Volume 39 Price Five Cents Today's Editorials H ow ’ll You H ave Your E ggs? THE DAILY TEXAN Enrollment Continues to Climb as 361 Pay Fees Monday Prominent Educators Late Registration Begins Now Being Considered Today at 2:30 in Gym For U. T. President Yell Leaders To Be Elected From Ballyhoo At First Rally 3 Dormitories Form Campus Organization The W eather Sundayt Cloudy tonight and w ith occasional rains. AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 Receives Bouquet j ? Twelve Pages Today tom orrow No. 5 --------- — ♦ * : t Names of outstanding educators over the nation are now being compiled fo r the selection of a president of the U niversity to replace the late Dr. H. Y. Benedict, it was announced here today. Several men are already on the list, b u t their nam es were not released, al­ though the three committees in charge of the selection have been gathering their records and achievements. O I =: r- rr.rrrrss=:^ ^ ^ reg arding*: = inform ation I O I No definite action will be i j C l l O C n w D p C c lK S taken on the selection until pos­ sibly next summer, Leo C. Haynes, I the Board of Re­ secretary of th atj intended gents, said. It the new president will take of fica long session. in tim e for the 1938-1939 is At Band Meeting Monday Night ---------- You never would know the guy’s name by looking a t his sig­ nature on cartoons, b u t it is J. I Bottle Guinn, cartoonist, w riter P a ra d e T im e S t i l l afte r a fashion, and possessor of one of the ra rest ideas of humor Indefinite; W e i Ie r in captivity. T o P lay Barroom Ballads at Dance Guinn’s hum or is evident from the fa ct th a t Ballyhoo reprinted one of his cartoons in th eir Aug­ ust issue from an earlier issue of the Texas Ranger. Several of his F o u r assistant yell leaders will cartoons have been used by n a­ tionally-circulated publications in Barbecue S u p p e r Launches G r o u p O n E n t e r p r i s e Of Fellowship bs elected a t the first pep rally this year F riday night in Gregory the past. Gym, W ayne Ashmore, head yell leader, rally, which will begin a t 7:15 an, was au th o r of the short, short tbe f:rst o’clock, Jim my W eiler’s orchestra | story, “F or R ent.’* will play fo r an hour of free = — ----- — .T.........- dancing in the Gym, Guinn, a m em ber of the Ranger t h e staff and co n tributor to the Tex- announcec. A fter Residents of Roberts, P rather, and Brackenridge dorm itories met last night at a brabecue supper to unite in a dorm itory association, its Wnd on th ® ^ ni* versify campus. In the m eantim e form er Comp­ tro ller J. W. Calhoun sits behind the presidential desk in the New Main Building office and directs the business of the University. He j Monday night in -1 Gregory Gym. was appointed P resident ad terim a fte r the sudden death Dr. Benedict on May IO. With eighty men less than the 250 bandsmen he predicted last week, George E. H u rt waved h is , baton over the 1937 L o nghorn! Hand at Ha organization m eetin g : ' row aft judges. figures on the campus was pre­ fratern ity ary and professional sented. fo r women in journalism, Sunday afternoon. The show, which was n, Plans vation.” k.. - # fo r ‘ . The 170-piece band will boom ftI] free " *aid Tom Law, fo rth with the first official “ Texas sponsor of the Freshm an Fellow- F ig h t” and one hundred m em -!shiP Club* “ Ws furnish transpor- ber. will parade. A t the Gym the j? 110". food. and entertainm ent. I said "hello" Longhorn football team ; Dana X. Everybody m eet a t the Y a t 3:301 I Bible, head coach. Blair Cherry F r>day and H. C. Gilstrap, assistants; J bere will be a touch-football, m arked “the night reminds me of J a k e Pickle, president of the Sui- p!ay* « " “ ><* baseball, h o r!*. 5hoe the dormitory spirit of the old B. dents’ Association; and W ayne' pltchln*- and o ther C. D. Simmons, Ashmore, head yell leader, will ne the ,n tire . ^ teJ n ®on’ £ \ > waiting for the students. Dana X. Bible, head football in attendance and during Hall days.” e John McCurdy, .ecre tary of the E x-Studenta’ coach, was A nociation, c u to - h m e the gathering.! JL* ;com ptroller, and tv. L. McGill, di­ The coaching I ! their idea of t h . opening game I” *.’ trio will ^ will ask student Pickle will make the welcome ad- „ v dress, and George E, H urt, di f? Uow ’uppar„ wl1! tha *amM’ I ™ etor o f Texas Student Publics- Da'>d Currie, chairm an of the rec- tions, m a,l, welcoma addresses. , T !Jake Pickle, president o f the Stu V. I. Moore: . wWch was ^ first-sem ester student registered for more than six sa- h a c k -im« 9ter hours fo r the second se- That is m ester who pays the second half tracked, room last 0f his registration and tuition fa t checked upon, a young lady had a fte r the first six days of elass- anc* asked, worfc in the second semester, will two semester charged with i f he the Auditor on the seventh or eighth day of class­ work, th ree sem ester hours if he settles on the ninth o r tenth day and four sem ester hours if on or a fte r the eleventh day of class­ work. However, in no case will this penalty be perm itted to re­ duce the stu d en t’s credit fo r the sem ester below hours. These negative hours shall l l ?! Y„ni ! * ra!ty_ °f I b«‘ « * a r d id a i 'o f T f ^ a d i l shiil the work of the be applied to cu rren t sem ester, and shall be de­ ducted in all computations o f qualitative or quantitative stand­ ing for any purpose, including graduation, tran sfer from one col­ lege to another, participation in any official extracurricular stu­ = den t activity, membership in any th . campus to supply t h . SU tc a n ~ d student social organization, etc.” . ditional revenues, H o w t o A d d o r D r o p a C o u r t * ..i d T e x ., To add or drop a course after “ five only “ five million cr lew ’ add!- ry registration the student must fill tier J fu n d . and the commie Special Session of the I * £. llbrary o£ ‘be Urn-, out and file W itt the dean of th . Legislature pass a luxury tax He ver8lty °* Winola is about tw ice; school in which he is registered an «*:>«* ‘j 1 cited' the success of C alifornia “ ' « » • « « • with such an impost, and ten ts- Northern schools, Mr. Coney said. j lively proposed a levy of one p er I ‘Their *oll«etlon is in many re- but cent on articles cortin* m ore than sp« ta Bupenor, to ■>« ,8nd system is our Li- brary is a* good as any of the larger libraries.” Illinois during th e summer sea sion, has resumed his duties here. library science, Two courses in Library A dm inistration, and a graduate course entitled A C riti­ y , ^ cal Survey of Current (IN S)— A luxury tax today h a d ' 1' Survey of C urrent lib ra ry the endorsem ent of State Senator ; T^ b n .q u e were under Mr. Co- s. sl,pt T 2 ' ° , Y R U vW l? d a o r’ J o h n R e c id itt of L u f k i n , c h a i r m a n director of the library school, was T X I S , r f Saturday, S e p t *5 is the last 1 ^ ...........*- ----------------------- ---- day a student already registered m ay add a course or drop a course w ithout penalty. n e e d e d! Although the L m verjity Libra- m , the So“ ‘h' .u(tgc,ted th a t! » 'th a half milhon volume, rn th . Donald Coney, University li­ brarian, a fte r teaching in the Ii- j W HBN Dean H arper ea rn . to «f < W t h . University, . , j had no resem blance to th at which I f It • I he can be seen walking across to- day. The D epartm ent of Chemis­ try consisted of about fifty stu- I dents, a tu tor, and a janitor. The enrollm ent in the College of Art* and Sciences was around 800, and the num ber o f students in the en­ tire U niversity did n o t exceed 450. exempting 80 ‘ar 88 No doctor o f philosophy degrees two had been conferred, and only a ' most necessities.” No tokens, tags, concerned, bare half dozen m asters o f art*; or m ilk-bottle-tops would be used degrees had been awarded. The in Redditt’s plan, central and w estern wings of the j i - i ' — ----- - old Main Building, the Chem istry Building, the original B. Hall, and a boiler house were the only phys­ ical equipm ent of the then new University of Texas. T E X A N S T A F F M E E T S A T e x a n S t a f f m e e tin g w ill ba held in Jou rn alism B u ild in g 2 :3 0 2 1 2 tim a fte r n o o n a t fo r o ’clo ck . AH th e w ork on th e T e x a n ara ask ed changed, t h e to a tte n d . E d S yars, e d ito r , changed, and to * « « d* Ed s T»r »* *ditor» a n n o u n ced that d e fin a ta a ss ig n ­ changed. Dean H arper ie still the , *nnounced that d e f la t e as.ign- m e n ts fo r th* y e a r ’s w ork w ill beloved friend of the entire stu- m ent‘ for th * / * ar * work wil1 be m ade a t the m e e tin g . m ad * a t th* m e e t i n g . dent body, and always will be. .....■■... ....... ................. 1 has c a m p u s students h a v e times have I the In reference to the handy new system of checking books out by the student’s name instead of the more complicated method of li­ brary num bers, Mr. Coney said th at it is an experim ent, th© suc­ cess of which depends upon the student* t h e m s e l v e s . He ex­ plained th a t there has been only 11 .m all lo** of books every ye*£ I departm ent in which To change a section in a course a fte r student m ust file a section change peti­ tion with his dean which has been approved by the chairman of the the course taught. Section changes and this adds and drops must be attended to in person by the student and “ To drop a course without permission (and persistent ab­ sence amounts to dropping) means to se re r one’s connection with the University,” the general in­ form ation bulletin states. an(J that a yery gmal, group of is students give state of affairs continues, so will ithe simpler method. PORT ARTHUR, Sept. 20.— , Happy birthday, Dean H arper! r ,>x>f . m 1905 nnli, l90£,5 0 e l K6uUlvt . (n o t by mail or oy a friend. ____ ________ __ registration ne added, v o lu n te e r s semester trouble. Though dollars, “ thus *.*.. . _ »’■!>• Ad- the , .. , . If '* * . PAGE TWO Th* Fir si C o i t ag*Daily in th« South Phone 2-3164 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-3165 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 Legion Urged To Support Peace Program Wallace Sets Goal Acreage For Major Crops Freer Trade Brings Peace--Hull for the safety or activities of its nationals abroad would soon ex­ itself the flouting of pose ♦•von elementary righty,” he said. to Eden Proposal, Leftist Blow Mark Tense League Meeting Britain Willing Berlin Prepares For Mussolini To Concede Italy Patrol Equality Loyalist Spain Is Ejected From Council BERLIN. Sept. 20.— (INS) Premier Mussolini of Italy will arrive in Berlin for his state visit to Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler on September 27, pro­ paganda Minister Paul Joseph Goebbels announced today. to the German people to welcome ll Duce “with a wave of enthu­ siasm and streets swamped with German and Italian flags.” Goebbels appealed Hitler and Mussolini both will address a mas* meeting at the Olympic Stadium on Tues­ day next. Mountain Troops Block Insurgents GENIEVA, S e p t 20,— (IN S ) — Ejection of Loyalist Spain from tv# Le aru * of Nations council interest at the assembly •hared today yr,th a dramatic meeting hid by British Foreign Secretary for cooperation Anthony Eden with A marl ca'* aff orts to lower trade barriers. to The Portuguese delegate. Dr. the assembly that Spanish j annex , Da Matt*, stirred with the charge Communists planned Portugal if they were successful tn the civil war. He denied that J the Portuguese were intervening in Spain, but said they were openly hopeful of an Insurgent victory interest of na- . lienal safety. The blow to Spain’s Leftist the in LONDON, Sept. 20.— (INS)— With Spanish Loaylist sources al­ leging that Premier Mussolini plans to speed 200,000 more Ital­ ian soldiers to Spain, Britain to­ day hastened measures to bring Italy into the Mediterranean pi­ racy patrol and keep peace in Europe. A plan Is now being worked in London which will give out the parity the patrol in Italy which it demands with Britain and France. The scheme may he presented at the next meeting of the 27-power Spanish non-inter­ vention committee. NEW YORK, Sept. 20— (INS) — Harry W. Colmery, National Com­ mander of the American Legion, today called upon the million leg­ ionnaires to support a program “to insure peace the United for States.” “ The time hat come when all organizations must pull together to keep America out of w ar,” Com­ mander Colmery said. Sounding the keynote of the Legion’s anti-war program as the Nineteenth Annual Convention got under way here today, the mili­ tant leader of America’s form er service men emphatically declared: “ We have had enough lip-serv­ ice about peace in this country. The la ripe for con­ time now certed action.” Legionnaires, in Colmery’s opin­ ion, are the logical spearheads in the “battle” for peace. “Nobody except the man who has seen how flat a dead man lies on the battlefield knows what war means.” Colmery asserted. WASHINGTON, Sept. 20, today announced (IN S)— Secretary of Agriculture Wallace the new farm program for next year. Submitted to farm leaders from every state here last week, the program establishes a “goal” acre­ age for all m ajor crops which would reduce the farm planting in 1938 by 15,000,000 to 30,000,- 000 acres. BOSTON, Mass., Sept. 20.*— (IN S)—Upon the free flow of commerce between nations, the peace of the world today de­ pends, Secretary of State Cordell Hull declared today in an address before the Boston conference on distribution. “Viewing the world scene, I am deeply convinced that the re­ moval of excessive trade barriers and the restoration of the normal processes of international com­ merce offer th# most satisfactory foundation for a stable structure of business, of peace and of dem­ ocratic government itself,” Hull said. Instead of receiving payments for diversion of acreage from soil depleting crops, farmers will be paid on the product from acres ac-j "w orm trade as a “World trade as a supplement tually planted in such crops— pro- j to domestic commerce is the only vided they do not exceed the max- \ means calculated the imurn acreage “goals” set for standard of living throughout the them by the AAA, and provided I world to a level which will dis- courage recurrent preaching and they carry out other soil conserva acceptance of campaigns of im­ tion practices established by the perialistic aggression.” department. raise to EDEN REPORTS BRITISH ARMAMENTS I GENEVA, Sept. 20.— (IN SI­ PEACE PREACHED AND HELL RAISED government came at the opening J of the assembly session when the its Madrid candidacy to a •eat on the council. regime fo r announced re-election A two-thirds vote was needed but Spain obtained only 23 out of 47 votes. Concerted opposition I bv , the nations of Latin Amer.ca. sympathetic for Jjth Genera! ss mo F r a n c i s c o Franco’s Nationalist movement, was responsible for Spain’* rejee- tion. thjs most ^ A sturian! ^ore ST JEAN Sept. 20. — against poorly organised troops in the mountains of North­ ern Spain, Insurgent columns to­ day labored slowly towards Gijon, DE LUZ, France, < Britain’s great and speedy rearm- up be- (INS) — Fighting ament program was held League of Nations as­ sembly today by Foreign Secre­ tary Anthony Eden as Europe’s chief guarantee of peace. miUti>B1CT t f _ I »«»b!y. during which At a tense session of the as- during which Spain was removed from the league council, ^ part | ported progress on ..e >sracos*a £ den told the world that “ Britain tons of warships On the sea. the Insurgent Cruis- urfier construction, and has spent er Canari** rented three Lov.list i **S0’0 0 M “° J " a r m a m e n t in destroyers in an hours battle and, But> the yonng f orei(rR 8ecre_ captured two cargo ships, one of tary stressed, “War will benefit them the Rev Jaime. three months. had 450,000 ■ np r'r e - to and front. _ Peru and Iran were elected the council, replacing Chile i Turkey. R epresentative* of Genera.issi- n o Franco, who last week a t­ tempted to unseat the Loyalists on the ground that they no long­ er represent the majority cf the Spanish people, were overjoyed by the rejection. In bis address. Eden held up Britain’s speedy rearm ament pro­ gram ae Europe’s chief guarantee of peace. —_r,------- —-- Gannett Attacks Roosevelt s Text In retalU; ion, Loyal .irp to n o .' , . . E ?2.*Pa * tn» « * .I,, pursued the a. a. Ionian coast, but their bombs miss- j ment agreement “when ed here. ! comes feasible.” rff the Tat* . data- j and reany to ^ Fierce, but indecisive, fighting along the Ea*'em front, KT \ f a went on where the F.ebels pounded Loyal positions with artillery and aerial | F a i l to A n sw er C a l l bomb* around Zuera. a • A p p o i n t e d In the South, the Loyalists gain- . .d Mill™ trident Insurgent eonnter-.:tM k. i One third of the students who but Ion it in > have beer. appointed to N. Y. A. | p o rtio n , this your hav, not ap- I plied for their assignment cards, Eubottom, assistant dean of CVI i n * t i m KlVPr n B M F n meri 8aid Mond*y- They have l u l u U » i a m c u until Saturdayf September 25 to V / I U apply. m I gas. But the gay legionnaires them ­ selves were the victims of the highlight of the uproar when a “mystery” tear gas bomb was ex­ ploded as 12,000 veterans jammed in front of the Hotel Astor, The bomb was thrown while the crowd was listening to a speaker on a truck who was impersonating President Roosevelt in a speech of j League of Na ions, Eden said, t welcome. Eyes aflame, the merry- a disarm *-j makerg diapered quickly. None of seriously affected by the it be- ; tber„ .»» “ Th# new program,” Wallace said, “represents a progressive de­ velopment from the previous pro­ grams formulated under the soil conservation and domestic allot­ m ent act. It follows the broad outlines already established and sets up definite objectives for 1938.” NEW YORK, Sept. 20— (INS) Several changes in the original Scenes of wild confusion left New plang oV~th~e AA A~ were fo rced 'by \ ork in a daze today as 250,OOO, members of the American L egion! week»8 conferences turned the city upside down in a final celebration before settling down to serious business at their annual convention. farm representatives at last V i e w i n g pessimistically the high peak of recovery from the depression some evidenced countries as a result largely of high pressure program of rearm ­ ament, Hull declared there exists “dangerous economic unsound­ ness,” in such nations. in Some countries have recovered to the point where their 1929 levels of production are being surpassed. “ But this world recovery,” Hull said, “largely connected as it is with war preparedness and artifi­ cial stimulants and moving in an atmosphere of doubt, is not yet stable or healthy.” A proposal for a six-cents a bu­ shel payment on early potatoes and four cents a bushel on late po­ tatoes was dropped in favor of a referendum vote among potato producers in commercial areas, to p j q h t NATIONS be held by October 2, to deter- HOLD SAME VIEW mine whether they want a maxi­ mum acreage for plantings. No specific acreage “goal wheat was proposed, because, en­ joying a big crop this year for the first time since 1932, and fair prices, the wheat farmers objected to any acreage planning. o —------- 124TH BULLETIN ISSUED The one hundred and twenty NEW YORK, Sept. 20— (INS) for —United States foreign policy to­ day stood rededicated to leader­ ship by toward world peace based on commer­ cial and economic cooperation. country this Warning against a policy of isolation, Secretary of extreme , State Cordell Hull pronounced I the American policy in an inter- ; national broadcast sponsored by °f * * Hep* vt- J th e n a tio n a lp e a c e conference which major statesmen of eight nations took part. spread by practical jokesters of ment of Chpmi8try has recen tly 1 the Legion’s prankster organ!**-1 baen re]ta8€ expected about October and an im portant fa cto r in pre- j , Rnd a powible statem ent from | him ,n answ er to 8worn affidavits a e ra tio n of peace. life This was the message President j th a t he accepted , cided cases. These are: the Klan Roosevelt se n t Daniel Bloomfield, membership. chairm an of the Boston confer- distribution, which! ence on opened here today. J. Action by the Supreme C ourt filed the ouster Justice Black on petitions on two I against ground th a t hi* appointm ent was In the first Intim ation o f th# de­ fens# he may offer to chargee he unconstitutional. holds a life membership in the Ku Klux Klan, Associate Suprem e Court Justice Hugo L. Black was put forward by certain sections of the English press today as a “ ru th ­ less enemy of corruption hounded by the capitalistic press.” 3. Telephone conversation be­ tween President Roosevelt, who will be on a far western tour, and Justice Black after the latter re­ turns to Washington. joined continue Justice Black, his friends hold, to to cannot afford m aintain secrecy, and thus tacitly admit that he the Klan when he campaigned for the Sen­ ate. He might, it was pointed out, assert that he joined the Klan for political resigned reasons and from it after he took public of­ fice. Such an explanation, how­ ever, it was conceded, would not halt the projected congressional fight against him. BLACK LAUDED BY ENGLISH PRESS LONDON, Sept. 20.- •(INS)> senator, The form er it was learned, has complained of his “ persecution” in talks w ith news­ papers such as Reynolds News, a weekly publication owned by the co-operative society, and the Man­ chester Guardian, the leading lib­ eral publication in B ritain. The question of w hether Black actually is or is not a m em ber of the Klan — uppermost in the con­ troversy now raging in th e United | States— apparently wa* avoided in the conversations. Black spent two hours in the o f­ fices of Reynolds News, with the result th a t the paper published a lengthy article about him. “ W hy,” the newspaper asked, “are English publications assist­ ing in the most scurrilous attack ever launched by reactionaries on a progressive politician?” “ Black is a marked man. Cer­ tain sections of big business and the yellow press desire to down him because he is the most ru th ­ less enemy of corruption in pub­ lic life who has struck America in years.” WASHINGTON, Sept. Students will not be asked to present th eir library or registra- fm ancial undersecretary, I tion numbers to get books from on Secretary of the T re s s -1 the U brary this year, Miss Lo­ librarian, has loan rena Baker, announced. The call number of 20.— (INS) — Sir Frederick Phillips, _ British called ury Morgenthau late today for a prelim inary talk on m utual mone­ ta ry problems confronting Great the Britain and the United States. book and the student’s name th at will be necessary are all under the new system. Sir Frederick told reporters he was not in this country on any special mission, but th a t he would review with adm inistration fiscal authorities the operaton of the three-power financial pact be­ tween the United States, England, and France. The old library num ber m eth­ od proved to be troublesom e and of little value. This year num­ ber* will be used only on records of fines for late or dam­ aged books. These will be p u t on the list by the librarian. the “ Black’* anti-Klan He was accompanied to Morgen- th a u ’s office by V. A. L. M allets Counselor to the British Embassy activities,” the paper said, “ have purged his record (alleged Klan membership) if it actually exists. So have his fam ous Supreme Court fight# for American interview ers, Mr. a n d workmen’* compensation and for I Mrs. Black slipped out of the rear the pauper negro in which Black entrance of th eir hotel for a sight- and William W. Butterwort)!, gave his services freely.” denying 1 ................... . Jr., seeing to u r a fte r breakfasting in I of the American Embassy in Lon- This new system is in th e na­ ture of an experim ent, but if it. proves successful during the com­ will be adopted per- ing year, it manently. t o ! their room. themselves • don. Still .... ' I Scares Envoy ?6,000 Sim s Dead SHANGHAI, Sept. 21.— (INS) —J a p a n ’s m ilitarists tu rn ed the full force of th eir devastating war m achine on China’s capital today, staging two more terrific air raids the on N anking which U nited States embassy s ta ff to leave th e city as a to prepare m easure of protection. impelled While Japanese w ar plane? roared overhead in separate a i r raids in the m orning and after- jn o o n , bringing to fo u r the num- | b er of assaults staged w i t h i n fo rty -eig h t hours, United States Am bassador Nelson T. Johnson announced his s ta ff would move the Yangtze River to ­ the gunboat Luzon i l l miles up aboard m orrow. The Chinese characterized Am erican acquiescence to Jap an ­ ese demands, coupled with Presi­ d en t Roosevelt’s recent embargo, as “betrayals of Sino-American friendship.” “The economic distribution of J the products of our fields and fac­ tories at home and abroad lies at the very base of our planning for the message future prosperity,” read. “It is also a factor in safe­ guarding the peace of the world.” “Our progress in developing the of mass production technique through mechanical and scientific processes is an outstanding mar­ vel, but we have not kept pace with this in finding ways and means of correspondingly reduc­ ing cost charges between the pro­ ducer and consumer, Up to 8 p.m., the American con sulate here was w ithout confirm a tion of the evacuation report. It publicly the contradicted an- nounced of Adm iral] decision H arry E. Yarnell, com m ander of the American Asiatic British Vice-Admiral Sir Charier.I “ d Little, and French Commander! Admiral Lebigot refusing to yield F.D.R. TO POSTPONE to the Japanese th rea t. squadron,^'""J ®*Jo* ^ " b u t t o n . __ REBUTTAL OF CRITICS W e need to realize more defi ^ in production In answer to the demand of i HYDE PARK, N.Y., Sept. 20— Vice-Admiral Kiyosui Hasegava, (INS) — P resident Roosevelt! “vindication Japanese commander, th at all for- about to make a eign warships be moved out of swing” across the country, will the British, j save his heavy reb u ttal of admin- range a t Nanking, fr e n c h and American adm irals istration critics fo r the homeward announced their vessels would be trip east, it was learned today. kept a t present moorings. Aides a t the tem porary White Only fo rty Americans in addi- House held the President s itiner- inform ed but of his counter undertaken a t ­ tu p to tion to the embassy staff are at ar>r secret ton ay present in Nanking. If they are sources said most taken up the river in the Luzon, it barrage wou i ne will still leave the gunboat Guam o f the American fleet on hand. A B ritish destroyer and two gun- boats as well as a French cruiser m ately would make at least three *!«■'> are at Nanking. set addresses., One in Seattle, a l l H asegava’s warning to foreign- second at Bonneville Dam, and a ars to evacuate was designed to ’bird at * fa cilitate Japanese destruction of Lacking official announcement, the capital. His announcem ent by it was understood Mr. Roosevelt spokesman of a country which has would leave Hyde Park VV ednes- not y et declared w ar exaggerated day afternoon and travel straight in to Cheyenne, Wyo., w ith only the j rear-platform appearance at op- Shanghai. ■ It was indicated that he ulti- ■ ;er &n ’ ear-to-the-ground Seattle with live s .ops. anti-Japanese feeling cago. The tim e set by Japanese fo r , crating stops of his train . th e bom bardm ent is noon tom or- J row York tim e ). (m idnight Monday, New r The Japanese .w arn in g , how- ever, found G reat B ritain, Soviet S Russia,, and France determ ined to i "bold the fo rt” at Nanking. ..... 1 0 ... 0 . . I W e n t y - h iX b h o t | n S o v iet PurST© I MOSCOW, Sept. 20. (INS) a P i e broad Yangtze River, Japanese warships, sailing u p ; Twenty-six more “Trotakyite an i a l s o pro-Japanese spies and wrecker?.'' rill participate in the razing of were dead today, victims of Soviet “ We cannot assume N anking, b u t n a v a l commanders firing suads. Twenty were executed ip East- |ro im sed to avoid damaging for- ♦ign interests “ as fa r as possible.” grn Siberia, said dispatches from respon- Kharbarovsk, for operating a t an aiblity fo r foreign lives and prop- im portant railw ay intersection un- erty ,” said the Japanese spokes- der orders from Japan. man in Shanghai, however, “if the w arning to quit N anking by noon tom orrow is disregarded.” the tlhe Black Sea area for alleged p re ­ paring for a revolution in case of a Soviet w ar with Fascist coun­ tries. Six others were shot in lay in sending a satisfactory re ­ ply to protests over the m achine­ gun attack on Sir Hugh Knatch- bull-Hugessen, B ritish Ambassa­ dor to China, it was learned to­ night. Unless definite Indications are forthcom ing within the next few days th a t a Japanese reply is be­ ing prepared, Sir R obert Gragie, am bassador to 'T o k y o , will be in­ structed to deliver a new note re­ questing an immediate answer. Johnson state cabled departm ent th at he would rem ain in the vicinity of the city and keep in constant touch w ith the Chinese governm ent. The state departm ent Johnson authority discretion as emergencies arise. cabled to use h i s WASHINGTON, U. S. NOT TO WITHDRAW EMBASSY, MOORE SAYS Sept. 20.— — The United States will not w ith­ draw its embassy representative at Nanking. R. W alton Moore, acting secretary of state, declared today. The action of Ambassador N el­ son T. Johnson in placing his s ta ff and some 20 other American re f­ ugees aboard the American g u n ­ boat Luzon was a step dictated by ^ prudence, Moore asserted, in view of Jap a n ’s notification her war planes will atem pt to blast the Chinese capital out of existence a t m idnight. ASIA’S BIGGEST FIGHT SINCE *05 KILLS 6,000 th an and more I IS ix m illed PE IPIN G , Sept. 20.— (INS) — thousand Chinese had been 40,000 to u ted , with unknown Japanese losses, today at the end of Asia s I eatest battle since 1905. Japanese aerial reconnaissance .bow ed th at the rem n an t of the sr, line stretches 25 miles Jfc h in e se 4 Ch I I from Tichow on the W est to Ku- fchengchen, 60 miles south of Pei | ping, on the Hankow railroad. itn a ltie s were is indicated by How heavy the Japanese cas- t h e tru c k lo a d s of dead and am bu­ lances full of wounded blocking the roads leading to Peiping. Most of them were victims of machine I guns from Chinese ambushes. Japanese advance forces now . are 23 miles from the second main [Chinese line of defense north cf 'aotingfu, and moving swiftly outhward over the m arshy low­ ness below the captured walled |t y of Chochou. ■ B r i t a i n m a y d i s p a t c h N e w DEMAND NOTE — LONDON, Sept. 20.— (INS) — G reat Britain is considering dis­ patch of a new note to Japan sharply calling the Tokyo govern­ ment to task for its continued de- RENT A TYPEW RITER D ial 6 0 6 0 and the m achine o f your ch oice w ill be d e ­ livered to you. Special Student rates. B A R R O W Typewriter Co. 129 W . 7th P h. 6 0 6 0 At the Texas Book Store■ You save more money here, be­ cause we Have more U S E D books. or c o u r s e s SAVE MONEY ON MORE SUPPLIES AND AT THE OPPO SIT E U N I V E R S I T Y M A IN E N T R A N C E * A T rade I Tat Service A la d \ P A G ! FOUR Th$ First College Daily in the South. Phone 2-8164 THE BAILY TEXAN Phone 2-3165 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1987 Jud Atchison Named Longhorn Grid Captain for Texas Tech Game — — - -- — ♦ .. * * * - • • • • ’ ‘ The Captain CLOVER ENTERS U. T. G LO V ER EN T ER S U . T, The Golden Glover’* boxing . night when night when it wa* learned that I rolled in the University. Roy Snyder, sterling 155-lb. w .l-i it wa* learned thatI mlUrf in th* TTnivorritv. Snyder wee one of the few win- . ners in the Glover*’ four-comered . stock hit another hfgh Monday j loper from N. T. A. C, had en -1 grand fin a le meet last spring. A A _- I ______I Dons Use Only 8 Plays In Win Over St. Mary’s SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 20.— (IN S)— Bay Region football fan* were wondering today just how ; good the University of San Fran­ cisco football team really is fol­ lowing the Dons “ surprise” 7-0 j victory over the St. M ary's of Texas Rattlers. the The Don* played entire game yesterday with but eight plays— six running and two pass play*— but even with this handi­ cap made their running attack work and scored their touchdown via the aerial route. J Z H____ I . . . . . . ___ SPO R T S W R IT E R S A ll m em ber* o f tho T o x in Sport* S ta ff and all iaftoroatod in w orking on sport*, bo taro tho T o x in S t i f f to attend m e ltin g in Journalism B an d in g 212 i t 2 :3 0 o'clock tod ay. Im­ m ediately fo llow in g tho gen ­ era! m eetin g, thor* w ill he a tho sports short session sta ff. If you w ant to w rit* sports, be sure to b« on hand. for 8 3 K. U . Y earlin gs P racticin g D aily LAWRENCE, Ran., Sept. 19.- A total of 83 freshmen have checked out football suite at the University of Kansas and ara ra- porttng dally. yearling The Kansas squad Dough Locke, 158-pound full­ _ J look* like the strongest in a num- back of the Rattlers, was the “won I der man” who caused the Dons bar of years with a bevy of high much worry. Running the ends be- school stars in its ranks. Big man hind three man in terference, the m plentiful with tackles welgh- dirrnnutive repeatedly I fullback gained ten and 15 y a rd , at a clip. ' On one occasion he sprinted 40 A t th e moment, the freshm en yards before being dragged down. &re preparing strenuously for t h e j However, despite ^Locke’s sense- freshm an-varsity tional ru n . g et within the Dons’ 15 yard line. f be the Texans did not pigged Saturday. They will have ln* ,s much »* 230 p<,aBd‘- game to . . . j _________0_________ . f had only nine days of practice at the tim e of the game, b u t figure * . u I . / * .. th* Ran- . ..... - C HEM ISTRY T E X T R E V IS E D L of > » * « « “ '>* Dr. E. P. 3choch, profM sor of It0 m ik ' physical chemiatry and director I “ * var y* Freshm an football practice be- of 't h e Bureau In d u strial! Chemistry. and Dr. W. A . Fel- W ednesday under the super­ sing, pro** sor of chem istry, are 'Vision of R. L. Conger, new freah- ! revising their textbook, “ General wan coach. Conger is being as- Chem istry,” which has been used sisted by Mano Stukey, Wade in introductory chem istry courses , Green and Jo e Giannangelo, for- here fo r the last fo u r years. mer Jayhaw ker gridsters. I Austin's Young Men's StoreI A n Ideal Campus Suit — Sport C o a t and Slacks The Coat — Is from th© W e st C oast and priced at only $10.95 English Slacks In herring­ — To match. bone e f f e c t s , plaids, checks and p!om co’ors, $5.50 to $7.95 Baker-Hemphill ■x. V,*' f f lip *% m * a** . ■ _.K W ^ ' ' I■:** f-im ^ Squadmen Sent Through Drill On Ground Plays senior Judson Atchison, left halfback from Baird, will act af captain in the Longhorn?' season opener w ith th* Texas Tech M at-1 ador* Saturday afternoon, Dana X. Bible, hear. coach, announced yesterday, Atchison, speedy runner and capable passer, is playing* bus last year for the Orange and White. He. was selected as captain or. the basis cf ability, form , and hard work put in on the practice field. Captain* the year will also be selected on the •am e m erit bas;?. throughout for the training tilt o f season, crucial In the Longhorns* opening football squadmen the were sent through a lengthy drill on running plays yesterday in the first secret drill of the season, which was held on the Clark I le d tu rf. line smashes, Reverses, cut­ backs, passes, laterals, and the en­ tire repertoire were the order of team? w ent three the day as through one of the longest prac­ tices so fa r. Also on the bill of football fa re were special p rac­ tices on passing and punting. to Ends pulled all evade freshman “dummies' who acted ss defen rive halfbacks. brigade of Longhorn backs. Although ham pered by the the stro n g wind blowing across field, managed to get of? some good kicks, with Gray. Pre st- wood, Wolfe. Haas, and Bryan all kicking long spirals. their tricks T h e Eight Pleasing team as freshm en, using dum­ the opposing de­ mies. acted as fensive the Longhorns ran through th eir entire 40 play*. to Longhorn era che* wa* the re tu rn o f H enry M itter- m ayer, qu arterb ack - right h alf­ back, to active practice tfitts r- Tnayerr has beer out fo r the ’ast week w ith ankle. an triple- Charley Haas, th re ste r, wa* also in uniform fo r the first tim e ainee W ednesday. in ju red speedy if W rn s - * J u d A t c h i s o n , s e n i o r h a l f b a c k , w h o w ill le a d t h e L o n g h o r n s in t h e s e a s o n o p e n e r a g a i n s t t h e T e x a s T e c h M a t a d o r s . F a m e d f o r his s p e e d , A t c h i s o n is e x p e c t e d to a g a i n b e a m a i n s t a y in w h a t will b e o n e o f t h e f a s t e s t b a c k f i e l d s in A m e r i c a . Bell Gives Mustangs Hard Workouts for Teacher Game ♦ ............... j end pogtg O'— -------- to find out teams picked initi4, p ractic„ , Tackle",', which look.d very weak Five Southwest Teams to Open Season Saturday DALLAS, Sop*- *0.— M adia.* W orth, and Randolph McCall, Dal- B«!l. t < ach of Southern M ethod.,t ' U l, supply ^ f o r e m e n * {or the is giving his gridsters “ the works th i. week in order w hat WH! happen when th e Mu,-1 ^ n o g ,^ ta n g le with North T e x * pr0Ted greatly. Charlie Sprague, I T each er, beat in D elia, on S e p t , M„ of Da!las. ra, yor> and ^ „ ie * Curik, husky soph from Taylor, i Tough scrimmages between X j are in fine shape. Cank may oust -and Y the i Leamon Phillips, Pardon giant, squad, supplemented with kicking, from a tackle berth if he keeps up : passing, and running drills, arej she good work. A trio of centers putting the Ponies through than- j leave* no troubla at the pivot slot. J John L. Sullivan, Amarillo; Arthur paces each day. Although many ragged spots r«- i Hawn, Athens, and Joe Gray, cap- main to be smoothed over, Bell be- tain in 3 M. U.’s initial tilt, snap lieves t he Mustangs will be ready j -he hall with precision. for real action when the opening S. M. U. ha* played Denton each whistle sounds. Big Bob Belville, I year sine# 1922, gaining the long* The conference will probably sophomore backfield s t from Yea-Stud of the score in 13 out of 15 grab m ajor headline# in the Na­ 1 tries. The Teacher?, have earned kum. supplies the fireworks be- tion'* papers in one o f the open- one victory and played once to a ara— when Dutch M eyer takes his hind the line, cavorting w ith Ama- heavyweight Horned gang progs to Columbus to clash w th the Ohio Stats Buckeyes coached by Francis Schmidt, not long ago the T. C. V. mentor himself. DALLAS, Sept. 20.— (INS >— Football team * of the Southwest swung in to another C onference week of practice today with five the i*-ven m em bers read y to of roll *p in the curtain S atu rd ay season opener? rillo's John Harlow, Dan Patter- scoreless tie. son of Ft. Stockton, and Henry Guynes from Big Lake. Sports N otice UUU’!,!»»)>«-'..pm. WHMHIttWWiil :- from cf Another set of backs ready for •—n-irmmmniiuiiinmHiinmmirmniiMnn duty includes Jack Morrison, eon — student* of Vanderbilt’s coach; Red Ewing, j Ail University men former Dallas Tech star; Hoyle wishing to become assistant var- Graham of San. Antonio, and Che!- j *ity football managers, “ B” team the sea Crouch, Piano speedster. re ­ power than anticipated, with wing-1 quested to meet with Kelso Dab- men Billy Dowell, soph all-C oufer- j ney, Bill Sansing, and Bill W ard, ence player, and Keith Ranspot, J co-managers of the varsity team . W eatherford veteran, taking play- this afternoon at 3 o’clock in Mewl­ ing honors. j managers, or manager* of team , have been Pete Acker, Fort serial Stadium dressing rooms. Bell’s line appears to have more freshm an N o T o * D a n c e At Austin, the Wolves will be af! set to either how or cheer when Dana X,. Bible, in his first start as the new coach at The Uni­ versity at Texas, unveils his speedy backfield against Pete Cawthon’s Texas Tech Red Raiders. The game promise* to be no toe dance for the Steers, even though Long­ horn’? team is much greener this year than usual. Last week the Red Raider? opened up their sea­ son by beating F lagstaff Teachers of Arif Ona, 6-0. N o Breathers to again. against cautiously see ne action -————— . c — ! of the time have brought him S hoe Wry L o o k s G o o d Coach Norton ha* no com plaint to offer on the passing work of aerialist Jim Shoe key, veteran Interesting to dopester* trying bo “get a line” on conference pros- peep* will he the games scheduled j a* breathers— such plans don’t! COL .EGE STATION, S ep t 20. the eorQ a ways work out—for Southern — Th* Texas Aggies, rapidly near- ing top form a fte r two weeks o f Methodist, Bay’or and Arkansas. work, are beginning to see at The Mustangs take on their an­ lea,«t partial solution to th e prob­ n u s’ fmst opponent, North Texas th a t have been crinkling lems Teachers, who lost last week to Coach Hom er N orton’s broad fore- I from ^ m er» ? r Sophomore w «le-1 Au**:n College, 6 -0; Baylor ad­ mon “ i Olton Price, of Newcas­ head considerably of late. vances the tle. And he ran a broad lins Southwestern University Pirate*; tbrough notations on place k ick-' while Th* Razorback* grapple with lug when Price* Letterman Bill Cen* rn! Ok a he-ma Boyd of Gilmer and Sophomore mood. i Bill A rdish, of Brenham , stuck 105 straight through the bars during ; '"me morning session. Quarter­ back Dick Vitek, letterman of Granger, also figure* to do a bit of the place booting. N a s r s t a P u n t e r Football* in the air have been Teachers of Rd- j the featu res of the C adets’ prac­ tice* as team attendant? dumped r ag a fte r bag of bai * en the grid for the player* to kick and throw. And from th# balls' gyrations have come tb s points th a t “ B ounding Bobby” Nesrsta, letterm an h alf from Flatonia, probably will be End* Not Too Bad No. I p u n ter, th at the Aggies will j Despite the fa c t Bill Seago, let- offer a deadly forw ard pass s t ­ tack and th a t their place kicking tarm ac wing from Gilmer, dsctdsd fo r point* a fte r touchdowns will not to re*snter school, the Aggie* be considerably improved th is year. • end problem isn't as pressing as it h w b M B . Big R.nVln B ritt, cf I . . f r a g , p u n rer m d R* n * ,r j " em‘ Mo Mom! nit into th* cc^ h e* predicted of T e x a* A A M ’ fo r another week Other games r i v i n g Texas tan rn* this week-e d in d u e * ' Au*- f waster r, Ok a- tin College v*. So boma Teachers < D urar.t; A bi­ lane Chn n i m vs lch r. T a r lto n ; B a re . S mn:.ms v* Kentucky S tate Teachers c M irra y ; West Texas S tate vt, D ••..ti B aker; F.rst Texas Teacher* v Louisiana C d- leg*; Trinity v* 8am H< uston T eacher*; S outh* -* Texas Teach* av• va. I ’&ynej McMurry vs Be h r;c- tier In stitu te ; Texas A & I. v* Randolph Field; Texas Werivyar w Weatherford Jar-. r ( Lilt* Golden W rit named on off' season dope rhart? \ f *t m a? th, probable punter, seem ingly him lapt F«a r ’ and PQw erful Bruno ; faded into the background a bit Schroeder, of Lockhart, ha* taken durir g r p( rung dav? when a do*en the tran sfo rm atio n from letterm an and :• ire - \ ■ -a n sticking th eir bullback to end both gracefully and j toe? into th* bali, The fa cts th a t; effvctively, he im p ro v e-1 The Aggies seem certain to miss mer t and that he is a b e tte r kicker j the g re at lins backing produced by J than the it: «r boys who figure to Charlie DeWar# and Le* Cum-: be in the lineup a m ajor portion ming* last year, h u t Coach Norton : — ; "" ----- — | ha? had his centers, fullbacks and ; taking the blam# fo r the T exan* even guards doing more defensive, i defeat. j stints than offensive work. The St. M ary's Rat lee# cf San Antonio will again tackle a i ali­ fe rn is team next Sunday when they take on th e Marine* team at Ran Diego Yes;et t. the Rati tiers lost, 7-6, to San Francisco’* Dons, in a usually good early- *ca»'>n game, With poor punt.r.g C r .d u .l i m p r o v e . n t s showing gradual -------- —— K » .r.t» . go Nesrsta Answers Bounding Bob Boots Booming Ball N P ra yer; Just Arrived—New Shipment— Fall’s Newest, Smartest Models Authentic smartness and genuine pleas­ ure are yours in one of these! Single and doub e-breasteds . . . plain and sport ba cit* . . .plain and fancy pattemt. A $2 2 50 $2 5 Months Divided Payment Plan t T h e Co-Op h a s inaugurated a low price policy on new school supplies. Large reductions have been made. Save by buying your school supplies at your own store. Official THEME PADS, Were 15c Spiral Notebooks, Old Price, 15c; _________ New Price BLUE BOOKS, Now ... — ______ .. 3 for TYPEWRITER PADS, Formerly 15c. Now. INK, 15c Bottle ALL 5c PENCILS INDEX CARDS, Were 15c. Now MASTERPIECE FILLER PAPER NO FEBOOKS, Formerly 50c. Now 9 c 9 c S c I O C 1 2 c - 4 c I O C - 7 V2 3 5 c HammermiH's Eye-Ease F I L L E R P A P E R Formerly 15c or 2 for 25c Now 8 */2C or 3 for .... 2 5 c S P E C I A L T O L A W S T U D E N T S Punched, 3-ring Typing Paper S . , , s o * UNIVERSITY CO-OP "THE STUDENTS' O W N STORE" rn TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 Phone 2-3164 T H E D A IL Y TEXAN Phone 2-3165 The First College Daily in the South PAGE FIVE Red Raider Guards INTRAMURALS DAY by DAY OO O C J S C V JO H N a MCCULLY T E X A N tP O H T f E D I T O R C U ) \ - / o o o / aam M INUS T H E W OMEN Sans women (or rather almost), the Texas Longhorns take the field Saturday against the Texas Tech Red Raiders. | Wild feminine shrieks will be scarce when Jud Atchison runs for la touchdown. Beautiful young U. T. sirens will be few and far be- J tween. Many freshman girls will be deprived of the opportunity to see T H E IR football team in action opening day. Senior girls who are members of sororities will miss one of the four home football games of their last year in the University. Three weeks will elapse before these girls will have a chance to see a game here in Austin. For, kind friends, Panhellenic has decreed that Saturday will be given over to rush parties. Instead of yelling for Wolfe to make a touchdown, they will yell for little Mary Freshman to pledge Kappa Theta Zeta. Instead of eating peanuts and drinking soda pop, they will be eating cake and drinking pink lemonade. Instead of supporting their University, they will be hot-boxing ; prospective pledges. Ah, me! FO O TBALL RUSH PA R TY I I still don’t see why at least some of the girls can’t take time off and go to' the game. Maybe a few disloyal members of some of the pledges will do that. Why not let the bulk of the girls pair off and take a couple of rushees to the game, leaving a skeleton crew on the job at the house to take care of things? Let the prize rushees, for example, stick around the house with the best rushors. Let the remainder and the sew-ups go to the game with some of the girls who happen to like the game. Or switch things around. Maybe the prizes like football too. Send them to the game and keep the unwanted ones at the house where they will be sure not to corrupt any of the prizes. There are lots of possibilities. RAM BLIN’ R O U N ’ The University becomes more of a country club every day . . . now we are getting a badminton court down behind the Union . . . if we could only have an open swimming pool between the Main Build­ ing and the Woman’s Building, everything wmuld be fine . . . except for a golf course across the Forty Acres . . . Adolph Kiefer, ap­ proached by Hollywood studios with contracts, turned them down and came back to the University . . . Guess he figures the contracts will be as good or better after he goes to town in the 1940 Olympics . . . And note the shirt he brought back from Japan . . . C O N G R A T S , J U D ! My best to Jud Atchison, hip-alinging left halfback on his appoint­ ment as captain for D. X. Bible’s first game in the Southwest Con­ ference since 1929. No better choice could have been made, for Jud is one of the most popular members of the team and the boys will work well with him. Freshman Squad Holds First Practice Under Price, Gray Ninety-odd freshmen have begun practice on the freshman field lander the tutelage of Jack Gray and Ed Price, former Longhorn ends. -Prominent among them, according to pre-season predictions, are sev­ eral players from Amarillo High School and Schreiner Institute. Although Monday marked the first day of official practice, most w< re suited up to play against the varsity in Saturday’s scrimmage. Several have been practicing unofficially for a week. Below is a list of the squad. Name— I Atchison, B u c k ■ A - iv... t I Weight Position Height Age Home Town ,.200......Tackle ........GT ..... 20......... Hillsboro 170 Guard ........5’11 Christian, Jimmy ..... 17 ..... Jefferson Billingsby, Clifton....190........Center .......6’ breton, J. W .... 145....... Back ..........5’7%....18--- Henderson End .......... 6’1 ...... 19-....— .... Edison Barefield, Morris ....165,. • Bcaven, Bill ............170..... Back ...........5*10..... 19..~ San Antonio .23.... Mt. Pleasant ■Copeland, H a r r y W Cooney, W a lte r .184 Guard ............. 5’10..... 2 0 ........ Houston I Colgrove, Lloyd .... 178.......Back ..........5’10..... 19....... Falfurias ....173..... End ........... 6’3 ..... 18..Cristobal, C.Z. San Benito Cowan, P in k y .......... 170..... Guard ........5’10.....17......... Midland Campbell, R a lp h ...... 210..... Tackle _____5’11..... 21...... Fort Worth Chiver*, Arnett ___ 175...... Back .......... 5’1Q.....20............ Borger Dclk, Frank ______ 170...... End ............6’2 ---21....... Arlington Deutsch, W ilin .......... 170..... End ...... .....6’2 ......19.......... Caldwell Drew, Charles....... 180..... Center ....... 6’8 ..... 18.... San Antonio ........5’9 ......20............. Hondo Dawson, Ted I Cruntz, Charles ..... 145.... ..Back ........... 5’4 ..... 18 ....... 188...... Guard Here it is! . . . as featured in Life and Esquire The Grizzly Brogue The shoe that is sweeping every smart Campus in America . . a real M A N ’S shoe. TAYLOR-MADE of rich Brown Calf . • • with 27 iron cushion soles . . . 50 $ 7 The Bootery D O W N T O W N — 606 C O N G R E S S Home of Varsity Five Shoes— Still $5 111. Back Captures By H A R P O Zuppke’s Attention Senior Back Shines In Wolverine Camp , , , a ball game seem like from the . and was hitting around ,400. . in the summer S1C e c C H AM PAIG N , IU., Sept (IN S ) — Tony Mazeika, 20 . . , junior Jake hits j ha}fhack f, om Chicago, was get- attention from Coach . intramural Roh Zuppke of illinois today, . p ate, a i0£ „ N ow I . T h o T im e . . . There is going to be a meeting man , , In scoring all three touchdowns the varsity made against a fresh- team Saturday, Mazeika of a i he team managers along showed plenty of speed and drive about the end of „ eptember, so an{j appears marked for a first* you organizations had better get team your teams together and elect | your manager, and when the call for tennis double and playground entries comes you can go right along with the rest of the show. Journalists to Get New Phone System " _ ______ 0_________ H a p p y H e r b G on e j ----------- AN N ARBO R, Mich., Sept. 20. — ( IN S ) — It would be no surprise on the Michigan campus if Stark Ritchie, senior back, turned out to be the Wolverines* chief triple threat man of the season. In recent scrimmages, Ritchie his been doing some flashy run­ ning for the first line team, has completed passes with accuracy i and consistency and his kicking : has been satisfactory. Although a twisted ankle has ! been bothering him, Ritchie was j scheduled to work with the var­ sity attain today. Absent from intramural? and A switchboard for the new tele­ school this year is “ Happy Herb” phone system which will serve the Cartwright. Carty was the win-. Department of Journalism, the ner of the individual participa- Texas Student Publications, all editorial offices of the three Uni- tion trophy two years ago. I ’H be seeing you on the intra- versity publications, and the proof- i reader’s room at the University ; Press, has been ordered. -------- o-------- mural fields. Katherine Finch, daughter of Louis Baethe, comptroller of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Finch, will j Texas Student Publications, Inc., leave September 28 for New York said Monday that the new equip- City to enter the Traphagen ! ment will not arrive for two weeks. School of Fashion. Miss Finch re-j Final details of operation have not ceived her degree from the Uni- been settled, Mr. Baethe ex- versity last June. | plained. In looking over the list of the ten men who gathered the most points towards the individual par­ ticipation trophy last year I noted that Robert Moers (he is almost sure to repeat), Jimmie Krause, Juneman, Pat Pickett, “ Horse” Bill Hodges, and Glen Parmley (another repeater if the Urban together Sturbans can gather some good men) are back in I also noticed that all of school. these men with the exception of one, Glen Parmley, are fraternity men. This situation would make things look like a mighty rough road for the independents except for one little rule which “ Dean” Whitaker put in his rule book. T h re e T r o p h ie s This year three trophies are to be given. These monuments of athletic prowess are to be given to the man gathering the most points in each of the three divi­ sions. Of course, there is a little matter of difference of size among the three trophies. One trophy is larger than the other two and will go to the man with the highest total point average, but the point of interest being that the three cups will be equally distributed among the three divisions. W hen D. X. B ible sends hit becks ch arging e t the m iddle o f th* T ex a s T ech lin e Saturday aftern oon, s tiff op position to the charge it likely to be m e t in th e p e r t o n t of the tw o Red Raider g u a rd s, Louis J o n e s a n d P e t e O w ens, p ic tu r e d above. B o th Jo n e s, lin e - c a p ta in of this y e a r ’s T e c h te a m , a n d O w ens, l&O -pounder f r o m Levelland, have b een a r o u n d on th e T e c h te am * of th e la st tw o y e a r s and h a v e proved b u lw a r k s of a T ech d e fe n s e t h a t has sto p p e d some of th e b e t t e r te am s of th e n a tio n . .20 208........ .........5’11 190....... Back .........6’ _...18......... Houston Earlywine, Herman 175 Evans, Robert .......165...... Back .........5’10.....22............ Hearne Engelke, Louis ....... 180.Center ...............6’2 ..... 19....... Galveston Flowers, Bob .—...... 175......Center ....... 6’1 ..... 21..... Big Spring Finch, Jo h n ........— .19............ Uvalde 188 ......Center ... 6’3 Fannin, Oliver ....... 180.......Tackle ........6’3 ..... 17....... Fort Worth Grubbs, E. W ........... 190.....Center .-.5'H.... 17............. Orange Gipson, Jam e s.......... 175......Center ........6’1 ..... 22......Santa Anna Graves, Hoyt ......... 160...„„..End ...........5’10.....21........ Beaumont Garrett, Joe.............185.Tackle ..............6’ ..... 21.. Raymondville Gill, John..........---- 160.....Back ..........5’10....18......Santa Anna San Antonio Hunt, Thomas Hilliard, J. P . ...... ...163......Back ..... 5’8 ..... 21......... Orange Back .........6’10..... 19............... Waco Herring George ......175 ..... 18...... Abernathy Haupt, W. D Hartshorn, Bill ....... 162 .......Back ..........5’10.....19...... . McAllen Huttig, J. E ............170........End ............ 5*11.....19.......... Giddings Howie, Wade .........163....... ........6’1 ___ 21-—....... Terrel? ....-175....... Back ..........6’2 ..... 21.... San Antonio Jones, Carrol Jarmon, A. B ........... IO O .....Back .......... 5’9 ..... 21 ... San Antonio Kelly, J. T ................ 150.....End ............ 5*9 ..... 16.... Forney Kilman, Bill ....... ....ISO .......Guard ......,.6’2 .....19 Fort Worth Koschak, John ........ 172......Back ..........6’ ^ .....17........ Galveston 161...... End ............6’2 ......17......... Houston Krahn, K erm an Layden, P e te Back ........5’9 ......17......... — Dallas .,165 .....22— San Benito Ledbetter, Newman 200......Tackle ........ 6’ Lack, Gene ............ 180....... Tackle ........ 6’1 ..... 22......... Kerrville McMichael, Thomas 160...... Back .......... 5’9 ___ 18—— ..... Cason Mclnnis, Ellis ........ 182........End ........... 6’1 ..... 19 San Saba McMurrey, R. L ........ 180.....Guard ...___ 5’11..... 18.... Yoakum McReynojds, Jack ....175......Guard ....... 5'10..... 18.. Mineola Mason, H e n ry .......... 144.....Back .......... 5’7 ..... 21....... Plainview Mathew, Jack .........160.......Center ____ 5’10 Lufkin Morrow, Joe ...........195...... Guard ..........6’ ..... 20......... Midland 155....Back .......... 5’9 ..... 19— San Antonio Moore, Joe .......... Montrief, A. E Fort Worth ..... 22 Kleinman, Maurie ....175..... Guard ...... ...5’6 ..... 18 ^an Ange.o ..... 17 College Station Nelson, Robert ..... End ..........6’1 ...... 17............. Dallas Nesbitt, Morgan .... Remaining names 195......Tackle ........6’ IT O the freshman roster w ill be run 185..... End .............6’ 19....... on row’s Texan. in tomor- Wonder what intramurals will be like with A rt Moers absent from its midst? No doubt there J will be much rejoicing from some j of the boys, but it really puts the S. P. E .’s in a spot. That M a n ’* B ack Lefty O’Connell is still around school and that means that some independent team is going places. Last year Lefty was manager for the Austex’s and at Fite Nite he almost walked his legs away go­ ing to receive medals his team had won. Also wonder if O Connell, Neu, and M. Smith are going to team up again this year? Cordon Roundtree looks like the cream of the crop among the soft­ ball pitchers, but look for this boy I hear he really has Johnie Kuhn. what it takes ( I for one sincerely hope he has). C a n T h e y R e p e a t? Parmley and Townsen won the tennis doubles in the ( lub divi­ sion last year, but I hardly look for them to repeat now that dor­ mitories have been added to this division. As yet, I haven't seen Recknagle and Woodward, win­ ners of the independent division last year, but Elliot and Shultz, Delta Tau Deltas and last year's University champions, are back. I still say look for Harvey Weil and his partner in the fraternity di­ vision. By the way, tennis dou­ bles start September 29. D o n’t Be ‘Hog*’ in The tennis courts are open to all students the University. They are your courts. At present there are not any supervisors to be at the courts to allot the amount of time to the players. Let’s all try and do our part and not be a common old tennis “ hog." Re­ member someone else wants to play. Now just one more little word about the tennis courts— try to keep them in just as good shape as possible. P ic k le . T he Ball T hope Jake Pickle is playing Jake not only softball this year. plays second base it the way should, but makes a ball game Just Arrived! A Special Group or NEW FALL SUITS Be sure to see this unusual selection of new Fall suits before you buy. You will find represented double-breasted drape and conservative models with the most important new style details, fabrics so that varied, and patterns so beautiful these suits look worth twice the price. A n d at these prices, there is no reason to be without a good suit this Fall. $2250 I 8 50 and Exira Trousers Exira Trousers $ h $5 Sizes 32 to 42 Share Our Values And Our Friendliness For Shaeffer Pens, Pencils and Sets, Come To H E M P H I L L ’S BOOK STORE (A C R O SS FROM L A W BLDG.) / IV orldi low ed God Vert! TIm wWta ( idauWSw th* li t •tim*" pen CARVE A CAREER WIW SHEAFFER'S YOU THINK, end IT WRITES! Before you touch point to paper, the Dry-Proof Cop keeps the tip moist, ready-to-go. When it touches paper, the platinum- channelled Feathertouch point flow* fr eely,instantly.Whileyou write,Stream­ lined Balance5 design prevents hand fatigue, offsets brain inaccuracy. As you’re writing, the visibility feature warns when to refill. And when you re­ fill, O N E forceful stroke empties, cleans, fills, keeps the pen fit.. .As the years of usefulnessadd up,you realize the econ­ omy of a Sheaffer pen.Through school, through business, through life—-Carve a Career with Sheaffer’sl SHEAFFER^ PA R A - LA ST IK , th* N E W w ay to pa*t*j do** not carf th i n noit shoot*, 15c and up S K R IP - O R IP liquid Paito or Mucilage, 10c and up. P E N S , Al LL C O L O R S $ 2 .7 5 TO $20 P E N C I L S, $1 TO $ S ONLY SHEAFFER HAS A Eon-SK R IP. S u cco rer to Ink, 2 oz. T ic. P *r m a rn* nt S K R IP took#* bottor Puli no** roc Ord*. V ISOLATED ... Il f ET HME* GUARANTEE. . . 2 WAY FEA TNE* TOUCH’ POINT... STREAMLINED BALANCE* ,. ONE-1 TROKE VACUUM AND LIVER FILLING. TAKES IN OVER 400 P f* CENT MORE SKRIP PER STROKE THAN MULTIPLE STROKE PENS...VISIBLE SKRIP SU PPLY... DRY- PROOF ANO AIR-SEALED MOST DESIRED PEN FEATURES Complete Stocks of Shaeffer’s Pens, Pennants & Skrip LOOSE-LEAF NOTE BOOKS BY LIV-LONG COVERS Flexible— pleasant to hand s— a new singe ply material, non-woven, does not fray at the edges and has remarkable surface wear! 7 % , 5 IOO Sheets Paper 8I/2x5‘/2 IOO Sheets Paper 90c 95c 91/ 2x6 IOO Sheets Paper $ 1.00 IH /,k8I/i IOO Sheers Paper $1.15 Embossed w ith University Seal Embossed with Seal University PAGE SIX The F irst College Daily in the Smith T hone 2-8164 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-3165 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 G uldahl W ins W estern O pen Football Dorm F a r Second S traig h t Tim e Is ^xc*uslve Oak Grove D orm ito ry , w hich it by ? ? f.0 0 t^ ! 1 p la y e rs’ C L E V E L A N D , S e p t 20— (IN S ) I tio n fig u re s. second stra ig h t G uldahl shot even p a r going out an d com ing hom e. W hile Sm ith — R alph G uldahl, C h i t t o p r o f ? ? -1 sional, won his W astern Open G olf cham pionship I th re a te n e d several to d ay by d e fe a tin g H orton Sm ith, J last nine, th e black-haired G uldahl I ^o rt " as m ade also o f Chicago, by a fo u r-stro k e m arg in in th e ir 18-hole p la y o ff of th e 72-hole m edal to u rn e y . ^ mp exc US1V® thls y e a r* L a st > ear, th e firs t year th e dor- the m ito ry had been o p erated , a n ef- to accom m odate a *‘ th e p lay ers, and it was filled to to J 0Tl‘y a b o u t th irty -fiv e m en, those to d a y wag by j w ^o com pose th e f ir s t squad, will be allow ed to live a t Oak Grove. L e tte r m en a re given firs t choice o f room s. catch in g G uldahl tw o stro k es in th e last tw elve holes of play. Sm ith scored th re e birdies to bring him th is close led his Chicago rival th ro u g h o u t. The n e a re st H o rto n cam e tim es on Ja c k G ray, fo o tb all coach, is business d ire c te r f o r the fresh m an URAM IM PR O V E S M IN N EA PO LIS, M inn., Sept. 20. (IN S )— A ndy D ram h a s shown such im provem ent in th ro w in g f o r ­ th a t C oach B ernie w ard passes Bierrrmn of M innesota to d a y con­ ce n tra te d on an aerial a tta c k in p referen ce to th e m an y la te ra ls they have em ployed in re c e n t sea­ sons. dorm itory," and is assisted b y Ed Price, who also coaches fresh m an football. H ugh W olfe, J . T. K ing, and Jack B oyer have been nam ed as pro cto rs o f th e firs t, second, and th ird floors, resp ectiv ely , and Mrs. J. M. G riffith is h o u sem o th er. Sweaters Ready For Swimmers ™w Coach Tex R ob ertso n has a n ­ nounced th a t th e follow ing m en, who le tte re d la st sp rin g , m ay g e t th e ir sw e a te rs by calling fo r them a t th e ath letic council in th e business o ffice o f G regory Gym. sw im m ing in Those who le tte re d a re : T h u r­ m an T alley, c a p ta in ; R ollin B aker, Zay Sm ith, Joe Bowling, Jo h n H u b b ard , Jo h n (H ondo) C rouch, Ja c k B erg feld , E d L evine, Ned L ooney, Arnold T ravis, C harles Z w iner, and Ja c k M endell. Tn keep in g w ith th e g en eral r e ­ vision an d ad dition o f courses in v ario u s d e p a rtm e n ts o f th e U ni­ v ersity , th e School o f Law is now o ffe rin g a new course in B usiness O rg an izatio n . Ira P. H ildebrand, d ean o f the school, will teach th e cou rse. The course h as been co n stru cted fro m tw o sh o rt-term s courses, P ri­ v a te C o rp o ratio n s an d P a r tn e r ­ ships. This revision and com bina­ tio n o f th e tw o courses has been needed fo r several y e a rs b u t lack o f p ro p e r te x t books p rev en ted its ex ecu tio n . Grays One Up In Negro Teams’ World’s Series fie and R ay Brow n holding the losers to fo u r h its. T he tw o team s w ere scheduled to m ove to In dianapolis today for a gam e th e re to n ig h t, an d will con­ tin u e th e , series in several E a st­ ern cities. CHICAGO, Sept, 20.— (IN S ) — The H om stead G rays o f P itts ­ b urgh w ere one u p to d ay on th e oom bined n eg ro A m erican G iants- K ansas C ity M onarchs in th e N egro W o rld 's series. The G rays won th e o p en er h e re PO L IO NOT SO BAD S P R IN G F IE L D , 111., Sept. 2 0 c - (IN S )— D r. F ra n k J irk a , sta te health d ire c to r, w arns a g a in st hys­ te ria over in fa n tile paralysis. “ I t strik e s te rro r in th e h e a rts of th e th o u g h tless because it leaves victim s w ith w ithered arm s o r legs, b u t sc a rle t fe v e r and d ip h th eria are fa r m ore p re v a le n t and b rin g m uch m ore sorrow to h u m a n ity in y esterd ay , 5 to 2, w ith Bill M cD uf- • th e ir w a k e .” A g allery of 3,000 follow ed the tw o pros th ro u g h th e e x tra ro u n d in the face of th e usual b lu ste r­ ing wind. The w e a th e r was com ­ p ara tiv e ly w arm fo r th e firs t tim e d u rin g th e to u rn ey . G uldahl enriched h im self to th e e x te n t o f some $600, including th e 8500 fo r th e w in n er an d his h a lf of th e e x tra g ate. Sm ith g o t $300 fo r second place w ith th e added sh are in th e g ate. I t w as the second tim e in th e astern O pen h isto ry tha^ an ex- I J * round had to be played, H a rry S m ith req u ired 41 strokes to g e t ! Cooper and Ry L a g o o n opposing to th e tu rn , five o v er th e regula- eac^ oth e r in a 36-hole p lay -o ff ! a t P e o ria in 1934. . , . _ ,. T ied at 268 a t th e end of th e reg u latio n play y esterd ay , G uldahl carded a 72 today fo r a to ta l o f 360 fo r th e n in ety holes o f play. Sm ith posted a 76 fo r a to ta l of 364. T h eir c a rd s: P a r O ut „ 443 445 345— 36— G uldahl out 453 435 345— 3 6 - Sm ith out 464 445 464— 41— P a r in _ 434 544 534— 36— 72 G uldahl in 534 434 544— 36— 72 Sm ith in ... 333 554 534— 85— 76 incom ing nine the which he to u re d in 35 strokes, one und er par, Sm ith, tw ice w inner o f th e A nnual M aster’s Classic a t , A ugusta, G a., was no m atch fo r G uldahl tod ay . E x cep t on Notre Dame Is Ragged in Drill N OTRE DAM E, Ind., Sept. 20. th e No. I — (IN S )— A lth o u g h N o tre Dam e eleven showed up raggedly in d e fe a tin g a sophom ore ag g reg atio n S a tu rd a y , Coach E l­ to d ay was pleased m er Hayden w ith the w ork of tw o o f his ace backfield m en, B unny M cCorm ick and M ario Tor. el Ii. In the m eanw hile. L ayden p la n ­ ned a program calcu lated to in ­ crease the driving pow er of the V a rsity , which several tim e s w as held fo r downs by the scrubs. Effie Keaster Gets ~ Teaching Promotion Miss E ffie Lou K e e ste r, f o r ­ m e rly in stru c to r c f physical e d u ­ c atio n and h ealth in th e San A n ­ gelo ju n io r high school, has been app o in ted to sim ilar d u tie s 'n the se n io r high school to re p la c e M ss D orothy M iddleton, w ho to ta k e a position in M aryland U n i­ v ersity . le ft Miss K e a ste r is a g ra d u a te o f T e x a s Tech and lack? on y th re e h o u rs’ w o rk on h e r m a ste r of art? d eg ree fro m the U n iv ersity o f T exas. Pre-M eds to M eet To Plan Smoker Tip-Top Special Bar-B-Q on Bun 1 5 c Tip-Top Bar-B-Q Plate 3 5 c Sandw iches of AH Kinds Plenty of Parking Spat* T I P - T O P Sandwich Shop Ph. 2-7741 C. E. Pearson, Mgr. I Mile South on San A ntonio Highway Cha*. H ow ell’s G U L F Service Station R e f i l t e r e d L u b r i c a t i o n St earn Car W ashing STU D EN T EM PLO Y EE S 19th and Rio G rande Phone 9 8 2 6 * The only stock of National C ol J ♦ loge Fraternity Jewelry in Austin. ♦ f T he f ir s t re g u la r m eetin g o f Alpha Epsilon Delta, honorary J W e deliver while others are * pre-med fra te rn ity , will be held ♦ thinking ab out it. C om e in and * J in T exas Union t O Clock to n ig h t. at 7:30 J look— C om pare our prices. 301 f P la n s sm oker f o r a pre-m ed will be discussed a t th e m eeting, a n d com pletion o f th e pre-m ed censue will be p la n n e d . Aboil* th irty -tw o m em b ers o f th e f r a t e r ­ n ity a re ex p ected to a tte n d . MI Mc Kl n n o n ’s Jewelers— Optometrists 607 Congress A ve, FOR STUDENTS TAKING ENGINEERING 301 On New and Slightly Used mu SAVINGS DRAWING SETS K & E POSTS -DIETGENS — U. S. BLUE W e have complete Supplies for Engineering Drawing 301 as well as Complete Supplies for ALL Engineering Courses COME IN AND GET YOUR FREE DESK BLOTTER TODAY HEMPHILL’? ■ ■ B O O K S T O R E W Across from Lam Bldg, 1 2 B lo ck G re g o ry G ym . Phone 2-3164 D aily T ex an Classified A d: Phone 2-3165 Announcements Coaching NOTICE COACHING; French, Gentian, Latin, G r e e k . T r a n s l a t i n g : 2 - 0 8 9 2 , e v e n i n g s . Classified Advertisers You can run your c ’assi- in fiftd very economically The D a ;iy Texan: R E A D E R A D S 20 W o rd s— M aximum 1 time ........................ .40 55 2 times 3 times — ................... 70 6 t :mes ____ 1.00 ........... Dressmaking A L T E R A T I O N S a n d D r e s s m a k i n g . H o u s e D r e s s e s a s p e c i a l t y . P r i c e s r e a s o n a b l e . IO y e a r s e x p e r i e n c e . W o r k g u a r a n t e e d . 304 E a s t 26 4 . Cal l 5 2 9 0 . For Sale S T U D E N T S : D o n ’t t y p e w r i t e r s . S e e t h e r e n t o r n e w b u y l a r g e s t s t o c k o f t o w n . All m o d ­ r e n t a t C r a d d o c k ' s B o o k s e c o n d - h a n d m a c h i n e s in els. B u y li k e S t o r e . 821 C o n g r e s s . 2 - 7 7 1 2 . U N D E R W O O D S t a n d a r d — C o m p l e t e ly o v e r h a u l e d r e c e n t l y . $3 0 . M a y be s e e n a t 706 S c a r b o r o u g h B u i l d i n g . Pawn Brokers Apartments for Rent Rooms Rooms r n M O N E Y T O L O A N o n D i a m o n d s . W a t c h e s . J e w e l r y o r A n y t h i n g o f V a l u e t o o I s r - - N o T "' n H i t r n 1 b a t h ; f u r n i s h e d N E W A p a r t m e n t ; L i v i n g r o o m , b e d r o o m . t e n n a n t . P r i ­ c a m p u s , 216 to s u i t v a t e e n t r a n c e . A d j o i n i n g A r c h w a y . P h o n e 4 0 6 0 . T W O B O Y S : F r o n t t r a n c e , a d j o i n i n g b a t h , b u s r o o m , p r i v a t e e n ­ lin e, p r i ­ v a t e h o m e L o v e l y n e i g h b o r h o o d . M e a l s o p t i o n a l . Call 2 - 9 8 6 9 . G R A D U A T E s t u d e n t s ; C o m f o r t a b l e r o o m f o r l a d le s , a d j o i n i n g s e c o n d fl oor, l a r g e i h o m e , s m a l l f a m i l y , f u r n a c e h e a t $ 1 7 5 0 t o $ 2 2 .5 0 . 1 0 6 W e a t 8 2 n d . 2 - 1 2 6 7 . N E A R U N I V E R S I T Y : D e l i g h t f u l a p a r t - . m e n t f o r 4 b o y s . 2 s t u d y r o o m s , r o o m , s l e e p i n g p o r c h , A l s o b e d s . 2 - 3 4 1 9 . l a r g e ^ l a r g e B O Y S : O n e v a c a n c y t w i n I h o m e . t w i n b e d s , s o u t h e a s t in q u ie t p r iv a te r o o m , a d j o i n i n g h a t h , p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e . 3 1 0 E a s t 1 6 th . 2 - 9 7 2 9 . N S T I D E N T S : F r o n t b e d r o o m , t w i n ! b e d s , g a r a g e , m e a l * o p t i o n a l , p r i v a t e b o g i e , <*r c o u p l e w i t h k i t c h e n p r i v i l e g e * . , 2 7 0 * S a l a d o . P h o n e 38 9 4 . 2 1 7 E a s t 6 t h Ph. 9229 Professional t o n i o . DR. F. M. S T E I N . F o o t S p e c i a l i s t , C h i r o ­ 6 t h t o 6 :1 0 . N i g h t a n d p o d i s t , 8 2 0 L i t t l e f i e l d B u i l d i n g . and C o n g r e s s . 9 : 9 0 S u n d a y a p p o i n t m e n t s . P h o n e 2 - 5 0 0 4 . Records F O R R E N T : S o u t h e a s t a p a r t m e n t w i t h p r i v a t e b a t h . R e a s o n a b l e . 1 9 3 4 S a n A n ­ N I C E T H R E E r o o m g a r a g e a p a r t m e n t . M o d e r n c o n v e n i e n c e s , l a r g e b a t h . 2 5 1 4 S o u t h C o n g r e s s . G I R L S E C O N O M I Z E I S m a l l a p a r t m e n t s ; a l s o r o o m - m a t e f o r 3 g i r l s . U n i v e r s i t y a p p r o v e d u r b a n . 7 1 0 W e s t 2 2 n d . h o u s e . R e a s o n a b l e . T h e S ib - . F I N E L A R G E S O U T H R O O M . l a r g e R O O M S f o r 4 b o y s s c r e e n e d p o r c h . in p r i v a t e k i t c h e n e t t e . b e d s . $9 e a c h . 710 W e s t 2 5 t h . 2-K 24 7. h o m e , s i n g l e C a l l B O Y S : N ic e l a r g e b e d r o o m * . $ 2 . 6 9 u p . 2 5 0 5 R io G r a n d e . P h o n e 2 - 9 4 4 4 . F U R N I S H E D v a t e e n t r a n c e , o n e b lo c k r o o m . P r i v a t e h o m e , p r i ­ f r o m U n i ­ v e r s i t y . 261 2 S p e e d w a y , P h o n e 9 2 6 6 . M E N : A t t r a c t i v e r o o m in p r i v a t e h o m e , 1 8 0 0 G u a d a l u p e . D IS P L A Y Help W anted c c 1, w ise x ! 'n. d e e p , 60c Insertion. I ----------------- ----- -------------------------------- — : W I L L G I V E R O O M in p r i v a t e m a t u r e w o m a n s t u d e n t i n : GRT "LA M PLIG H T.” ‘‘Got a D ate W ith t h e A n A n g e l . ' ’- —H a ! K e m p . “ I t ' s | t o D o.” ‘‘A ll Y o u W a n t f a m i l y t o . N a t u r a l T h i n g U n i v e r s i t y | D o I s D u n c e . ” — B i n g C r o s b y . R e c o r d * tVfc b l o c k s m u n i t y C e n t e r . 2 - 4 7 4 8 . ----------------------------------------- S O U T H A P A R T M E N T . A k o k i t c h e n , s h o w e r b a t h , p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e . [ L A R G E F U R N I S H E D B E D R O O M a n d f o r c o u p le s o r b o y s , p r i v a t e h o m e . 8 b l o c k s c a m p u s . 1 7 1 0 fr o m c a m p u s , n e x t s l e e p i n g p o r c h t o C o m - j s o u t h e a s t ---------------------------------------- - G u a d a l u p e . P h o n e 2 - 6 6 1 9 . G r a d u a t e S c h o o l in e x c h a n g e f o r s l i g h t J . R . R e e d M u a ic Co. - 0 5 C o n g r e s s . . s e r v ic e * , n o t m e n ia l . A d d r e s s B o x 26 5 , I — -— -------------------- — ----- I A u s t i n . — ...— — Service Stations R A Y W IL L IA M S O N S E R V IC E 2 B lo c k s S o u t h C a m p u s 1 9 t h A G u a d a l u p e S t r e e t s F U R N I S H E D G ro o m * S t r e e t ! 2 - m 2 B<1U K i t - ! F 0 R O N E » • « r o o m w i t h ' - ^ j o i n i n g h a t h . R e a s o n a b l e . 2 2 1 7 S a n ’ G a b r i e l . Call 2 - 5 6 5 5 . Furnished Apartments U N I V E R S I T Y n e i g h b o r h o o d : l i g h t ! 2 0 4 E a s t 2 2 n d . P h o n e 2 0 1 0 . a p a r t m e n t . W a t e r , F u r n i s h e d f u r n i s h e d . M E N : O n e o r t w o q u i e t , e m p l o y e d e t a - d e n t s , I * . 5 0 e a c h . T w i n b e d s , l i n e n , g a s f u r n i s h e d , P r i v a t e h o m e b e t w e e n C a p i t o l U n i v e r s i t y . 1 5 0 3 C o l o r a d o . 7 5 0 4 . G IR L S: r e m . b . 4 r o . n , A ? “ ™ ENJ i i . , . L l Y. ' , " h ' i 2 2 0 6 N U E C E S . N E W L Y O P E N E D t e l e ­ s l e e p i n g p o r c h , p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e s , p h o n e . g a r a g e . 2 0 4 E a s t 3 0 t h . C a l l 94 5 1 . F O R G I R L S : U p s t a i r s , 3 a n d 2 r o o m s , b a t h , s o u t h s l e e p i n g p o r c h . O n c a m p u s . 2 0 0 E a s t 2 2 n d . 2 - 8 1 2 9 . R o o m - B o a r d $ 3 9 - $ 4 5 . R o o m a l o n e $ 7 . 5 0 - $ 1 2 .& 0 2 b l o c k s d u e w e s t U n i o n B u i l d i n g . C A L L 2-7972 Furnished Cottages F O R B O Y S : N e w l y d e c o r a t e d c o m f o r t a b l e $ 7 . 6 0 - N o r t h e a s t C a m p u s . r o o m s . $ 1 0 .0 9 . G a r a g e . 40 9 E a s t 8 0 t h S t r e e t . F U R N I S H E D C O T T A G E , 4 r o o m s a n d h a t h . s l e e p i n g p o r c h . 6 1 0 W e s t 1 8 t h * R O O M S f o r 5 o r « b o y s in p r i v a t e h o m e . r o o m * . P r i v a t e e n t r a n c e t o b a t h a n d S t r e e t . L o t s w i n d o w s . 230 4 T r i n i t y . 2 - 2 6 0 5 . i n g b a t h B O Y S : N i c e s o u t h e a s t b e d r o o m , a d j o i n ­ in q u i e t p r i v a t e h o m e . A ls o r o o m b e t w e e n U n i v e r - a t t r a c t i v e s i n g l e s k y - C a p i t o l . 400 E a s t 1 6 t h . 65 1 6 . R O O M F O R 2 B O Y S in p r i v a t e h o m e , t w i n b e d s , a d j o i n i n g b a t h , n e a r c a m ­ i - a l a o p t i o n a l . 3 0 0 2 D u v a l . Call p u s , 2 - 4 6 7 6 . G E N T L E M E N : N i c e , in l o v e l y p r i v a t e h o m e In A l d r i d g e P l a c e . q u i e t r o o m 109 W e s t 8 2 n d S t r e e t . F R O N T B E D R O O M F O R B O Y S : A d j o i n - , i n g b a t h , p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e . N e a r U ni-< ve rs i t y. A l c o w a r d r o b e 2*38 L e a r!. P h o n e 8 0 4 7 . t r u n k f o r t a l e . B O Y S : S t u d v , b e d r o o m , p r i v a t e b a t h q u i e t E n f i e l d h o m e , 1 5 0 0 in L o r r a i n e . P h o n e 7 0 1 0 . R O O M S f o r 8 B o r e . N e w f u r n i t u r e , i n - \ n e r - e p r i n # m a t t r e s s e s . Q u i e t n e i g h b o r ­ th e s e . h o o d . 3 1 0 8 W e s t A v e n u e . 2 - 9 0 1 8 . t o s t u d y s e e I f y o u w a n t ^ Y O U ' L L N E V E R o c c u p y i n g s o u t h c le a n . t w o m e n . H o u s e a p p r o v e d . G a ­ l i g h t , c o ol, R E G R E T t h i s O n e o r r a g e . 2 3 0 5 L e o n . 2 - 2 7 4 6 , r o o m , d e n t s , D E S I R A B L E H O M E f o r s e n i o r l a w s t u ­ t u t o r * . E x c e p t i o n a l s o u t h r o o m s . C o n v e n i e n t U n i v e r s i t y a n d to t o w n . 8 0 2 S a n A n t o n i o . C all 7 6 0 6 . i n s t r u c t o r * , I N S T R U C T O R S , F a c u l t y M e m b e r s : D e­ l i g h t f u l n e w r o o m * o p p o s i t e U n i v e r s i t y C h ib . E v e r y t h i n g f u r n i s h e d . M aid s e r v i c e . 2 3 0 7 S a n A n t o n i e . C all 7 6 1 1 . Beauty Shops M . G . M c G a u g h O f f i c e a t 1 6 0 2 N e w f i e l d L a n e . 2 3 2 6 G u a d a l u p e P h o n e 459 7 G arage Rooms V I C T O R a p a r t m e n t . G a r a g e , p r i v a t e b a t h a n d B O Y S : F u r n i s h e d r o o m s . 8 b l o c k s o f R O O M S : T w i n b e d * , p r i v a t e b a t h , c o u p l e o r g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s . 2 b lo c k s n o r t h N I C E L Y F U R N I S H E D b e d r o o m in n e w I rf 2 - 0 8 0 6 . L Y * • n , r a n e *- 8 0 4 * * f t 2 2 n d ’ ^ o n e J F O R R E N T : 2 s i n g l e r o o m * in g a r d e n B A C H E L O R q u a r t e r s : V e r y d e s i r a b l e . 2 b e d r o o m s , g a r a g e , s l e e p i n g p o r c h . A l s o to r e n t . 180 4 S a n A n t o n i o . a r o o m G I R L S : U p s t a i r * r o o m s w i t h s o u t h s l e e p ­ i n g p o r c h , b a t h . O n c a m p u s . 2 0 0 E a s t 2 2 n d . P h o n e 2 - 8 1 2 6 . G R A D U A T E . i n d e n t s : U r g e i>riv H te r o o m a n d 6 e n t r a n c e . I>OPch F O R E I G N o r g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s w a n t e d r o o m w i t h p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e in q u i e t b lo c k s c a m p u s . C a l l 3 8 6 5 e v e n i n g s . a n d b a t h . S u i W e s t 2 J a t. 2 - 0 1 8 2 . e n t r a n c e . T e l e p h o n e 7 2 9 4 . c a m p u s . M e a l* o p t i o n a l . P r i c e r e a s o n - j ‘ . J a ble . 1 7 1 0 G u a d a l u p e . P h o n e 2 - 6 6 1 9 . \ ° f a a w a m - * ' 2 * ° ° * s h o w e r ; L A R G E G A R A G E R O O M , m a i d s e r v i c e l a v r t o r i e s , t w o l a r g e clo s e t s , p r i v a t e . P h o n e . F o r t w o m e n s t u d e n t s . 1 9 0 2 S a b i n e . 3 4 4 9 . t w o . ; _ _ _ F O R B O Y S : S o u t h e a s t I _ ‘ ; , r o o m p r i v a t e ; b a t h , e n t r a n c e , g a r a g e . 1 4 0 2 W i n d s o r R oad. C a l l 6 8 <7. ! 500 W E S T 1 8 t h : M e n — ' . — — — - u p s t a i r s s o u t h * — . . . e a s t a t t r a c t i v e r o o m . V e n e t i a n b li n d * . til* b a t h . 3 b l o c k s c a m p o * . l a r g e c l o s e t , w a l k i n g d i s t a n c e t o w n . 7 7 1 1 , C o m f o r t a b l e , q u i e t , s h o w e r , m a i d s e r v i c e . C o n v e n i e n t 1 4 0 0 G u a d a l u p e . P h o n e 2 - 8 2 6 9 , t w i n b e d s , j t o U n i v e r s i t y . I »».«*.** boos. .***» b a t h : to n a t u r e m a n o r c o u p l e ; n e w I h o u s e . 1 9 0 9 C l i f f S t r e e t . T e l e p h o n e M i s s «e*= . B l a n t o n . 2 - 0 1 4 5 . l i v i n g r o o m a v a i l a b l e N o v e m b e r 1 5 t h ; i n n e r s p r i n g m a t t r e s s e s ; n e w m o d e r n p r i v a t e b o m a , g a r a g e . 3 7 2 0 . G arage Apartment M E N : D e s i r a b l e u p s t a i r s s u i t e ; 2 b e d ­ r o o m s , c o n n e c t i n g s i t t i n g r o o m , b a t h . i n y e r d . 2 5 0 8 R i o G r a n d e . I Also r o o m Cal! 2 - 8 2 2 8 , F O R R E N T : L a r g e b e d r o o m a n d s l e e p ­ in g p o r c h e a c h . 2 5 0 7 Rio G r a n d e . f o r 8 b o y s a t $ 8 .0 0 T W O B O Y S : N e w g a r a g e a p a r t m e n t P r i - , _______________________________________________ v a t * b a t h , p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e . S o u t h e a s t I ~ V A C A N C Y r o o m f o r o n e bo y i n e x t r a nic e In p r i v a t e h o m e . S i n g l e be ds. e x p o s u r e . $ 2 3 . 0 0 . 204 E l m w o o d - 2 - 6 9 2 9 . I B L O C K C A M P U S : B e a u t i f u l l y f u r n i s h e d r o o m w ith p r i v a t e b a t h ; p r i v a t e en- 2 8 0 9 N u e c e e . Light Housekeeping t r a n c e , f u r n a c e h e a t . E s p e c i a l l y s u i t a b l e B E D R O O M 1920 fo r P h o n e 68 1 * . f a c u l t y m e m b e r . S p e e d w a y , O l d h a m . 2 - 7 7 2 8 . f o r 2 b o y s in p r i v a t e h o m e . 2 b l o c k s e a s t F o o t b a l l S t a d i u m . 2461 F R E N C H , G E R M A N H O U S E c o u p l e s , g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s w i t h o r ; w i t h o u t k i t c h e n . O n e b l o c k p u s . 2 5 0 3 G u a d a l u p e . P h o n e 2 - 7 4 9 6 . f o r b o y s , | B L O C K U n i v e r s i t y , c o o l f u r n i s h e d , a l l o p e n i n g f r o m c a m - ; ,n t o r e c e p t i o n h a ll. A d j o i n i n g h a t h . J u n - r o o m s , n i c e l y t h r e e U r g e ; j0 r s , s e n i o r s , g r a d u a t e s call 7 7 4 9 . N O R T H E A S T u p s t a i r s f o r b o y s , on* r o o m e x t r a l a r g e . R e a s o n a b l e . 226 0 N u e c e s P h o n e 7 2 8 2 . F I N K S O U T H c o r n e r r o o m w i t h o r w i t h - A T T R A C T I V E n e w f i v e o u t k i t c h e n p r i v i l e g e s , s l e e p i n g p o r c h b l o c k s c a m ­ G i r l s ’ a p p r o v e d h o u s e . 2 p u s . V e r y r e a s o n a b l e . 4 2 6 6 . d u p l e x f u l l y f u r n i s h e d , of c a m p u s , w i t h s o u t h e r n e x p o s u r e . 2 0 8 C al l W e s t 3 1 s t . P h o n e 2 - 6 6 1 4 . 668. r o o m u p s t a i r s i m n b l o c k * BOY’S : R o o m s w i t h s l e e p i n g p o r c h a v a i l ­ s i n g l e t o c a m p u s , 7 1 5 P e r k P la c e . a b l e m a i d b e d * . C lo s e ___ s e r v i c e , g a r a g e , Rooms B O Y S —- f r o n t b e d r o o m w ith p r i v a t e e n ­ to c a m ­ tr a n c e . A d j o i n i n g b a t h . Clo** pu s . B o a r d o p t i o n a l . 3 1. P h . 107 E . 2 -0 8 6 3 . F O R M E N - D o u b l e a n d N e a r U n i v e r s i t y a n d r o o m * . t o w n . P r i v a t e e n ­ t r a n c e . S h o w e r . M a u l S e r v i c e . 6 0 9 W e s t 1 3 t h , T e l e p h o n e 2 - 9 7 8 8 . s i n g l e ROOM F O R B O Y S : P r i v a t e h o m e . p r i ­ v a te e n t r a n c e , g a r a g e . R e a s o n a b l e . P h o n e 7 034 o r 74 8 3 , b a t h . N e a r W e s t 1 8 t h . U P S T A I R S R O O M S in p r i v a t e h o m e , p r i ­ >4 c a r l i n e . R e a s o n a b l e . 608 P a t t e r ­ e n t r a n c e , g a r a g e . v a t e b a t h a n d b lo c k son. T e l e p h o n e 2 - 5 6 4 6 . N E W L Y D E C O R A T E D R O O M S f o r bo y*. a d j o i n i n g s l e e p i n g p o r c h a n d a d j o i n i n g $09 U n i v e r s i t y . 2 - 8 8 2 8 . B O Y S : T w o « o u t h c a s t u p s t a i r * r o o m * in q u i e t p r i v a t e h o m e n e a r U n i v e r s i t y . T w i n b e d s , p r i v a t e b a t h , n e w f u r n i s h i n g s . 8 0 3 E a s t 3 2 n d . 2 - 3 0 9 1 . R O O M S F O R B O Y S In p r i v a t e h o m e , a d - j o i n i n g b a t h e , p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e , U n i v e r - s i t y 291 6 W e s t A v e n u e . P h o n e 2 - 5 5 8 3 . n e i g h b o r h o o d , r e s i d e n t i a l M E N : 2 n i c e b e d r o o m * , a d j o i n i n g tile b a t h . $ 2 0 f o r t w o . B e d r o o m , b a t h , o v e r t w o . 4 0 6 s i n g l e b e d s , $14 f o r s e c t i o n . ' g a r a g e , I E a s t 1 7 t h S t r e e t . N o refunds for cancella­ tions. Responsicle for one incorrect In se-t on only, ALL ADS C A S H IN A D V A N C E M essen g er until 4:30 p.m., w eek-days. Coun­ ter service until 6 p.m., service Dial 2-S164. fo r fu rth e r inform ation on m essen­ ger service. Barber Shop; H A I R C U T S i c 409 W e s t 2 4 — P.ear V a r s i t y T h e a t e r Houses for Sale N e w H o m e s in E n fie ld F o r S a le By Owner A T P R I C E ? A N D T E R M S T H A T W I L L B E A T T H i S E O L D R E N T R E C E I P T S r e s t r i c t e d T h e s e p la c e* a r e l o c a t e d in o n e o f t h e ' s e c t i o n s of r e s i d e n t i a l f i n e p e o p l e on t h e y t h a t l o n g f o r a re a l r e p r e s e n t h e s t A u s t i n — f i r e h o m e s a n d all will t im e . T h e s e p r o p e r t i e s v a l u e s a s y o u will fi n d . t i d e s . S o w e ll c o n s t r u c t e d r e t na in g o o d s e c u r i t y P r i c e s f r o m 1 3. 300 to $ 3 , 6 0 0 D R I V E O U T E N F I E L D R O A D , t u r n n o r t h o n N e w f i e l d L a n e . I w il l be o n t h e t o s h o w y o u . g r o u n d d a . l y M A R S H A L L B E A U T Y S H O P : S p e c i a l ; IS.OO O il P e r m a n e n t * $ 2.00. $ 5 . 0 0 P e r - m a n e n t * $3.6 0, E y e l a s h a n d e y e b r o w D y e BOc. 4 0 1 1 '-2 G u a d a l u p e . P h o n e 2 - 5 9 4 3 . WELDON'S “ S m a r t H a i r d r e s s e r s ” C r e a t o r * o f S m a r t P e r m a n e n t W’ a v e * * n d C o i f f u r e s Com plete Beauty Service Including A Budge-*- Booth Phone 2-91 I I Laundries h o m e l a u n d r y I A i P H O N E 3 7 0 2 One Day Service D R IS K IL L H O T E L L A U N D R Y 644^ 9 East 7th 2 D o o r * N o r t h o f V a r s i t y T h e a t e r 2 4 0 2 G u a d a l u p e P h o n e 4 7 3 2 Locksmiths R E E D S B E A U T Y S H O P . 2 8 1 1 N o r t h G u a d a l u p e , e x t e n d s a S p e c i a l I n v i t a t i o n F I T T E D . G A L L U S P E T M E C K Y ' S F I F T H S T R E E T S H O P . ................................. 101 W E S T 5 t h P H O N E 2 - 7 9 8 1 . K E Y S I t a yo u. S h a m p o o a n d w a v e ; 7121. 6 0 c . C all ----- — Lost and Found T I T T L E S P E R M A N E N T S H O P v ;, Y .Y e d ri 1 1 , N u e c e s . 2 - 0 1 0 6 . O p e r a t o r s : M r s . M, E . T i t t l e , V i r g i e B r u c e , D e l l B u r g e r . is n o w I -------———--------------- — ----------------- ---- P h o n e L O S T : A u d i t o r ’s r e c e i p t , b l a n k e t t a x a n d in L a w T e x a s R a n g e r c a r d S a t u r d a y L i g o n , E l o i s e R e w a r d . B u i l d i n g 205 . K i r b y Hall. V A N I T Y B E A U T Y B r a i d s , W e s p e c i a l i s e S H O P — F r e n c h in E u g e n e P e r ­ m a n e n t s . 809 C o n g r e s s . C all 2 - 3 5 8 4 . B I L L I E ' S B E A U T Y S H O P a n d h e r s t a f f w e lc o m e yo u f o r ail y o u r b e a u t y w o r k . 1 7 t h a n d C o n g r e s s . P h o n e 6 0 6 2 . T H E H A R P E R M E T H O D S H O P . E x c l u ­ s iv e B e a u t y S e r v i c e . S u p e r i o r P e r m a ­ S t r e e t . E a s t 9 t h nent. W a v i n g . 1 2 1 P h o n e 2 - 0 7 8 7 . Plumbin< w a t e r b e a t e r E . R A V E N — S i n c e 1 890 — P l u m b i n g . p i p i n g , r e p a i r i n g , r a n g e * , h e a t e r * c o n n e c t e d , s i n k s , s e w e r s u n s t o p p e d . 1 4 0 8 L a v a c a P h o n e 6 7 6 3 . g a * W G . A N D R E W A R T H A P L U M B I N G a n d Ga* h i t t i n g , H o t W a t e r H e a t e r s 408 E a s t 1 8 t h S t r e e t . P h o n e 2 - 2 8 0 3 . Cafes Cafes Welcome Longhorns W e suggest an order o f LESLIE'S FRIED C H IC K E N “It's Better Than Ever ” T H E C H IC K E N S H A C K „ . , k „ , ( T r a d e M a r k R e g . ) H M ile N o r t h o n G e o r g e t o w n R o a d . P h o n e 2 - 0 0 8 7 A u s t i n _____________ V I S I T O U R P L A C E W H E N I N H O U S T O N O R W A C O Cleaner* Cleaner* 24 H O U R S E R V IC E Shoe Shops S H O E R E B U IL D IN G I N V I S I B L E H A L F - S O L I N G P i c k - u p a n d D e l i v e r y G oodyear Shoe Shop t h e S h o e ” f o r “ E v e r y t h i n g Typewriters A d d i n g M a c h i n e s R e n t e d - R e p a i r e d A s k a b o u t t h e R e n t a l - P u r c h a s e P l a t IURPISS wT;;rt o *.E^ ANGE T Y P E W R I T E R S S o l d - R e n t e d -R ep* ire d S u p p l i e s TURPEN'S 2 1 0 W . 1 » P h o n e 6 1 1 5 4?N e w T e r m * L i k e R e n t r ' o r t a b i e * T I P I . W R I T E R S : R e m i n g t o n P o r t a b l e s . 7 m o d e l s — o n e t o s u i t e v e r y p u r s e a n d p u r p o s e . C all 2 - 3 3 2 7 f o r f r e e d e m o n a t r a - I t i o n . A L L M A K E S So ld — R e n t e d ——R e p a i r e d L o w e s t P r i c e s . B e s t S e r v i c e S T EC KOS P h o n e 573 4 D O N ’T R E N T A Typewriter W h e n you can Buy one like Rent at Sears just Factory Rebuilt Just Like New '•rn w U N D ERW O O D R O YAL and L. C. SMITH So'd O n Easy Terms 4 4 9 5 EARS. ROEBUC Notice Classified Advertisers! Effective Immediately M E SSE N G E R SERVICE Until 4:30 p . rn. Dial 2-3 164 Counter Service, os usual, to 6 p.m. F O R R E N T ; N i c e l y to g e n t l e m a n . R e a s o n a b l e . 1 211 E a s t 8 1 s t . f u r n i s h e d r o o m P h o n e 2 - 8 2 9 6 . T W O d o u b l e r o o m a f o r b o y s n e a r U n i ­ e n t r a n c e a n d b a t h . v e r s i t y . P r i v a t e D o u b l e g a r a g e . P h o n e 9 8 7 3 . B O Y S : N i c e l y r o o m . S u i t a b l e $ 1 5 . 0 0 o n e ; $ 1 8 . 0 0 P h o n e 7 6 8 4 . f u r n i s h e d s o u t h e a s t b e d ­ t w o b o y s . t w o . 606 W e s t 2 9 . f o r o n * o r F C *! R E N T : F u r n i s h e d f o r o n e o r t w o m e n . P r i v a t e e n t r a n c e , b a t h a d ­ r o o m j o i n i n g . 6 1 6 W e s t 3 4 t b . P h o n e 7 6 7 2 . P R E T T Y , n e w b e d r o o m , s o u t h w i n d o w s , p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e , c o n v e n i e n t t i l e b a t h , a l s o b o y ’s r o o m , v e r y a t t r a c t i v e , p r i v a t e b a t h . E a c h 1 1 0 . 0 0 . 7 9 8 2 . F U R N I S H E D R O O M S t o b o y * . 6 1 0 W e s t 1 8 t h S t r e e t . A T T R A C T I V E s i n g l e til* b a t h a d j o i n i n g r o o m in p r i v a t e i M o c k s h o m e , f r o m U n i v e r s i t y . 503 W e s t 1 7 t h . B O Y S R O O M S . $ 9 ; c o u p le , $ 1 6 , b a c k o f S . R .D ., 801 E a s t 3 0 t h . M r s . S h e a f - f e r . P h o n e 2 - 9 1 2 0 . B O Y S : A t t r a c t iv e r o o m s , s le e p in g p o r c h , 2 b a th * . B e tw e e n U n iv e r s it y and C ap­ 1 8 th . ita l. M e a l s o p tio n a l. 2 0 8 W e s t 4 7 1 7 . G IR L S : T w o n ic e m od ern room * a d jo in ­ 2 4 1 0 R io in g b a th . P r iv a t e h o m e. p r iv a te b a th . A ls o FO R M E N ; L a r g e s o u th room , tw in b e d s , la r g e s o u th r o o m , a d jo in in g h a th , p r iv a te g a r a g e s , p r iv a te borne. 9 0 7 R io G ran d e. PLAIN DRESSES Cleaned and Pressed C ash and Carry .......... M en's W o o ! Suits C 'eaned and Pressed C ash and C arry .... ........... PALACE CLEANERS 19th at Lavaca Hom e Owned 40c 25c W anted to Buy H I G H E S T C A S H P A I D F O R s e c o n d - h a n d c l o t h i n g , s h o e * , a n d s a l t c a s e * . W e a l s o b u y m u s i c a l i n s t r u m e n t s . A. S c h w a r t x , P h o n e 3 7 6 2 . P R I C E S C A S H f o r S c r a p Gold, R i n g s , C h a i n s , P i n s , w a t c h e s , e t c . 82 1 C o n g r e s s . 2 - 7 7 1 2 . G rande. W anted Room and Board Room and Board R O O M A N D B O A R D ’ g i r l s o n l y . E x c e p t i o n a l l y n i c e l y D i e e r i m i n a t i n g f u r ­ r o o m * . A p p r o v e d h o m e , p r i v a t e n i s h e d f a m i l y . U n i v e r s i t y n e i g h b o r h o o d . 8 0 6 Mi W e s t 2 2 * . S t r e e t. 2 ROOM A N D B O A R D ; 60 7 W e s t 1 7 t h r o o m s ; o n e b e d ­ room w i t h g l a s » e d - i n p o r c h ; 2 b e d r o o m s w ith e c r e e n e d p o r c h . l a r g e c o o l FO R T W O M E N s t u d e n t s : L a r g e ro o m , 2 or 8 m e a ls , g a r a g e lf d e s ir e d . P r i­ v a te h o m e. D ia l 2 -1 5 9 7 . V A C A N C Y : F o r g ir l * , l o v e l y ro o m . Ex* s e r v ic e . O p p o site c e lle n t m e a ls , m aid c a m p u s . SOI W e s t 2 1 s t . C a l l 2 - 8 5 7 5 , G I R L S — 2 2 0 8 - 2 2 0 6 N u e c e s — R o o m s , tw o b lo c k * w e s t o f U n i v e r s i t y , board P h o n e 2 - 1 0 7 4 . R e a s o n a b l e r a te s . R O O M S : 2 o r 3 b o y s , p r iv a te horns, p ri­ v a t e e n t r a n c e . A d j o i n i n g b a t h . 3 b lock s R e a s o n a b l e . c a m p u s . E x c e l l e n t m e a ls . P h o n e 7 6 3 6 . rage, B in gle b ed*, a ll new R O O M S F O R BOY'S. B o a rd o p tio n a l. G a­ f u r n i t u r e . N e a r U n iv e r s it y . 610 W e s t 2 9 th , C ell 2 -7 0 7 0 . P h i ^ n e a fiAAA R O O M - M A T E W A N T E D b y g i r l s t u d e n t , k i t c h e n p r i v i l e g e if d e s i r e d . 2 0 0 E a s t 2 2 n d . P h o n e 2 - 8 1 2 9 . Z * 0 0 OO 2 -2 6 0 5 . N IC E R O O M S A ll m o d ern fo r s ix or m o r e b o y * . P h o n e c o n v e n ie n c e s . W A N T E D : O n e g ir l r o o m m a te ta k e i m eal* in p r iv a te h o m e in q u ie t n a ig h - j b orh ood . P h o n e 7 8 0 4 . to ROOMS, HOUSES, AND APARTMENTS WANTED Do you have a vacant room, house, or a p a rtm e n t th at you w a n t to rent? This w eek ap p rox im ately 10,000 stu­ dents and faculty m em bers will move into new quarters. T h e y are looking for places N O W — T h e early use of the -one m edium w hich reaches every student and facu lty m e m b e r gives you an exceptional op p o rtu n ity to rent all y o u r vacancies at very low cost. C A L L 2-3164 T O D A Y —W E D O T H E R E S T TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 Phone 2-3164 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Phone 2-3165 The F irst College D aily in the South P A G E S E V E N ‘A C ro o n er Is B o r n ’ Student Cultural Brought ‘Names’ to U. T. Campus scholastic fraternity. In 1931 he j on Broadway, graduated from New "V ork I n s ti- • Members of the original cast of tate of Musical Art. Since his j “Tovarich” will the graduation he has continued his j show. study and composition work Under j several well-known leaders in the tour with 0_________ AI R W A V E S Texan to Haye Press Council On Amusements B y E V E R E T T S H I R L E Y Night officially starts a t 6 o’clock. And the best radio pro­ grams are on at night. So up to this time you will have to trust to your luck and patience to hearing any good programs. But not after, for one show after another that has sparkle of some kind will be on the air. Rues Morgan’s program comes on WOAI at 6 o ’clock. His music is smooth, he gets able help from a singing quartet and trio, and the dramatization o f some story gives the needed variety. KNOW will carry a musical pro­ gram at the same time, called “ Blue V elvet M usic.” Mark War- now ’s orchestra, who used to be on the “ Hit Parade” plays, and Hollace Shaw sings, A guest, Ray H eatherton, w ill also be present. W a y n e K i n g O ld -T im e r to No need tell you about Wayne King, who is on at 6:30 o’clock over WOAI. A fter all his years on the air, you have either learned to like or dislike him. And th a t’s that. A program over CBS, not so new , o ffers King competition. This is the Al Jolson one which has an im posinng line-up o f radio enter- | tainers. Martha Raye has been j signed again to sing— or shout— on the program. Parkyakarkus J gives humor, and Victor Y oung’s! orchestra furnishes the music. And like almost all other “ big I tim e” programs, guest stars are featured, the one tonight being J Ben Bernie. The “ OI Maestro” will be making the radio rounds; i he has a program o f his own at I 7 o’clock. G e r t r u d e N ie s e n G u e s t in glove with Organization of an amusements public relations counsel to work hand the amuse­ ments sta ff o f The Daily Texan will begin Thursday afternoon at o’clock, Pericles Alexander, 4 amusements editor o f The Texan, announced yesterday. The m eet­ ing will be in Journalism Building IOO. The counsel, composed o f one member from each drama and en­ tertainm ent group on the campus, is being organized to assist in giv­ ing complete Texan coverage to all campus am usements. These publicity representatives w ill meet with the Texan am usem ent sta ff at a tim e yet to be designated to discuss their plans fo r the season, what stage undertakings th ey are planning, and what stage attrac­ tions they may bring to the cam­ pus. Representatives will m eet in dividually with the amusement staff, also. The entertainm ent groups are asked to send repre­ sentatives to the Thursday meet­ ing: follow ing U n iv e r s i ty L ight O p era C o m ­ p a n y . C o m m itte e . S tu d e n t C u ltu r a l E n t e r t a i n m e n t T he C u rta in C lub. T h e W e » le y P la y er * . G r e g g H o u s e P la yer* . I n ter-C h ureh D r a m a t i c L e a g u e . U n iv e r s ity G lee C lu b s. Frien d s o f F in e A r ts . —O- Penicks Open Music Studios B ernie’s program will have as Its guest, the “ bluest” blues singer Mr. R. Cochrane Penick and o f the day, Gertrude N iesen. The his w ife, Mrs. Doris Sease Pen- oriental-looking and deep-voiced have opened a studio at <09 radio singer is now in Hollywood 5 preparing to make a second pie- Thirty-Second Street where tare, »nd B erri- didn't lo t- much they wlU o ffe r Pn v a tc in»t™<*u>n tim . g ettin g hor on h i. program. I m or« l n ' ',,an 0' C0m'’06,t,0n’ con- ducting, violin, viola, violoncello, H is work will probably be appre­ ensemble p l a y i n g , a n d all ciated by radio fans. branches of musical theory. Mr. Penick is the son of Dr. D. A . Penick, professor classical languages in the University. of .Mr. Penick, who received his bachelor of arts degree from the . University in 1929, was a mem- is m aster-of-cerem onies. ber o f Ph5 B eU Kappa> honorary , A t 7:30 o’clock over WOAI an auspicious program w ill be heard, entitled “ Hollywood Mardi Gras.” A s for names, it has them. As for entertainm ent, is has much. Lanny Ross is the star, although Don W ilson Ross, it seems, had some trouble 1 with m aster-of-cerem oning on the Showboat Hour! so his new spon sor put him back to ainging exclu­ sively. Some people don’t like the droll humor o f Charles B utterworth, musical field who is also heard on this same hour. But I do. And to keep up with the others, the program will have a guest, Phil Baker, who re­ turns to his own program on Octo­ ber 3. Mr. Penick is the composer of “Two Choral Preludes” which has ju st been published. Mrs. Penick was a scholarship the Louisiana State student at University School o f Music from 1933 to 1935. She was principal second violin the Louisiana in State University Symphony Or­ chestra. From 1935 to 1936 Mrs. Penick Dr. was a scholarship student at Cin­ cinnati Conservatory of Music, and from 1936 to 1937 she played first violin in the Cincinnati Con­ servatory Symphony Orchestra. She has had w ide training and experience in violin playing and teaching. ----------- o------------ — Teachers’ M eeting To Be in Houston The annual fall m eeting of the Texas State Teachers’ A ssocia­ the tion will be held during Thanksgiving holidays in H ous­ ton, A. W. B ed w ell, president, of Stephen F. Austin State Teach­ ers’ College, Nacogdoches, has announced. The first session w ill be held ’Wednesday night, N o ­ vember 24. O fficers for the 1987-38 year will be elected. The program baa not been released. P R I Z E JO B The Warner Brothers prop de­ partment had the prize job this week— cutting out paper dolls. They -were for a sequence o f a paper wedding anniversary in the film Hay Francis-Pat O’Brien “Return From Limbo.” In a sup­ posedly million dollar, m odernis­ tic apartm ent setting, the dolls dangle over the heads o f folk clad in ermine and sables. For this same picture unopened bottles o f champagne and w his­ key were used on the set th e other day. N ot a bottle was stolen. Nobody th e stu ff was real. suspected CAPITOL mm L a s t Tim e* T o d a y ! SVM. POWELL LOUISE RAINER — In— "EMPEROR'S CANDLESTICKS" AFTER­ SCHOOL MA TIN EE 10c TODAY 3 to B J O C K DflKIE •< ISOTHERM I . : Thrills! M ystery! -- J p l a i n A X - V • • •anJ \ig ^ # f y s f e r i B e n n y G o o d m a n P o p u la r The only trouble with the Holly­ wood Mardi Gras program is the tim e elem ent. Benny Goodman goes on the air when it does. Per­ sonally, I am no rabid Goodman enthusiast. But m ost of you are. Lanny Ross’ voice will probably not be heard much in the Unrver- aity neighborhood tonight. O t h e r P r o g r a m s . And this takes care of the major programs for the night. . . Here are some others . . the Navy Band is on CBS at 8 o’clock . . . Jimmie Fidier tells us the movie new s at 8:30 over KBC . . . The poetry o f Franklyn MacCormick is aired a t 9 o ’clock by KNOW . . . The same station carries Jay Free­ m an’s music a t 9:15 . . , A fte r this the beat dance bands are picked up by the networks from the night spots o f the country. ■ o-------------- Chatterton Named On Oil Board Sept. W ASHINGTON, 20.— (IN S )— Appointment of Edward a W. Chatterton of Illinois as member of the federal tender board on petroleum at K ilgore, was announced today by Secre­ tary o f Interior Ickes. Chatterton will assist Chairman Jack W. Steele in enforcem ent o f the Conically Petroleum Conserva­ tion A ct in the E ast Texas field. Chatterton has been in govern­ ment service for nearly 80 years. He was in the railway mail serv­ ice in the o ffic e o f the post in­ spector of the Post O ffice D epart­ m ent; deputy com missioner o f internal revenue and investigator in the income tax unit o f the treasury department. He served as captain and major in the world war. For the last two years he has been a special assistant in the field service of P.W.A. URRSITV Now ! 15c-25c a t t w o T h ey m et s t m i d ­ n i g h t . . . w e r e held up • landed in jail a t five . . . a n d w e r e m a r ­ b r e a k ­ ried f a s t ! before . - MARRIED BEFORE rBREAKFASI S H O B E R T V O U N G — F L O R E N C E R IC E JUNE C UD W ORT H I B A R N E T T P A R K E R , B Science In C o ,e Candid s c e n e s w ith K e n n y and B a k e r , F r a n k M c H u g h , sh o w in g how a J a n e W y m a n th - 1 w a y . cr o o n e r g e t s T h e film , “ Mr. D o d d T a k e s th e A ir ,” a r r iv e s t o m o r r o w at th e P a r a m o u n t . t o be W here to G o PARAMOUNT-—“The Prisoner of Zenda.” With Ronald Colman and Madeleine Carroll. (Last day.) STA TE— “ King Solomon’s Min­ es.” W ith Cedric Hardwick©, Anna Lee, Paul Robeson, and Ro- j land Young. (F irst day.) QUEEN— “ The Great Gambini.” With Akin: Tam iroff and Marian * Marsh. (F irst day.) CAPITOL — “The Emperor’s Candlesticks ’’ W ith William Pow­ ell and Luise Rainer. VARSITY — “ Married Before B reakfast.” With Robert Young and Florence Rice. D in in g a n d D an cin k AVALON DINNER CLUB — Frank Hubert and his Avalon Din­ ner Club Orchestra. THE TOWER— Carnes W eaver and bis band. Playing from 9 un­ til 12 o’clock. Julian Montgomery, U. T. E X IS H I G H W A Y H E A D I f o r m e r ; bead of the P. W. A. in Texas, : was named state highway engi- j neer by the highway commission last August. Mr. Montgomery re­ in civil engi- ceived his degree in } neering from the U niversity 1912. Tovarich’ Dated For Paramount “ Tovarich,” Broadway stage success of last season, has been booked by the Interstate Theater Circuit and will play th e Para­ mount Theater October 28. A comedy in two acts, “Tovar­ the Plymouth ich” opened at Theater in New York on October long 15, 1D36, and has had a Broadway visit. The comedy is from the pen o f Jacques Deval and was adapted its play presentation by Robert E. Sher­ wood. Gilbert Miller produced it for Dr. Dodd Attends M ath C ongress Dr. Edward L. Dodd, professor of actuarial mathematics at the University and world authority on the theory o f probability, is at­ tending a world congress of math­ em aticians in Geneva, land, before which he will lecture. S w itzer-1 Dodd and a Johns Hopkins; only two j invited to College man are the Americans who were take part in the program . Accompanied by Mrs. D o d d who was looking forward to v is it -; ing her native England, Dr. Dodd le ft in the early part o f July. The couple plan to return in about a month so that Dr. Dodd can take up his classes for the fa ll sem es ter. - ............ —o ......... R E G A N G O IN G P L A C E S Phil Regan is still going places the Metropolitan to — maybe Opera Company. Just six years ago Phil was a very happy young man because he had* been promoted to be a de­ tective only a month after joining the New York police force. Then a lucky chance put him on the radio where he made good. It was only a step then to Hol­ lywood. Now h e’s signed by Re­ public fo r that studio’s biggest musical, “ Manhattan Merry-Go- Round,” Genharo Mario Curci, noted voice coach, declared frankly to­ day he think* Regan’s voice is worthy o f an operatic opportun­ ity. m.JkM lakes die Air I IL KENNY*BAKER I WAR rn CHINA JI q * * ’ / C edric Hardwick©^ v/ Anna Cee Paul Robeson N Roland YounqTJohn Loder N o v e lt y C o m e d y N e w s Sch oo l Kid* 3 - 5 ........ 1 0 c " p f STS 1937' Austin Community Show S an A n t o n io H ig h w a y , 2 Miles S o u th . C hills, T h rills, Spills. S o m e t h in g N e w a n d D i f f e r e n t . T o n it e Invitational Derby Night Last year’s program, arranged by Tom Law, brought Stu rt Chase, famous economist, to the University. Other shows included Albert Salvi, harpist, and the Bal­ let Intime, with Edward Straw- bridge and Lisa Pam ova. --------------o -------- Zoology Department Receives Recognition Research by the University so- received ology department has recognition recently from leading scientific publishers. The work of Dr. E. J. Lund, professor o f zoology, and Dr. Go«'on Marsh, who received his doctor’* degree from the U niversity in 1932, have received special attention. Dr. T. T uncliffe Barnes o f Yale University discusses, in a new text, Dr. Lund’s flu x equi­ librium theory of bioelectric po­ tential as one of the six principal theories which seek to explain the nature of the electric energy produced by living tissues. The American Journal of B ot­ any published in June an article by Dr. Roper,© entitled, “E ffe c t of an Applied Electric Current on the External Longitudinal Polari­ ty Potentials of Douglas Fir.” The work on electrophysiology I carried on in the Department of Zoology is also discussed in other recent book*. B y JIM A N D E R S O N the W H E N A N G E L L M E R C A D O ’S Tipica Mexican Orchestra arrives with its tw enty-piece band, singers, and dance team in Gregory j Gym on the nigh* of Novem ber I, the seventh year of official student cultural entertainm ents will have begun. With the record of thirty headline shows in the six years behind him, this year’s Student Cul­ tural Entertainm ent Committee, headed by Sydney Reagan, h a s scheduled three shows, with two and possibly three more to be con­ tracted, with m oney received from the blanket ta x allotm ent. All blanket-tax holders are admitted free to these productions. campus. A o f protest on company and a Shakespearean choir o f 300 negro voices were also presented on the first year’s schedule. Cossack Chorus The Russian Cossack Chorus, direction of Sergei under SokA off, gave University students I the same show which has been seen in all of the principal cities I o f the world many times in 1932. The Cossacks, who swing through Texas on their American t o u r , every three or four years, appear- ed on the stage clad in traditional; military dress of their country be- The entertainm ent committee of the Students’ Association was first formed in the fall of 1931, after school o fficials realized that official entertainm ents of a high class were necessary for an ever­ growing student body. All negoti­ ations necessary for the program schedule were le ft to the stu­ dent com mittee, assisted by Wal- ter Rolfe, professor o f a rch see- fo r the revolution. Swinging with-! ture, who has been the faculty out accompaniment, they effected adviser for the committee since a symphonic orchestration with its inception. only the human voices. Laurant, the magician, a student of Hou- dini, performed during the follow­ ing February. In March of 1932, Sir Hubert Wilkins o f submarine- to-the-North-Pole fam e, gave an lecture on his Arctic illustrated and Antarctic explorations. S h o w s a t L o v C ost the The shows, which the student can see for the 37 cents allotted to the com m ittee from each blan­ ket-tax sale, have been made up o f entertainers, who, f*#hen per­ form ing in other Texas cities, have played or spoken before high gate admission Students audiences. who have not purchased a blanket tax and outsiders can attend the shows but m ust pay a gate admis­ sion similar to that which wou’d be charged if the shows wrere be­ ing conducted by a private m oney­ making concern. In the fall o f 1931 the Cher-, niavsky trio o f Russian musicians ’"K •March- f haw;n ,,n houst m the G.vm f i r a t j both at this a p p a ra n ce and again under the auspices o f the committee, which was headed by •» » * « • He performed before an Haskell Roberts. The comm ittee audience which, although it cheer- ran into hot w ater that first year, ed in the wron* PIa« s , was com- pletely won over by his classical when st scheduled Sm edley But dance ensembles. lcr, “The Fighting Marine." whose militaristic speech aroused a storm S I D N E Y R E A G A N T ed S h a w n In the fall of 1933, Bouhmir the by Jasper Deeter, opened 1934-35 season, with A. A. Milne’s “The Romantic A ge.’’ Four speak­ ers appeared on that year’s pro­ grams, including William Hard, Washington political correspond­ ent and magazine writer, Ruth Bryan Owen, former minister to Denmark, and Norman Hapgood former editor of Collier’s Weekly,: Kryl and his symphony band ap-! war correspondent, and minister to J peared on the stage of Gregory Denmark under President Wilson, i Gym, followed a month later by The following year, with the Trovadores Tamauiipecos and his stu d en t Cultural Entertainment Mexican quartet. Ted Shawn and: Committee under the direction of his men dancers appeared at the) Gus Levy, presented Lloyd D o u g -1 University for the first time dur- J ]a8> fam ous novelist, and author I of “ M agnificent Ob-esMon,” and ; the Manhattan j “ Green Light," Shawn 1 String Quartet, and Ted again. Josephine Antoine, Metro-] politan coloratura soprano, was scheduled to appear, but was in a n 1 automobile accident, while coming! through Oklahoma, which killed j one o f the members of the troupe. The Hedgerow Players, directed "How P.M.A.” ^PROPER MENTAL ATTITUDE Ninety per cent of studying is acquired by having the Proper Mental Attitude. Look over the smart study aids the C o - O p is of­ fering this year and see how inexpensively you can change four walls into an inviting room. In direct Lighting LAMPS Sa v e your eyes with a indirect go o d , s o f t , l i g h t . These indirect fur­ ligh ting lam ps will nish the prop er kind o f light. 50 UP. $ 2 T A B L E A N D F L O O R M O D E L S S o r o r i t y & F r a te r n ity PLAQUES lf you’re a G reek-m ind­ ed soul, you can ’t very well exist without your organization’s crest on is the wall. O u r stock com plete. $2OO Brighten Your Room W ith U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s PENNANTS and PILLOWS There’s nothing like col­ orful pillows and pen- ants to give your room that collegiate air. A ll sizes. P illo w s Pennants 2 L 5 0 u p 15c *° 3” ALARM CLOCKS WASTE BASKETS P r e r e q u is ite s f o r 8 o ’C locks for N e a tn e s s S a k e A n alert alarm clock is yo ur very best friend. M a k e certain that you will make your classes on tim e b y using this sturdy alarm clock. 79c leather Smart imitation in bound wastebaskets many beautiful designs and colors. OO UNIVERSITY CO-OP " T H E S T U D E N T S 1 O W N S T O R E " PAGE EIGHT The F irst College D aily in the South Phone 2-3164 THE DAILY TEXAN---- Phone 2-3165 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 Howl! You Have Your Eggs? \ y / H A T 1 )0 y ° u VV Texan? want in The Daily The answer to w hat this campus wants reflected in the columns of its paper is paramount on the list confronting a Texan staff that looks now to a new year. Q Possibly at no other time is a new s­ paper more dependent upon or more the property of its readers than during the years when college readers and college journalists work hand in hand. As a rule collegiate requests in the w ay of news presentation or editorial make-up infringe to no great degree upon the ethics of col­ lege journalism. Stipulations laid down by the directing powers demand only that the columns be left reasonably clean, and stray not too Beyond far from the campus. the within the control of through its elected representatives. that p a p e r lie s e n t i r e l y And the paper, to best justify its ex­ istence, need only serve the best interests of the most readers. Today’$ Cross-Word Puzzle -----------------By EUGENE SHEFFER------------------ 6 7 9 IO ll * T - 2 I I 2 3 H t § 15 5 13 I i 16 / / / 21 26 2 Q 2 5 % 3i Wa/V//p 32 35 / / / / VXZ HO 3Q 36 I if ll 22 I 21 a IH I I 17 i e> 2 0 23 i 37 P I I HI ■ ,, Wa 30 28 .Vi 3 8 33 I H6 HI HH 'A H5 ; I 52 53 w 54 / / A ' 57 / / A/ / A y / / 56 TS ufo NU NC By Harry Q u m j N THE CHUCK WAGON, only dispensary of bottled drinks in Texas Union, a new eagled-eyed e ffo rt pusher in the form of fair-looking Helen Eherhard holds fo rth and makes a bold push to keep the tan-uniform ed boys on the run from ice boxes and food containers to custom ers. Strolling in yesterday fo r a drink, we heard her call down no less th an th ree boys in the few m inutes we spent consuming o ur flavored carbo­ nated water. Labeling them callings down isn’t quite doing justice to th e new overseer because one o f them vras a regular fum ing e ffe rv e s c e d of vituperation ab o u t some m istake a new boy made. We see no need in her, as a servant ///*/ Q3 HH HQ 51 5 5 t h e S tu d e n t b o d y *n our n°nPr <>ftt-making Union, tearin g the boys to pieces in public. ON THE OTHER HAND the Commons has im- proved from start to finish. If you haven’t To that end it asks its readers’ gestions on w hat they want in its columns, If it presents the best rounded policy in year, an the eye8 of the m ajority; if it reflects thought most accurately, it has, in the consideration, justified its existence. SUg- eat?n there, try than anywhere on their enough to hand out extra final innovation in the cafeteria, it. Food i* good and cneaper the Drag. And the hostess this improvement over past ones, is nice forks for salads— an For next year the Texan w ill ask no favors, seek no consideration beyond the existence of an interested and alert group of readers. And its readers w ill find ultim ately an am azingly more vital product if they look to the Texan with th e eye that it is writ­ ten not only for them , but, to a large ex­ tent, by them. Quite p retu rb ed over a mistake in the Texas Book Store calendar are members of the journalism fratern ity fo r women. The calendar lists, on Sep­ tem ber 19, “ Sigma Delta Chi pre Rush period for Women.” Sigma Delta Chi is the journalism f r a ­ ternity for men. The green-eyed m onster gripped the women because Sigma Delta Chis invited them to no rush parties. Cross Words year-long use o f c r o s s - w o r d puzzles a s yt„ a t The university c r T e x ,, with about the a t Los Angeles where about seven thousand and two hundred students go to become educated, Last 24 n r H I S MORNING the Texan begins the special feature in its editorial page. 260 women. p l e d g e d sororities O ' UT AT THE University of Southern California HORIZONTAL !_W feat fatnott* A m e ric a n aviator loot hi* Iii* while on a flig h t w ith Will R oger*? 5— Dance step W hat < > i th* n a n * later given to Em u ? 12—Three-banded arm adillo 13— Literary m iscellan y 14— A ir: com bining form lh—Public bar 17— W ho preside* a t S e n a te ? 19—Run* <"-er th* m e e tin g s a f the — What American general wa* m»d* Chief of Staff In IS I?? 21—Edible part, of anything 23— T urkish governor* J I —Time immediately preceding an even* 28—R epuke 15—Look at 31—Jum bled type 32— At this moment S i— Preposition 34— M sachievou* child St— W hat well-known Tank** pitcher ie nicknam ed "L e fty ” ? SS— M ineral spring 39— Aroma 41—Bark 48—M re disabled 49 w h o is Idaho’* fam o u s te n so r S e n a to r? 48—Click-beetle BO— An arrow-po-tooB 51—W ilt 52—Sleeveless A rabian garm ent 14—Take dinner SS—One row placed above the other SS— Conf, ne 47—S harp abutting of the jaw* V ERTICAL 1—M ountain defile 2—Iridescent com 3 Who wa* responsible for the death of John the B aptist? 4—F igure of * peer Si 6—Kitchen utensil 8— Indefinite article 7 — Droop 8— M atutinal 9— Fem inine nam e 15—N ative metal* l l —Roman deity of the lower world !6 G lacial rids,* 18— Of whom was It said: "Am I my b rother’* k eeper"? 22—Type of male voice 23— Who com m anded the A m erican l e c t in th# victory at M anila B ay? 24—Finial 25— E nergy 27—Lap dog (Colloci ) 29—One of th# Caroline Islands 19—Greek letter 35— Cerate S6— A triangular piece St—Domesticated Indian ex SS—A violent tw in 40— Ref. tram 42— W hat is the nam* of th* tipper Hone* of P arliam en t? 48— Remaining 44—T u rk e s ta n m o u n ta in ra n g e 46—W ater-buff alo 47— W hat I* the mim ing name of thi* ch aracter from "David C oppcrfleld": U riah --------- ? 49— S trike sharply BO—C ontainer 53—Exist Herewith is the solution to yester­ day’s puzzle. *»-3i The Poet's Release seeds. soul, goal. place CANVAS A canvas is the hum an face; A work of crudeness or of A thing portrayed w ith thoughts grace. and deeds; Like harvesters, we plant life’s Each line we etch depicts the The shrines we worship at, the Each light th a t shines is but the stroke O f artistry our lives invoke. No other hands than ours may T rue loveliness upon the face. No m ark of genius can im part Exquisiteness of soul or heart. No canvass somber can remain, A thing depicting loss and pain If we let in God’s lustrous light, instead of L et daw n prevail All ours to m ake; all ours to There is no single human b ar To give it powder and wealth no night. mar. end; mend, To heal, to hope, to help, to To let its markings even be Graven to posterity; A thing of loveliness to give Knowing it shall us outlive. Magnetized, I often stand And watch a hum an canvas grand. my heart. glow', I watch its brave and cheerful Glossing shadows and I know I too may own a canvas fair If I persist and give and dare I ROSE STRAUSS. ----------------o-......... ......... DR. LAFFERTY TO ETEX from Dr. H. M. L afferty , who re­ ceived the degree of doctor of ed­ ucation the U niversity in 1936, has been appointed profes­ sor in the departm ent of educa­ tion at East Texas State Teach­ ers College, Commerce. He is one of the youngest men to be aw ard­ ed a doctor’s degree from the University. --------------- o ......... ...... I N H E R I N G / C N T U E P E R I J P A T U X B y P A T D A N I E L S And many thanks to the person (Dear Lord, m ay it be persons by the tim e this is printed) who so nobly volunteered to support the “ Music on the Tower” movement. Come, ye proud soldiers, get on the band wagon! Now, honest and tru th fu l, don’t you think it would be nice to have music floating ai.- rr v a- down from the Tower between classes? A r e c e n t stu d y made by a g r o u p a t C o rn ell U n iv e r s ity m a d e the rep o rt th a t girls w h o jo b s to get m arried h a ve q uit for m arital the b e s t c h a n c e •u e c c e s s . • Headlines of The Daily Texan J Sept. 17: Daily Texan to Have More Pictures. Sept. 18: Daily Texan to Have T v I en Y e a rs Ago B y W A L D O N I E B U H R F red M. W alker, last y ear coach at Loyola College of New Orleans, was approved by the Board of Re­ .. gents as new head gents as new head basketball coach of the University. ' . .. , A fte r accepting a blind date with the mythical Grace Hall, a freshm an named Miss Hall as­ tounded upperclassmen who a r­ ranged his date by leaving the girls’ dorm itory with a p retty co-ed in her car. P resident H. Y. Benedict ad­ dressed nearly 1,000 freshm en a t the first convocation in the Open Air T heater. Radio Hour. B ureau of Campus Opinion. Sept. 19: Daily Texan to Have Dr. John M. Kuehne returned inspection trip of observ- ato n es in California and British in- t h e Sept. 21: Daily Texan to Have construction of McDonald Observ- Sept. 20: Daily Texan to have Columbia where he obtained form ation to be applied in B etter Paper. Paper. • The most illum inating sight this year of a freshm an having t h e idea th a t the University is a col­ legiate jo in t was the girl in an eating place on the D rag w h o hung her shoes on the coat rack. ^ atory for the University. The title of champion eater of the Longhorn football squad was awarded to John Je te r of Cam­ eron afte r he ate five full services at the Longhorn train in g table. _______ . . . . A banjo player hangs his m- _ strum ent about his neck with a O ur sympathies a rr extended a t cord but i( is the man wjth t h ( 1 a . . , . , . this time to Bill Manti, who grave bass horn who a waitress a tip : he handed her a bill, thought it was $ 1 , later dis­ covered it was $5. • his. From the E ast Texan: It sadd en * me to m e d ita te H o w m a n y p e o p le o v e r r a te T h e m s e l v e s and feel c o n v in c e d t h e y ’re far M ore b r illia n t than I k n ow I ’m f r e e o f su ch d e c e p tiv e th e y ar e. sham — I’m sm a r te r th a n I think I a m . “ The time has come,” said the professor as he secured his watch from the rep air shop. “ The race” can now produce it everybody; enough fo r hasn’t yet learned to act as a race. but No m atter how much of Asia the Japs conquer, they still have to live mostly on rice. Oyster w eather arrived almost firs t oyster the prom ptly fo r m onth; b u t be cautious. We lend no more money to Europe. T hat seems to be what stalls “the next war.” , , ---------------------- , ____,, . I f s the tru th : Freshmen laugh at the p ro f’s funny (doubtful) re­ marks. One of my classes hap­ pened to be a freshm an course. lI*e , - The prof said the same humorous how tired he is if his busine*? is a - \ *L. i .... .... enenocc J ..... L / ,'4 ** n4.• 11 success. thing (it’s still doubtful to me) three times, and each time t h e room was in an uproar. I finally decided my sense of hum or was last slipping, so I joined in the time and ju st ha-ha’d. B ut I still haven’t caught the crack. A man with a paunch is always an advocate of suspenders. ._____ , UKS • . I a. « • • D I A L 3 7 0 2 The Sons of Alec, engineers’ f hi hn*inp’nu talk to the dean, tell him why most of the pupils a t least a con- you “ ju st can’t seem to make any Chicago’s effo rts to provide les- siderable p a rt of what they are b etter grades, because I am w o r ­ sens by radio fo r th at city's 315,000 missing while schools are closed, mg my way through college, if elem entary school pupils, while the The outcome of the project will be he says very pertly, “ It would cer- schools are closed because of the awaited expectantly by if college would infantile paralysis scare, will prove parents and pupils all over the work its way through some of the an interesting and possibly sign!- country.— Dallas Morning News, ficant experim ent Several State c o lleg e adult classes by radio, without offering credit, and the radio has been used in many elem entary schools for music appreciation; but the at- tem pt to teach such subjects as jap an . geography and m athematics to hun- T h * r e g is t r a r o f tho U n i v e r ­ si t y o f M o n t a n a s u g g e s t e d “ an e x c e l l e n t c o u r s e in f o r e i g n r e l a ­ t i o n s ” to a s t u d e n t, b u t the s t u ­ in t e r e s t e d ! d e n t said, “ I a i n ’t A ll my f o l k s li v e right here in the U n i t e d S t a t e s . ” if a psycholocigal in itself felt Psychological Boycott teachers, tainly be nice There u no We wonder is making conducted doubt but students.” boycott have changed their m ind, about how badly they w ant ^ to see the first game with Tech. Surely rushee* would enjoy football more than ice w ater, cigarets broadcasting stations co-operating ready to boil over a t Jap a n ’* ag- . ™ * w ith five newspapers and six China, and American American .ym pathy i , w ith ° [ t y n o v e l More poetry, now from the sentim ent New Mexico Lobo: T here was a young lady named and gab. And note the absence of so many girlish voices coming from the cheering section? how will the players fee! when they ^ J i M a bound''to o b ta T so m b re- suits. Yet the full co-operation of some children and parents will re­ main problematic. Not until after examinations are given at the close of the radio instruction will it be possible to determine the efficiency of this experim ent in educational how> th * resentm ent a g n a t Italy s broadcasting. Americans look on Japan just as they did on swaggering Italy ’* ruthless looting of Ethiopia, or the same Mussolini’s backing of the red-handed Franco in Spain. Some- . f , ,, . , . c s r J o M Certain disadvantages are obvi- to the Italian people. Sherly, early. Got all her school w o rk 'd o n e F o r work she had aptitude, S at on p ro f’s laptitude, A nd thus learned her lesson moat thor’ly. Under the consideration of the editor the the chronic comic strip, or came equally abundant timely cartoon. Likewise was brought attention th a t the word game hit its stride long years ago, th a t in such a feature had been on a wane ever since its many year old heyday. interest However, the Texan will present throughout th e y ear the best assortment of crossed words its syndicate submits. A rgum ent for the change is two fold. In th e first place the Texan believes the puzzle decidedly on a comeback trail. Confidential reports from snooping inves­ tigators declare th at, at least among the feminine esoteric, more scribbling at the squared blanks was done this summer th a n last year. More then, than the year before. Educationally, the program develops its undoubted reason and foundation vocabulary-building properties. in And from the Texan’s standpoint— if the germ catches— Texan editorial pages will be read perforce. Statisticians reason th a t for each troubling word, a two-minute pause must be forthcoming. During the pauses some of the readers willy Hilly, Texan editorial nuggets. I f they don’t, a near-future Texan step will be to bury some of the clues in the editorial m atter itself. Tile Dailv T e x a n trim W ill a Os o r b , about the well-dvesaed American woman.” On the An actress reveals som ething “ th ere’s other hand, her husband has look. home receiving ous a t the start. The pupil sitting beside his misses the personal influence of a j visible teacher and th a t comes from competitive youngsters. Yet the radio instruc- integrated effort with the incentive An Arkansas City h u nter reveals th a t a quail dashed itself to death against his gun, b u t fo rg ets to state w hether he liked the sport b etter than fishing. Official Notice T h e D aily T e x a s, s tu d e n t n e w sp a p e r of T h e U a iv e r s iiy of Tex**, th e cam po* of the University a t Austin by the Texas Student Publication*. Inc., every nont* inp except M onday. i» published or. Editorial offices, Journalism Building 109, ICI, and 102. Telephone* 917 2— 849 an d 9 1 771— 862. - A f te r IO p m . . 9 1 7 7 ) D e p a r tm e n t— J o u r n a lis m C irc u la tio n A dverts! i».g end Building I' * Phene 2-31 €4 and 2-8165 * »*i***Nf*0 tom KanoMak ADVcatiaiMa av National Advertising Service, Inc. Collet* / ‘i l / i i i i n Ktpreumtaiid* 4 2 0 Ma d iso n A ve N ew Yo r k N. Y. Ck CAM - Retro* • Lo* AN***.** . Sam ft*aci*co t 1 the U n iv e r s ity P re s* . A. C W r ig h t, m a n a g e r. P rin te d GEOLOGY 12, Physiography and Selassie’s tem porary refusal to accept U. S. Geology of North America, and and Red Cross services might have arisen from his r e ­ luctance to deprive America of them during hunt- Geology of South America, will be offered as electives this y ear by in® Dr. F. W. Simonds. Geology 12, non-technical in character, will be of value to students w hether spe- cializing in geology or not. P re- requisite: Geology I. MWF at IO o’clock To conform with the tenor of hi# rem arks on to America and Americans, ipell his name subjects pertaining th a t English playw right should “ Pshaw.” Geology 34, Physiography in ___ And in p artin g let m e rem ind power-mad dictator does not extend you th a t th e movem ent fo r Music on the Tower will be held In the Jap an makes endless toy*, trink- Tower every Tuesday and Friday, set etg> g a dgetts and small merchan- which m ean® th a t .this ?ol“ mn W*!! . ana in he United on the days the editor needs space too) on the products of American Tuesday and F riday. So ’by* now. , appear regularly (we hope, in successful competition filler he will hope so, ’ and States ., , , , TT y ,, other with labor. Every such article bears, in plain English “Made in Japan.” 0 g uch a creatu re as Cleveland’s exist ag ain st buying Japanese ware*. In outside of a city of a million. In Occasionally, one hears comment torso m u rd erer couldn't " the toy .to res, one will see people the co u n try h e'd b‘ caught in' turn an object upside down to h unt sta n te r* the m ost obscure spot, where th a t label “ Made in Jap an ” is likely to appear, Al Smith m ade a trip to Eu­ rope when he might have gone to the top of his Em pire S tate Build­ ing and ju s t looked over there. A real boycott, we think, would do more to crush Japan than all ^ whan^ng along Whangpoo. Austin American, nese 0 * THEY ALWAYS COME AGAIN FOR QU AUTY HOME STEAM L A U N D R Y SPECIAL RATES FOR STUDENTS 118-120 W. 10TH DIAL 3702 AT THE TEXAS BO O K STORE T Y P E W R I T E R S OF ALL MAKES ........... the morning Now th a t women are allowed to in G.B. serve on juries in New York t h e big question is what kind of hat limited num ber of students to wear during an arson trial and can be accommodated in Geology wha t color to tin t the nails during A From m arket reports, every man seems en- 34. A knowledge of Spanish will a m ate-slays-m ate case. , --- ---- --- titled to a chicken in a pot fo r the price of two no t be required. cars and a garage. P rerequisite: Two courses in geology. Hours to be arranged. _____ W ith _____________ thousands of trailer or bounding bungalow owners afraid New Nazi com m andm ent: “ If thou are healthy, REGISTRATION num bers thou m ust not remain unm arried.” And w ant to stay healthy, don’t rile they wife. if thou -will to move in low gear through any to community w ithout th eir lawyer, the m atter of uniform tra ile r leg­ islation is a t last being taken up. _ Editor-In-Chief _ __ ED SYERS .Associate E ditor Joe B elder:................. ...Copy E ditor H arry Quin ______ Sports Editor John MeCully Lynn Jackson . Associate Sports E ditor Elizabeth Keeny___ Society E ditor Lois S a g e r ------------ Associate Society E ditor .-tin..... m. E ditor .....Radio Dick Watts ..... ...... Jim A nderson........... — .............__ T elegraph E ditor F eatu re Editor Margaret:.e Garrison Pericles Alexander Am usem ents Editor E v erett Shirley, Olcult Sanders: A ssociate Amuse­ ...... ....... ments Editors FOR THIS ISSUE NIGHT E DI TOR ii i ANN ELDYSS JARRATT Heler F at Passmore and A Seattle man traded a house and lot fo r an old Canadian postage stam p. We’ve always wanted to meet th a t type of real estate a g e n t Mavourm e Fitzgerald. ................ Assi: ta fit# “John Barrym ore is called ‘Ya Han’ by Chinese Frank.e V> * ihorn, L ob movie fans.” W hat American fans call certain other actors has a somewhat similar sound. Harvey, Boyd Sinclair, Juliet Knight., Pauline Auvenshine, M argarette Garrison, H earlsill Young, Em ory Power*, Clarence La Roche. p a j Volunteer*..—. J. B. Billard, L o a Crow “ Now wben I was a lad, we had real w inters.” The words th a t froze on the old m an’s lips— not be needed by students obtain books this sem ester, a n d therefore will not be issued by the Library. LORENA BAKER, loan librarian. on THE HOME Economics T ea Room the fo urth floor of Home Economics Building, will be open for the long session W ednesday, Septem ber 22, to all friends of the University. Hours are from 12:30 to 1 :30 o’clock Monday through Saturday. HELEN DEATHE, director. Bill T erry has signed the con­ tra c t giving him $40,000 a year a* general m anager of the Giants. But he can remember, neverthe­ less, when he was happy and had nothing to do b u t play baseball. trucks I f buses and (freig h t vans) are going to m ultiply, all the old narrow concrete highways will have to be m ade “ high, wide, and handsome.” FREE SERVICE Typewriter* for Called an4 Delivered We m aintain a C O M P L E T E typew riter service departm ent a n d service all make* typew riter*. of PH O N E 614J F O R R E N T SPECIAL STUDENT RATES $3 per month $ 1 0 F O R S E M E S T E R T E X A S B O O K S T O R E Royal Underwood Remington L. C. Smith or Portables I—ii ar -i—rrm—n i TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 Phone 2-3164 THE DAILY TEXAN - Phone S-8188 The First College Bally tn the South PAGE NINE P ^ u s k e e s W ill R eceive T h e ir S o ro rity D a te C ard s T o m o rro w Must Be Returned to Dean O f Women’s Office Thursday piled by the Co-Ed assembly, will ' been given to th# artistic appear- be ready for distribution in the I aute of the booklet,,’ said Miss Dean of Women’s office at that time. Margaret Berry and Eliza­ beth Chambers are co-editors. C o-E d H andbook Ready This W eek Sorority Sum m er Delegates R eturn SON BORN TO WILSONS o — — — ——• the Recent Bride society All girl* in th* D epartm ent o f J o u rn a lism who would like staff to be on please com* to the meeting of the s t a f f of The Daily Texan this a f te rn o o n a t 2:30 o'clock in the Journalism Building 212. son wera University delegates. Burt Aschner and Saredel Weiss, Alpha Epsilon Phi representatives, went to Dicksville Notch, N. H. sororities, Alpha CW Alpha Xi Delta was represented Omega, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha in Yellowstone National Park by Xi Delta, and Zeta Tau Alpha, held Mae Elisabeth Hamme and Jane national conventions during the j Kone, and Billy Ruth Young, and Barbara Hull led eleven other past summer, with each of their Frances Rather, Phi Beta Kappa Texas Ze*as to Swampscott, Mass. local chapters being represented. and Bluebonnet Belle of last year, * * * I Alpha Chi Omega held its eon- , will continue study on the campus j vention in Glacier National Park, Caryl De Woody and Freda WU- this year. Beverly Gramann will be on the campus again this year. Four The background, the purpose, A son was born September 16 t h e membership requirements, Any new student with a yen to­ to Mr. and Mrs. George Wilson* and th# officer* of every wom­ extra-curricular activities ward en’s organisation on the Universi­ former University students, who may check carefully on the or- ty campus will be at the finger- ganization which most appeals to are now living in Beaumont. Mrs. tips of each freshman woman and her before she new student by the end of this I maze of campus organizations, week, said Miss Dorothy Gebauer, j dean of women. Wilson was formerly Virginia Hen­ last derson and was graduated year from the School of Business Administration. “This year the yearbook prom- lees a surprise and with more de- com- tailed information. Attention has The Co-Ed Handbook, leaps into the the m d 4 o’clock, Tomororw afternoon between 2 celebrated I rushee will cross her manicured fingers, walk up the steps of the Main Building, and take her place in the anxious line forming at the front entrance, down the main hall from the south entrance to tile Dean of Women’s office. She will file through the dooT and reach for the envelope that holds her date card for the last three days of rush week beginning Fri­ day afternoon, then file out the west entrance, tear her envelope open to find when the sorority of her leaning has asked for another / I date. , s The date cards issued from the Dean of 'Women’s office tomor­ row must be filled out and re- turned by 9 o’clock to the Dean office Thursday of Women’s • • J morning. } “It is imperative that ru p ees I call for their date cards at the • specified hours and that they re­ turn their cards cheeked for dates with the sororities by 9 o’clock the next morning,” said Mrs. Bland, assistant dean of women. ; sororities interested Open house dates inaugurated this year in the rush program to give rushee* a chance to see all the for ^ a longer time and to give aororitie* an opportunity to become ac­ quainted with the rushee* of their choice will be used a* a basis for the Greek chapter* to determine to whom date cards will be sent to decide the rushee and J • I which date* she will check for the Mr*. John Tolliver U n d e r­ wood, Kapp* Kappa G amma and fo rm e r M artha J e n ­ nings, was m arried Satu rd ay night in San Antonio. Both Mr. and Mrs. Underwood are s tu ­ dents in the University. U n d e r­ wood is a Kappa Alpha. Sororities A ccepting M any Transfers In Chapters Many transfers from other col­ leges and universities are coming During T h / issuing of date c a r d s | into The University of Texas this tomorrow in the Dean of Worn- fall. Girl* who belong to any one junior Panhellenic of the numerous sororities and are e n s office from representatives will supervise the being other it especially advan- waiting into sorting the card envelope*. A* rushee* chew the end of ; their sorority here at the Univer- sisters are their pencil before checking the sitv. Their sorority date* on their card*, they are only too glad to assist them in get- cautioned to remember the rules ; ting good housing accommoda- ( for tions. in meeting new friends, and i listed rn shoes. lines and will assist in places find ’m hoping them around th# cam- I tagaous to be transferred t h # Handbook transferred in 1. Rushee* must accept dates i Pu«- least two sororities atty. The climax of the seriee of so- I 2 There will be no split dates. ; into §mth at There are few sororities who if Snore than on# sorority asks her , have no transfers at all. The Al­ P^a PM sorority has welcomed gor dates its chapter Marjorie Rosen- X)at«s for certain party may not thai from Northwestern Univer­ s e divided between sororities. W Preference slips will be signed | b y rushee# In Hogg auditorium at 10:15 o’clock Sunday night, Sep­ tember 26. In the Delta Delta Delta soror- ity, there are a number of trans­ fers. Teddy Wordlow has been transferred, along with her soror­ ity sisters, Adeline Herman and vial events that will keep rushee* Erie Nell Roller, from Southwest- ln a whirl for th# next week is ern University. Miss Herman is a tile rero hour when between 4 native of McAllen and Erie Nell and 6 ©’clock Tuesday afternoon, Roller has come from Ennis. Betty ■September 28, rushee* will wait Putnam, a transfer from Leland in breathless silence for the en- Stanford, is also from Ennis. t h e Polly Barber comes into ▼elope in the Dean of Women s office that holds for them the Gamma Phi Beta chapter from (evidence of a bid from one of the Missouri University. Her home fourteen sororities on the campus :|L A* 6:80 o’clock Tuesday, ami I town is Kansas City, Mo, the hilarious braces from Greek sister to ne ' ^ r a t i o n s , i ncju(je(j jn the Kappa Alpha em- T hetft Ugt o f transfers are Bar. Belknap from Randolph Ma- from b ' I T ™ and Blanche Riddle 4 ™ enter! S-M.U. Both girl, are from Bal- jj f" '’ tamed by their sorority with a a*’ buffet supper given a? a closed Into the Alpha Chi Omega chap l»j0UBe i ter Peggy Collins has been trans- f The traditional pledge night *<-red front Alabama Unirenrity. L p m hou,o, when the new pledge, ta th . r n iv a r ^ v in e x c i t i n g evening Collins, who was in the Lmversuy dressed \ dressed in e x c i t i n g town la dresses pinned with the sorority ribbons will stand in line ar.-I be introduced to the fraternity men swarming through the doors and limp bond of each shaking the excited pledge, will be given Sat­ urday, October 2, from 7 until -9 o'clock. last year. Their home La Grange. 111. C o the present The Chi Omegas have welcomed into their midst a transfer, Jac­ queline Rayburn. She is their only transfer at time, though they are expecting more. June Knarpp o f California has been into Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Also Mary Gardener is welcomed from Boul­ der, Colo. Miss Gardener attended the University of Colorado last year. transferred B. S. U . C ouncil Has Retreat Sept. 18 The B.S.U. Council of the Uni­ versity Baptist Church held a re­ treat with the San Marcos B.S.U. Council at Wimberly Saturday, j: September 18. v: Under the trees along the river W Ck Raines, professor of the Townes Bible Chair, talked to the group on a book B.S.U. Methods.” called Immediately f o l l o w i n g Dr. Haines’* talk was a talk by Dr. Walter McKenzie, pastor of t h e I University Baptist Church of Aus­ tin on the World Youth Confer­ ence which he attended in Zurich, I Switzerland, in August. Saturday night Dick Stout, as titian t attorney-general from Aus- S tin, gave the inspirational address, and Dr. Raines continued with his discussion of the book. Miss C oston Is Bride fc)f W illiam Walker Included in the list of students who are coming from quite a dis- 9 lance is Betty Seigil who is a transfer from Randolph Macon and comes from Newport, Va. She is now in the Phi Mu chapter in the University here. Her sorority J sisters, Valdena Fry and Ruth Al- j “The exander, are also transfers from other colleges. Miss Fry of New Mexico, attended L.S.U. and Miss Alexander, of Tyler, is a former Sophie Newcomb student. The Zeta Tau Alpha sorority has a transfer from Miami, Fla., Marvena Howes, graduate student. Many sororities have not heard from their transfers and cannot get in touch with them at the present tim*. W illiam Lupe to W ed San A n ton io Girl Miss Hattie Lee Coston of Uvalde, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Coston, became the bride of William J. Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Walker of Clarendon, Sunday morning at in Philip’s Episcopal C h u r c h Uvalde. The ceremony was per­ formed by the Rev. Charles Leal. The only bride’s attendant Was her sister, Miss Adelle Cos­ ton.j Charles Walker, brother of th# bride and a student in the tfnivorsity, was best man. Beth Mr. and Mrs. Walker are pant students in the University, I and they will make their home in this winter and continue Au * til their [studies here. Mr. and Mrs. John Mirza Ben­ nett of San Antonio have an­ nounced the engagement of their daughter, Mollie Durst, to Wil­ liam Bartel* Lupe, Jr., ton of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Lupe, also of San Antonio. Mr. Lupe is an sx-»tudent of th# University, and a member of j Kappa Alpha fraternity. e v e Columbia University has been chosen by Sue Wright and Frances Louise Mueller, former students of the University, to continue their work. Miss Wright will enter dramatic work, and Mise Mueller will journalistic studies. continue her VftJH-Assai one aw d way! BOOKS and SUPPLIES a t the CO-OP SAVE 40% USED TEXTS SOLD AT 60% OF THE NEW BOOK PRICE The C o -O p 's policy is to sell all used books at 6 0 % of the new price and pay 5 0 % back at the end of school. This policy means that the student purchasing a new book originally selling for $2.00 may buy that book for $1.20, and may sell it a t the end of the semester or year (if it is to be used here again) for $ 1.00. In other words the cost of using a $2.00 book for a semester or year will be O N L Y twenty cents. PAGE TEN The First College Daily In the South Phone 2-3164 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-3165 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 rom Marriage Announced Houston Club Meets Tonight in Union M ISS P E C K IS B A C K Miss M argaret Peck, social di­ rector o f women’s dorm itories, has return ed from Verm ont, where she The fir s t m eeting o f the H ous­ ton Club, a cam pus organ isation serving a s a social medium fo r Houston and T rav is County stu ­ dents, will be a t 7 o’clock tonight i In T exas Union 316, Dean Couch, j the club, h as an­ president mf nounced. The club’s m eetings are on o f every month. first and third T uesday j the The club’s open house night for freshm en will be a t 8 o’clock T u es­ day night, Septem ber 28, in T exas ; Union 316. HAVE US DELIVER YOUR L M I K # f f 0 0 £ £ D A IR Y PRODUCTS 2 5 0 6 G u a d a l u p e PHO NC ZOZ €>4 LEARN TO FLY Instruction fo r a s low a s $ 3 .5 0 an hour L icen sed A irp la n e s and In stru ctors AUSTIN MUNICIPAL AIRPORT On H ouston H iw ay Phone R u ral-54 ch atter R ash ers m utt curb their frien d ­ form erly th at has ly brightened the cam pus the first days o f school a fte r rush week •a a h fa ll. The popular new stu­ dents m ust not pause outside classroom doors nor Unger in the Union to exchange sprightly re ­ m arks with intro­ duced cam pus men. This w as de­ creed by PanhelJenic Court of honor, when the senior Panhel- lenie delegates m et with Ida Mae A u tre ?, president, yesterd ay at noon. the recently Sorority g irls have been fo r­ bidden to converse with rushee? on the cam pus during rush week, despite the fa c t th at their talk m ay only be about the weather. no “ Silence m eans sorority talk with anyone; it m eans no out- i side v isitors; it m eans no d a te s’’ is the definition given as the first j rule fo r the ru sh ee! by Panhel- lenie. P articu lar em phasis has been placed on the enforcem ent o f this phase o f rushing this year because o f its n ecessity to the success of the new rush program , said Mrs. Kathleen Bland, assistan t dean of : women. Composed o f the senior dele-j d ates of fourteen sororities, Pan- j hellenic Court o f Honor will hold i fo u r rn OTO re gu lar m eetings dur­ in g rush week to assure the strict i enforcem ent o f silence and other j rush rules. Today at noon the court will convene again. Other m eetings j have been scheduled fo r Saturd ay, Sunday, and Monday noon, s a i d ! Id a Mae Au trey, president. or Greek Members o f the court of honor I in whose hands rest the fa te o f | any rushee chapter j which might violate rush rules are Caryl De Woody, Alpha Chi j O m ega; Elizabeth Kniveton, A l-: pha D elta P i; Let hale Copland. Al­ pha Epsilon Phi; Cora Marie S tem m an , Alpha Xi D elta; M ar­ guerite Winn, Alpha Phi; He;en Scott, Chi O m ega; Lots R avey, D elta D elta D elta; Sylvia Schm idt, D elta Phi E psilon ; Claudia Barbe. G am m a Phi B e ta ; Ida M ae Au- president, K appa Alpha trey, T h e ta; B itsy Gram ann, K appa K appa G am m a; Helen R am sey, Phi M u; Genevieve Marrow. P i; B eta P h i; M ary J o Mc A ngus, Zeta T au Alpha. Rushees will not be perm itted the night to atten d the pep rally o f F rid ay , and attendance to the rally, even i f only a group of rush ees alone, will be considered a violation o f silence, explained Mrs. Bland. A casual nod of the head is all th at rem ains o f cam pus con versa­ local tion betw een rush ees and G reeks until 9 o’clock T uesd ay m orning, Septem ber 27. In itiates living in dorm itories and board ing houses will not w ear their during pins while in the houses the period o f silence. Then they m ust guard th eir session s care­ fu lly again st any referen ce to the Greek alph abet and hints about •o ro rity life. U pperclassm an advisors in the dorm itories, drilled and proved in their silence pledge, have been gran ted perm ission to talk with fresh m an g irls and new studen ts th a t th ey m ay be directed around the cam pus and helped with the m any problem s they will confront during the n ex t week, Mrs. Bland stated . Church W ill Greet N ew Students Mr. and M n . V. L. 0 ’Farr»ll of Austin have announced the mar­ riage of their daughter, M argaret Elizabeth, to H. T. Wilson Fow­ ler, the wedding having been last Auguat IO in Georgetown. Both Mr. and Mrs. Fowler are ex-students of the University. TODAY IN B R I E F 2:30 — L a te registration, Ja c k e t*, T exas G regory Gym. 5— O range Union 315. Union 316. 7— Houston Club, T exas 7 :3 0 — Alpha Epsilon D elta, T ex as Union 301. 8— Sons of Alex, Engineer­ ing Building. 23 Students Pass T ry-Outs In Light Opera Twenty-three studen ts who tried out fo r the U n iversity L i g h t } Opera Company M onday were a c ­ cepted fo r membership because o f I their talent as sin gers and a cto rs.: The try-outs were held before the j H erbert W all, director company, in his studio in the U n i­ versity Methodist Church. Other try-outs this week will be today, Thursday, the sam e place, except the one F r i­ day which will be in the L igh t Opera studio on the fourth floor of B. Hall. and F rid ay o f in W alter Kerr, presiden t, said that more try-out* would p rob ­ ably be held next week so th at girls participatin g in rush week would have a chance to try out fo r the company. Those accepted today are Mar- Iguerite M cAfee, V alm a Lois Du­ nn, Anna B ess R a tliff, Adel® Col­ lin, Alice W ilkinson, Dortha G ri­ sham. Grace M cAfee, M argurette Grisham, Dolly M cAnelly, Louise S e lf, Shirley Collin, B en H am ­ mock, Corty A dam s, Ja m e s P rid ­ Stone, R oberta gen, Christine Clark, L eis H arvey, Boyce Sh el­ ton, Betty Sticker, C lara Block, W alter Lee Porter, Ja m e s K reisle, and Charles W illiams. • * * Donoho-Weatherby Are Wed in Dallas The m arriage o f Miss Desmond W eatherby, daughter o f Mrs. H a r - ! ry A. K in g of F o rt W orth, and Charles P. Donoho, son of Mr, and Mrs. H. G. Donoho o f A ustin, took place Satu rd ay night at the Oak C liff Church of C hrist in D allas. The Rev. W. L . Oliphant i perform ed the cerem ony. The a ltar was decorated with palm s and fern s, with tap ers candelabra on each side. The bride w as given in m ar­ in | J . j riage by her brother, A. W eatherby of Oklahom a City, Okla. The bridegroom ’s sister, Miss Lillian W eatherby of A m a­ rillo, w as maid o f honor. Deward A. Childre attended the bride­ groom as best m an. Bridesm aids w ere V i r g i n i a ! Donobo, Miss Ruth W eaver, Miss F a y e B rady, and M iss Arline Russell. Groomsmen were Jo e Bowling, Sam B rasfie :d , Z. G. Neal, and R obert H arper. in Miss L ite W itt, who san g the w edding, gave a reception at her home im m ediately a fte r the ceremony. The couple left fo r a short wedding trip to A ustin and Corpus Christi. The bride is an ex-student of tho University, and Mr. Donoho j received his degree' the from U niversity, and is now studying medicine a t B aylor M edical Col­ lege. D . A. R. Scholarship Won By Opal Denson The annuad scholarship given by the D aughters of the Am erican Revolution has been aw arded to Opal Denson o f Pam pa, a senior in the College of A rts and Sciences. The aw ard is $200, and is given on the basis o f scholarship and exten t o f student activities. J . W. Calhoun, president of the U niver­ sity, and Miss Marion Mullins, state regen t of the D. A. R., were the ju d ges. DR. W IN T E R S S E E S W EDDIN G Dr. J e t W inters was recently a g u est at the wedding of her sis­ ter, Miss U ns Elizabeth W inters, to A rthur George King. The wed­ ding took place in F o rt Worth in the M agnolia o f parlors the Christian Church, Softies . . . Back-to-School C D A D T A Y l ? n D n C or U lt I UAr UJKJJo O ur F a ll collection o f sp o rt o x fo rd s will win you r fa v o r fo r style and price. dKFJfB S ? ? ^ fPSIk Size* 3 Vt to 9 aa to C B la ck or brow n p er- fo rated o x fo rd , kiltie tongue— w elt lea th er ^ o le . s u e d e P erfo rated kiltie tongue with c r e p e s o l e . a n d B r o w n , blue, green, grey. A. A. U. W. Will Meet October 8 in S. R. D. The Austin group of the Amor- i ican Association of University Women has elected officers and made plans for the fall and win­ is to be ter. The first meeting in Scottish Friday, Octob> r 8, Rite Dormitory, and meetings thereafter w . ll be the second F r i­ day in ea 'n month. Officers are as follows: Mrs. Robert Cuyler, president; Mrs. Rex Hopper, fir-*, vice-president; Mrs. Curtis Chapman, second vice-pre? d e n t; Mrs. P. S, Man­ gum, recording secre tary; Mrs. E, G. LeMay, corresponding secre­ ta ry ; and Mrs. Harry Power, treasu rer. The executive committee in­ cludes Misses Hazel Barkhan), Mercy Ramsey, and Marjorie Ve­ g an ; and Mesdames Ben Lee Thole and Howard Jo rd an , and the fellow ship director, Mrs, Hal the educational director, , By bee. the re la ­ Mrs. C. F. Arrowood; and I chairm an o f international tions. Mrs, H. J . Et ton ger. M argaret Ming* o f Big Sandy will arrive th is week to p articip ate irs the rush parties of the Gam m a I ’hi B e la sorority. M iss M ings waa f m e r ;y a studen t in the U niver­ sity. M .i th . Sue Pickens o f San A n ­ tonio is em oiled rn the University this year. M .•« I Nek-na fo r m e r ly att e n d -d the I S a n A a t u o i j an a it & L am tub P h i B e - a . .‘en4sty o f F ran ces H:rsch o f M arshall, who with her sister Mary visited Alaska. this gummier, in school. M ary v t - grad u ated from the U ni­ versity last year. is b a 'k A ustin Q uality H osiery All Sires and colors 59c or 2 pr. for $1 .1 5 U A I I rich:... SH O E STO R E M I L L I N E R Y — H O S I E R Y An opportunity win be ottered to reserve copies of The Cactus, the $25,000 yearbook of the Uni- versify. Students Registering So Far Have Broken All Previous Records in the Number of Books Reserved For the convenience o f subscribers an d to make unnecessary the paym ent o f a cash deposit, arrangem ents have been m ad e whereby $5 of the general p ro p ­ erty d e p o sit m ay be assigned in p a y ­ m ent for the annual. STUDENTS A L R E A D Y REGISTERED M A Y RESERVE C O P I E S AT - J O U R N A L IS M BLDG. 108 UESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 - Phone 2-3164 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-3165 The First College Daily hi the South PAGE ELEVEN ou Must Have Done Something ~ Mr. Mathews, Registrar, Wants to See You Mrs. Mary Hamrick Billie Hanks William H. Hanna Everret James HardgT&ve R. E. Hardwicke, Jr. Glenn Harris Theodore E. Harris M. Glenn Harrison Carl Fritz Hassenstein Cooper F. Hawthorne Jimmy Hayes Nita Betta Hays James M. Headrick C. J. Hedrick Adelaide C. Heiner Ruth Irene Henderson Marguerite Henry Paul K. Herder Beatrice Hickman Gertrude Hill Prentice D. Hill Helen M. Hissrich Eleanor K. Holm Dysart E. Holcomb Fred R. Holle Iola Hollingshead Lucille Hollingsworth Jimmy P. Horany Doris Mildred Hughes Margaret Hutchinson Richard E. Hutchison, Jr. Maxine Hyer William R. Inzeo Ann Elizabeth Irwin Eugene H. Ischy Agnes Jean Ivey Emil Leo Jan Alvia P. Janak Annie Jarisch John C. Jarrat Albert W. Jasek Ben Franklin Johnson Roberta Johnson Earl Wooten Jones Edwin A. Kampmann Oscar Keller Robert E. Kelley Caroline H. Kennedy Jack Kinard Wier Kirby Walter S, Kirkpatrick Jam es A. Krause Lothar A. Krause Brent Kunn A. H. LaGrone leu cin e Grace Laugham "Wallace D. Lawson J. F. Lehman Sherman D. Lesesne Billy Leslie M argaret E. Leslie Billie Lewis Carl V. Lieb Patsey Linden Charles L. Little V irginia Heal Little H. C. Loehr, Jr. Cathryn Louise Long Maxine E. McAndrew E rnestine F. McCarty Cleo McChristy Oliver B. M c C la in Mary I. McConnieo Sam S. McCord A. McVoy M cIntyre Richard R. McKay Mary Ruth McKelvey Wilma P. Mackay Carolyn J. Malone Dolly Signora Marshall Leonard P. Martin Laura Mathis Rickey Ino Mazier Bruce R. Merrill Helen J . Merrill John D. Metcalf Wm. G arnett Meyer Mary Ernestine Miller Mrs. Dulse A, M. Mobley Anna E, Mohle Wm. C. Montandon Eugene Montgomery Guy Z„ Moore K. Kenneth Moore N. A. Moore Nancy Isabel Moore Julian Morehouse Charles H. Moss Thornton J, Mostjm Dorothy E. Mowery Mary E. Mulloy Alice M. Mundine P at Mu ria E- J. MATHEWS, Registrar. Official Notice l l THE FOLLOWING students requested to call at the Reg- litraf*» office at once to adjust Registration difficulties, l l Ame* D. Alley p f Katherine R. Anderson Laura Pauline Anderson Dorothy E. Ashley Ben S. Atkinson Evelyn M. A utry Burl B. Baker Mary Genevieve Barge Margaret Ellen Barnes Robert Owen Barney p Alvia L. Barrier I B. E. Barrow ■ | Hugh M. Barton R obert Edward Baskin Joe M. Battle Edw ard Randall Baylor Tom L. Beaucamp Jam es D. Beaver Roy Beery, Jr. Dewitt C. B ennett g e o rg e B. Benton C. H. B ernhardt "Wilma D. Best Fred Allan Beverly Joe A. Biolkowsky Wilmer E. Bivens Gladys Blanche Blaha E rnest B. Blount Rudolph Bodem uller John N. Boehme Maxine F. B randeberry D. Rachael Bra aer Fred R. Breaux, Jr. G. Louise Briggs Jimmie W. B ritt Mrs. 0. F. Brown, Jr. Garland Brown John William Brown Caroline Brownlee Shudde Bess Bryson B. W. Bullock Victor Oscar Bur,ala I M ary Frances B urm eister ; Thornton Bradley Burns V ernon W. B urton William Jam es Burton Mary N. B utler Joseph P. Callan C atherine V. Callender Geraldine M. Campbell Ju liette Jan e Canfield c h a rle s I. C ardiff M artha E. Cardwell J, R C artw right Mary D. Castro L l ’ use Ce m y An drey E. C herry George F. Clark E arl W. Claw atcr, Jr. Oliver Loomis Clevenger Mavis Clymer Aaron Cohen, J r. Marvin Key Collie Frances Ross Combest C. Neal C anaster Sidney M. Conolly J. E. Cook Paul Eugene Cooper 0 , Dean Couch W allis L. Craddock S tafford C. Craven Bi -hard W. Creal M is. Ruth Creal E thel Credo Kila Grits Erw in Gray Culley rn. L. Cunyus M ary C. Dalton Julius David Leonard H. Daniel Sbirlireed Darwin Dorothy IL Davis M ary Jane Davis . Stanley F. Davis, Jr. f William Deason P Homer Dee | C lifford F . Deininger H asel R. Deputy Wanda D eter Alice W. Dickinson R obert P. Doherty Charles A. Dopking E thel V. Doss Joel G. Downham B. Ducker Leo D uflot Velma Lois Dulin Eleanor Dumble H u b ert S. Durham S tanley S. Eliasa Je a n E. E lliott Lillian A. Emison | M ary Bess Eskew K enneth A. Etheridge I J. Billy Evans Jam es E. Evans Steve W. Evans Elizabeth A. Everett Jan e Eyres F rances M. Faltin lf E d na Fenn | | John T. Files Hector J. Floret M urry Fly, Jr. . Dorothy E . Ford A nton Foyt Jam es M. Franks JO. R. F razier IL 0 . Frederick Joe M. Freem an F Marie F reer John Friedel P ansy M. Fuller A. Adele F u rr Joe I. Garcia, J r. Richard R. Gangwyer John Wade Garnett R. C. Gibson James W. Giffin Edwin A. Goldberg John Robert Goldsmith Jack C. Goolsby Herbert M. Goitesman Lewis A. Gray Margaret E. Gray J. E. Greer Charlotte Lynn Greusel Elizabeth C. Griffin Mary Virginia Griggs John Alonzo Guinn Robert J. Gump \ Cutter*** jaMnanda F. Guyler ■ * E . Haggard t i ert M. Haglewood L, Haines r ni i # H klonrari Ballett Llokd J. Halpenny Edward Rhodes Hamilton at Hemphill** we still have plenty of a1! kinds of FREE DESK BLOTTER FREE DESK BLOTTER SCHOOL SUPPLIES Give Us Your Course Number Supply the Correct Books • Fountain Pens • Athletic Equipment • Note Books • U. of T. Stationery I • Laboratory Supplies j • Typewriters Come Early and Avoid the Rush FREE DESK BLOTTER FREE DESK BLOTTER Across from Law Building r i f e . “ PAGE TW 1LVJ Phone 2-3164 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-3165 The F irst College Daily in the South TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937 Nowotny Asks Organization of Boarding-House Men Social Activities, Intramurals Stressed Hoping to provide a program to facilitate activities, intram ural both social and athletic, for men students living in room ing houeo?. representatives of the Dean of Men’s Office will meet Thursday night with rooming-house repre­ sentatives to inaugurate ‘be Men’s The Com munity m eeting will be held in the ju r- ior ballroom of the Texas Union at 7:30 o’clock. Association. the Devoted exclusively to the in­ terests of students not residing in dorm itories or fratern ity houses, the association has two prim ary aims, Am o Nowotny, assistant dean of m en, said Monday. Spon­ sored by the Dean of Men s Of­ fice, the organization desires to Intram ural D epartm ent aid and Texas Union in providing facilities fo r unorganized men to participate more effectively in in­ tram ural athletics, and to offer social events which will help un­ organised men make proper social adjustm ents and develop the so­ cial side of their college experi­ ence. B-Men, P-Men Find No Clues To Dorm Kidnap The m ysterious kidnapping of Brackius I and Perathius I is still front page stu ff at the m en’s dor­ mitories. Former Salaries Are Restored For Teachers Cooperative Houses Increase As First Year Proves Success They’re only s couple of rag fsculty through dolls, but they were to re p re s e n t! approval o f the 1937-98 budget Brackenridge and P rath er Halls J presented by P resident J . W. Cal e t the pet-acquainted round-up of | houn ^ t b , Bo(mj o{ R t , the three m ens dorm itories Mon-; day night. Salaries of U niversity members w ere increased thle .am m er. Low Cost, Social Life, Scholarship Are Promoted To substitute fo r the purloined T he increases am ounted to 90 dummies, two new dolls were | per cent o f the 1992-33 figure for made, Brackius II and P rathius ; thog# above $4(000 a year and 95 j m win* I II, to “ die” in m artyrdom with t h , I for the Roberts Hall doll binding good-will of tories. dormi- the , A. . . Hailed by A m o Nowotny, as- .. ***** sistant dean of men, and by stu- th o le less than $4,000 I dent mPmbfr, as , p heno„ en, , a year. Salaries less th an $2,100 : success a t the clos# of its initial had been restored during the bi- j ye*r last spring, U niversity Co- operative Houses are beginning ennium. their second y ea r of experim enta­ tion in mass cooperation. P a r tia l F u l f i l l m e n t Following their disappearance Monday, Thurm an Talley, assist­ ing in party preparations, theo­ rized th at they were taken for a ride, probably by some “ fu rrin er becauaa no clue could be found ' when dorms were searched. three the I f s still a m ystery, Talley said, but if s apparent th a t B rack’s B- men and P rath er’s P-men still re­ sent the “ swipe.” In budgeting the $1,658,224 al­ lotted the University by the Legis­ lature, adm inistrative officers saw r H_; January to restore salaries to the 1932-33 level. ... J Expressing his entire satisfac­ tion with the success of the co- A . J ; ' , operative housing plan in its first Dean Nowotny predicted, , request last; !oon , f tw the cIo„ o f tb, m # . 37 session, th at in a few years at and fifty men . *«*,. *** students would live in co-operat- . i least seven hundred B udget expenditures approved .* ,,^ .,,. , , j by the Regents include $241,680 ive houses fo r general adm inistration, $1,*! , i OAno, i . . ’ T i fo r residence instruction 480,985 , j j , and departm ental research, $184,- , * .* * j .aft * 499 for organized research, $108,-; Tv„aa u * .™ 380 for extension service, $150,- 460 fo r library, $320,425 for the physical plant, and $10,000 for . . . . operative houses fo r students, one fo r women. T I * T ti , vj* *v*** th ere were two eo- to r men ana one Last year f r r 1 . 5 ’ r ' J - . ,W®r * , Now W e Have 4 Publicity Hound; Galveston With 64 U. T. Furnishes In IOO Pre-Meds Spot, th# campus dog who died from battle wounds last year, has a successor. H er nam e Is Foxy, and she usually is found sprawled in canine ease in fro n t of the of­ fice of the Publicity B ureau, where her mistress, Miss L orena in Galveston for Drummond, works. Sixty-four of th e one hundred pre-medical students accepted by the University School of Medicine freshm an class this fall were from the Uni­ versity. The University sends more students to the medical school than all other schools combined. the Following is the list accepted form er University students: John Ernestine Alexander, J r., Hugh Fuller Arnold, Charles W il­ liam Bailey, William Harold Bar- Je re Markle© Bauer, ekman, George R obert Branch, Jr., Ma­ thew DeVore B urnett, Jr., Ronald Malcom Burnside P erry Leroy Bursey, Sam Callaway, Henelaus Caravageli, Stanley L. Clayton, Betty M arguerite Cooper, E rnest Samuel Cunningham, Jr., Jam es T. Downs III, E dgar Shumate Ezell, Sarah Ferguson, Clare Denims, Fitzwilliam H enry Dodson G ar­ re tt and Mrs. Marie D. Gordon. The w arrior Spot roamed the Drag in search of fights, but Foxy is content merely to follow stu­ dents to their classes, visiting all courses except those in chem istry — hers is a sensitive nose. Miss Drummond, who says she is really Foxy’s au n t instead of her m istress, declares th at the dog is half collie and three-quarters German shepherd. The dog’s likes include ice cream and car rides, and h er pet peeve is fo r someone to leave the car windows closed when she is riding. H. E. Tea Room Opens Wednesday TJ)(. adm inistratjve offj„ , „ , | t o ba p aid over and above item - j „ f , h„ ** 18 R«*erve» Set Up The following reserves were set I u p . T e h I Advanta*es , houses include , . , , (com fortable q uarters, * w i d e n e r Half"» n d T th ,r” » m P M ^ in* ” **• *32.400; distinguish- The average cost o f i * Lv, * ’ a w Professorships, $30,000; addi- C0"T7 f . T . " . „ Lh o n » *m ° u n t * u th »n “ d \ ln board fo r one m onth to fitnirp for n r^ id e n t’* jurlarv ' in case" this am ount residents houses has been estim ated ST 500 is a t *16-38» which is about h alf the necessarv for the securing of a u?ual cost of room and board. In suitable m an for perm anent pre*- addition t0 id em ; rem odeling th . Old L ibrary * c . , rT. ro lle rtin r I Building to. the otaric L.oiiec..o.,, fc„ K„ _ .v . r _ offered low : ln d The Home Economics tea room I Vernon 7 * * pUees the by living costs, . * promotion Also Charles Houston H arris, Alan E rnest H ubner, Robert Elms H um , E m art Renshaw Innis, Isaac Neumon, Darrel Jones, will begin its third year of opera- j Johnson, Elm er Knox tion W ednesday. The tea room, j Blocker Howe Joslin, Alfred John which will be open from 12:30 to Kelly, Robin Houston Kilgore, 1:30 o’clock daily except Sunday, Theodore A rthur Klecka, G riffith is managed by the home econom- Delano Lambdin, Robert Edward ic.s students from the classes of Leaton, Carey Leggett, Jr., Wil- te a I Ham Cohen Levin, Louis J. Man- large quantity cookery and bis share of the room m anagem ent. Ann Fleming, hoff, Jr., A lbert Keay Mayes, Tra- vis Charles Meitzen, and Logan Underwood Mewhinney. resident ie required acnior. will be thia year’, student .L- in the wealth feervice, 54,»uu, re- t i ,900;; re- the in ^ e H ealth Service i, serve to cover operating deficit in available fund fo r 1937-38, $3”,- f« n A S f e l a & L x j t i * & i 0 4. Li A y u * « ; ,. ^ «*♦ . . . . . . . . . I have not been itemized yet. r. ____ . r *« ii I With expenditures and reserves the honor of I together to ta lin g f . . «9 rqq roo estim ated deficit for the y e a r kl I a g 7Q W University avaUable f u n d | A’a. Five of the fourteen livin* revenue is estim ated fo r the year m for a t $1,005,276. This am ount will be membership by various honorary consumed and a $37,361 deficit i scholastic organizations. Grades of Th* offices le ft vacant by -he jncprred | n m eeting the charges (Practically all were above those of co m m itte d d th o ^ g h ^ m e parts d° es not ninder- scholarship was G r a h a m t o M a n a g e . t - . , T __ ti. least living tv.* ■ . A Kn or a t Also Homer ^ P8Cted otA en operative by calling U niversity 240. livable. 1 in That houses encourages, to do one hour of work around the hostess. to do one hour of work around the hostess, , house each day. He also to do bis share . is ex-1 The tea room will serve a reg- Jackson Moore, tow ard ul*r menu. Meals will be priced Rhoads Mustain, Wesley Bernard ai . > and a t 40, 50, and 60 cents. Reserva- j McCall, Jr., E dgar Cornelius Mc tions fo r luncheons may be made j Ree A rthur Newton, Charles Pru- I *i_ u.. ..it,***. itt, Clarence Thorpe Ray, John Quinn Rounsaville, William W al­ lace Sawtelle. Oscar O. Salke, Jr., E rnest Daniel Shackled, Jr., Robin Royal Shepperd, Edwin Meredith Sykes II, Oliver H. Timmins, Jr., George Graham of Houston was Edwin P ier Tottenham , H arry o f the grades made by them were j approved as house m anager by Ross v assalto, Wilson U rr w ag- Jack Moore W eatherford, members of the U niversity Men’s ner, Cooperative U nit his John B. Webb, Jr., Weldon Ular- nomination by Am o Nowotny, as- enc© W hite, Sam W erner Wel- si?tant dean of men, Thursday j born, Jeptha W ilson Wille, Wil- night. Elmo Fisher of New Braun- Ham Edward and Rudolph Felix fels was elected secretsry-treas- Ximenes,. shown by the scholastic records of last y ea r’s residents. There were the no failures among the boys living . the hoote, end more than half I V le n 8 L - O - U p r l O U S e S the house were chosen Jacob W ingo, the average student. n w „ 6 a fte r __ ^ „ T, * „ . I * . - Nor were cooperative housers urer of the organization, Zepeda. I I I U nit I includes the co-operative the a v e ra g e 1 houses a t 202 E ast Twenty-sec- a t 403 East} devoid of social life and outside activity. They had num ber of dates and attended the ; ond S treet and usual num ber of dances as well a^ Twenty-second Street, being active in tests. All of jobs. Miss Lucite Nemir who received her bachelor of journalism degree is I from the University in 1936 has N.Y.A. council m em ber from the house a t replaced Mr. Ted T urner on the 202 E ast Twenty-second S treet Navasota Exam iner. Mr. Turner, The success of the cooperative and H artzel Styron of Joshua is an ex-student of the University, the o th er; died suddenly this summer in Gal- — ......... ... veston following an appendectomy. plan has been attributed by Dean council member from Glen M cNatt of Comanche EX ON NEW SPAPER intram ural con- them held 1-------- •------------------------------ against th e fund. Reception Honor Baptists Attendance records , , th at various Key Men Dean Nowotny sa.d Faculty Offices Moved to Tower the program would start as soon as possible. A t present “ key” men in the rooming j campus houses are being contacted fo r the J 0ll0W' offices of many faculty m embers m eeting Thursday night. ing r# moved from thUckf_ Greek letter for it? nam e. R e g io n a l C o u n c ils The association will be headed by three region.; council,. A pres- Went, vice-president, se.-reier - -president, r ' airm an, a r e traa su rer, aecia be intram ural m anager will offices of the D epartm ent of Ro­ mance , „ r . . floors tbro.agb tbe tw enty-fourth, a n d ; * * . , , w ♦ j the On the sixteenth floor are the I fir-*., caf tv.* Languages. The depart- j z.. / xr oceupie. tw enty-fifth houses lntervening !paca t . the „ ii.*. , v . the seventeenth the De- from Im A «% * M a ♦ ’L* alk P i A A , . y , , ; 5 i ” t°U ' i ' * .e x e s : !v to be ^ peak‘ng; I n . i n , a board, which will be com- * i of the tw enty-seventh floor and J. B attle, professor o f classi-j cai languages, is the so;e o cc u p an t, # iv + ca”I "for C reation3"©! a regional*ad* _ ' L_____ “ visory j posed of the faculty advisor of ca - c b regional^ council, the director , consequently ha# of intram ural a b i e t i n , the direc- haTtog ^ h , highert office on th* t*niver«ity campus, es It is one reT; v- to r of ten tativ e of the o ff:'es of the floor higher than th a t of Donald j 08epb( assistant professor of Ro Dean of Men and Dean of Women, two faculty mem bers appointed msncg ]an?ua by Dean V. I. Moore, the e d ito r! of The Dauy Texan, th e president v arjCU8 departm ents are of toe S tudents Association, a n d turned over other departm ents, the president o f the regions, ex- The gpac< Jeft Jn •xutive council. ©ne long session. Each m em ber of j the o rg a n ic s:ion may only with th* region in whicu ne resides. clitio n hope* to a n n u la te high K . . echo ereh ip . , « « _m public relations work, and encour­ age b e tte r bousing conditions. Ha]1 by the the D epartm ent of O fficers ar# to ho id office ‘ ^ English has been turned over to D epartm ent of Romance Lan- affiliate Kua?f5 %!)d , h st j# ft in W w M t i r a D epartm ent of th e, to w e r1 th* u f o . ..tw enty-fifth floor of b'eeB taken over by th , School TT . ~—— , t m v m r y #f Bu>jneM Admini, t „ ti o n . T h . Scboo! of Education wUl iohorit | the space in Sutton Hall that was form erly occupied by the adminis­ tration as soon as repairs have been completed on the building. ----------------o-------------- Registration Record Broken at A . & M. Kansas College Hires Graduate Dean Nowotny t a d . Public Speaking moved removal of wben the to . . . ---------- To W I N and H O L D Honor Grades . . I recommend a R O Y A L P O R T A B L E !” for , . . first , ZUO Nowotny and Mr-. G. L. Hawkins, house. | housemother, to the strictness of 408 University entrance requirem ent,. Records of . applicants are carefully stu- j I Have d ^ d before they are approved and attendance students of • Famous Churches Each unit of the Christian A ttitude To- Seen” and “ The W orld’s U nrest adm itted to the houses, the U niversity and ward I t ” were the subjects for co-operative houses is governed by the m orning and night services an executive council consisting of the house m anager, the house mo- respectively. Both I travelogues, chosen b y Dr. W. H. I ther, and tw o councilmen. The to appeal to house m anager is nom inated by the Dean of Men, subject to ap -, of To help this large num ber students’ tastes. topics were proval of the members. o—■ — COLLEGE STATION, S e p t 20. McKinsey, pastor, first-year today ( I N S ) — Some 2,000 students were Texas A. & M. College, at | arare!,t freshm an class on record, the students to reg ister to become acquainted. I the B aptist S tudent Union will j n f old r tu d e n t . 1 epo n so r * reception to b e g iv e n tom orrow m orning will bring th . Tuesday night, Septem ber 28. on the lawn of the church. Miss Bes- . P eter We 1., form er etudent of the Un,v e r ity , is now atten d in g the H arvard Law School. Watts c]aMr00n) work {or sie Rutb Carveri chairm an of the | was a student and grader in the session begins Baptist S tudents- Union, will he Departm ent of Government during uMenrellment to th . .s , S in charge. the long session of 1936-37. # sixty-second the Wednesday m orning. UPRIGHT AND PORTABLE T Y P E W R I T E R S IWS TIA* more stud etas than ever are using Royal Portables, using them because they know that the boy or g irl w ith the N ew Royal Portable mmariahbf wins better m aria and bas ja r more spare tim eI LASHER THAN WVTTINO BY HANOI W uh Touch Control, Royal’s sensa­ tional improvement and many other OBChiarre features! Easy to use—even if you’ve never typed a single word. J COSTS N O MOKE TO O W N A ROYAL With all its amazing advances in de­ sign and construction, the New Royal is priced the same as other porta­ bles. And the New Special Educa­ tional Budget Plan enables anyone to own a Royal imm ediately. Choose from three handsome modeia. All axe reasonably priced. P£»NE THE STECK COMPANY L A V A cI LAVACA ALL MAKES OF TYPEWRITERS F O R SALE OR RENT Underwood* - L. C. Smiths - Coronas - Royals Remingtons COMPLETE T Y P E W R I T E R REPAIR SERVIC E FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE— PHONE 2-2211 HEMPHILL’S BOOK STORE A C R O SS FROM L A W BLDG. M arion ex - rtuder.t 'Whitney, and daughter of Dr. and Mrs. F. L. W hitney, has accepted an appointm ent as associate profes­ sor of geology at E ar a* State T eachers C o h fg ., I it^ b u rg , b m h er d" T L V geology from th* l e e r e d * l e a June. P rio r to th a t time, she was W hitney f reee.ved ^ j 'tv’e . puhl :7 ' s o h S- is a m em ber of Phi Bf ‘a Kappa, Chi Upsilon, honorary fratern ity fo r women in geology, Sigma Xi, fratern ity , scientific honorary and Phi Lambda T heta, honorary educational fratern ity . Miss W hitney accented the ap­ pointm ent shortly a fte r she re ­ tu rn ed from a two m onths’ vaca­ tion, during which she attended th e biennial national council of P hi Lambda The*a in Michigan and visited friends and relative* In New York. Deen W ill Return T o School Sept. 25 A rth u r H. Deen, associate pro­ fessor o f geology in the U niver­ sity, will return to his duties in the D epartm ent of Geology on S aturday, Septem ber 25, afte r a six-weeks’ U>ur of South America and the West Indies. through there went Mr. Deen and H yde Dun*, stu­ dent assa te tit in the Departm ent of Geology, le ft New Orleans on July 27 for Havana, Cuba, and the from Panam a Canal, down th e west c os?r of 5 nth America to V alpa­ raiso, Chile By train and plane they svere taken across the Andes M ountains to Buenos Aires- A fter a sight seeing trr> of several days in Buenos Aires, they retu rn ed up the ea**t coast, stopping at coastal ports. o— ------ — C J O. CALLS ST R IK E LORAIN. 0 „ Sept. 20.— (INS) ——C harging the m anagem ent has t h e union r e f u s e d to m e e t w ith grievance com m ittee, a steel work­ ers organizing c o m m it t e e local of the c .l O. called a strike this a ft­ e r n o o n at th e L orain division o f the American Stove Co. The 600 em ployees of the plant walked ©ai rn re-fcpotfcu to the strike call. DRESSED "RIGHT) > IN A FINE NEW FALL S U I T for only . . . PER MONTH Sea C ohn's large assortment of new fall suits styled in the latest or double breasted . , . pat­ latest the terned weaves and designs. drapes, in ail single to 35OO B U Y N O W ! — P A Y A S Y O U G E T Y O U R A L L O W A N C E ! AT COHN BROS. 910 CONGRESS BEULAH BEAVER Kl Pipe Organ and Piano O r g a n L e s s o n s a t U n iv e r s ity M e th o d is t C h u r c h o r a t T e m p l e B e th I s r a e l . P ia n o L e s s o n s a t S t u d i o - —1 7 0 0 C o n g r e s s A v e . PH O NE 7627 I I I I I J. Campbell Wray H ead of VOICE D epartm ent TEXAS SCHOOL of FINE ARTS Director of First Baptist C hurch Choir, Austin Senior High School Chorus, Ben H ur Shrine Chanters. AUDITIONS are now being held for CHURCH CHOIR SOLOISTS Texas School of Fine Arts 2 0 1 0 W ic h ita Aero** from Law Bldg. Texas School of Fine Arts (Inc.) a c credit ed b y The State Department of Education F o u r y e a r c o l l e g e c o u r s e in mu*ic, *peech , and p u b lic t c h o o l m u sic. Special work for children in music, speech, and dramatics. Practice Pianos Available JUST SOUTH OF THE CAMPUS 2010 W ichita Phone 9935 Janet Collett S c h o o l o f D a n c i n g Seventh Season REG ISTER N O W LATEST BALLROOM DANCES t a u g h t i n d i v i d u a l l y . C la s a e s in b a l l e t , m o d e r n , t a p . 2 330 Guadalupe Phones: 9956, 6430