a T h e B a i T e x a n Th e F i r s t C o l l o g e D a i l y i n t h e S o u t h VOL 46 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JUNE IO, 1945 Eight Pages Today No. 187 Seventh Sets Cam pus Record--$2 0 9 *7 8 8 .8 0 ISI Candidates Kappas Sell *20,137 For Arts and To W in Contest Science Degrees ll Profs File Protest Against Cut Rule— Faculty to Reconsider at Tuesday M eet 187 B.A. Aspirants Head List; 11 Apply For BJ., 59 B.S. C a n d id a te s fo r b a c h e lo r o f arts d e g r e e s on J u n e 24 o u t n u m b e r b a ch elo r o f s c i e n c e a p p lic a n ts by 1 87 to 5 9, a c c o r d in g to th e a p p li­ c a tio n s r e c e iv e d by D e a n T. H. P arlin o f th e C o lle g e o f A r t s and S c ie n c e s . o f jou r n alism a p p lic a n ts b r in g to 2 57 the to t a l o f s t u d e n t s p la n n i n g to g r a d u a t e tw o w e e k s fr o m to d a y . th is c o ll e g e b a c h e lo r E le v e n fr o m T h e f o l l o w i n g n a m e s a s o f th is date c o n s t it u t e th e list o f s t u d e n t s who h av e a p p lied f o r t h e fo llo w - in g d e g r e e s : b a ch elo r o f arts, b ach elo r o f jo u r n a lism , b a ch elo r o f sc ie n c e in c h e m is tr y , b a c h elo r o f s c i e n c e in g e o l o g y , b a c h e lo r o f in h o m e e c o n o m ic s , and s c i e n c e b a ch elo r o f in p h ysics, s c i e n c e th e s e d e g r e e s t o be c o n f e r r e d on J u n e 24 , 1 9 4 5 . C a n d id a te s fo r the b a c h e lo r s d e g r e e in J u n e are re q u e s t e d t o ch eck th is lis t and r e p o r t t o th e D e a n o f th e C o lleg e o f A rts a nd S c i e n c e s th e in c o r r e c t s p e llin g o f a n y n a m e or th e o m i s ­ sio n o f a n y n a m e . A s t u d e n t w h o s e n a m e a p p e a r s on th is list an d w ho has a b a n d o n e d his d e g r e e in J u n e w’ould do th e d ea n a f a v o r by r e ­ p o r t i n g th e f a c t th a t he ha s g iv e n up ta k i n g his d e g r e e f o r th e n e x t c o m m e n c e m e n t . B a c h e l o r of A r t s l ’e a r l W i t t e r D u B o s e C l a r k Mr s . E d i t h J o a n C o r y Al l e n M a y b e l l e Al l e n J a n e t C o r d o n A m b l e r K a t h e r i n e B a c k u s M a r y J o B a n k s M i s . A n n a Be l l e R i c h a r d s o n B a n n a h a n B e t t y D u r h a m B a r l o w C a r o l J a n e B a u m a n Ma z e l M a r y l y n B e n n e t t R o s e m a r y B e n n e t t I.a d a y ne E a r n e s t m e Bl a c k W i l l i a m H a r o l d B l a c k J u l i a K i r k B l a c k s h a r e K a t h l e e n L o m a x B l a n d J u a n i t a B l a n t o n Cr a i K H a m i l t o n B o y d B a r b a r a B i r g i t t e B r a y M r s . R o s e m a r y T y l e r B r a y t o n A n n a L o t t B r i g h t M a r y L y n n B r o u t h c r t i n C a r o l i n e H a r t B r u c e Wi l l i a m J o s e p h B r u c e A n n a A r n o l d B u c h a n a n A n n E l i z a b e t h B u n k i e * P h y l l i s M a r i o n B u r n e t t B e t t e A y d l e t t e C a p r o n K a t h e r i n e N e v i l l e C a r l i s l e Ne l l M o o r e C a r m i c h a e l C a r o l y n C a r n e y Bi l l i e J o y c e Char l et ! E l i z a b e t h A n n C h u r c h i l l Mi >. Wi l l i a m K e m p C l a r k J o \ ce D r a y Cletrvc D o l o r e s H e n r y Col l i ne C a r o l y n C h r i s t i n e Co n l e y E l w o o d E l l i s C o o k S t a n l e y E v e r t C r a w f o r d S t u a r t D i c k s o n C u r r i e S h i r l e y S u z a n n e D a n c e r H e l e n D a v i s K a t h l e e n J a n e D a v i s M a r y F r a n c e s De B u s k B e t t i e L e e D e c h e r d Bobby® R u t h De l a f i e l d B e v e r l y R n lh D e w i t t M a r t h a V i r g i n i a Di l l er D o r o t h y $ ) i l l i n § t r B o n n i e - J e a n D u n c a n B e t t y B r o o k e E a k l e R o b e r t W a r r e n El l i s C o r i n n e A n n e E s g e n M a r t h a G r a c e K v e r i t t Ol i n B. h a i r c l o t h D o r o t h y L o u i s e Me l d s J o h n B l a c k w e l l F i s c h e r J a m e s E u g e n e F o g a r t i e B o n n i e F o r d „ , Mr s . E l l e n B l a n c h e H a s s l e r Pr e y C h r i s t i n e C. G e o r g e * B e t t y A n n G i l b e r t Mr s M a r y J o G r o s s Gi l l e s pi e M a r y M a r . C l a i r e Go ss a g e M a r y C a r o l y n G r e e r Colet-n F r a n c e s G r o s s m a n R o s e m a r y H a r w e l l ( leo P a t r i c i a H a u s m a n M a r y M o n t g o m e r y He f f l e y T a n n y e L e o n a Hill L y n n e E l i z a b e t h H o l l a n d M a r g a r e t Bet' s H o r c h e r V i r g i n i a F l o r e n c e H o u s t o n G a t Col e H o w a r d B e s a P a r k e r H u g h e s V i r g i n i a F r a n c e s H u n t e r L a n e l l e H u r l b u t E l i z a b e t h G o r d o n . _ S e e 2 5 7 , P a g e 5 W h a t (Joel Oh (Mete SUNDAY 1 0 : 4 5 — R a d io H o u s e p r e s e n t s “ Or­ g a n s w ith P s a lm s ,” K T B C . l l — N e w m a n Club will e le c t o f ­ f i c e r s fo r su m m e r -fa ll. 1 1 : 2 5 — W e ld o n H a rt w ill le ad s t u ­ fo r u m , U n iv e r s i ty C o m ­ d e n t m u n i t y Church. 7 : 3 0 — T au D e lta A lp h a p a r t y at h om e o f Dr. C a ro lin e C row ell, 2 31 1 L o n g v ie w S tr e e t. 8 : 3 0 — C a m p u s U n io n S e r v ic e w ith s er m o n by Dr. Jo h n B arclay , op e n -a ir th e a t e r . M O N D A Y 9-12-— S t u d e n t a rt e x h ib it, A c a ­ d em ic R o om , M ain B u ild in g 2 -5 S t u d e n t a rt e x h ib it, A c a ­ d em ic R oom , M ain B u ild in g . 4 :1 5 L iter s J o h n st o n in piano r e cita l, M usic B u ild in g . 6 : 3 0 — J. B. H olt, W e sle y F o u n d a ­ tion. 7 — Q u a l if y in g e x a m s fo r w o m e n s t u d e n t s in N a v y in t e r e s te d job s, W a g g o n e r Hall c o m m e r c ia l room . E le v e n p r o te s ts t o th e p r o p o sed “ e x c e s s i v e ” a b s e n c e s ru le w e r e se n t t o th e F a c u l t y C o u ncil by f a c u l t y m e m b e r s by S a tu r d a y and th e m a t t e r w ill be p r e s e n t e d b e ­ fo r e th e f a c u l t y as a w h o le on T u e s d a y , J u n e 12. I f a p p ro va l is g iv e n by th e e n ­ tire f a c u l t y , th e ru le w ill be p r e ­ s e n t e d to th e B oard o f R e g e n t s fo r a p p ro va l or d isa p p ro v a l, Dr. R. M. G u tsch , f a c u l t y se c r e t a r y , has a n n o u n c e d . A t a m e e t i n g o f th e F a c u lt y f o r f i v e C o u ncil May 3 0 , a rule s t a t in g th a t fi v e a b s e n c e s p er s e m e s t e r sh ou ld be c o n sid ere d e x c e s s iv e a n d t h a t a g r a d e o f “ F ” w o u ld be g iv e n a u t o ­ c u ts , w a s m a t ic a lly a d o p ted . A lso a d o p te d w a s a rule p r o v id in g t h a t d o u b le c u ts sh o uld be g iv e n b e f o r e and a f t e r h o lid ays. T h e S t u d e n t s ’ A s s e m b l y v o te d to to p r e s e n t a p e titio n F r id a y th e f a c u l t y t o a llo w a m e m b e r fr o m th e s t u d e n t bod y to g iv e the s t u d e n t s ’ p o in t o f v ie w on th e s u b ­ j e c t a t th e f a c u l t y m e e t in g . T h e p e titio n is as f o l l o w s : “ W e do h e r e b y r e s p e c t f u l l y p e ­ tition th e G en eral F a c u lt y to g r a n t us a n o p p o r tu n ity in th e sp ecial, th e G en eral called m e e t in g o f F a c u l t y on T u e s d a y , J u n e 12, 1 9 4 5 , t o p r e s e n t th e view's o f th e S t u d e n t s ’ A s s o c i a tio n c o n c e r n in g th e p rop o sed (T h e 5 -C u t R u le ) to r e g u la t e c la s s a b ­ se n c e s , said v ie w s h a v in g b ee n e n ­ d o rsed b y th e S t u d e n t s ’ A s s e m b ly in a m e e t i n g held F r id a y e v e n in g , J u n e 8, 1 9 4 5 . ” f a c u l t y p la n O p p o sitio n to th e F a c u l t y C o u n ­ cil a c tio n h a s b e e n v o ic e d by D aily T e x a n ed ito r ia ls a n d F ir i n g Lin e le t te r s. T h e E x - S e r v i c e m e n ’s A s s o ­ cia tio n o p p o sed th e r u le w ith th e s t a t e m e n t th a t “ m a n y r e tu r n in g v e te r a n s w ill be in c a p a b le , a s a r e su lt o f se r v ic e -in c u r r e d ph ysical d isa b ilities, class to m e e t r e q u ir e m e n t s . ” T h e a t t e n d a n c e I n t e r - F r a t e r n it y C ou n cil a lso o p ­ posed th e r ule a s b e in g “ r e g im e n ­ ta t io n d e s ig n e d f o r s t u d e n t s b elo w th e c o ll e g e le v e l .” t h e in th e S t u d e n t s w it h f i v e u n e x c u s e d a b s e n c e s m a y be r e in s ta te d by p r e s e n t in g a “ g o o d ” e x c u s e t o th e d ean w ith p r o o f o f r e a so n a b ly c o u r se , Dr. g o o d w ork G u tsch said. I f a f t e r r e in s t a t e ­ m e n t , a s t u d e n t had t w o m ore a d d itio n a l cu ts, he w o u ld b e re­ a d m itte d to th e c o u r se o n ly u n d e r c ir c u m ­ t h e s t a n c e s , ” th e C o u n cil a g r e e d , and i f re in s ta te d a se co n d tim e, w’ould ; be p la ced on sc h o la stic p rob a tio n 1 fo r th e r e m a in d e r o f th e s e m e s te r . e x c e p t i o n a l “ m o s t Polio 'Paralyzes' Campus— With Fear s t r ic k e n fro m G e o r g e t o w n w a s w ith th e d is e a s e a n d w a s bro u gh t to B r a c k e n r id g e h o sp ita l T h u r s­ day. T his b r o u g h t th e to t a l o f vic­ tim s fr o m W illia m so n C o u n ty to six. in T e x a s b r in g i n g L a st w e e k 24 n e w c a s e s w e r e re p o rte d th e to t a l fo r th e y e a r to 119. F i f t y la s t m on th. c a s e s w e r e r e p o r te d A lth o u g h th is f i g u r e is w o r s e th an n o rm al, Dr. S. W. B o h ls o f th e S t a t e H e a lth D e p a r t m e n t said tha t is n o th in g t o b e c o m e a la r m e d it th e m o s t part, he a b o u t. said, the c a s e s h av e o r ig in a te d in sm a ll t o w n s w h e r e s a n i ta r y c o n ­ d itio n s are n o t so g o o d as t h e y are in th e la r g e r cities. F o r By A L I C E F R A N K T h e o n e p olio c a se th a t w a s r e ­ p o r ted in A u s tin has st a r te d a w a v e o f s u g g e s t io n w h ic h has run riot o v e r th e c a m p u s. Colds, h e a d ­ a c h e s, s t i f f n e ck s, an d sto m a c h a c h e s h av e c a u se d s l e e p le s s n ig h ts fo r s t u d e n t s w ho c o n s id e r e d t h e m ­ s e l v e s v ic t im s o f n o n - s e g r e g a t in g So fa r, h o w ­ i n f a n t il e p a ralysis. ev e r , o n ly on e ca se h as b e e n d is­ in A u stin proper. co v e r e d Dr. C a th e r in e M cC o rm ick o f th e U n iv e r s i t y H e a lth S e r v ic e said th a t th e f i r s t q u e st io n a s t u d e n t a sk s w h e n he c o m e s to th e H e a lth S e r v ic e is, “ D o I h a v e in f a n t il e p a r a ly s is ? ” F r id a y m o r n in g a girl fa i n te d in o n e o f h er c la s se s an d w a s t a k ­ en t o St. D a v id ’s ho spital. J u s t a f t e r she r e g a in e d c o n s c io u s n e s s , she sa id sh e f e l t su r e she had polio, bu t a d o c to r a t St. D a v id ’s p r o n o u n c e d h er c a s e to be on ly th a t o f p r e -e x a m in a ti o n e x h a u s ­ tion . f o r t r e a t m e n t H o w e v e r , a 5 -y e a r -o ld child 33 Ensigns, Marine In Rotcee Class Aviation Study Needs 'Culture' Bulletin Advises School Teachers T h e in t e g r a tio n o f a v ia t io n m a ­ te r i a ls in th e s e v e r a ls a r e a s o f th e cu r ric u lu m sh ou ld be p r e d ic a te d u p on a s o u n d c o n c e p t i o n o f th e g e n e r a l aim s o f e d u c a tio n . I n ­ st r u c tio n in a v ia t io n a n d th e r e ­ la ted f i e ld s should e m p h a s iz e p r i­ m a r ily th e cu ltu ral, p re-v o c a tio n - al, a n d a v o c a tio n a l p h a se s w ith a se c o n d a r y e m p h a s is on th e v o c a ­ tio n a l, ap p roach . T h e F o r t y A c r e s will h a v e th ir ­ ty - th r e e n e w e n sig n s, an d on e n ew M arin e L ie u t e n a n t a f t e r th e U n i ­ v e r sity c o m m e n c e m e n t e x e r c is e s , S u n d a y , J u n e 24. C ap ta in R. J. V a le n t i n e , c o m m a n d e r o f th e U n i ­ v e r s i t y n a v a l p ro gr am , w ill hand c o m m is s io n s to th e R o tc e e s. le a v e t o th e In a d d itio n th ir ty -f o u r R o tc e e s, 139 o t h e r N a v y s t u d e n ts th e m a ­ will jo r i t y o f w h o m w'ill g o to m id ­ sh ip m e n sc h o o ls a t N o t r e D a m e an d C o lu m bia U n iv e r s ity . th e ca m p u s , f o r d e g r e e s , a re le a v in g , th ir ty -o n e are c a n d i­ d a te s t w e n t y - f i v e fr o m th e C o lle g e o f E n g in e e r i n g and six fro m th e C o lle g e o f A rts an d S c ie n c e s . R o t c e e s w h o w ill r e c e i v e e n sig n co m m iss io n s a r e H e r b e r t D. A n d ­ erson , C ha rles A. B ro w n , D on ald C. B ro w n , D o n a ld J. Clark, V icto r E. C rew s, F r a n k lin J. Crow, Carl I S. F itz g e r a ld , T h e o d o r e W. j C lo ck er, M artin K. H o lm es, H e n r y L. H ook , B ru ce S. J a m ie s o n , L e o n ­ ard D. J e f f e r y , E u g e n e R. J o h n s o n Jr., G eo rg e A. K lu m b Jr., D an iel M. K r a u s se, M on ro B. L an ier, E r n e s t L eo n ard , R ichard R. Le- R o u ax , J a m e s B. M acy Jr., R o b ­ e r t A. M a n o g u e , J o s e p h B. M oore, | R oy C. N e w m a n , R o b ert K. O v e r - 1 s t r e e t , W illia m C. P r e u sse , B rice j W . Q u arles, Ed J. S c h u tz e , W il­ liam B. S ilv is Jr., T h o m a s A. S t a n s b u r y , J o h n A. T a y lo r , John J. W a ls h , L a u r e n c e D. W illia m s, j D o n a ld E. W ilson , a n d J a m e s L. ' W o lf. C ly d e M. H a r d y will r e c e i v e his co m m iss io n as a s e c o n d lie u te n a n t in th e U n it e d S t a t e s M arine Corps. Dr. J. M. C o le m a n , c it y - c o u n t y h e a lt h d irecto r, is in c h a r g e o f all p o lio m y e litis c a s e s in th is district. H e and S a m u e l P. In g ra m and o th e r U n it e d S t a t e s P u b lic H ea lth S e r v ic e m e n a re n o w c h e c k in g s a n i ta r y c o n d it io n s in A u s ti n and v ic in it y v icin ity A b u lle tin h a s r e c e n t l y b e e n is ­ su ed b y th e S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t o f E d u c a tio n w h ich s e t s f o r t h p e r t i­ n e n t r e c o m m e n d a tio n s to g u id e a d m in is t r a to r s and t e a c h e r s in th e sc h o o ls n o w o f f e r i n g o r c o n t e m ­ p la t in g o f f e r i n g a e r o n a u tic s . H ob G ray, A ss o c ia te p r o f e s s o r o f cu r­ ricu lu m an d th e U n iv e r s i t y , is c o n s u l t a n t a n d ed i­ t o r o f th is b u lle tin . A p p r o x im a t e ly on e h u n d red and fo r t y n e w R. O. T. C. s t u d e n t s w'ill a r r iv e on th e c a m p u s in J u ly as a p a r t o f th e 7 0 0 N a v y s t u ­ d e n t q u o ta a llo w e d t h e U n iv e r ­ sity. T h e q u o ta is sm a lle r by 147 th an t h a t o f la s t y e a r d u e to the c o n v e r s io n o f r e g u la r V -1 2 s t u ­ d e n ts in to th e R. O. T. C. p rogram . A b o u t h a l f o f th e N a v y s t u d e n t s , n e x t y e a r w ill be R o tc e e s , and as a p r e c a u tio n a r y m ea s- I ? P,°n w h | ° h t !'18 b u lle tin is based j ea ch s e m e s t e r th e p e r c e n t a g e will b e lle v e t h a t th e r e s p o n s ib ilit y f o r be g r c a t e r u n t il all N a v y s t u d e n ts as a p it a a v ia t io n e d u c a tio n r e s t s on te a c h - j will be in th e R# 0> T> C- p rog ram . ors o f all g r a d e Q f th e 173 N a v y s t u d e n t s w ho in all s u b j e c t fie ld s : t h a t th e c o u r s e s o f i th e r e g u la r c u rric ulu m m a y and sho u ld be in t e g r a t e d w ith th e in -, fo r m a t io n n e c e s s a r y f o r ch ild ren j liv in g a t a tim e w h e n air tr a v e l j o n m a n y I is a m a jo r in f lu e n c e p h a s e s o f life. T h e m e m b e r s o f th e c o n f e r e n c e in s tr u c tio n at io n s y m e a le v e ls and * Collectors Ask I of 3 Textbooks For Europe's School Libraries A s th e tim e c o m e s f o r all g o o d ! T h e A l l - U n i v e r s it y B oo k D rive s t u d e n t s t o sell t h e ir book s a n d J is a s k in g th a t e a c h s t u d e n t g iv e g o h o m e , a plea c o m e s fro m s t u - ; o n e o u t o f e v e r y th r e e b o ok s th a t d e n ts in th e u n iv e r s iti e s o f E u ro p e, t h e y wrould se ll or o th e r w is e dis- T h e p le a is fr o m s t u d e n t s j u s t like p ose o f to th e book d riv e to be th e s t u d e n t s h e re in o u r u n iv ers i- s e n t to E u ro p e , so th a t th o s e s t u ­ th e o n ly d i f f e r e n c e b e in g d e n ts can h a v e a n o t h e r c h a n c e at p e s , t h a t t h e y h a v e had to en d u r e th e le a r n in g . T h e s e b oo ks m a y be b o m b in g and all a r o u n d h a za rd s p la ced in a n y o f th e b o x e s w hich o f w’ar. T h er e is n o th i n g l e f t o f \ h a v e b een d is tr ib u te d to th e fra- w h a t w e r e so m e o f th e g r e a t e s t t e r n i t y or s o r o r ity h ou ses, or j u s t lib rar ies w h e r e U n iv e r s i t y c o m e th e s t u d e n t s h er e th e w'orld. T his is the in. in in in e le m e n t a r y , In clu d ed in th e b u lle tin are the r e c o m m e n d a tio n o f th e A v ia tio n j E d u c a tio n C o n f e r e n c e on a via tio n ju n io r e d u c a tio n high , and s e c o n d a r y sc h oo ls. The s t u d y o f a v ia tio n an d its rela ted a c t i v it i e s can be u tiliz e d as a m e a n s o f m o t iv a t i n g a lm o s t all s u b j e c t s in T e x a s high sch o o ls — | so c ia l s tu d ie s, E n g lis h , lan^uaR-05=, biologry g e n e r a l fo r e ig n sci and drop p ed in th e b ox in f r o n t o f th e ence> p h y sics, m a t h e m a tic s , Co-Op or in th e T e x a s U n io n . f i n e arts. is w o n d e r f u l th e w a r W h e n s p e a k i n g on th e c a m p u s s e v e r a l w e e k s a g o , a Y u g o sla v ia n sa lio r m e n t io n e d the lack o f f a ­ c ilit ie s fo r le a r n i n g in his c o u n tr y sin c e th e b e g in n i n g o f th e war. In illu s tra tin g , he w e n t on to sa y that. it is o v er a nd th e w o m e n a re g o i n g b ack to fr o n t t h e u n iv e r s iti e s lin es, tr a d in g a m a c h in e -g u n fo r a book, a w orn pair o f o v e r a lls fo r a sh irt and a h a r r o w in g e x p e r ie n c e f o r th o u g h t s o f a b rig h t f u t u r e th ro u gh le a r n in g . fr o m th e T y p e s o f c la s sro o m d e m o n s tr a ­ tio n s, s t u d e n t a c tiv itie s , an d film s a r e s u g g e s t e d fo r e a c h o f th e s e p h a s e s o f a v ia tio n e d u c a tio n . A lso p r e s e n t e d are p r o g r a m s fo r a v ia ­ tio n t r a i n in g in T e x a s j u n i o r c o l­ l e g e s and e v e n in g sc h o o ls and th e p re p a ra tio n o f t e a c h e r s can a s s e m ­ te a c h i n g ble an a b u n d a n c e h e lp s list o f film s o u r c e s in T e x a s. in clu d ed a s is a o f is Historical Writer, Poet To Be Buried Today It is th e d u t y o f s t u d e n t s h ere f o r Mrs. w ho h a v e th e s e th in g s to g iv e th e m T h e r e s a M oore H u n t e r , 6 8 , ex- th e U n iv e r s ity , will in g fo r w h a t w e c h o o s e to call o u r be h eld S u n d a y a f t e r n o o n a t 3 :3 0 I o ’clo ck a t St. A u s t i n ’s Church. p e a c e . o th e r s w h o h a v e ta k e n th e beat- s t u d e n t o f s e r v i c e s F u n e r a l V-12's Moving Out, So Civilians M ay Join Navy— in Roberts R o b e r ts Hall will be p a rtia lly o p e n e d th is t o c iv ilia n s t u d e n t s n e x t s e m e s t e r fo r th e f ir s t tim e s in c e c o n t i n g e n t a r ­ rived on th e c am p u s, C h arles V. D u n h a m , a s s is t a n t d e a n o f s t u d e n t li fe , has a n n o u n c e d . th e N a v y B r a c k e n r id g e D o rm , w hich w a s r e-o p e n ed to c ivilian s t u d e n t s last March, w ill a c c o m m o d a te 13 0 m en, and t o g e t h e r w ith th e o n e se c tio n o f R o b erts Hall, w h ich will hold 3 0, w ill help to a lle v ia t e th e m e n ’s h o u s in g sh o r t a g e f o r th e c o m in g s e m e s t e r , said Mr. D u n h am . ★ d e u c e s w ill be o p e n f o r th e w o m e n st u d e n ts . sc h o o l th e m o s t lik e ly pro b lem st u d e n ts . A sh o r ta g e o f a p a r tm e n ts lo o m s ; fo r j as s u m m e r P r e s ­ e n c e o f te a c h e r s h er e f o r g r a d u a te w ork , plus m a n y v e te r a n s , is be- \ lie v e d lik ely to b o o st th e d em an d o f a p a r tm e n ts. G r a m m a r , Spelling T o Be in Films For Freshmen N ow L a st th a n F r e s h m e n E n g lis h s t u d e n t s at T he situ a tio n th is y e a r will he the U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s so o n will a b o u t th e sa m e a s last, a c c o r d in g “ s e e ” w h e r e th e c o m m a s and s e m i­ to t h e n u m b e r o f a p p lic a n ts , re­ c o lo n s should be p la ced , a n d w h a t c e iv e d t h u s fa r by th e R e g is t r a r ’s a “ d a n g li n g p a r tic ip le ” is, f o r Dr. r e s id e n c e s y e a r O f f ic e . th e d e a n ’s j J o s e p h J. J o n e s , a s s i s t a n t p ro fes - o th e r th o s e on is now' p rep a rin g I sor o f E n glish , list had to be f o u n d to ta k e care I film strips f o r u se in th e cla sses. o f th e A g r a n t o f $ 1 , 5 0 0 w a s a p ­ proved by th e B o ard o f R e g e n t s in th e ir r e c e n t s e s sio n , p e r m ittin g Dr. J o n e s to g e t n e c e s s a r y m a t e r ­ ials to m ak e th e film strip s fo r s e m e s t e r E ng lish use e x ­ p e c te d to he m ore th a n a d e q u a te th is s u m m e r , also, a f t e r th e d i f ­ last f i c u lt i e s o f room s h o r t a g e s su m m er . la te -co m cr s . r e s id e n c e s W o m e n ’s f ir s t are in S c o tt is h Rite D orm will be c lo s ­ ed b u t U n iv e r s ity -o p e r a t e d re>i- ; classes. {'ration o f f i c e r on a Rio Grande b rid ge. A U n iv e r s i t y o f T ex a s p ro d u ct, he did his g r a d u a te work u n d e r Dr. R obert C la ren ce S t e v e n ­ son. ★ ★ A n o t h e r star p e r fo r m e r at the F o lk lo re m e e t in g will he J. W. fo r W h a tle y , m ak er o f v io lin s tw’e n t y y e a r s and a fo r fid d le r m ore th a n fo r ty years. He m ad e th e fid d le w hich he will play T u e s ­ d ay n ig h t and th e g u it a r on w hich his so n, Bob, will a c c o m p a n y him. He k n o w s m or e th an 2 0 0 o ld -tim e tu n e s . O th e r p e r fo r m e r s a t th e m e e t ­ ing wall he A. P. T h o m a so n , w ith his p in e - k n o t ta le s o f biscuit e a t ­ in g w o o d sm e n , Dr. M ody C. Boat- la t e s t oil-w ell right, te l li n g th e lore, an d J. Frank D ob ie. “ The film s will be in s tr u c tio n a l : o n ly ,” Dr. J o n e s said, “ and will fu n d a m e n t a ls o f E n g- sp e llin g , p u n c t u a ­ j lish -g ram m a r, tion and s e n c t e n c e str u c tu r e . st r e s s th e “ T he p u r p o se o f h a v in g the film s is to fin d o u t ho w e f f e c t i v e visual aid s a re in th e t e a c h i n g o f E n g l i s h — a nd w h e th e r th ere is a n y j real va lu e said. t h e m , ” Dr. J o n e s in T h e se film s will be u sed on an e x p e r im e n t a l basis o n ly a t fir st, i and if th e y prov e s a t i s f a c t o r y and I h elp f u l, th e y will be a v a ila b le to all in s tr u c to r s o f c la s s e s in f r e s h ­ man f u n d a m e n t a ls . Dr. J o n e s e x ­ p e c ts to h ave th e film s r e a d y by N o v e m b er. L o n g th e v isu a l aid , Dr. J o n e s has a ’rea dy p r e ­ p ared a life o f T h o r ea u , to use a s an in t e r p r e ta ­ tiv e film . in t e r e s t e d strip on th e in G.l. Bill of Rights Lahr Topic at U.S.O. “ The G. I. Bill o f R ig h ts ” w ill be d is c u ssed by B. G. Lahr, t r a i n in g o f f i c e r o f th e U n ite d S t a t e s V e t - ; e r a n ’s A d m in is tr a t io n a t th e U n i- th e: I his is o n e o f th e r e g u la r S u n d a y m orn - j ( i n g se r ie s o f f o r u m s a t IO o ’clock. ^ Lone Star State Ballad Collector To Sing Calo' Songs to Folklorists N a t i v e b a lla d r y in T e x a s ow'es m u ch to B r o w n ie M cN eill w h o will s in g T e x a s b a lla d s in both E n glish and Spanish at th e a n n u a l m e e t in g o f th e T e x a s F o lk lo re S o c ie t y in th e T e x a s M em oria l M u seu m , T u e s d a y , J u n e 12, at 8 o ’clock. A c o lle c to r o f T e x a s s o n g s , M c­ N e ill has in his re p e r to ir e 2 5 0 s o n g s o f th e L o n e S ta r S t a t e and IOO are in S p a n is h — n ot th e S p a n - ‘ ^ you “ le arn in s c h o o l.” - a lo n g In El P a so , an d o th e r p lace s th e b o rd er. M c N eill has 1 fo u n d v e r s e s in a s t r a n g e kin d o f I S p a n is h -E n g lis h -P id g in -L a tin ljfiix- I tu r e sp ea k s ! S p an ish and E n g lish f l u e n t l y and k n o w s th e b a c k g r o u n d s a n d h is­ t o r ie s o f th e b alla d s he has c o l ­ lected . “ c a l o .” He called /Q. i : f * Better B a rg a in s T h a n M a c y ’s A t Union A u ction It's “ lo sers, w e e p e r s ” w h e n y ou . h ea r t h a t “ g o in g . . . g o i n g . . g o n e ” in th e h u m -d ru m v o ic e o f th e a u c t i o n e e r in f r o n t o f th e T e x ­ as U n i o n a t 12 o ’clock n o on W e d ­ n esd a y . R a in c o a ts , j a c k e t s , and all un- cla im ed a r tic le s w h ic h h av e b een in th e lost an d f o u n d d e p a r t m e n t fo r m ore th an th ir ty d a y s will be sold to th e h ig h e s t b id d er a t b e t ­ t e r b a r g a in s th a n M a c y ’s b a s e ­ m e n t ! it A p h o to f ile — c o m p le te w ith o f f sc a r fs, fo u n t a in p ic t u r e s w'ill he a u c tio n e d a lo n g w ith g lo v e s , s w e a te r s , pens, s u n g l a s s e s , and I f y o u ’re f o r j e w e lr y , y o u w ill fin d that, to o. in th e m a r k e t W ashington Work for V-J lf You Qualify M onday liv in g E x c it i n g in W a s h in g to n w o rk a s an im p o r ta n t c o g in v ic ­ t o r y -a im e d m a c h in e r y , r eserv ed h o u s i n g a c c o m o d a t io n s , and paid ex p en ses e n r o u te a w a it th o s e w ho p ass th e q u a li f y i n g exam in ation s I M o n d a y n ig h t, J u n e o ’clock in the com m ercial room o f W a g g o n e r Hall. P a tsy B eal, e x ­ is s t u d e n t, s a y s th a t su ch w o r k w o rth l o o k i n g into and p a r ta k in g of. l l , at ★ an A s re c e p tio n ist , o f f i c e th e s is c o n ­ P a t s y ’s work c o n s i s ts o f h a n d lin g siste d o f IOO n a tiv e T e x a s “ corri- N a va l p u b lic a tio n s r e q u e s t s and k e e p in g fi le s o f p u b lic a tio n s ma- d o s ” or b allad s a b o u t t h e brush c o u n t r y b an d its, w ild bulls, sher- te ria l. M c N e ill’s m a s te r 's ★ B R O W N IE M C N E IL L T h e m e e t i n g o f th e T e x a s F olk-1 v e r s ity , w h e n h e sp ea k s a t lore S o c ie t y i< o p e n to th e public, U. S. O. S u n d a y m o r n i n g . an d w o m e n . M any o f th e se and t h e r e will be no ad m ission i f f s , c a m e to him w’hile he w a s an im mi- i c h a r g e . A new, all-time record for stu den t w a r b o n d selling campaigns has been set by the Mighty Seventh W a r Loan with the final total chalked up Saturda y at $209,788.80. K ap pa K a p p a Ga mma sorority won the sorority c o m p e ­ tition in the selling of bonds for the Mighty Seventh setting a $20,137.50 ma rk in seven days of bond-selling. Pi Beta Phi sorority finished second with $11,943.50 and Delta Delta Delta sorority was third with $7,987.50. The final total— more th a n 1,000 per cent highe r t h a n the original quota of $14,620— almost equalled throug h s t u d e n t e f f o r t s a lo n e th e r e c o r d s ^ s e t in f o u r p r e v io u s c a m p a ig n s by th e c o m b in e d f a c u l t y , U n i v e r s i t y ; and s t u d e n t p u rcha ses. M ick e y C a t le t t and H o r a c e i ^ t h a t B u sb y , co -c h a ir m e n o f th e M ig h ty S e v e n t h W a r L oan c o m m it t e e , r e ­ p orted so m e o r g a n iz a t io n s still h a ve n o t c o m p le te d th eir fin a l t a b u la tio n s or h a v e fa ile d to re p o rt th e ir p u rch a se s t o th e c o m m it t e e and th e s e will be a dded in a s u p ­ p le m e n ta r y rep ort. O th er s o r o r itie s c o m p e t in g liste d in in f in is h below’ th e th r e e the se v e n d a y c o n t e s t s o rd er o f lea d er s are a s fo l lo w s : A lp h a O m icro n P i _$ 6 , 2 5 0 . 0 0 A lp h a Tau A l p h a _ 5 , 6 3 7 . 5 0 Z eta T au A l p h a _3 , 2 4 1 . 2 5 Kappa A lp h a T h e ta — 3 ,2 2 5 . 0 0 D e lta Z eta ---------- --— 2 ,5 0 0 . 0 0 A lp h a P h i ____ 1 , 4 3 3 .0 0 Chi O m e g a _____ 1 ,2 3 1 .2 5 A lpha Chi O m e g a ___ Phi Mu _______________ 8 2 5 . 0 0 3 2 5 .0 0 th e T h e se s o r o r i t y i n v e s te d t o t a ls do n o t r e p r e s e n t t h e fu ll to t a l b o u g h t by ca m p a ig n s o r o r itie s d u r in g in sin ce m a n y g r o u p s S e r ie s G o r F bo n d s— n o t e lig ib le f o r th e c o n t e s t — and o t h e r s <1 id n o t e n t e r th e c o n t e s t p h ase o f th e M ig h ty S e v e n t h c a m p a ig n . r e p o r ti n g p u r ­ c h a se s f o r th e M ig h ty S e v e n t h in ­ clu d e d I n t e r - f r a t e r n i t y C ou n cil w ith a $ 1 , 0 0 0 b o n d , T h e ta S ig m a Phi, $ 5 0 0 , a nd G la m a zo n s, $ 1 0 0 . O r g a n iz a tio n s f o r D o r m it o r y s a l e s th e cam- ( p a ig n s w e r e led by S c o tt is h R ite ■ D o r m ito r y w ith $ 3 3 , 9 0 2 . 0 0 a nd i L itt le fie ld w ith $ 3 ,4 7 4 .0 0 . Mu P hi E p silo n sp o n s o r e d tw'o O a lies F r a n t z w a r bond c o n c e r ts w hich ad d ed $ 4 5 , 0 0 0 to th e total s a le s o f th e s t u d e n t d riv e, and th e D e p a r t m e n t o f D ram a f u r t h e r : ad d ed m o re th an $ 2 0 ,0 0 0 to th e ; to ta l w it h a W a r bond p r e m ie r e ; o f “ T he G r e a t C a m p a ig n .” Junior Colleges Start Meet July 4 Miss P ho b e W a rd o f S an F r a n ­ cisco J u n io r C o lle g e , n a t i o n a ll y ! know’n in ju n i o r c o lle g e cu rric u lu m in s tr u c tio n , w ill be a sp e c ia l c on - i s u l t a n t a t T h e U n iv e r s i ty o f T e x a s ’ ! sp ecial th r e e - d a y J u n io r C o lle g e : C o n f e r e n c e J u ly 4 - 7 , Dr. C. CU C o lvert, p r o f e s s o r and c o n s u lta n t! in n o u n ced . ju n io r c o l l e g e e d u c a tio n , a n ­ ★ A n in s tr u c to r in E n g lish in th e San F r a n c is c o c o lle g e , Miss W ard has d o ne a g r e a t deal o f w o rk in ! va riou s o u t the U n ite d S t a t e s in th e th r e e y e a r s. t h r o u g h ­ last j u n i o r c o ll e g e s Ari u n u s u a lly la r g e a t t e n d a n c e is e x p e c te d f o r th e o p e n in g th r e e - ! d a y se s s io n , he said, w ith e n tir e fa c u l t ie s fr o m ju n io r c o ll e g e s in C orpus Christi, H isslboro, K ilgore, and B r e n h a m , p la n n in g to a tt e n d . f a c u l t y : In m em b ers fro m o th er T e x a s j u n i o r c o lle g e s , a n d the fr o m st a te , will be p rese n t. in d ividu al ad d itio n , c u t o f ‘H o w Green is M y V a lle y ' N ig h t Before Exam s “ H ow G reen Is My V a l l e y ” will be sh o w n T u e s d a y n ig h t a t 7 : 3 0 in th e Main L o u n g e o f th e T e x a s U n io n . The c h a r g e will be IO c e n t s per p erso n o r a U n io n card. Need M o re G aso lin e — Put ‘B’ on Board If y ou arc a “ B ” driver a nd y ou can sh ow th a t y ou n eed m ore g a s o ­ line. you w ill be able to g e t it by a p p ly i n g to th e lo ca l W ar P ric e an d R a tio n in g Board a f t e r J u n e 11. S in ce g a s o lin e su p p lie s are still lim ite d , “ B ” d riv ers w h o c a n n o t sh o w n ee d f o r a n in c rea s e will r e ­ main on t h e ir p r e s e n t r a t i o n in g basis. T h e v a lu e o f “ A ” c o u p o n s w ill in c rea se fr o m f o u r to six g a ll o n s on J u n e 22 a f t e r A -1 6 b e c o m e s valid. T he “ B ” book c e ilin g w ill be raised fr o m th e m a x im u m o f 4 5 7 m iles a m o n th to 6 5 0 m iles. Jap Okinawa Dead at (7,000 Raid on Kyushu Destroys 30 Planes c a s u a l t ie s G U A M , J u n e IO.— ( S u n d a y ) — ( I N S ) — J a p a n e s e o n O k in a w a m o u n t e d to m o r e th a n 6 7 ,0 0 0 d ea d on J u n e 8, F l e e t A d ­ miral C h e s te r W . N im itz a n n o u n c ­ ed in a c o m m u n iq u e to d a y . lin e s a n d T he c o m m u n iq u e r e p o r te d “no in t h e Oki­ su b s ta n tia l c h a n g e s ” n a w a b a t t le t w o t h e m ajo r e n e m y a r e a s o f r e s i s t a n c e w e r e k e p t u n d e r b li s te r i n g a t t a c k by w a rsh ip s, p la n e s a n d a r ti ll e r y . C arrier a i r c r a f t o f A d m ir a l W il­ liam F. H a l s e y ’s Third F l e e t , N im ­ itz r e v e a l e d , st r u c k J a p a n 's K a- n o y a a ir b a s e o n K y u s h u J u n e 8 , d e s t r o y in g a t t w e n t y - e i g h t l e a s t e n e m y p la n e s on th e g r o u n d a n d tw’o m o r e in a ir c o m b a t . B o m b in g an d s t r a f i n g a tt a c k s on th e a ir f ie l d a r e a w-ere c o n c e n ­ t r a t e d o n p a r k e d p la n e s a n d r e ­ t u r n i n g p ilo ts r e p o r te d o r b se r v - f i r e s a n d e x p lo s io n * . in g m a n y s h o t c a r r ie r p la n e s w e r e F o u r d ow n b u t th e p ilo ts o f a ll w e r e rescu ed . T h e J ap air fo r c e li k e w is e c o n ­ tin u ed a t t a c k s on U n it e d S t a t e s sh ip p in g in th e O k in a w a a r e a J u n e 8, b u t c a u s e d no d a m a g e w h ile lo s in g t w e l v e p la n e s t o A m e r ic a n g u n n e r s. T r a p p e d e n e m y f o r c e s o n Oki­ n a w a ’s O roku p e n in s u la a n d in th e Y a e j u d a k e e s c a r p m e n t to t h e sou th o f f e r e d s t r o n g r e is t a n c e t o T e n th A r m y a tt a c k s d u r in g y e s ­ te r d a y ’s f i g h t in g . ★ ★ ★ ★ Barclay to Speak At Service at 8: “ G od ’s R e q u ir ed C o u r s e s ” w ill b e t h e s u b j e c t o f t h e R ev. J o h n B a r c le y o f t h e C en tra l C h ristian Church, s p e a k e r a t th e u n io n w o r ­ ship s e r v i c e S u n d a y n ig h t a t 8 : 3 0 in th e O p en A ir T h e a te r . T h e s e c ­ ond o f a n o u td o o r s u m m e r s e r ie s, t o n i g h t ’s s e r v i c e w ill be c o n d u c t e d by s t u d e n t le a d e r s J a n e D o w e l l an d M. C. C u lb er tso n . I n a u g u r a t e d ★ la s t S u n d a y n ig h t with Dr. R. W. G o o d lo e , p r o f e s s o r o f ch urch h is to r y a t S .M .U ., a s prin cipal sp e a k e r , th e u n io n s e r v ­ i c e s w ill c o n t i n u e e a c h S u n d a y night th r o u g h J u n e , J u ly , a n d A u - gu st. The s t u d e n t le a d e r f o r th e fir st s e r v ic e w a s J im m ie F o g a r tie . Patch, Eaker to A rrive In San A nton io June 13 I D ist in g u is h e d a r m y m e n w ill be o f f ic ia l ly w e lc o m e d by th e n a tio n in c e r e m o n i e s a t S a n A n t o n io o n J u n e 13 , w h e n t h e y a r riv e fr o m Paris, F r a n c e , fr o m a d ir e c t fl ig h t , m ak in g st o p s o n ly fo r r e f u e l in g . T h e y w ill p a r tic ip a te in a pa­ rade, th e ta k e a boat ride o n San A n t o n io river , v is it p la c e s o f historic i n t e r e s t , a nd a t t e n d a b a n ­ quet. ★ In clu d e d in th e p a r ty a r e L ie u ­ te n a n t G e n e r a l Ira E a k e r , C h ie f o f the A ir S t a f f a t W a s h i n g t o n ; L ie u t e n a n t G en er al A le x a n d e r M. P a tch , C o m m a n d e r o f th e S e v e n t h A rm y ; L ie u t e n a n t G e n e r a l J. K. C a nn o n, C o m m a n d er , T w e l f t h Air F o r c e in I t a l y ; L ie u t e n a n t G e n ­ eral L u ciu s T r u s c o tt , C o m m a n d e r , F ift h A r m y ; M ajo r G e n e r a l H. F. V a n d e n b e r g , C o m m a n d e r o f th e N in th A ir F o r c e ; M a jo r G en er a l J. K. G a v in , C o m m a n d e r , E ig h t y - S e c o n d A i r b o r n e D iv is io n ; M ajor G en er al I. D. W h ite , C o m m a n d e r, S e c o n d A r m o r e d D iv is io n , and M ajor G e n e r a l N . D. C ota, C o m ­ m a n d e r o f t h e T w e n t y - E ig h t h In­ f a n t r y D iv is io n . 'Go East*—A n d Shelby Frizzel Does, Eager to Add to Her Tennis Laurels lose one o f B y H A R O L D F A R R I N G T O N J R. When Shelby Frizzell leaves for the East on June 17, the campus will temporarily its m ost famous ten nis stars. Shelby, in Texas tennis cir­ well-known cles since her junior division days, w ill go to Montclair. N. J., where in the she will represent Texas Eastern tourna­ ments. I n t e r co l l eg i a t e Starting her tennis career when she was 12 years old, she has a l­ w ays had the idea o f going East some day to the big league courts. She represented A ustin High School in the Texas Interscholastic League tournam ent in 1941 and held the Texas state w o m e n ’s te n ­ nis championship in 1943-44. She also has the Gulf Coast champion­ ship and the Southw estern Invi­ tation championship chalked up to her credit. < SUNDAY, JUNE IO, 1*45 / trophy case, hopes eventu a lly to enter the national tournament. Tht sun-tanned Shelby feet, IO inches tall and “slightly! ” underw eight.” is St She will receive her bachelor**! She in June. of science degree in physical edu­ cation is a m em ­ ber o f Mortar Board. Racquet Club, Bluestockings, the Girls’ Glee Club, Alpha Lambda Delta, Pi Lambda Theta, and the P.E.M. Club. She is a past vice-president o f Alpha Gamma Delta, and sh was rn 1944-45. She has made the honor since her roll sem ester entrance in September, 1941. A t the Alpha Gamma Delta achievem ent dinner this sem e ste r she was awarded a necklace for participating in the most activities during the year. the U niversity o f U.T.S.A secretary every into N e x t fall, Shelby will enroll in Teacher College, Columbia U ni­ versity, to work on her m aster o f arts degree in physical education. F A T H E R S D A Y I a (Sifts H IC K O K BELTS M O N TA G S STATIONERY N ASC O N DATE-REMINDERS TEXTAN BILLFOLDS STYL-PLUS SOCKS TRU-VAL SPORTS SHIRTS GANTNER SW IM TRUNKS BO OKS: Latest Fiction and N on-Fiction Only last year did Shelby start taking tennis lessons. Dr. Daniel A. Penick coached her while she was playing with varsity squad. the tournam ent Besides playing in the Eastern Intercollegiate on June 25, Shelby has also been ac­ c e pt e d for the New Jersey state tournam ent at Hackinsack, N. J.; the N ew York state tournam tnt in Brooklyn, N. Y . ; and the Middle States tournam ent at Philadelphia, Pa. Shelby, who has thirty-six silver cups, ribbons, and medals in her ZrtTe x a s ' , nu n , : h e r . in 1938 a n d g r e a t W h . r l . w a y | BO TA N Y TIES TEXAS B O O K STORE I"The Students Book £ xchanqe •••: - • . Ti;- ; -r .A: -: •• : . . . . it--; ' The Store that Service M a d e " GIFTS Til SI A R R O W and V A N HEUSEN SPORT SHIRTS A co m b n a tio n o f cool c o m fo rt and smartness. W h ite and checked S port Shirts w ith c o n v e rtis e collar. Full cut, fine workmanship. Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 PAGE TWO Football Short Story- A fte r Three Years on Jack Had a Chance the Bench to Play B y G E O R G E R A B O R N Tjsran Sport* Editor Whistling a m e r r y t un e, J a c k Blanchard t r u d g e d down t he du st y country r oad t ow a r d his f a r m h o u s e to home. He could har dl y wa i t tell his m o t h e r and the good n e« s t h a t he was going to start t he openi ng g a m e f or O a k ­ dale High a g a i n s t the Lak e C h a r ­ les Wi ldcats t omor ro w night. f a t h e r expe r i enc ed T h re e y ea rs of har d, g r ue l i ng pr actice lay behind l e f t end J a c k B l a n c ha r d — f ootbal l seasons in which he had t h e t o u g h a n d colorless life of an u n ­ a p p r e c i a te d sc r ub who was only good en o u g h t o sc r i mage a ga i ns t the varsity. F o r the last two year s Jack had been issued his b ea ut i f ul o r an g e a n d black u n i f o r m which h ad m a r k e d him as a m e m b e r of t he A-squad. t he sa me 1 self en t i r el y unabl e v-.;. t o keep his 5 o pp os i n g w ingback block him in 1 end who h ad n ev e r played the left end position bef or e, inst ead o f the end position b ef or e, ...,„a anri rflrit at ta nc un cv pr v s l i v an d allowing inst ead of the mind on his studi es a n d r ec it a t ions ! on e v e r y play and al l owi ng J a ck , who w a s hi ms el f a l e f t end in school, b u t somehow’ m a n ag e d Wi ldca t o f f e n s e to circle him time t h e r e f o r e should have been and a f t e r time. J a c k l ooked longingly to keep a t it until school was out, the mo st logical choice. A pl a y e r a t the coach, b u t coul d n o t catch G e t * A n k l e * T a p e d u n f a m i l i a r wi t h t h e left end sig­ his worr ied e y e . T h e second per nals was in t he lineup, while left iod b eg a n with lineup end Bl a n c ha r d w a s bei ng k e p t r e m a i n i n g in the g ame. out. J a c k f e l t t h a t he w a n t e d to t h e br oad s e a t kick his coach in is of t h e p an t s o r p un ch him on ugly, cr ooked nose, but he r e ­ sisted the i mpul se a n d se t t l e d down on He hea ved a deep sigh of r e­ lief as the dismissal bell r ang, a n d h ur ri e d a w a y t o the f iel dhou se to T h r o u g h o u t the s e co nd q u a r t e r . have his ankl es t aped. T h e n he w e n t h ome to t r y to g e t some rest in his as the coach advised. A f t e r w ha t e a g e r n e s s to t ake p a r t in t h e con- f a t e had des t i ne d s e eme d an e t e r n i t y the b enc h d ur i ng time once a ga i n f or t he f iel dhouse near- t!iC et l,: re ^irsl hal f, as he had done so m a ny mi s er abl e t i mes be ly t h r e e miles away. So g r e a t l y fore. As the pistol s o u n d e d to end I an d did he love t h e spor t of f ootball the f i r s t half, J a c k leaped to his J a ck wait ed f o r t h e coach to se nd t o ma ke a n d so e a g e r was he f ee t a n d r us h e d o u t to t h r o w his him in, b ut t he final period open- uncomp l ai ni n gl y good, he sideline coat over his would-be- cd w it h o u t c h a n g e in t he lineup, walked this di st an c e eve r y n ight ; Finall y, with six m i n u t e s le ft t o s u b s t i t u t e ’s shoulders. a f t e r footbal l p r actice had caused * play, a long pass was c o mpl et ed B e t w e e n him to miss his ride on the school bus. t h e cold, h ar d bench. O a k d a l e G o e * A h e a d , 2 0 - 1 4 T h e t hi r d q u a r t e r e nd e d t o him, t o s t a r t o u t M **1 ^ s.t on f i d get ed c o n s t a n t l y the I f'e s t - b ut m , € f inal ly came t he H a l v e * had J a c k t a l k e d e a r n e s t l y t o Louis for t h e t h i r d Oak da l e tou c hd own , a b o u t t he g a m e as t h e y ma de the i r and t he e x t r a po u t was t a c k e d on room, by a place-kick as t he score wa s way a s s u r i n g him t h a t he was pl a yi ng ch a ng ed 20, a fine game. N at ur a l l y , Louis re- i Lake Cha rl es 14. to r ea d: Oak da l e the d r es s i n g t o w a r d - bench t h e bench lay down on N e v e r G o t t o P l a y His o u t w a r d ca lmne ss did not b e t r a y his f everish e x c i t m e n t as he climbed i nto his f ootball togs B u t he had n e v er pl a y ed a sin- glen m i nu t e in a n y of t he r e g u l a r a n d t o . r e s t before t he game. J a c k t r o t t e d plied t h a t he hoped J a c k would get ga m e s t h r o u g h o u t these two years. t o play this second half. A f t e r Time an d t m e again h e h ad re- al o n g easily with t he f ir s t t e a m the usua l t o n gu e -l a s h in g given to por ted t o t he clubhouse one h o u r t h e y r a n t h r o u g h a light signal the t r a i l i n g t e a m a t t he h al ft ime before the scheduled kickoff time. 1 drill in t h e rapidl y-filli ng stadium, t he O a kd a l e W a r ­ intermission, donned his u n i f o rm proudly, a n d Then the squa d left t he field and r i ors t h e field once again, awa i t e d t he begi nn i n g o f t he c o n ­ went back to t he d r essi ng room for d e t e r m i n e d to erase t he o ne- poi nt t est in which he hopvd and p r a y ­ final i n s t r u c t i o n s f r o m the coach. deficit. To J a ck , ho we v e r, had ed he might see action. B u t since C o a c h B r e a k * t h e N e w * come t h e mos t b i t t e r news, f o r Coach Lawson s tr ode o ve r to he n e v er g o t t o play in t h e A- he had n ot h ear d his n a m e called squad g a m es on Fr i d a y nights, his J a c k a n d cl asped his s h ou l de r as by t he coach to s t a r t t he second footbal l c a r e e r was co nf in e d to he spoke. half. “ J a c k , ” he said, “ I ’m g oi ng to t he B-squad in which he participated eve r y S a t u r d a y a f t e r - s t a r t Louis in y ou r place t o n i g h t . ” T hen, se ei ng J a c k ’s bewi l der ed noon b e f or e a h an d f u l of f a n s on die pr ac t i ce field. “ D o n ’t worr y, H o w e v e r , eve n t s had bee n favor - Ja ck . Y o u ’ll see p e n t y of service j look, he add e d , t ook tilts - Well, a t least IMI g et t o play a f ew m i n u t e s now, t h o u g h t J a c k , in t h e coach b eg a n s e n d i n g as fresh players. B u t t h e coach said n o th i n g to J a c k , wh o f o un d h i m ­ self al one on the bench while t he s ub s t i t u t e s e t o ut acr oss t he field s u n s m u i e set, u ui n* iv.-, and t h e t i r ed r e g u l a r s s t a r t e d f o r the sidelines. J a c k W a r m * U p J a c k was c r y i n g in u n a s h a m e d fashion when he no ticed t he coach a t his side. t o go “ G e t r e a d y in. J a c k ! ” m u t t e r ed t he coach, and J a c k b e ­ gan c h a r g i n g up a n d down th-! sidelines happily. S c a t t e r e d cheer s the Oa k da le br oke out a m o n g r o o t e r s as t h e y not i c ed t h a t J a c k into t h e I was w a r m i n g up t o go game. “ W a i t unt i l we have a n o t h e r t i m e - ou t b e f o r e y o u go in,” w a r n ­ ed t h e coach. B u t J a c k had n ot f as c i n a t e d t h e sc or e bo ar d t r i p t h e m o v e m e n t of t h e clock as it s t a r t e d its final I hear d, I w a t c h i ng f o r h e s t o o d J a c k c ont inued to f r e t a n d f ume a s the t hi r d q u a r t e r wor e on and his t e a m r ema i ned b e h i n d , 14-13. S ud denl y, with only two mi nu te s l e f t in t he thi r d period, t he sound o f t he r e f e r e e ’s h or n which signi­ fied a called t i m e - o u t el ectri fi ed J a c k a s he noticed t h a t Louis was s t r e t c h e d o ut on t h e g r ou nd. In a flash, the coach a n d t he t r a i n e r t h e bench a n d hu r r i e d o ut le ft on t o t h e field f o r a look a t the i n j ur e d player. L o u i t L e a v e * t h e G a m e SHELBY FRIZZELL U. T. Netters Lick Aggies, 5-1 McCarter, Blanton Win 11-9, 11-9 Tilt T he T ex a s t e nn is t e a m took t he me as u re of A. & M.’s A.S.T. P. unit a t t he Peni c k C o u r t s S a t u r ­ day, 5-1. with t h e L o n g h o r n s ’ o nl y loss co mi n g in a t h r e e - s e t singles ma t ch. T h e t o u t e d Lewis t wi n s of Ut a h , Hoop Jr. Wins Kentucky Derby Arcaro Wins Again In $776,408 Take By C A S W E L L A D A M S L O U I S V I L L E , Ky., J u n e 9. — ( I N S ) — Six le ng t h s on top. T h a t was w h e r e Hoop Jr . , a n d his e x ­ p e r t pilot, Eddie A r c a r o , we r e this a f t e r n o o n when t h e c a m e r a clicked f o r t he finish o f the f abl e d K e n ­ t u c k y D e r b y b e f o r e 70, 000 f ans. Six a h e a d l e ngt hs Pot O ’Luck, which s t r u g g l e d t h r o u g h a q u a r t e r t h e m u d d y mile Chur chi ll Downs oval t o b ea t t h e a n d of al l- A me r ic an b a s ke t b a ll a u r a on »H*k g ra y , D a r b y Dieppe, by hal f U t a h ’, n at io nal -c h ampi on - j a l e n g t h f o r t he place dough. 1944 : l|i> q u m. f ■ a m t he . . n t e r c Hee,ate - • . o u b l e , w o n . ^ I A r c a r o b e c ame t h e t h i r d j oc ke y p e r jjy hist ory t o win t h r e e Der- J U w r j n ^ ^ d e f e at e d Bill b e r one m a n , in a long m a t c h by scores of 7-5, 1-6, 6-4. F r a n k l i n M c C ar t e r * r T-. j t . u i . i n o ve r F r e d Lewis in a m a r a t h o n 40- 1 g a m e ma t ch, 11-9, 11-9, a n d Mc- C a r t e r a n d J a c ki e Bl ant on , a c e S t e e r doubles comb in at i on , took a 6-4, 9-7 decision o v e r t h e twins. 1 1 a „vwi t r i u m p h e d i n u i i i u i i u u i n In o t h e r m a t ch e s Dub H am i l t o n won ov er Sy Grube l , 6-0, 6-3; Bl an t o n d e f e a t e d Calvin McGillis, 6-3, 6-4; a n d Hami l t o n a n d S ay re s d e f e at e d McGillis a n d Grubel, 6-4, 6-1. King Sees Dante Win V-Derby i . n in 1941. This t i m e t h e t i me was j slow— a m e r e 2 : 0 7 — b u t t he track c ondi ti o ns wer e mi s er abl e , a n d the i field of s ixt een had t o wall ow in goo the whole r o u t e nn ihp T h e b e t t i n g on the r a c e also set a r ec or d when t h e m o n e y e d t h r o n g p us h e d $776, 408 t h r o u g h t he a n ­ t i q u a t e d m u t u e l ma ws used here, exc ee di ng in 1926 the $69 4, 8 7 0 w h e n Colonel E. R. B r a d l e y ’s B u b ­ bling Over c o ppe d t h e heat. The g r o s s v al ue of $86, 87 5 was also high w a t e r m a rk f o r t h e race, now r u n s e vent y- one t imes on t h e s a me track. t he Isaac Mu rp h y, A rc a r o t hu s j o i n e d E a r l S a n d e g r e a t a n d N e g r o j ockey, i n t he select g r o u p which has won t h r e e Derbies, a n d j in this o ne he had t o b e a t t he I t r a i n e r w’ho had l i f ted him t o t he sa d dl e o n his t w o pr evi ous w i n ­ ner s, Ben Jone s. f a n s , N E W M A R K E T , E ng la nd . J u n e t h a n 50, 000 9 . — ( IN S ) — Mor e r a c i n g i nc l u di ng King George, t h e Qu ee n , a n d Pri nc ess Elizabeth, s a w shipowmer Sir Eri e Ohl sson’s D an t e win t h e vi c t or y Der by t oda y. J o n e s had D o u g Dodson up on j P o t O ’Luck, a n d t he y o u n g s t e r r o d e a good race, b u t he was too f a r o f f t h e pace a n d n ev e r coul d have c a u g h t H oop Jr., i f t h e y still T h e colt w i n n i n g B r i t a i n ’s p r e - w e r e encir cli ng t h e m u d d y t r a c k , mier classic in its 157th r u n n i n g | w a s n ' t m u c h of a horse race, was b a c k e d by his o w n e r f o r a b o u t Hemp Jr. br oke o n top a n d s t a y e d one million dollars. Midas a n d | t h e r e and t h a t ’s t h e s t or y. A r c a r o C o u r t m a r t i a l took place a n d show', ^ p e w too muc h f o r t h e o t h e r boys while King G e o r g e ’s e n t ry , Rising an(j he also k n e w t h a t he had to j Light, fell behind in t he h ar d race. ; g e t o f f f i r s t a n d n e v e r let a n y - J D a n t e ’s pr e- ra ce odds w er e f o u r t h i n g ca t c h him. H e had r i dd en t he I, wi t h , s a m e s w i f t st e ed in t he Wood a n d t h e w i n n e r s e t k n e w t h e l a d ’s capabi liti es. to one, Midas a t 13 t o p a y - of f od ds on at IOO to 30. I A n d no w t h e y ’r e hoist ing m i n t I t o a s t i n g to A r c a r o a n d T h e w i n n i n g colt was o n e o f t h e f i n es t looking hor ses in t h e classy field of 27. His f a s t g a i t b r o u g h t __________________ him in two le ngt hs a h e a d o f Midas. As a juleps H o o p J r . w S t u d e n t P i l o t E r n e s t F. A m e * yea r l i ng, D a n t e once w e n t j s t u d e n t in 1942, has b e e n s e n t to v p r i m a r y t he Naval Air previousl y c o m ­ cour se f l i g h t t r a i n i n g Corps. He had p le te d his p r e- f l i gh t Term. , in f o r . m i n i i n I . As J a c k s a w Louis b ei ng hel p - 1 second h and on The visitors w e r e t h e a r o u n d t h e dial, cd f r o m t he field by two t e am- ma t es , he s t a r t e d o u t o n t o gr idi r on, t h i nk i n g a t last t h a t his I t r y i n g des- cha n ce had come— b u t t h e ne x t 1 p e r a t e l y f o r a sc or e — t wo long i n s t a n t he st opped s h o r t w he n t he J passes w en t i nc omplete, a n d a h al f coach called him hack. Coach Law- m i nu t e was all t h a t r e ma in ed o f son p u t his a r m a r o u n d t h e sub- j the game. A n o t h e r long pass fell st i t ut e ri ght end, w hi s pe re d a few y a r d s s h or t of r e ­ words in his ear, a n d t he n releas- ceiver. Only f i f t ee n seconds l e f t five ed him. J a c k g as ped as he w’atch- j now . . . t e n seconds . t he the f lyi ng f i g u re h ea de d ed f o r j a n d J a c k s l um p e d over on t he r e f e r e e , a n d v e r y slowly t h e ! s c ar r e d t u r f o f t h e f ootball field t e rr i b l e t r u th d a wn e d on him. as t h e b a n g of t he t i m e r ’s pistol i nt e nded its . . . The coach had p u t in a r i g h t , echoed t h r o u g h t h e stadium. Earl Collins of Texas W ins 220-yard Dash, N.C.A.A. Meet in t he p r e l i mi n a r ie s a t M a r q u t t t e s t a d i u m this a f t e r n o o n . Missouri a n d Illinois wer e r u n ­ n e r s u p to t h e Middies f r o m A n ­ napolis, qu al if yi n g s i x me n each. P u r p u e and N o tr e Dame placed f ou r me n each. Navy, al th o ug h r a t e d t h e lead n a v y , n i i i i u u ^ u I o v c u t i l e i C f t U " in V e t e r a n Ear l Collins, T e x a s ’s only e n t r y in the N.C.A.A. t r ac k a n d f iel d meet a t Mi l wa uk ee , Wi s­ consin, c a me t h r o u g h with f lying the to win f irs t nlace colors 2 2 0 - ya r d dash. Col li n’s wi n ni ng time was 22.4 b e i n g slowed up as a r es u l t of the chilly w e a t h e r pr ev ai l i ng in Wi sconsi n last night. thir d thus b e c a me L o n g ho r n to win a f ir s t place in t he last sev­ a N a t i on al m e et in en year s. J u d Atchi son won the in 1939 and J e r r y broad in T h o mp so n won 1943 f o r Texas. two-mile Collin# j u m p t he t he M I L W A U K E E , J u n e 9.— ( INS) Navy, f a v o r e d to c a p t u r e t h e 24th a n n u a l nat ional col legi ate athletic associ a t i on t r a c k a n d field c h a m ­ pionships, qual if ied I I me n t o lead t he field of 32 c om p et i ng colleges M a r i n e P r i v a t e Alsup, f o r m e r p or t e d “ h oo t ” for C a m p L e j e u n e . N. C. s t u d e n t , h as Iris E l i z a b e t h r e ­ t r a i n i n g a t An Alpha Chi Omega , P r i va t e Alsu;) w a s employed by a Houston shipbui lding be f or e h e r en l is t men t . c o r p o r a t i o n viaa c a o s iw i I * r n I ____I ______ T o d a y he is priceless. inv c o n t e n d e r becaus e of t he largo ori t h * block b ut w i t h o u t t a ker s. Memphis n u m b e r of ent ri es, s u f f e r e d set hacks W'hen its s t a r p e r ­ two o f f o rm e r s failed to qu al if y iii t heir events. Van Velzer, IC-1A c h a m ­ pion, was u n ab l e to win a place iii the 220- yar d heat, b u t qual ified in t he 100-yard dash. F lo y d Cuf f, a n o t h e r N a v y favo r i t e , failed t o qual if y in t he 880 y a r d heat. Gai e t y o f a p r e - w a r s t a n d a r d prevailed over N e w m a r k e t ’s br oad and historic heath. All r o a d s t o t h e t h e classic w e r e c hoke d site of p ed e s t r ia ns . a n d with Stands wer e p ac ked a n d t h o u s a n d s in t h e c r owd we r e u na b l e to see t he r ac e r u n . t r a f f i c F l w . u , ( . T w e n t y - f o u r schools quali fit d men. Besides the f i f e l eaders t h e y ( Oh i o ) , wer e Michigan, Miami W e s t e r n Michigan, D r a ke ami F re s n o St ate. 3 e a c h ; Ohio S t a t e , Iowa St at e , M a r q u e t t e , Louisiana State. Minnesota, Illinois Tech. 2 ea ch; Utah, Texas, Michigan S t a t e , Idaho, De P a u n , Iowa, Wisconsin an d Oberlin, I each. T h e r oy al p a i t y came t o N e w ­ “ T h e t h e m a r k e t a b o a r d Royal S peci al , ” a r r i v i n g a t a s t a ­ tion into which sc ore s o f o t h e r specials h ad s t e a m e d f o r t he f ir s t time in n e a r l y six years. t r a i n Money W hen You Need It • Qu ick • Courteous • • Private • L O A N S on anything of value W I L S O N Loan & Jew elry Co. is f a r Life i m p o r t a n t a thi ng eve r t o talk serious ly about . — O s c a r Wilde t oo 5 1 7 E. 6 t h P h o n e 8 6 1 4 0 EXPERT W A T C H REPAIR Your Most GLAMOROUS Self for Your AMOUR in the Service . , the f ir s t r a t h e r jn this g a m e . ” c o a c h ! -----------” A w k w a r d S u b » t i t u t e ible f o r J a c k t hi s season bec aus e s t a r t e d l e ft end h a d been :he v e t e r a n forced t o leave t h e t e a m t h r o u g h J a c k. T h en rea i zi ng t he useless- ^ So j ness 0 f a r g u m e n t , he replied, “ 0. ' ail urc t o pass his courses. Jack was move d up t o t he f ir s t K., coach. I’ll be r e a d y t o go an y team an d given a s t a r t i n g as si gn ­ t i m e . ” ment. I t f e l t w'onderful t o he r u n ­ ning p l a ys w'ith t e a m a f t e r t h r e e mis er able y e a r s in the backgr ound. A n g e r had welled up in him —- a n g e r t o w a r d i nj us t i c e of a t he coach w h o would s t a r t a g re e n sop h omo re t h a n a h a r d ­ wo rk in g v e t e r a n w'ho had been on the f ir s t t e a m all t he t i m e up J a c k ’s u n d e r s t u d y w a s a s c a p ­ B u t he choked b ac k the ing, a w k w a r d y ou th n a m e d Louis. to now rho lacked J a c k ’s exp e r ienc e b ut • hot w o r d s which w a n t e d t o leap f or t h , a n d w e n t o ve r t o shake vas c ons id er ed an excel lent pros L o ui s ’ h a n d a n d c o n g r a t u l a t e him >ect. B u t since J a c k h a d played on g e t t i n g a s t a r t i n g a s s i gnme nt . tuch a s t e a d y b r a n d o f footbal l n p re- sea so n pr ac t i ce t h a t e v e r y ­ one was e x p e c t i n g him t o co n t i nu e tis c on s i s t e nt p e r f o r m a n c e s d u r i n g it w a. doubtful hat Louis would g et to play much lo w o n d e r J a c k f e l t highly elated, o nf i de n t , and pleased with him- elf. His big y e a r was coming up. T r y i n g n o t t o a p p e ar too pleas- d. J a c k a n n o u n c e d the glad tid- ngs to his f ami l y t h a t ni ght at upper . He was so mu c h on edge a his e x c i t e m e n t and j o y t h a t he ca r cel y slept, t ossing a n d t u r n - ng in his bed as t h ou g h he wer e d u a l l y p l a y in g t he game. Wh en ie a wo ke he dressed in e a g e r an- icipation, realizi ng t h a t his much r e a m e d - o f m o m e n t w a s only a ew h ou r s awray. He f ou n d him- S t a n d i n g beside t h e bench, I is his h e a d g e a r clasped tight ly hands, J a c k s ho ut e d e n c o u r a g e ­ m e n t to the boys whom he e n­ vied mo r e t ha n a n y o n e else in t n t world. A m o m e n t l a t er t h e game b u t poor, u n f o r t u n a t e was on J a ck , w’ho had looked f o r w a r d to pl ayi ng v a r s i t y f o r “O long, wa s back in his all-too-fa- mil iar role as a s u b st i t u t e on the sidelines. A mi gh t y r o a r b u r s t f or t h f r o m the cr owd as t he t e a m das hed on- to the field. The sta rter , grabbed t h e ir h e a dg ea rs , j a m m e d t h em on t h e ir heads, huddled in c on fe re nc e a m o m e n t wi t h the coach, and t h e n lined up f o r t he kickoff . t h e B e n c h f ootball W a t c h e * f r o m in Save Home Steam 15%! Laundry C a s h St C a r r y P h o n e 3 7 0 2 1 0 t h & B r a z e * T i e d at Q u a r t e r , 7- 7 itself The g a m e resolved into one of those f re e- sc or in g af far is . so t h a t by the en d of t he initial t he score was deadlocked period a t 7-7. Now, the t h o u g h t J a ck , coach will p ut nm in, f o r isn' t this the logical t i me to s u b s t i t u t e for an end who lins been l e tt i n g the A A * KS e a u d e I elmiest ■ ' j $ 7 /A / Grooming oidt in man- tizod bottlet . 8 o z . - * 3 . 0 0 PLUS IAX Economy Bo tile 4 o r . - * 1 . 2 5 rtus T A X F O R T H E Roto-formed to op to fit a mon'* hand. Pino of Sandalwood . 2 to Box - * 1 ,0 0 C o u th ** I U T U C U1 0 D I I I N T H E W O R L D ! ¥ MASCULINE GROOMING ESSENTIALS Father's Day comet once a year . . . but your gift is reMEMbered every day when it's MEM! Q uality- made on a base of imported oils, these tailor-made toiletries have a bracing, distinctly masculine scent and, fo r final perfection, they're attractively en­ cased in giant Califoi nia Redwood chests! "M E M . . . as in re M E M b e r l" lf your boyfriend is a b u rly Ma- rine, sa ty Sailor, grem linated' A r C orps man . . . or just a lonely G . I. you know he w ill welcome a picture o f Y O U . The H o ywood exclusive ' Du M ou lin ” M eth od o f taking glam our pictures Is still available at S tew art’s. W h y not phone 8-7067 fo r an app ointm e nt and e t STEWART'S STUDIO ra- oduce your most g'amourous Pr p o rtra it. Fine H an d Rol'ed HANDKERCHIEFS TIES Stripes, checks, solids and prints. Ties th a t suits Dad's taste. OTHER SUGGESTIONS SOCKS — BELTS — SUSPENDERS C L O T H I N G o F U R N I S H I N G S F U R N I S H I N G S A U S T I N . 2 2 . M I L I T A R Y S U P P L I E S T E X A S U.S. Ro* Ort. Courtesy Philadelphia Evening Bulletin Steiuant 2 3 4 6 G u a d a lu p e StuxH One. 'On t h e D r a g ’ T H E T O G G E R Y J. L. R ose 2 3 1 0 G u a d a l u p e c< I ( I I A I )J I •a cl ►-I til rn AY, JUNE IO, 1945 Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 PAGE THREE O O H S ... N e w a n d O l d . .. ttevivu r* a n d L i t e r a r y 1 h m n iv ie * lit e D a i l y T e x a n t t y MMI — ■ ) 3 Lace ;y to Follow I. I. Slapstick (as Heartkick Nursemaid Every Hour of the Day Sheepmen Brought Romance To Southwest in Quest of Gold furn ish ed the L in d o n with the Merino? The new Rambouillet the best inspiration for th e ambitious sheepman, and although he has found no b e tte r combination, the prospect of a fusion of all of the sheeps’ limited merits has been a co nstan t goal fo r the incorrigible breeder. ★ For Maudsley, the sheep was a dirty, unrom antic, helpless crea­ tu re , which needed a nursemaid every h ou r of the day, b u t th a t did not diminish the thrill o f breeding, raising, selling them. guarding, and Mrs. K upp er has w ritte n a dis­ cerning book of the “ sheep king­ dom’’ (until Hollywood a n d pulp w riters relent we m ust place it in quotation m a rk s). But perhaps her m eaning has been distorted by her conservative n a rr a to r , Robert Maudsley. The sheepman has f r e ­ quently seen the “ ro m a n tic ” cow- man on his uppers, and he has made and is now m aking money in a spectacular fashion. He will lease on the slimmest margin, over-graze, go broke, and still come back in the best tradition of the beatified cowman. And a bout this newfangled sheepm an’s p reference for m utton, Mrs. Kupper. It is a strange, sad these thing otherwise prosperous times. I, too, to contem plate in have seen this curious phenom e­ non, during the depression, where people sheepishly nibbled m utton (no pun in tended) with all the grace of a politely smiling Method­ ist missionary accepting a fricas­ see grasshopper from a g ra te fu l Chinese, b u t today it m u s t be a wartime expedient. regional This is a book to be proud of, thinks regardless o f what one about lite ra tu re . Mrs. K upper has done all o f the r e ­ search for a three-pound “ defini­ tive” edition, but she has con­ tented herself with compactness and readability. The r e su lt has been a work of some significance. — PAT MOLLOY. U.T.’s Biochemist Tells Us What to Do About Those Vitamins C A L L . B y M i l t o n C a n i f f . V Y o r k : S i m o n a n d S c h u l t e r . is Lace, a luscious b run ette, lore incidents with d iffe re n t th an any o th e r p a p e r doll. as created for ju s t t h a t p u r ­ ely Milton Caniff in his comic ‘Male Call.” 1942 C aniff hit upon the idea eating a gag-in-each-release on so t h a t soldiers moving camp to camp could follow omics more easily. The con- y strip with its m any charac- vas the usual type drawn. So Call,” with Miss Lace as lain attractio n, was created aniff. “ T e rry and the Pi- continuity ” is also drawn by him. .’s liked “ Male Call” so well Caniff has recently put into form 112 comic strip s fe a tu r- vliss Lace’s social activities d to war-time production, book, also entitled “ Male has ju s t been released, popular the e pin-up girl’s ad ventures her alw ays surrounded by ■r admirers. G.L's find them- ; in fights over Miss L ace’s is. They fo rg e t to salute offi- when Miss Lace is around, am ong sensations creates la a t the military camps when ides h er pass in her ga rte r, oves all G.I.’s and has a com- name f o r them all— general, e war-time heartkick in slap- edition is Miss Lace in her e Call” role.— LTL Best Sellers c o r d i n g to t h e P u b l i s h e r s ’ W e e k l y R e p o r t F i c t i o n rAIN FROM CASTILE, Samuel Shellabarger )R T A L W IFE , Irving Stone BALLAD AND THE SOURCE, Rosamond Lehman G R E E N YEARS, A. J. Cronin TH AND HIGH H EA V EN , G wcnthalyn Graham N o n - F i c t i o n VE MEN, E rnie Pyle : k BOY, Richard W right ROAD TO SERFDOM, F. A. Hayek AND STOP ME, B ennett Cert’ I RT ON T H E RUSSIANS, W. L. White B . R i l e y Jr., stu d e n t 1941-42, jeen promoted to captain at Jinth Air Force base in Bel- where he is a B-26 pilot and , com m ander with the 344th •ardment Group. C a p t a i n th e Air Medal and holds clusters. f a t longhorn numerous T H E G O L D E N H O O F . B y W i n i - f r e d (Cupper. N e w Y o r k : K n o p f . $ 2 . 7 5 . The A merican public has been favored with sagas (both printed and filmed) of the cattle kingdom, but few have had t r e a t of sheep. the audacity to G ary Cooper may ride on an M. G.M. cayuse a f t e r some unexplain­ ably steers, with General Electric lightning playing only a round Groucho Marx could fittingly p u r­ sue the lowly sheep und er such circumstances. Mrs. Kupper has no quarrel with the Gary Cooper- in M.G.M. p a tte rn of behavior; fact, she has a ra th e r rueful ap­ proach to the sheep and the sheep­ man. To Mrs. Kupper the sheep is “ the stupidest, most exasperating and most helpless of all domesti­ cated anim als.” horns, but his ★ The sheepman is personified by Mrs. K u p p e r’s u n c l e , Robert Maudsley, a well-educated, tough- minded, contemplative English­ man who had little knowledge of, and who did not care a damn about, the A ncient F re e and Ac­ cepted Institution of First Texas Cowmen. Robert Maudsley came to the Texas plains in the 1880’s with an open mind as to his fu tu r e occupa­ tion. If he had any rom antic illu­ sions ab o u t the west, the bleakness of the prairie dog country around the Middle Concho soon erased them. When Maudsley finally set­ tled down around Big Lake, he found a new world aw aiting him. He th o u g h t he saw a sheep m an’s paradise, but coyotes, cowmen, the n a tu ra l disin­ rustlers, and clination of sheep live soon made him re tu r n to his na tu ra l philosophical his environment. approach to to Maudsley was n o t a typical sheepman, yet he serves as a use­ ful prototype. He read Shakes­ peare and Scott and had a file of I the London Illustrated Times since 1840, bu t the “ Grover Cleveland Depression” was worse than any coyote - cowman - ru stle r combina­ tion : Maudsley was broke. Maudsley drifted. He worked through the northw est for Swift and Company and waited. Repub­ lican tr a d e combinations sent m u t­ ton and wool soaring, and Mauds­ ley again entered business on his own. It was a repetition of his first years. Although the range feud with the cowmen had slackened, there were still plenty of hazards to keep th e most ingenious sheep­ man on his toes. Also, there was the new am bi­ tion of proper breeding to disrupt his placid fram e of mind. Spain had contributed the Merino, r e la ­ tively small but jealously guarded because it had the best fleece in the world. England had the best m u tto n — fat, braw ny sheep with coarse wool. Could one combine We can, We Must mie m u- HIT OVER THE MIGHTY SEVENTH WNR LORN Dur fighting men still need the weapons, the ammunition, he food and supplies to w in this war once and for all. And hey still depend on us, you and me at home, to help pay for hese vital materials. T here will be one less W ar Loan this year, so to do our hare we must buy bigger War Bonds now, during the 7th Var Loan! O f course, you aren’t asked to ive your money —the W ar Bonds you >uy are an investment, your money will * D W a n te d 2 6 — H e lp W a n te d F e m a le 27— M i l e W o rk W a n t e d 2 8—.Female Work W anted Ed a c e n o Ste) 2 9 — I n s t r u c t i o n 1 0 — M u s ic , D a n c in g , D r a m a tie * 11— Speech J 2 ~ - C o a c h in g R e a t a la 45— R o o m s F u r n i s h e d 4 6 — R o o m s U n f u r n is h e d 47— R o o m s o d B o a r d l g — F u r n i s h e d Apt#. I S - A — U n f u r n i s h e d A p a r t m e n t * Fee Aal* I S— B ic yc le # a n d M o t o r c y c l e * I S - A — •F eta 14 — F o o d a n d F o o d P r o d a c t s 1 4 - 4 — C a s e r * ! t it — F u r n it u r e a n d H o u s e h o ld t h — M u s ic a l a n d R a d io s t 7 — W a t c h e s J e w e lr y R e p a ir id — M t s c e ila n e o n s F o r Sad* S F —." S w a p " if)— W a n t e d M e r c h a n d i s e 4 0 - A —-Ll vector,* S n p p li e* 7 t e a dc la! • I — A u t o L o a n s ,‘2 — B a n k L o a s s 4 S— B u s i n e s s O p p o r t u n ?ti ae »*- — H d i ' w o m W a n t e d • 9 — G a r a g e A p artm en t# 8— Lost and Found L O S T — Go ld B u t o v a w a t c h w i t h li n k h a n d . R e t u r n t o gold J o u r n a l i s m B u i l d i n g 108. Business Colleges SAN ANTON ip - r» w ent t h- HARLINGEN tin-nous TON W anted to Buy W A N T E D T O B U Y ! C o p ies of th e 1945 C a c ­ J o u r n a lis m B u ild in g tus. 108. 32— Coach ing M A T H E W J TICS— M r K M Handel. Ph. 8 - 1 1 6 8 23 09 S a n A n t o n i o S t 47— Room and Board R O O M AN I) B O A R D fo r S u m m e r *1e r m . girl s. f u r - Approve* I s t u d e n t n e w l y n i a h e d . dec o r a t e d a n d l l *15 N u e c e s , r e s i t e n e e f o r b r a m if ully I*h. 68 3 0 . 48— Furnished Apts. R E N T OR S U B - L E T fu rtii -h o d a p a r t m e n t St . F h o n e u n t i l S e p t . 1 s t. 2 0 0 E. 26 2 - 3 8 8 7 o r 91 71. S t a t i o n 354. 51— Rooms for Boys B A C H E L O R A P A R T M E N T , s u i t a b l e f o r 2 s t u d e n t s , s t u d y , b e d r o o m , p r i v a t e tile s h o w e r M aid a e r v i c e . P h . 2 - 7 2 3 1 . 230-4 L e o n S t , N E A R U N I V E R S I T Y — Cool, e r n , a p p r o v e d . M a k e q u i e t , m o d ­ r e s e r v a ­ y o u r P h o n e 2 - 0 9 1 6 . t i o n s f o r J u l y . C O O L , Q U I E T , s i n g l e a n d d o u b l e r o o m w i t h s l e e p i n g p o r c h , f o u r b l o c k s f r o m 1 7 0 8 G u a d a ­ t o w n . c a m p u s , e i g h t f r o m lupe. P h . § * 7064, V A C A N C I E S f o r m e n s t u d e n t s . o ff e s m p u s . Call a f t e r 3 P. M . I block 402 W e s t 2 4 t h S t r e e t . Ph. 8 - 4 1 0 1 . C H O I C E R O O M a t L o n g h o r n ( h o u s e f o r m e n ) , 20 0 E a * t 2 6 13 S t . C a l l M r s . W i l l i a m s a t 2 - 7 1 8 6 . 52— Rooms for Girls b e d r o o m , u s e o f V E R Y N E A R C A M P U S — L a r g e s o u t h r o o m a n d ic e c h e a t . B u s i n e s s w o m e n o r g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t . l i g h t h o u s e - k e e p i n g r o o m f o r cou ple . c o n v e n i e n t r e c e p t i o n A l s o . R O O M A N D B O A R D F O R G I R L S I N B E A U T I F U L W H I T E A R M S M R S . B R E T A G R A N T , M a n a g e r 1505 R io G r a n d e P h o n e 2 - 1 3 1 9 D O U B L E R O OM . q u i e t arid c ool.— B o a r d 6 0 8 VV. 2 4 t b S t. o p t i o n a l . W anted to Rent I F Y O U A R E g i v i n g up a n a p a r t m e n t , p le a s e cal l 8 - 4 3 6 3 . E x - s e r v i c e m a n d e s ­ p e r a t e f o r p la c e to live. S T U D E N T M I N I S T E R a m i w i f e w o u l d like t h r e e - r o o m a p a r t m e n t n e a r U n i v e r ­ s i t y . P h . 8 - 4 3 1 2 . THE STU DEN T EXCHANGE W a b u y . s e l l , a n d e x c h a n g e s m a l l a r t i c l e s o f v a l u e . P h o n e 9 4 5 5 4 0 3 W e s t 2 3 r d S t . 8— Lost and Found L O S T — B r o w n L e a t h e r T o b a c c o P o u c h L o s t i n i t i a l s “ K . A . P . " od side. w i t h in v i c i n i t y o f G r e g o r y G y m . Cal l 8 - 1 6 4 5 c o n t a i n i n g L O S T — F r o m c a r n e a r C a m p u s , billfold N a m e , " A n n e L o u i s e ( . r o t h a u s . " in go ld on b ill­ fo ld . R E W A R D . P h . 8 - 1 9 4 1. v a l u a b l e p a p e r * . v a t e L A R G S , C O O L R O O M d o w n s t a i r s , p r i ­ p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e . A w in d o w s , b o w e r . $12 50 e a c h . V a c a n t J u n e 30. P h . 9701 a f t e r 6 P . M. 2 507 S a n J a c i n t o . Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N - Phone 2-2473 SUNDAY, JUNE IO. I Texa — by Charles Stewart; push button th# young, white-shirted Texan waits for his girl, waits for the radio swing, waits for the top to come down PAGE FOUR Before Tuesdoy Safpbf tyidule ^beneath on PlaHntiuj, E D IT O R 'S N O T E : Thi» is t h e third o f th e aerie* of w in n in g s a f e t y e d it or ia ls b y H or ac e Blushy. T h e f i r s t on h ig h w a y s a f e t y and th e sec ond on ho m e s a f e t y w ere p r in t ed in pr e vio us i s s u e s .) Immediately a fte r final victory, the United States is expected to spend approximately one billion and a half dollars building highways. Such building, of course, is intended as a measure to­ ward maintaining high employment levels for the im­ mediate postwar era, but the prospect of a complete rebuilding of our nation’s highways and streets posses a challenging prospect for cities and counties and states. Our present network of highways and city streets is generally an outgrowth of the wagon train and cowpath philosophy of travel, and automotive transportation has been retarded by the inadequacy of present roadways. Experiments and experience have ta ugh t the neces­ sity for building highways planned for speed and con­ structed to channel traffic into its directional flow and prevent conflict in the flow with overpasses, un de r­ passes. “ clover leaf turnpikes,” and similar devices. Metropolitan areas, too, are confronted with a serious problem in traffic as modern transportation outmodes the “ buggy-wide” streets in business districts and the constant stop and start of residential blocks. Now with $500,000,000 of highway funds going to work the first year after the w a r ’s end, the nation and cities and counties especially must decide whe ther to merely again improve on the current highways or w he the r to revise the entire concept of national travel facilities. the metropolitan problems Texas, perhaps, will be more immediately concerned with the highway problems since the flow of traffic in the four major cities, Houston, Dallas, San Antonio and Fort Worth is at a perplexing wartime state with no promise of im­ proving. than In all four cities, narrow, unplanned, almost unwork­ able streets have been given a rathe r immovable pe rm ­ a n e n c y b y the growth of the business districts. Resi­ d e n t i a l areas are developing in the same direction. Such a situation demands aggressive planning sacri­ ficing tradition to the necessities for ad equate tr ansp or­ tation arteries. Dallas already has a master plan which would revolutionize transportation there by ringing the city with five circular super-highways to channel t r a f ­ fic into the desired area directly and without starts and stops of lesser thoroughfares. Other cities need similar plans. In answer to the dilemma of the narrow downtown streets and increasing population, the Texas cities may well turn to encouragement of public transit facilities. Noiseless trolly-car buses on ru bb e r tires are on the dra fting board for peace, and one such line can carry in an hour the average passenger traffic of a seven-lane highway. Public parking lots, r a m p s for pedestrians, subway c r o s s i n g s , and devices of that sort will be necessary to keep urb a n streets up to the speed of coming transpor­ tation. Such innovations demand initiative and foresight and they necessitate courage. Traffic safety of the next two generations, though, will depend largely on adequacy of the highways tha t are built with the money now' appropriated. Planning and determination must be approp riated generously by the builders now. THE D A # TEXAN! Ma. . « In A us tin •to m c a t n e w e l * I arm n»* D * .. r Texan , BBWIlMl* per of T h e U n iv e r s it y of T m * , I* pu blis he d e v er y m or nin g e x c e p t M onde ?* end S a t u r d a y s S e p ­ tem ber t w ic e we e kl y d a r in g th e *um m er c e s s io n under the ti tle of The S u m m e r T e x e n by T exe* S t u d e n t P u bli r e tf on e, to Jun e, end Inc. N ew* c o n tr ib u tio n * m e ? be coed* ( 2 - 2 4 7 8 ) or e t th e edl- by te le p h o n e In Jo u r n a li sm Building to rie l off ic e * 101. 102. end IOO C om plein t* ebon* de li ve r y In th* bor ine** office. J o u r n a li sm Bu ild ­ i n g e e r v ic e *hould be m i d * ( 2 - S 4 7 8 ) I OS M e m b e r A s s o c i a t e d G o tte 6 * c te P ^ e s s » i Z 3 I 4- 12 %I i / 19 lb 15 ZZ G r a d u a t i o n ? O h , Hell! I cigarette th o u gh t this was the line." jhaye off Quo. yeabl By MIMI M E R R IT T We would like to submit some regulations to govern the five- cut rule proposed by the fac­ ulty of The University of Texas K indergarten. I. In the event th a t a stud e nt is one minute o r more late to class his professor will dismiss the rest of the class and lecture for one hour to said late stu ­ the advantages and dent on disadvantages of gettin g to class on time. II. In the event th a t a stu ­ dent cuts one class for w hat­ ever reason, be it the death of his aged gran dm other or his own death, he must be confined in the stocks on the steps of the Main Building, subject to the ridicule of his classmates and professors, fo r the twenty- four hour* fol­ lowing his absence from class. le g is la tu re will appropri­ The ate funds with which to p u r ­ chase the stocks. immediately III. to five In the event th a t a stu ­ d ent cuts two or more classes times he will be up publicly horsewhipped on the steps of the Main Building and thrown the the Tower. The Tower chimes will accompany his descent with to the “ Down W ent McGintv top of from Bottom of the Sea.” The Presi­ dent of the University will de­ clare a holiday so th a t all stu­ dents and professors may a t ­ tend. A ttendance will be com­ pulsory. IV. In the event th a t a stu ­ d en t cuts class five times or more his credits will be stripped from w herever they keep the credits and he will be ta rre d and feathered and ridden o ff the campus on a rail. A con­ te st will be held a t the begin­ ning of each semester to de­ term ine which people will be entitled to carry the rail. Pro­ fessors and students may both e n te r the contest. V. In the event th a t a stu ­ dent cuts classes on the days immediately proceeding holi­ days he will be p u t in the stocks on the steps of the Main Build­ ing for thirty-six hours. In the event th a t such cutting con­ tinues holidays will be done away with entirely. VI. In the event th a t a pro­ the stu ­ fessor gives a walk dents in his class will be given the tr e a tm e n t described in the first rule, with the f u r th e r pro­ vision t h a t said professor a u to ­ matically be given a raise in pay. VII. At the beginning of each sem ester a committee of judge:- composed of the th ree professors least having imagination and the three pro­ fessors the dullest classes will be elected to su per­ vise the above rules. teaching the required VHI. Finally, every morning at eight o’clock all students will to meet on be the the Main Building. steps of From there they will march to th a t a classes. stu d e n t this meeting all of the above p u n ­ ishments will be ministered to him. to a tte n d the event In fails 5 I I IO ll e> rn9 ;; 14 ie ii • I i 21 2 b 20 21 I 24 29 k 251 30 P31 35 i 39 134- d 3 5 31 41 kl4 2 44- 45 r n 4e I t 32 J b 4C 41 52 51 f 4 3 49 ti 4 b 55 %5 b %59 VERTICAL 1. legal charge 2. government agency (abbr.) 3. stair-parts 4. indites 5. unit of work 6. accomplish 7. Roman coin 8. unaspirated consonant „ 9. printer's trays 10. grape 11. close comrade 16. electrified atom 54 lf 53 s e 40. unexpected difficulty 42. make an edging 43. prophet 44. smallest 46. was victorious 47. gratings 49. took care of 52. diminutive for Nancy 53. desirous 56. English cathedral* town 57. Shoshonean Indian 58. positive pole 59. expire Answer to yesterday’s puzzle. E D I T O R - I N - C H I E F _________ H E L E N E W IL K E ___ A S S O C I A T E EDITOR _ M A R I E R A N C E S W ILSON Editor:*! A s s i s t a n t —J i m m i e Gr ov e N i g h t E d i t o r s -------------- --- --------------- H or ac e B usby. N e v il le Hay* . M ic k e y N ebe nx ahl, Gene S t in n e t t . Je a n Talley, \f arifranc** Wile on S o c ie ty Editor Dorothy H u n t in g t o n S o c ie t y A s s o c i a t e _______ J o y c e Bel) A m u s e m e n t * Editor E arlayn e blaclt A m u s e m e n t * A saociat e Ge ne S t i n n e t t Geo rg e Reborn 8p c r t* Editor A s s o c ia t e S p orts Editor F a y e Loyd World N e w * Editor R o se m a r y Hooper F e atu re E dit or Hilda C haie ff E x c h a n g e E d ito r Mary V. Wallace C a r t o o n i s t _________ C ha rle s S t e w a r t S U B S C R I P T I O N R A T E S B y carr ie r March I to J u ly I s By Mail March I to J u ly SI :*u. I. *2.00. is w ith in t * d e li v e r e d Th* T ex an will in A u s tin , prov ided the place o f d e l i v ­ ery limit*, th e fro rn N i n e t e e n t h to I w e n t y - * e ver^b s t r e e t s , to north, and from Rio Grand# S t r e e t on the w e s t and Sa n Ja c in to B ou le var d on th* e a s t i n c l u s i v e carrier s o u th I ba Daily Texan ta ente red a* s e c ­ ond o ff ic e • t A atm. Texas by Aet of C o n g r e ss , March 3 c la e s mail at tb s post 1 87$ STA FF FOR THIS ISSUE Night Ski it ox .... HORACE BUSBY Mickey Nebertzahl Copyreader Night Sports E d itor__________ George Raborrt Night Society E ditor_________ A ssistant —............ — Night Amusements E d i t o r ....... Dorothy H untington Ja n ie Rugs Earlayne Black (30) Night Telegraph E d i t o r ............ A;- i >t.ant K atherine Rogers , ..... — Lou H oneycutt j the pilot S e c o n d L i e u t e n a n t F o s t e r L. 1939-40, a student Thompson, “ Flying in fighter Deuces” squadron of a F irst Ma­ rine Air Wing group, has flown j thirty missions against the enemy since going to his station in the I fall. L ie u te n a n t j Philippines Thompson said th a t th e squadron I had been hitting Ja p troops, en- : frenchmants, barges, and grounded I islands of Cebu, ! planes on j N'egros, and Mindanao. last the HORIZONTAL I. in favor of 4. foot lever 9. portion 12. slender finial 13. appearing gnawed 14. topaz humming­ bird 15. allaying 17. pronounced through the nose 19. goddess of dawn 20. Grecian island 22, gull-like bird 24. long braid of hair 25. city in Norway 28. watering place in Prussia 29. brink 31. hypothetical force 32. paid notice 33. auditory organ 34. fish eggs 35. unit of germ plasm 36. personal pronoun 37. fields (poet.) 39. prefix: before J. * IO B B B B B IMIAIS1S Average tim e e l eo latio n : 19 ad n ate* . List, by King Features Syndicate, Inc. b7 50 51 5 - n 18. mane reparation 20. mongrel 21. deplore 22. harnesses together 23. city in Germany 24. marks of omission 26. river in France 27. queerer 29. prefix: wrong 30. bombycid moths 53. incited 3 i. a stout, solid stick 39. awaited adjustment 41. straighten 43. male offspring 45. a t sea 46. had existed 47. South African antelope 48. desert one'i party (slang) 49. spread for drying 50. Hebrew high priest Bl. stain 54. indefinite article 55. leave O f f i c i a l N o t i c e d . I N F O R M A T I O N FOR S U M M E R STUDENTS S t u d e n t s e x p e c t i n g tai be in th e U n i ­ v e r s i t y thin s u m m e r sh ou ld begin now th e ir plan*. M ost de p a r t- to m a k e m e n t a , but no t all, will o f f e r th re e ty p e* o f eouraes, *'af”, “ au’’, an d “ f ” . li s te d T h e y are in a* m a n y a u b -d iv i- aion* th e F inal A n n o u n c e m e n t o f in C ou r se s , and you w ill h av e aa m u c h tu n w or kin g o u t y o u r pr ogr am aa y o u do w it h c r o s s w o r d puzzle*. H e n c e thi* i n f o r m a t i o n an d a d v i c e ; ear ly 1. Call at th e R e gis trar '* O f f ic e at on c e for t i ) a Fina l A n n o u n c e ­ m e n t o f C o u r se s for th e S u m m e r - Fall S e m e s t e r , ( 2 ) a p h o t o s t a t i c c op y o f you r cia** r ec d id to d ate, no w r ead y fo r y o u ; and I S ) , if you w is h it, a t e n t a t i v e c o u r s e card. is s u e d ; j u s t 2. S t u d y you r c o u r s e n e e d s and i f you w a n t a d v ic e c o n s u l t an app ro ­ pr iate m e m b e r o f th e f a c u lt y . F i ­ nally lis t on y o u r t e n t a t i v e card th e c o u r s e s , but n ot s e c t io n s , you w a n t to ta k e and p r e se n t it w h e n you r e g i s t e r on J u l y 6. 3. T h e "a f” c o u r s e s run t h r o u g h o u t i J u l v - O c t o b e r ) , j u s t as s e m e s t e r t h e y do th e in o t h e r s e m e s t e r s , m o s t o f th e m m e e t i n g th re e d a y s a w e ek . M o st " s u ” c o u r s e s m e e t s ix d a y s a w e e k and are c o m p le te d th e S u m m e r T er m o f e i g h t in w e e k * ( J u l y an d A u g u s t ) , T h e *-f ” c o u r s e s m e e t m o s t l y s ix day* in th e a week and ar e c o m p le te d Fall T e r m of e i g h t w e e k s ( S e p ­ te m b e r and O c t o b e r ) . W a tc h , th o u g h , fo r v a r ia tio n s. 4. If yo u ar e to a t t e n d th e S u m m e r T er m o n ly , r e g i s t e r on J u l y 6 fo r one, tw o , or t h re e " s u ” c o u r s ­ e s ; if t h e Fall T er m o n ly , r e g i s t e r on S e p t e m b e r I fo r one, tw o , or th r e e ‘‘f ” c o u r s e s . 6. If you ar e to a tt e n d t h e e n t i r e s e m e s t e r you w ill r e g i s t e r on J u ly 5 for t h e w h o le period ( J u l y - O c - to b e r ) and y o u r p rog ram m a y be m ad e up e n t i r e l y o f a f ” c o u r s e s , or it m a y c o n s i s t o f “ s u ” c o u r s e s pl u s "f” c o u r s e s , or it m a y h a v e a t y p e s . c o m b in a t io n o f all s o y o u w on't F i g u r e o v e rlo a d . c o r r e c tly th r e e F e e s On J u l y 5, a1) s t u d e n t s will p ay t h e r e g u la r s e m e s t e r fe e o f *25. T h o s e t a k ­ ing o n ly "a u” cour se * m a y s e c u r e a r efund o f * 7 . 5 0 a f t e r 15 d a y s . D o n ’t a - k for th e ref und , t h o u g h , un til you are dead c er ta in you will no t s t a y b e ­ yond A u g u s t , for if you do and t h e n att en d th e Fall T er m it will c o s t you In o th e r w o rds, th e s e m e s t e r * 1 7 .5 0 . f e e is $ 17.50 and th e Fall T er m fe e is 11 7.50. In th e S u m m e r - F e l l S e m e s t e r , or t h e th e S u m m e r T er m is $25. fee S u m m e r T e r m , or th * F a i l T er m , no r efund fu ll w or k. is m a d e b e c a u s e o f leas th a n T h e U nio n f e e b e c o m e s com pul­ s o ry. by r ec e n t s t a t u t e , on S e p t e m b e r I. T h e r e fo r e , all s t u d e n t s r e g i s t e r i n g in J u l y for an “a f ” or an *‘r* course will p a y t h e required fe e o f 50 c e n t s , or if t h e y m a y pay $1. 00 to in c lu de the optional fee of 60 cen ts for th e S u m m e r T er m . t h e y c h o o s e E. J . M ATHEW S, R e g i s t r a r and D e a n o f A d m i s s io n s . N .B . J u l y 5 is r e g i s t r a t i o n day and is no p r o v is io n fo r " la t e r e g i s ­ t h e r e tr a t io n . ” th e ir To s t u d e n t s w h o s i g n e d fo r a refun d I V* 4 5 C a c t u s : P lease com e for your on by J o u r n a li s m B u ild in g 108 m o n e y . F R A N K I E W E L L B O R N , B u s i n e s s M a n a g e r , T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b lic a t io n s . to retur n ALL R E S I D E N C E c h a ir m e n are r e ­ all q u e s t i o n n a i r e s q u e s t e d s c h o l a s t i c d i s h o n e s t y by c o n c e r n i n g J u n e 8 t h t o t h e D ean o f W o m e n ’s O f ­ fi ce. T h a n k you, D O R O T H Y G E B A U E R . D e an o f W o m e n . IN O R D E R fair op p o r t u n it y th a t p r o p r ie to r s m a y to r ep lace a n y h a v e s t u d e n t w h o will n o t retu r n a t th e end o f t h e s e m e s t e r , t e n d a y s ' n o t ic e th e s e ­ in w r i t i n g be fore th e end of m e s t e r m u s t be g i v e n t h e pr op rie tor t h e s t u d e n t w h e n m a k in g s u c h a by c h a n g e . to g i v e s u c h n o t ic e re n d e rs th e s t u d e n t liable to a m o n t h ’s ren t as a fo r fe it u re . F ai lu re T h u r s d a y , J u n e 14, w il l be t h e fin al da y o f t h is s e m e s t e r fo r g i v i n g s u c h notice . C H A R L E S V. D U N H A M . A s s i s t a n t to t h e D ean o f S t u d e n t L ife . is t e a c h e r in W e s t T e x a s . fo r t e a c h e r s . O ne T H E T E X A S T e a c h e r s A p p o i n t m e n t C o m m i t t e e has s e v e r a l a t t r a c t i v e o p e n ­ th a t o f a in g s ran ch T he A m e r ic a n S c h o o l F o u n d a t io n o f Mex ic o ne e ds a t e a c h e r o f h ig h s c h o o l d o m e s t i c In L a w r e n c e . Ran., s c ie n c e . J u l y I. is an o pe nin g for a te a c h e r o f t h er e E n g l i s h : for a s u p e r in t e n d e n t o f an A n g l o - A m e r i c a n Sc h o o l p a y in g $3 00 m o n t h l y fo r t w e l v e m o n t h s , and if hi* w i f e is well q u a li­ fie d. s h e m a y a ls o be e m p l o y e d at $115 per m o n th . in B ir o t a , C olo m b ia , A n y o n e in t e r e s t e d in g e t t i n g th e d e ­ ta il s o f t h e s e p o s it io n s s h o u ld s e e th e s e c r e t a r y . MARIAM D O Z IE R , S u tto n H all 21$. behind th e wheel th e young college man sit* o f low his softblue Ford convertible with the top down and you see only his brown head and the starched collar o f his white sh irt open wide a t the neck and a p a rt of a big fleshy whiteshirted shoulder he sits deep in the red warm leather looking quite secure with glass all around him the he looks dully ahead at no th ­ ing much a t all, sitting deep in the seat, and the inset pushbut­ radio plays m idafternoon ton dance records and the music comes ou t thin and d rifts away in the Sunbright still aftern oo n the Texas sun shines bright on shinyblue convertible with the clean ta n canvas top down an dthe radio aerial glis­ tens also the silver hub caps with a little dried mud on them from the side roads and the sun shines on the top leaves of the big oak trees on past the car the big trees shade the green sm oothcut lawn grass beneath them and through the grass the wide whiteflowry walk runs up to the high redbrick dorm itory fo r girls s— w h a t’s she hu ng on? switching stations one after- an o th e r in a h u rry trying to find some more dance music or something ON Hafter a N O T H er s— and the radio is clicked off he snaps shut his n eat little silvermetal lighter cig arette with his lips tigh t on his ciga­ rette, and his lower jaw and his chin stuck out in a manly way he draws in and then slips lower into the soft red leather and blows smoke out with his eyes half shut and he holds the ciga­ re tte in a big so ft hand with a big spreadeagle ring on it from Mexico were you with us the time w ent dowm to Ju a re z ? to on (you can go as fa st as you w a n t roads out those a round Ozona and F o r t Stock­ ton H a rry Stevens did eighty and ninety all the way from) HEY BILLBOY W hatcha- know to the boy passing on the sidewalk with the girl the hello in a g r e a t big h e a rty voice like gre e tin g the fellow t h a t was in the crowd you got d ru nk with last night, which m ay have been or W ednesday or Thursday the th a t m a tte r Monday big and toots on S a tu rd a y Sunday of course fo r is sand- the young Texan big his enough with some t h a t has fleshy steakfed face two long patches of pale red run n in g across eith er side he s tan ned some too: from swim­ ming, mostly lazy sunbathing, and driving with the top down intra m ura ls r i d i n g Dad s horses when I go home (a big p a rty everybody over to the hu n tin g lodge on the North Fork ranch) his dark- brown hair is wellcut welloiled but not quite combed a little falls down in fr o n t th e circles un der his steady bluish eyes are almost dark grooves now then; take his white shirt (m ost any time you see him h e’ll be w ear­ ing a white shirt; maybe late some weekday a fte rn o o n a g ray k n it sw e a tsh irt w ith re d G reek le tte rs on f r o n t and back; m any jolly fellow s piled all o ver th e speeding low c o n v e rtib le ): i f s well laundered and stiff and has a way of looking as if it were pulled on j u s t now sleepy- the headedly h e ’s to starched cuffs up enough bare freckled wrists and the c u ffs flare c u t is open loosely and the shirt r o l l e d bigbony the carelessly tw o b u tto n s down a t sm all (th e re ’s th e neck th e pearly pin o f fra te rn ity th e stuck on one side of his ex­ pansive chest) W E L L H E L L Why don’t she come on! he switches the cigarette to the other hand an d pushes a button and the ta n canvas top a t the back comes up quickly and q u ite ob ed ien tly sw ings su rely a n d stead ily j th e back se a t w ith the tw o I dents and then over th e I seat where the young Te looking ahead, waits assu fo r it to come to re st a fingertips and to p with a quiet snap and sheltered fro m th e hot sun th e W IN STO N B ★ Time on His Hands Sam W atched the Ants, Ate the Figs, Talked To the Frog, Looked in the Pond, Felt Sorry For the Squirrels— All in His D a y 's W ork “ ^ A M , OH, SAM. W here are standing a t the kitchen door, waving her apron a t the flies squeezing enlarged th roug h holes in the screen door. a n d blossoms Sam groaned as she looked up, distracted from watching the progress of a trail of red wood-ants bearing leaf particles th eir ant-hill. Tall clover to stalks stood around him, hiding his small body from the house. He rose as M other’s second call took on ton e and waved an anxious both arms. “ Here I am, Mother. Over here in the clover patch .” Mother smiled as she waved back the tu rn e d kitchen. A single fly buzzed in­ furiatingly a round h e r head. She sw atted a t it futily several times, then did h er best to “ I do wish Sam ignore wouldn’t punch the wires in the screen door. I must speak to him about it.” She sighed and began stirrin g the blackberry juice simmering on the stove. into and it. Sam tu rn e d his hack to the house and sta rte d to resume his a n t observation. With a pang of regret, he noticed he was standing in the middle of the a n t highway. A t lcust a dozen crushed bodies lay by his shoe — “ W orkers who died doing th e ir d u ty ” Sam m entally e n­ tombstones. th e ir graved on T heir fellow ants scurried in fru stra tio n a b o u t them, always skirting S a m ’s shoe by a wide margin. In a few minutes, the excitem ent died down— the tiny brains of the an ts focused on carrying the leaf particles and they plodded again along the trail. Sum w ondered a t th e ir cold-bloodedness and h eartless­ ness. Even as much as he hated Tommy Nichols next door, he ’d feel bad if somebody stepped on Tommy! ★ its legs then HE PLO W ED the through few knee-high clover a fe e t and, seeing a particularly green spot, juggled the ideas of going to the pond o r staying here. The clover patch won, and flinging himself down on top of blossoms and stalks, he closed his eyes a gainst the 4 o’clock sun. A persistent dron­ ing overhead he took to be a bee. He could see it in his im ag­ ination da rtin g from blossom to in sta n t blossom, hovering an over one, spreading ou t all six of to grapple as it landed. Then it would send its feelers into th e center, easily first, as if to sample the qual­ ity of the n ectar, t h o r ­ oughly gorging itself so th a t it could barely take off to fly fo r the hive. Then the droning be­ came louder and louder, as if a swarm o f bees were whole draw ing closer. Opening one eye, he caught a glimpse of f o u r P-38’s stre a k ­ ing past in all th e ir two-tailed splendor. Instantly, he was on his cupped arou nd his eyes, in te n t on fol­ lowing every g raceful swerve and bank. He even ran to the crest of the rise so he could see them fo r a few more seconds. When they disappeared, he sta rte d leisurely fo r the pond. sandpile, As he passed his which had been a p re se n t on his sixth birthd ay, two years ago, he noticed a huge gulley down the no rth w est tow er o f the feudal castle he and his sister Lois had been building f o r weeks. Sam p atted a few fing erfu lls of sand the crevice, moistened it with sa­ liva, and le ft it to the sun to finish. feet, his hands closer into and ★ tre e s k ept th e TH E POND was deep green and quiet, almost som ber a t half-past f o u r when the thick circle of late suns rays out. A b a tte re d row ­ boat drifted th r e e y ards from the pier to which it was tied. Sam tro tte d o u t to the edge of the pier, and, lying on his stom ­ ach, stared a t his reflection. Suddenly a n am bitious m ullet jum p ed out of th e w a te r fo r a it created g n a t— the ripples face waves, and gave Sam ’s best of all, his hair looked wavy. The m ullet leaped again and again, cavorting with such obvious t h a t Sam could not help but shout a f t e r it. abandon “ Good H u n tin g .” (He was reading th e ch ild ’! version o f Kipling’s “J u n g le Book” .) His voice rebounded from the o ther side— “ Good h u n tin g . . . good hu n tin g .” A th ro aty deep, croak issued from u nd er the next of n e a re st I illy pad. Sam stopped listening fo r the echo. The frog croaked again. Sam smiled. It croaked again. Sam grinned, s h o w i n g leap-frog teeth . He picked up a pebble and spatted it against the pad. “ B raaaack ,” he said. A very good imitation, he thought. The voice un d e r lillypad was the silent. “ B raaaack.” He tried again, with still no answer. “ I wonder if I said ‘sh ut up’ in frog lang uag e.” He fro g a pp e a ring looked fe a rfu lly a t the pad, half expecting to see an ira te to spit w a te r in his eye, or a m ermaid c a rry in g the frog which was her tra n sfo rm ed by little b rother th eir wicked step m other— Sam scrambled to his f e e t and ran back to shore. ★ AS HE passed through the south pa stu re on his way to the house, he noticed th a t the fig tree in the corner was loaded with plump purple figs. F u n n y how J u ly and fig time always slipped up on him. He to be surprised never when ripe. Going over to the tree he saw with pride th a t he could almost climb into the bottom crotch w ithout having to jum p f o r a limb and swing his way up. He had grown fa s te r th a n the tree this y e a r— he was almost a man. He was almost fo u r fe e t tall. failed they were His hands were covered with sticky w’hite milk from broken stems when he finally reached his favorite limb. He could sit there, with his back against the tru n k , his f e e t propped on the next limb, absolutely secure, and both hands were free to pick and peel the figs. A fte r the f ir s t dozen, his m outh was rim m ed with sticky juice. He licked his lips, and wiped them with his hands, then wiped his hands on his seersucker pants. Full and com fortable, he leaned back. A fig leaf brushed his ear. He carefully picked it o ff and looked at it. His mind was full of Sunday School when he said, “ W onder how I ’d look in fig leaves?” t h a t blue— as he He fancied himself w and er­ ing throu gh Paradise clothed in fig leaves. The sky ther«* was as blue as the patches t h a t showed now between th e leaves — he would like f o r bis eyes to be sta re d h ard e r and h ard er, his eyes felt like they m ight be blue. They might! He nearly fell o u t of th e tr e e in his eagerness to climb out of the tree and race back to th e pond and th e pier to see if th e y had changed. A pair of dream y brown eyes looked up th e pond. They a t him from looked disappointed and un­ happy un cuestio nab ly brown. B ut the w a te r did look good. He it with one finger. Oh — cool — gloriously th e shade. Of cool here course, M other had told him and Lois never to go in unless Daddy or Jo h n n y was around, in with his bu lt clothes on, it would be an acci­ dent. H e’d take o f f his shoes so he w ouldn’t lose them. And his suit would be clean, too, and the suck would come maybe back into the seersu ck er where it was slick an d w orn — if he w e n t tested a n d in ★ H ALLOO, SAM! See a n y It was old Mr. fish ? ” Nichols from the next farm , tra m ping down the p ath leading to his house . . . “ Only a m u lle tt o r two, sir, and th e y ’re not s’good to eat. T h e y ’ve mostly been ju m p in g .” “ Well, if t h e r e ’s nothing but Leaping Lenas out this a f t e r ­ noon, I ’m glad I wTen t hu nting instead. Look w hat I go t.” Sam looked appraisingly a t five from squirrels dangling Mr. Nichol’s hand. “ They look good, sir,” he said. “ Yep, th e y ’re rig h t plum p,” this the old man said. “ Feel on e .” Sam felt the cold body has­ tily. He hated to see an ything dead, and even worse to feel a dead thing. But he liked Mr. Nichols, so he said, “ Yes, Mr. Nichols. I bet h e’s going to be good.” “ Would you like him? I have your m other cook hirr you. You m ight give Lo bite, too.” to carey a “ Thank you, Mr. Nich S am ’s face belied his word! didn’t w a n t squirrel all the w ay up to house. He knew he woul H e ’d it somew and erect a little pile o f si — “ died in defense of his w and home” was m entally graved on this one. ju s t bury Mr. Nichols m u st have ticed his distaste, fo r he ai “ I ’ll carry it up there if a r e n ’t going back y et.” S am ’s face became a th a n k you grin— “ Oh, Nichols. I know M other MT glad to have it. Tell h e r all right, too, willya?” “ Yes, Sam, I will.” Mr. I ols swung down the P end trail. Sam decided he’d tain iv wait until Mr. NI and his dangling squirrels time to leave before he home. Yes, he’d wait, ev( he was late to supper. to there. t h a t anyone H E LOOKED around sighed. How he m Chip, the old brown dog Jo had had when he was « A fte r seven years, Chip d like to frolick aro und with or Lois, b ut he lay in th e th e back step shine by drowsily looked a t him fe lt a su urge to lie down on some gi spot and drowse too. May the h he went up though, Chip m ight cha stick. But no, Mr. Nichols n still be I f he wi around the edge o f the pon could go up by the chi house and in the side gate, avoiding an y chance of me> Mr. Nichols and the squi He rem em bered th e time hr Lois had nests and p u t all the eggs th e ir mud pies. Daddy had n ea r hysterical when they walked in the house, th e ir h and faces filthy, compla th a t the mud pies, eggs, an did n’t fo ur hours’ cooking in the sun. Mother had been so s< she didn’t even spank them fed them dozens of Ort Crackers a n d p u t them to I “ Sam, S am .” Lois was si ing on the side steps, screa a t the top of her twelve- old voice. “ There you Mama says to come to si; and be su re and wash hands.” She banged the do she w ent inside. ta s te rig h t even robbed fo u r Sam looked a f t e r her, kled his nose, a n d looked r hands. He scuffed the d minute, d raw in g odd de with his toes. He could se* family stand in g in the d room, th e ir heads bowe blessing. H e dusted his I inside, o f f quickly slipped into his place jut the family s a t down. ra n — KATHY BL It's Easy to Place Your Want Ad in the Daily Texan. lf you have a telephone you may phone your want ad. C A L L 2-2473 A N D A SK R A N A D T A K i SUNDAY, JUNI TO, T W 'Germany Should Feed 7,000,0110' Pauley Warns U.S. Not to Go Soft PARTS, June 9.— (IN S )— The American attitude in approaching the reparations problem with Ger­ many must be harder and saner than the United States stand after World War I, it was declared today by President Truman’s repa­ rations ambassador, Edwin A. Pauley. ★ In a news conference held at SHAEF headquarters, Pauley as­ serted it would be “false econ­ omy” to go deeper into reparations until the task o f feeding and sup­ plying seven million Allied sol­ diers, prisoners, and displaced per­ the is placed squarely on sons shoulders of the German nation. industrialist This burden now is carried by the U. S., Pauley said. Pauley, an from Beverly oil Hills, Calif., declared the United States made mistakes in dealing with reparations in the last war, “and we do not intend to make them again.” Zhukov Says Hitler Might Be Alive in Spain W ith Franco LONDON, JUNE 9— (IN D )— The m ystery surrounding the fate ..f A dolf H itler was heightened tonight with the disclosure that Soviet officials in Berlin believe the Fuehrer is alive and hiding somewhere in Europe, possibly in Spain. from Dispatches the German capital quoted Marshal Gregory Zhukov, whose armies stormed H itler’s last fortress, as declaring the No. I war criminal could have escaped the Russians by air before the .The Soviet commandant in Berlin, Col. .Gen. Berzarin, city fell. stated flatly: “We have found several bodies that might be H itler’s, but we can­ not yet state that he is dead. “ My opinion is that H itler has gone into hiding and is somewhere in Europe, possibly with General Franco.” Marshal Zhokov, disclosing that Hitler had married actress Eva Braun two days before the fall o f Berlin, said this was learned from notes in a diary found in the ruined chancellery. Zhokov confirmed no satisfactory identification had been made of a body believed to be Hitler, who was reported by the Germans to have died in his shell-and-bamb-blasted chancellory May I. “ It is impossible to say anything definite about Hitler’s fa te ,” Zhukov continued, “and the whole question is still a mystery. “ He could have flown from Berlin at the last moment, but we don’t know. The airfield (at Berlin) was at his disposal.” From Italy, meanwhile, came other published doubts that Hitler actually is dead. 257 Listed As June Candidates For ELA., B.S., B.JV B.H.E.,etc. (Continued from page I ) 'Hopkins Obtains Release O f 16 Poles— Paris NEW YORK, June 9.— .(IN S ) — The Paris radio, as heard by CBS, reported today that Harry Hop­ kins “has obtained the release of the 16 Poles arrested by the Soviet authorities.” Hopkins, President Truman’s personal emissary to Moscow, is en route back home after several talks with Premier Stalin in the Kremlin. The arrest o f the Poles on charges o f “diversionist activities in the rear of the Red Army,” erected a major obstacle in nego­ tiations for a solution to the entire Polish problem. The arrested Poles were affiliated with the Polish governm ent in London. M rs. 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L aura Muir McT.ellan Alien B ee m a n Masree Ca rolyn Jan e M a tth e w s S a m m ie Je a n M er rit t Elene M ey er Mary J e a n n e M illiken Patricia Moore Alicia Mary M ooty C rais W a lla c e Morris M artha Ann Morton E li se M o s k o w i t e Gertr ude F r a n c e s M oakow it z Carolyn Mari e M ur ray Mary A lic e N e l s o n Mary K a th le e n N o w ie r s k i H u b e r t s H ead s N u n n William Goro O bata R ub y E m m a O n c k e n Ida O r in o v a k y R e tty e L or rain e O r t Mary E liz a b e th O ’Toole Mrs. E rn a R o sa lie H e r z o g P e a r s o n R o s e m a r y P e a r s o n He len F a y I’eri m an F rances L aV er n Pi erce Mary K a th e r in e P ip sa ir e Syb il C la r en ce Po n drom Mary E le a n o r P o e t E liz a b e th Je an Po w ell Mra. J a n e t B lack P r it c h e t t Ann C am pb el l Raborn Marian Rend all Bertha F r a n c e s R obin so n E u g e n ia M ae R o s e n t r i t t Marilyn G ib so n R ow e E v e l y n E n g lis h R u m m e l l Minnie Lee Sc handel Julia E liz a b e th S c h u elk # F lo r e n c e R u th S c h w a r ta H arry Fr e d e r ic k S c h w e n k e r Mary L ou S c o t t Sh ir ley S c o t t I -rate . Sl ick S e e lig a o n Jo hn H o l t S e w e ll Jr. V ir ginia L ee S h u d d e Katie F r a n c e s S i m m o n s M arjorie Ruth L y n e t t e Sk il e s W a lt e r Arnold S lo v i c k Paul Greer S m it h Clara Celia S t e in N anc y .lane S t e p h e n s Mary E le anor S t e w a r t I.oia Mari e S u t t o n M argar e t E le an or T ac q ua rd R o s e m a r y T h y f a u l t Doris Mae Tice Mary E li z a b e th T o m p k in s Oren B a il e y T ru lo c k Jr . Gloria M ae W alke r D o r o th y L ois W all ac e Mrs. J e a n L u c ille P u t n a m W a lto n T h o m a s Lee W a t s o n M arg ar et W e st b r o o k R o s e m a r y La Kue W h it a k e r Pau la J o W illia m s E lo r en e W ils on Max E m il W in d is c b B e v e r ly Moo dy W in g a t e M rs. A n n F r a n k s W in k e l m a n n Marvin J a y W is e Wiila W a y n e W it h er s A lf o n s o G ena ro W’o n g - V a l le Ruth C a r le t o n Wood Jo A n n Y a te s Vir ginia Y o u n g C ha rle s H o f I Z im m e r m a n n B ach elor of J o u r n a li sm Marion K in g B ridge s L ois R u th D a v i s P e g g y W y n n e D ye r Patri cia A n n F o w le r J e a n n e Cardell Miller Mrs Muriel J e a n K ilp atrick O xfo rd W aite r Mc Fall T a ylo r Jr. K a th le e n W harto n ( i - r t r u d e H e l e n e Wilke M ar i lr a n c e s Wils on Bae C addis W right B a ch elo r of S c ie n c e J o h n H ar old Gilm er E a s o n Lelia L i s a t t e E y o u b S y lv i a Ann J o h n Mary H arrie t L o t t M ary Edith Moore Mary Lu Murray Ray D a n ie l Reed M ari lyn J o y c e W a ld v o g e l in C h e m i s t r y B ach elor of S c ie n c e in G e o lo g y in H o m e E c o n o m ic s P a y t o n V ic to r A nderso n G u s t a v o E n r iq u e Marques Pedro Je-o is l i a r q u e s N e w t o n J o s e p h R a b e n s b u r g Jr B ach elor of S c ie n c e B e t t y Nell Ariki - s on Billie L orae Bake r Mrs. J e a n Lee F i s h e r B an k e r M ar gar et C u m m in s B lake Ardire A lle e n e Bock K a th r y n V ir g in ia B ow den Mrs. P atti Je an R o b in so n B r e n n e c k e M a r g a r e t Claire L a u g h li n Mrs V ir gin ia Lee S m i t h D o b s o n Maude A lic e D o ckery Mary F r a n c e s E a st la nd E th e l E li z a b e th E p p r ig h t Mildred E le anor Glazer He len L o u is e C r im e s Billyo E s t h e r Harpe r Luc ille H ar r is on M ar jor ie Marie H e n r y Mary L o u i s e J a c o b s e n K il t ie S u e J in k in s E m il y Ann Kennard Mrs. E liz a b e th Craig W e s t e r v e l t K n ig h t Mildr ed F e r n L es li e M a rg a r e t Nolle L ong D o r o th y L o u i s e L o v e Mrs. E li n or J u n e Olc ot t M c A - h a n Mrs. E ll e n S t u a r t L o u g h b o r o u g h McC a m i s h V e r ly n J e a n n e t t e Miller Mrs. E s t e l l a E liz ab eth G ar n e tt M orr i- K ve ly n F ay Morris Edith Parte!) Kila M a rt ha P r ie s * R o s e m a r y R e ynold s Mrs. M ary D a r n e l R ic h e y R o b in so n E s t h e r S a n d g a r te n Mrs. Mildred J a n e S au nde r s S h e r r y S y lv i a Ann S t e v e n * V ic to r ia V ela Mar th a Ann W e lc h Ann W in d r o w M ar c L o u i s e W o lc o t t B ach elor of S c ie n c e in P h y s i c s Rilly F r a n k C o g s w e ll W ilf re d Clark Fa g o t S a m u e l D ob r y Ke epe r Will L o v i n g M cL end on H a r v e y J a y McMain* A nne Motley J o h n N e f f Ter rell Youth Leader Needs Humor, Dr. Moore Says “ I know of nothing a youth leader needs more than a sense of hum or,” declared Dr. Bernice Mil­ burn Moore, consultant the Hogg Foundation for Mental Hy­ giene, in a recen t address to Girl Scouts in Houston. fo r is im p ortant responsible “ L earning that it is fun to he a indi­ self-disciplined, vidual th in g ,” the said Dr. Moore. F ar too much de­ linquency may be traced to lack of leadership on the p a rt of both parents and the neighborhood, she believes. “ Both family and com­ munity m ust take responsi­ bility.” the Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N - Phone 2-2473 PAGE Pl Great Actor Staged First Festival To Honor Work of Shakespeare Tifo Agrees To Quit Trieste Yields to Calls O f Allies WASINM, June 9. — (IN S) — Yugoslavia’s Marshal Tito bowed to the W estern Allies today on the explosive Trieste problem and agreed troops to withdraw his from that key Adriatic port. department an­ nounced the agreement, which is considered a decisive victory for the United States and Great Brit­ ain. It assures Anglo-American forces an open communication line to Austria. state The Disclosure o f the agreem ent cooled a heated controversy which had jarred Allied harmony and threatened to become another of Europe’s territorial powder kegs. Both America and Great Britain had protested Tito’s “forcible seiz­ ure” of the teem ing Italian sea­ port. Under the agreement, the Yugo­ slavian leader will remove his forces not only from Trieste, but also west of a line determined by the American, British and Yugo­ slavian governments. The new Trieste line will guar­ antee protection of railroad and highway communications from the Adriatic the into Austria Americans and British. for British Field Marshal Sir Harold Alexander, Supreme Allied Com­ mander in the Mediterranean, will assume control of all naval, mili­ tary and air forces west o f the Trieste line. “Yugoslav forces in the area must be limited to a detachment of regular troops not exceeding 2,000 of all ranks,” the agreement stated. “These troops will be main­ tained by the Supreme Allied Com­ mander’s administrative services. They will occupy a district se­ lected by the Supreme Allied Com­ mander west o f the dividing line and will not be allowed access to the rest of the area.” Meat W ill Be Scarcer, Says Texas Attorney J u n e W ASH ING TO N, 9. — (IN S) — Adm inistration su p p o rt­ ers in th e Senate, worried over the pending vote on price control, sent out an alarm today calling all absent p a rty members to re tu rn to Washington. Simultaneously a House com­ mittee heard th a t the present meat shortage may be looked back upon as “ an era of abundance in com­ parison to pass.” to what may come told Joe G. Montague, a tto rn e y for the Texas and Southw estern Cat- tle raise rs’ Association, the House banking and currency com­ mittee t h a t m eat would become much more scarce if the price con­ trol act is not amended to provide th a t when subsidies are reduced, prices shall be perm itted to rise commensurately. Representative Fred L. Craw­ ford, Michigan, in questioning the witness said t h a t he had been told by an e m inent physician th a t he feared “an epidemic might break the United States and out spread widely because our resist­ ance has been lowered from lack of m eat in o u r diet.” in The University of Texas John Sealy Hospital School of Nursing is the oldest in the Southwest, hav­ ing been established in 1890. (E d ito r ’s n o te) T h is sto r y w on th e $ 2 0 R are B ook e ss a y p r iz e o f f e r ­ ed by R e g e n t E .E . K irk p atrick to m em b ers o f th e J o u r n a lism 327 c la s s .) B y D O R O T H Y H E A R D The group was listening intent­ ly — so intently that the collaps­ ing of several benches and part of a wall did not disturb, in the least, the rapt attention it was The oc­ giving to the speaker. casion was 159 years ago at the first celebration ever instituted to honor William Shakespeare, and at which David Garrick, noted actor, delivered an ode English he had written especially for the occasion. Now in 1945 that same ode, in the form of a first issue folio resides in the Rare Books Collection of The University of Texas. ★ is This folio, entitled “ An Ode Upon Dedicating a Building and Erecting a Statue to Shakespeare at Stratford on Avon,” is one of the first ones printed in 1769. A f­ ter the sixteen-page ode in­ cluded “Testim onies to the Genius and Merits of Shakespeare” writ­ ten by well-known eighteenth cen­ tury men. The whole manuscript is housed in a brown paper cover and tied at the le ft side by one tiny string bow. The edges are frayed and sig h tly tom , and the first page is turning brown giv­ ing evidence of its old age. Just looking at it one wouldn’t be able to tell any marked dfference in it from many other folios, yet it is the symbol of a festive occasion and the expression of one great man’s adm iration for another. The story cf the first Jubilee Celebra­ tion is also the story of this val­ uable document, because if the celebration had not been held per­ haps the Ode would never have been written. ★ During David G arrick’s lifetime on the stage he built up the re p u ­ tation of being the gre a te st living actor. P a r t of his success can be a ttrib u te d to his skill as a Shakes­ pearean actor. Being very v ersa­ tile he played as many as seven­ teen Shakespearean characters, difficult among them being the portrayal of King Lear. He is said to have “ done good service to the th e a tre and signally advanced the p o p u l a r i t y of Sh ak esp eare’s plays.” So to honor this actor as being the outstan ding man in his profession and f o r in making Shakespeare a continuous success, the Council of Stratford- on-Avon, home of Shakespeare, conferred upon him the Freedom of the Borough. This m eant th a t Garrick was made an honorary cit­ izen of Shakespeare's home town. “ The Council enclosed the Scroll of Freedom in a m ulberry cask­ et,” fashioned from the wood of the tree Shakespeare was supposed to have planted in his fr o n t yard, “ and adorned with carvings of Fame holding the bust of Shakes­ peare. and Three Graces crowning in him with laurels, and Garrick the c haracter of Lear, the storm scene.” assisting in to honor Although Garrick was always and a rd e n t ad m ire r of Shakespeare it was only a f te r he had received the Freedom t h a t he conceived Shakespeare idea the with a Jubilee Celebration. G ar­ rick was a person to do things on a g rand scale, and he wanted some kind of a festival th a t would In­ clude everyone, so th a t it would truly honor the S tra tfo rd Bard. He had no opposition from the S tra tfo rd citizens, because when Dorothy Heard Wins First Place In Contest Sponsored by Regent Dorothy Heard, journalism major, won the $20 first prize offered by Regent E. E. Kirkpatrick for the best feautre story written about Shakespearean material in the Rare Books Collection. Miss Heard’s story was “David Garrick and the First Shakespeare Celebration.” ★ Mary Virginia W allace’s story, “They Built Their Own Monu­ ments: Printers of Shakespeare’s First Folio,” won the second place award of $10. “The Halliwell-Phillipps’ Edition of Shake­ speare” won the $5 third place prize for Melba Marshall. ★ Honorable mention went to Mimi Merritt for “The Pope-Theobald Controversy,” and to Loraine Rosenbush for “The Development of 2«lacbeth.” he presented his plans to them they enthusiastically received them and willingly promised their support the So the first Shakespeare cele­ bration was set into motion. Gar­ rick stayed in Stratford and led the town's activities in making three-day preparations for festival. At Bancroft Gardens car­ penters quickly hutil a wooden am­ phitheater to hold 1000 peole and to serve as a center for the cele­ bration. It was made with a paint­ ed dome and a circular arcade of Corinthian columns. Garrick had a specially-cast statue of Shakes­ peare made to put in the building. The first week of September, 1769, was a week of unaccustomed ex­ citem ent for the tow n’s citizens. Innkeepers made every available room townspeople and tried, in everyway possible, to re­ create the spirit and the atmos­ phere Shakespeare had left in their town. During this time Garrick was composing his ode to recite during the festvities. ready, by Garrick and his mulberry wand. The whole group then moved to the Holy Trinity Church whare an oratorio “Judith” was perform­ ed by its composer, Dr. A m e. A f­ ter the performance seven hun­ dred people dined in the amphi­ theater. That same night the am­ phitheater became a ballroom for the dancers, and its lawn, the thea­ tre for watching the spectacle of fireworks which were displayed throughout the evening. The visitors were awakened the second morning, not by a cannon salute, but by an unscheduled and persistently hard rain. Neverthe less, most of the visitors braved the weather and met at the amphi­ theater for breakfast. i t it was bust o f Shakespeare before birthplace — the ceremony to the celebration. The pageant the crowning ceremony had to abandoned because i raining on the third and last of the jubilee. At least one vis' turned the seeming misfortune, continuous rain into a tribute Shakespeare by saying, “The struggling through the clouds’ enlighten the world — a fig five representation of the f.' and fortunes of our beloved Ba * Fortunately, by * evening weather had cleared, so the ended with fireworks outside amphitheater and dancing in* Thus, the first jubilee ender it had begun — excitingly and1 thusiastically. ★ even The celebration was over, Garrick tried to perpetuate spirit by writing a play ent “Jubilee,” whch he presentee Drury Lane Theater. He also cted his ode there on several casions. The ode continued t< popular, after Garr death in 1779. It was read later Shakespeare festival in or of Garrick, its founder, Shakespeare, its lauded. Eve: late as the 1927 celebration rick’s contribution had not in that forgotten, because the to, festival attem pted again, capture the spirit of first jubilee. An adaptation of, Shakespearean Pageant was en, and the ode was read more. Today Garrick’s od* treasured chiefly for its lite value and not for the festive casion which made it possible gave it life. N evertheless, one not mourn the loss of the gotten celebration back of the because it is serving an eq w Afterwards Garrick delivered his ode, “part recitative and part cantata, composed and spoken by Garrick, to orchestral accompani­ ments by A m e, with interruptions by King as comic accom plice,” and to the accompaniment of the con- w" hy c*,uw ~ ,*J“ ‘ ° f eivi' tinning rain. Jamea B e w a ll des- ®“ h. « » d“ * 1»ttle dee,iba Delta h e r first .semester in the University. She a ttr ib u te s her I scholastic success to the personal touches she puts into her papers. Fond of writing a u th o r ’s notes and prefaces to ber themes, she dedicated a recent term them e on social mobility to the m igratory \ canvas-back duck. Mobility is a fittin g subject for F rau to write on because being an Army brat, she is well-acquaint- ed with it. When she was six her fa th e r was sent to China for three years. F ra n made the retu rn trip I to the States in a m a n n e r fain tly reminiscent of Cornelia Otis Skin- nor. She got the mumps on the boat at i had to be smuggled off. in At present, F ra n ifw lll| lf S K m K m f jp lli y il W tm k J m ifllW l i t | | | | | living is San Antonio, bu t her fa th e r has W tg H E k been stationed in California re- disappoint- biggest cently. H e r merit is th a t her family is not mov- mg out th ere until September. looked fo rw ard to spending “ I ’d th*- sum m er in C alifornia,” she says, “ But I ’ll have to wait ’til I g ra d u ate now.” T hat event will be in Ju n e , 1946. f l p l i i i p |^ u | | k | | | | | | | | | ^ F r a n ’s first love is fo r sports, a nd her election as president of ICT.S.A. came as a surprise to no one hut her. In tra m u ral m anager tr e a su re r for Delta Gamma and and w inner of tu rtle aw ard of the T urtle Club, Fran in sports has been participating since she was lug enough to hold a baseball bat. If you can’t find her anywhere else you can always find her a t the W om en’s Gym. the gold ||^ ^ ~ A j im Ju n e 7 through July I ishing activity will be al- , however, on July 2 or 3, ire-rush p a rty may be gipen. p a rty must be registered the In te r-F ra te rn ity Council e Dean of Men’s Office. ;er complaints from Panhel- last semester about fra te r n i­ sing sorority girls “ to influ- pledges, the rule will again ’ective th a t utilizing sorority ere or other women students P h i K a p p a S i g m a has announced the election and installation of the following officers: Raymond Roberts, Alpha; Max Killian, B eta; Robert Hare, T au ; Howard Klein, Sigma; Elden Wolcott, Iota; E d ­ win Cohen, Pi,, Jam es Beaman, Upsilon; C. C. Huffhines and Gor­ don Walker, Thetas. A poor life this if, full of care, to stand and we have no stare.— William ll. Davies. time Among the Churches : E N T R A L C H R I S T I A N *. F. E. Brooks, minister of st Presbyterian Church; ser- ti, * ‘The L a t e s t Com- nique.” ) Rest in the IPe » nd 7.50 in the A R M Y Ii >1 v v * V A " ) I \ 1 I Leather w a lle t *, 3.95 to i> .0 0 )\us ta* English n; b h ° s e suntan, 5 0 c in _ Se r v i ce tie, • _ Up w o o l or rayon, 1.0 0 W r i t i n g V ' Y T e f ^ g r a i n e d leather, 5.00 to 15.00 Boxer type shorts, gaberdine poplin. 2.95 to 5.7b MEN’S FURNISHINGS, STR EET FLOOR PASE EIGHT Phone 2-2473 — T H E D A I C Y T E X A N — Phone 2-2473 SUNDAY, JUNE IO, 1945 Air Capers Tex. Cal Blend Interstate Show V Johnson and Shilling Play Piano Recitals Miss Shilling will p lay: I II Sonata in B Flat Major, Koechel 570 ---------------Mozart Allegro (fir st m ovem en t Sonata (Quasi una F a n ta sia ), Opus 27, No. 2 — Beethoven A dagio Sostenuto A llegretto Presto A gitato Three P r e l u d e s ___ — Chopin E Minor C Sharp Minor B F la t Minor Dr. Gradus Ad Parnassum P relu de: “ Ce qua vu Ie v e n t d ’ouest S hepherd’s H e y Debussy Grainger Bob Rolston Is New Leader of N avy Orchestra Bob Rolston, trum pet man o f the N a v y orchestra, was intro­ duced as the new leader o f the orchestra at a banquet given by Captain R. J. V alen tine at Hill Hall W ednesday night the members o f the orchestra and their guests. Gene Johnson, leader since N ovem ber, will receive his com ­ mission in June. for Captain V alentine and Lieuten­ ant T. J. Maloney presented each member o f the orchestra with a recording made from one o f the w eekly groadcasts, and the entire recording Thursday’s last broadcast was played. o f Chaperons were Captain V alen t tine, Commander F erguson, Lieu­ ten a n t Maloney, and Lieutenants (j.g .) Brown. URRSITS IXJ C L A U D E T T E C O L B E R T In “PRACTICALLY YO U RS” Wi t h F R E D MAC M U R R A Y Al so C A R T O O N P L U S : L A T E S T N E W S With three years o f piano study behind her, L’R ees Johnston f e lt that, at the age o f eight, she was capable o f performing. And ever since that eight-year-old rendition of B e eth o v e n ’s “ Sonata A ppas­ to an amazed but ap ­ sionata” preciative audience, L’Rees has been studying and performing. Now, a U niversity music major, she will present her senior recital Monday aftern oon, June l l , at 415 o ’clock: in the Recital Hall of the Music Building. A t present a student o f Dr. Donald J. Grout, associate professor o f music his­ tory, L’Rees Johnston has studied under Karin Dayas at the Cincin­ nati Conservatory, Bella Rosher at Baylor University. She recently gave a concert in Colum­ bus, Texas, at the Reese Conserva­ tory which was founded by her aunt. and Miss Johnson is a m em ber o f Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary music sorority, and is a newly elected member o f the W ednesday Morn­ ing Music Club. She is active in student activities at the First Bap­ tist Church and recently presented a joint recital there with the music dircetor, Shelby Collier. Although music by her debut composer. Beethoven, is missing from L’Rees Joh nston ’s program, the standard music forms in which he wrote are abundant. Earlier composers, Bach and Scarlatti, are represented by a “F antasia in C Minor”and sonatas. A rondo by Hummel and a noc­ turne and ad agietto by Faure, a contem porary French composer, complete the first portion o f the program. three short A Brahms sonata, one o f his longest and reputedly m ost b eau­ tiful, in F Minor, Opus 5,” will conclude the recital. the “ Sonata Tom m ye Jo Shilling, piano stu ­ dent o f Dalles Frantz, will be p re­ sented in her junior recital Tues­ day aftern oon at 4:15 o ’clock in the Recital Hall. Several years ago, Miss Shilling won the district and state contests sponsored by the National F ed era­ tion o f Music Clubs in both Texas and Oklahoma. B efore en terin g the University, Miss Shilling studied with Ruby Lee Haberlin in Austin. She is now a m ember of the U niversity Musicians and i n ’ the plays Symphonic Band. the French horn Keys From Club Given June 6 21 New Actives Also Announced The an nou ncem en t of n ew ac­ tive Curtain Club members and awards of the Curtain Club keys were made Wednesday night at the Club’s barge party. The key, which is the Curtain Club’s highest award, was present­ ed to Ethel Chappell, who w ill be remembered for her work both on in “N ight Must and back stage I F all,” and to Helen Richardson, playwriting major. N ew active members are Jo Anne Millard, Roy Lee Clark, J e r ­ ry McDonald, Abbe Rae A lex a n ­ der, Mary J o y ce Gerlach, Leroy Smith, Bill P atsy McFarland, Cathey, Glenna Lee Couch, S u z ­ anne Sessions, David Sawyer, Le- nore Sobel, Fannie Wugman, Howard, A nnelle Roquemore, Mary Browning, B etty Bob Knapp, Bar­ bara McMahon, Bertie Nebenzahl, N annette Reese, and Jean Simon- sen. Annell Roquemore received the awarded to Rosemary Davis, the award for ou tstand in g probation­ ary, an award created n 1942 and secretary. present Curtain Club Walter Moore also received the award that year. Mrs. J am es A. Moll, fa cu lty director o f “ Night Must F all,” was elected to honor­ ary membership of th* l>Jb. in V irginia Lipscomb, one o f the leads in “ Skin o f Our T e eth ,” and last production, “ Em ily” the “ The Great C ampaign” was elected president for the 19 45-’46 season at an active m eeting Thurs­ day night. Virginia was vice-presi­ dent this past season. The new board of Governors elected were J e a n n ette Cliff, re­ membered for her perform ances as “ Olivia” in “ Night Must F a ll” in and as Master of Ceremonies the Cabaret Revue; Lyman Rip- perton, who received the key in 1942 and has done splendid work in m any productions, B etty Jo Winsett, blues singer for the Cab­ aret Revue, Cowboy Minstrels, and others; Leroy McFarland, “ Wal- lie” the “ Great C ampaign” ; V-12 Gene Melezco, technical di­ rector of T.S.O. and “ Night Must Fall,” was elected vice-president. in Ensign Valentine Visits Captain Valentine Ensign A. J. V alentine, son o f Captain R. J. V alentine, com m an­ der o f the U niversity naval pro­ is here visiting his fath er gram, since his graduation the United States N aval A cadem y at Annapolis, June 6. from ex with Another T exa s the Eighth Air Force, L i e u t e n a n t Ma r ­ vin L. Davis, is credited with d e­ stroyin g a Messerschmitt 110 on the ground in a recent attack on an airdrome near Prague. in for lead two years the the campus musical production, “ Time S taggers On,” she is the regular vocalist with the N avy Dance the Band, sings constantly Longhorn Room, the campus night club, goes on alm ost all the camp show tours, goes on the air, and just generally sings. Besides this, she is a member o f Pi Beta Phi sorority and has been a Bluebon­ net Belle nominee for two years. at California finds its way into the Texas “ College Capers” this year by w ay o f one Jam es Reed Stone, a V-12 Naval train ee at the U n i­ versity who showed he w as wicked enough with the ivories to make the “ S how tim e” broadcast. Reed lessons is m ixing medicine wth music now during his pre-medca! traning but the music has been taking a leading part in his life since the playful age of five when he started his music in Portland, Oregon. California call­ ed at seven but the lessons con ­ tinued. A f e w years later these lessons payed o f f for he became soloist with the Berkeley Young the P eop le’s Symphony, one o f few am ateur sym phony orches­ tras composed entirely of junior and senior high school students. Reed claims he reached the top here with the playing of Mendel­ ssohn’s “ Piano Concerto in G Min- I N o t long a fter this he played for Pierre Monteux, now conduc­ tor o f the San Francisco Sym ­ phony, who praised his playing then told him to learn some more concertos. About that tim e Reed’s brother, “ Bud,” organized a jazz band and as this band needed a piano man, Bud told Reed he was it. A fter graduation That was in 1941. Betw een band engagm ents, Reed went to Berkeley High School where he was class president fo r two years and stud en t body vice-president | one year. in | 1943, he wfent to the University of California for one sem ester and then reported to the V-12 unit a t ' the U niversity in N ovem ber of 1943. He will finish his pre-med training June 24 and w ill then go to a base hospital to aw ait assign- J m ent to a medical school. Mean­ while “ B ud” Stone and his Or­ chestra are playing a return en- at the gag am en t for Camp Currie in Yosemite N ation ­ al Park. summ er Reed found the N a v y Dance Band at the U niversity alm ost as soon as he g ot there and he has had many solo spots in the Band’s I arrangem ents since he joined in. I The thin g about these breaks i s ! that they are not alw ays played exactly the same w a y twice. Since ! Reed plays by ear, he improvises and makes his own arrangem ents as he goes along. And he also makes orchestral arrangem ents. Reed Stone is 20, has brown hair and brown eyes, and is from Piedmont, California. The U niversity spot the “ Show tim e” broadcasts fo r “ Col- on A ll Their Dreams Came True In 'The Enchanted Cottage’ Tw enty-three year ago “ The Enchanted C ottage” was play­ wright Arthur Wing Pinero’s pep talk to a battle-scarred England. And after a successful London run, Katherine Cornell brought it to Broadway in 1923. A year later movie-goers over the nation were applauding the film adaption with and May Richard Bar!hleme>3 Mc Avoy. it is still on N ow its up for public inspection again. The RKO-Radio production has tried to streamline the aging the old­ plot, but fashioned side. Old fashioned and a hit fantastic, perhaps, but utter­ ..a w a it ly charming. is o f a disfigured The story veteran and a rather homely girl who find happiness and beauty in each other because they are in love. Everyone else sees them as they really are— scarred and plain, I but the;, see each other through their h e a r t s —handsome ar d beau­ tiful. say “ trite” or “ impossible,” but then maybe those people are just je a l­ ous or don’t enjoy the nicest of fairy tales. The story may not be practical, but it is something nice to think about. Some people might Dorothy McGuire and Robert Young bring the same charm to the screen that they brought in “ Claudia.” Miss McGuire, as the plain girl who wanted to “ belong.” I the show and her every owned scene. Young who gave a good performance for the majority of the showr was a bit over-dramatic i in a scene or two, but the general e ffe c t was good. Into the role of the s o m e w h a tj mysterious housekeeper steps a Hollywood necmoer, Mildred Nat- wick who g a i n e d Broadway fame ! in “ Blithe Spirit.” This top-notch | character actress seems to give the play backbone an dperhaps a dash or two more of reality. As always, Herbert Marshall (the blind composer) is good; you know what he says is so just be­ cause of his assuring and soft voice— a good trait for any actor to have. The rest o f the cast doesn’t lag behind— Spring Byinton as the fu'.sy mother who “ oh dears” rather than t h in k s Richard Gaines as the impatient stepfather, Jose­ phine Whittel as the canteen hos­ tess who thinks that a bit of rouge and a bobby pin or two is all wom­ en need to think about. “ The Enchanted C ottage” doe^ not have all-around audience ap­ peal. Realists, non-dreamers, i^n- romantics, or those who sncar at enchantment or magic may shake their heads. This movie for those who believe in dreams, for in fairy tales. those who believe is JEAN' TALLEY Non-Acting Beauties Bother Beautiful Sudan ’ Spectacle Sometim es poor acting in a pic­ ture can be excused because so much attention is placed on beau­ tiful film ing and extravagant dis­ play that the vertuosity o f the actors goes virtually unnoticed. However, the acting ability o f at least two of the stars of “ Sudan” is so conspicuous by its absence as to be almost impossible to over­ look. Universal has made the mistake of trying to let beauty alone be the criteria of excellence in this day of perhaps too critical movie audiences. flail and Maria Montez do a fine job of looking attractive, but lack the fire, an i­ mation and conviction of real ac­ tors. Jon Turhan Bey certainly isn’t up to standard* and seem s a bit out; of his elem ent a fte r the w onder­ ful showing he made in “ Dragon Seed.” Much consideration is due the fact that the parts are only! obviously weakly w ritten — rather stock characters, in many cases. Nevertheless, he m anages to seem real and shows up much better than his colleagues. technical Perhaps it is unseem ly to criti­ imperfections, but cize in the painted backgrounds used the desert scenes were so obvious as to be impossible not to notice. Perhaps the war, (or som ething), has made some studios become I rather careless about such details. it certainly As far as beauty and extrava­ is!! gance go— well, Some o f the scenes are really quite breathtaking. The music, too, in spots is very lovely, when the chorus o f mixed voices rises from a background murmur and swells into a stirring desert song. If beauty and splendor are what is your you ’re after, “ S ud an ” dish— but if y o u ’re too severe an acting critic. BARBARA REYNOLDS let this one go by By E a r l a y n e Black Under protest Beth Butte, U n i­ versity o f Texas “ College (.'apers” winner, gives lier full name as Rose Elizabeth Butte. But no one protests about Beth or her sin g­ ing. The small, blonde with blue eyes and a versatile voice has been g ettin g swoons from the boys and applause from the grls at thie U ni­ versity since she first came to the campus in February o f 1942, to ^tudy voice in the Departm ent of Music. While her mother claims she tarted singing at the age of three, Beth detoured to acting with the Y oung People’s division of the N ew York Theatre Guild when she was thirteen before settlin g dowrn to singing during her junior high in Dallas. There she tried days operettas, in liked them, “ H. M. S. P in afo re ” at Highland Park High School. She also help­ ed in the entertainm ent programs of the school before graduating in 1942. sang in j N ot to get out o f practice the field of entertainm ent, Beth w'ent up to station KRLD in the sum m er of 1943, auditioned, and got the job of vocalist with Shanty Morrell’s Orchestra on a fifteen minute program. This started her ambitions along the radio line and she now plans, a fte r graduation from the University in February of 1946, to go to N ew Yo"k for radio training in the singing parti of it. Beth hasn’t been idle at the U niversity, either. Besides having Professional’ Work Represented In Students’ Annual A rt Exhibit ★ Dressmaking * Designing A T Tots Cr Teens 2 40 0 G u a d a l u p e P h o n e 2 -0 9 6 3 / f ___ Sc. M U ST YOUR CAR L O O K ITS A G E ? N E W S E A T C O V E R S a n d A C O M P L E T E P A I N T J O B C a n r e s t o r e its o r i g i n a l c ol or a n d y o u t h f u l a p p e a r a n c e . JESS A L L M A N G A R A G E F i r s t a n d B r a z o s P h . 6 1 6 6 T l - V S V E ­ in failed Possibly you are one o f the people who wandered into the art the Academic Room, exhibit admired, to admire, and wandered out again without real­ izing that the work is not profes­ sional. The paintings and sculp­ ture o f the advanced students is that good. But if you stopped in the Old Library Building first and saw the “ beginning” o f the annual student art exhibit— the work o f the fresh ­ men and sophomores— you would have been expecting final products. the The portraits, “ modern” land­ scapes, and still Ufos that line the walls o f the Academic Room are oils. Particularly outstanding are the three d ifferen t interpretations of a Mexican man. Two portraits include only his head— the felt hat and big black mustache— but the other is the work o f an advanced student who showed originality by adding a background o f dark clouds and wheat and putting a cane in his hand. Rather paintings, dull characteristic o f colors the form the D I N E A N D D A N C E R e f r e s h i n g d r i nk s C o u r t e o u s S e r v i c e Y o u ’ll a l w a y s h a v e a g o od ti m e at t h e . . . 9 HH 6 1 0 6 D a l l a s H i g h w a y D ia l 2 - 0 4 7 7 J us t O u t s i d e City Li mi ts Deccci Records 1 8 6 5 3 - A S t r a n g e r In T o w n Y o u ’ve L a u g h e d A t Me F o r t h t L a s t T i m e 18658- A F r i e n d O f Y our # All Of My L i f e 1 8 6 7 0 - - D r e a m T h e r e I ’ve S a i d It A g a i n Mel T o m e Bing Crosby Jiminy Dorsey 18672- - B a c k H o m e F o r Keep# AII At Once Ray Armen and Guy Lombardo 4m J