ed s. P r iv e t* e n tr a n c e . P r iv a te tile b ath . U tilitie s paid . 9 1 1 W . 1 9 th . 8 -7 9 6 6 . for th re e b o y s. 2 6 0 5 W ic h ita . 10-A— Schools and Colleges G IR LS s i t s . V a c a n c y I 1* b lo c k* from U n lr s r - 260 6 W h it! * . 2 -2 2 6 7 . 8U COLLEGES V A C A N C I E S . R o o m and board f o r g ir ls . t i n g l e and d o u b l e r o o m s— 2301 Rio G rande. P h . 2 1 7 6 2 . C r - * J U 5 T V H - NOUS TON SAM ANTONE) * FT WOHTW» MARLBiOEIi I I n v e s tig a te O ar 1 8 - W eek In te r n a tio n a l M ore* Cod* R adio C ou rse. B O Y S: V a c a n c i e s F e b . 1 s t . la r g e dou ble ti l* • b o w ­ 2 313 u p s t a i r s r o o m , s i n g l e bed*, e n t r a n c e , g a r a g e * . p r i v a t e e r* . O l d h a m . 82 6 0 4 . 23— Cafes 48— Furnished Apts. SMS UUJUlahore Health Treatments • T H E L A T E S T T H E O R Y I N M A SSA G E " Call Mi** H a n s o n , C a p i to l C ity H e a l t h C e n t e r . 305 W . l i t h . P h o n e 8 1 242. 24— Help Wanted Male W A N T E D : M a n o r bo y w h o c a n m ix d r i n k * a n d w a i t ta b le * . E x p e r i e n c e p r e ­ f e r r e d b u t u n n e c e s s a r y . L o c k h a r t No. 2. 26— Help Wanted Female E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T d e s ir e * t y p i n g t o b e d o n e a t h o m e . Y o u r w o rk will c o n s i d e r a t i o n . Mra. e v e r y g i v e n h* B u r n * — 2 8 6 4 9 . •AIR H O S T E S S FOR A IR W A Y S ” B R A N IF F to 28. H e ig h t » ’3 ” to 8 ’5 ” . AGE 21 P r o p o r tio n a te w e ig h t. T w o yoar* c o l­ leg e. S in g le and in p e r fe c t con d itio n . A pply M alcolm H a r r iso n , P e r so n n e l D irecto r, S tep h en F. A u stin H o te l, S a tu r d a y , J a n u a ry 3 0 , S u n d a y , J a a u - j ary 3 1 . J W A N T E D : Y o u n g m a n t o a h a r # m y m o d e r n a p a r t m e n t . M aid c e r v i c e s , bu* ROOM S 2 9 8 2 6 . line . R i c h a r d M o rle y . 8 5 1 8 6 . bath adjoin*. Maid TWO F U R N IS H E D R oom a. T w in bed*. s e r v ic e . P r iv a te e n tr a n c e . N ear U n iv e r s it y , to w n . G arage. 1600 B ra zo s. 6 8 2 2 . t o i l R E D R IV E R . L o v e ly bedroom w ith fu r n itu r e . p r iv a te bath. M o d e rn istic F or 2 p erson a. L in e n s . 8 7 2 0 . T W O ROOM S, p r iv a te b ath . a le e p in g porch. Im m e d ia te U n iv e r s ity n e ig h b o r ­ hood. 2305% N u e c ea . P h . 2 9 5 1 5 . h om e, N E W L Y F U R N IS H E D room a. P r iv a te e n tr a n c e . A d jo in in g bath. B u s lin e n ear U n iv e r s it y . G a ra g es. 6 2 7 4 . G en tlem en preferred . p r iv a te c o m fo r ta b le. 3% BLO CK S W E S T c a m p u s. S m all, c le a n , 8 2 7 .6 0 . S en io r g ir ls , m o th e r and d a u g h te r , co u p le s. 710 W . 22n d . 2 -0 3 8 0 . 815 to 48-A— Unfurnished Apts. a p a r tm en t. F ou r A T T R A C T IV E upper d u p lex u n fu r n ish e d la r g e room s. 8 8 7 .6 0 . A dult*. 610 W e st T w e n ty -th ir d S tr e e t. A pply 7 0 6 W e st T w e n ty -th ir d . 2 2 4 0 7 . 49— Garage Apartments B A C H E L O R A P A R T M E N T : S tu d y b e d ­ tile sh o w er , m aid se r v ic e . A c ­ tw o b o y s . P h o n e room . c om m od ate# on e or 2 7 2 3 1 . 2 304 L eon . 52— Rooms for Girls G IR LS : A v a ila b le now — tw o s in g le room s. V ery near ca m p u s, fu r n a c e h e a t, m aid s e r v i c e , all c o n v e n ie n c e s. 207 W . 2 1 s t. 2 0 1 9 0 . TW O V A C A N C IE S : R oom and hoard. B oard op tio n a l. 2 6 6 8 0 . 606 P ark P la c e . M O ST D E S IR A B L E room , s o u th e a s t e x ­ p osu re. q u ie t, tw in b ed s. S c a ly m a t­ tr e s s e s , 4 b lo c k s c am p u s. B u s lin s. 1 8 1 9 R io G rande. 6 4 1 6 . G IR LS— T w o n ic e room s. F in e lo c a tio n , r ea so n a b le p r ic e s, p le a s a n t su r ro u n d ­ in g s . 102 E. 2 6 th S t r s s t . P h o n e 8 2 4 2 . H O U S E K E E P IN G G IR LS— G irl*, room s, rock h o u se , w arm fin # in w in te r , 1% c o m m u n ity k it c h e n e t te s , block su m m e r cool b lo c k s c e n te r . 2 4 7 4 6 . al«o ca m p u s, % G IR L S : A v a ila b le F eb ru ary la r g e room s and n ic e c lo s e ts . V ery d e sir a b le . th * room * 1% b lock s o f ca m p u s. S e e now . 1 928 San A n ton io. P h o n e 8 1 2 0 7 . l e t , fo r ta b le, ROOM S for w om en , a tt r a c tiv e and c o m ­ s in g le or d ou b le. A ll c o n ­ v e n ie n c e s, fu r n a c e b ea t. T erm * r e a s o n ­ a b le . 104 W . 2 7 th S t. D E S IR A B L E room , b ath. C lose tw in b e d s , p r iv e t* to U n iv e r s ity , v e r y reg* so n a b le . 906 W . 22%. P h o n e 8 -2 0 1 8 . T Y PIN G — D ep en d ab le, a c c u r a te ty p in g . Mr*. W a sso n . 907 W . 22nd . P h o n e 50— Garage Rooms 2 - 9 1 3 5 . 8 -6 0 8 9 E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IS T w ant* ty p in g and copy w orh_ to do a t bom a. P h on e 32— Coaching R. M. R andle— M ath C oach in g 2 3 0 9 San A n ton io— 2 -0 7 4 1 M ATH C O A C H IN G — P u re or app lied A. M. C u ellar. P h o n e 2 9 8 9 4 . tio n s E N G L IS H : E x p e rt tu to r in g for e x a m in a ­ te a c h e r w ith e x p e rien ce d MLA. d e g r e e . P h o n e 2 -1 3 8 3 for a p p o in t­ m en t. R ate# 8 .7 6 an hou r. ____________ by 34-A— G eneral FO R S A L E : A lm o st new m in u s* draw ­ in g s e t . P e r f e c t c o n d i t i o n . Call 8 1 5 5 7 . 40— Wanted Merchandise b a t h . well F O R R E N T : G a r a g e r o o m w ith p r i v a t e f u r n i s h e d , u t i l i t i e s . C o n ­ v e n i e n t to U n i v e r s i t y , p r i v a t e h o m e . Call 3 * 2 9 f o r a p p o i n t m e n t . L ane. COZY, c o n v e n ie n t, r ea so n a b le. 102 L aurel la r g e cloth e* c lo s e t, r e s id e n tia l n eigh b orh ood near U n iv e r s it y . 8 7 9 2 8 . ____________ flo o r , p r iv a te b ath , le t A C C O M M O D A T ES 2 Q u iet s e r v ic e , g in e e r in g B u ild in g . 2 1 7 4 0 . su r r o u n d in g s, u t ilitie s . C o n v e n ie n t b oy*— 111 each . sh o w er s, m aid to E n ­ G A R A G E R O O M S: C o n n e c tin g b ath , tw in beds, q u iet, c o m fo r ta b le , bu*. S in g le 816. d ou b le 820. D ial 6 6 5 8 . 9 0 8 W . 2 9 th . G A R A G E R O O M S: C lean, c o m fo r ta b le, show ers* A cco m o d a te* 4 b oy*. 18 cadi* U tilitie s and m aid s e r v ic e . 2 8 0 6 0 . E X T R A N IC E , p r iv a te til# sh o w er , cu rtain ed d r e s s in g room , m aid e n tr a n c e , se r v ic e , u tilitie s . 308 E . 1 7 th . 5 7 7 2 . H IG H E ST C A S B PR IC ES foe used su it* , sh o e* A S c h w a r ts Pb 8 -0 1 8 4 51— Rooms for Boys W A N T E D TO B U Y : T a b le -siz # r a d io in j B O Y ’S ROOM : Ideal fo r . good i c o n d i t i o n w ith p h o n o g r a p h a t ­ ta c h m e n t p r e ferred . Ph. 23762 e v e n in g * . t i t _ i t ..... . a J . . * mn** Lr riAti a# d e n t. rock hou se, tile b ath , p r iv a te e n ­ tr a n c e , tw in b ed s. 2 c lo s e ts . 2 3 1 6 O ld ­ ham . 8 6 0 S 7 . til# M i n . or! V a LO i n W O U L D L IK E TO B U Y sec o n d -h a n d record p la y er. C all M aria M orrow a t Classified Advertising RATE CARD READER ADS 20 Words—Maximum - ■■ - ............. ....... —* -48 *M im «Vf JO - I time t tim** I times 4 times I times — USS • times Reader Ads Ars To Bs Rem On Conseeutivs Days We Charas for Copy Changs — ................. i- DISPLAY ADS I column wido by I inch desp 4 60c pet insertion Dial 2-2473 for further Infor­ mation or messenger service. Ws «ss w»s tbs right a r e to ssfwst s sd with tig rh# Dally Tams. Messenger Ssrrtoa « * f l SMM ft rn wash-ders. Coaster ess rigs ALI ADS CASH IN ADVANCE libte f e e t h e s a i n t o f H o l d i n g a p l a c e o f h o n o r in all t h e c la s s p i c t u r e s o f t h e p a s t f i f t e e n o r t w e n t y y e a r s is P e r s - g r i n u s , th* h a l f - b i r d , h a l f - a n i m a l p a t r o n l a w y e r s . P e r e g r i n u s is e q u i p p e d w i t h “ a l o n g b e a k , w i t h w h i c h it d e l v e s i n t o t h e i n t r i c a c i e s o f t h e l a w s ; to a w e e p a w a y all a f l a t o b s t a c l e s a n c o n f r o n t i n g a r c h e d b a c k r e a d y to s p r i n g to in n e e d th# d e f e n s e o f f a s t it s e q u i t y ; o f e n c a s e d in b o x i n g g l o v e s t o g i v e a p u n c h t o th# w a y w a r d . ” t h o s e a n d h a s ta il it; Social Hygiene Day Held February 3 Social Hygiene Day, nationally sponsored by the American Social Hygiene Association, will he ob­ served throughout the country on F e b ru a ry 3, Dr. George VV. Cox, state health officer and chairman of health and emergency medical service, announced recently. Army and Navy officers, indus­ labor unions, try. management, and health and welfare agencies will participate in the nationwide campaign. ‘‘Physical fitness not only of our soldiers, Marines, and sailors but also of our civilian population, will determine the effectiveness of our war e f fo rt,” Dr. Cox stated. “ We must realize th a t the nation’s defense depends on a healthy civilian population, able to p ro­ duce needed w ar materials.” V a l u a b l e B o o k in L i b r a r y The “ most valuable book in ex­ istence on the history of archi­ tecture in the Americas” is in the Latin-American Library at the University, declares Senor Man­ uel Toussaint, National Univer­ sity of Mexico a r t critic and his­ torian. It is a volume of class notes by Fray Andres de San Mi­ guel, one of first Mexican the in teachers of architecture, used the Royal Pontifical University of Mexico around 1600 to 1630. SIC K LIST S t. D a v id ’* H o sp ita l G e o r g e G ib s o n Ru«#el! P u r i f o y R a l p h S t e k i n S e to n H o sp ita l C a r r o l l E. B oyd T h o m s # Llo y d C a r lie le G e o r g e Ellin J o h n n y E llis S c o tt is h R ite D orm itory L e li a J a c q u e l y n P o w e ll III a t H om o Electrical engineers are being in their e ffo rts to get as aided much of their subject as possible before going into the arm ed serv- . Ro^rt J. shakier ices, according to R. W. W arn ei, chairman of the D ep artm ent of ; Electrical Engineering. M i r v M a r t i n V i r g i n i a N e n b it Mr. W arner has announced that several courses required for elec­ trical engineers are being o ffe re d , each semester instead of in a lte r­ nate semesters, in order that stu ­ dents might work off pre-requi­ sites faster than usual. CACTUS Group Photographs (Including N R O T C and Long­ horn Band groups). Photos by F. Wilbur Soidars season Modification of and tournament achedulea has enabled 95 per cent of the high schools to continue their basketball pro­ gram*. detpite war-tima travel tmtrittiena, Porter Mid. Goofy M ay Help Braves El Goofy has been one of the outstanding pitcher* for ten years and helped the Yankees to many of their pennant# and world cham- phasized football. Moving to S ta n ­ ford, he brought th e West Coast school up from last place in the conference to the Rose Bowl. Latest course to be added to this list is one in communications L ast year S h a u g n e s s y moved engineering, form erly offered only in the fal l , hut which will be dou- up this j e a r in both semes- to Maryland, a n d g a v e the small •rhool a fine record of seven vie- to r iti against two defeat*. i ter*- Now on display at 8 6 8 2 3 . FOYTS NEWS STAND (N e x t to T ex** T h e a tr e ) For Rent M O D ER N f iv e room h o u se in B r y k e- w ood T ile b eth , V en etian b lin d s. On bu s lin s. T s s s s ca ll 8 -4 2 4 1 a it s r * P .M . ROOM S for tw o b o y s or b e d s. hot and cold w a te r , th re e . T w in te le p h o n e In room . 2 6 1 0 S an G abriel. r e n t a n o t h e r R O O M S f o r t w o b o y s , 8 1 0 . 6 0 e a c h . W il l to o n e boy. T h # t h r e e u«e t h e u r * p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e . N« o t h e r r o o m e r s . 1 8 0 2 N u e c e s . P h o n s 1 1 9 7 . r o o m IHURSDAY, 'JANUARY 21, 1943 K o n a 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 TELEGRAPH— EDITORIAL— PAGE THREE J Allied Offensive Mapped at Parley Americans Bomb German Homeland Small Talk by Mary Brinkerhoff J le t'l A b d a li fyinalb A nd He 9decim al W e have just come out of a final, and Shat is always an excellent time to write a column. Finals put us into a coma, a form bf quiet hysterics which begins about an hour before the ordeal and lasts for two or three hours afterward. During this time certain parts of the brain— the parts which register thoughts of pain, fear, and re­ morse— are completely paralyzed. The rest of the brain is more active than usupl, and the sufferer says and writes a lot of things which in normal times would amaze him or her as much as everybody else. This is the ideal state of mind for writing a news­ paper column, so here goes. • The thought of our present mental state theories reminds us of some scholastic we’ve had for a long time. There is little hope that anyone wants to listen to the exposition of these theories, but what judg­ ment w e have is suspended by what we have just gone through, so there’s no stop­ p in g now. A part of the theory has to do with finals, which w e think are a relic of the Middle A ges and should have been abolished along with the Inquisition. The rest of it concerns classes, which w e think should be replaced by conferences or by just staying at home reading and thinking about the course. To the obvious objection, punctuated by loud and cynical laughter, that nobody would ever come to the con­ ferences or read about the course, there’s an obvious answer. You can always lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him pass a course. Disregard the mixed figures of speech for a minute, and think about it. If a stu­ dent likes a course, he likes it and is going to spend time on it and probably make a If he doesn’t like it, he will good grade. probably ignore it, grades or no grades. If grades put a holy fear into him he will study and pass the course, but he won’t enjoy it or get a great deal into it unless he can find something in it to interest him. Consequently, we don’t hold to the old compulsion theory. We even think a completely free hand with a course would interest a lot of people in it who hadn’t been interested before. Then w hat about tho final? Th« an­ swer is that there’s nothing wrong with the exam itself—*ifs the state of mind it puts you into. Many people raise trailing grades a notch or two higher on the last round, but a lot of people who know as much as they do lower their grades in­ stead. W hy? Because the idea of going into a final causes them to break out with a beautiful case of screaming gleeps, and their minds immediately become as clean and shiny as a blackboard with nothing written on it. As we said before, we are in an exam stupor ourselves right now, and don’t par­ ticularly care what we say. We are in­ spired further by the fact that we doubt seriously whether anybody listening. But we do believe finals should be done away with and regular classes should be replaced by something more informal. If this happened, a good bit of emphasis would probably be taken away from mak­ ing good grades and added to the plain enjoyment o f the course. is ,cial Notice*. MATHEM ATICS 3 2 * ., th* beginning h a lf o f the course in D ifferen tial ■ q u ation s. w ill be offered the second se m este r, beginning in February, for th e s e who h are com pleted a year's so u r se in Elem entary Calculus. This,* cou rse w ill be of in terest especially g of M athem atics 22as as well B scien ce stu d en ts. The fir st meet* Is th e fir st m eeting of M athem atics 2bs w ill be held in my o ffice. W .H .7. tm F e b ru a ry 8. H. J . ETTLING ER GOOD SW IM M ER needed, preferably registered lifesaver, for I Vt hours d aily. Apply S tu d en t E m ploym ent Bu* reeu , M B. 101M. STU D E N TS w ishing to sn ter Botany I at the beginning of the sp rin g lb and se m este r may enter B otany lak e Botany la in tb s sum m er s e s ­ sion or in tb s f s ll sem ester of the She JfaUg Tile Daily Texan, stu d e n t news­ p a p e r o f The University of Texas, la published on the campus of the U niversity in Austin by Texas S tu d e n t Publications, Inc., every m o rning except Monday. E n te re d as second class mail m a tte r a t the Post Office, Austin, Texas, u n d e r the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. Editorial Journalism offices, Building 109, 101, and 102. Tele­ phone 2-2473. Member Associated Collegiate Press ST A FF FOR THIS ISSUE N ight Editor . RALPH FRED E A ssistant Night Editors How ard, Bill Logan A. R. C opyreaders Banks Miller. Bill Barton, Anita W alker N igh t Sports Editor Ralph Leach Dean N ig h t Society E d i t o r Finley N ig h t Amusements Editor Leigh Cohn N ig h t Telegraph E ditor __ W alker A ssistant: Bill Barton ...... N ig h t Radio E d i t o r Gaines BOND and ST •ward ad in th a ^■W K C O lf^ TVI lit CONTESTS IN ONE fon H m m FON PROFESSIONAL ARTISTS First prizes • $50.00 War Bonds for Mig boat poi) and ink drawinga illus­ tra tin g som a phase o f Amorica’s Drive to Victory. Entry may bo mo- ghanical drawing of tom# machina # r davie#, promotional pioca urg­ ing aal* of war stamps and bonds, Inspirational pioca or other suitable A lk mmaL w fn # AU MkiN Se* *ek*l**- ftip* offend by Art Instruct!** Im., Chicot* Aeedomy of Fie* Aria, etc. Ow complot* fefewm tio* ask your echo*) dr art supply dealer, ala Ii on ar or writs — L O U IS M E L IN O C O M P A N Y H i W. CHICAGO AV*, a CHICAGO, ILL. ux I sealion . Two long lecture aeetiona ere open: B. 1.1, MW F a t » and laboratories B. 1.2, TTS a t 9 w ith ta scheduled in the Final A nnounce­ m ent of Coursea. Botany la# will not be given aa such. MARIE B. MORROW. Chairman, Dept. Botany A B acteriology. STUDENTS 47» m u st bring their term them es to IN CHEMISTRY my boma s t 2218 Rio Grande. DR. H . W . H ARPER. THE NATIO NAL ROSTER of S cien ­ tific and S pecialised Personnel o f th* War Manpower C om m ission has asked that we d istrib u te form s to in­ dividuals who hope to attain a m as­ ter's or doctor's degree any tim e during 1943 in certain fields. Every stu d en t who is a candidate, even ten ­ tatively, for a graduate degree in any field except Classics or English dur­ ing 1943 should com e by the G r a d u . at# School office, Main Building 121. for there form s a t his earliest con­ venience. A. P. BROGAN, Dean. be giv en F e b r u a r y 18, 17, POSTPONED EXAM INATIONS w ill l l , l l , I O , and 22. P et i t i o n s to take exam - nations in this aer ies m u s t be ia the Registra r’a Office n o t later th a n Feb­ r u a ry I, Tuesday, a t 6 o’clock. T h e sc hedule these exam ina­ for tion*. which a r e to be given in Ge­ ology Building 14, is as follows: Tuesday, F e b r u a r y 18, 2 p. rn.— Art, E n glish , Greek, a n d speech. W ednesday, F e b r u a r y 17, 2 p. rn.— Anth rop o lo g y, d ram a, engineering, philoso phy, ph ysics, g o v e r n m e n t, an d psychology. T h u r s d a y , F e b r u a r y rn.—- B u s in ess a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , education, jou rn alis m , a nd m a t h e m a t i c s . IR, 2 p. F riday, F e b r u a ry 19, 2 p. rn.— C serh . Italia n. Latin , French , G erm an. p ha r m a c y , S p an ish, and Bibl*. S a t u r d a y , F e b r u a r y 20, 2 p. rn.— B o t ­ any, c h e m i s tr y , economics, geology, music, and sociology. Monday. F e b r u a r y 22, 2 p. rn.— H i s ­ tory, hom e econom ics , zoology, and o t h e r subject*. E. J. MATHEW S. R egistrar and Dean of A dm issions. th e sound p a y m e n ts by place on m o re T H E BOARD O F R E G E N TS , in ord er legal to the m eth o d of handling by g r o u n d s the U n iv e r sity of the collection a n d p a y m e n t of t h e g ro u p life in su r a n c e prem iu m s , has d irected t h a t th e p r e ­ mium individual policy holders m u t t he made to t h e U n iv e r sity not later t h a n J a n u a r y SI of each year T h is y e a r J a n u a r y 81 falls on S u n day, a nd gro u p in su ran ce p rem iu m s m u s t be paid before th e close of b u sin e ss, I P. M., S a t u r d a y , for J a n u a r y 30, and be fore calling sa lary ch eck s o r w a r r a n t s . All p a r ­ ticip atin g m e m b e r s who have le f t mailing th e B u r ­ s a r ’* Division for t h e i r sa lary checks or w a r r a n t s s ho uld have r e ­ m itta n c e s c o v ering p r e m iu m s due in t h a t office. Room 8. Main Building, not l a t e r t h a n 4 P. M„ Friday, J a n ­ r e ­ uary 29. T hose m e m b e r s whose m itta n c e s t h a t l a t e should p r e s e n t t h e i r receipts for i n su r a n c e p r e m i u m s when calling for their sa lary c h eck s o r w a r r a n t s on ( a n n a r y 30 or later. i n s t r u c t i o n s with received a f t e r t h e i r a re C. D. SIM M O NS. Com ptroller, S U G G E S T E D P R O C E D U R E FOR E N ­ G I N E E R I N G STUDENT** 1. If you arc u n d e r eighteen years of age, you can en l i s t in the N aval Rese rves. T h e se re s e r v e s will p r o b ­ t h e College of E n g i ­ ably r em ain in neering for a to t a l of eig h t se m es­ ter* if th e y do good work. 2. If you have as m u ch ss t w e n t y - seven s e m e s t e r h ou rs of C. cr ed it in E ng in eering , you a r e eligible for d e ­ f e rm e n t and m ay r e q u e s t your d r a f t in board th e U n i v e r s i t y as a civilian s t u d e n t . You will be requ ired to ca r r y a m i n i ­ m um of s e m e s t e r ho urs of work per se m e ste r . for p erm issio n rem ain fifteen to 3. The procedure for deferm ent is ss follows: a. Th# s t u d e n t should secure form s. which ace to be filled in bv him, from th* Office of t h e Dean of E n g in e e r ­ ing. T hese fo rm s m i r he completed b e f o r e th e st u d e n t receive* hie c l a s s i ­ fication II-B. HUA I. should be com pleted sn d r e t u rn e d to t h e Dean's Office et th e tim e t h e q u e s t io n n a ir e is mailed to th e d r a f t board o r a* soon t h e r e ­ after ss possible. ( fo r exam ple. They I-A, h He should go to the R e g is tra r'* Office and re q u e s t a p h o to sta tic copy of his record " f o r d e f e r m e n t.” A fee of IS cen ts p er p ag e is ch arg ed to r this se rvice. e. He should return the com pleted forms plus the p h otostatic copy of 'he record to th* O ffice of the D eer >f E ngineering for tran sm ittal to the tffire of the Vice P resident and then to the draft board. W R W O O L R I C H , D o m a l X a g ia a e rta g . IU F IR IN G J lin e Dem* E d itor: This m orning I d rank my usual cup of coffee (which seems to help me think better in finals, you know ). It really bothers me th at I have nothing1 im p ortan t (such as liver tro u ­ ble o r cancer) to talk about, but I m ight aa well write you and let you fill an o th e r half page of The Daily Texan for the next issue. Which all goes to show' t h a t we, the students and readers, are no t only tired, but d ar ned fed up with such tripe as “ The Perils of Being a Texan W rit­ e r ” and “ Don’t Stab Me Again” bv McGuire, T u rn e r and Co. if Why do we give a damn some things idiot says n a sty a bout one of his fellow column­ ists (m irth must be here regis­ te re d ). I t was not enough for Mr. T u rn e r to waste s up p o se d­ ly precious paper in inflicting his courageous stand against the evils of his cohort into our otherwise unwounded con­ science, hu t we were again forced to tears by such merci­ less corruption as “ Deah Slug— honey. I can say some things foah you all th a t you all can't say foah youah self” ; conse­ quently, Mr. T urn er, by this time re a d y to sell his soul for a chance to avenge himself a t our expense, spends the rest of the page saying these things “ foah him-self,” with appropri­ ate modesty (sic) of course. Tomorrow Mr. T u rn e r or Mc­ Guire will probably write some­ like, “ Since wars and thing rumors of wars are so dull and uninteresting, I shall tell you of something n ea r to the hearts of all American people— my op­ eration.” Might I suggest some propa­ ganda o r a bond advertisem ent the next time you have nothing to say; we're sort of used to them. CONNELL CAWTHON Dear Editor: • is should turbines columnist It w asn’t so bad when thp Texan told of heating the Uni­ versity with located deep in the engineering build­ ing, because, a f te r all, jo u rn a l­ ists a r e n ’t really expected to know much about such things, BUT it seems to me th a t a rec­ know ord enough abo ut his subject to know t h a t ASCAP is n ot James the C. Petrillo’s. ASCAP American Society of Compos­ ers, Authors, and Publishers. Petrillo the American Federation of Musi­ cians and self-styled music czar. It is his ban forbidding union musicians to make recordings of any kind that is giving the record companies all of their present greif. I could go on with more details a b o u t Pe­ trillo’s playing in Chicago poli­ tics through the Chicago of Mu­ sta n g , b u t th a t is beside the point of this letter. is president of A turbine is a machine that ‘Events’ to Tell Global Strategy J a n . WASHINGTON, 27 — ( I N S ) — Inform ation director El­ m e r Davis, who has become the gov ern m ent’s semi-official spokes­ man, today promised fu r th e r de­ strategy tails reached a t the Casablanca* confer­ ence would be disclosed chiefly “ by events.” global the on Davis pointed out th a t the g re a t­ est resu lt of the conference was a plan fo r a world-wide offensive. Asked a t his weekly press con­ ference if he had more inform a­ tion regarding a solution or a set­ tlem e n t of North A frican political problems, Davis replied: “ W hatever this means a f te r the war, French to have reached harm ony on ‘unity fo r w ar fo r all Frenchm en.’ ” leaders seemed The information director noted with suspicion the supremely pes­ simistic tone of German propa­ ganda, particularly fo r home con­ sumption. He stresse d th a t w here­ as the German arm y “ is taking a beating in Russia,” he believed th a t the Germans were concen­ tr a tin g on painting the picture blacker than necessary. Davis listed several motives fo r the present Hitler line th a t “some­ times an arm y wins, sometimes it loses” which had replaced fo rm er slogans declaring Nazi forces in­ vincible. is using Possibly H itler a “ strength through f e a r ” policy to unite Germans by keeping them working harder, he thought. Also, he felt, th a t the German a u thori­ ties hoped to p repare th eir people fo r the worst so th a t if they halt the Russian offensive, the masses would re a c t with a g re a te r psy­ chological boost. Davis revealed th a t Nazi propa­ gand a is now emphasizing th a t all German people “ are tarred by the same brush and all will be held this fo r Nazi crimes,” although was contradicted a t Casablanca. “ The Nazis arc also re turning to th eir original propaganda line th a t they are ‘the g re a t bulw ark against Bolshevism,* ” he said. Dis­ closing th a t the announcem ent of the Churchill-Roosevelt conference caught the Axis off-balance, Davis rem arked that the Germans made unusual but unsuccessful efforts I to jam Allied stations. “ Berlin h a d Churchill in Wash- j i n g t n n t h r e e q u a rte rs of an hour the Casablanca conference a f t e r wa s announced here,” Davis de­ clared. “ T h e Japanese were caught even more flat-footed, and Tokyo was announcing Churchill’s pres­ ence the United States three c o r r e c t re p o rt came out.” in Davis was able to explain how his form er opinion th a t DeGaulle had approved Marcel B. Peyrou- t o n ’s appointment as commissioner in Algiers. “ I t h o u g h t then that. DeGaulle was in North Africa when the ap­ p o i n t m e n t was made, but accord­ ing to present information he a r ­ later,” Davis said. “ How­ rived ever, the appointm ent seems to have been made a f te r Mr. Roose­ the velt and Churchill were c ountry and I suppose it could hardly have been made without their approval.” in Regarding the fighting in North Africa, Davis expressed doubt th a t heavy action would develop be­ the rainy season ended to ­ fore ward the middle or end of F eb ­ ruary. Hitler's Confidant Helping U.S. Now W ASHINGTON. Jan. 27 (INS) — Dr. E rn st (“ P u tz i” ) Hanf- staengl, for fourteen years one of H itler’s closest aides, has been secretly released from a Canadian intern m en t camp and is n ow w o rk ­ ing in Washington as a confiden­ tial the American to governm ent on anti-Nazi phases of the w ar effort. adviser The Harvard-educated form er foreign press chief of the Nazi party, who used to soothe Der F u e h r e r ’s jangled nerves by play­ ing his favorite op erat tunes on the piano, escaped from the Ges­ tapo clutches to London in 1937 a f t e r an open break with Hitler. He has been in this country for about six months, it was a u th o rita ­ tively disclosed W ednesday night. His release from the Canadian to which the internm ent camp, form er Nazi luminary was sen t from London a f t e r the putbreak of the war, was obtained through close the British and American governments so th a t Hanfstaengl could con­ tribute his knowledge of the inside workings of Nazism to the United N ations’ w ar e ffo rt. cooperation between In cooperation with the Office of W ar Information, he has been interpreting and analyzing Nazi propaganda, communiques, speech­ es, and newspaper articles as well a* advising the American a u th o r­ ities on host methods of conveying United Nations’ information to the German people. converts hea t energy into work. (sic) are used to drive They generators which supply elec­ tric power th e campus. for They (sic) are located in the Power House which is directly east. of the Engineering Build­ ing — P. P. By I The war’s first A merican a t ­ tack on the German homeland was delivered today by U. S. heavy bombers in a smashing assault cen­ tered on the huge Wilhelmshaven naval and submarine base, while the R.A.F. staged the fir?' “ ack on Nazi-occupied Denm ark with a Daylight Raid on Copenhagen. The blow a t Wilhelmshaven, de­ scribed officially as heavy and on a “ large scale,” was deal th by Flying Fortresses which thereby struck a t the mainspring of Ger­ m any’s most potent w ar weapon— the, U-boat. Simultaneously, Lib­ e ra to r bombers blasted industrial targets a t Emden and elsewhere in northwest Germany. Wilhelmshaven, the fir s t Ger­ man city raided by the R.A.F. on the opening night of World W ar II, is ra te d the Reich’s largest cen­ te r f o r the building, repair, pro­ visioning and dispatch of subma­ rines. Coming on the heels of a the new R.A.F. night a tta c k on Nazi U-boat nest a t Lorient in France, the American blow a t the North German naval base was ap­ parently intended to execute plans mapped by President Roosevelt and Prem ier Churchill a t Casa­ blanca fo r the smashing of the worst th r e a t to the Allied cause— Germany’s submarine w arfare. • Characterized by B r i t a i n’s bomber chief as opening the A mer­ ican phase of a new campaign to “ bust Germany wide open,” the initial American attacks on Ger­ many proper were carried out within a few hours a f t e r the world had learned of the “ unconditional s u rre n d e r” conference between President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill a t Casablanca. th at participated in the history-making aerial expedition to the principal seat of Germ any’s naval strength, only four-engined American bombers failed to return a f te r shooting down several Nazi large formations three of Out of the N .3. interceptors without the aid of any Allied fighter escorts. B etray in g uneasy concern over the f a c t th a t the might of the United States had a t last reached G erman soil, Berlin late tonight broadcast the exaggerated cl. !m th a t eight American bombers were shot down during the raid on Wil­ helmshaven. While the Fortresses and Lib­ e rato rs were hammering Germany in broad daylight, a formation of the R.A .F.’s high-speed, wooden mosquito bombers raced across the Skaggerak and K attegat to give Denmark its first air raid of the war. Droves of R.A.F. Mustang, Spit­ the fire, and Typhoon fighters, air ministry announced, lashed a t ta rg e ts in northern France, rail “ dam aging m any locomotives.” T he day’s far-flung activities, fol­ lowing an R.A.F. night attack th a t blasted the U-boat nest at Lorient and the French port of Bordeaux with two-ton bombs, were opened early this morning when R.A.F. Hudson medium bombers struck a t Nazi shipping off Holland and destroyed an e n ­ emy losing one of their own. float-plane, T h a t the sustained air offen­ sive was being continued tonight with fresh blows a t Germany was I indicated when the Deutschland- sender, the Reich’s leading radio station, went off the air at 8:20 ; Wednesday night. The Copen­ h a g e n radio went silent a t 4:07 | o’clock, apparently when the Mos- I quitoes charged a t the Danish cap- | ital. The primary objective of the new Allied air onset against Ger­ many apparently was the shrivel­ ling up of G erm any’s submarine arm in execution of plans Presi­ d en t Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill must have mapped a t Casablanca for the smashing of the w orst the Allied t h r e a t of ! cause. First W.A.A.C.S Arrive in Africa Arrival of a good-sized group of W.A.A.C.’* in North Africa adds another laurel to Uncle Sam’s crown o f sw ift wartime accom­ plishment. It was only on May 16, 1942— less than nine months ago— that the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps, created to relieve men for combat duty, was established by presidential order. Just the day before, Congress had enacted into law a bill introduced by Congress­ woman Edith Nourse Rogers of Massachusetts creating the Auxil­ iary. Rep. Rogers’ bill to set up a pioneer women’s army corps had secured the full support of Army authorities, who saw in it a partial solution to America’s pressing manpower demand. Marina Corps Auxiliary Qualifications Stiff Physical qualification* will ba aa stiff os those of the mon, with •light variations due to the Marino Corps* determination to get a stream-lined, straight-backed, and lean-hippad women’s reserve. Recruiting will be done through the existing Marine Corps recruit­ ing stations throughout the coun­ try. Distinctive G I F T S China - Silver - C andy Y* Quality* Shopp* 1104 COLORADO Y E A T E X ! T Polo Shirts with Emblems. 5 Styles, All Sizes. For Men end Women. 85c M A N ’S SHOP T ou s Bookstore your college newspaper reaches buyers of today and tom orrow ! a story recently related by BRUCE BARTON $ “ The acc o un t of J os e ph in the Old Testament tells how he left his co un try u n d e r difficulties and coming into a strange land he rose, t h ro u g h his diligence, to become the principal person in the state, sec­ ond only to the King. The Biblical n ar r at iv e brings us up to the cliax of his c a r e e r and the*! hands us an awful jolt. Without any words of p r e p a r a t i o n or explanation, it says blun tly: AND THE KING DIES, AND THERE AROSE A NEW KING IN EGYPT WHICH KNEW NOT JOSEPH. “ I submit this as one of the most staggering lines which was aver writ# ten in a business biography. “ Here was a man so famous th a t everybody knaw him, and presto, a few people die, and a few new ones are born, and nobody knows him. The tide of human life has moved on; all the advertising th a t the name of “J o se p h ” had enjoyed in one generation is futile and of no avail because th a t generation hat gone.” Mr. Barton concludes: “ So the first very simple thing th a t I would say to you Is that the bust# ness of advertising is a very constant business, that the fact that you told your story yesterday should not lead you into the delusion of sup­ posing th a t you have ever told it. is a day-by-day and Hour-hy-hour business. “ Cultivating good-will Everyday and every hour the “ King” dies and thera arises a naw “king” who knows not Joseph.” Arc You Getting Y o u r Share of The New Students That Arrive Every School Term— If Not Let The Daily Texan Tell Your Story! The Buyers of Today & Tomorrow! rT17 T^\ 41 HP I tie Daily I exam the First College Daily in the South Early Spring I Jap Laborer’s Hate of Soldiers Shows Up in Defeat, Says Ex THURSDAY. 'JANUARY 21. I M I S B I R T S le a ve from a transport I ical w arfare division o f the Arm y! Paris, T exas, and has been work- I On vessel th a t carried him to G u a d a l­ canal and other P a c ific w a r zones, E n s i g n R e * G . B e l i e r J r . , 1941 graduate o f the U n iv e rs ity , re ­ cen tly visited the campus and told an encouraging story o f in tern al strife am ong the Jap an ese. A f t e r delivering supplies and M arines to G u ad alcan al, B a k e r ’s ship w ould retu rn w ith Jap an ese sr,,p prisoners. H e foundI th a t the Jap- . ; a n e ., la b o re r, hate the acid era w A ir Fo rces. Johnso n is stationed at Shep pard F ie ld n e a r W ic h ita Fa lls . ing in A u stin . U. 7. Flier Blasts Japs O n Barges in Burma A delayed i th rillin g dispatch but nevertheless the reached A m o n g cadets a t the A r m y A ir F o rc e P re - flig h t School fo r P ilo ts , M a x w e ll F ie ld , M on tg o m ery, A la ., are six fo rm e r U n iv e r s ity students. T h e y a re in ten sive ta k in g an ph ysical, m ilita ry , and academ ic course p re p a ra to ry to e n terin g p rim a ry flig h t school. w ife o f l . , „ J L i . u t . n . M I C d . . B u l , . . M . C . w n S m ith w ho .H a n d e d the , o f G e rm a n to w n , T e e n ., L l. B . '42, I „ „ a m em ber of The U n iv e rs ity ^ ^ , becam e w hen Ja p a n » (o L ie u te n a n t R alsto n and a com- j o f T exas Rap A sso ciation. C adet i I t v * I V or, 11rift W h e n panion f lie r re tu rn in g to the coast- kick the they w ere a ll mobbed loge her as , l» ^ r e r s around W h e n P prisoners spit on th e soldiers. En sig n B a k e r also told of ‘ he Ja m e s R an d olp h H a ile o f A b ilen e , B u rm a w here three w as a p h a rm a cy student here in carH er th c y had cu t o f f 1937, and C adet R o b e rt C la re n ce re tre a t, j H a rd t o f Tem p le an engineer in tw en ty- five 1937-38. C adet H e n ry L e e D u e rr F |o ra studi(,d education borne f G , h , g e a j apanege , found a clu ster o f average Zero fig h te r , respect , „ d . ^ fe a r fo r the N a v y . ( m achjne gun ^ guns. Althoug h standard equip- >nd cannon ‘ X m e S blasted them w ith ; here. 1938-42. w hile a r t , and sci- , o n ce , stu d e n t, w ere C a d e . Ren.- Jo h n M u r ra y o f O range, » « U # r merit W ith the F ir s t L ie u te n a n t G eorg e A . Har- , here in 1937-38, and C adet O N eal [hove the new gun to be a super- risj etterm an in fo o tb a n and tra c k j C h ild . M ob le y o f O akw ood, here „ ® f The tra n s p o rt o f w h ic h .B a k e r ^ R ^ o p l i n 1924-26, and a th le tic coach ^ h ^ m em ber of the V in 1940-41. . « a g u n n e ry o ffic e r has shot do four M itsub ish i*, two-m otor med- turn bombers, and lan “ r the_ • boats have dropped two Zeros, >ut I e fv i I his ship ha* not been damaged b>T i stru cto ri enem y a r tille r y fire. The tra n s p o t11 was h it by a torpedo once in th e; fo rw a rd p a rt, hut the crew w a s , a ll in the stern so no one was pei.form er phvgica] tra in in j? s t a f f a t P e r rin T h re e U n iv e r s ity exes have re- L ie u te n a n t H a rr is was com . . Ce n tly been assigned to the new igsioned ]ast A u g u s t a fte r fir s t A r m y A i r F o rc e a vig atio n School ag a c iv ilia n p h ysical in- at Sa n M arcos. C a p ta in J a c k M. ’26, o f A b ilen e , w ill c h ie f o f su rg e ry fo r the station Ja m e s footb all, basketball, and tra c k R . G ra n t, B .A . ’40, is operations L ie u te n a n t A v ia tio n C adet C a lv in M . Brad- hospital. F ir s t L ie u te n a n t is re c e ivin g j of fice r, and E .te « , B A . j n 1 9 3 8 , Second ^ j hurt. . En sig n B a k e r >elieves w e a ir s u p e rio rity over G u ad a lca n a l | . and are going to keep it. , pre-flig ht bom bard ier tra in in g a t : C la rk N . W ilk in s o n , B .B .A . *41, of ave j E llin g to n F ie ld , n e ar Houston. H e Longview ', is an assistant tra in in g E llin g to n Fie ld , n ear Houston. He is the son o f M rs. T . V . Rush, f M r s _ T> v> Rush. ! o ffic e r. ROn h 1.55 in richness and D u p licating rareness the finest patterns loom ed a b ro a d , these Smart S trip e s blend well into any man's w a rd ro b e . . . and add som ething to it! Tailored in the de luxe q u ality of TruVal, with the fam ed Fair-flex col­ lar; needs no starch to stay smooth and sm art all day long. MAN’S SHOP Tex a s Bookstore ac*os* mom umvtanry 2 2 4 4 GUAD ALUPE ML Mi a * a Coming Play Is Newspaper Show News Comes to Life In Cookie's Script V a rie d productions which range from a m usical revue to propa­ ganda-tinged e ntertainm ent w ill be launched by the Curtain Club and D epartm ent o f D ram a this spring, says La w ren ce C a rra , chairm an. I A musical revue now being re­ h e a t e d b y the C u rta in Club and Departm ent o f D ram a w ill be ready fo r production by F e b ru a ry . 22. The show is being done ex-! pressly to tour A rm y camps. The cast, which seventeen girl* and five men, w ill p lay at the San A n tonio A v ia tio n Cadet C enter, Cam p S w ift, Del \ aile, and Cam p Hood. includes A Russian play. “ Sq uaring tho C irc le ” by V ale n tin e K a ta y e , will be staged M arch 10-13. It not o n ly reveals to the audience the Russian sense of hum or but gives a clear the people themselves. T his fa rc e deals with housing problems which w e arc ju s t beginning to appreciate in the U n ite d States. • insight o f T h e ate r “ W h a t of the Peace One novel production scheduled this spring w ill he a liv in g news­ I t is ba*