T oday’s Editorials W hich A lso A p p lies to U s . • • THE DAILY TEXAN T exas Prosperity M ay N ot End W ith Turn o f N ew Y ear THE FIRST COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTH Volume 38 PRICE 5 CENTS AUSTIN. TEXAS. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 9, 1936 T oday’s Quotation •‘Liberty is given by nature to m ute ani­ m als.”— T acitus. Judiciary Candidates Eight More Students File as Candidates For Campus Offices E ig h t stu d e n ts filed petitions y e s te rd a y with M a rg a re t Gray, sec­ r e ta r y of th e S tu d e n ts ’ Assembly, announ cing th e ir candidacy for cam pus offices. W a rre n Osborne, Jo e Beiden, a n d Tom Law will r u n fo r places in the assembly fro m th e College of A rts an d will r u n fo r th e Assembly fro m —....................... th e School o f Business A d m in is -* n « a * tra tio n . S tan sife r Ross announced O Z a>l H C I l f o r assem blym an from the College * 1 r r i « I Sciences. J a n e Eyres ........ - — — » * • j Y t l T r O I * of E ngineering. W heeler Lyon | J* O F I 6 1 6 S C O D C will r u n fo r assem blym an fro m the ! G ra d u a te School. In Last Stage Two studen ts, M a rg a re t W irtzj o f s t a f f The scientific the W. J. McDonald O bservatory of the U niversity, situated on Mt. Locke, in the Davis M ountains of W est Texas, practically is now complete, and the te chnical s ta f f is also rea d y to s t a r t work as soon as the 82-inch in stru m e n t is in op­ eration, Dr. O tto S truve o f Wil­ liams Bay, Wis., announced. Dr. Stfu v e occupies the dual position ° t d irector of the new observa­ to ry and d irector of the Yerkes O bservatory of the U niversity of Chicago. He said the t h a t im p o rta n t observations m eantim e a t th e McDonald e m K se rv a to ry by m eans of smaller in instrum ents. “ I r ec en tly inspected th e opti­ cal p a r ts of th e W. J. McDonald O bserv atory and fo und t h a t the 82-inch m irro r was in the process of being parabolized,” Dr. Struve said. ‘‘This is th e last stage in the fig u rin g of a n astronom ical tele­ scope m irror, b u t is also the most difficult. Polished With Rouge ‘‘The 82-inch m irror, when r e ­ ceived from th e glass works, had a rough su rfa ce which was a p ­ proxim ately flat. The first process consisted of m aking the su rfa ce flat, a f t e r which it was m ade con­ cave to f it the su rfa ce of a sphere having a radius of 5 4 feet. th e large “ All of this w ork was accom­ plished on grind ing machine of the W a r n e r & Swasey of Cleveland, Ohio. Com pany used, H eavy metal p re ­ which had been especially pared f o r this purpose. tools w ere ac cu rate, “ A f t e r the sphere was consid­ the ered su fficie n tly rouge m ir r o r was polished with p erfectly its su rfa ce was until smooth and reflecting. U n f o r tu ­ nately a reflectin g sphere does not combine into one focus th e rays coming from a d ista n t ob je ct; in th a t optical a possesses spherical a b e rra tio n ,” Dr. Struve declared language, spherical m irro r is said it and Carolyn Russell, announced th e ir candidacy for seats in the J u d ic ia ry Council. Osborne, a ju n io r stu d e n t in the College of A rts and Sciences, is a m em ber of th e “ T ” Association and a m em ber of th e H ouston Club. He has been active in six in tr a m u ra l sports fo r the last two years. L ast y e a r he was a varsity le tte rm a n on th e basketball team. O sborne is also a m em ber of the Alpha T au Om ega social f r a t e r ­ nity. His petition f o r candidacy w as signed by 1,548 students. Beiden F ilet Beiden, also a ju n io r stu d e n t in th e College of A rts an d Sciences, filed his petition last Monday. He ie president o f the N ew man Club,j ^ r,e m a n a g e r of th e varsity swim ming te am , upperclass co-sponsor o f the Sophom ore Club, and a m em ber o f the W est T exas Club, Y.M.C.A. C abinet, Rusk L ite ra ry Society, an d Sigma D elta Chi, professional a n d f r a ­ te rn ity . He is sports editor o f The Daily Texan. L ast y e a r Beiden w as co-president of th e Sophomore Club, a N ew m an Club scholarship w inner, and a night e d ito r of the T exan. H e was recently appointed by Jim m ie Brinkley, p re sid e n t of th e S tu d e n ts ’ Assembly, to a posi­ tion in th e Assembly f ro m th e Col­ lege of A rts a n d Sciences to serve u ntil th e fall elections. jo urnalistic h o n o ra ry Law is a sophomore stu d e n t in th e College of Arts a n d Sciences. H e is one of th e sponsors o f the F re s h m a n Fellowshsip Club. He w as appointed cha irm an of t h e C u ltu ra l E n te r ta in m e n t Com mittee la s t su m m er by L efty Cummins, at t h a t tim e ac ting president of the Assembly. He is a m e m b er of the D elta T a u D elta social fra te rn ity . Recent A p p oin tee File* Miss Eyres, a ju n io r s tu d e n t in t h e School of Business Adminis­ tra tio n , is president o f the Girls’ Glee Club, vice-president o f Al­ p h a D elta Pi social sorority, a r ep rese n tativ e, a n d Panhellenic la st y e a r was a Bluebonnet Belle nom inee fo r th e C entennial Cac­ tu s. . She was re c e n tly appointed a m e m b er of th e S tu d e n ts ’ Assem­ bly fro m the School o f Business A d m in istration , to serve until the fall election, b y Brinkley. Ross is a stu d e n t in the College o f E ngineering. He is a m em ber o f Pi Epsilon, h o n o ra ry petroleum en g in e e rin g f ra te r n ity , Tau Beta Pi, h o n o ra ry f r a te r n ity of the Col­ lege of E ngineering, a n d A.I.M.E. Miss Lyon received h e r b ache­ lo r of a r t s degree in Ju n e . She is th e C urtain Club, a m e m b er of a n d is a m e m b er of th e Board of G o vernors of th e Club. She is also a past s e c r e ta ry of th e C urtain Club. She is a m e m b er of Alpha dram atic Psi Omega, f r a t e r n i t y , and Delta Delta Delta, social sorority. h o n o ra ry Wirt* File* Miss W irtz w as one o f the ten B lu e b o n n e t Belles last year. She is a m e m b e r of th e S idney L anier L ite r a r y Society, Alpha Lambda D elta h o n o rary scholastic society, a n d Alpha Delta Pi, social so ro r­ student, is a g r a d u a te ity. She w o rk ing on her bachelor of laws degree. She w as ap ­ pointed to a ch air in th e Ju d ic ia ry Council to serve until th e election, by Jim m ie Brinkley. rec ently Miss Russell is a j u n io r stu d e n t in the U niversity from Houston. She is a m em ber of Pi Beta Phi, social sorority. She is also a r e ­ of B rinkley to c e n t appointee serve in th e Ju dic ia ry Council u n ­ til th e fall election. length, a little blond J.A. n tm p r f f William Penn Jo n e s bobbed up in th e middle of th e room and said: “ P ardon me, p r o fe s s o r ! ” And he walked aro u n d to face a big J.A . on th e next row nam ed B rockm an Horn. To th e big J.A . the little J.A. said— w ith r a n c o r: “ So you had a date with Evelyn And th e little J.A. drew back and took a c u t a t the big J . A . ’s jawbone. Raises Opposition To which action, being a p o te n ­ tial lawyer, the big J.A. raised op­ position. So he reta lia ted. And the little J.A. and changed landed in the la p of a third J.A. across th e aisle. ends By this time the class in Con­ tra c ts was aw ake and exclaim ing and gasping and gesticulating and ju m p in g up ptherw isa m a nifesting and in te re st in the a ffa ir. seats their in M E ET IN G P O S T P O N E D last n ig h t! ” of The C leburne Club will not its r e g u la r m e eting S un day hold football g am e because w'ith Oklahoma U niversity in Dallas, Waldo Wilton, president, has announced. The n e x t m eeting will be held Sunday, O ctober 18. the Y O U M A Y BE NEXT To win a fr ee p as s to the TIXAS THEATER Names of w inners ap p e ar daily in the C LA SSIF IE D SEC TIO N of the THE D A ILY TEXAN Geo. Stimpson Condemns Censorship W a sh in g to n N ew s C o rresp o n d e n t S ays S h o u ld M ak e E d ito r R esponsible B y International New* Service W hy should a u n ive rsity news­ pape r be tied down with censor­ ship because of the hasty action of one stu d e n t? Thin question this week by George was asked Wr. Stimpson, p resid e n t of th e N ational P re ss Club, com m enting on o f The Daily T exan, U niversity of T exas new s­ paper. censorship Stimpson, W ashington corres­ the H ouston Post, p o n d e n t fo r visited the Capitol on vacation. As a f o rm e r college editor, he has his own ideas a b o u t censorship. “ W hen I got too wild as m a n ­ aging ed ito r of the p ap e r a t V al­ paraiso U niversity Indiana, th ey expelled me,” he declared. T h a t is the logical way in which to keep college new spapers w ith­ in the bounds of propriety, he believes. in Margaret Wirt* ( l e f t ) and Carolyn Russell, shown above, are both candidate* fo r sea ts in the Judiciary Council. These stu den ts filed their petitions y este rd ay with Margaret Gray, secretary o f the S tu d e n ts’ A ssem b ly. Far East and Tropics Turn Ex-Students Into Missionaries “ Besides,” Stimpson continued, “ A censorship does not give th e citizens of T exas much cre d it fo r discrimination. The people who read a college n ew spaper un- doubtedly realize th a t it is edited their postg( but m a n y of by college students, and will dis-. are stiH ca rry in g on miss any g la ring or im proper a t - j spots 0f the globe. tack as a schoolboy pran k or m i s - I ju d g m e n t.” in ( T he 5irst ex .s tu d c n t t „ become The lure of the inscrutab le F a r E ast and th e glam or of th e tropics have a t tr a c te d forty-five f o r m e r stu d e n ts of the University, and se n t them to foreign missions, according to records of the E x -S tu d e n ts ’ Association. Several have r e tu r n e d to this co untry to live, others have died a t thpm rem ote ... # j (jlYCCnilC PlcHlt a m issionary was H e n ry G. How- Operator to Talk c o r r e s p o n d e n ts ,; bjs bachelor of a r ts degree Stimpson, one of the o utstand- j ard 0f Jacksboro, who received ing W ashington in recalled his college career. He 1 3 9 7 and his m a ste r of a r ts de- " as w orking on five new spapers gree the n e x t year. He w as s e n t at once, and decided th e P re sb y teria n p reside nt of the university should Church, resign. When he g o t the sugges- tion published, he was expelled. Two Here on Leave India t h a t th e by t 0 Monday Night SIX PAGES TODAY No. 20 Church Group Brinkley Remains To Discuss Eligible Despite Censorship Change of Schools G oo d m an To Begin Jimmie “ Cousin” Brinkley is still eligible to hold his o ffice, that D i s c u s s i o n ; B o t h 0f President of th e S tu d e n ts’ Association. Dean H. T. Parlin, dean of S i d e s T o R p 1 tb e College of A rts and Sciences, in confe re n ce with Dean V. I. Moore I n v j p e n D i s c u s s i o n an d Dean A m o Nowotny, made the official ruling on Brinkley’s case . Is restriction o f free speech and in a de­ f re e assembly justified m ocracy? T h a t is the question th a t will be debated a t a round-table discussion a t th e Congregational Church S un d ay night a t 8 o’clock. P artic u larly , desirability of c e n ­ sorship f o r The Daily Texan will be considered. Rabbi A b ra m Goodman will in ­ troduce th e general topic of dis­ cussion f o r the evening. Then spe­ cific aspects will be considered. E v e r e tt Looney, fo rm e r assis­ t a n t to th e A tto rn ey General will talk on “ Should candidate whose nam e app e ars on the ballot be refused radio facilities.” any Jim m ie “ Cousin” Brinkley, president o f the S tu d e n ts ’ Asso- ! ciation, will take the question “ Is j the of The Daily j T exan desirable.” censorship of philosophy U niversity will discuss the ques­ tion, “ Shall the right of assembly for political and labor org an iz a­ tions be r e stric te d by refusal of the use of halls and p a r k s ? ” —— ............ - ■ ^.yesterday. John H. Reagan, one of By Centennial x x v a r x x / l f f C C K V / D S c r V c Q John H. Reagan Brinkley was in form ed Wednes­ day that, because he had transfer- | red to th e College of A rts and Sciences this sum m er a f t e r fa ilin g in the School of Law he had been autom atically placed on final trial. in­ This would have made him eligible to hold a campus o ffic e . A fte r the decision y esterd ay , the Brinkley said he was inform ed by m ost famous figures in Texas his- j Dean P arlin th a t he had been re- to ry , has been honored du ring the moved fro m the final tria l list and p a s t weeH by th e University C e n­ was still eligible to hold the o f­ fice. te nnial Exposition. Mr. R e ag a n ’s birthday w as Thursday. “ Dean Parlin said t h a t one o f A picture of Mr. Reagan a n d a I th e reasons fo r taking me o f f the folio of his correspondence, m ost final trial list was th a t the D ean’s of which concerned a f f a ir s of office had failed to give me due is now on exhibit in th e ; notice,” Brinkley said. “ It is cus- sta te , tom ary to notify persons who are Littlefield Home, h e a d q u a rte rs of the U niversity C entennial E xposi­ going on final trial of the action tion. of the U niversity officials, befo re the stu d e n t is actually ev e r placed on the list. The s tu d e n t then m u s t sign an a g re e m e n t th a t he is on final trial and u n d ersta n d s t h e term s of th e agreem ent. F o r som e He showed g r e a t b rav ery in two reason, I was not notified in J u n e , th e School of Law to the College o f A rts and Sciences. Indians and when Texas in 1838. tr a n s f e rr e d fro m I b attles ag a in st th e w as o ffe re d a lie u te n a n t’s com ­ mission in the a rm y of the new to ac­ republic, b u t he declined f o u r ce p t of this commission. F o r In opening th e church m e e t­ ‘‘Dean P arlin also told me that ings to th e discussions, the Rev. while I had been enrolled in the College of A rts and Sciences be­ S. Marcus H ouge emphasized th e years he worked as surveyor fore I ever en tered the School o f ; f a c t th a t th e church is no t ta k in g j public lands. In 1846 Reagan was adm itted Law, my grades were good, a n d a p artisan a ttitu d e to a n y of th e j questions, b u t is continuing a pol- to the bar and six years later was th a t the records of the College of icy in e f f e c t for several years of elected d istric t judge. In 1857 he A rts a n <* Sciences had no scholas- allowing discussion from all an- was elected to th e U nited S tates gles of a n y problem in which the House of R epresentatives. inter- t h e He sided with Texas when she deans decided to remove me f r o m seceded and was a m em ber of final trial. I realize th a t they g a v e convention. He me the ben e fit o f every doubt. I both sides J served u n d er J e ff e r s o n Davis in certainly appreciate this fact, a n d “ W hat o u r gro u p is interested in is g e ttin g of a n y question in as f a ir and un* (th e C o nfederacy as postm aster- 1 know it was ‘w h ite ’ of th e m .” tic bad murks a ga inst me. prim arily j t h e “ Because of secession facts, these * ____ *_____---- C ranberry to S p ea k Mr. Reagan w as born in Sevier C ounty, Tenn., October 8 , 1818. Dr. R. C. C ran b e rry , professor He was ed ucated in Maryville Col- to a t S outhw estern lege in Tennessee, and came Ralph C. Shuey, noted chemist {church m em bers might be I Miss N ora Agnes G raham a n d an(1 professor, who a t p rese n t is ested For any outside board to at- Miss A lthea Cronk have been on engaged t 0 dec^ e w h at th e public leave and were enrolled in research work, will the g[v€ a le cture on “ A F o u rth Di- in the Graham, g r a d u a te o f 1918, is a mension should and should not r» * ln E(iucatlon Monday biased a way as is possible,” he g eneral and for the last few years -------------- 0 -------------- to Speak I of the Civil W ar as Secretary of the T r«a s u r y- ^a,,e made a” e f f o rt to In 1865 Reagan was made a 1S sp^ J ed . sides of th e censorship question, o th e rs of the leaders. A fter he | take both Pn s o ™?r of war with Davis and; Over One Million See Bureau Films ed ‘to r responsible, and F o u r o th e r ex-students have not the new spaper itself, he de- 5^ n se nt to j Dr and Mra. Mr. Shuey is connected with the c ar€ ‘ o Aeronautical Club Holds Meeting ; Roy Mack B ryan; fo rm e rly o f Redmanal C h e m i c a l P roducts Galveston, a re the K enned y I Company, a p a r t of the Bakelite • Hospital at the A m erican Pres- Corporation, and is conducting re- I b yterian Mission . . i „ is missionary in Chosen. Dr , the e f f e c t of phenolic 1 search on . . in . r Bryan and surgeon, and Mrs. Bry an is res’ns on a hospital assistant. physician course of th e poly- of oxidation ,, See CH U RCH, page 3 Chem istry Club of the I rn -1.since it is the m ost controversial was released, he re tu r n e d to Texas farm ing a t Palestine. and began Soon, however, he r e tu r n e d to politics. He was re-elected to the United States Congress 1887 became a senator. In 1891, to he resigned from the S enate th e Texas become chairm an of Railroad Commission. He died in 1905. 15 Engineers Attend Meeting and The convert are always dealing with distant light sources, a spherical m irror would be useless and it is, t h e r e ­ fore, necessary to the sphere into a geom etrical surface is 0 the cross section of which parabola. This is accomplished by polishing ce rtain p a rts the spherical m irror, others unchanged. University A eronautical Society held first m eeting its T h u rsd ay nig h t to appo in t a com- Since in astronom ical work we ^ ^ t e e for the nom ination o f o f ­ ficers, and to discuss plans for the coming year. The com mittee consists of G olfrey Connally, Grace Decker, and Bruce Switzer. stressed was th a t the club is non-technical is not an e ng inee ring club. and Mr. Alex V allance, the sponsor, suggested th a t an inspection trip of Randolph H eld and D uncan Field would be highly probable. th a t the pro­ I t was m entioned gram s a re to be planned to in­ clude m any related su bjects of gen e ral interest. “ The optical ex p e rts are very to g u ard a ga inst effects astigm atism , which would Mirror Could Be Ruined See MIRROR, page 3 im p o rta n t poin t ca reful of leaving An of J. A. Classroom Fight Ends In Court; But It’s Only Fun J .A .’s in the class o f C o n tra ct Law drowsed a n d yawned y esterd ay m orn ing as J . A . ’s do. To them, Benno Schmidt, assista n t professor, talked in sentences a y ard long, w ithout ever g e ttin g his breath, as professors do. T h e n , .rig h t in the middle of one of Schm idt’s prize sentences for --------------------- ----------------------- in lyn which H o rn had been accused in to of d atin g out. She rushed do little the c o m forting a c t on William Penn. But others were rushing little to p ro te c t blond fro m f u r t h e r on slaughts and irate Horn the injuries th re a te n e d they inflict, carried the b a tte r e d lover o u t the door into the hall, com pletely ig­ noring poor E velyn’s m a te rn a l in­ stincts. th a t to and the Goes to Court Lawyers o f all types and ages for stron g f o rm e r The lure of China has proved stu- twelve j dents of the University. R obe rt B. W are, who studied a t Yale a f te r leaving the U niversity, w ent to Y unan, China, u n d e r th e a u s ­ pices of th e Y oung Men’s Chris- tion Association. M i s s Mary C harlotte A lex a n d er of Blanco and Miss Inez L ung of A ustin have also done work in China as B aptist Missionaries in Canton. Miss N ancy Lee Swann, grad of 1917, is uate missionery in Honan. Watha Smith, g r a d u a te o f 1903, is w ith the P re sb y teria n Church At*’ the S h a n tu n g in Yencheng. mission us Charles Lee Culpepper, stu d e n t in 1913-1914. Some Not Located to Some doubt has arisen as the w herea bou ts of two mission­ aries in China. The E x -S tu d e n t’s Association has n o t heard from and Miss Mrs. Minnie F oster time. Louise T re ug er Mrs. F oster, a sum m er s tu d e n t in 1914, was last known in Cheffo. Miss T re ag e r, g r a d u a te of 1920, wa.* missionary te ac h er t h e Anglo-Chinese Girls’ in School th e F ed era ted Malay States. in some to be in a n d merization varnish oils. Miss Cecile E lizabeth L an c as­ He received hi? degree from the ter, f o rm e rly of Brownwood, at- tended the U niversity in th e sum- U niversity of K ansas in 1907 a n d mer o f 1918 and now is in Kokan. J e f f e Wilson was fo r a B aptist missionary in J a p a n , b u t is now back in the United States. Others in Japan O thers who have done or are doing work in J a p a n a r e Will Nash, Mr. an d Mrs. R o b e rt Knox, Jam es Miss A nn a Lou G reer, I ra P airley, and Miss Agnes Elrie s‘8 ned Graham. Fall meetings of the American Society of Civil E ngineers and Institu te of Min­ the A m erican E ng ineers ing rem ained th e re f o r three years as are tod ay and S at- j an as sista n t in industrial rese arch u r d a y at F o r t Worth. F ifteen u n d er R o b e rt K. D u n ca n . L a te r represe ntatives fro m the Univer- he w e n t to th e U niversity of P itts- sity ch a pte rs are attending. burgh and to the Mellon I n stitu te a tte n d with Mr. Duncan. the A.S.C.E. a r e Leah Moncure, th e Mr. Shuey ta u g h t in th e U n i - 'o n ly woman m em ber of the chau- ter, Richard Dix, F. D. Savage, and Mrs. versity of P ittsb u rg h as professor of technical chemistry until he re- Professor and Mechanical being held Those w ho will time to ( hicago. John A take up developm ent Focht, Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Daw- work in th e A rm o u r Glue W orks son and P ro fe ss o r Phil M. Fer- guson. J u lia M ontgom ery, s ta te " b e n the Redmanal Chemical director of the P.W .A ., and Gibb e n g i­ Gilchrist, neer, both g r a d u a te s of the Uni v ersi'y, will of a “ the tion VOO- -.iv.. V- J y e a r cia .,. Greenh.ll fa,d l a , Re c o l e s * annuals fjlms durjng t h f ‘ Personal r e p r e s e n t , . . 42,884 w e n t to classes, a n d 2,763 .u . A c a b f u l chack of t h , a n e t - Saver.! y e a n ago, ,n I,ne w ith dance j, m!ide by the exhibitor, to oth er com m unity institutions. for mem bers of 1 5 > 1 6 2 ,s?ued 0 ( lh first- UMI > nd ’ . • ' "’t ; * ? * , ? Ct0S * o f th e I n ,v e r s ,- Moor<> ch ief of th0r* Sai ap pre cia ted by the first and sec­ ond year groups is evidenced in the large num ber who ea ch y e a r a1, ail themselves o f the o p p o r tu n ­ ity of thus identifying themselves with ed itor pointed out. institution, th e the T h eta S igm a P h i’s Issue Bids T o d ay a t Thursday. professional F re sh m en may call and f r a te r n ity Bids will be se n t today to those elected to T heta Sigma Phi, hon ­ o ra ry j o u r ­ for women, nalism E dna Merle McMurry, presid e n t, F i n a l announced fee. covering cost of photog- voting on members* was held the T e x a s J o u r ­ th e y nalism Building 108 w here will be given an hour a t which th e ir picture will be made. The SI raphy p n n tm ir a n d engrav in g is T hursday payable when the studio appoint- Union. men*, is made a t the J o u rn a lism Building. f if t y . te.-nmcn since the section was opened an d journalism , a B average Greenhill Pcrs of the first y e a r class a ! van taste of this week end when sional the studio will n o t be rushed to have pictures made for the class section. f o r m em bership ju n io r standing, a com- ave had pictures m ade pletion of a t least six hours o f a ll t h a t mem- journalism courses and C 'a v e r- ta k e age in oth e r work, and a profes- in te rest field o f journalism. S tud ents who w ork on the college n ew spaper are f a ­ vored as being those most likely the professional aim s A pproxim ately Qualifications suggested include night the in in in j to uphold of th e fra tern ity . fell upon the rivals o fferin g handle their cases in court. But the m a jo rity of the enthusiasts will not leave until 6 o'clock ^ hurch has sent ten th e re for S a tu r d a y m orning on the special train w hich i? to be equipped w ith Charges of assault and b a t t e r y rebe f work. Mrs. E ula H a r p e r a se p arate ca r for dancing p n r - » = — ......... — ------- ------------------- I Brazil has had it* share of ex- to stUfle n t missionaries. The Method- were filed Horn, though just w ere little vague. filed and im m ediately against Bowden, bachelor of a r ts g r a d u a te where they by whom w as a i ° £ 1910, is a te a c h e r in the school education in G r a n b u ry Col- Band will make poses. G overnor Allred, Mayor the Longhorn trip on the | Tom Miller, and the t However, the case will com e to i position in the college. leKp- H e r husband has a sim ilar train. The Rev J. W. Daniel, bachelor ended; trial in the c o u r t of th e McLaurin and Law Society n - : t Tuesday night surprise a t 7 o’clock in t h 2 Moot Room. < The ticket sale in A ustin has the windows of th e Ath- , . „ , , Ju d g e W. P. Keeton, professor Reports: of th r e e girls f ain tin g ; 0f to rts in the School of Law, will and two boys windows, were , . ha™ r * ju m p in g out the h e a r the case, u n su b stan tia te d , “ ' • hv you big b r u te ! ” screeched a fem ale J A named Fvelvn I in 1 c y V Flock G a r re tt, B a rtra m , Skelton, A tto rn ey s f o r the defense are and i°r ^ E velyn, it seem s, was the E v s - i Everybody is invited. in c h a rg e of There o a r ts g r a d u a te of 1911, w e n t t o ! , , Brazil rn 1914. Ha la now a t Porto j letlc C o u n c l 1 w ere d '’sed Legro, where he is on the Method- day a f tern oon ist Mission Board, three churches, and is dean o f the P orto Legro Theological College merce, with at 0 o ’clock, is a way out, however, The J u n io r C ham ber of Com- the aid of the Red Jacket?, will be selling the $ 8 all- t h e exodus may in the G rid-G raph p a r ty which will begin a t 3 o ’clock S a tu rd a y a f t Mi *s Z u l a Terry is a teacher i n expense tours through Friday in 1 ernoon in H ogg M snwriaT'Audi- in Corium. F ree tickets to this m a- f ront of the Texas Union or tickets to this ma the m a in corridor of the Now' Li- be obtained before closing time of brary Building. With the blanket the Union Friday. Those who do not make See F A R E A ST , page 3 S o d * ! Center W orker find consolation torium . F ree in fo rm an ts a t Office said yesterday. As a tu r e o f wuI! no the handle a round the campus. Only incom ing calls will be handled by the this modern system, it longer be necessary fo r to outgoing calls o r calls switchboard o p e ra to r I University operator. J o s e p h ’ S h e l l a c k e r , and | the ( olegio A m erican o, in Porto I Legro, and is working in the Peo- The Weather Friday: Partly j slightly warmer. cloudy and nnlv s r sn N ew P h o n e S y stem To Be in U se Soon F riday m o rn in g a t 9:50 o'clock Pledge services will be held f o r the student* will assemble n ea r those accepting bids T h u rs d a y W aggener Hall an d March to the night in the Texas Union. On tho steps of the U nion Building. A th o following ten-m inute “ step r a lly ” will follow pledges will th o headed by five yell leaders a n d in p u ttin g o u t Tho night s ta ff tw en ty m em bers of the Longhorn Building as soon as it is finished, n5jiv 'tPy,,Ti morning, in- m ara in*, rn- R.*h Band A com plete system of dial te le ­ the th e New Main phones will be installed on ......... ........................ first nig h t f o r sub stitute S a tu r d a y floor of I J th e C om ptroller's I f 1 a break fast. 1 1 . ' foUowed first produced, Mr. Shuey super- stu d e n t vised those p roducts and spent several Rancher an d IL H . Power, chair- n „ m xnc use sales developm ent o f while F. B. Plum m er, Dr. George t a c t u s ina u g u ra ted the policy of ^ c a t i o n s ! e x h i b i t s of A.I.M.E., n ch a p te r the °uups d«**- i mg them. The use of them in ed- >nj? is y ea rly be- im po rtant, Mrs. Page 2 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N Friday, October 9, 1936 Badly Battered Longhorn Squad Entrains Today for Sooner Game Mittermayer and Small Southwest Conference Football Teams in for Tough Week-end Unlikely to See Action Texas Poloists Sooners to Hurl Dazzling Determined Hogs Gallop Through Work on Offense Offense at Longhorns First Practice Bears Meet Hogs, Owls Play A. &M. In Conference Harrison Dons N ew Shoes; Kicks 23 Goals Ja c k Chevigny sent the Longhorns through an easy w orkout T h u rs ­ day aftern oon, consisting of little besides sprints, light blocking p r a c ­ ------------------------ for Aspirants the U niversity U niversity of O klahom a Sooners’ in th e ir series th a t s ta rte d in 1900, the polo team galloped up and down J wjjj bg forced to face S a tu r d a y a d if fe r e n t type of offense from the Zilker Park afte rn o o n of the season. im p rov em ent in th e kind of football played by th e Red and White te am field y«»terday j uga4i b rand dished o ut by th e Oklahomans. T h ere has been a g r e a t ainee C aptain Lawrence-* in th e ir f irs t w orkout The U niversity of Texas, which has held th e u p p e r hand over the C rusem ann, | “ B iff ” Jon e s took over the head McKnight, football coaching duties last sea- ■on. Jones, who tu rn e d o u t colorful te am s fo r A rm y and Louisiana S ta te before going to N orm an last season, has a g r e a t record behind him. Seven players. Jones, Schw artz, Blaha, Herd, an d P earson, r e ­ ported to W. B. Wilson, s tu d e n t polo organizer, f o r th e workout. Prospects th e coming y e a r as C rusem ann, look very good Jones, W’ilson, and Schwartz are experienced poloists and the r e ­ m ainder of the squad are good horsemen. for Y esterd ay ’s w o rk o u t was held In spite of the handicap of h a v ­ ing to take over his duties a t Ok­ season lahom a U niversity Zllkar | w ithout having tho opportunity of tho sq u a d . , w orkm g w .th h,s charges rn ap r,ng * * ’ « , ‘J * , ® * 0" * ” to . the best w inning record . football * system t h a t enabled them tu r n of any Red and White .. * last ttt in ’ . on h o 'r e e , 'b e io n ^ n g 't o ' P ark Stables, b u t all mon are p ro parin g to brin g th e ir >>r a c t f * * a;- * . own m ounts to A ustin as soon as . from they are given assuran ce . . . * , achoo! o ffic ia l, t h a t polo will he the cam- a recognized apo rt on l i * f p a tu r e j ^ f>mous w , r . f Uf' .. ... . , . I a n . I c s t V I I I * • we.- t f I A I / I / l i n e n -'The city o ffic ia l, have prom -! used to build a firs t class field a t Zilker P a r k ,” Wilson stated, “ as soon as th e y are satisfied we in ­ tend to p u t a U niversity spon ­ sored team on th e field. We need the backing and cooperation of all tho s tu d e n t polo fa n s ," Wilson ae r double-wing-back system and go(m « jou> perience in this particu la r o f fe n ­ t h e sive, were slow to pick up f u n d am e n tals last season, b ut in spite of a bad s t a r t finished sec­ ond to N ebraska in th e Big Six records show C o n fere n ce; and . t u c k th e y ha(, t|)e b e, t a Sooners Crave Dry Grid For Longhorn Ti ff the j in than loop, gaining more twice as many y ards from scrim ­ mage as their opponents. This season, with th e well instilled in the squad, Sooners are g cing strong. system t h e Although held to a scoreless tie in its opening gam e against Vie strong Tulsa University H u r t’s eleven, O klahom a came back last so wpck to dpfpat Coiorado Univer- NORMAN, Okla., Oct. 8— Web- . , , a t g q the “ B iff ” J o n e s ’s Okie- ' The Sooners are expected footed from s l i d i n g around much on w et gridirons, M ajor L aw rence to homa f o o t b a l l squad is crying f o r |th r o w th e ir famous runninf? * a m e a d r y fiNd when it .a c e s Texas ag a jn,.t the com paratively green in th ir ty - f irs t a n n u a l gam e LonKhorn line. W ith some veteran S atu rd ay a t Dallas before the big backfield m a terial made up of the seasoned Ja ck Baer, a t q u a rte r- Centennial crowd. Six out of the la st seven gam es back an(J Elmo „ Bo,. HeweSj A1_ Oklahoma has played have been I b e r t Corrott0f Bill Breeden, W ood­ en slippery fields with the mud f0W H uddleston, the o th e r balling up under their cleats and postg> the o k la h o m a te a m is well j fortified on offense. Hewes, who ram slapping them in the face. t h e is expected to do most of punting, has on record a 71-yard boot th a t went o u t of bounds on the 6-yard stripe against O kla­ homa A. and M. last year. Should into a defensive the game scrap, to co u n t is figure d heavily in favor of the Sooners. Boudreau won th e Colorado gam e last season with a 40-yard field goal from placement, and Breeden is also a th r e a t with his w’ell- trained toe. T he N ebraska, Kansas, Missouri, and K ansas S ta te contests last year and th e T ulsa and Colorado gam e this fall w ere all played in rain and mud. Sleet and rain both came down on them a t Boulder, Colo., S a t u r ­ day when th e y defe ate d last y e a r ’s Rocky Mountain confe re nce c h a m ­ pions 8 to 0 on a rectangle caked with black gumbo. P e te Smith, 190-pourfd end, blocked a Colorado pu n t in the end zone fo r a sa fe ty and Elmo “ Bo” Hewes, ra n g y rig ht wingback, skidded across the Colorado line for a touchdown in the fo u rth q u a rte r. tu rn this one, T he Texas gam e will be a t e r ­ rific as usual. L aw rence “J a p ” Haskell, fro sh coach and scout, rep orted upon his r e tu r n that Texas played Louisiana S ta te even all th e way a t A ustin S a t ­ u rd ay and well deserved their 6 to 6 tie. G olf Bawls., fore all By BOB KINCAID l o r a n S p o r ts S t a f f T pathetic — was set v ib rating this week when accounts w ere given of how 28-year-old M aureen O rc u tt Crews failed in h er tw elfth a t te m p t f o r th e U. S. W o m en ’s golfing crown. A fte r p u ttin g up a courageous battle th ro u g h o u t the entire match, the eld er w oman was gradually forced to bow r e v ­ erently to her opponent. t h e n a t i o n a l T h e N e w Y o r k - b o r n v e t e r a n e x ­ h a s e n t e r e d a c t l y a d o z e n t i m e s w i t h e a c h r e s u l t b e i n g i n e v i t a b l y t h e s a m e . N i n e y e a r * a g o , M r s . C r e w s c l i m b e d t o t h e f i n a l s w h e r e h e r h o p e s w e r e s l a i n . T w o t o u r n a ­ l a t e r s h e a g a i n s u f f e r e d m e n t s s e m i - f i n a l h e r f a i l u r e m a t c h . In 1 9 3 1 , t h e g a m e c o n ­ t h e t e n d e r o n c e a g a i n r a n k e d s e m i - f i n a l s o t h e r t o y e a r s s i n c e 1 9 2 4 m a r k e d b r e a k ­ d o w n s w i t h o u t c o n s o l a t i o n . l o s e . A l l d u r i n g L OCAL. W onder why U niversity the S ou thern Collegiate to be held a t Athens, Ga., n e x t S pring do no t get to g e th e r fo r a j a u n t down to San Antonio or H ouston where golfers come in with mid-irons in ­ stead of niblicks. I t seems th a t courses in H ouston and San A n ­ tonio are planned on somewhat th e same scale as th a t in Athens, with long approach shots galore. t h e t e s t i n g T u r n i n g o u t rn. g o l f c o l u m n is e a r l y - m o r n i n g n o t u n l i k e i s , e d g i n g o v e r k i t ­ b a t h . T h a t t e m p e r a ­ t e n i s h l y , t u r e , s h i v e r i n g a m o m e n t , a n d t h e n a m i g h t y s p l a s h . A n d , o f c o m i n g s h o u t i n g , c o u r s e , b l o w i n g , a p p r o p r i ­ a n d a t e l y , a l l w e t ! o u t q u i t e t h e Sigma Phi Epsilon f r a te r n ity the pledging of has announced R. F. Marshall of Houston. Harper Method Shop Scientific C are of th e Hair C om p le te B e a u ty S e rvice Mrs. R. W. Shearer, O w ener Phone 2-0737 121 E a st N inth 8. DALLAS, Oct. (IN S ) — H ardly recovered from last wreek's games t h a t dusted o f f Arkansas, Rice, and Baylor, scarred Texas, and le ft the Aggies with a let­ down feeling, th e Southw est Con­ its ference te e th into the tou ghe st m enu of games y e t presented. this S a tu r d a y p u ts J Five contests, including tw o be- I tw een co n fe re n ce teams, will be battled o u t on the t u r f while the ‘d o p e s t e r bite th e ir nails. E v ery one is a hea d lin e r; every one a close match. th e glory of Houston welcome? its Rice Owls, still full of f ig h t a f t e r a pair of d e fe a ts and n o t too im- ! pressed with the Texas Aggies. L ast S a tu r d a y the ' Hardin-Sim mons Cowboys showed th a t, even though they couldn’t do it, the Aggies might possibly be stopped. S atu rd ay , Rice will see if it has the answer. The chances a re they h a v e n ’t, so early in the season. H o g s M e e t B e a r s Up in the Ozarks, the A rkansas I Razorbacks go a ga inst the Baylor | Bears. Both these team s are good, I even good enough to have a shot the title. The Po rk ers found a t two touchdowns w e r e n ’t enough to beat T.C.U. last week. This time th e y will undoubtedly t r y to make | it three. The Hogs should win. judg e Of the extra -c o nfe re nce games, the one which pits T exas against Oklahoma in the T exas C e n te n ­ n ial’s Cotton Bowl, will probably a t t r a c t the m ost attention. This has become a tradition, though not a hallowed one— to from w h at goes on when the. two g e t to­ geth er on the gridiron. Last y ea r Texas exploded the m y th of Okla­ homa super-strength. B iff J o n e s ’ boys are feeling tough again this year. B ut Texas served notice on all its foes when it held L.S.U. to a 6-6 tie, th a t it was o u t for blood. This corne r v enture s a guess th a t the Longhorns will m ake it worse th a n last y e a r ’s 12-7 win. T u l s a , M u s t a n g s B a t t l e The team which tied Oklahoma its opener— Tulsa, where Vie in H u rt, coach of S.M.U. is th e head m an— will play host to Texas C h r i s t i a n . C om parative score erstw hile same line day the Clarence H arrison, the back who w en t in to t r y fo r th e e x tra point a ga inst L.S.U. last S atu rd ay , has a new p air of shoes. He kicked in the usual shoes and soft-toed missed. Now he has a steel-boxed toe and one a fte rn o o n this week kicked consecutive field goals into the wind from the tw en ty yard line. tw enty-thre e inform ation I hounds can g e t lots of fun and the from lack o f usual | w atching how T.C.U stacks up ag ainst Texas, on a line throu gh j the tw o S ooner teams. A vote of confidence in the H orned Frogs, who seem last hitting to be a t th e ir stride. W h i l e th e Texas-Oklahoma gam e draw s th e atten tio n o f the N orth Texas fans, th e S outh ern M ethodist M ustangs will be having a very in te restin g a fte rn o o n of th e ir own up in New York City. T here th e Ponies will m eet one of team s, th e n a tio n ’s outstan d in g th e F o rd h a m Rams. the T e x a n s’ chance to show if th e y ’re muscle bound this year, as some one has whispered. T h ey ’ll havD to be fast as well as tough to stop th e Rams, who had a p a r ty of th e ir own last week a t th e ex­ pense of F ra n k lin & Marshall, 66-7. I t ’s all v ery well to ro o t for th e M ustangs— but i f s p r u d e n t to p u t your money on th e Rams. I t ’s F A Y E T T E V IL L E , Ark., Oct. 7. ( I N S ) — Bewildered b u t n ot b a t­ red-shirted tered, A r k a n s a s ’ big grid machine to d a y w en t a b out th e serious business of p erfec tin g its ru n n in g gam e the P o rk e rs swing into Southw est C onference competition fo r its second str a ig h t week. as The Razorbacks will tackle th e Baylor B ears here S a tu rd a y a f t ­ ernoon. And they will a t te m p t to swing back into the victory col­ umn a n d also to f o rg e t the 18-to- last 14 d ru b b in g handed S a tu rd a y a t F o r t W orth a t the hands o f T exas Christian U niver­ sity. them big A rk a n sas’ two offensive guns, aerially speaking, Ja ck Rob­ bins an d Dwight Sloan, will both be re a d y th e Bears. N eith er was in jure d in the T.C.U. fray. to w ork a g a in st The gla rin g weakness revealed in F o r t W o rth was the lack of a sustained r u n n in g game. And it is th a t w eakness Coach F re d C. Thomsen is strivin g to co rrec t this week. Thom sen indicated he was going to find capable ball-luggers or m ake wholesale changes in the d ep a rtm ent. loss the Razorbacks would alm ost th ro w them o u t of the confe re nce running. This is the picture th e Razorbacks face. And since it is generally believed th a t every te a m in the circuit will drop a t least one game, A rkansas will “ shoot th e w orks” a t Baylor. f o r A TEXAS-0.U. Game D A L L A S OCTOBER IO, 1936 L O W F A R E S VIA K A T Y G OOD IN C O A C H E S O N L Y O N S A L E S P E C IA L T R A IN L E A V IN G AT 6 :0 0 A M . SA T U R D A Y L im ite d to le a v e D alles n e t le te r th a n S u n d a y n ig h t. G OOD IN C O A C H E S O N LY On S a le fo r 3 :1 S p.m . T r a in F r id a y a n d a ll T r a in s th a n S a tu r d a y . L im ite d le a v e D a lla e n o t la te r to M o n d ay n ig h t. -azo M R O U N D T R IP * S L IG H T L Y H IG H E R R A T E S IN P U L L M A N F o r In fo rm a tio n on a ll e x p e n s e to u r te le p h o n e th e A u s tin J u n io r C h a m b e r of C o m m e rc e o r M is s o u ri- K a n s a s -T e x a s L in es— 7 2 0 2 o r 3 1 4 3 I i V I i i 3 3 9 > « i * * « > s k BI I "et -t i t / f * = * ^4 tice, and pass defense. The squad seemed r a th e r listless in its last session before em barkin g for F o r t W orth today a t 10:55 a. rn. H i n t Small and H enry M itterm ay er were ta k in g p a r t in practice, b ut both z+of these first stringers were con­ sidered unlikely to s t a r t S a tu r ­ day’s contest, and will very likely be used only in an emergency. injuries. Both are su f fe rin g hip Several of those slaked to make the Dallas trip a re in poor co n­ dition and are n o t expected to break into the contest. HIGHLIGHTS * Sports * B y L I N N A L E X A N D E R Toran Sporta Staff A WORD of w arning to t h e ro aring Knights of the Open Road, Messrs. B arney Oldfield, F ra n k Bonner “ Schoolboy" How­ ard, G. D. of the House of H in­ son, e t a1, before the Dallas trek. “ H a r e l i e s t h e b o d y o f W i l l i a m W h o d i e d d e f e n d i n g Hi* r i g h t N o w p o o r W i l l i a m Ila* t h e r e a l l Jay, o f w a y . a l o n e , H e i* j u * t a* d e a d a t i f h e h a d b e e n w r o n g . ” T he spirit of the f o u r horse of ®?n » men, the hallowed memories the beloved “ Rock” and la­ the m ented George Gipp, in fact the very foundation of the traditio n of football and all it stands for, lie in the shadows of the ivy-cov- ored cathedrals o f N otre Dame. For years football followers have been asking themselves w h a t made the wheels go around a t the C a- tholic institution. a I t is obvious to all concerned th a t the school has definite system peculiar u n to itself and as full of variety as the nationali­ ties th a t go to m ake it up. Notre fighting Dame football as Irish play it is the acme of perfec­ tion, but it has proved a difficult problem and more often rew ard ed than not with very little success. tra n sp la n t the to the ON E a f t e r another, the g re a t teams have g radua ted, y et there have been more to fill their places and take t h a t same deep- rooted determ ination to c a r ry on. E ven of Knute passing Rockne, the g r e a te st of them all, did n o t h alt the tra il of d e v a sta t­ ing destruction of the N ight Rid­ ers who le ft in th e ir w ake fea r and trem b lin g w herever men m et to settle th e suprem acy of the gridiron. Lawrence P erry of the have New York Sun found the answ er in one word, R e ­ ligion. seems to t e e m j u * t a n o t h e r T h e S o u t h B e n d W a r r i o r * e r e s t r u g ­ n o t g l i n g f o r t h e a l m e m a t e r o r i n ­ d i v i d u a l * s e e k i n g t h e y a r e * u r r o u n d e d b y a n i n t a n g i b l e a t m o s p h e r e m o v i n g i r r e s i s t i b l y t o w a r d a g o a l . g l o r y ; Those making the trip include Jack Chevigny, Ted Twomey, and Jack Gray, coaches; David Hume, and Sam Brown, managers. The traveling squad includes: centers, f l i n t Small, Bill Hughes, and Roy Raines; guards, Howard T erry, J. T. King, Charles Naiser, Ja m es Maedgen, J a c k Rhodes, and A lbert McMillan; tackles, Nick Frankovic, Ray Keeling, B ernard Esunas, Ja ck Landers, W’ill T u l­ los, and Lewell B utler; ends, J a c k Collins, W alton Launey, Homer Tippen, Dave Joe Roach, Jo h n Peterson, and Bley- maier; backs, H enry M itterm ayer, William F orney, Charles Dulaney, Bill Pitzer, Wallace Lawson, J u d Atchison, J a y Arnold, Ney Sheri- Hugh Wolfe, Morris Sands, J. W. Boyer, and Clarence Harrison. ---------- o Irving Gilbreath, Johnston, ...............- ■ ■■ 0. U. Ducats Selling Fast fo r ticket sales of the Advance University Texas-Oklahoma football gam e scheduled fo r Dal­ las S a tu rd a y reached a n u n e x ­ pected high, 7,000 tickets having been sold in the im m ediate A u s­ tin area, Business M anag er Ed Olle announced late T h u rsd ay night. I t is anticipated th a t as g r e a t a sale will characterize the O kla­ homa interests, th u s bringing the total the 25,000 m ark. Downtown sales in Dallas have spurted in a last m inute rush for choice ducats. tu r n o u t n e a r The S teer-Sooner con test is a f e a tu re of the extensive C e n te n ­ nial football program being o f ­ fered. Sports N otice of the V arsity T H E REGULAR weekly m eeting squad will be held today on the second floor of G regory Gym. tennis in THE SWIMMING POOL the W om en’s Gymnasium will be open for dip hour swimm ing from 4 until 6 o’clock every F riday a f ­ te rnoon today, and from 5 until 6 o ’clock o th e r days, except Saturday. beginning to u r director. T. H e n d e r s o n , ANNA HISS, H A VE YOU HEARD T H A T — E r n i e K o y will have a n o th er tr y with th e Yankees— R e d S h e r i d a n , one-time Sw eetw ater E x p r e s s , seems to be gathering some of the steam he le ft back on th e cattle ex- ranges— J. Longhorn gnard, is coaching foot­ ball— A l B a d g e r is not digging up as m any divots as usual b u t then he is not playing as o fte n — most of th e respective rosters of St. Louis and D etroit are made up of fo rm e r Texas League ball players and B eaum ont from Houston (home of th e Lipscomb twins) — took his J a c k “ B i g D o g ” G r a y second trip out of the confines of Texas on his scouting to the other day— A r t h u r Boulder M o e r * can do everything with th a t j Before soft ball b u t make it ta lk ; he is j the U niversity he will have to g et th e best pitcher unquestionably of this n atu re on the campus— B ill B u r c h and T r u m a n Spain w e r e football colleagues not long ago. _ he is aide permission o f instructors of the the classes in which he plans to register as a freshm an in the Col­ lege of Arts and Sciences. He may register a t the pen a lty of f o u r negative hours, E. J. Mathew?, registrar, said W ednesday. to enroll Terry to Retire A* Giant Regular T ex Robertson, who discovered teleg raphed and coached K iefer, T hursday from S w e e tw a te r th a t he will probably be here Sunday. N E W YORK, Oct. 8— (INS) — The coach le ft last week f o r his A* a result of the world series home to be with his f a th e r , who licking the Yankees inflicted upon j was reported ill. R obertson had a the Giants, Colonel Bill T erry is room reserved for K iefer a t Little planning a 1937 re-organization. Campus D orm itory since the b e ­ “ W e ’ll make some changes d u r ­ ginning of the sem ester, and the ing th e w inter,” he said. “ We’ve y e s te rd a y champion moved got to. The world series showed when he arrived. Kiefer was not the club to be too old in spots, to get here sooner because able not strong enough a t the plate and he has been on a post-Olympic ex- not quite f a st enough. I hibition to u r of Europe. o — so in in - ■ “ T o s ta rt wdth, w e’ll have an- I d o n ’t in­ other firs t basem an. tend to play again. Jo h n n y Mc­ C arthy, the N ew ark boy, is my candidate f o r the job, b u t we’ll see. I ’m afraid, too, t h a t Travis Jackson has reached the end of the road. T he y ea rs catch all of us, you know.” —o ............. — Samuel Sevier, U niversity stu ­ dent who was slightly injure d in a car wreck n e a r Temple S unday, will r e tu r n to the cam pus S a tu r ­ day. Friends of Sevier repo rted he WW ie] -ased from the hospital Wed ne aday. ------------- o-------------- Cubs Swap W arneke To Cardinals ST. LOUIS, Oct. 8— ( I N S ) — Lon V> arnekc, ace right hand pitcher of the Chicago Cubs, a n d c o n ­ sidered one of the best hurlers in the National League, has been ob ­ tained by the St. Louis Cardinals in exchange for Jim m y “ Ripper” Collins, slugging first basem an, and Leroy Parm elee, rig h t hand pitcher, it was announced a t Car- ; dinal headquarters today, j The deal was a straig h t player I the fo rw ard wall, The following linesm en— r e t u r n ­ ing le tte rm e n fro m last season— will give Jo n e s ample experience in an average of 185 pounds from end to end. Several f irs t y ea r men are and also add the experienced enough p erfo rm ers. showing fire to nicely and Passing has been stressed d u r ­ ing the spring p rac tice session, and the Red and White is likely to a tte m p t a surprise a tta c k fro m the air— if their g r e a t r u n n e r s a re stopped. K E N A R D T O B R O A D C A S T P aul K enard, A ustin musician, will give th e f i r s t of a series of f iftee n -m in u te recitals Monday n ig h t a t IO o’clock over station KNOW. He wall play the U niversity’s org an in th e Physics Building. organ -----------o— — — Shirley Brown, D orothy M a t­ son, Gladys Matson, and F en o ra M eyer will spend the week-end in Dallas where th e y will a tte n d the Texas-O. U. game. Kiefer Arrives Thursday Will Register Today Adolph Kiefer, Olympic backstroke swim ming champion, arrived in Austin at 8:10 o ’clock last night and will begin reg istra tio n in the University this morning. The 18-year-old Chicago sensation w as sched­ uled to get here this m orning, b u t the plane in which he was trav eling was stopped in K ansas by bad w eather. There he had to ta k e a tr a in to Dallas and then here. transaction with no cash involved, it was stated. The Missouri Pacific Lines A nn ou nces V is it o f Modern A ir Conditioned Train To A ustin, October IO and l l T h e p u b l i c , p a r t i c u l a r l y s t u d e n t s a n d t h e i r p a r e n t s , a r e c o r d i a l l y i n v i t e d t o i n s p e c t t h i s d e l u x e t r a i n w h i c h w i l l h e h e r e f r o m 7 : 0 0 p . m . t o 9 : 0 0 p . m . S a t u r d a y a n d f r o m 8 : 0 0 a . m . t o 1 1 : 0 0 a . m . S u n d a y . W e h o p e y o u w i l l t a k e a d v a n t a g e o f t h i s o p p o r t u n i t y t o i n s p e c t t h i s l a t e s t t y p e o f p a s s e n g e r e q u i p m e n t . F o r in fo r m a tio n p h o n s o r sa* M. L. M o rrla , D lv. P a s s . A g t., P h o n s 775S S e rvice In stitu tio n ' Advertising Deadlines T H E p rod uction schedule of T H E T E X A N requires th a t a deadline on advertising copy be set a t 6 p.m. p r e ­ ceding date of publication. C U S T O M E R S w h o w ish to have ad v ertisem en ts picked up b y s ta ff represen tativ es are req uested to call 2-3164 befo re 4 :3 0 p.m . C O P Y will b e received until 6 p.m. at our advertising offices, R oom I 08, Jo u rn alism Building. T H IS regu lation will ap p ly b o th to the display an d classified d ep a rtm en ts. W E ask y o u r continued cooperation. T H E D A I L Y T E X A N CANDIDATES FOR STUDENTS’ ASSEMBLY T H E D A I L Y T E X A N T h e fo u r s tu d e n ts sh o w n a b o v e , fro m le f t to r ig h t, a r e W a r re n O sb o r n e , J a n e E y r e s , J o e B o ld e n , an d T o m L a w . A ll o f th e m file d p e t it io n s y e s te r d a y w ith M a r g a r e t G ra y , s e c r e ta r y o f th e S tu d e n ts ’ A s s e m b ly , a n n o u n c in g th e ir c a n d id a c y f o r p la c e s in th e S tu d e n ts ’ A s s e m b ly . O sb o r n e , B a ld e n , a n d L a w a r e r u n n in g fr o m th e C o l­ le g e o f A r ts and S c ie n c e s . M iss E y r e s is r u n n in g fr o m th e S c h o o l o f B u s in e s s A d m in is tr a tio n . Game Crowd* Send Centennial Total Up the As a result of football game last Saturday afternoon, the registration at the Centen­ nial Exposition on the campus has num ber 127,591. soared and a new high has been reached. The number attained late Monday was 218,444. Gregory Gym holds the highest record of all the exhibits. The visiting there totaled Russian Chorus Forsakes Volga for Southern Tune By P ER IC LE S A L E X AN DE R and J. OLCUTT SANDERS The Dixie Russians under the direction of Mme. Margarita Siaviansky sang and so fo rth last night a t Hogg Memorial Auditorium before a ridable but receptive student audience. The Student Cultural E ntertainm ent Committee was responsible fo r their appearance here. Founded by Dmitry A greneff, the John Lomax of Russia, who spent his life sleuthing for folk music,* the troupe now includes six sing-1 ers from the Russian steppes and several the Southwestern University steps. Appropriately, the the m ajority, p a tria ” of tenor sang the rath er Russian Southern “ Going Home,” with tune from Dvorak’s “ New World Symphony.” His voice was smooth and easy and the chorus offered fine support. from the program opened with two early folk songs. Continuing in nationalistic nature, the group gave an acceptable re n ­ dition of “ The Waves of the Volga R iver.” “ The Volga B oatm en’s Song,” largely because of its f a ­ m iliarity, created quite a stir. Shading received more attention here than in most of th e other numbers. from Then the Georgetown soloists emerged th e group and and showed their talents in turn. Sweetly and in English the blonde soprano sang “ F ather in H eaven.” “ Lord Have Mercy” offered ex­ cellent opportunity for dynamics display. The Russian Symphonic Choir, however, handled it with somewhat m ore precision. F orgetting the homeland of the the “gloria six b u t turning to of In the popular portion of the program, of which there were a thoroughly goodly num ber American songs, the chorus gave us “ Old Man River,” taken bodily from the Oscar Hammerstein- Jerom e K ern musical score of “Show B oat.” The soloist no doubt was as thoroughly American as the song he w-as singing. Appealing finally to our Southern nature, the Russian aristocracy, aided and abetted by Georgetown’s student democracy, polished off their per­ formance with “I Wish I Were in Dixie.” We expected the rpadame into a to and company swing chorus of “ When Did Y o u Lei Heaven?” at any moment. A mention of the basso pi fundo. He was one of the most i thentically Russian touches, t tones and his i his vibrating hement manner were rather harmonious with the rest of t ensemble. Mile. Mara, on the other bai wras more than adequate in h role as the last of the Siaviansky She accompanied the chorus at t piano, sang in pleasing voice, a danced in the most orthodox Ri sian fashion. Fundamentally, Mme. Slavia sky’s Russian Chorus represents musical organization sometime much favor with the crown hea of Europe. Its repertoire includ many Russian folk songs and : Tin Pin Alley. Its member sh was Russian, not Texan. La night we saw and heard only part of those folksongs; the oth part we can get on our radio ai night in the week. C A M P U S R E V IE W N O T O I The regular issue of the Cl pus Review will not be pubiis this week because of the gam* Dallas Saturday, and beca Monday is Columbus Day, p Ushers Philip Smith and Ji I Cowley have next issue will be out Frid October 16. announced. Lefty Cummins will drive Dallas today and will attend Texas-Okiahoma game Satui Friday, October 9, 1936 Robert E. Lee Letter Reveals Pre-War Views An old letter w ritten by General R obert E. Lee has been discov­ ered recently among the letters of Sam Houston in the archives a t the S tate Capitol. I t was w ritten in 1860 to A lbert M. Lea, who at th a t tim e was one of the leading engineers in the construction of P ort Aransas, a project in which General Lee was vitally interested. The le tte r was w ritten in San An­ tonio. In one p a rt of the old letter, sympa­ General Lee’s political thies are revealed, which then fa­ vored the Constitution and t h e Union. When gun fire on Fort Sum pter snapped the tension be­ tween the N orthern and Southern factions the following year, how­ ever, he reversed th a t opinion in favor of the South. in W orries over cotton and the slavery question, the le tte r points out, little concerned Texans at this tim e, whose chief annoyance was the Indian situation. General Lee vividly describes the problem of the small Indian bands which crept into the settlem ents on foot to steal horses and make good th e ir escape before anyone was aw are of th eir presence. The purpose of the le tte r th a t part devoted is to found A ransas Bay, which was being transform ed into P ort Aransas. Lea, in an earlier le tte r to Gen­ eral Lee, had mentioned the ad­ vantages of the bay as a harbor and invited the general to visit it and see for himself. General Lee declined the invitation in phrase­ ology of th a t period and assured Lea th a t the governm ent would be “happy to avail itself of the privi­ leges” th a t such a port would a f­ ford when the proper tim e came. —o Brinkley Appoints Buster Quist B uster Quist, senior student in the School of Education, was ap­ pointed last night to membership of the Students’ Assembly by Jim ­ mie Brinkley, president of the As­ sembly. She will serve as assem­ blyman from the School of Edu­ cation. Miss Quist is the director of the C urtain Club of the A ir, a mem­ ber of the C urtain Club, Home Economics Clubk Wesley Players, Cap and Gown, and Pierian Lit­ erary Society. She is also a mem­ ber of Alpha Phi, social sorority. Miss Quist will be sworn into office a t the next m eeting of the S tudents’ Assembly. She will serve until the fall elections, October 2 0. Gregory Quits Geology Staff R esignation of J. N. Gregory as geologist and scout in the Univer­ sity Lands Geologizing Division of San Angelo has been accepted by the U niversity Board of Regents. They also approved the appoint­ ment of Taylor Cole as assistant sub-surface geologist. B erte Haigh acting geologist in was named charge. ap­ W. R. C avett has been pointed assistant auditor in the Oil Royalty A udit Division, Aus­ tin, succeeding C. W. Isenberger, who resigned. Far (Continued from Page one) pies’ Institute, the social center fo r foreigners in Brazil. Miss M ary Sue Brown, form erly of Cainsville, helped to build up the Colegio Americano. She re ­ ceived her m aster of a rts degree from the University in 1934. Miss Maud Ann Mathis, grad­ uate of 1924, is in charge of the home economics departm ent of B ennett College, Rio de Janiero. Miss Rachel Ja rrie t, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Taylor, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Marshall have been missionaries in Brazil fo r several years. A frica has a strong attractio n for University missionaries. Eight t h e ex-students have worked in Dark Continent. Dr. E. R. Kellers- berger, form erly of Cypress Mills, bachelor of arts graduate in 1911, is a medical missionary in t h e Belgian Congo. Miss Janie Mc- Crummer Elroy is also stationed there, Miss Louise Rounds, graduate of 1926, is w ork­ ing under the Congregational Board in N orth A frica. Miss C a p ­ rine Minter Smith, graduate of 1927, form erly of Austin, is a missionary nurse in the Belgian Congo. Florence Mrs. Etta Woolsey Schodel and John Noble White are also in the Congo. Missionaries have also gone to Cuba and Mexico. Miss Annie Churchill, who attended the Uni­ versity in 1883 and 1884, was in Gloria of Castillo, Cienfuegos, Cuba, Miss Katherine Gray is a Presbyterian missionary in Mexico. -------------o------------ C O M M IT T E E T O M E E T The members of the publicity committee of the C urtain Club will meet this afternoon at 3:15 o’clock in Texas Union, 316, K athryn Owens, chairm an of the committee, announced yesterday. Students of U. T. From 37 States And 6 Nations A perusal of the student direc­ tory reveals th a t over 8,000 stu­ dents in the U niversity call Texas cities and towns their home. Now and then a break comes to relieve the monotony, and to prove th at Texans a re n ’t the only ones who appreciate The U niversity of Texas. Five foreign countries, thirty- six states, and the D istrict of Columbia are represented by stu­ dents who are enrolled the long session of 1936-37. fo r students T hirty-three claim Mexico as th eir home country, th a t nation giving first place am ong the foreign contingents. The Panam a Canal Zone places second with eight students, while Cuba has two and Canada one. The long distance record is held w ithout the slightest dispute by from Turkey, 6,000 two boys miles away. Neighbors Send Many Neighboring states have the lead in domestic representation, A rkansas being first with thirty- eight students, and Oklahoma a close second with thirty-four. But the far-o ff New England states, Maine, New Ham pshire, and Mas­ sachusetts, are not out of the ru n ­ ning, claiming three students each, one more than the nearer states of M innesota, North Carolina, N orth Dakota, and W est Virginia. t h e states, by tw enty-three students. New York is next with tw enty, and in order come Illinois, Kansas, Missouri, and New' Mexico, all with more than twelve students enrolled in the University. O ther states Louisiana is third among represented are C onnecticut, Georgia. California, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Iowa, Tennessee, New Jersey, Ken­ tucky, Colorado, Alabama, F lor­ ida, Ohio, South Carolina, Wyo­ ming, W ashington, and Wisconsin. represented being --------------o — Church— (C ontinued from Page one) of the issues, but those who were expected to take an opposite stand to the student president have re­ fused to come, he declared. to “ The m eeting will be open discussion from all those atte n d ­ ing,” he explained and said th a t opposition to any of the stands taken by the speakers would be gladly heard. The m eeting, open to the gen­ eral public, has been arranged by Mrs. A. P. W inston, Mrs. D. L. Clark, W illiam Trenckm an, Mrs. H. W infrey, and A lfred W upper- man. These members constitute the com m ittee on social action of the church. Mirror- (C ontinued from Page one) mean th a t one cross section of the m irror is d iffe re n t from a n ­ other. If astigm atism should de sta rt the velop, from the beginning. figuring m ust “F ortunately, in our case no astigm atism has been found, and all cross sections of the 82-inch m irror are exactly alike. It is now necessary to retain this property and to gradually polish o ff a m in­ ute q u an tity of glass in order to satisfy the tests provided by the opticians.” He continued, “I t is n ot possi­ ble a t this tim e to predict accur­ ately how soon the large m irror will be ready. It may be a m atter of a couple of m onths or it m ay last a year. Incidents are known when the m irror was a t approxi­ m ately the same stage in which our 82-inch one is now, where u n ­ expected difficulties arose which made is necessary to postpone the work fo r a period of year*. While no one fee la th a t a sim ilar event is likely to occur in connection with the 82-ineh m irror, it would to predict the be quite unwise time of com pletion.” --------------o------------- . Frances Landers and Frankie Mae W elborn will attend the Texas-Cklahoma football game in Dallas this wreek-end. Frosh Bandsmen, In Grass Sacks, Lead Parade Clad in grass sacks, pants rolled above th eir knees, freshm an mem­ bers of the Longhorn Band m arch­ ed jauntily down Congress Avenue T hursday afternoon, leading bet­ ter-clothed bandsm en in a final parade prior to their trip to Dal­ las. Following the band were local in cars on which business men slogans as such were painted to Dallas S aturday,” “ L et’s go “ On to Dallas S aturday,” “ $8 All- Expense Trip to Dallas,” and “ Texas U. vs. Oklahoma U. at Dallas S aturday.” The Austin High School band t h e form ed the closing u n it of parade. Although short, the procession attra c te d attention of crowds all along the way, down Congress to the railroad station and then re­ tu rn in g to Seventh S treet. The parade was partly to arouse enthusiasm fo r Austin Day a t the Centennial Saturday and partly to raise funds to send the entire band to Dallas. I Pension Revenue Estimates Drop -N< Ifed By I n t er na t ion a l , New* Service Legislators re v l^ d downwards th e ir estim ates of probable rev­ enue from the omnibus ta x bill fo r old age pensions today as the trend of House taking out of the bill more than was p ut in. continued the Original estim ates of sponsors of the bill were it would bring in $15,000,000 a year. New esti­ the House m ates w ere offered based partly on Comp­ today, tro ller’s the bill th a t would yield but $8,000,000; and fu rth e r deletions were made by the House. figures, All-morning consideration of th e bill, coupled with action yes­ terday afternoon, added up this resu lt: Section originally I, which proposed severance taxes on salt, ores, m arble, cinnabar, and min- and shell, ended up with taxes on ores, m arble, cinnibar, and m in­ eral w ater. tax on to Section 2, which originally pro­ posed to divert the present cigar­ the basis of one- e tte school th* available fourth to fund and the rem ainder the to give pension fund, am ended one-third one-third to pensions, to schools and one-third to g e n ­ eral revenue. This alone am endm ent cut down the am ount of probable pension money from $4,500,000 to $2,000,000, th e revenue from the cigarette tax being approxi­ m ately $6,000,000 a year. Meanwhile figures which are calculated prove th a t oil production Texas already taxes than in any other state. the House sought to in is paying more said to Such a compilation, have been widely draw n from records of the Texas Com ptroller, has been widely circulated by the M id-Continent Oil and Gas Asso­ ciation. This com pilation shows the tax p e r barrel of oil is 7.7 cents, when the ad valorem taxes is are claimed, is higher than other oil producing state. in, which, figured it in a n y 1 a these figures To certify the H o u s e adopted resolution signed by Joe G reathouse of F o rt W orth, asking the S tate Comp­ troller to say w hether or not the figures a re correct. G reathouse explained he w anted to get the inform ation before the House be­ gan am endm ents to the oil tax section of the om­ nibus tax bill, which proposes an increase of \ cen t per barrel on the present severance tax of a p ­ proxim ately 2A cents p e r barrel. considering T H R E E MORE R E G I S T E R Three m ore students paid th eir fees Thursday, bringing total res­ p ira tio n fo r the U niversity up to 8,456. H arry Samuel Gropper en ­ rolled School, the G raduate registered Ralph Wesley K utzer a s a nd L averne Nance as a freshm an. undergraduate, a n in A N N O U N C I N G T H E OPENING OF T H E FRESHMAN CLASS SECTION O F T H E 1937 CACTUS ! F R E S H M E N T Individual photographs of first-year students are being made at this time for the Cactus class section. Members of this class are asked to call now at Journalism Building I 08 for studio ap ­ pointments^ Perpetuate the Years With T H E C A C T U S PERI?ATUS FROM OTHER PENS Friday, October 9, 1936 Oldest Professor Can Draw Map Using Both Hands at Once THE DAILY TEXAN Th* D a ily Texan, • tu<3«nt new spaper o f T he U n iv e rs ity of Te*a», is published on the campus o f th * U n iv e rs ity a t A u stin b r the Texas S tu d en t Pu b licatio ns, Inc., • vary m orning except M o n day thro u gh o ut the long session. E d ito ria l O ffic e s — Jo u rn a lism B u ild in g 101. 102. and 103. Telephone 9171— 61 A d v e rtisin g and circu lation departm ent— Jo u rn a lis m B u ild in g I Os. Phone 2*3164 (A f t e r IO p .m , 9177). and 2*3165, P rin te d b r the U n iv e rs ity P re ss . A. C. W rig h t, M snsg er. S ub scrip tio n p rice by m a il: F iv e dollars y e a rly , N a tio n a l a d ve rtisin g re p resen tative : N atio n al A d v e r s in g S e rvice , Inc. 420 M adison Avenue, N e w Y o rk C it y . , f f E D IT O R - IN - C H IE F 1 * Associate E d ito r------------------------------------- — I ]i Special Ed itio n s E d ito r rn E d Syers Fra n kie Mae W elb orn . , —■■— ■■■■............. .I.................................................................... .................... . as............... — — I .. ~ — - ■! - E D H O D G E j Book E d ito r---------------------------------------- V irg in ia Nixon Telegraph E d ito r. .... ............. ~........ — ----------J . C. Arnold S P O R T S D E P A R T M E N T f J E d ito r__________________________________________________ Jo e Belden Associate — Jo h n M rC u lly Assistants: Nathan S a fir, La n e Goldsmith, Jo e W h itle y, J e r r y Penix, L in n Alexander, Jo e Frantz, Boh Kincaid, Douglas Perkins, H. V. Culp, J r . , Bob M urphy, L y n n Ja c k -on. ....... ..... :...... G irls’ S p o r t * Ju a n ita W h ittle se y S O C IE T Y D E P A R T M E N T E d i t o r ............................................. — ....... ...............F ranees Landers Associate.^. Elizabeth Keeney Assistants: V e rn a Dean Craven, Helen F a y Passmore, E v e ly n Buzzo, M a ry M cLa u rin , Gladys Matson. F E A T U R E D E P A R T M E N T ---------------- ......—-....... Ed n a M erle M c M u rry N orris Davis F red Gipson, Towel Moore, Ju lie t K nig ht, Jim m ie Ed ito r -------- Associate ____ A s s is ta n ts :____ Pounds III , Ed ito r A M U S E M E N T D E P A R T M E N T Pericles Alexander _ N O R R IS G. D A V IS ................_ ......... .......... N IG H T E D I T O R Assistants: Sam Lester, Fred Gipson, Vernon Rooks, and H a rr y Quin. H O R S D E C O M B A T f o r W e d ­ th ro u l h in : f o r b e la te d a p p e a r a n c e . W i t h the r e v is e d d e a d lin e s , P e r i p b o w s in s e r t io n n e s d a y ’* sh ad es o f s n a tc h e d c o p y h a n g in g o v e r th e s u p e r v is o r ’s h e a d p le n t y o f m a t e r ia l m u s t be p re s s- b o u n d a L a s t w e e k o n e d a y m a in s t o r y w e n t o u t o f th e m a k e ­ in a d v a n c e . up s h o r t ly b e f o r e p re s s tim e , j u g ­ f e ll g led th e m a k e u p ; t h e a x e M o n d a y w ith a d a y - b e f o r e d e a d lin e set f o r c o lu m n s . P e r ip a t u s w a s in ­ v o lv e d in a M o n d a y m o r n in g d is ­ to o k a o r g a n iz a t io n p ro c e s s a n d v a c a t io n . A f t e r t h o u g h m a k e s m e w o n d e r th is p a r a g r a p h w ill if c r a w l u n d e r th e g a te . The political pot still putters, occasionally splatters out. W’hile in-andouter B rin k le y watches his lobbed from the Dean of office A rts and Scie n ce ’s o ffice to Dean of M en’s, back again, Vice-Presi­ dent Cumm ins stands back, almost within reach o f an o ffice, learns the added virtu e of patience. C O M M U N IT Y S P I R I T a v e Florence H ollis and V ale rie O blewetter, sophomore transfers from H ockaday school in Dallas, Pauline G ill, Ruth Johnson, W a l­ ker and Dixon ( ain, Kappa Sigm a six pledges chipped and $6.70 bought a Model-T Ford. The new cost means $40, “ Speed y” at last reports. The 20 cents may have gone fo r gasoline. from Houston. A ll transportation is christened apiece of in Which Also Applies to Us that H ave you heard Little A u d re y now has a baby brother named Oaka. One day her mother told her to go upstairs and bring L ittle A u d r e y Oaka laughed and laughed, because she knew she couldn’t carioca. down. SICK LIST School Children Visit Exposition Arrangem ents fo r Austin school children to v isit the U n iv e rsity C entennial exposition at G reg o ry Gym nasium have been completed by Austin school o fficials and the hundred first group of children Ju n io r taken W ednesday school were m orning and w ill be taken again this morning. tw o B ic k le r from T ransportation is provided by school busses not used during the the day. The visits are made in m orning and the students return to their classes in the afternoon. The children w ill be instructed upon the various phases o f the exhibits by P rin c ip a l Tem ple May- hall and his s ta ff o f teachers. A group from the U n iv e rsity w ill act as hosts. Phone 2-3164 NOTICE Classified Advertisers iou can run your classi­ in fied very economically The Daily Texan: 20 Words— Maximum 1 time ................ $ .40 2..times .................. 55 ....... .70 3 tim e s 1.00 6 times ......... No refunds for cancella­ tions. Responsible for one insertion o n l y . incorrect ALL ADS CASH VANCE. IN A D ­ Messenger service until 4:30 p. rn., week-days. Counter service until 6 p. rn. Dial 2-3164 for further information or messenger service. icial N o tic e A L L S P O R T N O T I C E S a p p e a r on ite m s , in “ T o d a y th e s p o rts p a g e . c lu b m e e tin g s , a p p e a r S o c ia l in B r i e f ” o r e ls e w h e r e o n th e s o c ie ty p a g e . O n ly n o tic e s p e r ­ a n d t a in in g s c h e d u le s c la s t to o th e r o f f i c i a l a d m in is t r a t iv e a n ­ n o u n c e m e n ts w i ll be ru n th is c o lu m n . T h e s e n o tic e s m u s t be in sig n e d b y a m e m b e r o f th e U n i ­ v e r s i t y s t a f f . O F F I C I A L N O T IC E S that U n iv e r­ sity people desire to have run for the next day Jo u rn a lism Building in the Texan must be IQ I by 6 o’clock. in A L L C A N D ID A T E S fo r offices in the Students’ Association must file w ith the secretary of the asso­ ciation the follow ing by October IO, ten days before the election day, October 20: a. A petition anouncing the in ­ tention to run fo r the o ffice de­ sired, stating that the candidate is a bonafide student of The U n i­ versity of T exas; said petition being signed personally by at least f if t y students of the U n i­ versity. fo r at registered b. A statem ent signed or coun­ tersigned by the R eg istrar o f the U n iv e rsity stating that the candi­ date is a t the time o f filin g said least petition tw elve hours o f scholastic work in The U n iv e rs ity o f Texas, and that he or she during the last sem­ ester in which he or she was reg­ in the U n iv e rs ity passed istered at least nine hours o f scholastic w ork w ith a grade o f at least C average in the ninn hours. M A R G A R E T G R A Y , secretary. i n t , r U L L U V V l M , persons are requested to report to the R eg is­ t r a r ’s O ffice, Sutton H a ll 101, im­ m ediately : Bohls, Fred d ie Otto Bruce, R ichard H u n ter B y ro n , Jo h n Ingram Chew, Ja c k F u n Cole, R ichard R o y Collins, B e rn ice Ogden D aniel, A rth u r Fra n k lin H an d ley, Tom L e v y , Leon C a rl L o tt, Jo h n B e v e rly M arin , Angel M anuel Patterso n, L u th e r R a y Pow ers, E m o r y E. P re w e tt, Jo h n Ed w a rd s E . J . M A T H E W S , registrar. I H E R E W I L L B E a m eeting of the students of the College of En g in e e rin g W ednesday, October 14, at 5 o’clock for the annual election o f class officers. W . R . W O O L R IC H , dean. fo r T H E E X A M I N A T I O N the B row n U n iv e rs ity m athem atical entrance prizes w ill be held S a t­ urday, O ctober IO, a t 2 o’clock in W aggoner H a ll IG I. The com­ petition regu lar freshmen. See C atalogue, P a r t I, age 18. is open to a ll P. M. B A T C H E L D E R , c h a i r m a n . Departm ent of Pu re M a th e m a tic s . Announcements Pawn Brokers Typewriters L. LAVES P A W N B R O K E R and J E W E L E R . M oney loaned on a n yth in g of value. Phone 9229. 217 E a s t 6. Professional DR. E. H. K O H Licensed C hi r op od i st and Foot S peci al ist A com plete foot co m fo rt service. A ll foot ailm ents treated w ith sc ie n tific skill. Pre sc rip tio n s for correct shoes. 711 N orw ood B u ild in g Phone 4855 2002 Guadalupe Cleaners Cleaned A Pressed D ay and N ig h t C L EA N E R S TA ILO RS 411 W e s t 19 Phone 25722 Dancing E. Ranges, R A V E N , Plu m b in g , Gas Pip in g , S in k . sewer, drains unstopped. Asbestos backs In heaters. 1403 L a v a c a Phone 6763. Connected. H eaters DANCE W ELL Ballroom classes M o n days and i T h u rsd a y s 7:30 p.m. I 60c a lesson DUVAL SC H O O L O F D AN CIN G K. C. H a ll— P . 8320-2-3854 108 W . 14 — V isito rs W elcom e Dressmak F O R D IS T I N C T I V E custom-made gowns see V I R G I N I A S T . C L A IR , designer, d ressm aker, and N o rth tailo r. G uadalupe. Ph one 20160. 2801 M AYFAIR TAYLOR SECRETARIAL SC H O O L A selective school of business t r a in ­ ing fo r the U n iv e r s it y student. Degreed In s tru c to rs F re e Plac e m en t S e rv ic e 916 B raz o s Ph o ne 2-4583 AUSTIN UNIVERSITY OF BUSINESS F or H 'o h School G raduate* a n d U n iv e r s ity S tu d e n t* E v e r y In s tr u c to r H a* a V n ite r s ity D egree A L L G R A D U A T E S P L A C E D B Y T H E A u stin E m p lo y m e n t A g e n c y (L ice n s e d by the State o f T e x a s) A lso E v e n in g Classes M o n d ay and T h u rsd a y E v e n in g s ' " 6:30 9:30 p. m . 'W to H A R O L D F A I N come W oolw orth B ld g. P hono 2 -1 2 3 8 ... Jo u rn a lis m B u ild in g 108 fo r a free pass to ''S to rm O ve r the Andes show ing a t the Texas T h e ate r to day. ■— ■■■- BE THERE TO M O RRO W W i t h A P H I L C O R A D I O As Low as $20 $4 Down $1 Weekly G u a ra nt e ed TEXAS BO O K STORE The Stud ents Book Exchqnqe. W e R e n t R a d io s Records IS IT L O V E O R Ja n G a rb e r; L E T ’S M A K E A V I S H . Ted Records at J . R . Reed M u sic I N F A T U A T I O N ! F io Rito . C om pany, 815 Congress. E V E R Y T H I N G F O R T H E F E E T RO W ELL'S SHOE SHO P 1606 L A V A C A S T R E E T SHO E REBUILDING Sho e D y e in g — Shoe C leaning C alled fo r and D elivered G O O D YEAR SHOE SHO P ‘E v e r y t h i n g f o r the Shoe' G u t A . F ris k e , Pro p . 2326 G uadalupe Ph o ne 4597 ROYAL TYPEWRITERS ) E a s t 10th Ph one 23233 M O T O R C Y C L E S ! The best selection of used m otorcycles in Texas. T erm s. 213 C ongress A ve n u e . Ph o ne 2-2709. Lost and Found L O S T : T h u rsd a y afternoon in Hom e E c o ­ nom ics B u ild in g . F lo re s v ille H ig h ring. 1935. In itia ls '' i J . L B . " F in d e r phone L u ­ cille P e lf, 2-1074. L O S T : W e d n esd ay on campus. P h i E t a pleas* S ig m a key. R ew ard. F in d e r phone Jo e Lo p er. 2-6963. Room and Board L O V E L Y U n iv e r s it y cam pus fo r g irls. M aid service. Board opposite R O O M optional. 301 W e s t 21. Ph one 8575. K E R S C H N E R ’S : G irls* room and board $30-140. D esirable rooms. T w o squares Phone R eferences. west U n iv e rs ity . 21074. 2208 Nueces. Apartments for Rent P R I V A T E H O M E , Room and B o ard fo r tw o boys. P r iv a t e entrance. one and 3114 W h e e ler. 5063. F U R N I S H E D o r un furnished, fiv e rooms, up stairs, apartm ent. Modern co n ve n i­ ences. Garage. T hree blocks U n iv e r s it y on c a r line. 2300 R io Grande. 2-2727. Furnished Apartments FURNISHED APARTMENT L o v e ly m odern fiv e room ap artm ent. F rig id a ire . H ardw ood floors. 3 blocks of cam pus. A p p ly M rs. W a lk e r. 1907 P e a rl. Ph o ne 6370. Light Housekeeping G I R L S : F in e , cool room s. A lso use of porch. 2 reasonable. 247 48. blocks lic h t housekeeping sleeping from cam pus. V e ry south Rooms for Rent sta irs room % block F O R T W O B O Y S : C om pletely new, up ­ U nion Bu ild in g . Sho w er. A ll bills paid. 407 W e s t 23. 20616. from F O R F O U R B O Y S : L a rg e up stair* room. four exposures: also S o u th w est dow n­ stairs room. $10.00 a student. 2307 Red R iv e r, phone 2-2873. N IC E L A R G E com fortab le fo r young men students. Q uiet home. T e le ­ room phone 2-3305. HOUSTON POST Educational D elivered S u n d ay A kin , Phone 24581. to y o u r door D aily and fo r 76 e per m onth. Bo b S ta n d . agent. A tla s N e w s 2314 GUADALUPE B I L L I E ' S B E A U T Y S H O P . 17th and Congress, hts p le n ty of p arking space. Telephone 6062. B illie C ontet. fo rm e rly w ith A dorable B e a u ty Shop. « Z zi ma SO* dOHS AinV39 31VI03TIOO 'O O H £[uo Jo ; eXp atojq pus qgs(eXa ja t o odu itiq * jn o ;o auo uj X u n s J A U i Xq dn apts tq Z u d } j; s»U *(I snoX ju s ts F in g e r w aving a J O H N Y E M A E S B E A U T Y S H O P P E . sp ecialty. G u a ra n ­ teed Perm anents $2.50 up A ll lin es of b eauty w ork. 2004 Guadalupe. 8819. Laundries B u ild in g J- D. P O W E L L Jo u rn a lis m to IOX fo r a free pass to see " S to rm O v e r the A n d e s" a t the Texas T h e ate r today. come H o m e l a u n d r y l l P K O N E 3 7 0 2 I E X P E R T T Y P I N G : B B A G rad uate of U . of T . E n tir e satisfa ctio n assured. through C all 4590 a fte r 4:30 M onday F rid a y . A n y tim e S a tu rd a y . Friday, October 9, 1936 Fraternities to Enjoy Football Entertainm ents Many o f the campus fraterni­ ties will entertain members of their chapters of S.M .U. and Oklahoma U niversity at Dallas this week-end. chapter and The Delta Tau Deltas have re­ served forty tickets for the fo o t­ ball game Saturday afternoon for members and their dates. Friday night thirty members o f the chap­ ter from this campus and their dates will attend a dinner party to be held at the B aker Hotel. Members o f the O.U. chapter will also be present. A m ong th e Delta Tau D eltas to a tte n d th e gam e are Ike LaRue, H enry Smith, Dow G entry, Ross Elliott, K enneth McCrea, Ja ck Simms, Ed G riffins, Douglas A r­ nold, Bill Brown, John Singleton, A rto n Smith, E d Richardson, Joe Baldwin, E lliott Nash, F r a n k L a u ­ r e n t, J o h n Pope, Lewis Scofield, Bill Williams, Woodfield Collins, Tom Matthews, Bobby W right, F re d E ilenberger, K eith Kelly, Tom Law, G raham P eterson, Joe Gribbel, and Lew Hopkins. a t Dallas The S.M.U. ch a p te r of K appa \ A lpha will honor the K appa Alpha ch a p te r of the U niversity with a luncheon to be held a t N u re n b e rg I n n S a tu rd a y a t I o ’clock. Among those who will a t ­ te n d are J. C. Suttles, H arvey Suttles, D. D. Hinson, J e f f Cope­ land, A ndy C a rte r, Billy Client, H a r ry K e n n e t h Goetzke, Billy Clemmons, C. M. Malone, P. L. White, Bill Wil­ Jo rd a n , liams, Neil Dubois, Ed Bud Watson, George N orsworthy, G eorge T arr, Bill H arriso n, Toll U nderwood, Manson H arris, F ra n k Reedy, S te w a rt Skidmore, Reagan C artw rig h t, S taley Hawkins, Clint Woods, and H ew itt Wheeless. Pallichaet, Members o f B eta Theta Pi from the Texas chapter and the chapter from O.U. will have a luncheon on the Baker Peacock Terrace of H otel Saturday at 12 o’clock. Among those who wall attend are Bill Tideman, Harpo Simmons, Herbert Cartwright, Arthur N ew ­ ton, George Juneman, C liff Brody, Donald Markle, Fred Derby, Bill Rutledge, Bob Rutledge, and Drew Nicholson. Active m em bers o f Chi Phi will m eet Dallas alumnae members at the Adolphus Hotel after the game S atu rd ay . Those who will go to Dallas are H arold Lewis, Hal Ra­ d ial, Ja ck W arfield, Jack Dingle, Duke Goddard, Irby Cobb, Joe Smith, Alex Rinse!, and Jimmy Walker. The traditional Sigma Phi Ep­ silon banquet which is the final celebration for members from Texas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas who will attend the Texas-O.U. game will be held Saturday night at the Dallas A thletic Club. The A lumnae Association will sponsor the b a n q u e t with H 0 . Craft, sta te alu m nae secretary, in charge of arra n g e m e n ts. Speakers will in­ clude M aury Hughes, and X. R. Gill, district governor of the fra­ ternity. Am ong the m em bers of Sigma Phi Epsilon who will a tte n d from I A ustin are J a y A rnold, E v erett Hutchinson, Tom H eard, Tom Wheat, Charles K rueger, Ja ck Ayer, Clifford Lemmons, H en ry Jack Anderson, Asa Cezeaux, Holmes, Tom W eatherly, Robert Sellers, Ralph Dickson, Nolan Harvey, Erie Eades, J r ., Vance F oster, Bill Hodges, E rn e s t Allen, J. D. D aughety, William F. York, Charles W aldman, A rth u r Moers, and Hugh Miller. The Phi Delta T hetas who will a t te n d the Texas-O.U. gam e are Al Dealy, Bruce M artindale, John M cElwrath, H arv ey P enland, Ed P enland, John Miner, Joe W ard, Charles Sharp, S tanley Neely, Al­ len Adoue, Lynn Milam, Bill W ag­ goner, Bill Middleton, and F red Heyne. to Dallas Members of D elta T heta Phi f o r the who will go week-end Ralston, are David J a m e s Nesbitt, and Mac DeGuerin. A b u f fe t supper will be held S a tu r d a y night by m embers of Al­ pha Tau Omega from the Texas and O.U. chapters. from Phi K appa Psi will e n te rta in with a b an q u e t a t the Baker Hotel S a tu r d a y night. Members of the ch a p te rs the University, O. LL, and S. M. U. will attend . This annual a f f a ir will be a t ­ te nded by Ramsey Moore, Bill Dy- Jones, S tan Ross, sert, Elm ond P a t Wilkerson, Jo e Moore, Jo h n n y Cooke, T u rn e y Fletcher, E arl A r ­ nett, A rch Ross, Nelson Munger, Tom Wood, and Jo e Rogers. F o rty mem bers o f D elta K appa Epsilon f r a te r n ity and th e ir dates f will a tte n d a p a r ty to be held a t Casa M anana in Fort Worth Fri- A n n o u n c i n g A N e w and Distinctive Place to E at T H E D A I L Y T E X A N T O D AY IN B RI EF 9:50 o’clock— Step Rally in front of the Texas Union. 3:30 o’clock— A.A.U.W . m eet­ Scottish Rite Dormi­ ing, tory. 7 o’clock— A ll-W esley Founda­ tion Party— W esley Foun­ dation. 7 :30 o’clock — Evangelistic services, U niversity Church o f Christ. 8 to l l o’clock— Observatory in Physics Building open to visitors. H . E. Club Fiears Speech Thursday first m eeting of The Home Economics Club held the year in the club the Home Econom ics its Thursday afternoon room o f Building. told During Schwartz Members of Theta Xi fraterni­ in day night. They w ill also attend the gam e Saturday. Am ong those who will attend are A llen Hilburn, Ed T igner, Roy H o ffm a n n , Bob W hitehead, Red McCullough, Tom Sweeny, H a r ry Fulwiler, Bill Ful- wiler, and Gordon R ountree. the business m eeting, A my the girl* about membership, which is open to any girl who is registered for at least one course in home eco­ nomics. Kathleen W orley e x ­ plained the Objectives of the club to the new members. These ob­ jectives, she pointed out, are first, to broaden the interest o f the club members along the lines of their major not directly in­ in classroom procedure; cluded ty who will attend the gam e Dallas "ire Roy Pennycuick, L arry second, to promote acquaintance Bynum, Harold Spears, George among the girls o f the various di- Lewis, Clarence H arrison, Bob visions of the departm ent; and W right, Keith third, to provide a scholarship f o r V augh an, Ja c k Orr, Cook S h e f - 1a student in the departm ent who field, and John an d Mac Wassell. meets the requirem ents specified. Following the m eeting the girls Tom Abney, Joe Acker, Ben ad jo u rn e d to the patio w here the Blanton, H e rb e rt Carson, H ow ard officers of the club and the (W- I ishei, Bob Mills, u lty sponsors form ed a reception Dodd, Will Jo hn McCully, b r a n k Quirk, Her- line to g r e e t the new members, Faymote, In the receiving line were Kath- be rt leen W orley, E sth e r P ecknepaugh, ( hauncey W hitehead, J o h n Rich- Jr., Ruth Swanson, F ra n c e s S anders, ard W alker, Milton W est, Ardis Piercy, M a rth a Van Ness, and Donald White. A m ong Sigma Sigma N u ’s who will a tte n d are A lpha Mu fra- Amy . chw artz, Doris F o re m an , Bob Thomas, Bob „ ____ - r n - — - " R usk Has Picnic For N ew Members A ctive members of the Rusk Literary S ociety were hosts Thurs­ day night at a picnic at Zilker Park for seventeen new members. Picnic arrangem ents w ere made by a social com m ittee composed of Jesse George Kennedy, Joe Joseph, and Stanley Gunn. The program of entertainm ent was planned by Wroe Owens, president of the society. The outing was given in honor o f Joe Belden, Frank Chappell, Billy Boone, Joe Frantz, Millard Carter, Ed Patterson, Duke Tay­ lor, Gus Kohns, James Roos, Nash Poole, LeRoy Flores, Robert Fischer, Breez Seaberry, Cole Smith, Bob Markland, Ed K uyken­ dall, and Bill Clifford. ’‘All students interested in pub­ lic speaking are invited to attend the next regular m eeting of t h e society, Owens announced. “Club m eetings are held each Thursday night in Texas Union 311.’’ Book Review C lub Gives Luncheon Jewish Club To Reorganize On Campus Jewish men students m eeting at the H illel Foundation on Mon­ the decided day night, Avukah,' Jewish men s cultural organization, will be reorgan­ ized. The club was active on the campus four years ago. that i he group elected Emanuel Bender chairman and appointed Herbert Davis, Billy Goldberg, and Charley Freeman to serve on the program com m ittee. Dr. D. B. Klein, professor of psychol­ ogy, will sponsor the club. The Avukah” will m eet every other Monday night at the HiHel Foundation, 2228 Guadalupe, at 8 o’clock. The date o f the first m eeting has not been set. The purpose of the organization is to study Jewish culture and to become acquainted with the the confront problems which Jewish people. The first book to be studied by the club will be by “Judaism * Kaplan. as C ivilization,” The charter members o f the entertained Book Review Club new members with program a consisting o f a review of Marga­ ret M itchell’s best seller, “ Gone luncheon of Dr. and in W ashington B. Cox ------ •” I With the W ind,” at a IV indrow, Tuesday in th e home take Miss Bernice Mallory, Mrs. Bob Mrs. A. are Har- A rm stro ng, and Miss May B r o o k - ! Square. te rn ity members who will •in the Texas-O. U. gam e old Schiff, Sidney R affkind, Ber- shier nard Wolf, Marion Goodman, j M eyer B onderm an, Lewis Wail, Simon Ray Alexander. Those in Phi Sigma Delta fra- T " r~ " • • • Wesley Foundation The luncheon tab le was deco­ rate d with q u e e n ’s w re ath and purple ag e ra tu m . Pale pink ca n ­ dles in crystal holders w ere a t each end of the table. A Tv to the Jai. K its meetings Tobolowsky, B. supervision of II. j Wesley Foun dation Recreational o'clock, C. E. W oolen, direc to r B. Crag'*, Horace W a ll.” ', s i The Wesley Fou ndatio n P arty , the of of the school, has announced. to The recently form ed stu d y club will devote th e study of c u r r e n t books, both fic ­ tion and non-fiction. The new m em bers of th e o r­ _ a r e Mesdames O. F. ganization s t r i c k ^ 0’ R o ^ B e ^ F '" m* B ord' ' te rn ity who will go to Dallas Sat- A O V j I V C I a r t y urday are Ivan Schwartz, S tern T , S einberd, Mortis Marks, R o b e rt: Purvin, Royal Brin, A lfred E gre- j u n d e r will, Marks, Leo Rosengartcn, Louis School, will be held to n ight a t 7 T o b » n , „ „ d Edward Bowman. T w enty-four m e m b e r s sig m a Chi f ra te r n ity will go Dallas The c h a r te r m em bers are Mes- this week-end rp , , m c v im * vcir m e m o i r s a r e m w * the Texas-C. L. football game which have been handed down dames J. L. Brown, F. A. Buechel, the Centennial Exposition. *rom th e Old World, will be dem- A. B. Cox, Olin Culberson, J. M. and T hey are Stokes Brown, Sidney c i t r a t e d a t the school to night. J. F. Ewing, Minnie The p ro g ra m to n ight will con- Fath. R. A. Johns, Tom Lemon, Covington, David H um e, Rosser Coke, H arris school, Douglas Johnson, and W. A. Nel- Coke, Ja m es Downs, Dudley Pe- which sta rte d T uesday night. terson, Ed Nesbitt, William Bul- lard, Motley, Charles Pro thro, Stan ley M l S S B a t e s t O H e a d Gunn, Bill John Burns, Billy Mayne, Ed Cravens, Phil Yochem, Douglas Perkins,;1 Erie Downs, Hoskins Chosen H ead O f C hurch G roup M any games, made of wood, I D uff and wire, m a n y — ’ ------- * r- r r e s h m a n W o m e n Haves, T. L. Goudy, and H. E. \o c h e m , H ow ard ■. ... atten d marbles, , H ow ard Mead, Swearingen, recreational Ja ck d u d e Philquist, Falkner, _______ F r a n k * * * * * * son. the o f to _ , . i , , . I ! ardr ' J°y I 'V l n Vw « ! R ii o f ^ r a s t y , Ed F re shm an girls elected class offi- £ v e Ca„Ir Duncan Dunfian, Billy S ta n b e rry , B art cers for the year. Mann, and William Kuhn. hailed The f ir s t th ree Conde Hoskins was fro m t h a t city as M ary Sue B ates was chosen president, Shirley K err, „ ___ „ _________ _ vtce-president, and M ary F ra n c e s j gave its rep o rt, and the elected p resident o f Inter-C hurch the D ram atic L eague a t its firs t m e e t­ ing of the y e a r W ednesday a t the F irs t C ongregational Church. last The Com m ittee app ointed ............ .......... y e a r to f o rm u la te a constitution constitu- The w inning lion was ratifie d by the League. a t this point, A ta ck y p arty , the date to be an- se creta ry. Alpha Mu La., was elected presiden t of the Crow, Sigma pledges W ednesday night. Her- however, when E lizabeth Braden nounced, was planned, m an Eisen of Tyler was elected se creta ry -trea su rer. f r a te r n ity s tr e a ^ was broken {I S from Columbus, Texas, elected and Helen tr e a s u r e r , North, of Dallas, was nam ed class r e p o r te r f o r this year. M o n a U s a RESTAURANT AND CURIO SHOP S.A.M. P L E D G E S ELECT ^ v J a m es Muslow of Shreveport, _ ---------- , Serving from 7 a. m. to 11 p. m. FOODS TRULY AMERICAN Rooms for Private Parties Imported Mexican Curios loth & Colorado .....1.......— ...... Phone 2-6192 iiimitiiiimiiii.inmirii,nHiiiiii,iiini.,iimMini.iiMiHiiiHHiiinHiiHiwHwm«iniii»f The gayest I C _ • how of the l l to I West Texas Club Plans Picnic P a g e 5 T ri Delts Give Tea For H ousem other Dallas R egistration To Assist Students new D elta D elta D elta introduced their housemother, Mrs. George Yard o f Galveston, at tea W ednesday afternoon at the chap­ ter house. D ecorations consisted o f yellow chrysanthemums and blue delphin­ iums combined in the arrangem ent for the tea table and ivory candles in crystal holders. An effectiv e touch was added by the tall gold standards in front o f the win­ dows in drawing rooms and din­ ing room. The guests were received by Mrs. H. L. Darwin Mrs. Yard, Mrs. Charles H. Page, Jr., pro­ vince and M argaret Ward, Virginia Crews, and The­ resa Dean. advisor, Tea was poured by Mrs. Will ^Vatt and Mrs. George Harring­ ton. Members o f the active chap­ ter assisted in serving the call­ ers. Faculty members, chaperons, so­ representatives rorities, and friends were asked to m eet Mrs. Yard. from other A registration booth whoa q students of The U niversity Texas and o f Oklahoma UniveT sity may register and find — M o r n i n g D e v o t i o n s 7 :15—News 8 :00— B r e a k f a s t C l u b O r c h . 9 :0 0 — B r e e n a n d d e R o s e • l l 6— B e t t y C r o c k e r ! n :? * ~ S irl R * v ° T ter I * - 15— V agabonds i o :so—H o w to B e C h a r m i n g Shep Fields, who — J o s h H i g g i n s j ’ , i I . is U iso—T e x a s F a r m H o u r --------------- Friday, October 9, 1936 1 2 : 1 5 — M u s i c a n d S t e e l 12 :80— Doughboys 1 2 : 4 5 — J a c k A m l u n g ’s O r c h . I :00— C h u c k W a g o n G a n g 2 : 0 0 — P e p p e r Y o u n g ’* F a m i l y 2 : 1 5 — V i e a n d S a d e 2 : 3 0 — M a P e r k i n s 2 : 4 5 — M u s i c a l P r o g r a m 3 : 4 5 — Y o u n g H i c k o r y 4 :00— A lr b r e a k s 4 :3 0 — S t r i n g E n s e m b l e 4 45— T e r r i L a F r a n c o n i 5 : 0 0 — J a c k A r m s t r o n g 5 : 1 6 — S a f e t y L e g i o n 5 : 3 0 — T e x a s R a n g e r s 6 : 1 5 — U n c l e E z r a ' s S t a t i o n (5:30— R u b i n o f f . v i o l i n i s t 7 : 0 0 — J e s s i c a D r a g o n e t t e 8 : 0 0 — F r e d W a r i n g 8 : 8 0 — H e l e n C l a i r e . R o s e m a r i e B r a n Cato. 9 : 0 0 — F i r s t N i g h t e r 9 :30— R e d G r a n g e ’n ’ A n d y 1 0 : 0 0 — A m o s I 0 :15— N e w s 1 0 : 8 0 — L e o n N a v a r a ' s O r c h 1 1 : 0 0 — S h a n d o r , v i o l i n i s t ; D a n c e O r e h . • Others K o s t e l a n e t s ' s O r c h . — 7 :30— A n d r e R T S A . 8 : 0 0 — D i c k P o w e l l — R T S A 9 : 0 0 — S h e p F i e l d s — W R E N --------------O-------------- S E N I O R L A W S E L E C T Mark Martin o f Dallas was elected p resid en t of the senior law classes T uesday. This year peti­ tions w ith sig n atu res o f te n sen ­ law stu d en ts w er e necessary ior for n om in ation , w hile previous election s w ere held in mass m eet­ ings. Other o ff ic ia ls o f the clasa will be ele c ted b efore Friday. Learn to Fly C o m p lete Solo C ourse $45 L icen sed P ilo ts and A ir p la n e s A ustin M unicipal Airport P K Sandw ich Shop N o. I Featuring C ream W a ffle s at A ll H ours T a sty S a n d w ic h e s W . R. A U T T E N B U R Y 1 0 8 E . 7 t h P h i l l i p s L o r d , g l o b e t r o t t e r , h a s r e t u r n e d t o t h e a i r in a n e w a erie* o f b r o a d c a s t s e n ­ t i t l e d , “ W e , t h e P e o p l e . ” It m a y b e h e a r d o n S u n d a y s . t o g * T h i s p e r s o n a l l r i g g e d u p i t S t o o p n a g l e a n d B u d d . H e in o f f o o t b a l l S t o o p n a g l e is r e a d y t o t a c k l e his n e w p r o g r a m w h i c h is o n t h e a ir e v e r y S u n ­ d a y . Two problems that will be dis- was two! A „ I * 4. • . . at that. And super e n t m a m m e n t rn* h i, regular its spelling o f the word parts. Perhaps in sm g ,n g and a ctin g oaUed you rem em b er the King.” F ields first appeared on . . Rippling Rhythm ‘ — the . the , of lts vers,on last n,Kht- Thls it presented g reat how l that went up all over the Radio Guide magazine p r o ­ cussed are the possibility o f a f f ii- | “an n iv ersa ry” when K J .i. » „ „ w lin g U n iv ersity clubs with Federated W o m e n ’s Clubs fan s when f?ram and was so P o p u l a r that the T ex as and the advisability o f per- ha* alw ays been good and the a p e - ; “ Captain H en ry ” le ft the show as j jlste£ ers !n all parts o f the coun- t a ’ce n o ' m itting fresh m en to join an un- a a l broadcast w as even better. limited number of o r ga nized ,,!... Each o ff ic e r atten d in g the meet is invited to o f f e r a topic for dis- Thursday night a t 8 o ’clock over equalled the popularity of “ Cap WOAI through NBG. All the old tain H en ry ” with the bulk o f the cussion. Sponsored by Co-Ed A ssembly and new stars were featu red on rabid dial tw isters. So the logical j its head to move on elsewhere. His J I , a c c e , , or, th ough he w e . ex cellen t each and, in our opinion better, never ° in charge o f s h o w ! th e nation by This program tompany now ,° Ht up. an< is heard ----------- radio e the . . A v . i this w e e k ’s ju bilee hour and faith- choice fo r the position was and Mortar Board, this co n fer en ce is the first o f the kind held on the ful U niversity cam pus, although they for the four years of its existence Ross. have proved su ccessful at other were not disappointed. Two o f the universities. listeners who have tuned _ _ _ _ _ in real backbone o f the show, Lanny ' hain ' nnd gold content. finest singers in the c ou n tr y are) A m ong m em bers of the original L O N E S T A R G O L D St S I L V E R CO. 6 0 8 C o r g r e s s the gold watch. G O LD ! G O L D ! G O LD ! W e p a y a s h i g h s s $ 2 5 . 0 0 f o r a h e a v y to $1 5 .0 0 for Gold for Gold Rings 11 50 to *7.50 $7 .5 0 S t e p h e n F. A u s t i n Ho t e l Beauty Shop M e z z a n i n e Fl o o r A u s t i n H o t e l For wo rk, f i r s t t r y c l a s s t h e Stephen F. Austin Hotel Beauty Shop Pho. 2 -5 7 6 2 P a g e S At the Shows “ GIVE ME YOUR H E A R T .” W ith K ay Francis, Roland Young, and Georg® Brent. A t the Para­ mount. (L a st da y ). “ THE ROAD TO GLORY.” With Fredric March, Lionel Bar­ rymore, and Warner Baxter. A t the State. (First d a y ). “ S T R A I G H T FROM THE S H O U L D E R .” With Ralph B ella­ m y and Katherine Locke. A t the Queen. (R eview ed to d a y ) . “ SONS O’ G U N S.” With Jo e E. Brown, Joan Blondell, and Erie Blore. A t the Capitol. “ STORM OVER THE A N D E S .” With Jack H olt and M ina Bar­ rie. A t the Texas. R eviewed Today ST R A IG H T I H E S H O U L ­ FROM D ER '* A t th * Q ueen. F ro m a "to ry by L u r ia n C a ry . S c re e n play by M adeleine R u th v e n . P re s e n te d by A dolph Z ukor. Directed by S tu a rt B e v ie r. Released by P a r a m o u n t . P u r n e l l P r a t t . D a v i d H o lt j , ............... T H E C A S ! C u r t H a y d e n ________________R a l p h B e l l a m y Gail P y - e K a th e r in e Locke J o h n n y H a y d e n — —— J. M. P y n * Jam** McBride M r. W e n d ! Onalow Steven* David Holt with his childish e n ­ thusiasm was a real help to Ralph Bellamy in making “ Straight from the Shoulder” excitin g and inter­ esting. Katherine Locke, a new screen insipid personality was enough to tear down her share of the plot. to brings Andy Clyde the screen “J. M. P y n e,” one of Lu­ cian Cary’s beloved old philosoph­ the Saturday ical gunsm iths o f E ven in g P o s t series o f short stories and does it well. He adds comedy where it is most needed and is lovably human. An old mill wheel and an in ­ terestin g country house on the banks of the water make an a t ­ tractive en vironm ent for Clyde’s rifle factory where most of the is played. Here the child scene and his father, a widower and an artist, com® to escape a gang of racketeers. T hey are a ttem pting to kill Bellamy as he was the * itness o f a gan g killing. is The point of the story th** child’s fear that his father will marry Katherine Locke and ruin that has been the comradeship father and strong betw een his himself. David Holt is a match in wits fo r the gun m en , and C lyd e’s s u b ­ tle actions the in u n ­ child’s fo rsight tw ining the usual tangles.— J. K. combined with succeed 2 Math Teachers In Honor Society Two fa cu lty members o f the U niversity belong to the National A cad em y o f Science, a scientific organization with a national mem­ bership o f three hundred. They are Dr. R. L. Moore and Harry S. Vandiver, professors of p u r e mathematics. Of the total m em ­ bership, on ly been chosen from the South and South west. four have to t h e the U niversity fo llow ing year. Dr. Moore was elected the A cadem y in 1931. He received his science bachelor and master o f d egrees from in 1901 and received a fellowship In h e r e 1902-03 Dr. Moore received a fe l­ lowship at the University of Chi­ cago, and took his doctor o f phi­ losophy degree th e r e in 1905. B e­ fore he became a mem ber of the U niversity faculty 1920, he taught at the University o f T en ­ n essee, Pi nceton, N orthwestern, and the U niversity of P en n sylva ­ 'The Foundations nia. His book, o f the Point S et T heory,” was published in 1932. in Mr. Vandiver was elected to the Academy in 1934. He studied at the U niversity of P ennsylvania in 1904 and 1905. He was instructor in mathematics at Cornell for six jea^s. In 1 9 2 1 he was given a Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship. American Men ot S cien ce” di-j rectory listed both faculty mem- hers with stars by their names. I indicating among the most important o f the thousand members listed. their work is J that N e w m a n Club S ee k s N e w M em bers on A drive to reach ev e ry Catholic stu den t campus was t h e launched Monday night when a com m ittee consisting o f twenty N ew m a n Club members met at their club room to discuss means o f in creasin g the membership o f the Catholic o rga n .zation. The d riv e will continue througn th e last d a y o f October. A large num ber o f s t u d e n ts eligible for mem bership since the beginning*^ the club have en ro lle d in th e Uni­ ve rsity this s e m e s te r , Joe Bolden, p resident, announced. He said t h a t 148 a lr e a d y , a n d m a n y more o f a possible 580 will be urged to becom e m em b er? dur­ ing the month. Also p la n s were discussed fo r a fall fo rm al. jo i n e d have D ean VU I. M oo re sp ok e on the N .Y .A . program o f the U n iversity a i the m e e t in g Sunday, and \ i r - g n.a K ershner played the violin. — o ------------------ N or m a n D. Nicholson o f Port the U n i­ N e c h e , e x -s tu d e n t o f v e r sity , visited this m eek on his way^ to F ort Worth. the T ex as Okla H e will atten d b om a g a m e rn D allas. the cam pu s t h e S m i l i n g J o a n B l o n d e l l , a b o v e , f e m i n i n e c a * t o p p o - b e a d * i n a i l e c o m e d i a n J o e E. B r o w n t h e t h e B r o a d w a y s t a g e c o m e d y , “ S o n * t o d a y w h i c h o p e n * v e r t i o n a c r e e n o f Andy Cl yde) O G u m , , r ___ . , C a p i t o l . U. T. Republicans Get Landon Wire Governor Alf Landon, R epubli­ c a n presidential nominee, fig u r a ­ tiv ely came before the U niv ersity Y oung Republicans (Tub T uesday in Garrison Hall 101 and night • declared in a telegraphic g r e e t ­ ing that “ your organization is a d ­ ditional proof th a t the youth o f this land are n ot willing to s u r ­ render liberty for a phantom s e ­ curity.” The o fficer s were elected for the y^ar: Brian Coyne, chairman; H. L. McCune, Jr., first vice-chairman; Ralph Moore, Robert vice-chairman; second Blankrnburg, the chairm an co m m ittee; Bob constitutional secretary ; H enry local Ritter, Hauschild, s e c r e ­ tary; Ed Bewley, treasurer; and Bill Deaderick, sergeant-ab-arms. corresponding follow ing of J. W. Bass, a T ex as d e leg a te to the Republican national c o n v e n ­ tion, spoke briefly on “ Youth and T axation .” H. L. McCune, Jr., chairman o f Texa.s district No. 5 o f the T exas Y o un g Republican Federation, spoke in behalf of the T exas organization and read a telegram o f g reetin g from Carter H. Stovall o f Dallas, chairman o f the T exas fe d e r a t io n Other teleg ram s were read from John Hamilton, Republican n a ­ tional chairman; J. Kenneth Brad­ l e y , Y oung Republican national chairman; and H enry A. Bubb, Y oung Republican vice-chairm an. last s u m ­ A resolution o ffer ed form er mer by Frank Hayes, constitutional chairman o f comm ittee, cen sor ­ ship o f The Daily Texan on be­ half o f the club was unanim ously endorsed T uesday night. condemning the She Found Out All Orange Boxes Aren't the Same there are Undoubtedly fo rty acre.? to this U niversity campus. Her fe e t brought about this c o n ­ clusion fo r her. Now she was to experience her first lab. And she had to find it. Just ahead o f her was a boy with an orange box. She had learned that orange boxes meant lab sets; so she followed this boy with the orange box. her 311 Up one flight, then up another, ano1 still another, before her guide disappeared around a corner. For e y e s room searched as she traversed the hall. sp ectacled y o u n g man, Then a who came looked very knowing, out o f a door. He seem ed friendly enough. anxious “ P l e a s e , " she begged, “ Will you help me find my chem istry la b ? ” "I’m sorry,” he smiled, “ This is the Physics Building. Your ch em ­ fo r istry lab is probably waiting you next door in the C hemistry Building.” VV lth a sigh she turned to the I hat boy w ith the orange stairs. box had misled her. M iss P in ck n e y To Sp eak at K ilgore “ The N ecessity o f Health E d ­ ucation the in C olleges” will be subject of a talk by Miss J ean ie M. Pinckney at the T exas Public Health A ssociations’ convention in Kilgore, October 15-17. Mi- chief o f Pinckney, the Bureau of Nutrition and Health Education, will be accompanied by Miss Alice H. Miller and Carl V. Bredt, the bureau. The three plan to attend the s e s ­ sions the American Public Health Association in N ew Orleans after the convention. lecturers of in MEETIN G PO ST PO N ED The Cleburne Club will not meet Sunday, \\ aldo Wilson, pres­ ident, announced yesterday. The next meeting of the club will be held Sunday, October 18. The m eeting has been postponed as so many students from Cleburne the viii bo in Dallas to attend u I gam e this week-end, Wil- i son said.