Clark, Hudspeth, Gooshy, Mims Win! VOL. 56 Price Five C ents 1First Co liege Daily in the South' AUSTIN, TEXAS, THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1957 Six Pages Today NO. 160 Separates As Rain Hinders B y EDDIE H U G H ES victories. Scattered rains only slowed down the turnout of voters Wednesday— 3,207, the lowest in four years— as H arley Clark, Nancy Goosby, and Bud Mims rushed to easy victories while Hal Hudspeth and Don Stodghill managed only the closest of That seemed to be the outcome late Wednesday night in what has been termed as “ the quietest student election on the campus” in many years. ( lark sw ept past Don Hendrix for president, Goosby raced past Marion Simon for secretarv, urncut and Mims defeated Greg Olds for The D aily Texan editor position. Recounts are likely for Hudspeth's 200-vote victory over Pete Gunter for vice-president, and Sto d g in g one-vote edge over Tom Bousquet for chief justice. A V IC T O R Y S H A K E as winning candi­ dates H a 1 Hudspeth, vice-president; Nancy G o o e y , secretary ELd Mims, Texan Editor; and Harley Clark, president see tabulated late W ed nesda/ the t na! balloting motif in texas Union. Active in Politics Photo by Paul D, Hope British Professor Balfour to Talk = On Labor Party Drenching Rains Send Brieh — W. Campbell Balfour, visiting | associate professor of economics, i will deliver a public lecture on , “ The British Labor P a rty " at 8 Rivers O ver Banks B y lh# Av.*/>,■ jate *»’. the .-ole of the in te lle c t^ 1 S / the influence of I S I ! T h . av* ard is made ta award 18 madc * a commit- the recent struggle for leadershin t v 5 e of three faculty members and and the meaning and strength of . , -‘Bovarism ” srrengtn or, all in Central i a S I S ? ^ S" uti’! .Cen!r?' ! L;ike Travis West of Austin was reported rising at the rate of two south 3 feet an hour. The Lower Colorado otherwise scattered ,#r Thured« ’ and R iv e r Authority M id the Peder- nales R iv rr was at f,ood stage, it. ( ’™ rK° ,° w n - I uas ^,|!i raining late Wednesday in Texas, appeared to the watershed and the LO R A was bear the brunt of the flooding. But unable to estimate what the total ' I ' T a" d T p , , * Segregation Bills Voted Out of Senate Committee By The Associated Press The Senate State Affairs Com­ mittee "ed n esd ay night approved t, ,, . . Mr. Balfour w ill set his discuss- lakes rose, streams spilled u over ion against the background of the their banks and rainwater stood in changing economic and political the low p la c e s over wide areas of forces in the w’orld, with special Texas. . —- • -.... - — . I reference to the Anglo-American Guard failed alliance. Mr. Balfour, who was born in Aberdeen, Scotland, was graduated from the Tendon School of Keo- ' nomics and also attended the Uni­ versity of Chicago. At present he is a member of the faculty of the University of South Wales and Monmouthshire. Active in British politics for IO years, Mr. Balfour has participat­ ed on both the local and national levels. He has been a delegate to the national conference on three occasions and w'as a candidate for Parliament in 1951. . . ... six years with the British Com mandos, mainly in the Mediter ranean and in the Balkans. Gov. Daniel "ednesday night authorized “ whatever n a t i o n a I guard units are necessary” to aid in evacuating flood-stricken the Belton and Killeen areas. Little Nolan and Rig Nolan Creeks boiled out of their banks and crashed into the southern and eastern part of Killeen. Flood­ w a te r IO feet deep in some places gushed through the streets. More than 300 persons were evacuated at Killeen. The city got BG inches of rain. At Belton, Nolan Cleek was af its highest level since 1913. Help . was needed to evacuate families ,, Communications to Belton were out and all roads to Belton and Killeen wee* impassable Tele­ phone service to Killeen was er­ ratic. E lectric power w>ent out in Bell County. T,tl„. v von re iiMth ... " orlj ' p r ll ta served bning h„ by Hoodin'; wn,m . , T A L X e S . T . ' S M i n i o n jean l h . I r » on Travis might bo Pedarnaies runs into Lake Travis. ; ers. -rn. " a f e r from rains in the upper Rio Grande Valley continued to pour into the Falcon Reservoir Total storage rose more than 1,000 acre feet, an hour. - - Floodw ater isolated the south­ west Texas town of Medina. Tornado Spotted Two state highway patrol cars tracked a tornado spotted on the ground west of Elgin The tornado damaged an old building and blew a car off the road, but the High­ way Patrol said it didn’t think there were any casualties 1 The approval came on the bills following a 3-hour hearing. Senator David Ratliff of Stam- ford mo\ ed to table a motion by Senator Abraham Kazoo J r . of Laredo to send one of the bills to the attorney general for a ruling its constitutionality. Senators on voted 11-6 in favor of Ratliffs mo­ tion and then gave voice vote pas­ sage on his succeeding motions that the committee recommend approval of the measures. Hazen asked to be recorded as The Weather Bureau at Austin voting no on all Ratliff's motions Displays, Eats O pen First 'B B A W e e k ' April 2 9 Deadline For Three Awards The deadline for submitting nom-, students on campus during his two inations to the Dean of Men for I years here, the M ike Flynn Citizenship Award is April 29. This award is given each year to the outstanding male student at the University. to have a friend is to be one.” Flynn once said, "The only way tee of three faculty members and two students As suggested in the award charter, the committee tries __ , ™ t i? * ® ]® ? . kn,0Wn for cam- to select the outstanding man on campus who most nearly repre­ sents the spirit of Mike Flynn pus son ire and his devotion to the Universtrv. Included with the nomination should be qualifications, honors, and a brief sketch of the nominee. Any male student who has complet­ ed 30 semester hours of academie work in the University with a “ C ” average is eligible. "T ien this award is given, pres­ entations will also be made to two outstanding women students. The Silve r Spurs group presents one to the outstanding woman, and the M arjorie Darilek Award goes to the most outstanding independent these woman. The deadline nominations is April 29, also. for The Mike Flynn Aw’ard was first made m 191k when fellow' students of M ike Flynn from World W ar IT and learned that, he had been killed by a sniper on Sugar lo a f Hill on Okinawa* Flynn , returned . . - Dr. Bopp Outl ines Objectives to BBA “ Time is the most important ele­ ment to an economist, for every­ said Dr. thing depends on it." K a rl Bopp, vice-president of the Philadelphia Reserve Rank, in a speech Tuesday to the faculty of the College of Business Administration and to students of the American Finance Association. D r ^ °P P named five alternative Federal consider and listed the conditions that w'ould permit an easing or tightening of credit, which was con­ sidered related to the objectives. “ If there is to be a stable price level, conditions permitting an easing of credit would have to be declining prices; if there are rising prices, tightening of credit w ill be u e u u most: R °P u!ar objectives that centra! banks must ! necessary,” said Dr. Bopp In L a w School Honor Fraternity i nopposed winners inelud- ♦ i ed Rudy Rochelle for Ranger editor. Bettye Faulk for Cac­ tus editor, and Jill M cM urry for head cheerleader. All three landslide victors took the lead,at the outset and just kept pushing farther into the lead, but ; leadership for vice-president and J chief justice never took any defi­ nite trend. Gunter held the lead during the first two hours of the ballot counting by the A P O ’*, but Hudspeth forged ahead late to stay ; in command. ■ Bousquet had the same fate— leading early, then finding Stodg- hill climbing to regain the lead The unofficial final tabulation had 1.432 votes for Stodghill, and 1,451 for Bousquet, B l I-LE THV — The recount of vote* in the race for chief justice wa* .will underway at 1:37 a.m. Thursday when election officials estimated It would take two more hours to complete It. There was no recount held rac# the vice - presidential In "ednesday night. (S e e P ictu re, P a g e SI 'wnrc (here were no more than two candidates running for any of (he major offices, no runoff w’ould be necessary. Another landslide victory came in the referendum where students w ont ' for by a 5 to I vote. ’ he races for assemblymen went much quieter, although Brunson Moore managed only a two-vote victory’ for the La w School Assem­ blyman over Louis Neumann, a 72- 70 edge. race, The big in Arts and found Richard Keeton, Sciences, M arjorie Menefee, and Terry Mo-* all easy victors Other assem­ blymen winners were John Sauer and Fred Pfeiffer in Engineering; 6 New Chancellors Chosen Owen is a Law Review candi­ date, quizmaster, and a member of Phi Delta Phi. He was awarded a bachelor of arts degree from Princeton University in 1952. Sterling is a candidate for Texas Law’ Review, Freshman American Law Student Association Repre­ sentative, Mid-law Honor Council his bachelor of arts degree here in 1956. Representative, chairman of the Honor Council, Peregrines Consul Awardee, quizmaster, and a mem­ ber of Ph i Delta Phi. He received Bogatto received his bachelor of arts degree from Rice in 1955. H e ! , . is » candidate for the Texas La w “ <*'Orwto»n. Review and a member of Phi Del­ ta Phi. . r , The rise on the north and south forks of the river, which combine , roared d o w n stream to Circleville and Hoxsey lowland residents w e r e where evacuated. , •rn M errill O'Neal, president of the night and will be presented at the MiR<:r B B A Council, has announced that dflnce. They are Bob Laughlin, Goole and Ben Bradshaw i a** Flood T h reaten s Georgetown The flood-swollen twin San Ga-; brie I Rivers burst from their hanks i at Georgetown and chased lowland residents from their homes, ll ide- cookies s p r e a d evacuation downstream was threatened. Thursday 9 a .rn. The B B A Wives Club w ill sell and toffee in Waggoner to 3 p m. Thurs- H all from 8 a.rn day and Friday, Each organization within tho Col­ lege of Business Administration will set up a booth in Waggener H all depicting its purposes, func­ tions, and activities. late Wednesday Several houses were evacuated around Dallas as minor flooding covered much of the city. U S Weather Bureau forecasters said the Trinity would hit 38 feet major flood stage night or early Thursday The individual booths set up by the organizations w ill be judged, and one will be chosen as being the most original and attractive. Judging will be done by a student- faculty committee headed by Dr. Edwin Mumma, associate profes­ sor of management and faculty representative on the council, and in 30 minutes Blanco got 3G and Wimberly the ^ " l e y King, sweetheart of the College of Business Administration. same A .semiformal dance will be held from 8:30 p m. to midnight Frid a y in Texas Union wath music by a local combo. The Blanco R iver was rising and was expected to cause some flood­ ing at San Marcos early Thursday. Residents started to evacuate late Wednesday San M arcos got IG inches of rain late Wednesday. ' New officers of the council for next year were elected Wednesday’ Floods threatened to return to J * ’* % ? £ £ £ ? * ' Assembly Tile outgoing Student Usem M f will wind up its affairs at the last session of the year Thursday night. The meeting will convene at 7:15 p.m. in Union Building 30!. I S g ™ " write-in « » ™ . c y S (over unopposed Leon Whitney) in Archi­ tecture. Joe S te e lie Other write-in votes ranged from Austin Mayor Tom Miller for head cheet leader, to Dr. Logan Wilson and Pogo for Ranger editor. The only comment the write-in \ ictory Stoeltje had was “ I appre­ ciate all the votes indeed.” c j T .. . . . tim slim turnout —19.1 per cent of vice-president the student body—due m ainly to and rlta lrm a n a f lh,. Rota. and bad weather condjtioBt w a J J thp A ppropriation. C o m m u te., M id lowest ainee 1953 when only 3 867 the vote* were cast. In st year the rec- hat he would Blanket organizations requesting a per- rentage of th,,.,, fund. tor nevi ..par ’ ^ * ’ " “ ’ rowest-of-hnargtrs , victory may have come chiefly Dom hi< tremendous support from f ax appropriations to | ord of 6.905 was set report „ „ BUI Dykes, Education, has the “ B B A ” school, where he scored submitted a bill which relates a 381 to 221 vote victory, but Bous- t«> Freshman C ouncil elections, quet rallied on the strong support The Assembly will undoubted- from the Arts and Sciences voters iv move to suspend rules so who went 540 to 451 in his favor, that the bill m ay be brought up Even other boxes went definitely for second reading and voted on one way or the other for the two at this evening's meeting. rh cf justice candidates, but in th* ♦•end it came out a near even total. Phar 69 79 F. Arts 8-1 24 Grad 42 37 Edna 189 55 Totals 2.043 1,033 Clark Hendrix . Gunter Hudspeth Simon Goos by Bousquet Stodghill Olds Mims Rochelle Faulk Mc.Murry Referendum: For Against Unofficial Election Returns Arch 62 13 31 42 12 62 23 46 19 53 59 61 62 53 l l AAS 735 303 544 499 304 724 540 451 321 699 864 888 882 742 123 B B A 436 220 330 299 221 390 221 381 210 399 514 531 531 412 IQI Eng 246 133 174 204 115 262 154 192 122 240 298 308 309 258 55 69 74 43 97 75 60 38 101 115 121 109 109 14 Ka 180 169 1(6 265 99 205 236 127 IOT 2u8 230 241 206 226 117 45 54 22 74 48 45 33 65 83 SS 91 75 l l 37 40 14 56 35 32 29 47 51 50 45 47 23 119 124 73 160 119 318 51 186 215 221 221 180 IO 1,456 1,601 903 2,030 1.451 1.452 9V*4 1,998 2,439 2,514 2.466 2,102 454 A R C H IT E C T U R E : Stoeltje 41 Whitney 32 B B A : Love 278 Lerner 187 M iller 232 DeVries 152 Laughlin 190 P H A R M A C I ; Brunson 90 Clarke 17 Adamo 41 G R A D U A T E : Grocer SS Cook 35 Bradshaw 14 E N G IN E E R I N G : Griffith 131 Sauer 201 Pfeiffer 154 H arrell 126 E D U C A T IO N : Ross 110 Cain 126 L A W : Moore 72 Kealey 45 Blumentritt 34 Shrull 56 Neumann 70 F IN E A R T S: Spelce 93 AUS: Henry 344 Meneiee 549 Keeton 676 Stanley 363 Roosth 232 McCall 506 E D W A R D BARN ETT R IC H A R D B O G A T T O D AVID O W E N --------------------- ----------------------------------------— ROBERT REYNOLDS ROSS STERLING BARNEY YOUNG and Chancellory highest honorary fraternity of the School of Law-, tapped six new members recently. Chosen on the basis of scholar­ ship, personality, achieve­ ment. the new Chancellors are B arn e y Thornton Young, grand chancellor; Robert B. Reynolds, vice-chancellor; Edw ard W illiam Barnett, worthy keeper of the Pe- regrinus; David Robert Owen, clerk; and Ross N. Sterling and R ichard Paul Rogatto, Chancellors at large. Young who reserved a bachelor of arts degree from Yale U niver­ sity in 1955, is a candidate for the Texas Law Review', a member of P h i Delta Phi legal fraternity, and a quizmaster. Reynolds attended the U niver­ sities of Colorado and Texas, re­ ceiving his bachelor of arts degree in 1957. He is a member of Phi Delta Phi, a quizmaster, and a candidate for the Texas Law- R e­ view’, Barnett is a member of the edi­ torial board of rh* Texts I^ w R e ­ view and of Phi Delta Phi. He re­ ceived a bachelor of arts degree from Rice in 3955. Engineers W ill Choose Sweetheart Thursday One more election comes up Thursday as the campus engineers go to the polls to choose Miss E n ­ gineer. Voting w ill take place in front of the Engineering Building from 9 a.m. to 4.30 p m. In the race are Dianne Denton, nominee of electrical engineering students; Betsy Blanton, chemical engineering; Sharon Henson, civil and engineering; Cynthia Lee, mechanical engineer­ ing; Ja c k ie Booth, aeronautical engineering; and Joan W are, pe­ troleum engineering. architectural M iss Engineer will be announced F rid a y at the Engineers’ B all, to be held in the City Coliseum. Van K irkpatrick and his orchestra-will play for the dance, which w ill be from 8 p.m. until midnight. B A M C Game Drowned Out; TOU Up Next Heavy rains caused cancellation for the second time of Texas’ gam* «with the Brooke Medical Center Comets of San Antonio Wednesday afternoon. Rain also took the m eas­ ure of the Texas Freshman gam e || ! with Travis High School of Austin. I J Head baseball coach Bibb Falk I I said W ednesday that neither the j | , Brooke gam e ©or the one with I i Travis would he played, I Falk w as undecided about pitrh- H era to start against Texas Christ- ian in Ft. W o rth Friday an d Satur- * II | day afternoons. H a r r y T a y lo r and I h H o w a rd Reed, to p c a n d id a te s for I i the s t a r t i n g ro le a g a i n s t B rooke, r will m o s t likely see actio n a g a in s t I • the Homed Frogs. F a l k added th a t I T a y l o r a n d Reed m a y be s t a r t e r s , ■I t h a t w ould be rn m a d e up, th e T e x a s m e n t o r a d d ed , * ; are a tw in bill w ith B aylor, T his set of g a m e s w ould be p la y e d af* fe| ter the regular season ended. ■ T h e only g a m e s Bold Ruler Leaves NY Bound for Derby Thursday, April 25, 1957 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 ------------------- P a r t i n g S h o t s ---------------------------------------- UT Golfers Spent Holiday on Links B y JO H N ' H O B B S T e x a n Sport* Staff W ith tra c k an d field w orld records flying h ith e r and th ith ­ e r, th e tim e co m es to talk of a n o th e r spring sport, golf, and th e L onghorn golfers. C aptain K irb y A ttw ell and his m ates, Don Pohl, T om m y S eekatz, Bob N elson and Sonny Rhodes, have ripped all but one opponent a t th e ir A ustin hom e and now stan d in con­ te n tio n t i t l e . T h a t o n e th e conference* - - o • •_>, the books a n d profs l o s s , 4 'H o r n s for the Speers the season Tile t o B a y l o r ’s B e a r s w a s In a p la y e d in th e g iga ntic S outhw est- r>on-conference m atch played e a r l y errs In te rc o lle g ia te o v e r H ouston s in th e hon e co u rs e of the m e e t w in n e r ta k e n B e r g s t r o m A ir F o r t e B ase T rin ity , Southern M eth o d is*, Ar- U n iv e rs ity of H o ulton . T he T e x a n s finished the th r e e -d a y m e e t with a k a n s a n and K a n s a s to the c le a n e r s o v e r the Austin M u n ic ip a l links and train is. w hich w a s total of 1,192 Saturday travel to th e Land of the cood enough for fourth p lace be- I 191 a n d A g e e s to b a ttle AAM h av e P in e F o r e s t C ountry Cl P i t t s b u r g h ! .VUU It HAN Wed nf", ds \ N ew Y o r k a, B a lt Bojo on 4. W a s h i n j D e t r o i t fit C h ico g K a n s a s C i t y IT. 0 Mural Schedule HORSTSHOTS 5 4— S u m n e r \ s. A bles, Neil T u r n s va. W i n n e r Hall a n d M c G ree vy ; T o m m y T u r n s \ s Alt weir.: H o w a r d vs, Zru - b eek; L ic h t * vs H a l o s ; C l a r k vs Gol- b u r g ; 4 an — W i n n e r Kelly-Hail vs. W i n n e r S w e e n e y - P r l c e ; W i n n e r Nelson- Cloveland i s . W i n n e r C o b b - H a r rt s : W i n n e r D a v I s- H a m m o n d vs. W i n n e r Ro oney-C ole; W i t b o r n vs. Rosburg Rh o d e s vs. D y e r : P i e r c e vs, Gains. I *ee vs, C u m m i n g s ; Miller vs. W i n n e r L l n d e r - J o r v n C o oper vs R u t ­ ter ; S e a r c y vs. W il l i a m s Kelly vs. S p iv ey ; C o t t o n va. W i n n e r S i o k e r - C a gle : 5 IO—W i n n e r M c l n n e s - F l o w e n i vs. W i n n e r Kopr. Norman K. Wagner, re­ search meteorologist for the E lec­ trical Engineering Research Lab- oratory' at Balcones Research Cen­ ter, will describe such an appara­ tus and its use at the meeting of .the Central Texas branch of the American Meteorological Society Friday at 8 p.m. in Experimental Science Budding 223. I Highlights of the recent Chicago meeting of the society w ill also be reported by D r. Wagner. At the I niversity of Chicago experiments are being conducted using rotating dishpans filled with various fluids : to simulate the earth's atmospher­ ic motions. Rotating dishpan apparatus re­ cently built by meteorology stu- . dents at the University w ill be dis­ played, and a non-teehnical dis­ cussion on atmospheric modeling techniques will be supplemented with a color movie. I tsgsSsS* i ASC's Fight Looks Doomed State Commission Postpones Decision It looks as if Arlington State's fight to become a senior college is going to fail. elevate if passed, The ASC B ill, which Is In the House State Affairs Committee, could, the school’s status from a junior col­ lege to an accredited four-year institution. However, Representa­ tive Jim Moore of Arlington, spon sor of the bill, said Tuesday that the State Commission on since Higher Education had postponed delivering an opinion on the mat­ ter, he would not push the bill any further. The Commission’s announcement that it needs more time to study the situation practically closes the door on Arlington State's hopes and delays possible passage of the bill until the 1959 session of the Legislature. Stormy student demonstrations, highlighted by effigy hangings and I torchlight parades, protested the j Commission’s decision. Throwing more flames on student feelings, ■ boo! officials impounded an - -sue of the campus newspaper for print­ ing a picture # of a recent effigy- 'hanging Cuss W o rd s Cost In Prather Hali's Cleanup Campaign FC Scholarship Deadline Friday A campaign to clean up the the language of residents of bottom floor in section I of Pra­ ther Hall is on. The men on the floor have signed an agreem ent stating they will pay 2 cents every tim e they utter “ an unclean w’ord or phrase hereby defined as a word or phrase you would not say in from of your mother or a minister ” Each signer is bound by the agreement to see that 2 cents is deposited when he hears a sign­ er -ay an unclean word or phrase. The agreement will hp terminated when as manv as five of the signors agree on it. Hie agreement has been in ef­ fect almost a week, and the little tin can hearing the in­ scription “ Right here, you sin­ ner. Shame on you,” conto nj almost $1. What will the money collected'’ They will have a party with it, of course happen to M an or W om an M ay Be Selected Application deadline for the an­ nual scholarship given by Inter- fraterr.ity Council has been extend­ ed to Friday. Competition Is open to University students, men or women. Presenta­ tion is based on need, campus par­ ticipation, and grades. Students m ay get an application form Sn the Dean of Men’s office. Speech Building 102, A small pic­ ture of the applicant must be sub­ mitted with the application. scholarship The amount of the scholarship is not yet known. M embers of the IFC com m ittee are Ken Soldier, Bob Raekley, Jack Riley, and G e o r g e Schneider, chairman. Dean is the faculty sponsor. Ja c k Holland What Gees On Here _ rn ■ I*,... r n ---1— & . * % v r e M - ar \ *, I'M Ti -I • Jy r \ ^ I TH E D A IL Y T E X A N Page ( Thursday, April 25, 1957 Hughes to Participate In Scientific Meetings Dr. Darrell S Hughes, professor of physics, will participate in sev­ eral scientific meetings in U'ash- ington, D. C., and Pittsburgh through May 4, Shock \ \ aves and Metals" wall be the topic of his paper which will be presented Friday to the American Physical Society. And • ue - lay at a meeting of the Amer­ ican Geophysical Union he will dis- c iss Igneous “Density of Basic Rocks at Extreme High Pressure.” This is one of our famous , ; i 4 n * e i a Hiq n o ’ iity Loudspeakers i i i : lib* .r& w ; i I k J I A f . . ? I - f i l C O N G R A T U L A T IO N S are In c rder for the rew C h ief Justice. ' cm Bousquet and Den Stodghill d o the honors. S*odghis! copped I 452 vo*es to Bousquet s 1,451. A re ecu-4- probably will be held +o determine the wincer. 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SPEEDWAY — SALES & S E R V IC E - H IG H FID ELITY AT R E A S O N A B L E PR IC ES 20 IO Speedway G R 8-6609 tee live of the A ir,” Music Build­ ing Recital Hall. 8:15—ACT p r e s e n t s “ Janus,” T F W C Building. Single Breasted Suits made from doubles • A lteration s • Repairs A N D Y ’ S Expert ra z o rin g IS 12 Guadalupe — GR L-S067 EXPERT SHOE REPAIR • Modern Eq uipment O Keys M ad s • 10% OB Goodyear Shoe Shop Off the Drag on 23rd Strset m i f i t ? ) ''I k I ' f i W E RENT ‘EM! ,$ 3 l t u x e d o s $6 00 Complete w ith Accessories CROWN TAILORS 408 E. fish C R 7-6703 You’re A lw ays Right in focus when you look your well-groomed best! a 1 Thursday 8-6 -Exhibit by art faculty, Music Building loggia. 9-11 -Snack sale, Home Economics Building basement 9-3— B B A Week exhibits, Waggoner Hall. 10— Mrs. CHII Abraham to speak on "'nip Status of Women in the Middle East,” < I arri son Hall 215. 3-5— Exhibit cd paintings by Peter Hurd and San Antonio artists, Laguna Gloria. 3— Debate workshop, Speech Budd­ ing 201 1 Dr, Nathan Sharon to speak on "Science in Israel," Experimen­ tal Science Building 223. I Dr. Simon Btesh to give public lecture on "Preven tive Medicine in Israe l," Geology Building 14. 4 45—Co-ed Forum, Eugene C. Barker Texas History Center. 5 Home economics style show, Home Economics Building patio. club 7 - Cl r i' Man Sc if tv e O resnizaiion 7:10 and 7:30 - "U niversity High* 2328 Guadalupe, lights," K T EC . 7:30- Southwestern Rocket Society', Experimental Science Building 223 7 :30—Austin Stamp Club trading session, downtown Y M CA 7 :45 — “ University Newsbeat,” K Y FT. 8—Concert cf French m usic for benefit of Aaron Schaffer Me­ morial Fund, T F WC Building 8 Public lecture by W Campbell Balfour on “ The British Labor P a rty ,” Architecture Building | 105 8:15—Sigmund Spaeth, “ Tune-De-! UT, A &M Pistol Teams Take Honors in Austin Pistol teams of the United States Army M ilitary District, Texas, won honors in the recent annual spring* pistol shoot of the Austin Rifle a u h . Representing The teams, firing under the Na­ tional Rifle Association classifica­ tion system , won the center lire, placed first, expert in .22 caliber firing, and first expert and first m arksm an in the .45 caliber firing. the m ilitary dis­ trict were Maj. Clarence L. Siefert. Capt. CasUear Middleton, 1st Lt. R o b e r t L. Schroeder, M/Sgt. Jam es B. Archer; Col. Ralph A. Tolve. M/Sgt. Irving T. Cutter, and SFO Leo P. Joron, all of Army Reserve Officers Training Corps at the University of Texas. Col. Henry L. Phillips and Capt. Kermit D. Reel of Arm y ROTC at Texas AAM also participated. TUXED O S F O R R E N T A l] Sizes Longhorn Cleaners 2538 Guadalupe Phone G R 6-3847 SEN D A L L Y O U R C L O T H E S TO Western Ha ta— Sh irt* Su its— Je a n s Ja c k e ts — S k irts Ladies* B a rs Gloves— Beits Shoe Repair CAPITOL SADDLERY 1614 Lavaca * J a m e S t f e a c j C a u n d r y CL caners rn a n cJ 14th & Red River G R 8-2586 Si,Si. . . Es Deliciosa! El Mal 504 EAST AVE. GR 7-7023 El Toro 1601 G UAD ALUPE GR 8-4321 Monroe's Mexican Food to Take H om e’1 * 500 EAST AVE. GR 7-8744 miracle Dacron and cotton wash-n-wear A -ew Travel-Weave suit by P dm Beach that gives you that c ear, cod, freih 'ook all summer. Completely washable and styled with t I the famous Palm Beach tailoring features. Th’s three button flap pocket model in a bare'y visible Stripe pa He *n -avy cr brown. Men’s Clothing, Street Floor $39.95 H u it h in lllK L Tnt SMAMTisr Aooacss on consscss avis us LISTEN W E E K N IG H T S T O " K N O W " R A D IO AT 8 P.M . TO Y O U R A L L - R E Q U E S T " T E E N - T IM E T U R N T A B L E " TWjd*y, Apr* 25. 1957 THE D AILY TEXAN Pag* 4 Little M a n O n the Cam pus B r B ib le* Leadership v.Representation Som etim es leaders of the people must choose between sheer representation and leadership. This was the gist of a speech by one of the presidential candidates at Stump Speaking tw o nights ago. We think there was much merit in what he said. Student president Lloyd H ayes and his administration cam e in for a good deal of direct and indirect criticism during the campaign for the stand taken on the proposed tuition increase— a stand which Is a case in point of choosing leadership rather than sheer representation. W hile there is not doubi that no stu­ dent—or anyone—wants to pay $25 more for anything he is getting, the fact re­ mains that he does pay m ore for every­ thing else he is getting these days, A United States office of Education re­ port, findings of which appear on this page. show*s that the am ount students spend in attending college has doubled since 1939-40. The present tuition rate w as set in 1933 — even before the 1939-40 report cited in the study. It seems, as the Texan has stated before, only reasonable to adjust the 1933 rate to contem porary realities. This is reasonable, that is, if one operates on the p r e m ie that it i« proper for the person receiving the benefits of such edu­ cational services to pay a slight portion of the costs of them. If, on Hie other hand, you suppose that higher education is a service which the state should perform gratis, either for all its citizens or for those most nearly equip­ ped to receive such service, then the $25 tuition should have been target for hot and heavy criticism Song ago. Such criti­ cism w as never heard. Senator Jarrard Seerest, who is spon­ soring House Bill 265 in the Senate, said in Com m ittee hearings where students ap­ peared to oppose the bill, that if the Sen­ ate voted down the bill, a new’ one should be the present tuition. introduced abolishing “Right or wrong,” Senator Seerest said, “the state has never taken the position that students were entitled to education without any cost.” An argum ent can be made for having no tuit ion at all and we hope someone will make it as Senator Seerest suggested if H.B, 265 does not pass. But in the light of the rise in the cost of everything since 1933 and the University's critical needs for money, if $25 was a reasonable and proper tuition in 1933, $50 seem s reasonable to­ day. In citing these farts in the face of large­ leaders sheer leadership Mature ly emotional protests, dem onstrated a choice between representation and leadership prevailed. student Firing Line & ' W e S e r v e ’ . In s p irit of To the F .dito r: the w o r d s t h e p en n ed b v a fam ous E n g li s h b a r d . “ I w e n t into a public-’o u s e to g et a pint ’o beer. The p u b li­ c a n ' e u p a n ' *ez- We s e r v e no . ” c o n s id e r . r e d - c o a ,c h e r e ' the repent via rn at Am erica's ffifxt unpopular pre vent-day in­ stitution—t i l e p e a c e tim e soldier. th e se r g e a n ts h a v e no t h c r Im p r e s s iv e d e c re e * a f t e r n a m e s n or a r e th e y included rn the n e b u lo u s r a n k s of the ' g e n ­ tl e m e n . " ev en b v an pet of Con­ g re s s. T h e i r p a y likewise i« not v e ry i m p r e s s i v e . but of c o u r s e it would not b e a d v is ab le to p a y su ch p a r a MU’* th e e c o n o m y a w a g e c o m p a r a b le to factors of T ru e , Official Notices T h e C la s s if ie d F erscn n e! O ffic e t h e U n iv e r s it y re* • rn Iv r e le a s e d i m m e ­ ,'nb o p p o r t u n i t i e s lis t o f r f a d i a t e l y a v a ila b le Ail o f th e s e c r e t a r y and iH-s’tio n s are op en fo r fu ll-tim e e n j o y m e n t w ith o n e e x ­ c e p tio n T w o p o s itio n s are Xcr a d ­ s e n io r m in is t r a t iv e e ie r k -ty p U t , n o t a llo w in g s tu d e n t vs ive* to a p p ly O th er o p e n in g s a r e t o r s e c r e t a r ie s , s e c r e t a r i e s , th r e e -q u a r te r tim e B e e m a n , c le r k - tr a n s c r ip t e x a m in e r , h o u s e ­ ty p is t . a r c o u n t - k e e p e r an* an d r e s e a r c h a ssista n t c o m p u tin g clerk s e n i o r S a la r ie s v a r y w ith q u a lific a tio n s an d e x p e r ie n c e . F u rth er saiar- . an d o u a iific a t m n he o b ta in e d th e C la ssified P e r so nrt el O f f i c e . M a i n B u i l d i n g 2302. • in fo r m a tio n m ay fro m T h e s e m i - a n n u a ; F o r e i g n S e r v i c e O ffic e r E x a m i n a t i o n w ill b e g ' v e n bv t h e D e p a r t m e n t of S t a t e o n . l u r e 24 a t m o rt t h a n ho c e n t e r s t h r o u g h ­ o u t t h e I S. T o be e l id ib le t o t a l e t h e e x a m i n a t i o n , c a n d i d a t e * m u - t b p a t l e a s t if* y e a r s of a g e a n d u n ­ d e r 31, a n d m u s t a ls o he A m e r i c a n tea-? 9 ' c a r s s t a n d i n g c i t i z e n * of at Ai t h o u g h a . .n d,i s: e s s p in -e 1 h o t b e a c i t i z e n o n t h e d a t e o f t h e e x a m i n e , » n c i t i z e n s h i p m u s t h a \ e b e e n o b t a i n e d p r i o r lo th* d a t e o f t h e o f f i c e r a a p p o in tm en t be A p p l i c a t i o n f o r m s m ay o h i n t h e S t u d e n t E m p l o y m e n t ts ir u - d B u r e a u o r bv w r i t i n g to t h e B o u r d o f Examiners F o r e i g n f o r S e r v i c e , S t a t e . W a s h i n g t o n 25 D C , T o e c l o s i n g d a t e is M ay 1. 3957. t h e a p p l i c a t i o n D e p a r t m e n t f i l i n g t h e f o r o f • Regilt rn Pun for the First Term o f "111 t h e 1957 S u m m e r S e s s i o n o c c u r o n T u e s d a y . J u n e 4. A n y s t u ­ d e n t w h o h * s p r e v i o u s l y a t t e n d e d T h e U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s m a y re- c e i v e h i s F i r s t T e r m 1957 S u m m e r S e s s i o n C o u r s e C a r d a n d R e g .vi r a - t 1 nn Time Assi zn.-rn re bv mad by is fillin g t h e R e g . m a i l a b l e a : i s t r a r T h i s m u s t be d o n e n o t l a t e r t h a n M a y 4. in an a p p lic a tio n w r i c h t h e Office of John W B row n A s s i s t a n t R e g i s t r a r a n d R e g is tr a tio n S u p e r v is o r r o b l e e n lig h ten ed e d u c a t o r s T he e d u c a tio n th e y e r e bn- p a r o n g isn't ev e n v e r y i m p r e s ­ sive, only h o w to p ro t e c t o n e a life in event of w a r. a n d d efen d the c o u n tr y a g a in s t foreign in­ v ad ers . N oth ing to c o m p a r e w ith such lofty and u se fu l s u b j e c ts ** Latin, G re e k a n d a n c ie n t h ir- t o n a t e r n h l e fhev a r c ftgd jn p ^ h t 0 f the o t h e r h and . S o d e rid in g not to ” i \ P people who a r e not p r o f e s s o rs a n d only w ork h e re p a r k i n g p e r m i t s "t not re ally they a r e not p a r t i c u l a r l y fa c t ed u c a te d , n o ta b l e < • i m p r e s ­ sive This is p a r t i c u l a r l y t r u e in the ca«p of th e s e r g e a n t s Af’ er tax all b u rd e n a lr e a d y , an d th e y don t s e n c a v e ry useful function rn the s o c i e ty —o n ly go o ut and die for it at any g iven m o m e n t so re q u es te d But on is ft p a r t i c u l a r l y noble of th e high- m in d ed u l t r a - s o p h i s ti e a ted a d ­ th e m m in is tra tio n the the c a m p u s rig h t to p a r k on th e i r d u tie s while p e rf o r m i n g here, on such a s h a b b y p seu d o ­ intellectual th e i r r a t e of p a y for s e r v ic e s p e r ­ form ed o r lack of l i t e r a r y title s ? for o u r noble e d u c a t o r s and e q u a ll y no­ ble civilian p o p u la tio n . T h e s e r ­ g e a n ts h a v e o n e s m a ll c o n s o la ­ tion for in th e w o rd s of Kip ling •—" I t '* T o m m y this, a n ' T o m m y thai a n - T o m m y go a w a y But it * Thank you. Mr. A tk in s ' to p la y when the b and begins sn o b b e r y as to d e n y c h e e r s th r e e Web E D D C LA R K I / e t T h e n 1 B e L i ^ h t T o ’h e E d i t o r : As a s u p p o r t e r a n d a p p r e c i a ­ to r of the d r a m a p r o g r a m since th e d a y s of S ta r k Young, b e f i r e the b e g in n in g of a n o t h e r d r a m a ­ tic sea son I wash to r e g i s t e r a p rotest a g a i n s t b eing fo rced to sit in s e m i - d a r k n e s s and s t ra in m y eyes to r e a d the p r o g r a m . I h a v e tw ice p ro t e s te d to the D r a m a D e p a r t m e n t and been in­ fo rm e d a s fo l lo w s ; " T h e lig ht­ ing .situation in H ogg A u d ito riu m is not s a tis f a c to r y . When the 'dowm li g h ts ’ in the ceiling w e r e Installed th r e e y e a r s ago. it w a s t h e m on a n e c e s s a r y s e p a r a te circuit an d T h ey m u s t be cut. of t before the to put sw itc h P E A N U T S TI WHAT 6 THE MATTER WITH VOV, SCHROEDER? THAT'S THE THIRD GROUND ©ALL YOU'VE MISSED TODAY! r e g u l a r lights in h e a u d ito riu m an d th e s t a g e lights a re tu r n e d i o u h a v e not enough on. T h u s light. T h 's situ atio n cannot; be r e m e d ie d w i t h o u t ex cessive r n - ’ *' so m e fu r th e r [ s u s p e c t ho w ev er, t h a t th e r e reaso n m a y he c o nn ected w uh production an d cannot w ho lly ex cu se the D e­ p a r t m e n t of D r a m a . The o t h e r night w e sa t for half an horn' before the p la y b eg an a t t e m p t ­ th o ug h ing to re a d the p r o g r a m the th* v h n l e t i m e s t a g e w-as u nligh ted At n e o t h e r m e e tin g rn H ogg a r e such con dition s o f e y e s t r a i n p e rm itte d . And sn [ ap pe al from the D e p a r t m e n t to C a e s a r the a d m i n is tr a t io n to r e m e d y th e situation . Let th e r e be light. K M. C LA R K vc Fund for A w a rd * I To th e E d i t o r : to such To m \ kno w led ge only a w a r d s In re th e I F C -P a n h e lie m c V a r ­ sity C a r n iv a l F u n d , w h y not set the e n ti r e a m o u n t up in a hind to be u se d for p re s e n ta tio n of a n n u a l a w a r d s to o u ts ta n d in g m e m b e r s of the T e x a s faculty** th e a r e I ^ m S c a r b r o u g h d e s e r v in g p re c e n te d fa c u lty m e m b e r s . th e s a m e selection m e th o d s a s t h a t a w a r d IO s e r ie s of a w a r d s of $500 e a c h could be e s ta b lis h e d for six y e a r s at le a s t out of ex istin g funds Then e a c h y e a r s p ro c e e d s could be ad d e d to th e fund la sting p r o g r a m o f real con trib utio n by all G re e k s to the No. I p ro b le m of o u r U n iv e rs ity . to c r e a t e a 1'sing s o m e a If G r e e k o rg a n iz a tio n s could co m e f o r w a rd with a p r o g r a m , b esides p e r h a p s being a n u cle u s for o th e r g ro u p s d oing the s a m e , we w ould be brin gin g g r e a t c red it to the G r e e k S y s t e m — too often lau g h e d off as " M ic k e y .Mouse " I don t feel the o th e r p ro je c ts m e n tio n e d u n d e se rv in g it s e e m s to m e that h ere is a pro- g r a m c r y i n g for such o r g a n i z a ­ tional supper t a s G re e k s c a n give. but A fte r all. if T e x a s stud ents a r e to help o u r school fa c u lty intangible b e n e ­ not willing m a i n ta i n a • with all fits!, w h o will b o ” first-cla ss the R O B E R T T DAVIS I SUPPOSE YOU'RE GONNA SAY IT TOOK A BAO ^ 80UNCE AGAIN, HUH?! vj ^ *T TAKE IT YOlTVe JUST ECeNTLY LEARNED TO PANOS/ n a 17 Y e a rs in is ca tio n tho first c o m p r e h e n s iv e siuri.v of how m u c h it costs an u n ­ d e r g r a d u a t e student to a tt e n d col­ lege and w h e r e he g e ts die m o n e y . E x p e n d it u r e s p e r stu d en t r a n g e d fro m $200 to $5,500 p e r y e a r . F o r th e m ddle half of the g ro u p sur- \ ey ed, the ra n g e w a s h o rn $815 to $1 708 and includ e f. jg u res in s tru c tio n a l ro o m , h o a rd , n a v e ' living c o sts — clothes, re­ c r e a t io n a n d e n t e r t a i n m e n t — an d ed u ca tio n a l costs of tuition, fees. hooks supplies an d e q u ip m e n t B a s e y e a r the s u r v e y w a s to o k I'152-53 P r o j e c t i o n s the B u r e a u of L i hor a n . > ac co u n t S t a t is ti c s ’ co-t-nf.living index an d als o the r i s e fees a n d o t h e r college r o o - fo r 1057 tuition for in net rn.m o n s ta.x-su pp orted living co sts t h e rn A? re p r e s e n te d 1952-53. iota! stu d en t e x ­ five-sixth* o ' p e n d itu re Af p riv a te institutions, the su r v e y r e v e a l e d that t w o third* of l r mg costs. the m ta l w a s spent on \ ve r a g< tuition a n d fees at p ub ­ lic colleges w a s a b o u t $175 and a ’ p r i v a te institution s about $$50 that ye a r S tu d e n ts living xx uh th e ir p a r e n t s ar th a t tim e spent an a v e r a g e of $1,000 a v e a r, It c o st a b o u t $350 m o r e for a stu de nt to l o p in som e o t h e r p r i v a te h o m e o r d o r m i t o r y an d a n o th e r $300 to live in a club, f r a te r n i ty , o r so r o rity house T en p er cent of the m en s t u d e n ts an d 8 p er cent of th e w o m e n polled fam ilie* with a n n u a l w e r e fro m in c o m e s o f th a n $3,(XKI. T h e less a v e r a g e fa m il y in th e lowest fam ily in c o m e g ro u p d e v o te d a b o u t one- to e x p e n s e s of fifth of its in com e th e h ig h e r a child sn college. In in co m e g ro up s, th e a v e r a g e w a s less th a n on e-tenth. F a m i l i e s supplied 41 p e r ce nt of th e m o ney fo r die college s t u d e n t s ; 29 p e r cent c a m e from s tu d e n ts ' ow n s a v i n g s ; and stu d e n ts e a r n e d 17 p e r c e n t a f t e r e n te r in g college. O th e r s o u r c e s w e r e sc h o la rsh ip s. a n d v o c a ­ 5 p e r c e n t ; v e t e r a n s r e h a b ilita tio n p r o g r a m s . 5 tional p e r I p er c e n t; a n d m i s c e l la n e o u s , 2 p e r r e n t loans. i c n t : T w o -th ird s of th e m en stu d e n ts w ork ed, e a r n i n g a n a v e r a g e of $486 a y e a r . H a lf the w o m e n s tu d e n ts w ork ed, a v e r a g i n g $265 a v e a r. im iuded M ore t h a n 15.OK) student* fro m IIG colleges w e r e in the r a n d o m s a m p le fo r the s u r v e y . It w a s c o n d u c te d b y E rn e s t V. Hollis. d i r e c t o r of the College and U n iv e r­ sity A d m in is tra tio n B ra n c h of th e Office of E d u c a tio n T h e am o u n t s tu d e n ts spend in a b e n d i n g college h a s doubled sin c e 1939-40 L a w r e n c e G. De cfh lek, ■ cd v e y ' s p r e l i m i n a r y rn a w e r e noted A m e r i c a n Council on E d u c atio n . in an Office of E du catio n s u r ­ findings w h i c h th e r e l e a s e by fo r C o m m is s io n e r D e rth ic k said ex- full-tim e p e n d itu re p er y e a r u n d e r g r a d u a te s tu d e n ts a tte n d in g public colleges this y e a r a v e r a g e s about $1,500. A student in a p r i v a t e college p a y s abir,it $2,000 a y e a r The a v e r ­ a g e e x p e n d itu re in 1930-40 w a s $747 for a stud ent rn a public col­ lege an d $1,023 for a p r i v a t e college stu d f nt T h ' * s u r v e y bv the O f f i c e E d u - Job Opportunities h f o n in a task-•> e x a m i n a t i o n f o r v A r s o - fl o u n c e d . ' i r o n i c T e c h n un is p o s i t i o n s p a y i n g $4 525 a y e a r p Cos * of I iv ’' 4 d i f f e r e n t i a l , fo r n u t ' in the Cl'- 'I Ae-on .ut -s Ad minis* ra- t >n ’ nit cd Stale* : i 'ivii Service Commission has an­ nounced. Application* will bn ac­ c e p t e d .fr ere B o a r d of I ' S ( ' n i l S e r v i c e E x a m ­ in e r * . P o u c h 9 A n c h o r a g e . A l a s k a , until A p p l i c a t i o n f o r t « m a y bo o b t a i n e d f r o m A, I D a v i s , t h e A u s t i n p o s t o ff ic e . t h e A n c h o r a g e f u r t h e r n o t i c e by .'ti • Engineer* and accountants ar* t w o position categories which cur rent I.v offer t h e hest opportunity for carcer e m p l o y m e n t with P i e Federal Government me Civil Serv­ ice Commission announced. G r a d u a t e e n g i n e e r s in a n y b r a n c h t h e p r o f e s s i o n w i t h o r w i t h o u t o f e x p e r i e n c e , a w i d e v a r i e t y of p o - i t io n s t h r o u g h o u t t h e U S at r a n g i n g f r o m Si ISO to $10,320, the com M is ­ s i o n s a y s . c a r t i n g c h o o s e s a l a r y f r o m X p p H c a tio n f o r m s a n d i n f o r m a ­ t i o n m a y b e o b t a i n ' d f r o m m o s t p o s t >>ff i r e s a n d a p p l i c a t i o n s s h o u l d t o T h e E i g h t h Un t e d b e m a c e d S t a t e s C iv il S e r v i c e R e g i o n a l O f f i c e 1114 C o m m e r c e 2. T e x a s s t r e e t . D a l l a s a S e v e r a l j o b o p p o r t u n i t i e s r a n g i n g f r o m f i r e f i g h t e r w e r e a n n o u n c e d r e c e n t ! ” bv t h e U S C iv il S e r v i c e < o m m i s s i o n n u r s e s t a f f t o T h e s t a f f n u r s e f o l l o w i n g a r e j o b o p e n n g s a i r w a y s o p e r a ­ t i n d e r civil s e r v i c e i n d u s t r y t i o n s s p e c i a l i s t c o m m o d i t y a n a l y s t a d m i n i s t r a t i v e a s s i s t a n t a n d f i t . f i g h t e r C a ' s c a l e f a i l bet w e e n $3415 f o r l o b s t h e s e ' c a r . W o r k i n g Us a - a n d $7 570 p e r t* o n s a r e s c a t t e r e d f r o m A r k a n s a s t o A la s k a A ls o a p p l i c a t i o n s a t e a g a i n b e i n g a c c e p t e d f o r th.* e q u i p m e n t s p e c i a l ­ f i e l d s o f i s t e x a m i n a t i o n e l e c t r i c a l , e l e c t r o n i c s g r a p h i c a r t * a n d m a r i n e e q u i p m e n t th* rn E. D a v i s a t f o r m s m a c b e o b t a i n e d F u r t h e r I n f o r m a t i o n a n d a pp. ( r a ­ f r o m t i o n A t h e A u stin P o s t O f f i c e o r f r o m t h e U V Civil S e r v ­ ice C o m m is.-io n W a s h in g t o n 25, I) C • in Hie :!' r h a p m a n , indep. od - nt pi im mal P. 1. 11 - s - School District, Batesville, Texas will be the Teacher Placement Service office on Friday. Apr ! 26. to interview teach­ ers of pnmar> and intermediate grades Mr. Chapman will interview both single applicants and couples Come to Sutton 2U9 and make an appointment for un to­ rt a \ , interview, Y E S . I A M ! ! ' V-u I 'nil ersity a dm inistration. IVE GOT A CATCHER WHO CAN'T 6EE A FipsT JAGEMAN loHO‘6 ONLY THREE PEET TAO, AND AN outfielder who cant throll cant THROW? ive never HEARD OF SUCH A THINS... urn, n o w you w ave! . . T M y&i Ar SSk* , jPT I ■ ( ‘M u - iS2£U^ S fr t'C J t. ~hE (U6EDS APE TOO TALL OUT r WERtf OH GOOD GCiEF G T O P W - V c o m p la in in g , A N D J A t l \ ftGHT ) 6ET GOINS i BUT SOM!MOY BETTER TELL ME LUMEN TUB INNING IE OVER! _ ” ------------------ \ j T h e d T e x a n O p i n i o n r exp re sse d in T h e D a ily T e x a n are those o f the E d itor or o f th e u r / te r o f th e article a n d n o t necessarily thoocal C lergy D efen d s C h a s t i t y . " D e p a r tm e n ta l iz e d , h ere s w h at else wa* d e e m e d 'it for p r i n t ; A M U S E M E N T S : Dr W F M ichael a n d bis stu d en t* of G e r m a n b e g a n a s e r ie s destin ed for su c c e s s a s e d u catio n al en fp c ta tn m e n t T h e ir first G e r m a n p lay w a s " J e d c r m a n n ’’ a re - c re a tio n of "E v ery m an .* * . . . T h e T e x a n e m i r echoed th e title of Hie se a s o n * m o s t ho no red movie in p ra isin g it. " T h e Best Y e a rs of O u r L iv e s ." he said, wa* " t h e b e s t in y e a r s ’ He did o b ject to the u n u su a l length, c o m p la in in g thai a t h r e e - h o u r film " r e q u i r e * q u ite a bit of sitting an d th e r e is a limit to p h y sic a l e n d u ra n c e ’’ S P O R T S l o n g h o r n t r a c k m e n w on the 449, 880, and d i s ta n c e m ed ­ in ley re la y s , took both first and se c o n d place* in th* 100-yard d a sh . Special s i m u l ta n e o u s m a t c h e s b e ­ . the im p o r t a n t K a n s a s R e la y s tw e en th e m o s t re cen t football, so c c e r , an d softball finalist* c e le b r a te d th e e re c t io n of 30 lighl I n t e r f r a ’o m i ty C ouncil c o n tr ib u t e d $11,000 t o w a r d the cost, su p p le m e n tin g the A toletia Council s $29,000 e x p e n d itu re I n t r a m u r a l Field. to w e r s on . S O C I E T Y : T he K ap p a C lub a local social g ro u p affiliated w ith . . A c h a p t e r of Alpha the n a tio n a l fr a te r n i ty of P h i S ig m a K a pp a K a p p a P si, bu sin ess o rg a n iz a tio n , wa* r e a c t i v a t e d . Stan K enton and his h a n d played. J u n e C h r is ty sang, and 2,500 stu den t* d a n c e d , all in the s a m e evening, in G r e g o r y G y m . . . • rn • • AMI S E M E N T A ? S P O R T S ? SGH ! E T Y ? O r m a y b e E a r n A cres Fort- d e r ” H o w e v e r classified an April even t d ra w in g c o n s id e ra b le a tt e n ­ tion a n d m a n y laug hs w a s Alpha Chi O m e g a s o ro rity '* sixth an n u a! J u n i o r T e x a s R e la y s . T his w a s a go od -h um or b u r l e s q u e of the p re v io u s m o n t h ’s c in d e r s p e c t a c le an d Round-U p h u llab alo o , co m p lete w ith a n o t h e r p a r a d e a n d m u c h t<>do ab ou t selection of a s w e e t h e a r t . F r o m a dozen o r so a ll u r ­ ing n o m in e e s, the AChtO’s chose a Sigm a Phi E p silo n n a m e d L a n ie r " t h e D e a r " A d a m s He re ig n e d o v e r such J u n i o r R e l a y s ex ertio n * as * hoop r a c e a th re e-leg g e d r a c e , a s a c k r a c e , a sock re la y , a n onion r a c e i in w hich th e edible is p ro p e lle d with the no«e at gro u n d level— a in volving a m a r s h ­ m a llo w a t the m id d le of a s trin g . lowdown c ry in g s h a m e > a n d th e 13-inch ra c e , In the last, ea c h boy -and -g irl te a m w o uld s t a r t at opposite end* of the ir w a y to the cente r. These c o n te s ta n t s se e m e d a strin g an d chew to h a v e p a r t i c u l a r m o tiv atio n T h e ones w ho got to the m a r s h m a l l o w first m u s t h a v e really won a nice trophy, we gue<-« E d d ie H ug hes • j i m m i f McK i n l e y IN M EM O RIAM (AARON SC HA FFER) l l n e - i pas m ort ti n est pas m o r t! f e Ie sa n b ien q u i t t i t enc or. D ans totes U s coilers de B allro o m Studio. G R 8-3951. G R 2-9bS6 Tutoring W A N T E D F O R T H E b eau tiful C h ar­ coal G a lle y of th* Ja c k T a r H otel in Galveston neat appearing and courteous young women for summ er w ork E x ­ perience not necessary. Th ere is a fine career fo r young women in this tvp# B, . „0U/ 1earnin»» a te gen erally h nigh er than sales or office w o rk A t­ tractive uniforms furnished’ and xnaln- » Meals furnished Con­ ia t Ned Fox at G R 6-2613 between 5 and 9 p m. any weekday. i T U T O R IN G F R E N C H . Translation. Instructress, M ila. Dupuis. Ex p ert G R 6 2296. 2506 R io Grande. /Typing Lost and Found G R E G O R Y G Y M S a tu rd a y night plaid wool car blanket. Rew ard . Phone G R 6-0723 N E E D A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G ? Reason­ a b le . G R 2-8402 798 W e st 28 t y p i n g W o r k to perfection. D isser­ tation*. theses. W illso n G L 3-8304. L O S T fr a te r n it y pin In small brown envelope on D rag near University T H E S I S dissertation. E le c tro p la te . U T neighborhood. Mrs. B o his. G R 7-3749. Co-Op, Rew ard. G R 7-8441. L O S I’ : P A M P H L E T entitled "B io g r a - 1 phy of Alonzo S te e le ” betw een E D I H al. and men s Tri-D orm s parking lot. I I Rew ard . C all G R 2-5751 L O S I ■ B ro w n w allet. K eep money, Please return to G arrison H e ll 1 0 9. Nam e stamped Inside A p a rtm e n ts F G I R freshly - decorated B L O C K S west of campus furnished rooms, porch, air-cooled W a te r fu r­ nished. $52,50 G R 6-3005’ afternoons. ’urge F U R N IS H E D D U P L E X for couple, L iv ­ ing, bedroom, kitchon-dinette ’ tile bath, shower, evaporative cooler. 606 East 20‘4. $55 In q u ire 2055R Sabine, evening*, weekends. G R 2-10-43 For Rent A L L T Y P E S work done by experienced typist, f.leetromatic. G R 2-6359. D IN S E R T A T K IN S , ‘ T H E S E S E le c tro T L Y 0 S y m b o ls !; Mrs R itch ie . U.T, neighborhood, G R 2-4945. D E L A F I E L D T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . T h * . (.AT2-65*9 S4 Guadalupe. T \ r :x(h E D L I N G b y typ in g ' teacher. G R 7-0330. y M r s B ra d le y. G L 2-1235. • school. Mid-law o r third yea r W A N T E D : R O O M M A T E fo r Sum m er law' student Extrem ely convenient location Must be able to present some concrete evidence of responsibility. financial Cat! T . K . H oldsw orth. G R 6-1825 A B A R H O T E L F in e room* fo r men Central heat. Air-conditioning. E le ­ vator Perter sen ice. E a rb e r shop. La u n d ry and d ry cleaning. P riv a te parking. 2612 Guadalupe Ph on e G R 6-5658 E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G , reports, etc. E le c tric . Mrs. Hunter. G L 3-3546, M A R T H A AN N Z JV L E Y , J I B.A. com plete professional ty p in g A sendee tailored to the needs o f U n i­ ve rsity students. Special keyboard fo r language, science, and engineer­ ing. Conveniently located at W O O TEN H A LL 2104 Guide oe Pho. GR 2-3210 LARGE BRICK HOME ! Bock U Y . Cam pus 5 B.R, — 2»/2 Ba-ns $22,500 » oU it ■se r si .yusstss ttOod location on a street of fine qu ality home* lu s t East o f the Campus T h is is a two-story b r-.ck hora* built In 1941 large liv in g room w ith fireplace, separate dining room, and modern kitchen on the street • eve! and .. bedrooms and a bath upstairs. T h ere s a complete basement, a ttic storage, and 2-car garage. I o u win appreciate the qu ality In m aterials and workm anship and trio o verall spaciousness. Ex c e lle n t terms can be w orked out tor ct Qu&iiiiBu Duvcr, It has 3 bedroom*, bath To see phone JO E C R O W REAL ESTATE GR 2-1103 for appointment • • • • • • Marjorie Sn** Segal, Alpha E p ­ silon Phi, to Edwin Bursty*, senior. • Betty Jackson, former student, Pi Beta Phi, to Conway It. r a m ­ mers, grad1 late. Alpha Tau Omega. • Frances Boogher Reed, student. lo Jose J . Soli* Manzane, industrial chemistry student. • Patricia Yvonne Hill, former stu­ dent. to Jam es I). McFarland J r . • Connie Louise Din la to Paul Betty Ta u Holubec, to Joe E. Lee, former student Patricia Io u Bailey*, graduate to Robert Hall, law student, Phi Beta Kappa. Margie Sue SegaJ. Alpha Epsilon Phi. to Edw in Rurstyn, student, September I, in Durant Okla. Elsa Gainer, Alpha Epsilon Phi, so Phil Rarshop, Zeta Beta Tau, A2 Engineering Students Pledged to Tau Beta Phi Students pledged to Tau Beta Pin', honorary engineering frater­ nity are D It. Abel, G < Ander­ son, J . F . Anderson. D M Bailey, L M. Barber C. K Best C R Boatright D. L. Billingsley, R J . Cole, J . E Cunningham, K. A C u r r y -lr G W . Cry. J . N Dexter, T. C. Edwards, W Ii Grecnstreet Jr., and E . F , Infante Also J . T* Irick, W. S. Jackson, A D, Jacoby W C. Johnson, T. L. Ka nr J. D. La Rue W. C. Melnar, J. P. Moore, K D Morgan, D. P. Mundell, G E. Murphy, K Owen, G, P., Parker, A D. Patton, E. B Peek, S. C, Phipps, and C. Pro­ mote. Also F. A. Rippenger, R, H Sobotik, W, F. Seward, Sproul, Thompson, A. Utz, and J B. Yows J . Stephens, B J , J , Tucker, G. C. J . C. E Spring Formal to Be Given By Luiac Student Council The University Lulac Student Council w ill hold its first annual spring formal M ay 18 at the City' ‘ Coliseum, Leo Cardenas, council president, has announced. Miss Latin American of Texas will ba selected at the dance in a personality contect sponsored by the council. Two hundred civic, service, and social organizations in Texas representing 75 cities have been invited to send candi­ dates. j Friends W ill M e e t Sunday “ The Quaker Attitude Towards the Ministry — Symbolism and Ritual ’ w ill he discussed during the Forum Period at in a rn, Sun­ day, at the Friends Center, 2106 Nueces. V V 'ey Club to Meet Today The Rio Grande Valley Club will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in Texas Union 315, G e e to H e a d W e sle y G r o u p j Newly elected officers of the Wesley Foundation Council are I John Gee, president; Dexter H ill, I vice - president; and B a r b a r a Dickey, treasurer. E a rl Good Carolyn Grades, Cal-1 vin Baker, Jan e Callaway, Linda I ie Bardeleben, Dick Hunter, Bob Odic, Bob O Connor, and Ju lia I Roberta have b een elected council­ men. C lu b Plans Social Events The University Club has planned three social events for April and May. A dinner meeting will be held in tho Queen Anne Room of Texas Union at 6:30 p rn. April 27. A bridge party w ill be held M ay I at the club, 2304 San Antonio street at 8 p.rn , and club members a t Ballon Springs w ill May ll. p ic n ic I-ouis M. Bradshaw, former Uni­ versity student, recently qualified I as carrier pilot in the Naval A via­ tion Cadet Program . Order your ring N O W and get it by Graduation CH ARGE IT — N evsr an interest or carrying cfosrgs! I ’strata M b lr tar ta r a t ..- K R U G U T S 2236 GUADALUPE Tobacoc Cusp- THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* W a y , Ap,I, « , 1957 ( J n i v e r S I + Y S t u d e n t s ' Arf Work on Display ing.” William T h o m a s ; and “ Dream of Peace,” Clarence Log­ ier Works in graphic®, which include lithographs, wood blocks, and dry­ point. are “ Landscape ” Richard Cannes; “ Houses," W illiam Steger; Joe Hobbs: “ Children “ Operation, Playing,” Roger W inter; “ The P a r e n t , Candle Pattillo; and “ Planes.” Jim Stoker, Honorary Offers Imaginary Tour Sigma Delta ish fraternity v Latin America 8 p rn, Saturd torium, The cd b> dept from t The slot Pi, honorary Span- ■; ii! present “ Around ,n SO Minutes” at ay rn Batts Audi- > - vvrirten and direct­ ion Dominguez, a stu- Dominican Republic, • nit - >und in • I out to find a hus­ Ame, iran band /tic goc<; *o sec a gypsy fortune teller who tells her there are plenty of available men in South America. Both then leave for that continent The American girl is played bv Jane Callaway and the gypsy by Cherry McGinnis, The rest of the cast are students from various countries depicted in the play They will present songs and dances typi­ cal of those nations' folklore Admission is free, and the public is invited G rant, M onroe Team In Next Union Film “ Monkey Business.” with Cary Grant Ginger Rogers, and M arilyn Monroe, will up shown in the Main lounge of Texas Union Monday at 7.30 p.rn “ Blue Gardenias.” with Anne Baxter and Richard Conte, will be shown M ay P. An exhibition of paintings and graphics by approximately 30 Uni­ versity art students and former students arc on display in San Antonio at the Men of Art Guild Galleries, Thc r IN G'ANr-)%y The two big hits that made JAMES DEAN a sensation! SAL JAMES NATALIE DEAN WOOD MINEO 'R e b e l W it h o u t a C ause* •flkJMI BACKUS • A N *■ DOS * *1 CinemaScok * WarnerColor i HWWffR get* van Bk. & jgr ^ f rn* KAUNS JWMTVCTW. » IMN SUWA (Ort I E a s t o f E d e n ' • H VA****. wtn a Att is* rnb u dun • tAriwio basset *•» BURL Ives •#»««»* ta ELU KUAN OncmaScope • WarnerColor WtNT m TfCM#*COtOt I * WW»t£i rnmmmmmm ' a rm»" -wow % - Hie Spirit ofStlouis’ p6£senteo bt WARNER BROS.in Cinemascope anc WarnerColor PARAMOUNT DE BICA* LO REN M A N G A N O TOTO ;™ S c , N a p iiB s ©tr**i*d br Vittorio Do Stoa 8- Contributions will be accepted for the Aaron Schaffer Memorial ! Scholarship Fund. Curtain Club Production Planned for T h u rsd ay The last m e e t i n g of the Curtain Club will feature the first product­ ion of “ Ont e Upon A P a rty .” a one aet play by Grady Hausenfluck. Curtain time will b* 7 p.m. Thurs­ day in Drama Budding 103. The public is invited, and no~arimissinr» will lie charged. The play, a light comedy, is con- 1 cerned with a mother's scheme to I win a husband for her young, naive daughter Cast members are Jo Bailey, Jeanette Jung, Charles Hughes, and John Hummel. Philip Wayne , Is the director. After the play there veil] be a meeting of th* Curtain C ub, and a vote will be taken to determine the annual awards for 1956-57. You’ve FORCED Us! To Serve O nce Again $1.00 SIRLOIN individual Salad, French Friai ar Baked Potato A French Bread Pioneer Drive in 829 Barton Springs Road Open 1:45 — Features A t 2 _ 6 — 8 — IO A GEM FROM ITALY F o u r D e lig h tfu l S to rie s” Zua*«r Cub M a l i n e /•* > V spec a p r o g r a m scheduled R C - T V I C n d nna! TI will r a m / srs in th e d r a w i n g are f a m e d p a rt of the w o rld . " W H O W A S M Y F A T H E R ? ’ (Douglas es K "g Oedipus ampbell), searching the for .Bn *rar wit bring his down* ! bg * • c S' * suspense story ll, i Sop hoc Ie-, ha-, bee" ^ i e ■a a the na .• n rh o p e s next wee* e+ e Texas Thea'er- 'G e a r:..,', ’ !rn —hbd Audubon to Hold Outing The Travis Audubon Society of Austin and the Outdoor Nature Club of Houston will visit Hie Little Thicket Sanctuary near La ergn en .Saturday and Sunday. Those inter­ ested m going should call Mrs. Moore at G R 2-3007. SLA T E AT H A N D a Me is! Iv emcee comedian t rn e Ko aud consulta’' t -mac;«cian M bom (upper right) cor are up elusions ‘BBA Week Features Exhibits, A w ards, Dance The B B A Council has announced plans for “ B R A Week.” Depart­ ments in the College of Business Administration will present ex­ hibit's Thursday and Frid ay from a.rn. to 3 p rn. A semi-formal dance from 8:30 p.rn to 12 midnight in the Union will climax “ B B A Week” on F r i­ day, A local combo will be fea­ tured at the dance. Awards for the exhibits w ill be made and new officer® will be presented. STARTS TO DAY Spuria! MaOr*** Stir T il 5 P 't "In 'GOLD OF NAPLES* a Company of Italians Makes the Screen Glitter." — Aru* York Timee “ The quality of one scene is such that it seems almost certain to become at least a footnote in any history of film comedy.’* —Xru-suieeh Toto, Italy's Chaplin, is exquisitely funny. Loren’s parts fit beautifully into the whole.”* — Time Magnum J j ‘“ The Gold of Naples’ is a noteworthy exam ple \ of how a movie ought to be put together", —Sew \'nrkrr * v ACT'S 'Janus' Delightful Romp The Austin Civic Theater has done it again! Their current production of “ J a ­ nus,” a tale a tv nit a trifling wife. is a delightful romp from start to finish, I" s in ’he best ACT fash­ ion, shown only once earlier this The pro­ season in “ Bus Stop. duction w ill end Thursday night at 8:15 Forced from their own building last summer by fire the is being pre current attraction sented at the Texas Federated Women s Club Auditorium, 24th and San Gabriel. The play, the group's last sea­ sonal attraction is aided tremend­ ously by a polished cast, clever staging devices, and admirable d i­ rection by ACT head, a lei Rape Reservations rn calling G R 6-0541. he made by »: vt ri i in 'is Rock Hudson Martha H\*r -- Plus C O W .O < H O S IN O Onorgn Na her Virginia Mayo M O N TO P O L I S M.*A3p. R IO C K A N IT E John W a y n e Maureen O H art -Plus I H E M A N Is A R M K H I >ane > lark—May Wynn GEKES1DS3 T U T . M AA K R U K ( J I I T V B a rb a ra S ta n w y c k B e rr v Su lliv a n Pl IS­ S I A M I A H . INT Robert H atton P a tricia W righ t b m m e b i I H F . B I G L A M I A lan Lad d V irg in ia Ma* o --Plus - S H O W D O W N A T A R I T I V R Jock M ahoney— M artha f ly e r Y A N K LA so M ii RA DE CRI 7, DIABLO En riq u e Ram a! Rosita A renas — Plu s - B E Y O N D T I I I P E C O S Rod Cameron- Ed d ie Dew' EVER* a n n WEES a r V U L G015 RANDY’S 3 Convenient Locations: • 3221 Red River • 3515 Jefferson • 5th and Neches TRY OUR NEW "Puffed Krunchy Tacos" ORDERS TO GO Open Daily till I a.m. 2 H A R D H IT T IN G FIRST R U N S H O W S CLEO MOORE HUGO HAAS VINCE EDWARDS H it* * marm u r d e r ! Released thru UNITED ARTISTS cents S e e fo r y o u rs e lf—th e ravaged lives in the ad o lescen t jungles of A m e rica today! m u lla h Adult* 50c. Teen* ?5c, Rid* Tree UN)VMSAl-IN ria*ADONAI ROCK HUDSON b m t m Mmw CmtMAScoPC TECHNICOLOR. MARTHA HYER DAN DURYEA-don ocFore P U S “ B A G H D A D ” \ IM T VT PRH * O u r S pecial Lunch Today Served from 11:30 n m. to 8:30 p.m. Roast Turkey with Cornbread Dressing G ib let G ra v y Cranberry Sauce English Peas & Carrots Cornbread & H ot Rolls Dessert & C offee or Tea Smothered Steak Mashed Potatoes Combination Salad English Peas & Carrots Cornbread & H ot Rolls Dessert % Coffee or Tea 6 5 cents F i n e selection o f choice st eaks 30th & Guadalupe G R 6-5955 THE AUSTIN CIVIC THEATRE S NEXT SHOW IN T H E A R E N A Most delightful comedy about a trifling w if e ---- J A N U S and bow she managed to keep two husbands happy. Wednesday, Thursday - April 24, 25 8:15 P.M. Texas Federated W o m en ’s Club Auditorium 1607 San Jacin to 14th and San G abriel Ph, G R 6-0541 for scab. TECHNICOLOR* ♦ ‘L ’ ffs jib ' T p p i k ‘TV* K i l l * 1 ALAN VIRGINIA EDMOND O'BRIEN With UT's Kathy Grant - I First Show 12:00 TODAY STATE "IT HAPPENED TO YO U " Special Featurette Court M artial of Billy Mitchell Dart C«nper Clark, Hudspeth, Goosby, Mims Win! TIE. f t . • *• J \ : *".ti ^ yJLzaZm* -t I . M ....L U J L . y .L J .'■—•• I _ —j • t \% *f H , yr f- ■ f- JA.. J : l l J j i l t I I . / I I J ) f 7 | 7 i l f 7 $ I W “ibBL.St * . ? « I T i H i . i i ■ V- * f S i 4 _ 4~ i » ? I ' r . • *' •,• - i W ^ I 4 ~ ^ :? - »-fc, -^SL V & >4|t, . ; %*£i> i W v -V v H * * I ’ • A — ;;••'•■ * I- . f * '*<• x ^ e a ^ . - *< ■■ / / " ♦ & 1 £t* imp t a i A * * ! * I c"#-.. I , sSM Isi •j ' * € 3 / Salfi Z % q . S * W j %f J I t] i i l l “.. f f f.« i f I ..( JI P The Da Price Five C e n ts AUSTIN, TEXAS, THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1957 Six Pages Today NO. 160 4First C o l i e g e D a i l y in the S o u t h 1 Vote Separates Rain Hinders Turnout By EDDIE H U G H E S victories. Scattered rains only slowed down the turnout of voters Wednesday— 3,207, the lowest in four years— as Harley Clark, Nancy Goosby, and Bud Mims rushed to easy victories while Hal Hudspeth and Don Stodghill managed only the closest of That seemed to be the outcome late Wednesday night in what has been termed as “the quietest student election on the campus” in many years. Clark swept past Don Hendrix for president, Goosby raced past Marion Simon for secretary, and Mims defeated Greg Olds for The Daily Texan editor position. Recounts are likely for Hudspeth’s 200-vote victory over Pete Gunter for vice-president, and Stodghill’s one-vote edge over Tom Bousquet for chief justice. Balfour to Talk On Labor Party British Professor Active in Politics W. Cam pbell Balfour, visiting associate professor of economics, w ill deliver a public lecture on “ The B ritish L abor P a r ty ” at 8 in A rchitecture p m . T hursday Building 105. IT'S A V IC T O R Y S H A K E as yarning card'* d ate s M a l H u d sp e th , vic e-p re side n t; N a n c y G o o s b y , s e c r e t a r y Bud M im s, Texan Editor; a nd H a r l e y Clark, p resident see the final b a l lo t in g t a b u la te d late W e d n e s d a y n igh t in "exas U nion. Photo by P au l D, H ope April 29 Deadline For Three Awards The deadline for subm itting n o m -, inations to the D ean of Men for | the M ike F lynn C itizenship Aw ard is April 29 This aw ard is given each y e a r to the outstanding m ale student at the U niversity. Included w ith the n o m in a tio n ! should be qualifications, honors, and a b rief sketch of the nom inee. Any m ale student who has com plet­ ed JO se m e ste r hours of a c a d e m i e w ork in the U niversity w ith a “ C” a v e ra g e is eligible. When this aw ard is given, p re s­ entations wall also be m ade to two o utstanding w om en students. The Silver Spurs group p resents one to the outstanding w om an, and the M arjo rie D arilek A ward goes to the m ost outstanding independent w om an. Th* deadline these nom inations is A pril 29, also. for The Mike Flynn A ward w as first m ad e in 1946 w hen fellow students from of Mike F lynn World W ar II and learned th a t he had been killed by a sniper on Sugar I/>af Hill on Okinaw a. Flynn had been one of the m ost popular retu rn ed students on cam pus during his two y e a rs here, F lynn once said, “ The only w ay to have a friend is to be one.” F lynn w as also known for ca m ­ pus service and his devotion to thp U niversity. The aw ard is m ade by a com m it­ tee of three faculty m em b ers and two students. As suggested in the aw ard ch a rter, the com m ittee trie s to select the outstanding m an on cam pus w'ho m ost n ea rly re p re ­ sents the spirit of Mike Flynn. Dr. B o p p O u tline s O b je c tiv e s to B B A Mr. B alfour will set his discuss­ ion ag a in st the background of the changing econom ic and political forces in the world, w ith special the Anglo-Am erican referen ce to alliance. M r. B alfour, who w as born in A berdeen, Scotland, w as g rad uated from the Tendon School of Eco­ nom ics and also attended the Uni­ versity of Chicago. At present he is a m e m b er of the faculty of the U niversity of South Wales and M onm outhshire. “ Tim e is the m ost im p o rtan t ele­ m ent to an econom ist, for ev e ry ­ said D r. thing depends on it.” the K arl Bopp. vice-president of P hiladelphia R eserve Bank, in a speech T uesday to the faculty of the College of Business A dm inistration and to students of the A m erican F inance Association. Dr. Bopp nam ed five altern ativ e objectives that centra! hanks m ust F e d e ra l consider and listed the conditions th a t would perm it an easin g o r tightening of credit, w hich w as con­ sidered rela ted to the objectives. Active in B ritish politics tor IO y ears, M r. B alfour has p a rtic ip a t­ ed on both the local and national levels. He has been a delegate to three the national conference on lf there is to be a stab le p rice I occasions and w'as a candidate for p erm ittin g level, conditions easing of cred it would have to he j D uring W orld W ar II he served declining p rices; if th e re a re rising | six y e a rs w ith the B ritish Com ­ p lices, tightening of credit will be m andos, m ainly the M editer- n ecessary ,” said D r. Bopp. ran e an and in the B alkans. an P a rlia m e n t in 1951, in In l a w School Honor Fraternity 6 New Chancellors Chosen Owen is a Law Review' candi­ d ate, quizm aster, and a m em b er of Phi D elta Phi. He w as aw arded a bachelor of a rts degree from P rinceton U niversity in 1952. Sterling is a candidate for T exas Law Review, F re sh m an A m erican Law Student Association R e p re ­ sentative, Mid-law Honor Council R epresentative, ch a irm an of the Honor Council, P ereg rin u s Consul A w ardee, q u izm aster, and a m e m ­ b er of Phi D elta Phi, He received his bachelor of a r ts degree here in 1956. Bogatto received his bachelor of a r ts degree from Rice in 1955. He is a candidate for the Texas I-aw Rev iew and a m e m b e r of Phi D el­ ta Phi. The le ctu re will consider the forces w hich have shaped the L a­ bor P a r ty 's past objectives and the influence of present position, its political phi- j thundershow ers for T hursday and I R i v e r A uthority said trad e unions on losophy, the role of the intellectual, the recen t struggle for leadership, and the m eaning and strength of “ B evanism .” M ore local th u n d ersto rm s have fo re ca st for South C entral been T exas m ainly in e a st and south portions w ith otherw ise scattered f*ake T r a v is R i s e s L ake T ravis w est of Austin w as reported rising a t the ra te of two feet an hour. the P ed er F rid ay W i r e Briefs Drenching Rains Send Rivers Over Banks Ky Th* Annodated Pre** lightning, h a i l Black storm s lashed T exas with tornadoes, and drenching rain s w hich sent riv ers and stre a m s surging over their hanks W ednesday. Waco as 2.65 inches of rain lashed : the city in an hour s tim e W ednes­ day afternoon. Winds with gusts of up to 80 m iles an hour w ere re- I ported a t Waco and som e property w as dam aged. said a confirm ed tornado funnel dipped to the ground at W ebber­ ville, ea st of Austin, W ednesday afternoon. T here w as no im m ediate d am ag e o r casualty report. Killeen. Belton and G eorgetown, all in C entral T exas, ap p eared to b ea r tile brunt of the flooding. But lakes rose, stre a m s spilled over th e ir hanks and ra in w a te r stood in the low p laces over w ide a re a s of T exas. G uard Called Gov. D aniel W ednesday night authorized “ w hatever n a t i o n a l guard units a re n e c e ssa ry ” to aid in evacu atin g flood-stricken the Belton and Killeen a re a s L ittle Nolan and Rig Nolan C reeks boiled out of th e ir hanks and crash ed into the southern and ea ste rn p a rt of K illeen. Flood­ w ater* IO feet deep in som e places gushed through the streets. M ore than 300 persons w ere evacu ated at Killeen. The city got 6 4 inches of rain. At Belton. Nolan Creek w as at its highest level since 1913. Help to ev a cu a te fam ilies w as needed being hit by flooding w aters. C om m unications to Belton w ere out and all roads to Belton and K illeen w ere Tele­ phone service to Killeen w as e r ­ ratic. im passable E le ctric pow er went out in Bell County. F lood T h r e a ten * Georgetown The flood-swollen twin San G a­ briel R ivers burst from th e ir hanks a t G eorgetow n and chased lowland residents from their home®. Wide- s p r e a d evacuation dow nstream I w as th reaten ed . ! at G eorgetow n, The rise on the north and south forks of the riv er, which com bine d o w n stre a m to Circleville and Hoxsey vv h e rr residents w e r e evacuated. lowland ro ared S everal houses w ere evacuated around D allas as m inor flooding covered m uch of the city. U S. W eather B ureau fo re ca sters said the T rinity would hit 38 m a jor flood stage night o r ea rly T hursday la te W ednesday feet San M arcos got I 1 2 inches of rain in 30 m inutes late W ednesday. B ianco got 3 4 and W im berly the sam e. The Blanco R iver w as rising and w as expected to cause som e flood­ ing at San M arcos ea rly T hursday. R e s i d e n t s s t a r t e d to ev acu ate late W ednesday Floods th reatened to retu rn to The Low er Colorado Q u f o f S e n a t e C o m m i t t e e S e g r e g a t i o n Bills V o t e d nales R iv er w as a t flood stage, it w as still raining la te W ednesday in the w atershed and the LORA w as unable to e stim a te w hat the total rise on T ravis m ight be. The P e d a rn a le s runs into Lake T ravis. W ater from ra in s in the upper to Rio G rande V alley continued pour the F alcon Reservoir. Total sto rag e rose m ore than 1,000 a c re feet an hour. into Floodw aters isolated the south­ w est T exas town of M edina. Tornado Spotted Two sta te highw ay patrol e a rs trac k ed a tornado spotted on the ground west of Elgin. The tornado dam aged an old building and blew a c a r off the road, but the High­ w ay P atro l said think there w ere any casualties. it didn’t The W eather B ureau at Austin By T h e A ssociated T ress The Senate S tate A ffairs C o m -! m ittee W ednesday night approved fj\p house-passed bills backed by segregation lead - 1 j by voice veto j ers. The approval cam e on the bills i following a 3-hour hearing. S enator D avid Ratliff of S tam ­ ford m oved to table a motion by S enator A braham K azoo .lr,, of L aredo to send one of the bills to j the atto rn ey general for a ruling its constitutionality. Senators on voted 11-6 in favor of R atliff’s mo­ tion and then gave voice vote p as­ sage on his succeeding motions th a t recom m end the com m ittee approval of the m easures, Hazen asked to bo recorded as voting no on all R atliff’s motions. Displays, Eats O p e n First 'B B A W e e k ’ M errill O 'N eal, president of the night and wall be presented at the dance. They a re Bob Laughlin, p resid e n t; Jim P erkins, vice-presi­ d en t; E linor D rake, se c re ta ry ; and Don Roper, tre a su re r, BBA Council, h as announced that the first “ BBA Week ’ will begin T hursday at 9 a rn. The BBA Wives Club will sell cookies and coffee in W aggener H all from 8 a rn. to 3 p rn. T hurs­ day and F riday, E ach organization within the Col­ lege of B usiness A dm inistration will set up a booth in W aggener Hall depicting its purposes, func­ tions, and activities. The individual booths set up by the organizations w ill lie judged, and one will be chosen as being the m ost original and attractiv e. Judging will be done by a student- faculty com m ittee headed by Dr. Edwin M am m a, associate profes­ faculty sor of m anagem ent and I rep resen tativ e on the council, and Shirley King, the College of Business A dm inistration. A sem iform al dance w ill he held from 8 30 p.m . ta m idnight F rid ay in T exas Union with m usic by a local combo. sw eetheart of New’ officers of the council for next y e a r w ere elected W ednesday Assembly T ile o u tg o in g Stu d en t \ s s e m M y w ill w ind up its a ffa ir s at th e la st se ss io n y e a r T h u rsd a y n ig h t. T he m e etin g w ill c o n v e n e at 7:15 p .m . in U nion B u ild in g 301. the of Sfieed C a rro ll, v ic e p resid en t and c iia ir m a n of th e K a les and A p p ro p ria tio n s C o m m itte e , sa id the that he w ould B la n k et T ax a p p ro p ria tio n s to o r g a n iz a tio n s r eq u e stin g a jwr- r e n ta g e of th o se funds for n ext y e a r . rejwirt on Bill D y k e s , E d u ca tio n , h a s su b m itted a bill w h ich r e la te s to F r e sh m a n C ou ncil e le c tio n s . T h e A s se m b ly w ill u n d o u b ted ­ ly m o v e to su sp en d r u les so that th e bill m a y he brought up for se c o n d r ea d in g and voted on at th is e v e n in g ’s m e e tin g , Unofficial Election Returns Unopposed winners includ­ ed Rudy Rochelle for Ranger editor, Bettye Faulk for Cac­ tus editor, and Jill McMurray for head cheerleader. All th ree landslide victors took the lead .at the outset and just kept pushing fa rth e r into the lead, but leadership for vice-president and chief justice n ev er took any defi­ nite trend. G unter held the lead during the first two hours of the ballot counting by the APO ?, but Hudspeth forged ahead late to sta y in com m and. Bousquet had the sam e fate— leading early , then finding Stodg- hili clim bing to regain the lead. The unofficial final tabulation had 1,452 votes for Stodghill, and 1.451 for Bousquet. Bl LI.F.TIX — The recount of v o te* in th e rare for c h ie f justice w ax still u n d e rw a y at 1:37 a.m . T h u rsd a y w h en e le c tio n officials e s tim a te d it w ou ld ta k e tw o more h ou rs to c o m p le te it. t h e r e w ax no thp in W ed n esd a y n ig h t, v ic e - p r e sid e n tia l recoun t held race (See Picture, Page Si Since (here w ere no m ore than two candidates running for any of the m a jo r offices, no runoff w’ould be n ecessary. A nother landslide victory ca m e in the referendum w here students w ent “ fo r” by a 5 to I vote. The races for assem blym en w ent m uch quieter, although Brunson Moore m anaged only a two-vote victory for the Law' School A ssem ­ blym an o ver Louis N eum ann, a 72- 70 edge. race, in A rts The big and found R ichard K eeton, Sciences, M arjorie Menefee, and T erry Mo-* Gall easy victors O ther assem ­ blym en w inners w ere John S auer and F red P feiffer in E ngineering; Donald Love and Bill M iller rn Business A dm inistration; W alter Goole and Ben B radshaw in g ra d ­ uate school; Billie Cain in E d uca­ tion; Tom Brunson in P h a rm a c y ; (over and w rite-in unopposed Leon W hitney) in A rchi­ tecture. Joe Stoeltje O ther w'rite-in votes ranged from Austin M ayor Tom M iller for head cheerleader, to Dr. Izigan Wilson and Pogo for R an g er editor. Tile only com m ent the w rite-in victory Stoeltje had w as “ I ap p re­ ciate all the votes indeed.” The slim turnout 19.1 p er cent of the student body- due m ainly to the bad w ea th er conditions was j lowest since 1953 when only 2.867 votes w e re cast. I -ast y ear the rec­ ord of 6.905 w as set Stodghili s na n ow est-of-m argm s ■ victory m ay have com e chiefly from his trem endous support from the “ BBA ' school, w here he scored a 381 to 221 vote victory, but Bous­ quet rallied on the strong support from the A rts and Sciences voters who w ent 540 to 451 in his favor. Even other boxes went definitely one w ay o r the other for the tw o chief justice candidates, but in tho ♦end it cam e out a n ear even total. Clark Hendrix Gunter lf ud*|M*th Hi mon Goosby Bousquet Stodghill tikis Mims Rim* belle Faulk Mc Murry R eferendum : For Against P ilar 69 79 F . Arts 84 24 t • rad 42 37 F,due 169 55 Totals 2,043 1,033 Arch 62 13 31 42 12 62 23 46 19 53 59 61 62 53 l l AYS 735 303 544 499 304 724 540 451 321 tm 864 888 882 742 123 BBA 136 220 330 299 221 390 221 381 210 399 514 531 412 IQI * 531 Fug 246 133 174 204 115 262 154 192 121 240 298 r n 309 258 55 69 74 43 97 75 60 38 101 115 121 109 109 14 I -I if 180 169 105 265 99 205 236 127 IGI 208 230 241 206 226 117 45 54 22 74 48 45 33 65 93 88 91 75 l l 37 40 14 56 35 32 29 47 51 50 45 47 23 119 124 73 160 119 118 51 186 215 221 r n 180 IO I 456 1,601 903 2.030 1.451 1.452 924 I 998 2.439 2,514 2,466 2,102 454 AK< H IT IX T I K E : Stoeltje 41 W hitney 32 BBA: I>ov« 278 PHARM ACY: Brunson 9*) C larke 17 Adamo 41 G it ADI AIT : G rocer 33 Cool* 35 Bradshaw 14 L M il> E L K IN G ; G riffith 131 Sauer 201 P feiffer 154 H arrell 126 tu r n e r 187 M iller 232 DeVries 152 Laughlin 190 LAW : Moore 72 K ealey 45 B lu m en tn tt 34 Shnall 56 N eum ann 70 C IM : A KTH: Spelce 91 AAS: H enry 344 M eneiee 549 Keeton 676 Stanley 363 Rousth 232 McCall Jo6 and highest C hancellors, the new O ian c ello rs honorary fra te rn ity of the School of Law, tapped six new m em b ers recently. Chosen on the basis of sc h o lar­ achieve­ ship. personality, a re m ent, B arney Thornton Young, grand ch an cello r; R obert B. Reynolds, vice-chancellor; E dw ard W illiam B arn ett, w orthy keeper of the P e ­ r e g r i n e . D avid Robert Owen, clerk ; and Ross N. Sterling and R ichard P aul Bogatto, C hancellors at large. Young, who received a bachelor of a r ts degree from Y ale U niver­ sity in 1955, is a can d id ate for the T exas Law Review', a m e m b er of P hi D elta P hi legal fra tern ity , and a q uizm aster. Reynolds atten d e d the U niver­ sities of Colorado and T exas, r e ­ ceiving his bachelor of a r ts degree in 1957. He is a m em b er of Phi D elta Phi, a quizm aster, and a candidate for the T exas Law R e­ view’. B arnett is a m em b er of the edi­ torial hoard of the T exas Law R e­ view and of Phi D elta Phi. He re ­ ceived a bachelor of a r ts degree from Rice in 1955. Engineers W ill Choose Sweetheart Thursday com es One m ore election up T h u rsd ay as the cam pus engineers go to the [lolls to choose Miss E n ­ g ineer Voting will take place in front of the E ngineering Building from 9 a rn. to 4 ;.'40 p m , In the rac e ar* D ianne Denton, nom inee of electrical engineering students; B etsy Blanton, chem ical engineering; Sharon Henson, civil and engineering; C ynthia Lee, m echanical engineer­ ing; Ja c k ie Booth, ae ro n au tical engineering; and Jo a n W are, pe­ troleum engineering. a rc h ite c tu ra l M iss E ng in eer will be announced F rid a y at the E ngin eers’ Ball, to be held in the City Coliseum . Van K irk p atrick and his o rc h e stra will play for the dance, w hich w ill be from 8 p.m. until midnight. ROBERT REYNOLDS ROSS STERLING BARNEY Y O U N G MILE RELAY STRENGTH is one of Texas boasts th:s season. Clockw ise around C o a c h C ly d e Littlefield c e Lavern Voigt, Jim m y Holt, Ralph Rosenberg, Brooks Patrick, Edd e Southern, and W a lly W ilso n. These six boys a*e dividing their n u m b e r between the Drake and Penn Relays this weekend, hoping to make strong T ile relay showings at both meets. WASHINGTON eft — Jackie Jen­ sen's 10th inning single off Bob Chakales scored Billy Klaus from second to give Boston a 4-3 victory over Washington Wednesday night. Ted Williams crashed his third hom er of the season with none aboard in tho eighth Inning to tie the score at 3-3. Longhorns 2 Deep In Mile Relay Teams Thursday, April 25, 1957 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 I —-WTW!*':’-?' U T Golfers Spent Holiday on Links By JOHN HOBBS Texan Sport* Staff With track and field world records flying hither and thith­ er, the time comes to talk of another spring sport, golf, and the Longhorn golfers. for the books and profs, Captain Kirby Attwell* and his mates, Don Pohl, Tom m y Seekatz, Bob Nelson and Sonny Rhodes, hat e ripped all hut one opponent at their Austin homo and now stand in con­ tention the conference♦ title. That one loss, 4 ^-31 -J, 'Horns w a s to Baylor’s Bears in a played in the gigantic Southwest- non-eonference m atch played early em Intercollegiate over Houston’s In the season. The Steers have Pine Forest Country Club, the taken Bergstrom Air Force Base, home course of the meet winner Trinity, Southern Methodist, Ar- University of Houston. The Texans kansas and Kansas to the cleaners finished the three-day meet with a over the Austin Municipal links and total of 1,112 no infs. wh 'h xx as Saturday travel to the Land of the good enough for fourth place he- hind Texas AAM with 1.191 and Aggies to battle AAM. third During the F a ste r vacation from the HANK A A R O N 7-game streak going A t t w e l l in T h i r d readers will In team match play North Texas State spelled the Orange crew s doom and drowned their chances for the team crown in that depart­ ment The Horns bowed. 5-1, to the Eagles from NTSC As some of our older rem em ber, North Texas is the school that pro­ duced the fine links stable hack in the days of Billy Maxwell M ar­ lon Hisky, Bobby Maxwell, and Don January’. Billy Maxwell, the Odessa lad who took the National A m ateur some years back, and January’ are both on the pro tour now. Bobby Maxwell is playing a partial in the tour and working golf shop in Odessa In gaining the m atch plav finals Attwell and company cam e up on Houston’s blind side and beat the hosting unit, 3T4-2H, on the m orn­ ing of the second day of play. That afternoon Texas halved with SMU and picked up 17 points to earn the right, to play for the title. Attwell stroked along with the more heralded Houston swingers Rex B axter Jr. and Jim m y Hisky*. and w’as in third place with 212 172-67-73) when the air cleared late Saturday afternoon. B axter romped home to the in­ dividual medal with rounds of 71- 72-67 for a total of 210 strokes over the 6.710 yard course. Baxter and Attwell both had the five under 67’s day after Hisky had set 67 up as the course record for the par 72 lay-out. Seekatz of Texas finished in a ti© for fourth with Juan Estrada of North Texas Both coupled final round TI’* with scores of the other two rounds and finished with 214 s. Houston brought home the four- ball crown with a 184 total. Okla- hom a’s Aggies were second with 186 and the Steers fashioned a 188 to place third. SHORT SHOTS-W e had Attwell and Pohl shared the two- ha ll lead during the tourney with two two-man units from Houston. I All three duos finished with 197. the chance to meet Kirby Attwell's fa­ ther. O sb o rn Attwell, when Texas hosted and heat Southern Metho­ dist some two weeks ago. The sen- Av v< I was down Iv avine a to watch his highly twelve through the wet course touted holes with seven birdies as Horns won, 5H-H. lad blaze that Kirby's dad told us the Longhorn lead m an was planning to get his m ilitary obligation off and then enter H arvard business school following his June g ra d u -! ation from Texas. “ He is thinking about going through a four-month the officer training course with Coast Guard and then serving six months on active duty,” the sen­ ior Attwell said Mr. Attwell also told us that he had tried to get Kirby to enter the National Am ateur during one of the past sum m ers but that jobs and the like had kept him at home and out of play. During the holidays we talked to Ed Hopkins the form er Texas first man now living in our home town of Abilene. Hopkins has been nut of meet action for most of the win­ ter tour. He did m ake the Texas I Open at San Antonio where he placed fifth in the am ateur brack­ et. Hopkins, an independent oil man who works all over West Texas, said that he planned to en­ ter the Mile High Open and the Trans-Miss later on in the sum ­ mer. LOUISVILLE T — Rugged hills and tricky greens tamed golfdom’s top par busters Wednesday, but Walker Inman Jr. sneaked in with a i-under-67 to get the jum p on the first Kentucky Derby open field. The transplanted Georgian, play­ ing out of Bolton, Mass., birdied tile first three holes and kept mov­ ing in what prosed to he a specta­ cular round when compared with m any other scores. Inman, a 26-year-old, was sta rt­ ing on his seeond tournam ent of the current pro tour. O t h e r s who solved Seneca course s trying 6,575 yards Included Jack Fleck, Bobby Maxwell and Peter Thompson, each with a 69. included Pat Schwab of Dayton. Ohio, Bo W r ­ inger of Odessa, Tex. Tile 70 shooters Even with p ar 71s were Don F a ir­ field -of Casey, HL, George Bayer of Los Angeles, Jack Burke of Kiamesha Lake, N. Y., G ardner Dickenson of Panam a City Beach, Fla., and Arnold Palm er of La­ trobe, Penn. Ouillian, M a c k a y Win In River O a k s Meet HOUSTON lift—Two young new­ comers, William Quinlan and B ar­ ry Mackay, upset seventh-seeded Don Candy of Australia and eighth- ranked G rant Golden in the fourth round of the annual River Oaks Tennis Tournament. Wednesday. Quinlan, form er NCAA doubles champion from Seattle, Wash., eliminated Golden, the nation's No. IO am ateur, 6-2, 6-2, Mackay, na­ indoors doubles champion tional from Dayton, Ohio, defeated Can­ dy. 6-2, 6-4. Meet Bill Hancock l f es tern Electric development engineer Bdl Hancock is a graduate of Pennsylvania State University where he majored in indus­ trial engineering. Btl! joined Western Electric as a planning engineer in November, 1951, at the Kearny Works in New Jersey. I ater, he was assigned to the new Merrimack Valley Works in North Andover, Massachusetts, as a development engineer. Here Bill is shown leaving his attractive New England home for his office while his wife, Barbara, and their daughter, Blair, watch. Braves Win, 8-7, On Crandall's H R MILWAUKEE IT The Milwau­ kee Braves m aintained their posi­ the National League tion atop W ednesday when Del Crandall hit a home run in the last of the ninth for an 8-7 decision over St. Louis. The victory gave Milwaukee a lead over tem porary half - gam e Brooklyn. in which All the B raves’ runs in the free- swinging contest, they twice cam e from behind to tie the score, were brought across by hom ers. Before C randall’s blast, Ed Mathews drove home three runs with his first hom er of the season. Henry Aaron hit his third — also with two on and Joe Adcock his second, with the bases empty. For Aaron, it was the seventh in which he hit straight gam e th at started safely in a streak opening day. In the process the Braves have won six against one loss. Attendance Wednesday was 15,368, Taylor Phillips, young Milwaukee lefthander who cam e to the mound the fourth in to relieve starter Ray Crone, got the decision, his first of the year. looser was Wil­ lard Schmidt, who relieved St. Louis sta rte r Herm Wehmeier with three runs home and none out in the fifth. NEW YORK UPI Mickey Mantle lined a home run into the right field bleachers with the score tied in the eighth inning Wednesday for a 3-2 New York Yankee victory despite 12 Baltimore hits. Bob Grim was the winning pitcher in relief of sta rte r Art Ditmar. M antle's smash, his s e c o n d hom er of the year, cam e on tire first pitch by Connie Johnson in the eighth. Mickey hit only two against Baltimore last year, both at Yankee Stadium. Yogi B e rra ’s second hom er of the season following a single by Mantle in the first inning had given D itm ar an early 2-0 the form er K a n s a s C i t y pitcher couldn't hold the edge and finally left for a pinch hitter, giving Grim the chance to win his second game in relief. lead. However Mantle and Bill Skowron led the Yanks with three hits each while Bob Boyd and George Kell each had three for Baltimore. trap that chased BROOKLYN (IP — The Brooklyn Dodgers sprung a four run fourth- inning rookie righthander Curt Barclay and made it stand up for a 4-3 victory ov er the New York Giants Wednesday night although held to one hit the rest of the way by three reliefers. CINCINNATI tfr—The Cincinnati Redlegs “ walked” to a 9-5 victory over the C h i c a g o C u b s here Wednesday night as Bruin pitchers set a new’ National League record for walks in one inning by giving bases on balls to nine Redleg bat­ fifth. The Redlegs ters scored seven runs in that fram e with only one hit. the in PHILADELPHIA (^--Rookie Ed Bouchee clouted a three-run triple and the Philadelphia P h i l l i e s notched seven runs the sixth inning for an 8-5 victory over the Pittsburgh P i r a t e s Wednesday night. in wmmmmmp m MICKEY MANTLE . . . his homer won NATIONAL LEAGUE W ed n esd ay ’* Results M ilw au k ee 8. St Lo uis 7 B rooklyn 4. N e w York 3 P hiladelphia 8, Pittsb urg h 5 Cincin nati 9, Chicago 5 M ilw au k ee Brooklyn N e w York Ch icago Cincinnati Philadelphia St Louis Pittsb u rg h ................. 6 ................... 8 ................. 4 .......... 3 . . . . . . . . . . 3 ............. 3 ................... 2 ................. 2 I I 4 4 4 4 5 6 .857 .857 . 500 . 429 .429 .429 . 286 . 250 . . . 2li 3 3 3 4 414 AMERICAN LEAG UE W ed n esd ay's Result* N e w York 3. Baltimor e 2 Boston 4. W ash in gton 3 (IO i n n i n g s 1 D et ro it at Chicago, ppd Kansa s City 17, Cleveland 6 rain ............. .. Chicago N e w York Kansas City Boston W a sh in gto n Bal timore Cleveland Det ro it W L Pet. GB .800 4 ,714 ................. 5 .625 ........... 5 ....................... 4 .571 ,375 ............. 3 .375 ................. 3 .333 ................... 2 . 286 ....................... 2 I 2 3 3 5 5 4 5 I 2 1* 2 1* 2 L 3 , . . H 'Mural Schedule HORS ESHOES 4 ~ -Sumner vs, Ables Nell Turn s vs W in n er Hall and M cG reevy; T o m m y Turn s vs Altwein; Howard vs. Z e ­ beck; Licht* vs. P a in s ; Clark vs Gol- hurg: 4 30 — Winner Kelly-Hnll vs. W in n er S w e e n e y - P r lr e ; W inner Nelson- Cleveland vs W in n er Cobb-Harris; W inner Davls-Hammon d vs Winner Roor.ev-Colr Wtlborn vs. R o s b u r g , Rhodes vs. Dyer. P ierce vs. Gains. 5 Lee vs Cummings Miller vs W inner lander-Jones Cooper vs Rut­ ter, S earcy vs. W illiam s: Kelly vs S p ivey; Cotton vs W inner Stoker- Cag le 5 to Winner McInnes-FSowers vs. W inner Kopel-Steve* Winner Stout-Klatta vs W inner Davis-Scar- b r o u g h . Winner Jenkins-Sarg ea nt vs W inner Mlghell-Moak W inner F.d- ward-Smlth v* Winner O liv er-H arte r. W ash in gton vs W inner McBrlde-Me- Clendon , W h ite vs. Blesch. R em aining r o u n d s In horseshoes (fraternitv division* h a v e b e e n resched­ uled for Saturd ay afternoon. S O FT BA L L CI as* A 5 —Phi Sigm a Kappa vs Lambda Ch) Alpha S ig m a Nu vs Sigma Chi; 7— Phi S ig m a Delta vs Kappa Sigma; Cam pus Guild vs. Twin Pines: PLM vs A n n s 8 Delta Tau Delta vs Alpha Kpstlon Pl: M anagem en t vs. W es ley . BSC vs. Thole me Class H 4 9 . \ P vs Bela Theta Pl; Sigma Nu v*. Delta U p s i l o n ; Theta Chi vs Kap­ pa Alp ha, a Phi Delta Theta vs A l­ pha Upsilon Pl Bill * p re v e n t a l i g n m e n t a t Western E lectric: the de velopm ent of m ethod s and m ac h in ery for assem bling o n e o f to d a y ’* most^ prom isin g electronic de v elop m en ts - e le c t r o n i c “p a c k ­ ages involving printed wiring. At a p rodu c t review c o n f e r ­ ence Bill (st a n d in g j discusses his ideas on printe d wiring assem blies with fellow engineers. Bill and h i* s u p e r* Ivor, Jo h n Soutcr, test a m ac hin e they d e v elo p ed to insert c o m p o n e n t s o f different sh apes and sizes into p u n t e d wiring hoards. T h e •m all e le ctro n ic pa cka g es p re p are d hy this m ac hine are b eing used in a new transisto rized c arrier *ystera fo r ru ra l tele p hon e lines. E ngineers: W estern E lectric offers you a w ide variety o f inter­ 1 0 1 4 Brazos S t r e e t esting, c r e a t i \ e opportunities. It m akes no difference w h a t your field o f specialization is. Y o u can fit — now — into our opera­ tion a s the m anufacturing and supply unit o f the Bell System . . . or into our defense job. A free booklet —“ Your O pportun­ ity at W estern E lectric’*— outlines com pany operations and apecific job opportunities in detail, fiend for it. Write lo: C o l­ lege R elations D epartm ent, R oom 1029, W estern Electric C om p any, 195 B roadw ay, N ew York 7, N . Y . M A R I O N B. FINDLAY G R 2 - 8 4 7 5 M r 4"f, an underw riter ikiliad in matters concernin g life in* •urance, is ready to h e lp you. H e represents the Jefferson Standard, the company that has never paid less than 4 % inter, est on dividend accumulations an d on policy proceeds lefr with the c om pa ny to provide income, which is considerably in excess of the rate g u a r a n ­ teed in it* policies. Sailing off the north chore o f M assachusetts is o n e o f Bill’* favorite sports. He also enjoys the g o lf courses and ski runs within an easy drive from where he l o w and works. ^ M A N U F A C T U R IN G A N O S U T f lY M a n u f a c t u r in g p la n ts In C e r a g o , IU Kearny, N J S o i l w a r*, M d , In d io n o p o ii, Iu d i A llen to w n a n d L aureld ale , Bo ,• B urlington, G r # e ',»boro a n d W in sto n Salaam N . C , I H a lo N Y.| H a ve rh ill e n d Law rence, M a n t l ‘nco*n, N e b i It. Pout a n d Oulutli, M in e . Installation h e a d q u a rte r* *a 14 ti net. A ls o , T eletype C o rp o ra tio n , C h ic a g o 14, lllin oi*. D ist r ib u t in g C e n te r* in 3 0 citied a n d U H INS U* ANC f C O Mown O W ** N C O v n J l W Bill on Lit* (Murine* rn f o'f* B A M C Gam e Drowned Out; TO U Up Next Heavy rains caused cancellation for the second time of Texas’ gam* with the Brooke Medical Center Comets of San Antonio Wednesday afternoon. Rain also took the m eas­ ure of the Texas Freshm an gam e with Travis High School of Austin. Head baseball coach Bibb Falk said Wednesday that neither the Brooke gam e nor the one with Travis would he played. Falk was undecided about pitch­ ers to sta rt against Texas Christ­ ian in Ft. Worth Friday and Satur­ day afternoons. H arry Taylor and Howard Reed, top candidates for the starting role against Brooke, will most likely see action-against the Homed Frogs. Fall* added that Taylor and Reed m ay be starters. The only games th at would be m ade up, the Texas mentor added, 'Hus are a twin bill with Baylor set of gam es would be played af­ te r the regular season ended. j train NEW YORK (I* Bold Ruler De­ late Wednesday parted by for the Kentucky Derby accom­ panied by Rusty, three Irishmen, a German and a ton of equipment including his own special mountain w ater and food. So, if you've been worrying about the gas bill for the old jalopy, or taxicab fares, just rem em ber it costs about JI,200 to ship the E a st’s main Derby hop© to Louisville. Rusty is a pony of just that color, who goes with Bold Ruler wherever he travels, and accompanies him to the starting gate on days h© Irishm en are B art races. The Sweeney, forem an for Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons, exercise boy Tommy Quinn and w atchm an Jim Driscoll. The Germ an, a native of Brooklyn, is Robert “ Snag” Bittrolf, the colt’s groom. While flash bulbs popped and spectators gawked at the Belmont P ark loading platform , Bold Rul­ e r ’s 82-year-old trainer supervised the operation which has taken three days of preparation. Mr. Fitz and his son, John, w ill leave for Louisville Saturday night by rail. Bold Ruler is owned by th© Wheatley Stable of Mrs. Henry Carnegie Phipps of Palm Reach, I Fla., and New York, and “O pera­ tion B erby” is going to cost her some money unless he finishes at least fourth in the race May 4. S P O R T * N O T I C E Manager* o f organization* still In tournam en t are requested to softball in contact w it h the Intramural keep O ffice schedule Came* will bo scheduled every avail­ ab le day. Including Saturd ay and It m ay be Impossible for managers to he o fficially notified. to check on their Brooks Patrick, and either Joe V illarreal or George Foerster will be entered. Voigt has run 49.3 and 49 4 lead­ ing off the relay this season. P a t­ rick ran a 49 8 on the distance medley* at Kansas, while Rosen­ berg turned in a 48.3 on the mile relay at the sam e meet. Villarreal record- ran occasionally on breaking freshm an mile relay of 1956, while Foerster is a much- improved half-miler. the The Pennsylvania-bound four­ some will run against the Villa- nova mile relay team which won at Penn a year ago with 3:11.9 and is anchored by Olympic 400-met.er cham p Charley Jenkins. Wilson has run tim es of 47.3 and 47.5 on the relay this year, Holt did 47.7 at Kansas, and Southern anchored at the Texas Relays in 46.5, Whilden ran the opening leg early this season in about 49.5, while Gainey was a great, high school 440 m an and ran on last ; year’s freshm an relay for a while. If those boys run up to their best times a t Penn, Texas could dip under 3:11.5 or even 3:11, some­ thing unheard of since Oklahoma AAM ran a 3:10.9 in 1955. SHIRMAN Here it is: the new University style, specially developed for the man on the campus. The fabric is the famous Cramerton Chino in new, subtle pen­ cil stripes and approved, conservative colors. The slacks are authentic Ivy, correct in every detail. The superb ta ilo rin g is by Pool-O f-Sherm an. Completely washable, of course. Exclusively UNIVERSITY 23/0 (JU a d aln 41 YEARS O N THE D R A G THE DAILY TEXAN Paqe Thursday, April 25, 1957 Hughes to Participate In Scientific Meetings Dr. D a rre ll S Hughes, professor of physics, w ill participate in sev­ eral scientific meetings in W ash­ ington, D. C., Pittsburgh through M a y 4. and "Shock W aves and M etals” w ill be the topic of his paper which w ill he presented F rid a y to the Am erican P h ysical Society. And Tuesday at a meeting of the A m e r­ ican Geophysical Union he w ill dis­ Igneous cuss "D en sity of B asic Rocks at Ex trem e High Pressure.” This is one of our famous £ | e n * e n Hiq ; ndelity Loudspeakers K-210 M V A l C O A X IA L Provides the excellent high fi­ delity reproduction of a coaxial two-way system in a unit of sm all size and am azingly low cost. r a d i a t o r 1-f u n i t : M atched d ir e c t provision fo r easily a d d i n g ST-901 IT F Balance C ontrol. C o m p ac tn e ss f o r and r a d i o m o d ern izin g TV se ts a n d e q u ip ped w i t h 12-inch slng le-u nit s p e a k e r s Built-In f r e q u e n t ;ng sy stem . P o w e r r a t i n g , 12 Im pedance. 8 oh ms. Baffle o ' V ; OD. 12 1-3 ’ S h i p p in g W e i g h t 7 lh*. Net Price $27.50 lo'v cost m a k e d epth . 6 5 -1 6 /5 Ideal It W e carry the complete line of Jensen high fidelity & extended range speakers & component*. SPEEDWAY — SALES & SERVICE- H IG H FIDELITY AT REA SO N A BLE PRICES 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 ASC's Fight Looks Doomed State Commission Postpones Decision It looks as if Arlington State'.« fight to become a senior college is going to fail. elevate if passed, to an accredited The A SC B ill, which is in the House State A ffa irs Committee could, the school's status from a junior col­ lege four-year institution. How ever, Representa­ tive J im Moore of Arlington, spon sor of the hill, said Tuesday that since the State Commission on H igher Education had postponed delivering an opinion on the m at­ ter, he would not push the bill any I further. Tile Com m ission’s announcement that it needs more tim e to study j the situation p ra ctic a lly closes the door on Arlington S tate’s hopes and delays possible passage of the bill until the 1959 session of the Legislature. Storm y student demonstrations, highlighted by effigy hangings and torchlight parades, protested the Com m ission’s decision. Throwing more flam es on student feelings. school officials impounded an issue of the campus newspaper for print­ ing a p ic tu re ,of a recent effigy- hanging. C u s s W o r d s In Prather H a l l 's C l e a n u p C a m p a i g n A cam paign to clean up the language of the bottom floor in section I of P r a ­ ther H all is on. residents of The men on the floor have signed an agreem ent stating they w ill pay 2 cents e very tim e they utter " a n unclean word or phrase hereby defined as a w ord or phrase you would not say in front of your mother or a m inister ” E a c h signer is hound by the agreement to .see that 2 cents is deposited when he hears a sign­ e r say an unclean word or phrase. The agreem ent w ill he term inated when as m any as five of the signers agree, on it. The agreem ent has been in ef­ fect almost a week, and the little tin can hearing the in­ scription "R ig h t here, you sin­ ner. Sham e on yo u ," contam.? alm ost $1. W h at w ill happen the collected? They w ill money have a p arty w ith it. of course to IFC Scholarship Deadline Friday Man or Woman May Be Selected Application deadline for the an­ nual scholarship given by Inter- fraternitv Council has been extend- I cd to F rid a y . Competition is open to U n iv e rsity students, men or women. Pre se n ta ­ tion is based on need, campus p ar­ ticipation. and grades. Students m a y get an application form in the Dean of M e n ’s office, Speech Building 102. A sm all pic­ ture of the applicant must be sub­ mitted w ith the application. The amount of the scholarship is not yet known, M em bers of the IF C scholarship com m ittee are Ja c k ( ’. c o r g e Schneider, is I Ken Solcher, Bob R a cklev, I chairm an. Dean Ja c k Holland ' the faculty sponsor. R iley, and What Coes On Here S W IN G OUT IN VITATION S to ba sent to se- or studier being prepared by Merry Io u Coin, right, a-d Jean Kelly Out is sponsored by Cap and Gown Council a^d S:!ve- Spurs to honor outstanding student leaders and is to be held May 3, 6:45 p.m., in front of Main Building. s are Swing C a m p u s N e w s in Brief Four to Speak on Middle East Fo u r speakers on the Middle E a s t are scheduler! on campus this week. M rs. C illi Abraham , vice-consul of Is ra e l in N ew York, w ill talk on "T h e Status of Wom en in the M iddle E a s t ” at IO a rn. Thursday In G arrison H a ll 215. D r Simon Btesh, director of the Is ra e li M in istry of Health, w ill speak on "P re v e n tiv e M edicine in Is r a e l” at 4 p rn. in Geology B u ild ­ ing 14. D r, N athan Sharon w ill speak at in Ex p erim en tal Science Is ­ 4 p m , Building 223 on ra e l.” "S c ie n ce in Sim cha P ia tt, consul general of Is ra e l, w ill speak on "T h e Legal Sysem of Is r a e l” at 8 p m. Frid ay In Batts H a ll Auditorium. i Co-ed Forum to Meet The C o e d Forum w ill m^et at 4 45 p m T hursday in the Ba rk e r Texas H istory Center Diane M c ­ F a rla n d w ill present an evaluation of Round-Up. M em bers are requested to bring their g r o u p s ' suggestions on Round-Up and other activities to the meeting. Refreshm ents w ill be served. May I Contest Deadline Deadline for the Log al H. R o b ­ erts E d ito ria l Contest is M a y I . Sponsors of the contest, the In ­ tercollegiate Association for Study of the Alcohol P io h lcm , w ill award prizes totaling $3,000 to waiters of editorials, ranging from 500 to 800 words, on and Sa fety.” the subject, "A lcohol ’ M anuscripts must be typewritten and double-spaced or written in ink and must be attached to an official entry' blank. Judging w ill he based on sound, objective, original thinking: quality of research: accu ra cy of basic in­ form ation; and editorial cla rity of expression. style; E n tr y blanks and additional in­ formation m ay he obtained from Secreta ry of Aw ards, Intercollegi­ ate Association. 12 North Third Street. Room 522, Columbus 15, j . Ohio. Townsend Writes Story Dr. H ow ard W . Townsend, asso­ ciate professor of speech, has ; written an article called Scared for W ords” for the M a y | 1957. issue of Thp Lion monthly i magazine published by the In te rn a - 5 tional Association of Lions Clubs. "T oo Navy Officers Will Talk leading A team of naval officers from Houston and D allas w ill discuss N a v y program s for men and w om ­ In en I naval service Monday through Fri- | day of next week from 8 a rn. to 4 p.m. in the lobby of the N R O T C Building. to a commission Six Engineers Elected F iv e faculty m em bers and one graduate student of the U n ive rsity have been elected mem bers of the ; T ra v is Chapter cf Texas Society' of Professional Engineers. N ew mem bers are M yron L . Begem an, professor of m e c h a n ic a l: engineering; Harrison D. Gorham ! power plant engineer; Fra n k lin B. I Johnson, assistant professor of en-1 gineering; R o y Krezdorn, assistant professor of e lectrical engineering: j Dr. R obert L . Stone, professor o f ! ceram ics engineering; and W a lte r Wendlandt, engineering graduate of Texas A & M now in the U n iv e r­ sity I/aw’ School. Whirling Dishpan Tells Weather? W h a t’s a rotating dishpan got to do with the w eather? Dr. Norm an K . W agner, re­ search meteorologist for the E le c ­ trical Engineering R esearch l a b ­ oratory' at Balcones Research Cen­ ter, w ill describe such an app ara­ tus and its use at the meeting of the Central Texas branch of the Am erican M eteorological Society F rid a y at 8 p m, in Exp erim ental Science Building 223. Highlights of the recent Chicago meeting of the society w ill also be reported by D r. W agner. A t the U n iv e rsity of Chicago experiments are being conducted using rotating dishpans filled w ith various fluids to sim ulate the earth ’s atmospher­ ic motions. Rotating dishpan apparatus re­ cently built by meteorology stu­ dents at the U niversity' w ill be dis­ played, and a non-terhmcal dis­ cu ssio n on atmospheric modeling techniques w ill be supplemented with a color movie. Won [u, ll" " * * " * * tective of the A ir ,” M usic B u ild ­ ing R e c ita l H all. :15—A C T p r e s e n t s " Ja n u s ,” T F W C Building. Single Breasted Suits made from doubles • Re pair# • A lte r a tio n s A N D Y ’ S E x p e r t T a i lo r i n g 2512 G u a d a l u p e - GR 2-3067 EXPERT SHOE REPAIR • Modern Equipment f t Keys M ade • 10% Off Goodyear Shoe Shop O ff The Drag on 23rd Street W E RENT ‘EM! y * § | TUXEDOS $ 6 ° ° Complete w ith Accessorial CROWN TAILORS GR 7-6703 408 r. 6th You’re Always Right in focus when you look your well-groomed host! Thursday 8-6— Exh ib it by a rt faculty, M usic Building loggia. 9-11—Snack sale. Home Econom ics Building basement. 9-3— B B A W eek exhibits, W aggoner H all. 10—M rs. C illi Abraham to speak on "T h e Status of Women in the M iddle E a s t ." G arrison H a ll 215. 3-5— E x h ib it of paintings by P e te r Hurd and San Antonio artists, Laguna G loria. 3— Debate workshop, Speech B u ild ­ ing 201. 4—D r. Nathan Sharon to speak on "S c ie n ce in Is ra e l,” Ex p erim e n ­ tal Science Building 223. 4—D r. Simon Btesh to give public I lecture on "P re v e n tiv e M edicine 1 in Is ra e l,” Geology Building 14. I Eugene C. i 4 .45— Co-ed Fo rum , 5— Hom e B a rk e r Texas H isto ry Center. economics style show, Hom e Econom ics Building patio, club 7—-Christian Science Organization. 7:10 and 7 :30 — "U n iv e rs ity H igh­ 2328 Guadalupe. lights,” K T E C . 7 :30— Southwestern Rocket Society, Ex p erim e n tal Science Building 223. 7 :30— Austin Stam p Club trading session, downtown Y M C A . 7:45 — "U n iv e rs ity N ew sbeat,” I K V E T . 8 -Concert of French music for benefit of Aaron Schaffer M e ­ m orial Fund. T F W C Building. I 8— Pu b lic lecture by W . Cam pbell Ba lfo u r on "T h e B ritis h La b o r P a r t v .” A rchitecture Building j | 105. * 8:15— Sigmund Spaeth, "Tune-De­ UT, A&M Pistol Teams Take Honors in Austin Pisto l team s of the United States A rm y M ilita ry D istrict, Texas, won honors in the recent annual spring pistol shoot of the Austin R ifle Q ub. Representing The teams, firing under the N a ­ tional R ifle Association classifica­ tion system, won the center fire, placed first expert in .22 caliber firing, and first expert and first J m arksm an in the .45 caliber firing. the m ilita ry dis­ trict w ere M a j. Clarence L . Siefcrt, Capt. C asilear Middleton, 1st Lt. R o b e r t L . Schroeder, M/Sgt. Ja m e s B . A rch e r; Col. Ralph A . Tolve, M /Sgt. Irvin g T. Cutter, and S F C Leo P . Joron, all of A rm y R eserve O fficers T raining Corps at the U n iv e rs ity of Texas. Col. H en ry L . Ph illip s and Capt. K e rm it | D, R ee l of A rm y R O T C at Texas A & M also participated TUXEDOS F O R R E N T All S t i r s Longhorn Cleaners 2538 G u a d a l u p e P h o n e GR 6-3817 C O N G R A T U L A T IO N S are in order for the new Chief Justice. Tom Bousquet and Don Stodghill do the honors. Stodghill copp ed 1,452 vo*es to Bouquet's 1,451. A recount probably w be held to determine the winner. 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A raw I rave'-Weave suit by Palm Beach that gives you that c'ean, cool. fresh look all summer. Comp'etely washable and styled with a I the famous Palm Beach tailoring features. Th’s three button flap pocket model in a bare!y visible •tripe pattern in navy or brown. Men's Clothing, Street Floor El M at • 504 EAST AVE. GR 7-7023 El Toro 1601 GUADALUPE GR 8-4321 Monroe's "Mexican Food to Taka Home" 500 EAST AVE. GR 7-8744 $39.95 r m r - — ■w— m i * j. aa. f i e HukhiniikL T H S # M a a » * # f A p o s t i l O N C O N O O C S * » V C W 4 4 LISTEN W E E K N IG H T S TO " K N O W ” RA D IO AT 8 P.M. TO YO U R A L L - REQUEST "T E E N - TIME TURNTABLE" Thursday, Apr* 25, 1957 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 4 Little Man On the Campus B t B ib le * Collegiate Corral Leadership v. Representation Som etim es leaders of the people must choose between sheer representation and leadership. This w as the gist of a speech by one of the presidential candidates at Stump Speaking tw o nights ago. We think there w as much merit in what he said. Student president Lloyd H ayes and his adm inistration came in for a good deal of direct and indirect criticism during the campaign for the stand taken on the proposed tuition increase— a stand which is a case in point of choosing leadership rather than sheer representation. While there is not doubt that no stu­ dent—or anyone— wants to pay $25 more for anything he is getting, the fact re­ m ains that he does pay more for e v e r y ­ thing else he is getting these dave A United States office of Education re­ port. findings of which appear on this page, shows that the amount student* in attending coilerr ha* doubled spend since 1939-40. The present tuition rate w as sot in 1933 — even before the 1939-40 report cited in the study. It seems, as the Texan has stated before, only reasonable to adjust the 1933 rate to contem porary realities This is reasonable, that is. if one operates on the premise that it is proper for the person receiving the benefit* of such edu­ cational services to pay a slight portion of the costs of them. If, on the other hand, you suppose that higher education Is a service which the state should perform gratis, either for all its citizens or for those most nearly equip­ ped to receive such service, then the $25 tuition should have been target for hot and heavy criticism lone ago. Such criti­ cism was never heard. Senator Jarrard See rest, vvho is spon­ soring House Bill 265 in the Senate, said in Com m ittee hearings where students ap­ peared to oppose the bill, that if the Sen­ ate voted down the bill. a new one should he the present tuition. introduced abolishing “Right or wrong,” Senator Secrest said, “the state has never taken the position that students were entitled to education without any cost,” An argument can be made for having no tuition at all and we hope someone will make it as Senator Secrest suggested if ILB. 265 does not pass. But in the light of the rise in the cost of everything since 1933 and the U niversity’s critical needs for money, if ^25 was a reasonable and proper tuition in 1933, $50 seems reasonable to­ day. In citing these facts in the face of large­ leaders sheer leadership Matt ire ly emotional protests, demonstrated a choice between representation and leadership prevailed. student The H irin g I -J 'W e S e r v o ’ Te the Editor: In the spirit of the words penned by * famous English bard “I went into a puh'ic-'ouse rn get a pint 'n beer. The publi­ can’ e up a n ’ *ez 'We serve no red-coeic h e rr' . , , " confider the recent a t America s rno^t unpopular present-day in­ stitution—the peacetim e soldier. the sergeants have n o im pressive degree* after their nam es, nor a re they included rn the nebulous rank* of the "gen­ tlem en." ex en bv en ne? of Con­ gress. Their pay likewise is not very im pressive, hut of course it would not be advisable to pay such parasitic th* economy a wage com parable to factors of True, Official Notices The C lassified F -rso n n e l O ffice c f the U n iversity riccntSv reir.*sefi im m e­ a d ia te ly availab le iisi o f Job op p ortu n ities All of th e in**, Mons are open for f ul l - .rn* emplo> rn* nt w ith one e x ­ emplum. T w o position* m e for ad­ senior m in istrative a ecrelary and rlerk-t> plat stu d en t wive* lo apply O ther o p e n in g are #ecretarte*, secreta ries for three-qu arter tim e secretarv , clerk - ty p lst, tran scrip t exam in er, h ou se­ k eeper. co m p u tin g clerk, accou n t­ ant and research assistan t not a llo w in g senior S alaries vary w ith q u a lifica tio n s and experience F urther salary tied q u alification inform ation may he the C lassified Per obtained son n et O ffice, M ain B u ild in g 2302 • from th e CS. T h e se m i- a n n u a l F o r e i g n S ervice O f fice r Exalt m a t on ti be K'ven by th e D e p a r t m e n t of S ta te on J u n e 24 at m o r e th ai! 65 c e n t e r * t h r o u g h ­ r o be el k hie to t a k e o u t th* examination, c an d id ate* m u -t he at least SIJ y e a r s of ag e an d u n ­ d e r 31, a n d m u s t al s o he A m e r ic a n cit lien s of at least 9 - ear* s t a n d i n g A l t h o u g h a c a n d i d a t e * sp o u s e ne- 1 toot be a ci t i z e n on t h e d a t e of the e x a m i n a t i o n c it i z e n s h ip m ust have been o b t a i n e d p r i o r t o th e d a t s of t h e of ficer * a p p o i n t m e n t Application form* m ay be ob ­ tained in th* .Student Em ploym ent Bureau or by w ritin g to th e Board for Ute F o reig n o f E xam iners State S ervice o f I he closin g W ash in gton 25 P C d ate is for May I. 1*97, the ap p lication D ep a rtm e n t filin g • for R egistration in * hirst Term o f the 1957 S u m m er S o s* -rn " ill occur on T u esd ay, June i. A ny stu ­ dent w ho has pre* m usic atten d ed T he U n iversity of r e re.ve his First T erm 1957 Sum m er S ession C ourse Card and R eg istra ­ tion T im e A s s i g n m e n t bv m ail bv fillin g Is ava labia a ’ the O ffi-c o f the Rcu ! st rar Th iv m ust be done not later than May 4 in an ap p lication which le v a * ma John W Brown A*«l&tam R egistrar and R eg istra tio n S upervisor noble enlightened educators. Thp education they ere im­ parting isn t even very im pres­ sive. only how to protect one * life in even! of w ar, and defend the country against foreign in­ vade’'’s. Nothing to com pare w th such lofty and useful subject* Latin, Greek, and ancient bis­ son, ^o deciding not to give people who are n ot professors and only work here parking rtermiis is not really so had in light of th* fact they are not particularly educated, notable < im pres­ sive This i« particularly true in the ea-e of the serg ean t' After all. tax burden already, and they don ♦ gen e a very’ useful function rn the society -only go out and d » for it at any given moment go requested they are a terrible snobbery ss But on the other hand, is rf particularly noble of the high- minded ultra - sophisticated ad­ m inistration to deny them the the cam pus right to park on while performing their duties here, on such a shabby pseudo­ intellectual their rate of pay for services pen* formed or lack of literary titles? for our three cheers noble educators and equally no­ ble civilian population. The ser­ geants have one small consola­ tion for in the words of Kipling —“ It s Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' Tommy go aw ay,- But It* Thank you. Mr. Atkins' wdhen the hand begins to play Well - EDT) CI.ARK I * t Thor** B e L ig h t To the Editor: As a supporter and apprecia­ tor of the dram a program since the daj s of Stark Young, before the beginning of another dram a­ tic sea-on I wish to register a protest aga in'-!, being forc ed to sit m semi-darkness and strain m y eyes to read the program I have twice protested to the D ram a D epartm ent and been in­ formed as follow x, "The I .gib­ ing situation in Hogg Auditorium the is not satisfactory. When down lights’ in the ceiling were Installed three years ago. it was them chi a necessary separate circuit and They mu«i be cut off before the to put switch regular lights in the auditorium and the stage lights are turned on. Thus you hav e not enough light- This situation cannot he rem edied w i t h o u t excessive cost.’* I suspect, however, that there may he some further reason connected with production and cannot w'boily excuse the De­ partm ent of Dram a. The other night we sat for half an bour before the play began attem pt­ ing to read the program , though the the stage was unlighted whole time At no other meeting in Hogg a re such conditions of eyestrain perm itted, And sn f appeal from the Departm ent to Caesar the adm inistration to rem edy the situation. Let there he light. - E. M. HJVRK I m» V C L u n d f o r A w a rd s To the Editor? To re the IFC-Panhollcnic Var­ sity Carnival Fund, why not set the entire amount up in a fund to be used for presentation of annual aw ards to outstanding m em bers of the Texas faculty? the To my knowledge only Lem Scarbrough awards are such deserving presented to faculty m embers Using the sam e -election m ethods aa that award, a IO aw ards of $500 each could he established for six y ears at least out of existing funds. Then each year'a proceeds could he added to the fund to create a lasting pingram of real contribution by all Greeks to the No. I problem of our University, series of soma If Greek organizations could come forward with a program , besides perhaps being a nucleus for other groups doing the same, we would he bringing great credit to the Greek System - too laughed off as "Mickey often ' Mouse I don't feel th* other projects mentioned undeserving, but it seems to me that here is a pro­ gram crying for such organiza­ tional support as Greeks can five After all. if Texas students are to help our school faculty intangible bene­ nor willing maintain a n< of cd i mon < po t ■ cd in «n Office of Education sur­ vey’s prelim inary findings which were noted m a release by the Am erican Council on Education. Commissioner Derthick said ex­ full-time penditure per year for undergraduate students attending public colleges this year averages about SI,500. A student in a private college pays about $2 OOO a year. Tile av er­ age expenditure in 1939-40 was $7i7 for a student in a public col­ lege and $1 023 for a private college student, Thi* survev bv the office of Edu- Job Opportunities an Ap examination ha* been in Alaska Bounced for Kif"! rome Tf><'onie:a.n p osition s pa'- rig t i 525 * year, p ms i on* of livin g d ifferen t a : for fluty in th e Civil A eron au t<>•* A <1 m ini**-a- tion the rniterj S tale* Civ I S ervice Con m ission has an ­ nounced. Application* w ill be ac­ cept cd by Join t Board o f V S Civil ^Service e x a m ­ iners, Pouch 9. A n 'h orage Alaska. u n til Application form* may be ob tain ed from A E D avis, at the A ustin post office, the A nchorage further notice • E ngineer* and accou n tan ts ar* tw o p osition c a teg o ries w h ich cur­ the best op p ortu n ity rently o ffer for career employ merit w ith the F ed eral G overnm ent, the C ivil S e n • ic e C om m ission announced sa ta n rlins are scattered to Alaska these It > tis V so a p p lication s are again being accep ted for th e equipm ent special 1st. exam in ation field* of the alis t Heal electron ics graphic art* and m arine equipm ent form* m ac he ob tain ed F urth er in form ation and a p p lies from th e Austin Post S Civil S e n - 25. 1 on A F Davis at O ffice or from the ■ I, •- D ( . om m ission W ash in gton in • in .1 R C hapm an, pi net pal Roles­ Independent School D istrict v ille the tta iv —vt tie T exas w ill be T eacher P lacem ent S ervice off - e on F riday, April 26 to Interview teach ­ er* of prim ary and in term ed iate grad es Mr Chapm an w ill interview both sin g le ap p lican ts and cou p les Com e to S utton 209 and m ake an to­ for an ap p oin tm en t il.* v. in terview , WHATS THE THATS THE THIRD 6ROUND BAIL VTHTV! MISSED TODAY! I 6U PP0« YOU KE GONNA GAY IT TOOK A BAD ^ BOUNCE A6AIN, HUH? YES.I AM!*) P l W I ’ I N IVE SOT A arcus? UUWC CAN I *3EE, A FifiST BASEMAN UJkO'G , ONLY THREE PEET TAUL AND CAST T MWL) CAs" THROW? VE NEVER MEAPD OF SUCH A TWINS, 'CMARi.f BCOufc I CAN'T PLAY CEN-ER PiElD "VE WEEDS ASE too tau a r tlere C* SOUD 6C E- sTOPL— COMPLAINS AND J Au f l# lT GET G0 IN6 ! BUT SOMEBODY BETTEjfl TELL M i UJM6N THE INNING IS O V E R ! - T h e d a # T e x a n Op.e of the Editor or of the cu ter of the article and not necessarily tho ct at .1 tentered a* »<•< ond class matter Oct. IS. *943 at th* Post Office in Austin. T e x a s u n d e r (he a c t of M a r d i 3 1879 ASSOCIAT ED F B S S * VVJ B K S R B VK K The Associated Press is ex clu siv e ly entitled lo the use tor republication of a: : ne vc * d i s p a t c h e s c r e d i t e d t o it o r n o t o t h e r w i s e c r e d i t e d In t h i s n e w s p a p e r , a>,cl ail local i te m s of s p o n t a n e o u s oriRln p u b lish ed herein. R i g h t s of publication of all other mattrr herein also reserved Represented for n ation al ad vertisin g by National A dvertising Service Inc. C ollege P u b lish ers R ep resen tative 120 M adison Ave C h icago— B oston — la st A n g e le s—San F rancisco New York N I. N I MBKR Associated I oilegiata Pres* ISI HSI B i r r I OM KATI A (M inim um su b scrip tion —T h ree Month*) Delivered to Austin.............................................................................. $ 75 month II.UU m o n t h M alt e d in A u s t i n . Mailed out o ' to w n ....................... ............................................................ ..................$ 75 nontb ............................................................................................ PERMANENT STAPP' Editor ............. Managing Editor .. Editorial Assistants New* Editor Sports Editor Am u'em onis Editor .................................................. ......... ...................... . ( A Ii OI. q i ERO LO . . . . . . . . . . Cyrena Jo Norman, Jim m y Thornton Mark S. Smith Eddie Hughes Bradford Daniel .................. ....................... N w r y M< MEANA ................................ ................... STAFF FOR THIS ISSI E ................... ............................. ..................................... N. B Mght Editor Bt l ) M I M S Beak Editor ................................................................. JOY VANDER A ORT Assistant Nigh! Editor ........... ............................................... . Pat Parker l a ds Assistant Copy R eaders . . . . . . . . . . Jack Worley, G ay Goo* h, Roddy S. Trevino. Joyce L M oriarty, Bob Hall Texan Election B u re a u Julie Lane, Bot) Greenberg Joe Sanders Night Sports Editor Assistants Pat Truly, John Hobbs. Pete Hickman Night Amusements Editor ...................... ................................... Edd Clark Bradford Daniel Assistant .......... Night Wire E d ito r • Bill Clayton Norman Sorrell ............ Assistant ..................... *.................. Marilyn Goldberg Night Society Editor ........ ............ ................ These Things All Candidates Should Know By TI KIO ST EMB R tm iF Spring elections are causing a stir throughout the collegiate na­ candidates are tion as hopeful in cam paigning with a platform one hand and a long list of quali­ fications in the oilier. IH E DAILY TAR HEEL recently listed a num­ ber of qualifications for the all- around candidate. 1. He must know how to con­ struct a parking lot. 2. He must have at his finger tips the lists of soon cs within university where money supposed­ ly could he got. If is preferable that those places lie somewhat Oh­ s' tire. so no one can contradict the candidate J 3. He must have a working of rraffu patterns as know led w cli as a m ajority hi hind him -on lite town hoard of aldermen. lie most have a all future physical plans of the uni­ the versity, a* well ss those of town. and he m ust exercise the veto power over ail policv-making groups of both organizations, as well as dictatorial power over sam e 5 He must know intimately the problems of dormitory men. fra­ ternity men, dorm itory women, sorority women, irvtowm men. in- town women, transfer student', athletes, and foreign students. He must know just how much trash a wife has to carry out each day and how m any steps it takes her to c a rry it. 6 He must control a simple m a­ jority of the legislature, 7. He must have a friend in th# federal governm ent’s finance cor­ poration. and he must he an expert on student union buildings. 8. Above all, he must be able to talk a great deal and say very little. He must have three hands, one for shaking, one for patting •hacks*, and one for painting pos­ ters while not slabbing. 9. Some lists include a platform a* the last requirem ent but that would he a'km g a little too much w e fear D ie SKIFF commented editorial­ ly during T O ’’* recent cam pus election that "Voting , » . isn’t a privilege it’s a duty “ The editor­ ial also reminded the students that "those who desire a voice in their student government and who wish to he represented sn all categories rn the hest possible m anner must look over the candidates carefully, and m ake their choice, and cast their votes accordingly.** The University of Kansas is on# of five Kansas state schools to benefit in the struggle to raise the salaries of the faculty. The state legislature passed a bdl which pro­ vides for a 5 per cent raise for the entire adm inistration and teaching staff. Kansas will receive $240,000 from total of $570,000. The rem aining money will to Kansas State, Em poria go State, Pittsburg State and Fort Hays State the hill out of s (ACPt “ We cannot see the jus­ tice.” says Je rry Dawson, U niver­ sity of Kansas DAILY KANSAN editorial editor, "in allow-tng m ar­ ried students to compe’e with un­ m arried students In ‘M arriage and the Fam ily.’ "P erhaps an arrangem ent could he made where th* unsmgles would net h* asked to come to ria xx until the second half of the subjeet mat­ ter is taught,’* Job Opportunities In F loy d VUCrurv d u e l l e r o f ele­ m e n t a r y p e r s o n n e l Odes sa P ublic Scho o ls will be t h e T e a c h e r P la c e m e n t S ervice nffi e on T u e s ­ In terv iew both d a y . April 30 to teacher* • t e m e n t a n a n d se c o n d a r e if you t e a c h i n g a r e a * of in all a p p o i n t ­ w ould Interview Ilk* m en t w i t h Mi M U ’r u r ' c o m e i n S u t t o n Hall a nd we w ill a r ­ r a n g e one (or you. an This Weis A p ril IO Years Ago University people enjoyed an extra holiday, or semi-holiday, h$ April, 1947 All clashes were suspended one day to permit pre-advising of prospective sum m er registrants. This was one of several experi­ ments in the interest of better enrollment procedures, made urgent by the previous Septem ber’* snafu. The unprecedented wave of students in 1948 was not to he equalled for nine years, hut the 1947 sum m er ses­ sion was expected lo set a record of its own. Most campuaites in 1947 wet* veterans, and many »x-*ervicemen chose to m ajor in engineering So many, sn fact that a national survey group confidently predicted an end to the shortage of engineers by mid-1949. Another period of growth, although less spectacular, had followed World War I, Shacks (no other name for 'em ! had been thrown up to house classrooms, lab*, and practically anything else Intended as "tem porary," these rem ained for manx years. . , In April. 1947, th# shacks cam e back as the latest thing in campus decor. Like an echo, the assistant to the president emphasized thai the 13 "tem porary” structure* hauled fr- -rn Camp Wallace, "would serve as a stop-gap m easure and would be replaced with more adequate buildings ” For the time being, however, the University was glad to have pus additional space. The 13 roofs covered 36 classrooms 85 faculty offices, 4 chem istry lab', art engineering drawling lab, shop facilities, a library- exhihit room a cafeteria, a University' Health Service annex and. by no means least, 13 Veterans Administration offices Form er officers* quarter* already’ lined San Jacinto Boulevard, ready for occupancy as dorms May I. Soil on the langtble topic of building, the Board of Regents ap­ proved sues for two perm anent classroom budding* on the southern Forty Acre* asked for bid' for two dorms and approved plans for ex­ panding Memorial Stadium searing capacity from 43.000 to 62.000. Not all the month's news dealt with growth and progress, un­ fortunately. • • DIMETER ON A WEDNESDAY MOR MVG horrified the stat* and nation Worried students staved near t e l e p h o n e and r a d i o for new* of family and friends in what had been a bustling port. The fir# that began in th* hold of a fflftilizer-freighter wa- quickly to sear its pilar# sn history as Texas' worst catastrophe since the Gulf of Mexico had lust a few mile* away across the bav, in 1900. submerged G aheston Texas O ty would survive the afflation, but 512 of her citizen* would not. Die turmoil and terror of April 16 and 17 caused fears of an even higher toil The stricken city s mav-or first estim ated 3,800 fatalities, and relief workers thought the number would exceed 1,000. No University persons were among the victims, although th red UTwrien engineering students had toured the giant Monsanto chemical works on its last day of existence. Its safety precautions deeply im­ pressed them . . . A num ber of others from UT soon ''am e on the scene. Students from the area could hardly stay away. and reporter* from Radio House arid Tho Daily Texan provided on-the-sceem coverage ranking creditably with the effort* of profess tonal new* staff* nearer at hand. f o o t p r i n t s , die naked ”t n e h *hc*» ed th# < a « to polling r***** on the ria' of sc.dont elections Whh such reminder* underfoot a1! day, voters had little trouble rem em bering one candida*#'* distinctive name They ejected Ba ref no* Sanders head yell leader over three reft- ponents without a run-off. 7hi« victory wa* actually th* pre-lavs' student * **onrrd for th# same post, After na* year as assistant yell leader, Sander* had won the headship in 1943 only tm enter the arm ed forces before the next football season. More responsible posts were in his future, each ae the mideast presidency and a seat rn the Legislature, hut the hare feet would stand unsurpassed as a successful cam paign gimmick. Another future lawyer, Bradley Bourland, was elected student president in 1947. Come Mhv he would be the fourth individual to hold that post in five months. Jim Smith, elected the year before, had resigned January I. Hts vice-president, H. D Mc Elroy, stepped ir» th in and out in April, to enter business President No. I wa* Frit* I.yne en assem blym an chosen by his fellows. OTHER NEWN happened, hut several of the Important things are too complicated to get into here all about AAM and communism and the NAACP and fire escapes, and the story headlined "Tyvsl CV rfy Defends Chastity " Departm entalized, here’* what else wa* deemed tor print; AMI CEMENTS: Dr W, F Michael and his snjdents of G erm an h« gan a series destined for success as educational entertainm ent Their first G erm an play was ‘Meder'mann," a re-creation of "E verym an.’’ . . . The Texan critic echoed the title of the season s most honored movie in praising it. "The Rest Years of Our Lives,’* ha said, was "the best in years * He did object to the unusual length, complaining that a three-hour film "require* quite a bit of sitting and there is * limit to physical endurance.” SPOR TS took both first and second places in the t00-y*rd dash l/wighoin tea. kmen won the 440, 880 and distance med­ in ley relays the im portant Kansas Relay* . . . Special simultaneous m atches be­ tween the most recent football, soccer, and softball finalist* celebrated ♦ he erection of 30 light Interfratem ity Council contributed 511 OCK) toward the eoat, supplementing the Athlena Council s $29,000 expenditure tower* on Intram ural Field SOCIETY: The Kappa Club a local so* tai group, affiliated with the national fraternity of Phi Sigma Kappa . . . A chapter of Alpha Kapp# Psi. business organization, w-as reactivated . . . Stan Kenton and hts band played, June Christy sang, and 2,500 students danced, all in the sam e evening, in Gregory Gym. • AMI ARMENTI? SPORTS- SOI IF,TY? Or max he F o m An e# Fod­ d e r ’’ However classified, an April event drawling considerable atten­ tion and manx laugh* wa* Alpha Oat Omega aoronty * sixth annual Junior Texas Relay* Thi« was a good-humor burlesque of the previous month * cinder Spectacle and Round-l p hullabaloo, complete with another parade and much to-do about selection of a sweetheart From a dozen or so allur­ ing nominees, the AOuO s chose a Sigma Phi Epsilon named l i n i e r "the Dear ’ Adams He reigned over such Junior Relays exertion* as a hoop race a three-legged ra re a sack race, a sock relay, an onion race (in which th# edible is propelled with th# nos# at ground level— a lowdown ctying shame y and the 13-inch race, involving a m arsh­ mallow* at the middle of a string. In the last each hoy-and-gtr! team would star! at opposite ends of a string and chew their way to the center These contestants seemed to have particular motivation The ones who got to th# marshmallow first muri have really won a nice trophv, we gu#*« —j i m m i f McKi n l e y IN MEMORIAM (AARON SCHAFFER) l l n e t s pas m o r t U n e t t p a m o r t ' j e Ie tats b i e n q u i! u t e n c o r . D a n s l o u t U s Coeur s d e Pir~m■% I \ Black W h it e Belga Kid S U P E R S M O O T H ! Only Viceroy smooths each puff through 20,000 filters made from pure cellulose-*-soft, snow-white, natural! r n C ^ n a a a e m e n Is Nina Ruth C arter to I,a rry T em ­ Sharon Black , form er student, pleton, graduate. Georgia Ann McDonald, grad­ uate. to E rn est W . Cam pbell J r . • M arth a Sue Richardson to Nor man E . Johnston J r . , form er stu­ dent. Dorothy Ja u n lc e Peyton, student, to John Ben Yows, student, Tau B e ta P i, P h i E t a Sigm a. P i Tau lo n g ­ Sigm a, K appa K appa P si, horn Band. S y lv ia Beth Nixon, form er stu­ dent, to James# T e rre ll Townsend, law student, Lam bd a (Tii, P h i A l­ pha Delta, S ilve r Spurs, president J of In te rfra te m ity Council. Ciliium E lain e W allace, student P i Omega P i, to W ayn e M elvin Laym on. Sigm a D elta Tau, to I^enny Gold stein. B e v e rly G ayle Toby, form er stu­ dent, Sigm a Delta Tau, to Paul Srid cr. Georgina Swarz, Delta P h i E p ­ silon, to Rabbi Nathan M . L a n d ­ man, chaplain of Bergstrom A ir Fo rce Base. M arjorie Sue Segal, Alpha E p ­ silon Phi, to Edw in Burstyn, senior. • B e tty Jack so n , form er student. P i Beta P h i, to Conway R . Lam- mer*, graduate, Alpha Tau Omega. • F ra n c e s Boogher Reed, student. to Jo se J . Solis Montane, industrial chem istry student. • P a tric ia Yvonne HIH, form er stu­ dent, to Ja m e s I). M cFa rla n d J r . Connie Louise Dav la to Pa u l Bettegene Mullens, form er stu­ Hyatt, student. dent, to M aster son Coyle J r . • • • • • • While thoughts of campus coeds turn to spring and s u m m e r Models fashions, the Hom e Econom ics Club w ill present its annual style show Thursday at 5 p.m. in the Home Econom ics Building patio. for fashion show, the which w’as begun during W orld W a r II. w ill be students from three clothing classes w earing the cos­ tumes M ore than 30 girls w ill participate they made during class. ' In the beginning, an admission of IO cents w as charged and the proceeds went to the Am erican Red Cross. L a te r, the price was dropped and IO cents worth of sew­ ing equipment w as the charge, and tile m erchandise w as sent to home economics clubs In Europe. N o w ; admission is tree. Students from clothing classes and the H E Club plan the show* the help of M rs, Dorothy with Greenwood, instructor in home eco­ nomics. The classes also Invite a professional model to show them the proper w a y to model dresses Mica Elects B’aclcwen for M ica elected officers the coming y e a r in its meeting Tues­ day night. The new officers are Fred B la c k w e ll, president; Ja m e s Pfluger, first vice president; Lloyd Bru m m ett, second vice president; Jo e Burke, se cre ta ry; and F ra n k Colby’, treasurer. The new officers w ill be Installed M a y l l at M ica s annual Branding P a rty . acta 3 C a i Ic en a a r F r id a y I S-12—Alpha Delta P i party, Moose- I head Lodge. 18-12— Alpha Tau Omega costume party. 9-12—N a v a l R O T C form al, B e rg ­ strom A ir F o rc e Base. 3-12—K appa Alpha Theta form al. Austin Country Club. 9-12— B B A Council dance, S aturd ay Phi Kappa P s i house party, La zy H. Ranch. ; Sigm a Alpha Ep silon house party, R io V ista Cam p, In g ram , la m b d a Chi Alpha house party’, C lark Ranch, Braek ettsville. ; 8-12—Curtain Club banquet, Dris- k ill Hotel. 8-12— Theta Chi costume party. 9-12— Sigm a Chi form al. 9-12— D elta T au D elta R om an par­ ty. 9-12— P i K appa Alpha form al. Sunday 7-10— Alpha Ep silon P h i o p e n 8-12— Alpha D elta P i party, Moose- house. head Lodge. • • • • • • • M a ry T-aVerne W illiam s, Alpha Omicron P i, Spooks, U n ive rsity A Cappella Choir, w inner of W ill Rogers Scholarship, to Jo e W ayne Perrone, Orange Wings, Young Dem ocrats Club. Annttbeile W illia m s to Frederick 'William C atterall I I I , graduate, Kappa Alpha, Sigm a Iota Epsilon, Beta G am m a Sigm a. B e v e rly Sue M cD o w ell, student Zeta T au Alpha, to Hilbert Ed w ard Bosey J r . , student, president of Sigm a Nu, vice-president of Inter- fratern ity Council, Cowboys. Carolyn Dorothy Thomas, grad­ uate, to Roger H. P o rter J r . , grad­ uate, P h i D elta Theta, P h i Alpha Theta. ; A u s t in T C o m p l e t e s M o v e 1 In t o N e w A c t i v i t y B u ild in g The Austin Y W C A completed a week-long move Into a new a ctivi­ its Lutie P e r r y residence at Eighteenth and t i e s building adjoining ! Guadalupe streets Sunday. standard This move gives the Y W C A a indoor swim m ing pool, ' combination gym nasium and audt- j torium, and a v a rie ty of classroom j facilities. 'Y' Cabinet to Meet Friday The “ Y ” cabinet w ill have its final meeting of the y e a r at 3 p.m. F rid a y . Comm ittee chairm en are asked to turn in evaluation reports of this their com m ittee's w ork ye ar. Ensign George K . H a le y, gradu­ ate, has qualified as c a rrie r pilot, having landings aboard the U S S Saipan in the Gulf of Mexico. completed six W. Wk fe Hi TI-®n J _ 3 J p S M U Hi 'vnaiti’i We I* Be tty I-ou Hoi ubec, to Jo e E . Lee, form er student. P a tric ia lam Ba iley, graduate to Robert H a ll, law student, P h i Beta Kappa. M arg ie Sue Segal. Alpha Epsilon to Ed w in Burstyn. student, Phi. Septem ber I , in Durant, Okla. E ls a G ainer, Alpha Epsilon Phi, ‘ 0 Ph il Barshop, Zeta Beta Tau. 4 2 E n g in e e r in g S t u d e n t s Pledged to Tau Beta Phi Students pledged to Tau Beta Phi, honorary engineering frate r­ nity, are D. R . Abel, G. G . Ander­ son. J . F . Anderson, D. M . Ba iley, L . M . B a rb e r, C. K Best, C. R . Boatright, D. L . Billingsley, R . J . Cole, J . E . Cunningham, K . A C u rry J r . . G. W . C ry. J . N« Dexter. T. C. Ed w a rd s, VV. H, Greenstreet J r . , and E . F . Infante. Also J . T% Ir ic k , W . S. Jackson, A. D . Jaco b y. VV. C. Johnson. T. L . Hang. J . D. L a Rue. W . C. M elnar, j J . P . Moore. K . D. Morgan, D . P . Mundell, C E . M urphy, K . Owen, IG . R . P a rk e r. A, D. Patton. E . B Peek, S. C. Phipps, and C. P ro ­ mote. Also E . A. Rippenger, R . H. Sobotlk, W . F . Soward, Sproul. Thompson, A. Utz. and J . B . Yows J . C. ; J . Stephens, B , E . I J . Tucker, G . C. J . | Spring Formal to Be Given j By Dulac Student Council The U n iv e rsity L u la c Student i Council w ill hold its first annual spring form al M a y 18 at the C ity I^ o Cardenas, council Coliseum, president, has announced. M iss L a tin Am erican of Texas w ill be selected at the dance in a personality contest sponsored by the council. Tw o hundred civie, service, and social organizations representing 75 cities in Texas have been invited to send candi­ dates. I Friends Will Meet Sunday '"H ie Q uaker Attitude Towards j the M in istry — Symbolism and R itu a l” w ill be discussed during , the Fo ru m Period at IO a rn. Sun­ day, at the Frien d s Center, 2106 Nueces. Valley Club to Meet Today The R io Grande V a lley Club w ill meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in Texas Union 315. Gee to Head Wesley Group N e w ly elected officer* of the W esley Foundation Council are John Gee, president; Dexter H ill, j vice - presid ent; and B a r b a r a D ickey, treasurer. E a r l Good Carolyn Grades. C a l­ vin Raker. Ja n e C allaw ay, Linda De Bardeleben, Dick Hunter. Bob Ju lia Odle, Bob O Connor, and Roberts have been elected council- I men. Club Plans Social Events The U n ive rsity C u b has planned three social events for April and M ay. A dinner meeting w ill be held in the Queen Anne Room of Texas Union at 6:30 p m. April 27. A bridge party w ill be held M a y I at the club, 2304 San Antonio street at 8 p m , and club members will picnic at Barton Springs M ay l l . I,ouis M . Bradshaw , form er U n i­ versity student, recently qualified as c a rrie r pilot In the N a va l A v ia ­ tion Cadet Prog ram . Order your ring NO W and get it by Graduation S H O E S T O K ! 2348 Guadalupe O n-the-D rag CHARGE IT — Never en interest or carrying c ie rg e ! I ’njwQQ m w lr Im • nm . k ftU G tft'S 2236 GUADALUPE Article Reveals Growing Trend To 'G o Steady' “ Going steady” is the w a y to­ day g young people are preparing for m arriage, say* D r. Charles VV. Cole, president of Amherst. College. in his article, “ Am erican Youth Goes Monogamous,” which ap­ pears in the M a y issue of R e a d e r’s Digest. Steady dating, he adds, has de­ veloped a new gap between parents and young adults. Young adults now frown on such dating practices of their parents' day as rutting in on someone ris e ’s date at a dance. U su a lly six dates in fa irly rapid order are sufficient to establish a ''going steady” relationship. This makes the fourth o r fifth date a I crucial one If the girl s reply is ! yes, both stop dating other people. E a ch considers the other to be a dates, future partner dances, and other social events. for all D r Cole observes that this revo- i lution is a return to ru ra l nine­ teenth century’ customs that caused in boys and girls to “ pair off” more or less stable fashion. condensed from I H a rp e r’s Magazine, also points out that the average age for m arriage I has dropped rap idly since couples “ going steady” m ay begin thinking i of m arriage as early as the second article, Tile or third date. Ensign Patton C. Hudson, ex­ student, has qualified as a N a v y c a rrie r pilot, having completed six , landings aboard the U S S Saipan. Thursday, April 25, 1957 THE D A ILY T E X A N Pag* I Y' Counselor H elps UT Religious Groups campus. The foundation tries to Torn H uff w o rk in g t in , s e m e s te r p Ia ce e a c h * r a d u a te nn a c a m p u s By B IL L BA R RO N ret;3lous which will provide a different re* “ * ' ‘ ’ ,;l A Ui?h 1 rommittces as well as the VVesley j gional environment. Foundation and Christian Fa ith and Life group, is in Austin as the latest recipient of the Danforth Foundation grant in religious edu­ cation. Mr. Huff, who is m arried and has a son, said, “ W e really w ill regret leaving Texas when m y year is up He and his wife have studied Texas history and visited historic spots in Texas, M rs Huff k a student and lacks only’ one semester toward her degree at the U niversity of California. The Danforth Foundation, an ed­ ucational trust fund, provides a program whereby college gradu­ ates in religious work can get practical experience in this field for one ye a r w ith salary. interested R n \ / * ! f \ / IN O y d I T y M r. Huff, who graduated from the College of the P a c ific and com- v lf e d tv , years P a c ific School of Religion in Ber-. 1 u 1 • a v e keley, is employed on the staff of I the “ V 1 as counselor s' ids at ’he T p Cotill ion Forma! Nominated bv a Danforth acsoci- T ’1 regal no*e w ill he added to the G irls Cotillion ate on his campus M r Huff was I ( lub of Austin this year. The royal- appointed on the basis of academ ic of the Tyl er Rose Festival, the leadership, " an Antonio f testa De san Jacinto, ability, capacity religious devotion, and interest in tbe Corpus Christi Buccaneer bringing his experiences to another r* a>'s U !l! be presented at dance on M a y 18. /—i t d i. * for CT the uri a r - ■._© Mica beets New O uters c n a rv , I Tile Curtain Club w ill hold its annual Aw ards Banquet and for­ m al dance Saturday evening ai 7:30 in the Crystal Ballroom of the D riskill Hotel. Music for danc­ ing w ill he provided by Pud Payne P atterso n’* Tea Sips, U n ive rsity students to be pre- rented are G a il Hudson, Kappa Kappa Gamma, queen of the Tyler Rose Fe stival, and K a v Bland. Kappa Alpha Theta, Austin's duch­ ess to the festival. 1956 Austin debutantes invited to participate are Je a n Kobe, Chi Omega; Dorothy’ Bratton, Kappa Alpha Theta; Carol Corley’, P i B eta Ja n n Turner. Delta D elta P h i; D elta; and Carol T y le r Long, P i Beta Phi, A ll are U n ive rsity stu­ dents. University Coed Presented At Fiesta de San Jacinto Carol C orley represented Austin as duchess to the San Antonio F i ­ esta de San Ja cin to Wednesday night and was presented to th# Queen’s Court at the coronation. M iss Corley is a junior m ajoring in costume design, textiles, and clothing. She is senior execu tive officer of P i Beta Phi and w as presented as a 1956 debutante by the Bachelors of Auster In D ecem ­ ber, Spring I v y League Look Can Be Uncomfortable B v E D T E I N E R T W ith the advent of w arm weath­ er. that “ Iv y Leag ue” look w ill be even more pronounced around the campus. No longer w ill it be re­ stricted to mere clothing, but w ill extend to rash-covered skin. R etaile r for this annual fad !s a ■ is caused by a yellowish oil. I urushiol, which coats the leaves, berries, fruit, and even the roots Infection m ay be ; of the plant. | caused either by direct or indirect ' contact, with the plant, or by con­ tact with its smoke w’hen the ivy is burned. sm all, many-branehed, w o o d y Washing with soap and w ater or plant, with dark green leaves USU- with alcohol im m ediately after ex- a lly of three leaflets, sm all green­ posure w ill remove the poison and ish flowers, and a whitish, b e rry­ m ay prevent Infection. Num erous like fruit. other treatments have been pre­ scribed. among them the popular U T T a le n t t o E n te rta in calam ine lotion which m any con-1 sider an intl sp oilab le picnic item _________________ * The plant is inconspicuous and m ay be either vinelike or bushy in appearance. Its poisoning e ffe c t1 three, le t it be.” The “ Out of Tow n” talent group Despite all treatments, how ever of the Texas Union Talent Com- the bothersome plant continues mittee w ill entertain patients at leader cf Gonzalez W a rm Springs Rehablli- y e a r after ye a r as a tation Foundation at 7 p m. Sun- fashion. As alw ays, its chief ad “ Leaflet', day. L a p Pardon is chairm an of the is the adage, v e rsa ry group. Poison ivy, as our fashion leader is called, m ay he found almost anywhere, but seems to take a fiendish delight in frequenting pic­ nic grounds, cam ping sites, trails, and other recreational areas. Texan Classified A d s GR 2-2473 — Extension 29 M O N T H L Y C L A S S I F I E D R A T E S 8 w o r d s ................................................ I * ne SO w o r d * 8 1 1 0 0 ........................ C L A S S I F I E D D E A D L I N E S Tuesday T e x a n ...................................... M onday, 4 p m . Wednesday Texan........................... Tuesday, 4 pm. Th u rsd ay T e x a n ................... W ednesday, 4 p m. F rid a y Texan .................................... Thursday, 4 p m. Su nd ay T e x a n .......................................... F rid a y , 4 p m. D A I L Y C L A S S IF I E D R A T E S . 20 words c r less A dditional words , I day .......................................... $ ,95....................... s .02 En. h additional d a y .................$ S S ...................... ; ,oi Classified D isp lay ....... ........... $135 per column Inch In the event of errors made In an advertisem ent, im m ediate notice must be given as the publisher* ara responstbie fo r only one Incorrect insertion. Special Services Dance Instruction W an ted BALLROOM CLASSES every night. $100 per hour P riv a te lesson* can be paid for »inglv. H alf price after 5 Jitte rb u g . Fo x Trot, lesson*, L e a rn W altz, Latln-Am erlcan dance* Dancing Is a useful and desirable addition to human happiness popularity. Annette D u v a l U n lv e ritv Ballroom Studio. G R 5-3951. G R 2-9086 Tutoring W A N T E D F O R T H E beautiful C h ar­ coal G alley of the Ja c k T a r H otel In Ca I vos ton neat appearing and courteous young women for summ er work. E x ­ perience not necessary. Th ere it a fine career fo r young women in this type or work. t o u r earning* are general!v h.gher than sales or office work. A t­ tractive uniforms furnished and m ain­ tained bv botel Meals furnished. Con­ tact Ned Fox at G R 6-2613 between 5 ana 9 p rn. any weekday. T U T O R IN G F R E N C I i . Tran»!at!on. In s tru c ts * * MU*. Dupuis. E x p ert Lowest G R 6-2296 2506 R io Grande. /T yp in g F R I D A Y M O U N T A IN R A N C H fTr ! weekend parti*?*. M eals and lodging furnished #C)0 acre* to hike over. T e n ­ nis court*, pingpong table*, horseshoes, I swim m ing pool. etc F o r reservations i call O L 1*1107 or H O 5 9242 a fte r 5 E S C A P E T H E s c o r c h i n g heat. C amp on pine-wooded shore* of La k e ' Infor- J Cohbosseecnntoe in M aine regarding counselor position* mation w rite Camp Director c r I graduate* G irl Scout Council, 142 F re e Street P o rtlan d . Maine. F o r R E N T T-V’s, L a te model* rate*. H O 5-5597. G R 2-2692. E X P E R T T A H / l R I N G ? Suit*, slack* Ja c o b s o n * shirt*. Reasonable rate* Men » W e ar. 2332 Guadalupe D A N C E M U S I C : ’ O perator, «pedal lighting, all type* of music anti high F o u r SJO. Satisfactio n guaranteed. equipment furnished. fid e lity hour* G R 7-5566. dissertations, F O R M U L T I P L E cople* of your these* etcetera by m u ltilith proee** «ail G R 2-2473. ext. 29 O r G R 6-1280 after 6 and before 9. A t price* you can afford theme* For Sale 15 F O O T F A C T O R Y U p stro k e run-1 about F lh re glass bottom Ideal for •kung Excellent condition H eavy duty tra ile r Complete $425. 3206 M eredith. Phone G R 7-3591. H IG H F I D E L I T Y 12“ speaker enclo­ sures, Unbelievable bass -to 30 cycle* feet. without peak*, o n ly 3 5 cubic Select finishes. 850. G R 7-5566. R E G I S T E R E D one-year old R E D D O ­ E a rs clipped. the B E R M A N Raised w ith money C all G R 2-2473. ext 29 days G R 6 1280 evenings before 9 children. W o rth for sale 1952~~DpDGE C O R O N E T d u ll coupe j R and l l Ex cellent condition Vt sp. older model. for trade sell or H O 5-6965 L I G H T W E I G H T 53 H a rle v Davidson 186 “ Not a scratch. Guaranteed I nder 4 OOO miles $265. Term s perfect I C all G R 2-0935 after 5 T, Ziekenoppasser A Ca. Diamond E x p e lle r* Amsterdam. H olland .Save 40% to 50% on gem q u a lity diamond* direct from Am sterdam at wholesale price*. A ll diamonds furnished w ith full description and guarantee F o r complete details call C L 3-7016 after 8 p m . (Capitol Piano Company F o r All Your M usical N eeds from I ............... 7 95 Ukulele* G u ita r* .................. from S 19 85 Bongos ....................... from $ IO 50 Hi-Fi Phonograph . . from $ 84 95 . T*|>e Recorder* . . . . from $194.50 Pianos ....................... from $ 75 OO Sheet music and Instruction books instruments and accessories Band H i-F ld e ilty bv H offm an V M Zeroth Motorola and W e boor Free parkmg behind our new building 1518 G u a d a lu p e G R 6-5363 Lost and Found G R E G O R Y G Y M Satu rd a y night plaid wool car blanket. Reward. Phone G R 6 0723 L O S T : F ra te rn it envelope on D rag near Rew ard. G R 7-8441 Co-Op, tv pin In sm all brown Drag near U n iversity L O S T : P A M P H L E T entitled " B io g r a ­ phy of Alonzo Steele ’ between E D i H all and men s Tri-Dorm * parking lot. Rew ard, C all G R 2-3751 L O S T B ro w n wallet K eep money. Please return to Garrison H a ll 1U9. Nam e stamped Inside A partm ents F O U R B L O C K S west of freshly - de* orated large rooms, porch, a r-eooled. W a te r nished $52.30 G R 6-3005 afternoons campus furnished fu r­ In*. bedroom, kitchrn-dlnette; F U R N IS H E D D U P L E X for couple. Llv- tile shower, evaporative cooler. 6u6 Inquire 2035B Sabine, bath East 20‘-a. $55 evenings, weekend*. ( J R 2*1043. For Rent W A N T E D : R O O M M A T E school. Mid-law or third year tor Sum m er law student Ex trem ely convenient location Must be able to present some concret# evidence of responsibility. financial C a ll T. K . Holdsworth G R 6-1825. A B A R H O T E L F in e rooms for men Central heat Alr-conditlonln*. E l* . valor. I ’ jrte r service. B a rb er shop. L a u n d ry and d ry cleaning. P riv a te parking. 2612 Guadalupe Phone G R A5658 N E E D A C C U R A T E T Y P IN G 7 Reason- •. . rag W est 28 T Y P I N G V TO RK to* tat ions, these*. to perfection. Ditaer- Wulson CL 3-8204 T H E S IS , dissertation. Electro m atle U T ^neighborhood. Mrs. Bohls, GF. 7-5749. A L L TV P L S w ork done bv experienced typist. E le c trom atic. G R 2-6359. D IS S E R T A T IO N S . T H E S E S Electro- m afic (sym b o ls); Mrs R itch ie U .T. neighborhood. G R 2-4945, D E L A F I E L D T Y P I N G S E R \ T C E ~ T h * I themes. N otary. dissertations, > - G R 2*8569. L F T M R S . A L B R IG H T do x-our typing. Experienced. Efficien t. G I, 3-24*1, T Y P I N G A N T kind Reasonable rates. Mrs. Vick. H O 5-1343. T Y P IN G : Su p erio r q u a lity w o rk ; Mrs. M ardi W h ite, H O 5-7521. P O R T S D IS S E R T A T IO N S T H E S E S , RE- electromatie typing. M inor editing F o u r blocks from campus. Mrs. Bbdour. G R 8-8113, Experienced C A R E F U L L Y-DON E T H E S E S dlsser- Electric, 900 Experienced. tatioRs. W est 31. G R 2-9444. I Y P IN G E X P * R I E N C E P , reasonable. t'losa in location. G R 8-3298. T Y P IN G E D IT I N G b y tv p in * teacher. M rs B ra d le y. O L 2-1235 E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P IN G , reports, eta. Electric. Mrs. H unter. C L 3-3546. M A R T H A A N N Z I V L E Y , M . B A. com plete professional typin g A a m ic e tailored to th* needs of U n i­ versity students Special keyboard for language, science and engineer­ ing. Conveniently located at W O O T E N H A L L 2 104 G ueda .. p# PHo. G R 2-3210 LARGE BRICK HOME , I B o ck U .T , C a m p u$ S B .R , — 2 j B a th s $22,500 lf you a r* connected w ith the U n iv ersity have a large fa m ily and would like It m av fit y o u r requirements a fin* spacious brick home -then see this one IkXKl location on a street of fine q u a lity homes Ju st East of the Campus This is a two-story brick home built In UM I It has 3 bedroom* bath, large ilvtng room w ith fireplace, separate dining room, and modern kitchen on the street level and 2 bedrooms and a bath upstairs. There s a complete basement, attic storage, and 2-car garage You w ill appreciate the q u ality in m aterials and workm anship and the overall spaciousness. Ex cellent term s can be worked out for a qualified buyer. To see phone JO E C R O W REAL ESTATE GR 2-1103 for appointment B E G I N N E R 'S C o rtin * correspondence Spanish course complete w ith record* ana book*, $10 W in d e il Grand, 2607 U n iv ersity Avenue G R 7*2357. M E N Q U I E T air-conditioned rooms Sp ring $33 and $60 Sum m er $25 and I4 '1 Maid service Parking. N C. Arms 306 Fast 30th G R 7-0801 L A T E M O D E L 1955 Cushman Eagle , S la v be »een after 5 p m , at SOO G R 7-0330. RO O M F O R R E N T 2004 Guadalupe B astrop H igh w ay. TH E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 6 Thursday, April 25, 1957 Snowden Winner In Billiard Match B ill Snowden U n ive rsity fresh­ man, was named straight-rail bil­ the United liards champion for States in a repent tournam ent at the State U n ive rsity of Io w a . entered C o l l e g e s a n d itttfvet sides throughout the U S the competition, sponsored by the B i l ­ liard Congress of A m erica. There w ere three divisions consisting of pocket, Three-rushion and straight­ est! K e y shote were m ailed to players and their scores in turn W ere sent hack to Io w a ,. This is known ac ♦he A ir M ail K e y Shot system. Snowden one of the top th re e scorers in the strmght-rai! division was flown to Iowa where he de­ feated the other tv* x top -corers. The pocket billiards champion­ ship was won by a representative of Suffolk U niversity, Boston, and the three-cu-mon title bv a U n iv e r­ sity of Washington p la y ? A ll types of canrr-r are different since the> affect different tissues of the bod- . G R E G O R Y P E C K end s‘ar$ La wen Bacall and Do lores over G ra y are being held through Thursday at "he Pa-a- r o j r * Theafer. Their turn? De­ signing W o m an ." Other creden- * a s: r e. t r ■. o c-y C nemascope, Aid e x -1 7 charac’ " ' a pot Mickey Shaughresty. The film alrer*ed by Oscar-wir-er V ( o r - g M :r.r> e :i Thmmwmt Doors Open 11:45 A .M . HELD O VER HIS ARE ON THE POLICE BLO TTER/ University Students’ A rt W o rk on Display An exhibition of paintings and in g ," W illia m T h o m a s : and graphics by approxim ately 30 Uni-! D ream of Peace. Clarence Leg- let Works in graphics, which include lithographs, wood blocks, and d ry ­ point, are “ Landscape " R ich a rd C’oones; “ H ouses," W illia m Steger; Jo e Hobbs; ‘ Children ' Operation. P la y in g ," R oger W in ter; “ The Canrii< P a ttillo ; and P a r e n t , “ P la n e s ," J im Stoker, Honorary Offers Imaginary Tour Sigm a Delta P i. honorary Span­ ish fratern ity w ill present “ Around L a tin A m erica sn 80 M in u tes" at. 8 p.m. Saturd ay in Ba tts A udi­ torium, The The play w as written and d irect­ ed b y F r a n k lin Dominguez, a stu­ dent from, the TFmunican Republic. story centers around an Am erican girl out to find a hus­ band She goes to see a gypsy fortune teller, who tells her there in are plenty of available mon South A m erica. Both then leave for that continent. The A m erican girl is played by Ja n e C a lla w a y and the gypsy by C h erry M cGinnis. The re st of the : cast are students from various ; countries depicted in the play. They I w ill present songs and dances typ i­ cal of th “ In -GOLD O F N A P L E S ’ a Company of Italians Makes the Screen Glitter.” -—New York Timm "The quality of one scene is such that it seems almost fry? ">1 certain t0 become at least iy a footnote in any history of film comedy." -Newsweek r-^ - -^7 Toto, Italy’s Chaplin, is exquisitely funny. Loren’s parts fit beautifully into the whole." — Time Magazine k ii Ih e G o ld o f N a p le s ’ is a noteworthy example of how a movie ought to be put together.”, —New Yorker D E RICA* L O R E N M A N G A N O T O T O nam> O F Belee** Directed b f VHtorlo De M m CAPITOL 5 Se© fo r y o u rs e lf—the ravag ed lives in the ad o le scen t jungles of A m e rica today! BlintfUBntS H A R D H I T T I N G F IR S T R U N S H O W S CLEO MOORE HUGO HAAS VINCE EDWARDS H it .a* R im m u r d e r ! - T F RcfeM* Dim UNITED ARTISTS m u l e A 4 h(Y| .VOr 'I i A L A N V IR G IN IA EDMOND LADDMAYOO’BRIEN HATTLR HS MN R o ck Hudson M a rth a Live r - Plus - C O N G O ( K O S S !N G GonrRi* W ider V irg in ia Ma o MONTOPOLIS RIO GRANDE Jo h n W as ne Maureen O'Hara T H E I >a nt XI AN I " A ll M K H ( ‘lark—Max' Wvnn TH I B a r b a r a R o b e rt XI A ' I RIC K O I K l X Starm>n ai ROCK HUDSON b m t h m H E M O nkmaS copC TECHKICOlWf, MARTHA HYER D A N D U R Y E A dom Oi fore F I I “ BAGHDAD’’ I I M I X T I'Kl< a O R THE AUSTIN CIVIC THEATRE S NEXT SHOW IN T H E A R E N A Most delightful comedy about a trifling wife — — J A N U S and hex* the m a n a g e d to keep two husband* ha pp y. Wednesday, Thursday - April 24, 25 8:15 P.M. Texas Federated W o m en ’s Club Auditorium 1 6 0 7 S a n J a c in to 14th and San G a b r i e l Ph. G R 6-0541 for seatf.