The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, June 20, 1941 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: North Texas Daily / The Campus Chat and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries Special Collections.
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PAGE TWO
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THE CAMPUS CHAT, DENTON, TEXAS. FRIDAY, JUNE 20. IU1
The Campus Chat Visits Campus
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June IS, 1941
The Editor's Desk
By JOHN THOMASON
IT'S TENNIS TIME
Come summer, for the past year or two.
the boys down in the print shop and
around the publication* offices usually
find a little more time off than in the reg-
ular session. Being too active to do noth-
ing at all. they often take their spite out
on the tennis game.
This year in no exception. Charles Dam-
won and Charles Cox, Went Texas' gift to
this part of the college, and our old friend
and tennis foe, Mow Woodson, almost beat
the summer to the draw as they dug up
their racquets and worn-out balls and were
loosening up their joints between sessions
of school in order to get ready for some of
the hot matches that are sure to be played
Things look a little more prosperous
than they've ever been, as far as equip-
ment is concerned. My gi-1 in Dallas sent
us three new balls and Dameron and 1
managed to conclude a little deal with Ber-
nard Flanz for two racquets. This and
Cox's good one has improved our mater-
ials more than somewhat.
I'M AFRAID TO START -
But with all this new stuff on hand, I'm
afraid to get out and do much playing.
True, I have been out twice already
trying to get the feel of things, but at all
times I've been on my guard for fear that
something would happen to me like that
deal Ray Edwards, last year's Chat editor,
and I got roped in on last August.
Mose Woodson had a dollar-arid a-half
idea that he could beat Edwards and me at
the same time. We had to peddle out half
the stock to a couple of print shop hands
before we could get enough money to call
the wager.
After about a week's d"iay, whose fault
it was I will not mention, we got 'he match
played off —Hone Woodson won 6-0. 6-0.
Now here's the point I'm getting at.
Edwards and I hadn't more than cooled
off from that terrible licking until th *
Frognot scribe devotes an entire column
of the August 9 paper to exalting the
beautiful play of his partner to the skits.
I quote a few passages:
"Natural we would have won if John
had played his part. He is jfs slow as six
snails duckwalking on ice. and his serve
is as feeble as a rotten onion rolling up-
hill. His back hand is as accurate as a
blind widow woman shooting a pistol at a
black cat at midnight. His footwork re-
minds a person of a three-legged sick cow
trying to dance in a barbed wire entang-
lement.
"In case my intentions are not plain, the
next time I plan to play tennis. I'll try not
to get a love-sick, tobacco-chewing, air-
fanning, turtle-geared, flop-eared, lipping,
stumbling, stammering partner."
I guess Ray still believes that, because
he hasn't asked me to team up with him
all year. And if a man with the renowned
veracity of Edwards still believes that,
maybe it is best that I stick to washing
dishes for a pastime.
HfiSLY KNOWS HOW NOW—
Randall Seely, the school-teacher-sports-
editor from Joy, reports that he has been
practicing up this spring on some of his
tenth-graders and has now learned to play
the game
He was in my class last year, but if he's
improved as much as he says he has, I'm
going to have to spend about three hours
in the library reading Bill Tilden's "How
To Play Tennis In Ten Easy Lessons" be-
fore I can even talk as good a game as
most of these guys down here.
Bil l, MCRI'HRKK HAS A STORY—
Bill Murphrwr, engraving salesman from
Southwestern Engraving Company in Ft.
Worth, had another of his many tales to
tell when he came up to see the Yucca
editor about next year's contract the other
dar.
It seems that there is an old lady who is
slightly hard of hearing that has a home-
stead down at Brownwood right next to
the Camp Bowie firing range. Now, some
of the army officers tried to get her to sell
her property and move out of danger of
stray missiles, but to no avail.
Finally, one day they line up a battery
of field artillery right next to her house
and fire all of the guns at the same time.
Someone who was inside with the lady re-
ports that she merely got out of her rock-
ing chair, stood up and smoothed the
wrinkles out of her dress, and said po-
iiA-s- IBiWg ->&-•; BRaaaspgs:' .-r
uicir, -
"Come in."
(Any resemblance in this story to any
person living or dead is purely coincident-
al)
Francis Stroup Is Author,
Swimmer, And Song Writer
Sets Scholarship Ed(iforia|) Wards
By NaDEANE WALKER
Francis Stroup, author of our
college fight song, is teaching
swimming si a mtmbtr of the TC
physical education faculty for the
third consecutive summer this
year. I looked him up for an in-
terview after hearing the build-up
the sport* editors were giving him
around the office the other day.
Bennies being a compoaer, a poet,
a pianist, and a former State div-
ing champ, Stroup ia a veteran
teacher in the beat tradition of
North Texaa. Since graduation in
192*. he has taught in s number
of Texas high schools, and has
also taught piano and swimming
to private pupils. I found him at
the recreation pool in a swimming
suit and explorer's white helmet.
Holds R.A. degree
Stroup holds a B.A. degree
from Teachers College and an
M. S. in education from the Uni-
versity of Southern California. He
has taught in high schools at
Golden. Newark, Methodist Home,
and Prosper. He names as his most
outstanding pupil National AAU
_ _ _ * , champion Bob Gentry, a former
Ex Denton Student student of TCHS and the Univer-
sity of Texas.
In 1938 the college sponsored a
contest to select a new fight song.
Stroup's entry won, and was an-
nounced and introduced last year
in connection with the observa-
tion of the Golden Jubilee. He has
a stack this high of his own songs,
K. O. I'ate, ex-student and recent
aviation graduate, visited the cam
put this week before leaving for
active duty in Hawaii.
Graduate Aviator,
Has Faith in U.S.
Back on the Teachers College
campus in the trim uniform of a
second lieutenant of the U. S, Air
Corps, K. O. Pate, who visited his
ulmn mater before leaving June
24 with tactical units of the air
corps for Hawaii, expressed faith
in "Uncle Sam," after naving ob-
served the efficiency anil rapidity
with which the army air corps
is being built up.
Lt. Fate, who graduated with
ti class of 10 cadets at. Brooks
Field May , was interested more
in telling of the advantages offered
for young men entering air corps
training than for stories about
his own experiences. Even those
who "wash out" as pilots, he said,
have opportunities to take up pho
tography, radio, and any number
of interesting fields.
Air Corps training, he said, is
a serious business and therefore
takes up most of the time of the
cadet, hut aside from the interest-
ing aspects of the work itself, the
cadet is allowed a break from the
regular routine on the week-ends.
In San Antonio several rooms of
the Gunter Hotel have been made
into u Flying Cadet Club open to
cadets from Randolph, Brooks, and
Kelly Fields, Fate said. Pool tables,
a dance floor, and many other en-
tertainment features are offered
here.
The Teachers College ex com-
pleted 4W hours of flying before
his graduation from Brooks Field
- flying which included formations
in aerial review with 48 ships and
"rat" racing in which the cadet
attempts to catch a veteran in-
structor and keep clear of other
ships ut the same tinvs). When he
is ready to graduate as u second
lieutenant, the cadet has learned
to use the airplane as a weapon,
radio beam work as an aid in
navigation, and radio code for day
and tught flying. He has acquired
the "neck of an owl" in watching
out for other ships while flying.
Fate sails from San Francisco,
California, June 24 for Hickman
Field in Hawaii. The first three
months, he said, will probably be
a continuation of advanced train-
ing where he will get actual prac-
tice at bombing and other warfare
training. After that time, he said,
he will probably be on patrol duty
around the island or some other
American possession.
Martha Jo Edwards
Marries Holbert
he admits He writes all kinds, but
mostly popular—"Just the type,
not my songs," he hastily amend-
ed. Stroup was also the author of
"Ladies in Wading," which last
summer's students will remember
as a part of the Water Carnival.
Reminded of that, Stroup sighed.
"And now it's nearly time to start
planning another one."
Plays Piano by Gar
Stroup plays and teaches piano
by ear. For his educational phi-
losophy he referred me to one of
his poems, published in the Decem-
ber '39 issue of Texas Outlook.
"Most of my stuff rhymes with
June, moon, and spoon, in 32 bars."
he said, "but this one was really
lenous." I looked it up, and found
a professionally smooth poem in
three stanzas, comparing the flor-
ist and the farmer, carefully nour-
ishing a stalk of corn and a blos-
som, to a teacher who,
"Prods and pulls,
Encourages,
Deflates
and helps boys and girls to attain
new heights."
A real "native." Stroup has liv-
ed in or around Denton since 1910;
he graduated from Denton High
School. Amazed at his list of ac-
tivities, I asked, "Do you do any-
thing else?" And my interviewee
ferinned engagingly, "Sure," he
said, "I wash dishes and mow the
yard-
Off the Campus With the Exes
Another Commencement . . .
and NTSTC has 334 more exes
to go into the teaching field and
other work over Texas and the na-
tion. That 334 is the number of
graduates granted bachelor's de-
grees. Add the 29 graduate stu-
dents who received their master's
and tack them on to the total num-
ber of students who have gradu-
ated in other years from this place
und you'll find that over 8,000 peo-
ple hold degrees from NT8TC. Miss
Esta Willine Graham took her
M.S. degree June 2, the 8,000th
degree granted from this institu-
tion. Taking into consideration the
number of students who dropped
out of school at NTSTC for vari-
ous reasons with only one, two, or
three years work here, NTSTC
has a tremendous number of peo-
ple rooting for her and holding up
the standard.
Take For Instance . . .
Prof. Frank R. Phillips, gradu-
ate of NTSTC, A. & M., and Cor-
nell University, who is manager of
the Western Life Camp for boys
which begins June 23 in the San-
gre de Cristo Mountains of New
Mexico, and H. M. Chapman, prin-
cipal of the Bradfield School,
Highland Park. Dallas, an NTSTC
graduate who will be the director
of the camp. According to the Am-
arillo News-Globe the summer
camp "has set unusually high
standards for its counselors—se-
lecting only those with excellent
cultural backgrounds and with out-
standing records in boys' work-
Western Life this year will be
staffed with the finest faculty in
the history of the camp."
A Ph. D. at 22 . . .
isn't bad on any man's record,
but Robert James Speer of Den-
ton holds the record of being the
youngest student ever to receive
the Ph.D degree from the Univer-
sity of Texas. He took his B.A.
from NTSTC at the age of 18, fol-
lowed it two years later with his
M.A. at the University, and this
year while working on his doc-
torate has been assistant in phar-
maceutical chemistry. With his
Ph. D. degree to his credit, Speer
will go with his wife, the former
BY ONETA ASHLEY.
f Miss Verna Mae Petty, TC grad
At Kaufman Church . n. j., to be a
Martha Jo Edwards, '39 Yucca
favorite and daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Turner Edwards of Kaufman,
was married TtMWiay, Jam 10, to
Joe L. Holbert Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. L. Holbert of Denton. Rev.
Thoma* A. Bonham of Kaufman
officiated at the marriage cere-
mony in the First Baptist Church
of thai «Mk,
Mrs. Curtis Kelley, sister of the
bride, was her only attendant,
whBs J. . jPjftMl of Waao at-
tended the groom as best man.
Both the former Miss Edwards
mid H fit are NTSTC graduates,
Holbert having received the mas-
ter of science and bachelor of
science degrees In the college.
Clinic
Continued from page 1
extended formal greetings by Pres-
ident W. J. McConnell of the col-
lege.
Both in equipment and person-
nel, the college has sought to make
ite library on a par with any de-
partment of the school, President
McConnell told his audience.
The president stressed the point
that though it has often been said
that the library is the center of
college or sub-college education,
too often this ambition has not
been realised.
reseurch chemist for the Analine
Dye Company.
County Attorney . . .
Harry Boyd, NTSTC ex-student,
has been county attorney of Hen-
derson County since January 1,
1939, and according to the Athens
Review has "fulfilled the office and
met the county's legal transactions
with outstanding satisfying abili-
ties."
Uncle Sam . . .
keeps calling on NTSTC exes
more and more often . . . Kenneth
E. Reddy of Bowie, NTSTC grad-
uate and Beta Alpha Rho Beta,
has completed almost two-thirds of
his flight training at Moffet Field,
Calif., and will report shortly to
one of the advanced flying schools
for the final ten-week period of
training . , . Donald M. Crosland
of Mineral Wells was scheduled
to graduate May 29 from the Air
Corps Advanced Flying School at
Stockton Field. Calif. . . . Robert
0. Pate was to have received his
wings and rank as second lieu-
tenant May 29 at Brooks Field,
Calif Grad Bob McCIoud Jr.,
who has been employed in the of-
fice of the Graham Daily Report-
er and the Graham Leader, was
called to service May 27, but hopes
to be transferred soon into the av-
iation service as a photographer.
He pasaed examinations for gov-
ernment photography work recent-
ly . . . Grad Billy Collins, teacher
of civics and band director at the
Sherman High School, resigned re-
cently to take a position with the
Federal Power Commission in
Washington, D.C.
Scanning the News . . .
we find Evelyn Dunn has been
elected editor-in-chief of the "Ca-
rillon," student magazine at Bay-
lor .. . Coach Elmer Brown of the
Martin High School told members
of the Rotary Club in the Plaza
Hotel at Laredo how an athlete is
trained for special events . . . Prof.
Earl Y. Wolford, head of the high
school commercial department in
McKinney, opened the regular
summer school Monday, June 2,
for students who wish to study
stenography, typewriting, book-
keeping, etc.
Teachers and School Heads . . .
Leon Graham, member of the
Mercedes school faculty since 1927,
was recently elected superintend-
ent of the school system . . . Hat-
old L. Smith has been re-elected
for his eighth consecutive year as
superintendent of Tolosa school,
five miles from Kemp, Kaufman
County , . . R. L. Jones, who has
been superintendent at Elmo for
about ten years, has been elected
principal of the Kaufman gram-
mar school . . . Guy C. Pryor, prin-
cipal of the Burkburnett High
School, was elected principal of
the Arlington High School recent-
ly ... P. B. Stovall, all-conference
center on the Eagle football squad
in 1935, has been elected assistant
athletic coach at Marshall high
school.
June and Its Toll . . .
In the spring a young man's
fancy . . . and then comes June
and the time for wedding bells,
and they certainly tolled for TC
exes this year. First on my list
comes the marriage on commence-
ment day, June 2, of my sister,
Blanche Ashley, and another TC
graduate, Darwin Kirksey, both
of whom are spending their hon-
eymoon working toward a mas-
ter's degree at NTSTC . . . Then
they come thick and fast ... Ex
Sherman Clifton to the former
Miss Wanda Lou Martin of Valley
View . . . Miss Mary Kate Evers
of Itasca to Crillon Payne of TC
football fame, coach on the North
Dalla« High School staff . . . two
exes—Miss Julia Faye Lain and
Lloyd Yeager, teacher at B&tson,
who will play professional league
baseball this summer with the Kit-
ty Fulton League ... Ex Welton
Anderson to the former Miss
Thurma Wayne of Nocona . . .
Ex A. B. Lewis, counselor of
the National Youth Administra-
tion in Brenham to ■ Mary-Har-
din-Baylor graduate. Miss Max-
ena Garidy ... Ex Ruth Emma At-
kinson to Etra Dodson of the Dod-
son Brothers grocery in San Be-
nito ... Ex Janie Dawson to Guy
Farmer, ACC graduate ... Ex
Farrell Burnett to Charles E.
Durilap of the William Cameron
Lumber Company staff In Odessa
. , . Ex Ruby Willis to Wayne
Hamilton of Ringgold . . . Ex Ma-
ry Ziegler to Earle E. Smith, own-
er of the Earle E. Smith Jewelry
Store in Coleman . .. Two NTSTC
graduates, Mrs. Vera Owens Bow-
ers and Erwin Ingram Brand, both
members of the faculty at Falfur-
rias . . . .
Ex E. C. Dittrich. coach and
athletic director of the Sour Lake
high school to Miss Ellen Bayrte
Patterson, ex of TSCW and SMU
. . . Ex Marie Sptiier to Glenn Kg-
gen, dental technician in Los An-
geles. Calif. ... Ex Helen Snod-
grass to Cecil B. Ryan, graduate
of the College of Arts and Indus-
tries at Kingiville. and vocation-
By RAY EDWARDS
mm
1 ■BBS
Jack Rohbins. outstanding college
debater at the college who received
his degree here this spring, has
been awarded a scholarship to
the University of Columbia Law
School.
College Debater
Granted Columbia
Law Scholarship
Jack Robbins, June graduate of
the Teachers College and an out-
standing debater at the college
during his college career, was
notified this week by Young B.
Smith, dean of the law school of
Columbia University, that he has
been granted a scholarship in the
school of law for the year 1941-42.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W.
Robbins of 216 Fry.
The scholarship, which was
granted on the basis of nomina-
tion by the Dallas alumni of the
Columbia University law school
and on the recommendation of the
economics and government depart-
ments of the Teachers College,
will cover Robbin's tuition and
legistration fees for the year.
While attending NTSTC, Rob-
bins participated in debate, ora-
tory, after-dinner speaking, and
extemporaneous speaking over the
Southwest, was a member of
"Who's Who in American Uni-
versities and Colleges" from the
economics department in 1939 and
of the Yucca "Who's Who" in gov-
ernment during the 1940-41 school
term. He was president of Pi Kap-
pa Delta, national honorary fra-
ternity in forensics, and a mem-
ber of Kappa Delta Pi, national
honorary fraternity in education.
Farmers
Continued from page I
and goats, the speaker said.
Calling attention to the enorm-
ous expansion in the field of ag-
riculture during the past 30 years,
Davis said that the spread of con-
servation had revolutionized the
agricultural pattern of the nation
and that chemurgic developments
promised even further uses for
agricultural products during the
next few years.
Criddle Society
Elects Montgomery
John Alva Montgomery from
Corsicana was elected president
of the E. D. Criddle Historical
society, Tuesday at the first meet-
ing of the summer at the home of
Dr. and Mrs. L. W. Newton.
L. H. Terrill is the new secre-
tary, and Mrs. Viola Bagwell is
the reporter.
Dr. C. A. Davis, visiting pro-
fessor in the History Department
here from the Junior College at
Edinbury, as the speaker of the
evening, discussed Anne Morrow
Lindbergh's latest book, "The
Wave of the Future."
The next meeting will be Tues-
day, July 8. Refreshments wore
served to about twenty-five old
members and to several new stu-
dents.
al agriculture instructor at Gon-
zales ... Ex Wayne Richardson
to Miss Christine Cobb, ETSTC
ex . . , two NTSTC exes, Miss
Mildred Helms of Celina to
Charles M. Estes of Celina, prin-
cipal and coach in Celina high
school . , .
Miss Opal Kemp to James Mc-
Carley of Trenton ... Ex James
Lee Box, employee of the Cardinal
Oil Company to Miss Lucille Jor-
dan of Iraan ... Ex Barrett Ham-
lett of Denton, employee of an un-
dertaking company in Dallas, to
Miss Alberta Latus of Pampa . . .
Ex Lula Emily Melton to Harlan
Brown of Denton ... Ex Eldean
Morehead to Bill Tom Drake, ex
of W.T.S.C. at Canyon . . . Ex
Jenry J. Houser of the G. N. Mu-
sk Company In Amarillo to Miss
Dorothy Jane Cook of Amariiio
. . . Two exes—Martha Jo Ed-
wards and Joe Holbert, who have
been teaching at Junction . . .
Miss Wynell Pound and Jack Cal-
lan. T.C.U. graduate.
MORE TOll . . .
A lot of folks look down on the people
over home. They say that anybody who
lives off the main road in a place like
Frognot without a great deal to do but
talk about the other people is just about
nuts.
Other people might have newer cars
and shinier shoes than the folks back
home, but for pure original thought, I'd
put some of the people over there up
against anybody.
In the big towns one person does some-
thing like getting a heart bracelet or
something and everybody else does the
same thing-
One person goes to a certain pile of mud
and rocks called a mountain resort for a
rest, and the next year half the town goes
to the same place and does JLhe same things
the first person did.
It ain't exactly that way over home. In
fact, one fellow came up the other day
with one of the most novel and satisfying
ideas for taking a rest that I ever heard
olf
His name was Nunelly Crawford. No-
body ever accused Nunnelly of being
bright. He never could learn to read
small print, and he never inherited any
high culture from Jess and Myrt, his
ma and pa.
We never did have but two rooms in the
school house there at home. Myrt finally
got into the "big room, but Jess never got
out of the room with little kids.
All that was not exactly connected with
the story, but I just wanted to get over
the point that Nunelly's mind never was
hog-tied by any traditional education.
Well, to get down to the story, we
were all settin' around Sabe's store one
dav talking about people going places to
rest. Of course, Macey Scroggins had to
tell about his sleeping during the summer
on a drift down in the Bear Creek bottoms,
but that was not very interesting, for
everybody sleeps on the outside over
there in the summer.
Finally Nunelly got to telling about
what he did when he wanted a rest.
He took a cud of Brown Mule out of his
mouth and studied the shadows to see
how close it was to dinner (12 o'clock, if
you please), but finding it only 11:30, he
put it back in.
"Well," he began, "when I really get to
wantin' to rest, that's jes' what I do.
• I walk off down in Bear Creek bottoms
an' go into the timber. I look all aroun' 'til
I find a log jes' the size I'm lookin' fer.
It is one that I can jes barely lift an' get
on my shoulder.
"When 1 get it on my shoulder, I strike
out walkin'. I walk, en walk, en walk, en
walk til I'm jes dang near plum give out.
'Then I throw it down under a good
deep shade an' set down on it an' pull my
shoes off. When I get to diggin' my toes
in that cool ground and leanin' again' the
body of a tree—by golly, you know, that
is the best dern restin' a feller ever
had!"
A MATTER OF CUSTOM . . .
Another thing about the women's styles
over there at home. I notice the school
teachers coming in here and putting on
slacks the first chance they get. They say
they do it to rest, to feel different.
That would be about the silliest sound-
ing thing they ever heard of over there.
When the women want to rest and feel
different over there, they put on dresses.
They wear overalls and waist pants all
week, and when they wear their dresses to
church, they really feel good.
This church going business is even more
sensible over there. Everybody is always
early. There are two reasons for that.
First, as they only wear dresses on Sun-
day, the women would think it was silly
to have more than one dress.
You take Ma. for instance, she had
her debut in her last new dress in 1931;
so she hasn't had to be late to church in
order to exhibit a new garment in nigh
on to ten years.
The second reason for always being
early is that the preacher always preaches
right up to dinner time. If the women
don't get there early and talk about the
neighbors before the services begin, they
just lose out
Those not present when the talking is
going on really lose out. They don't get to
here the gossip, and nobody will tell them
about it, as it's usually about those ab-
sent in the first place.
But, to get back to styles, that's one
thing I can't get used to over here. Imag-
ine girls running around in the middle of
the week wearing dresses!
When a gal over there takes a notion
to go out and get her a man, she doesn't
try to find out how much he knows, owes
or own- -as it has been hinted other gals
do—but she looks at his size
She either wants a man much larger
or much smaller than she is—that way he
won't always be wearing her clean over-
alls and getting them dirty.
FITTING NAME ...
I saw a joke in some college paper the
other day that somewhat entertained me.
One neighbor goes over to the other
neighbor and asks him if he has a bottle
opener.
"Yes," kindly replied the other neigh-
bor. "but at present he happens to be
off at college."
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Thomason, John. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, June 20, 1941, newspaper, June 20, 1941; Denton, TX. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth313260/m1/2/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.