UT Promotions Okayed by Regents Dr. Otis Singletary, Dr. Norman Hackerman, and “Dean Jack” Holland received promotions at the weekend Board of Regents meeting. Dr. Harry Ransom, vice-president and provost of the Main University, made the announcement Tuesday. He will assume the Presidency on Sep­ tember I. Dr. Singletary, former assistant professor of history and associate dean in the College of Arts and Sciences, is now Assistant to the President, a new position. Dr. Hackerman, former chairman o& the De­ partment of Chemistry, was named to another newly-created post, Dean of Research and Spon­ sored Programs. Mr. Holland, former Dean of Men, is now direc­ tor of the personnel office. The deanship of student services, to be vacated September I by the retirement of Dean H. Y. McCown, will not be filled, Dr. Ransom announ­ ced. The activities of that office will be absorbed by the office of the President, he said. As Assistant to the President, Dr. Singletary will be in direct charge of student academic af­ fairs and of curriculum planning, Dr. Ransom said. Specific details of the office will be announ­ ced later, he added. Dr. Singletary will continue as director of Plan II but his position as associate arts and sciences dean will be filled at a later date. After coming to the University in 1954 Dr. Singletary was named to the associate dean post in 1957. In 1959 he received the Lemuel Scar­ brough Foundation faculty award. As Dean of Research and Sponsored Programs, Dr. Hackerman will be in charge of government and private research grants, Dr. Ransom said. He will continue as c h a ir m a n of the C h em istry D e p a rtm e n t. Dr. H a c k e rm a n , who helped in devel­ oping the atomic bomb, w'as pres­ ident of the E lectro c h em ic al So­ ciety in 1957 and received the Na- (See PROMOTIONS. P a g e ID ★ N ew Director To 'Stim ulate1 Private A id The U niversity’s D evelopm ent B oard will get a new' executive d irec to r w'hen J a m e s S. Triolo takes office September I. The appointment of Triolo, who will also serve as d irec to r of pri­ vate fund development, w'as hailed by U niversity officials as signaling a new e r a of em phasis upon p ri­ vate support designed to push the institution levels of excellence. toward h ig h e r C u rren tly serving as associate d irec to r of development at Stan­ ford University, he r e p la c e s Hu- Ion W. Black who resig n ed last August. - Black, a pioneer in the college fund raising and developm ent field, served as executive director for o v er 20 years. He resigned to en ter p riv ate business. U n d er the new U niversity organ­ izational set-up w hereby P resident Logan Wilson will b eco m e chan­ cellor of the U niversity sy stem and p re se n t vice - presidents will b e­ com e system vice-chancellors, Tri- olo’s position will be th a t of a m e m b e r of the chancello r's “ cabi­ n et.” In this newly c rea ted position in the cen tral adm inistratio n of the U niversity System. Triolo also will as s u m e some fo rm er responsibili­ ties of the vice-president for de­ velopm ental services. H e will di­ rect the total private fund raising effort for the University. Associate d irec to r of this p ro g ra m is W. D. Blunk Dr. Merton M. M in te r of San Antonio, chairm an of th e Board of Regents, said T riolo ’s appoint­ m ent is the first step to w ard im­ plem enting the C o m m ittee of 75’s recom m endation th at em ph asis up­ on laying the U n iv ersity ’s oppor­ tunities before p riv a te benefac­ tors be more intensified Dr. O tis S . . . PRESIDENTIAL ingletary KL ASSISTANT Jack H o lla n d . . . DEAN NO M O R E Dr. N. Hackerman . . . UT RESEARCH Jam es Triolo , . DEVELOPMENT CHIEF T H E S U M M E R ! XAN Vol. 60 Price Five Cents A U STIN , TEXAS. W ED N ESD A Y , JULY 6, I960 No. 7 Briefs.. . From the Wire By the Associated Press H o lid a y Record P ro m p ts H ig h w a y Death C u rb C a ll The reco rd weekend toll pix>mpl­ ed a call T uesday for swift action lo curb d e a th s on the s tr e e t s and highways. "P ublic officials and ail o th e rs dedicated to safer highways m ust act. and a c t fast, in an in c re ased effort to red u ce this s l a u g h t e r — not only on holidays but every the National Safety d a y ,’' s ta te d Council. The NSC s tatem en t w as evoked by tho loss of 442 lives in traffic from 6 p.m . Friday to m idnight Monday. 'Hie total went f a r beyond hie previous high m ark for a three- day celebration of the F o u r th of Ju dy 107 fatalities in 1955. ★ l/S A s k s C u b a n Reversal W A SH IN G TO N — T h e Ignited b la te* T u e sd a y d en ou n ced C'uba’s se iz u r e o f tw o IJS-owned o il re­ fin e r ie s as u nfair and u n law fu l and c a lle d on P rim e M in iste r F i ­ del C a stro to rev erse h is a c tio n . lni|M>rtH o f T h is w a s an nounced s h o r tly aft er the IJS A gricu ltu re D e p a r tm e n t su sp e n d ed all (iih a ii su g a r to th e Unltinl S la t e s , c le a r ­ ing th e road for P r e sid e n t E is e n ­ h ow er to sh ish C uba’s s u g a r quota Minier a b ill C on gress p a s s e d Sun­ d ay . ★ ★ it C a r d o n a Steps D o w n HAVANA — Jose Miro C ardona resigned T uesday as a m b a s s a d o r designate to the United S ta te s be­ cause of idealogical differences With P r im e Minister Fidel C a s tr o ’s leftist governm ent. In an obvious move to avoid the vet­ ii n e s t o r o th e r reprisal, era n d ip lo m a t law yer took refuge im m ed iately in the A rg en tine Em ­ bassy. N ik Clim bs, Boasts V IL L A O !, A ustria tan — Soviet P r e m ie r N ik ita K hrush ch ev rolled liup p ily through the A lp s T u esd ay p r e d ic tin g he w o ii I d long en ou gh to s e e the lie d fla g cover th e w orld . Ile a lso le c tu r e d Auh tr in e s (Mi m odern art. liv e G o ld fin e Im p riso n e d HOSTON Bernard Goldfine, f»9, ty gift giving millionaire coon, went to federal p riso n Tues­ day for contem pt of co u rt iii a tax aaa*. textile Demos, LBJ Gird Convention Forces to a LOS ANGELES (.Ti — Demo­ crats hopped into official prelimi­ naries sc ra p p in g national convention Tuesday w ith barely a ripple of excitement a t Sen. Lyn­ don B. Johnson’s announcem ent of his presidential c a n d id a c y . J o h n s o n rooters q u ic k ly claim ed th er e now' will be a groundsw ell of n e w sup|N>rt for th e T e x a s sen ­ ator fr o m the ran k s o f d eleg a tes to com m it w ho w e r e unw illing t h e m s e lv e s until J o h n s o n did. R iv a l cam ps said J o h n s o n ’s for­ mal pronouncem ent of his can­ didacy in Washington m e re ly con- Fall Freshmen To Be Oriented F o u r hundred f r e s h m e n to-l>o will flock to the F o rty A cres today to begin a (ourday o rien tatio n pro­ g r a m designed them a bead s ta rt on University life come fall. to g iv e T h e participants, recom m ended for participation a s outstanding from th e ir high schools, will regis­ ter at Kmsolving D o rm ito ry , their base of operations, f ro m 1:30 to 3 p .m . At a meeting at 3 30 p m, C a m e ro n Hightower, president of tile S tu d en ts’ A ssociation, will wel­ com e the students. At evening sessions beginning at 7 30 the participants w ill h e a r 'loin the Univer­ Crowell, president of sity Religious Council, speak on UT religious life a n d M aurice Oli- an .vice president of the S t u d e n t s Association, speak on IJT history. show and a get - acquainted h o u r will top off the evening. A University ta le n t O th e r activities fo r the day in­ clude special wing meetings de signed tune for to give s tu d e n ts qu estion and an sw er sessions. f irm e d what everybody already knew and therefore changed noth­ ing. to h a m m e r T h e D em o cra tic c o n v en tio n kick o ff c o m e s next M o n d a y . Hut the IOO p lu s m em b er p la tfo rm c o m ­ m it t e e began h e a r in g s T u e s d a y — w ith th e im m e d ia te e m p h a s is on to g e th e r a tr y in g p la n k that will c a p ita liz e ou any d ise n c h a n tm e n t have w ith th e (JOI*. A nd while avoided m entioning the su bject again N a­ tional D emocratic C h a irm a n Paul M r. Butler took occasion to deny ; he h as done any rigging of the John convention in favor of Sen F. Kennedy of M assa ch u setts. In an ap p earan ce before Joh nson fa r m e r s the ’ p la tfo rm com m ittee B u tler dis­ form er p u te d charges m a d e by P r e s id e n t H arry S. T ru m a n , and en d o rse d by Johnson, that Butler , h a s shown partiality tow ard Ken­ n e d y . O n ce more B u tler conceded ti) r e p o r te r s there is a possibility of a Ixill by some Southern dele­ g a t e s who might balk at giving f o r m a l assurances they will siijv- l*>rt whatever p la tfo rm com es out of the convention. Supporters of S tu art Symington c a lle d on delegates who like the M issouri senator firm th ro u g h a donnybrook which they snit! will kill off U g h Johnson and K ennedy and leave Symington and A dlai E Stevenson battling it (Hit fo r tin' nomination. to stan d A rm stro n g to D iscuss Joh n son T o d a y at ‘Y f the IV m ocratic nominee "W hy Lyndon ll. Johnson should for b e p re s id e n t" will U* discussed Wed n e s d a y by Bob A rm stro n g , Austin a tto rn e y and U n iversity law school s|x»nk g ra d u a te . A rm stron g will l*olitns the P resid en tial b e f o r e luncheon group at noon in tin* main I auditorium of tho U niversity " Y .” C o ld War Stays; Iron Curtain Goes; Khrushchev Mute SA L Z B U R G , A u stria ITV— An Iron cu rta in w a s lifte d for S ov­ ie t P r e m ie r N ik ita K h ru sh ch ev w h en h e v isited th e Salzburg M u sic F e stiv a l th e a te r . A fte r aji o fficia l ex p la in e d an e la b o r a te sy ste m o f m o v a b le s t a g e se c tio n s, he sa id . "Now w e a r e going iron to c u r t a in .” the lift N e w s iii e ii ch u c k le d , but K h ru sh ch ev d id n ’t fiat an eye a s th e h u g e h a m m e red m e ta l stage c u r ta in w as lifted . University Future Plotted by Regents U niversity Regents spent one- half of the Fourth of July week­ end plotting UT’s fu tu re in term s of everything from 10-year m aster plans to furnishings for the Inter­ national Center. D uring long c o m m ittee sessions the R egents studied tentative pro­ posals regarding m a s t e r plans for the Main University. M aster plans eventually will be adopted for each the Univer­ of th e sity system to present m ista k e s in building locations. in in o r d e r institutions A doption of the p la n s along with N|veclfie re co m m en d a tio n s on build lug p rio rities at e a c h institution is e\|MH‘ted to ro m e lit S ep ten ilier. In tile line of sjiecifie action on the building and grounds affairs, R egents last w eekend approved tin4 expenditure of $30,000 to move the present wooden Art Building acro ss San Jacinto Street to the lot directly oppisite its present site. The present stru ctu re will lie m ov­ ed this sum m er to m a k e way for the new D ram a construction of Building in the fall R egents also authorized an a p ­ to clearance t subject prop riation by tile I legislative Budget Board an d the Governor) of $39,SOO for an official residence for the presi­ dent of the Main U niversity, to In? built on the B rack e n rid g e tract. An appropriation of $15,000 to Internation al House furnish with recreation a re a s , office space, guest rooms, and dorm itory facilities was also approved the reception a n d the clo*,* I ni v e r sify F in a l approval of th e Hoard o f R e g e n ts w a* given an a m e n d m e n t s y s ­ lilM 'raiizing t e m ’** anti n ep otism ru le. U nder th e new ruling re la tiv e s m a } be em p loyed by th e U n iv er­ at different b ra n ch es and sity m ay the s a m e lie em p loyed at in d ifferen t d ep a rtm en ts b ra n ch wi t h s p H 'hi I |M*rmis*don fro m th e Ad m in istration and H oard. A liberalization also c am e in the th e George VV. rules B rackenridge l o a n F u n d ’Hie new loans. specifications allow At the meeting the Board m e m ­ bers also announeod the establish­ m ent of a SKX),OOI) professorship in l.ibbie Rice b ar- geology Ivy Mrs regulating la rg e r tSee REGENTS, F a g * ID Is the U S Scientist Free* Second I houghrs on the Pauling Case i s m , th#* s y s t e m o f personal frJ d o m , c r i t i c i s m a n d demo#*!. v J a t r o p h ie d fr o m d i s u s e . To say ti tr e n d h a s r e v e r s e d would th#* a n o v e r s ig h t . A g a i n th e gag s#-,.j to Ik* g r o w in g t i g h t . S e n a t o r J a m e s O . Ka Hand s u b c o m m i t t e e is c u r r e n t l y nvesl g a t i n g a l l e g e d c o m m u n i s t mfluenj in t h e c i r c u l a t i o n in 1957 of n ani n u c l e a r t e s t i n g p e t i t i o n a m o ng ti J i e n t i s t s o f 49 n a t i o n s . Th# .it#.i of t hi s p e t i t i o n , Hr . I ^ P a u l i n g , h a s been g i v e n sever! w e e k s t o p r o d u c e f o r tile e< t h e n a m e s of p e o p l e w h o b.-'f* c i r c u l a t e t h e p e t i t i o n . D r . P a u l i n g h a s o f f e r e d a fun n tH i s h copies of all his lett< ■ s ni de # t a n d t h e s i g n a t u r e # n ti] p e t i t i o n b u t lie f a c e s fxt* , (0J t e m p t of C o n g r e s s c a u s e h e r e f u s e s nan os of his helpers. H< pi a v a l s will b e m a d e . c h a n t s t o disclose ti , ^ ★ H r . P a u l i n g ★ is a n A m o r a an, I. iroak s# .# n t i s t , a N o b e l P r i z e 11# m a y b e t h e g r e a t e s t America! b o r n s c i e n t i s t , w i t h t h e fK>*->ihie ej| ( •o pt io n of t h e l a t e J . W. Gibbs Nj o n e h a s a c c u s e d h i m of boing c o m m u n i s t . T h e y h a v e only ha raj t o e m b a r r e d *e#l h i m , a t t e m p t e d him, a n d succeeded in in podia] h i s a t t e n d a n c e a t s ci en ti f i c mee i n g s a b r o a d . G e n t l e m e n l i k e S e n a t o r Thomal J I >odd of C o n n e c t i c u t a r e so pit o c c u p i e d w i t h t h e c o m m u n i s t s u| m a y o r m a y n o t h a v e signed ti p e t i t i o n o r h e l p e d c i r c u l a t e it th? ( -ne s u s p e c t s t h e y h a v e not rea^ th# m e s s a g e o f t h e p et i t io n ther s e l v e s . r o b o t , e c o n o m i c b r o a d W e d o not k n o w o n which si#H o u t is butlers T h e n o t i o n t h a t a n y scientist u} l i k e a wHl-pr d o e s n o t p e r f o r m g i a m m e d indiudu; a n y w h o is o u t s p o k e n o n a vital issu< or a n y b l a s p h e m e r of o u r Nntioni R i g h t e o u s n e s s s h o u l d h a v e , lob l o m v so t h a t h e w i l l be of no us| (and wh< t o a p o t e n t i a l e n e m y k n o w s w h o tomoi I*1 t h a t m a y i ow ’ I a n d t h e n h e s h i p pe d to OIH or a ll o f t h e e a r t h ’s f our terriers It i* tru e th a t t h e l'nite#l sud w o u l d Ive a q u i e t a n d restful plan but s o I* a g r a v e y a r d . ★ ★ T h i n k e r s c a n no long# s c i e n t i s t s cr h i d e in a n a r r o w field of "< bol a st ic e n d e a v o r . All fields <•( know l e d g e a r e i n t e r r e l a t e d a n d -a# viq lf t h e g r e a t e s t singl#’ source a l . k n o w l e d g e r e m a i n s a poli ti ca l poli t! #* a n d l o se . t h e n a t i o n suflm ai thei T e c h n o l o g y , in t h e broad#**-! ><*nsej laboratory OI e x t e n d s b e y o n d th# tb< la t h e a n d w e a lo n e b o # f i e f d o m to e x p l o r e this s#i#n#e u t h e b r o a d e r s e n s e . th#’ It I* s i g n i f i c a n t to not** that free­ d o m c a n n o t s u r v i v e without knew l e d g e or k n o w l e d g e without free­ d o m . N e w w a y s m u s t he IoiiimI kl put th e t w o t o g e t h e r if we ar# ti w in the b a t t le to sulvstitub dignity for d i s g r a c e a m o n g the world # p e o p le * . Wednesday, July 6, I960 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 2 Panels of Youth W h a t S e n a t o r K e n n e d y h a d to s a y M on d ay ab o u t tho United S t a t e s as a y o u n g nation w a s p a rt i c u l a rl y sig­ nificant in view of r e c e n t world events. E ven a s we as a na tio n pro ved w ith o u r n e w sta te of Ha waii t h a t we w e re yo ung e n o u g h to be still g r o w ­ ing, two in f a n t n ations in Africa w e r e m a k i n g th e United Sta te s look middle-aged by co m p aris o n. B a r e ly ge ttin g their feet on the g r o u n d b y o u r Independence D a y w e r e t h e ( ’ongo a n d Somalia, which g a ine d t h e i r f r e e d o m from colonial r u le last T h u r s d a y . T h e U n ited States, a s a n a tio n in which u n i t y w a s forged f r o m the provincialism of 13 jealous state s, is in p a r t i c u l a r l y good position to u n d e r s t a n d t h e p a n g s of y outh w h ic h these t w o A f r ica n n e w c o m e r s will face. tribes. Conflicting I or b o th the Congo a n d Somalia a principal problem will be t h a t of proving t h e i r nationhood. N a tio n a l loyal­ ties will be difficult to s u m m o n f ro m peoples whose ties of la n g u a g e a nd custom a r e to a g r e a t n u m b e r of widely t r i b e s will be hard to reconcile. diverse in te r e s ts of often hostile And fo r these n e w n atio n s t h e r e will be n o y e a r s of grace. Inste ad of being g r a n t e d b y a n ind if fe rent world, p r i v a c y in w h ic h to su ffer t h e i r g ro w in g pains, the two A f r ica n c o u n tr i e s will be e x p ec te d to develop in Hie g la r i n g publicity of a cold w a r world. We can hut hoj>e that national leaders, youn g as their countries are young, will steer through the stru g­ gles ahead without yielding the individual personal free­ doms they have deem ed im portant iii the past to the seem ing efficiency of totalitarianism . Cool But Sod W e ’d n e v e r associated jazz with sobering realizations. Mot until last week, t h a t is. T hat's when we saw a movie, a very good one, called ••Jazz in the Afternoon." It w as an hour-plus glim pse at the annual N ew port Jazz F estival, and the jazz was the coolest. The perform ers— Satehm o, Mahalia Jackson, Dinah W ashington, to name a few — w ere the finest. In s h o r t , we w e r e impressed. B u t not only by the music o r the o u t s t a n d i n g p h o t o g r a p h y . A c e r ta in m oral m es sa g e — uni nte nded we a r e sure, b r ou g ht a b o u t by a coincidence of c ir c u m s ta n c e s — also hit home. A f t e r th e film w a s over, we realized t h a t m o s t of its principal p e r f o r m e r s would not h a v e been a d m i t te d to the t h e a t e r (or a n y o t h e r first-ru n t h e a t e r in Austin, for t h a t m a t t e r ) F o r in t h e y — Sateh m o, Mahalia addition J a c k s o n , Dinah W a s h i n g t o n — a r e Negro es . A n d in A u s ­ tin we h a v e se g reg a ted e n t e r t a i n m e n t . to see th e i r own h a n diw ork . to boing talented, Jim Crow, it seem s, still reigns. And that is a sober­ ing, and saddening, realization. Who's Green? H ow dy, Mr. F r e s h m a n - C o m e - F a ll ! Meet t h e Uni­ versity. By t h e time y o u ’ve hoofed it once fro m Littlefield F o u n t a i n to Kinsolving, y o u ’ll know t h a t the* place is big. But not too big. T h e r e a r e stopping-off places. Before y o u ’ve quite r u b bed a blister in y o u r c ro s s-c am p u s trek, y o u ’re in front of t h e J o u r n a l is m Building. So c ’mon in, you f u t u r e T ex a n f o u r t h e s t a t e r s . Shoot t h e b ree ze for a while to the tu n e of a cup of coffee and a clacking t y p e w r i t e r o r two. N o n - r e p o r t e r tyjK*s a r e welcome too. W h a t th e heck, Hie b u ild in g ’s air-conditioned. Keep Firing F riday we got w hat we asked for — gadflies. Discom forting a s t h e y were, we w e r e glad to get those letters. T h a t ’s w h a t t h e Firin g L ine is supposed to be - h place to blow off s t e a m or ideas at us or j u s t about a n y b o d y or an yth ing . The T exan’s traditional invitation still stands. Fire away I Musings I w o n d e r f h e a v e n s s e g r e g a t e d . — K I U . D A V I J I T h e c h i l d c r i e d , F o r t h e b u b b l e * tie b l e w in tin* a i r H u r s t a s lie t o u c h e d t h e m . H e h a d a r i g h t t o h e t h o u g h t , For a was ins breath lilie d th e m . th a t I U H O I STON* w a d i : b l e . ” is N a t i o n a l p r i d e in A m e r i c a . As j u s t l y a b u n ­ d a n t t h e w o r l d t e e t e r s b e t w e e n a n u c l e a r c a t a ­ c l y s m a n d e c o n o m i c - i d e o l o g i c a l w a r f a r e , t h e q u e s t i o n of j u s t w h a t it is w e s h o u l d b e p r o u d o f h a s c o m e i n t o n a t i o n a l f o c u s . C e r t a i n t h i n g s w e c a n ’t h e p r o u d of h a v e c o m e t o o u r a t t e n t i o n r e ­ c e n t l y . A m o n g l a c k of n a t i o n a l p u r p o s e , w i d e s p r e a d d i s ­ h o n e s t y , l o s s o f r e l i g i o u s c o n v i c t i o n a n d f a i l u r e to t e n d t h e u n d e r p r i v i ­ l e g e d n a t i o n s . t h e s e a r e t h e g r e a t T h e ai r i t e r , h o w e v e r , p r e s u m e s i n d i c a t e o n e s p e c i f i c g r o u p cl t o w h i c h A m e r i c a n s c a n b e g e n u i n e l y l i e r m e n a n d w o m e n of p r o u d : s c i e n c e b o d y of a n d k n o w l e d g e t o w h i c h t h e y h a v e c o n ­ t r i b u t e d . B y m e n of s c i e n c e , w e will n o t c o n f i n e o u r s e l v e s t o m e n t h e e x p e r i ­ w h o h a v e w o r k e d m e n t a l s c i e n c e s . in t h e m e n w h o l u n e w o r k e d e l u d e s in t h e p u r s u i t of k n o w l e d g e in any field o f h u m a n e n d e a v o r w h e r e p h e n o m e n a a r e o b s e r v a b l e o r f u n c ­ t i o n s p r e d i c t a b l e . iii O u r g r o u p I n d e e d t h e v e r y u n i v e r s a l i t y of k n o w l e d g e - s e e k i n g in A m e r i c a is t h e u n i q u e a n d r e m a r k a b l e t h i n g a b o u t it. In f a c t , t h i s h a s b e e n t h e e s s e n c e o f A m e r i c a n f r e e d o m a n d a t t h e s a m e t i m e t h e s o u r c e of this c o u n t r y ’s g r e a t m a t e r i a l w e a l t h . T w o h u n d r e d y e a r s a g o , o b s e r v e r s of t h e c o l o n i a l s c e n e n o t e d tho a l ­ m o s t u n i v e r s a l l i t e r a c y , p r a c t i c a l s k e p t i c i s m a n d g e n e r a l l y o u t s p o k ­ e n n a t u r e of t h i s c o l l e c t i o n of “ r a b ­ N o “ p r o o f ” o r m e t h o d o r i d e a l h a s b e e n long s a f e a s d o g m a , e x ­ c e p t . f o r t h e m o s t p a r t , i n s o f a r a s r e p e a t a b l e , o r it w a s a p p l i c a b l e , f or o u i v a l i d . If w e a r e g r a t e f u l p l e t h o r a of c o n s u m e r a n d i n d u s t ­ r i a l g o o d s , w e h a v e o n l y t h i s s y s ­ t e m t o t h a n k . a t to t h e t r e n d t h e s a m e S u r p r i s i n g l y , tin* v e r y z e n i t h of o u r m a t e r i a l s u c ­ c e s s to t h a t w e h a ^ e c e a s e d is t h e p r a c t i c a l , g i v e a n y c r e d i t f a c t s e e k i n g m e t h o d s of t e c h n o l o g y w h i c h m a d e t h e i n d u s t r i a l r e v o l u ­ t io n p o s s i b l e . At t i m e , f r e e d o m w h i c h h a s t h e p e r s o n a l g o n e h a n d in h a n d w i t h t h e n a t i o n ­ a l a s c e n s i o n a n d of w h i c h w e still h o l l o w l y b o a s t , h a s d i s a p p e a r e d . t h e So vi et p r e s s h e a t s its c h e s t o v e r t e c h n o l o g i c a l s o m e a c h i e v e m e n t of R u s s i a n s c i e n c e , if w e c a n n o t b r a g of a “ b e t t e r o n e , ’’ w e b e l i t t l e t h e i r a c c o m p l i s h m e n t by m a k i n g it s e e m i n s i g n i f i c a n t o r e v e n m o r a l l y w r o n g . W h e n As f o r o u r o w n f r e e d o m , if a n A m e 1 i r a n c h o o s e s Jo s p e a k o u t o n a n i s s u e w h e r e h e h a p p e n s to h a v e a n o p i n i o n c o n t r a r y t o t h a t of t h e s i m p l e m a j o r i t y , o r s t a t e s a f a c t w h i c h m a y not b e p l e a s a n t t o h e a r , h e is l i b e l e d in t h e p r e s s , s l a n d e r e d is r e g a r d e d a s a o n c r a n k o r C o m m u n i s t . C e r t a i n l y t h e n i c k n a m i n g of all d i s s i d e n t f r e q u e n t l y u s e d a n d p u r e l y A m e r i c a n i n n o v a - t ion. “ c o m m u n i s t ' ’ t h e a i r , a n d a s i d e a s is a ★ ★ the a d v e n t of M c f a r t h v - Sine,, Operation Brainpower Seeks Texas Talent B y J O N B A U M A N and I .KON G R A H A M I m p o r t a n t d e c i s i o n s still n e e d to >* m a d e if th#’ p r o g r a m is to r e a c h p e a k e f f i c i e n c y : • Money is n e e d e d b a d l y to s u p - I«ort trie e x p a n d i n g c o st of til# oil­ is f i n a n c e d er af ion As of n ow , t h e e n t i r e p r o ­ g r a m t h r o u g h m e m ­ b e r s h i p t e es fre rn m e m b e r s of t h e i n c r e a s e d A s s o c i a t i o n A v e n u e s of m o n e t a r y s u p p o r t m u s t lx> i n v e s t i ­ g a t e d i m m e d i a t e l y . should • s t u d e n t p a r tic ip a tio n In* the in r e e v a lu a t e d . p r o g r a m The stu d e n t si#!#* of the #i|M‘raliiin is now under the d ir e c tio n of the five m a n O rientation am i V isita tio n to C o m m it t e e . T h o u g h t not only the e f fic ie n c y of th is g r o u p hut to how stu d en t* a r e selecte#! for v i*i ration should r o m e s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t lea d er* . from a n d • C o r r e l a t i o n b e t w e e n i n f o r m a t i o n u s e d in “ O p e r a t i o n B r a i n p o w e r ” a n d f r e s h m a n o r i e n t a t i o n s h o u l d be c l e a r l y d e f i n e d . T h e p r e s e n t r e ­ I e jx Mi h on m i g h t d u n d a n c y we ll b e e l i m i n a t e d t h r o u g h c a r e ­ ful p l a n n i n g Hie r e l a t i o n !>olwee/i s|*»< a a l a n d v u rn rn e r o r i e n t a t i o n p r o g r a m s s h o u l d c o n s i d e r e d a l so . C a r e m u s t be t a k e n to s e e t h a t t o p (light h i g h sc h oo l s t u d e n t s a r e i n v i t e d t o p a r t i c i p a t e in troth p r o g r a m s . B r a i n p o w e r ” t h e ti# t o p i n t e l l e c t u a l T h e p r o b l e m of h o w to k e e p T e x ­ a s ’ “ at h o m e . ” f o r fiost -high s c h o o l e d u c a ­ l o n g b a f f l e d e d u c a t o r s in t i o n h a s t h e s t a t e t a l e n t E v e n t h e C o m m i t t e e of l>efore 75 b e g a n a n a l y z i n g t h e ills of t h e U n i v e r s i t y , U T o f f i c i a l s a n d pr< l a ­ m e n t e x - s t u d e n t s w e r e to f ind t h e a n s w e r to s t o p e a c h y e a r ' s m a s s e x o d u s of h i g h s c h o o l g r a d ­ u a t e s to “ the* E a s t . ” t r y i n g on F ir s t a c tio n c o n c r e t e the p r o b le m c a m e from Ed Schultz#*, p r e s i d e n t of lh#* D a lla s Fixes Club. Mr. S c h u lt z e took a s u r v e y of top h ig h s c bool p r o d u c ts in tho D a lla s a r c a a n d found th a t IO jut c e n t of t h e m w e r e a tte n d in g c o l l e g e s and u n i v e r s i t i e s o u tsid e T e x a s . He a lso IimiikI that few of th#*se stu d e n ts r e ­ tu r n e d to T e x a s t<» liv e and work. ★ A r m e d w i t h * t h e s e f i g u r e s , Mr . th#* S c h u t z e a n d o t h e r E x - S t u d e n t s ' A s s o c i a t i o n s u g g e s t e d t he “ O p e r a t i o n I >rai n-pow' er p r o ­ g r a m a h i g h - p o w e r e d , ***ll-tho- 1 T n i v e r s i t y e a m p a i g n . l e a d e r s of in lie T o i n c l u d e d to d i s c u s s t h e new p r o ­ g r a m , whi# Ii w o u l d b e a i m e d at o n l y t h e h i g h s ch oo l “ c r e a m of t h e c r o p ” a c r o s s t h e s t a t e , w e r e v i s i t a ­ t e a m s c o m b i n i n g o u t s t a n d i n g t io n s t u d e n t s a n d f a c u l t y m e m b e r s wi ll ­ i ng a n d a b l e t h e a c a ­ d e m i e o f f e r i n g s of t h e U n i v e r s i t y . p r o g r a m the PG7, iii B e g u n sue#*es*ful to a m ild ly s t r u g g l e d s ig n s of first y e a r , hill d«*finite str u c tu r a l in d e n tin g As p r o b l e m s w e r e w orked (ait and l«>p flight stu d e n t t e a m s ( hoseii for the \ is itn t io n s , gain#*#! the m o m e n t u m wild in flu e n c e . Accord­ in g to U n iv e r s it y o ffi# ia ls, a d el s t u d e n t s w lid in b lite first q u a r te r of g r a d u a t e d th eir high soho#»l c l a s s h a s lieen n oted in f r e s h m a n e n r o llm e n t p r o g r a m i n c r e a s e shone#] the in N o w u n d e r I, t he g u i d a n c e of ('. ( b i l l i o n field r e p r e s e n t a t i v e for t h e I*.x S t u d e n t s ' A s s o c i a t i o n , “ O p ­ e r a t i o n B r a i n p o w e r ” is a n i l l i c i t , ant p r o g r a m at m a n y h i g h s c hoo ls a c r o s s t h e s t a t e P a r e n t s a n d --til d e n t s a l i k e p l a c e g r e a t w e i g h t in t h e e x p l a n a t o r y session*, p l <>• g r a m o f f e r s . th# * * iv Often# I ion Bt a iri(>ow'cr no l o n g e r - a l u x u r y , bul a n e c e s s a r y ( b i l l i o n s a y With o p e r a t i o n , M r t h e d e m a n d a c a d e m i c e x c e l ­ t h e l e n c e e a c h ve nt s u p p l y -,' 1 I # >.T or at the news la leu a l m y, J. ti 10.1 I nil ult »* *- - < "* • ne ' " a ' 'I. l i v e s should be made in J H 107 an#! advert ising J ll III <( .l --M.il office -O* pull* Krt . - -Oui n d e l l Pi . vs news rh. . rn.I, I,..* ------ 1... . JOI ^n e w s d i s p a t c h e s c t . d o * d e n c ' '"Mil n i h i l m a l l e i h e r e i n a l s o r#*serve#l A s s o t I ATM* Pit K S S WINK KKIt V M T’. is ex# l u s i v e l y t o t t i l e d t o t h e ox#* f o r r e p u t e < . . o t h e r w i s e c r e d i t e d t o It o i n o t o t t o ( W i s e ( - r e f i l l e d . _ .. iii t h i s n« ill t h i s >'<*■ • pal i. a! i i . t n s o f v p o n l a n e o o N o r i g i n p u b l i s h e d h e r e i n H i g h t s #»f I" ' A s s o c i a t e d I «p 11** g i.% In A l l A n t e r i # • « P » # c i n « k * f M K M U K K I* h o u l h u a s t r r n J . . ( " nrt ....................................................................................... K a t h l e e n ( a - - I * " 1 Ni ght E d i t o r D es k F.ditor I s s u e N e w s E d i t o r f o p y r e a d e r s N i g h t Sjsiit-. E d i t o r ................................................................. N i g h t A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r A s s i s t a n t .................................... ...................................................................................................... Al ici a ....................................................................... l u c k u south I hs Ui c* J e r r y S c a H ' i o u g h ( ’a ii i p u s I ufo u p m r .................. . . . . . ................................. J<> A,,rH ‘ Night Assi,s l a n t . . . . . . . . . . . J ' an lilt# *-clf UT Attracts Linguists 15 Ambassadors To Get Briefing Travelers to Chile W ashington-Bound The 15 U n iv e rs ity of T e x a s stu ­ d ents c h o sen for th e se c o n d s t u ­ d ent e x c h a n g e to Chile will t r i p leav e for W ash in g to n , D. C., Ju ly IO to a tte n d a th re e -d a y o rie n ta tio n session c o n d u c te d by th e S ta te De­ p a rtm e n t. Follow ing th e briefing, th e s tu ­ den ts vvill r e t u r n to T e x a s to p r e ­ t h e i r d e p a r t u r e J u ly 22 p a r e for for S an tiag o . T h e g ro u p will re tu r n to the US A u g u st 21. Th e s tu d e n ts , ch o sen fro m a field of 200 a p p lic a n ts , a r e J o e Powell, B ru c e Dane. E v a G a y le M axey, Mike F r y , E lly M e d i n a , J a c k Lowe, B e c k y R eynolds, S a m C u y ­ ler. Also J o E ic k m a n n , J u a n M eyer, J o e F a ttin g , P a t P a t te r s o n , Mike M uncy, T o m Crow ell a n d Rolx'rt R ic h a rd s . P r o f e s s o r D a n Stanis- th e g e o g ra p h y d e p a r t ­ law ski, of the g ro u p m en t, will a c c o m p a n y H i e T e x a n s will sp e n d ab o u t one Week tr a v e li n g in Chile, with the r e m a i n d e r of tim e being Sfx'tit in d isc u ssio n s a n d m ee tin g s. S tu d en ts will a u d it c la s s e s in th eir p a r t i c u l a r in te re s ts a t the U n iv e r­ sity of Chile. th e ir The b a s ic o b jec tiv e of th e ex­ c h a n g e p r o g r a m is to f u r t h e r m u ­ tual u n d e r s ta n d in g b e tw e e n the United S ta te s a n d Chile. Specialist Gets Grant For Research in N orw ay D r. H a r o l d P. H a n so n , U n i­ v e rs ity X - r a y p h y sic s sp e cia list, a w a r d e d a F u lb rig h t h a s b e e n g r a n t to c o n d u c t r e s e a r c h a t the U n iv e rs ity of Oslo, N o rw a y , d u rin g the 1960-61 a c a d e m ic y e a r , D r. H a n s o n will in v e s tig a te the p h y sic a l p r o c e s s e s involved in p r o ­ d uction of X r a y s to tr y to d e t e r ­ m in e th e c h a r a c te r is t ic s of th e X r a y s p e c t r a he o b s e rv e s . He also p la n s o t h e r stu d ie s on th e c r y s t a l ­ line s t r u c t u r e s of s o m e m ix t u r e s of n o n -m a g n e tic m a t e r i a l s w hich e x ­ hibit m a g n e t i c c h a r a c te r is t ic s w hen h e a t- tr e a te d . Cuba Takes All HAVANA — Tile C u b a n C ab in et the e a r l y W e d n e s d a y a u th o riz e d e x p ro p r ia tio n of all p r o p e r ty ow n ­ ed by A m e ric a n c o m p a n ie s of US citizen s ‘w hen d e e m e d n e c e s s a r y in th e n ational i n t e r e s t ." in C u b a re s id in g A s p e cia l honor h a s c o m e to die the U n iv e rs ity fo rm of the L inguistic In stitu te. s u m m e r this in T h is tw enty-second a n n u a l m e e t­ ing of the Institute, w hich is spon­ s o re d jointly by th e L inguistic Soc­ iety of A m e ric a a n d th e host in­ stitution, is the first to be sp o n so r­ e d in th e Southwest. Tile p u rp o se of th e in stitu te is to o ffe r a full s c ale s u m m e r session in linguistics on both th e g r a d u a te a n d u n d e r g r a d u a te levels. It is a t ­ te n d e d by recog n ized s c h o la rs from the U nited S ta te s foreign c o u n tries. PhD v is ito rs and stu- j d e n ts h a v e co m e this s u m m e r fro m In d ia , S w itzerland, J a p a n , E g y p t, I I n d o n esia , a n d the P hilippine I s ­ lan d s. a n d I T h e L inguistic So ciety c o n td - Fish Facts Ferns Individual In Love Calls love calls F e m a l e fishes h a v e in d iv id u al­ istic t h a t e n a b le m a le fish es to d istin g u ish b etw een th e ir ow n a n d those of a d ifferen t s p e ­ cies, E . A, Delco, U n iv e rsity zo­ ology g r a d u a te s tu d e n t, h as d i s ­ c o v e re d . D elco won first p rize for the h est r e s e a r c h p a p e r on fishes p r e s e n te d by a s tu d e n t w h e n he a n n o u n ced his d isc o v e ry to th e A m e ric a n So­ cie ty of Ichthyologists an d H e r p e ­ tologists in C h ic a g o re c e n tly . D elco found, w h ile doing r e ­ s e a r c h for a d o c to ra te , th at not only do d ifferen t s p e c ie s m a k e d if ­ fe re n t noises d u rin g courtsh ip , b u t a lso t h a t fish h a v e reg io n a l a c ­ c e n ts. T h o se found in the C olo rad o R iv e r n e a r A ustin h a v e d ifferen t so u n d in g those of th e s a m e s p e c ie s found s o m e IOO m iles e a s t in th e B razo s R iv e r, he ex p lain ed . love s o n g s from D elco did his r e s e a r c h u n d e r D r. C la rk Hubbs, U n iv e rs ity zoologist, w ho is in v estig a tin g re a so n s w h y d iffe re n t fish sp e cie s u su ally do not in te rb re e d . R a d io F r e e E u r o p e , the p riv a te , non-profit, A m e ric a n b r o a d c a s tin g n e tw o rk which a c c u r a t e new s an d in fo rm a tio n to the c a p ­ tive people of E a st E u r o p e is now c e le b ra tin g ten th a n n iv e r s a r y se n d s its Wednesday. July &. I960 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 3 h a t e s the s a l a r y of one p ro fe s s o r w h o hold the Collitz C h a ir of In- do - E u ro p e a n stu d ie s. The C h a ir w h ich is held th is y e a r by Dr. E r i e H u m p of the U n iv e rs ity of C hicago, h a s been held by th e m ost d i s t i n ­ the field of g u ish e d s c h o la r s linguistics. in Tw o luncheon le c tu re s , on T u e s ­ d a y s an d T h u r s d a y s , and a n o p e n le c tu r e on W e d n e s d a y e v e n in g s a r e g iv en e a c h w e e k by o u ts ta n d in g linguistic s c h o la r s fro m all n a tio n s . 1 In ad dition to a tte n d in g th e s e lee- j t tires, m e m b e r s follow a r e g u l a r s c h e d u le of c la s s e s for which th e y m a y e a rn fro m t h r e e to nine h o u rs of a c a d e m ic c re d it. the O th e r m e m b e r s of Dr. A. A. Hill, p ro fe s s o r of E n g ­ lish, is the d i r e c t o r of the In stitu te . f a c u lty w h o a r e on th e U n iv e rsity s ta ff ’n-; e lu d e IL A n a n t h a n a r a y a n a , E . B a g - by Atwood, W. C u rtis B l a y l o c k , ! D a v id D e c a m p , M o h a m m e d A. E . j d a d a I la. E r n e s t lin d e n , Mieko Man. R o b e r t T, H a r m s , Lee M. H o lla n d ­ er, Winfred P . L e h m a n n , J o s e p h IT Mat luck, G e o rg e P. S k a rg in s k y , Stanley N. Wet how, a n d Wei ner W inter. Visiting p ro fe s s o rs a r e J o h n C. Catford, U n iv e rs ity of E d in b u rg h ; W. Nelson F r a n c is , F r a n k li n and M arsh al! C o lleg e; E rie D a m p , U n i­ v e rsity of C hicag o , R o m a n J a k o b - son, H a r v a r d U n iv e rsity an d M IT; M artin Jo o s, U n iv e rsity of W iscon­ sin; B y ro n J , Koekkoek, U n iv e r ­ sity of B u ffa lo ; R obert P> Lees, IBM R e s e a r c h Center. Also R a lp h B. Long. U n iv e rs ity of P u e r to Rico, N o rm an M cQuown, U n iv e rsity of C hicago; Yakov M a l­ l e i , U n iv e rs ity of C a lifo rn ia ; K en ­ neth L P ik e , U n iv ersity of M ichi­ gan a n d S u m m e r Institute of Lin­ gu istics; J u a n Puhvel, U n iv e rs ity of C a lifo rn ia , Los A ng eles; Ism a e l S ilv a -F u e n z alid a , F o re ig n Service Institu te, D e p a r tm e n t of S ta te ; G eo rg e L. T r a g e r , U n iv e rs ity of Buffalo; VV'. F r e e m a n T w ad d ell. Brown U n iv e rs ity ; an d W illiam E. W elm ers, H a r tf o r d S e m in a r y F o u n ­ dation. Snakes Gain Aggression Through Drought Season • i ‘ sr -4 H e l p Yourself By H e l p i n g the Kids C e le b r a fe Late 4th O rigin al p la n s for an “ old fa sh io n e d " Fourth o f J u ly pie* iii<* (or retard ed ch ild r en at A u s­ h a v e b een tin S ta te School c h a n g e d , n e c e ssita tin g a d d itio n ­ al U n iv e r sity for sh o rte r tim e , M rs. B eu lah P a r e , v o lu n te e r coordi­ n ator for the sch o o l, an n ou n ced . j>eriods of v o lu n te e r s to At re|M>rt le a st 14) v o lu n te e r s are n eed ed on the sch o o l grou n ds from 4 to 7 p .m . T h u rsd a y to h elp s u p e r v is e the e ig h t p icn ic lo c a tio n s. V olu n teers a re ask ed to th e A d m issio n s B uild in g p rom p tly at 4 p .m . tor a ssig n m e n t. and o rien ta tio n T h o se who need tra n sp o rta tio n or w ho ran sh a re tra n sp o rta tio n to the ca m p u s sh ould m e et at th e U n iv e r sity Y or C o n g re g a ­ tio n a l Church at 3:15 p .m . F r a n k W right, in an n ou n cin g th e tim e ch a n g e m a d e sin c e tho o rig in a l plans w ere m a d e, s p it ­ ed , “ N o e x p e r ie n c e or sp ecia l q u a lific a tio n s a re n e e d e d ." He u rg ed su m m er stu d e n ts to d o ­ n a te th is one aftern oon to as- su re a v e r y s p e c ia l ev en t for ch ild ren of the sc h o o l. Snakes this s u m m e r a re b o ld e r a n d h u n g r ie r th a n th ey h a v e been for m a n y y e a r s , re p o rts H o w a rd Dodgen, e x e c u tiv e s e c r e ta r y of the G a m e and F i s h C om m ission. a g g re s s iv e R ecen t d r o u g h t conditions h a v e the u s u a lly placid s n a k e s c a u se d to b eco m e t h e i r q u e s t for food a n d hom e. T h e only r e c o u rs e left to th e ho m o s a p ie n s populace th e c r e e p y beings alone, e x c e p t for th e fo u r poisonous v a rie tie s . E x t e r m in a t io n is th eir fate. le a v e to in is s tu d e n ts . Helping th is f a te along a r e t h r e e U n iv e rsity J a c k Kyle, Phil P r it c h e tt , a n d Billy Wittliff killed 19 r a t t l e r s in a r e c e n t e x p e ­ dition to El C inco Cien R a n c h n e a r Blanco. p o p u latio n la rg e -s c a le E lse wile re, e x p e d i­ tions a re o r g a n iz e d to r e d u c e the serpent S w e e tw a te r and m a n y o t h e r T e x a s a n d O k la ­ h o m a a r e a s s p o n s o r a n n u a l s n a k e round-ups, a w a r d i n g prizes to the h u n te rs p ro d u c in g the m o st s n a k e s still c ra w lin g and s q u irm in g . Aft­ e r being m ilk e d of th e ir v e n o m which is s e n t to la b o r a to r ie s p ro ­ the ducing an ti toxins, m a n y of snak es a r e killed a n d p r e p a r e d for the hunt-clo sin g b a n q u e t. T h e p rey p ro v id e th e m a in c o u r s e for this feast the th o u sa n d s of d iffe re n t Of c o p p e rh e a d , sn a k es e x t a n t today, only fo u r v a ­ rieties a r e d a n g e ro u s . R a t t l e r s uti­ lize d ry . r o c k y h a b ita ts, w hile c o r­ al, c o tto n h e a d a re a s . m o c c a s in L a c k of m o is tu re h a s r e s u lte d in the u n u s u a l s n a k e m o v e m e n t this y e a r. fre q u e n t m o is t a n d A lthough leth a rg ic sn a k es a r e and tim id , they a re not a v e r s e to qu ietly n ip p in g a h a n d y w rist, a n ­ kle, o r o t h e r p r o tu b e r a n c e which o b s tr u c ts t h e i r path. A nyone h ap­ pening to Mr. Snake s m a r k of d istin ctio n should im m e d ia te ly follow s im p l e safety p re c a u tio n s , for m ost s n a k e bites, though p a in fu l, do not p ro v e to be d eadly. v ictim fall to F irs t, m a k e p ro p er incisions at the wound a n d apply tile s ite of least a half hour. suction for at the Apply a wound, r e le a s in g ten or fifteen m in u te s for a b o u t five s e c ­ onds at a tim e . to u rn iq u e t it e v e r y a lsjv e The m o s t im p o rta n t i te m s to r e ­ m e m b e r a r e to re m o v e a s m u c h of th e Cloison as possible a n d to con­ tac t a p h y sic ia n at th e earliest possible m o m e n t. How c a n one e s c a p e th e sn ak e m e n a c e in this y e a r of sn a k y go­ ings-on? T he hest bet is to m ove to M a in e , th e only s t a t e devoid of poisonous reptiles Enrollment Shows Decrease of 142 T ile U n iv e r sity sh o w s a d e c r e a s e in e n ro llm e n t of 142 from la st Hum­ m e r ’s cou n t, s ta tis tic s re le a sed bjr the R e g is tr a r 's o ffic e rev ea l. T h e College of E d u c a tio n , th e College of P h a r m a c y a n d the G r a d ­ u a te School a r e the only ones show­ ing e n ro llm e n t in c r e a s e s . Total e n ­ ro llm e n t a s of J u n e 21 w a s 7.720. As u su al, the College of Arts a n d th e m ost s tu ­ S c ien c e s c la im e d d e n ts. th e G r a d u a te hut School w as a close second with 2,026. 2.228, S tu d e n ts r e -e n te rin g the U niver­ sity to ta l 6.435, a n d 349 fre s h m e n e n te r e d from s e c o n d a r y school. T h e includes 925 U n iv e rs ity p opulation t r a n s f e r s a n d eleven s tu ­ college d e n ts a d m itte d by individual a p ­ p ro v a l. s o m e 1.200 L ife g u a rd s at A tla n tic City r e s ­ c u e s w i m m e r s e a c h s u m m e r . Hie la r g e s t of New J e r ­ s e y ' s s e a s id e re s o r ts , A tlan tic City, to 16.000,000 visitors a p la y s host v e a l . SUMMER TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS CLASSIFIED AD V ER TISIN G DEADLINES Tuesday Texan .................. Friday Texan M o n d a y 3:30 p.m. Thursday 3:30 p.m . Call GR 2-2473 For Sate Tutoring Furnished A p a r tm e n ts T yping T y p in g F o i l S U . I P L U T A R C H ' S LI V KS In j tin* ti insult ion r a i l e d l H y c l r n a Cm t, .I f r o m Un* Gr e e k a n d revi s ed B v i A (Moue,Ii. s o m e t i m e f e l l o w md t u ­ ll tor Mi Ori el C ol l e ge . O x f o r d and tate I V o l e sor of t he E n g l i s h L a n g u a g e -md I . d e i a l u r e at U n i v e r s i t y C o l l e g e C o n ­ li in MMu . w or k is c o m p l e t e a n d conal ts in q u a r t o w i t h j • v o l u m e s bo und o f to i roo ii b u c k r a m b un t i ne . In e x c e l l e n t is $3 ’ > per v o l u m e , C o n i d i u m Br i c e II J o h n K, B o y d , B o x J ’s t W e s t v i e w S t a t i o n , W a c o , *[ i n t e r e s t e d w r i t e | TUMM UU NI I IN R u s s i a n and F re n c h . E x p e r i e n c e d t e a c h e r GR 2-lG3'‘ R o o m and Board man B u r n i s h e d MKN — SI MM tilt ra t e s O n l y $25 per apart I til- mends A c c o m o d a t e ‘2 or 3 m e n itie.s paid T w o blM A N D BO A RD BOR Si MMI It. r o o m s . w e e k l v . I M3 R i o •la ss T h r e e ' B L O K . , Co-Op. G R L 8331 ( Jrande c o o l e r s s e v e n me al s N a e BOI It R OOM G a r a g e A p a r t m e n t Br need Nard, w i n d o w c o n i n v e n i t i a n $70 iY) w i t h g a r a g e bli nds C h i l d r e n Gi t 7 KUT 3 la ll R o o m s for Renf ft C A i l l BB U t , I PY port .atli * $75 Se,* nt S p e e d w a y It. ol to S h o p C O I N G T O St IMM BR S C U O O l H e lp W a n t e d n**< e VV VI I l i l t s VV \ N IMMU - E x p e r i e n c e n o t .ars W e w i l l t r ai n Age 21 .‘lb tills A p p l y In per ii ir\ plus fijood ••ai C o m m o d o r e B e r r y Ho t e l S t u d y In C O O L COM BOR r a t th* A-Bar Motel \ PTR AGT IV IMI A Bl RN ISH Bl.), 2 bed j room I d o u b l e ‘2 s i n g l e t i eds , s h o w e r oui lull c e n t r a l a n c o n d i t i o n i n g wa Mi-, er. u t i l i t i e s f u r n i s h e d $110 per m o n t h S l a u g h t e r . I JR (’> al 19 A lte ration s M U N S I \ Bl ilv I' A L T E R A T I O N S (tone tsUs 233? r e a s o n a b l y Qui ck s e r v i c e S e e J a c o b s o n ' s M e n s W e a r Arnold Gua d a l upe . A L T E R A T I O N S ANI) D R E S S M A K I N G 715 W e s t 25th S t r e e t GR ti .UGO W A N I BI) R e s i d e n t C o u n s e l o r * $25 d o u b l e — ( t o m n g l a S p e c i a l S e r v ic e s TAI 3 G u a d a l u p e GR 0 5638 RUNT — Bl RCII ASK T V s T e l e v i s i o n R e n t a l GR 2 2G92 A l p h a TI UM B A R B U S . RI B O R T S , d i s s e r t a t i o n s a c c u r a t e l y t h e s e s t y p e d GL- T Y R I N G W VNM I I). T h e s e s and v a r ­ Call Dobbs . ? Sh a ver s . i ous w a n . (JR '2 533a aft Ct 5 S H O R T ON T Y P I N G , t i m e a nd m o n ­ o s ? Bet me help w i t h t h e m e s , out- r e por t s D i s c o u n t . Mis., n o t e s Uia s G r a h a m G B 3 37 > B l d JC I RUM V r h d i s s e r t a t i o n s , ( G R 8 3 .US R E P O R T S . M lies, e in M i n De But t i M A R T H A A N N SHIVLEY M B A. A c o m p l e t e p r o f e s s i o n a l t y p i n g serv­ i c e t a i l o r e d to t h e n e e d s of I i m or­ k e y b o a r d a ll y e q u i p m e n t sci ence. t h e s e * and di»- and a e r t a t i o n * S p e c i a l l a n g u a g e , s t u d e n t s for e n g i n e e r i n g C o n v e n i e n t l y l o c a t e d at G O O D A L L W O O T E N D O R M BLIX!. 211 BJ G u a d a l u p e Rho GR 2 3210 N U A I’ ACC. R ATK t y p i n g R e a s o n a b l y E l e c t r i c 2831 P e a r t. GR ‘2-8102. E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G SERVICER A c c u r a t e R e a s o n a b l e Mi no r e d i t i n g . H O 5 5813. D E I . A KI E L D S GI V I C K T Y P I N G G r a m m a r corm. Mc I M i m e o g r a p h i n g . M u l t i ! Rili ng i l l 2 Go22. L E T MR S AIM pens. El ectr oni c 2911 i : poi nut. md B RO M CAMB O ll I 31 SS t 'l l *111 s t El ectr oni c 13 lit pa- ^ i I j JU ■ un* I h o» ti i s. I MMU I C S T BN' 0< J R A R I I B K - - T y p e .Vidro s Tinve- Manus, rtpts etc IS in lojies w a t s ovporieivo W o r k gnat m*t vd, Heasonable Ra t e s A m ic a b le m g l t o r d a \ 3 2 nd. IJR ti is >»♦ I «me or your’. 'Theses i m yus VS o d Na n c y Tyler R E P O R T S D I S S E R T A T I O N S . T H VS I S T V t i l ) Mr* R o b e r t a B W m k l e r W e s t 13th GR 7 JNB T H E M E S O K U INKS, Douhl«> S p a c e d . 25c I VU N i f l ' E S . (JR ti 1717 W a n t e d F o r p r i v a t e d o r m i t o r y t e r m <’all • ppoi nl muul . (JR ti H U a f t e i 7 p o l f o r t h e l o o n f«W UUY IT OK S U L L B a l l / T e x a n th# (M assif bsf Atta. R h o n e t h r o u g h IT G R 2 247.1 b e t w e e n 8 an d 3 flailv A U S T I N T. V R E N T A L S IiMk) Portables B r e e D e l i v e r y amt P i c k u p O p e n 24 B o u r * G R 8 5282 T Y P I N G P R O B L E M S ? Call It W I [ o l i o . GR G 3018 a f t e r 5 OO. Multl- lith m a t * I ll M E l e c t r i c . G u a r a n t e e d a c c u r a c y Ra pi d S e r v it*#. tx a p t v i a l i t v N e w B L O O D D O N O R S - A l l type* of bino* needed for usage In Austin Profes­ s io n a l donors now ac ce p te d TravUl County BUkhJ Bank 29Kii Red R u e r . GR 8 <$157 Wednesday, July 6, I960 THE S U M M E R TEXAN Page 4 Player Tops Q u a lif y in g Sarazen H eads U S Linksters ST. A N D R EW S, Scotland UU — V e te ra n G e n e S a raz e n a n d young Arnold P a l m e r hung on to lead a thin A m e ric a n the qualifying the c e n te n a ry B ritish O pen Golf C h a m p io n sh ip T u esday. test for th ro u g h line At the s a m e tim e the, defe n d in g c ham pion, G a r y P la y e r of South Africa, m a r k e d him self a s a m an who m a y re q u ir e a lot of b e a tin g in to u rn a m e n t, b egin­ ning W ednesday. The South Afri­ ca n added a 69 to a prev io u s 67 for the q u alifying m e d a lis t p r iz e at 135. the 72-hole S arazen , the 58-year-old s t a r of sp o rt's golden e ra , s u rp r is in g ly led the U S. contingent by shooting an even p a r 72 on the New C ourse a fte r an opening 69 for 141. This put him a s tro k e b e tte r to th an P a l m e r , wrho sk y ro c k e te d a 75 for 142. E x p e r im e n tin g and playing the U.S. M a s te rs loosely, and Open c h a m p io n s a id : “ The round d id n 't b o th e r m e. I looking ov e r the course. a m still I t s to m o rro w th a t c o u n ts .” The I s t r o b e , P a ., pro is co-fav- o n t e for the title with P l a y e r and a P e t e r T h o m so n of A u s tra lia , four-tim e w inner. T hom son shot a 72 tied for 141 T uesday. T h is S a razen. F r a n k Toledo. took a Ohio, with a 73 M onday, n ig h tm a r is h 80. Sam F r i e d m a n , an Air F o r c e m a jo r from T u sc a lo o sa , Ala., a n d a m a t e u r T r u m a n Con­ nell of J u p ite r , F la ., followed open­ ing 72s with 78s S tr a n a h a n of P a l m e r indicated he w a s just try in g the co u rse for size a f t e r g e t­ ting a c o m fo rta b le 67 M onday. tak in g c h a n c e s T u e s d a y he w as a n d ex p lo rin g the te rra in . S a r a z e n w a s like a schoolboy a f t ­ e r ru sh in g around the New Course in 72. “ I ve n e v e r d riv e n th e ball b e t­ ter in m y life,” the G e r m a n to w n , N.Y., s q u ire said. “ I d o n 't know how to explain it. M a y b e it s just b e c a u s e a t being h e r e .” in spired I 'm I S a r a z e n w as 22 w h e n he played in his first of 13 B ritis h Opens in 1932 but lost the new y e a r at St. Andrew s. Snead Favored In Canada Golf TO R O N TO i f t - S a m Snead, as usual, w a s installed T u e s d a y a s fav o rite to win the $27,000 C a n a d ­ ian O p e n s ta r tin g W ednesday. This is old stu ff to S l a m m i n ’ Sam . field T h e 143-m em ber includes six f o r m e r C a n a d ia n O pen c h a m ­ pions, including S n ead who h a s won it th re e tim es in 22 y e a rs , lf he w ins a fourth h e ’ll eq u a l the re c o rd set by the f a m o u t Leo Die- gel of W ashington in th e 1920s. the 72-hole T he 48-year-old S n e a d to u re d the s u b u r b a n St. G e o r g e ’s layout, site of t o u r n a m e n t , along with o t h e r e n tr a n ts w h o w a n te d a inspection of th e 158-bunker ' close co urse before firing s ta r t* in e a r n ­ est. T h e field includes su ch s ta r s as d e fe n d in g c h a m p io n Doug F o rd , P a r a d i s e , F la .; Dow F in s te r w a ld , T e q u e s ta , F l a .; a nd K e n V enturi. P alo Alto, Calif. THE U N IV E R S IT Y ’S O N L Y E X C L U S IV E R A D IO A N D HI-FI SA LE S A N D SE R V IC E CEN TER 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 I Serving the University area for IO years • H I G H FIDELITY AT R E A S O N A B L E PRICES*1 Deadline Nears AL ALL-Star Tea ^ intramural^ amecj P l n n P n n r t Golf, Ping Pong f 2 . r s . l t Cronin F r a n k L a r y , D e tro it; Bill Mo bouquet te, B oston; C a m b io Pa cual, W a sh in g to n ; a n d G e r ry Sta ey a n d E a r l y Wynn of Chicago. C a t c h e r s E lston Howard, Ya a n d S herm Dollar, Whit ( t kees, Sox w e r e to back s t a r t e r Yogi B e r r a , a lso of Y a n k e e s. se le c te d R e s e r v e infielders a r e Lu’ A p a ric io a n d N elson Fox of t Indian W hite Sox; Vie P o w e r , an d B ro o k s R ob in so n and Ji G entile of the O rioles. T e d W illiam s of th e Red So w a s n a m e d to a r e s e r v e outfiel role a lo n g with Al K a lin e , Tigers H a r v e y K uenn, Sm ith, W hite Sox. In d ia n s , and T h e e ig h t s t a r t e r s n a m e d earlie a r e B e r r a , Bill Skow ron, Ne lh; P e te R u n n e ls , Busto York, 2b; R o n H ansen, B a ltim o re , ss F r a n k M alzone, B oston, 3b; Mi nie M inoso, Chicago, lf; Mieke M antle, N ew York, c f; and Roge M a ris, N ew York, rf. A b re a k d o w n show s pion W hite Sox a n d lea d in g Y an k e e s m en e a c h . the cha leagu seve the p la c e d Willie Mays Gains NL Batting Lead N E W YORK iff) — Willie May hot a s a f ir e c r a c k e r , has roare to a 30-point lead in tile Nation ti l e a g u e biffin s tr e n g th s t r e a k th a t has b oosted his ave ag e 46 points. r a c e 19-gam e b a ttin g of on a W hen the firing w a s o v e r folio ing th e J u ly 4 g a m e s , M ays ha .371 m a r k while N o rm Larke a the rn of I>os Angelos w a s .341. P ete Rut ne r-u p position a t riels of Boston top[>ed the Amor .336. c a n L e a g u e w ith in his began M a y s, s t a r San F r a n c is c o on fielder, p r o d u c ts s tr e a k J u n e 15. He w a s hitting 3 then he's co a t le c te d 38 hits tries a 49 p a c e. tim e. Since in 77 the B a l t i m o r e ’s J im G entile, the A p a c e s e tt e r a w eek ago, slumpe into second place w ith a 19 jxun d e c lin e to .328. R o g e r M aris of th e New Yu Y a n k s s la m m e d t h r e e home i in and d r o v e iii six r u n s last week H m a i n ta i n his AL c a te g o rie s . Ho blows a n d 64 RHI. thor- cli cill le a d s h a s in E r n ie B anks of the Ch ic ag Cubs continues to lea d the Natior a1 in h o m e rs wi t h 23 and nm b a tte d in, 69. M a n tle Sells Interest In D a lla s B o w lin g Aile " BOSTON M — A m e ric a n L e a g u e P re sid e n t Jo e Cronin T u e s d a y an­ nounced the 22 p la y e rs se le c te d by m a n a g e r Al Lopez to c o m p le te the I960 AL All-Star squad. The eight s ta r tin g p la y e rs w e re chosen previously by a poll a m o n g all play e rs, m a n a g e r s a n d c o a c h ­ es in the league. The All-Star g a m e s will be play-, cd in K a n s a s City July l l a n d New York J u ly 13. Lopez n a m e d p itc h e rs G a r y Bell and Dick S tig m a n of C le v e la n d ; J im Coates a n d W hitey F o r d of New Y ork; Bud D aley, K a n s a s City; C huck E s t r a d a , B a ltim o r e ; Standings A M E R IC A N T K A C I K W T ea m New Y ork .................... 43 C l e v e l a n d ........................ 42 B a l t i m o r e ........................ 45 C h i c a g o ............................ 39 D e tr o it ............................ 34 W a s h i n g t o n .................... 32 K ansa s C ity ............... 27 ............... 26 Boston T a e s d a y ’s R e s u lt s L 27 28 33 34 37 38 45 46 . . B a l t i m o r e , B oston 4. W a s h in g t o n 5. New Y ork 3. Only g a m e s scheduled. W e d n e s d a y S c h e d u le P e t . GB 614 — I .600 .577 2 . 534 Sp* . 479 9 4 .457 l l . 375 17 .361 18 New Y ork ( B r o w n 7-2) C h icago (fo r d 4-5) a t B a l t i m o r e ( n ig h t. ) ( W y n n 4-6) a t C le v e la n d ( S tt g m a n 4-4), ( n ig h t. ) K a n sa s C ity ( D a le y 11-4) a t D e tr o it ( I ^ r y 6-8), ( n i g h t . ) W a s h in g t o n ( K ra - lick 3-0) at B o s to n ( ( ’a s a le 2-7). n ig h t. N A T I O N A L L E A G U E ( P a s c u a l 7-5) o r T eam P i t t s b u r g h M ilw a u k ee .San F r a n c is c o St. I x>uis Ix>s A ngeles C in cin n a ti P h tld e l p h la C hicago W .................... 45 .................... 40 ........... 39 ...................... 38 ............. 37 .................... 35 .................. 31 ........................ 28 I 28 32 34 37 37 38 44 43 P et. GB . 616 — . 556 4** . 534 6 . 507 8 500 SR .479 IO .413 15 . 394 16 T u e s d a y ’s Result*! P h ild e l p h ia 2. C in c in n a ti 0. St Ix)uis 3 C hicago 2. P i t t s b u r g h 5, M ilw a u k ee 4 I-os A ngeles 8. San F r a n c is c o 0. W e d n e s d a y ' s S c h e d u le P i t t s b u r g h (M i/e ll I 5 o r (’h o n e y 0-1) at C in c in n a ti ( P u r k e y 8-3) ( n i g h t . ) P h ila d e lp h ia (O w ens 3-9) a t M il w a u ­ kee ( J a y 2-4), ( n ig h t.) St L ouis (G ibson l l ) ( H o b b le 7-10 i at Chicago San F ra n c is c o t o Dell 3-7) Angeles ( W il lia m s 7-2), ( n ig h t at 1-os ) It Looks Like Leo A f San Fra ncisco A fte r I960 Race LOS A N G E L E S '.I*) j bun will m a n a g e T om Sheo- tin* San F r a n ­ cisco G ia n ts at least until the end season, Club P re sid e n t of said T u e sd a y , I H orace Stoneham j implying Loo D u ro c h e r tLr* ' running for 1961. this in is I ney j two weeks, J u n e IM, he four weeks, When Stoneham fired Bill Rig- said S heehan would he the interim m a n a g e r “ for rest of the season, o r possibly lo n g e r.” I u e sd ay about D urocher, I a r e “ Leo and Stoneham said good f rie n d s ,’’ and the fo rm er G ia n ts m a n a g e r would he in die pictu re should a c h a n g e la* m ade a f te r this season. in tim a te d A'-ked tin* But should Sheehan he s u c c e s s ­ the p e n n a n t in 1961, job ful with race a nd w a n t Stoneham said could have if the club in the he DA LLA S sta .JI — B a s e b a ll M ic k e y M antle's a s so c ia te s said T u e s d a y th at lite N ew York Yan­ kee s lu g g e r h ad d i s u s e d of par imwling -ill* of his c on c eiv a b ly h e r e but would k e e p his resider)* interest in a in D allas. N O EXTRA C H A R G E F O R FAST SERVICE T u esd a y intram u ral is the d ead lin e for intram u ral golf and tab le te n ­ nis en tries, s a y s Sonny Roolrer, sp orts d irector of for m en. G olf in elig ib le lo co m p ete in the golf tou rn ey. O th erw ise, all U n iv ersity s tu ­ d en ts and fa cu lty m em b ers are elig ib le. letterm en are B o lt en tr ie s will p lay tw o rounds of 18 h o les, m ed a l play a t M unicipal B o lt C ourse on J u ly 19 am i Ju ly 26. E a ch co n ­ te sta n t m u st ch eck in a t the co u rse b etw een 1:45 and 2:30 p .m . on th e sch ed u led d a tes. is 50 T he co st for ea ch round c e n ts. A m ed a l w ill be a w ard ed the ch am p ion . T a b le ten n is co n testa n ts will report to the b a sem e n t of ti reg- ory G ym a t 7 p .m . Ju ly t i to play th eir first tw o rounds of co m p etitio n . F in a l rounds w ill be p layed J u ly 28 at 7 p .m . T he w in ner w ill r e c e iv e a m ed a l. in E n tries w ill b e a cc ep ted G regory G ym 114 or by ca llin g G R 6 8371, E x ten sio n 347. M i l nil t n n r wwirww 'r t i t Akins Meets Luis In Comeback Try hits LO UISVILLE, K y. — Virgil th e m ak e -o r-b rea k A kins p h a s e of his c o m e b a c k a tt e m p t I W ednesday night when he m e e ts leading w elter- Luis Rodriguez, I weight contender. T he 32-year-old St. Louis b e lte r has been up and down in m o re th a n 12 y e a rs of fighting, winning the title, then losing it and a re- j m a tc h to Don J o rd a n . Akins, who u p se t C harley Scott last M ay 20, will be a 12-5 u n d e r ­ dog a g a in st Rodriguez. He goes into the 10-round televised m a tc h (ABC) with a 28-0 rec o rd while Akins is 51-24-1. P r o m o t e r Bill King said 35 p er r e c e ip ts the g lo s s g a te cent of will go to the widow a nd six < hil- d re n of Rudell Stitch, ran k in g L o u i s v i l l e w elterw eight. He in an un­ drow ned a m onth ago successful a s a v e to friend. a tte m p t Stitch died the d ay before he w as sla te d to vign for a bout with R odriguez h e re J u ly 24. N o t e v ery o ne k n o w s that the CCI TS carries an as sortment o f lathes sp orts­ wear. At left you see o n e of our j u m p e r sport shirts. C o m e In soo n and toke a lo ok at our dresses, her mudas, s k i r t s , blouses, belts and even sox. T h e ClxftLc Go/mp6tlJL HnfomrihjStaj) 2550 Gimdjiiup* L A D I E S Laundry Service Open 7 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. M ond ay-Saturday 510 West 19th Street am 1 Longhorn Exes To Have Lounge C om e n e x t fa ll and footb all s e a ­ son, old U n iv e r sity a th le te s and j th ose not so old w ill h a v e a p la c e all th eir ow n w h ere th e y ca n r e ­ new fr ie n d sh ip s and r e v ie w L ong- horn e x p lo its. $75,000 L e tte r m e n ’s “ T L o u n g e” to be b u ilt u n d er T e x a s M em orial S ta d iu m sh ould be re a d y about m id -S ep tem b e r. A T he B o a r d of R e g e n ts h as a w a r d ­ ed c o n tr a c ts for the co n stru ctio n w ork an d a u th o rized C om p troller C. H . S p a r en b e rg to a d v e r tise for bids on fu rn ish in g s for the lou n ge. A L o n g h o rn Club c o m m itte e h as raised n e a r ly $15,OOO. and the r e ­ m ain d er o f the $7.>,000 c o st, e x c lu ­ siv e o f a d d itio n a l funds r a ise d by th at c o m m itte e , w ill b e borne by the A th letic C ouncil, m a in ly from Cotton B o w l m o n e y , A th letic D i­ rector E d w in W. O lio sa id . T he fu n d -ra isin g c o m m itte e is co m p o se d o f W a lla ce S cott, A ustin, and C o lo n el D . H arold B y rd , D a l­ la s,* c o -c h a ir m e n ; N o b le D o ss, B u d d y J u n g m ie h e l, and F ra n k B e ­ m us, all o f A u stin ; C h arles H a a s, Corpus C h risti; J a c k P e r r y , H ou s­ ton. a n d B ed ford W ynne, D a lla s. T h e lo u n g e w ill o c c u p y a sp a c e 45 by IOO fe e t u nd er th e s ta d iu m ’s w est s id e , A th letic D ir e c to r O de e x p la in e d . “ We fine to i m eet b e fo r e or a fter g a m e s or at to re n e w old a cq u a in t­ j h a lf-tim e it w ill be a for L onghorn le tte r m e n th in k p lace I a n c e s ,” O lio c o m m en ted . Wednesday, July 6, I960 THE SU M M E R TEXAN Page S Stan N ot Expecting All-Star Team Spot - if he CHICAGO d isap p oin ted tv — Stan M u sia l, w ho h a s a p p e a red in m o r e All- Star b a seb a ll g a m e s — 16 — than an y oth er p la y e r, s a y s he won t be d o e sn ’t m a k e it th is tim e . T h e g r e a t St. I » u is C ardin al o u tfield er in field er w a s ab sen t from the 16 p la y e r s n a m ed in the r e su lts N ation al L ea g u e in for I K a n sa s C ity, Ju ly l l . and N ew 1 Y ork. J u ly 13. But W alt A lston of the L os A n g e le s D o d g er s, w h o w ill th e N a tio n a l L e a g u e r s, m a n a g e th e r e m a in in g m e m ­ w ill n a m e bers of h is 30-m an sq u ad T h u rs­ d ay, the A ll-S tar e n g a g e m e n ts v o tin g “ I w as b e n c h e d for a m on th . B u * du rin g that in re a l g(X)d co n d itio n .” tim e I kept c a r e e r b attin g a v e r a g e of M u sial, w h o h as a m ajor leagues .337, in 1959, ‘ had h is p o o rest se a so n ! slu m p in g to .255. A fter h is th e b en ch , te r m on w hich en d ed tw o w e ek s ago. M u­ sia l h as been p la y in g w e ll. As of T u e sd a y ho w a s h itting .278. Davis Cup Squad Has Youth Galore “ I ’v e had no in d ica tio n w h a tso ­ e v e r th at A lston w ill n a m e m e in the g r o u p .” M u sia l told T he A sso ­ c ia ted P r e s s T u e sd a y . ‘‘I w on't be In d isap p oin ted fact I w ou ld be su rp rised if he did. if he d oesn t. “ I h a v e n ’t p la y ed too m u ch th is th e b e sid e s sea so n . And the you n ger in p le n ty of ch a n ce. th em , and, a fte r all. I ’m 39 y e a r s old you k n o w .” th at, sh ould get fe llo w s I ’v e been M u sia l w a s re m in d ed th at he is p la y in g b ette r at th e m o m en t than he w a s la st y e a r w h en he w a s an A ll-S tar c h o ic e . “ I g u e s s I a m , but th at d oesn t m ean I w ill be n a m e d .” he sa id . N E W YO RK tm — A trio of p la y e r s a v e r a g in g o n ly 21 y e a r s of a g e w a s n am ed T u e sd a y by W S. D a v is Cup o ffic ia ls the A m e rica n zone first round m a tc h ­ e s w ith C an ad a a t Q uebec J u ly ! 15-17. for N a m e d w ith th e y o u n g ste r s is B a rt B a r tz e n , 33, of D a lla s. H e m a y p la y but th e m a jo r p ortion of the co m p etitio n is e x p e c te d to I be h and led by B arry M a c K a y , 25, ; of D ayton . O hio, and tw o 19-year- from St. L o u is, E a r l B u ch - old s holz and C h a rles M c K in ley . T he se le c tio n s w e r e an n ou n ced b y D a v id F r e e d of S alt L ak e C ity , n ew c a p ta in of tile U .S . te a m . J O R A C E P R E S E N T S SUMMER CLEARANCE [ s p e c i a l g r o u p SUITS... now $35. ...... W ERE $55. & $55. I I W ERE $40........... I SUITS I SUITS.. ...... W ERE $55.......... j SUITS W ERE $79.50 . . . . N O W $30* I N O W $44.1 mow $59” I POLISHED C O T T O N Dress Slacks & Bermuda Shorts 20% off Eddie Southern No European Visa For Vet Southern A q uick g la n c e b ack w ard p» >b- abl> cost E d d ie S outhern a bet th on li t e E n d ed S ta te s O lym p ic to tm ti ip tints, an e x p e n se p aid and t > R .m e in A u g u st, sa id UT a s ­ sista n t tr a ck c o a c h F r o g g ie Lov- \ mo T u esd a y . T he fo r m er L on gh orn g re a t w a s Texas to Sponsor Coaching Clinics T h e U n iv e r sity w ill con d u ct th ree o n e-w eek c o n fe r e n c e s on athletic ro a ch in g J u ly 11-29: b a s k e tb a ll.) Jul.s 11-15; fo o tb a ll, J u ly 18-22, and a th letic tra in in g , J u ly 25-29. Staff for th e b a sk e tb a ll c o n fe r ­ e n c e i in Hides H arold B ra d ley and J im m y V ir a m o n te s of the U n iv e r ­ sity and J im m y A n d ers of South P a rk H igh S ch o o l o f B ea u m o n t, A AAA s ta te ch a m p io n s in I n te r ­ s c h ol a s t i c L e a g u e co m p etitio n . T he footb all c o n fe r e n c e sta ff w ill includ e B ob S c h u lz e and R u sse ll I d ic e of the U n iv e r sity , Dr. R h ea lf W illiam s o f the U n iv ersity ^In­ te r sc h o la stic L e a g u e and B ill St i- g e s of R ay H ig h S chool, C orpus C h risti, l e a g u e AAAA c h a m p io n s last fail. Frank M edin a of the U n iv e r sity w ill conduct th e a th letic tra in in g co n fe ren ce . Dr L ynn W. M cG raw , P h y s ic a l an d H ealth E d u ca tio n D e p a r tm en t c o o r d i­ ch a ir m a n , n a l F u rth er d e ta ils m ay be ob- t lined by w r itin g to h im til U n iver- c itv S tation , A u stin 12. c o n fe r e n c e is A u stra lia to Increase Se a tin g for D a v is C u p M E L B O U R N E , A u s t r a l i a Iff* Tfie A u stra lia n Lawn T en n is A s ­ so c ia tio n v o te d T u e sd a y in ­ c r e a s e lite p erm a n e n t s e a tin g « » of S y d n e y * W hite C ity p a cify .st Olds to 17,000 from 9,HIH) fur the D a v is Cup c h a lle n g e round th ere D e c e m b e r 26-28. to running slig h tly ah ead of the p ack in the the 400-metier hurdles at fin al O lym p ic T ria ls F r id a y night in P a lo A llo, C aliforn ia, s a id L ov- ( vorn, w hen he sh ot a sw ift g la n c e j b ack w ard a s he clea r ed th e last hurdle. T hrow n off strid e tty this m a n eu v er, he w a s p a sse d in the sprint to the tap e by th ree oth er O lym pic h o p efu ls. I As on ly Hie first th ree fin ish er s I in ea c h e v e n t a re se le c te d to run I in the O ly m p ic s, S outhern now' ; finds h im se lf in the role of a lter- * nato. A sec o n d p la c e h urdler in the the y o u n g e st 1956 O ly m p ic s tis m em b er of th e A m e r ic a n sq u ad , I E ddie m u st now' rely on th e slim c h a n c e that on e of tile top th ree I w ill drop from the te a m for so m e reason . “ E d d ie w a s g e ttin g tired of run­ n in g ,” sa id L ovvorn . H e e x p la in e d 1 that S o u t h e r n , now an A ir F o r c e l i e u t e n a n t , h a d been ru n n in g c o n ­ t i nu ou sl y s e v e r a l v e a l s and that he h a s f i n i s h e d h is co l­ now leg ia te e lig ib ility , is d ifficu lt to find top n o t c h co m p e titio n . for it Mural Sc SOFTMALL u > d n » » il» v : 7—D elta T h e t a P h i vs PVH H ( .ir k s vs Scrubs. Merchants 7- Th urntU> El Chickens MA vs Newman H. -JSAI. vs Pearl Wranglers, Moore l i m vs M V vs I ll AMULA! I- I-h ml MMI im! score* are du«* b* i I* rn \ W «-dne»d»> l ur : I ’ow ell. L*oei> vs. Wukasch I» I u,.I I ’ow ell, Loeb v s. \ \ be e l o l w M a h o n . D o l t vs C a n t i n o I [slier v ^ Osborne, McDaniel vs. Stet I vs I, .nu. smith vs 'Un ll I horn s o n o S m i t h , t e r r y vs. H o w a r d I UN MS *1 Ii it ti n m ad sc o re s »r«« d u e b f a l» »'» c , i v - r a mi e Wu k a s . - h vs Si Cox. S p r in g ! vs terguson VV ml neMU * ««>r : Jar, a i d vs ‘.non Wheelei v i un im Walters vs. Mood v* DUulseppe, N ed vs Stephenson SCIENTIFIC WATCH REPAIR .. - FREE ESTIMATES FINE JEW ELRY On TK* Drag distinctly jew ell) Anilin ! Only Ktefuk*D m « < W Jtwtlrf d e p e n d a b l e SERVICE Allandalo V illa ge W h ere prices are lower . . . because no rebates or trade stamps are given. 2270 G U A D A LU P E MHI Wednesday, July 6, I960 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 6 VUU Q oeS O n J I ere Employment Bureau Offers Succor for Sagging Wallets the afo re-m en tio n ed glint, d e te rm in a tio n , apprehension about the p ro c e d u re . J a n y Parson half-way respectable the types of jobs, and th e s a la r - and not a les. som e a to u ch of You h a v e so m e r e f e re n c e s to list and nancial decrepitude. W ednesday 9-4 M a rin e Corps o fficer selection interv iew s, ROTO Building; also T h u rs d a y . 9-5 — Daily exhibit of " M a s t e r P r in t s F r o m the M e tro p o lita n ,’’ R e g e n ts ' Room . M ain Building. to sp e ak on " O u r Schools T o d a y a n d T o m o r­ r o w ’’ a t E d u c a to r s Luncheon, L onghorn R oom , C o m m o n s. 12—D r. J . W. E d g a r 1 2 —Bob A rm s tro n g to talk a t Tex- as Politics L unch eo n in b ehalf of Lyndon B. J o h n s o n ’s n om ination for presid en t, U n iv e rs ity Y. I Special e x a m in a tio n s a n th ro p o lo g y , in a d v e r ­ a r c h ite c ­ tising, tu re , a rt, b a c te rio lo g y , Bible, b o tan y , b u sin e ss w ritin g . E d u c a ­ tion CL, and m a t h e m a t ic s , B a tts A uditorium I :30— R e g is tra tio n for O rien tatio n P r o g r a m , K insolving D o rm ito ry ; su p p e r at 6 p m. 9 Movie, " S a n F r a n c i s c o , ” Open Air T h e a te r. 8 D e p a r tm e n t of D r a m a p re s e n ts " T w o G e n tle m e n of V e ro n a ." Hogg A u ditorium . S N a tu re m ovies, Z ilk er P a r k Hill­ side T h e a te r. £ P u b lic le c tu re by Dr. VV. N. F r a n c is on G r a p h e m i c A nalysis of Grin M id d le-English M a n u ­ s c r i p t s . ” B a tts A ud ito riu m . By DAVE HELTON H a v e you b een m ak in g fre q u e n t c h e ck s at y o u r back pocket l a t e ­ ly to m a k e s u re the w a lle t’s still th e r e ? Does y o u r s to m a c h growl a s you c ra w l into bed, even though you did have a h a m b u r g e r for lu n c h ? Do you h a v e h o u rs of s p a r e t i m e r b e c a u s e you w e r e too b ro k e o r too lazy to r e g i s t e r for the m a x i ­ m u m hours of school w o rk ? your pocket If three tim e s yes, then a r ise , check (or back p urse), tighten your belt a final notch, and, with an a g g r e ssiv e , for look, strike out dependable P ea rce Hall 106, offices of the Student E m ploym ent Bureau, Visions of a b r ig h te r s u m m e r ? W hy not? If the need or d e s ir e is p re s e n t and non-study tim e p e r ­ m its, why not a p p ly for a p a s t i m e m o re r e m u n e r a t iv e than, say , soli­ ta ire , letting th e b u rea u help find y o u a m e a n s of sa tia tin g s o m e of (i.e. h u n ­ those biological d riv e s .). g er, H y p o th e tic ally speaking, y o u d e ­ cide to give th e e m p lo y m e n t p e o ­ ple a ch a n ce , b e c a u s e , th ro u g h th e y e a r s , you o b s e rv e that m o st h u ­ m a n s h a v e p r e f e r r e d work to s t a r ­ to re p u d ia te b is ­ vation. So, not t e r ’/, ■ iij e n te r P e a rc e Hall w ith the n eed for ex e rc ise . . for th e You h e s ita te for a m o m e n t, look­ ro o m n u m b e r , but ing im ­ to; you see th e r e ’s no n eed m ed iately floor the first is only one noticeably occupied room. t h a t on is The first s te p to ch eck one of the th re e bulletin b o a rd s : m ale part-tim e, fe m a le p a rt-tim e , and p e rm a n e n t. Classify y o u rself and refer to the co rresp o n d in g board. At this r e p o r t e r ’s last count (in late June*, posted w ere 46 m ale part-tim e fem a le p a s ­ times. and 25 p e rm a n e n ts . Jobs lab fro m shoe selling ranged from " w a it r e s s i n g " work < m a le L to and (fe m ale ), from n u rsin g to c o m m e rc ia l art (p erm an e n t* , including an opening in a sin g in g -w a ite r q u a rte t. bookkeeping jobs, 13 to On e a c h c a r d you mm* a c o d e n u m b e r . C o p y the c o d e s of th o se |M>sitlons y o u feel m o s t q u a lifie d to fill an d e n t e r the o f f ic e . Then r e g is t e r a m i talk to th e fr ie n d ly la d y , w h o , lik e the m o t h e r i m a g e sh e is (n o o f f e n s e , fr ie n d ly la d y ) , the will b e g in fi m a la d ie s to help you c u r e and o f id le n e s s lf you want to fell the NEW STUDENTS for Fall, I960 about Your Business PLAN NOW TO ADVERTISE IN THE Special Freshman Edition i TO BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY, AUGUST ll Call GR 2-2473 De Vaca Rests, Finds Bartons C a b e z a de V a c a m a y have beat out of his h e a d w hen he searched for E ld o ra d o , b u t h e certainty k n ew w h a t he w a s doing when h« sto p p e d to r e l a x a t B a r to n Springy in 1535. T h e s c e n e r y m a y have c h a n g e d sin c e de V a c a , and th* , I n d ia n s b e fo re h im , c a m p e d t h e r i b u t m a n y still find p l e a s a n t r e t r e a t . th e o a s i s T h e p r e s e n t b a th h o u s e on the e d g e of th e g r a s s - c o v e r e d slopes w a s c o n s tr u c te d in 1947. F a c ilit ie s a r e a v a ila b le fo r p u rc h a s in g of m o st picn ic n e e d s a n d picnickers n eed only b r in g th e m s e lv e s in or­ d e r to e n jo y th e pool a n d the park s u rr o u n d in g it. y e a r lounge c o m f o r ta b ly on the b a n k s of Bar. ton pool, so m e ev en before it of­ ficially opens. th o u s a n d s E a c h d a y . T h e B e tw e e n 15 a n d 42 million gal- Ions of w a t e r flow fro m tho springs e v e ry s p rin g s were f o rm e d m illions of y e a r s ago when the w e s t portion of th e a r e a A ustin uplifted t h e Ed- w a r d s P l a te a u . fo rm to in O th e r v isito rs to the springs are C o ro n ad o , a n o th e r e a r l y Spanish e x p lo re r, a n d R o b e r t E . Lee. who sto p p e d the Civil W a r while on an expedition to d r iv e the In d ia n s f art hoi west. th e re sh o rtly befog* UT Exes Establish Scholarship Fund, ' Honor Bill McGill A new U n iv e rs ity loan and schol­ a r s h i p fund h a s been established by the E x - S tu d e n ts ’ Association in honor of the late W illiam L. * Bill’* McGill, f o r m e r U n iv e rs ity profes­ sor a n d a lu m n i p r e s id e n t. J o u r n a l is m s tu d e n ts wall h* giv­ en p r e f e re n c e for lo an s and s< hoi- a rs h ip s fro m th e M cGill Memor­ ial F u n d c r e a te d by alu m n i con­ trib u tio n s. the Initially, fund will provide m a x i m u m loans of 5250 pc? Near p er stu d e n t. As the fund in* teases, sc h o la rs h ip s a lso will be provided. im m ed i- . . . Once those a r e co m p le te d , m e m b e r of the ate f a m ily is a c c e p ta b le ), a n d a 1 bit of a u to b io g ra p h ic a l d a ta to file, j the 1 lady h elps you find the job m ost j su itab le to y o u r ta s t e a n d ability, J and g iv es you a c a r d of intro d u c­ tion to the p r o sp e c tiv e e m p lo y e r, j After own. th a t, pal, y o u ’re on your The Student E m ploym ent Bu- j reau, which has been in business ! since 1938, w as started tinder the direction of Arno Now otny, pre­ sent dean of student life. It w a s du rin g th e dep ressio n y e a rs, and th ere w a s a genuine need for such a s e rv ic e , without larg e p ro p o rtio n of s tu ­ which a dents m ig h t have been unable to finance th eir ed u catio n . W ages at that t im e a v e r a g e d 30 cents an hour. Now. a w orking student m a y c o n sid er a $1.00 to $1.25 a n a v e r ­ age h o u rly ea rn in g . I Today, 1959-60, $300,000. W ere you g ra p h in g In 1938. stu d en ts e a r n e d $28,OOO. the y e a rs, you would find the e x p e c t­ ed ups and downs, follow ing m o re or less u n iv ersal ec o n o m ic tre n d s ; lait g e n e ra lly the line would point u p w ard . Next y e a r could he even bigger, and is the c o m m o d ity this o rg a n iz a ­ in tion. not capital. T h a t, according to should m ak e it even m o r e worthw hile p r o g re s s iv e r e m e m b e r , th o u g h t, it o v er Jailor B esides dealing in p a rt- tim e jobs for s tu d e n ts, the b u r e a u has con­ nections with p ro sp e c tiv e e m p lo y ­ ers the for students upon w hom shadow of g ra d u a tio n h a s fallen. D uring th ere s r e g u l a r p o s t-g ra d u a te em p lo y ­ a ment p ro g ra m , but s u m m e r g r a d s m ay file their ap p licatio n s through the b u re a u . long session, the " T h e p ro g ra m is to help the stu ­ job in any p h a s e of his dent n e e d s .” says W. J . Hall, d ire c to r of the b u reau. WMmad Doris Jean M atter, student, to Richard Edgar Turner, g r a d u a te stu d en t. ★ i t Hilda (dal Sw enson, Ihii Beta Phi, to John Arthur Voekel, Beta 'Biota Pi, J u n e 4. ★ Botte J a n Wiggins ★ Carney Jr., stu d en t. to Howard Dorothy ★ ★ l*ee R ainey, g r a d u a te . to Donald Hollis W atts, Chi I a ha Beta, J u n e 25. * l-ou Anne Alpha De lta Pi, W«*ar. g ra d u a te . I .an g ford, g r a d u a te , to Robert Randle * Lana Merra Sm ith, Sigma D e l t a I an, to Richard Simon karotkin. ex -student, Phi S ig m a Delta, on J u n e L in Austin. * * ii it Virginia Ann Steele, Delta G a m ­ to Roltert Burton Reese, stir m a. dent, on Ju n e 12 in A u s t i n , * * S i b \ | Josep h in e to R odger Tat Legal G r o u p Picks fhirteen Students 59. J a n u a r y Tbit teen law stude nts of the* Au 60 and J u n e gust '6<> Kl urinating c la sse s have been n a m e d m e m b e rs of tti*- O rd e r of '***’ in te rn atio n a l h o n o ra ry ( 'at, legal society. a r e Q ualifications o u tstan d in g b o a r s h i p , high moi al charac leu md having six a rtic le s published in the* Law Review. I hose stu d en ts I). j Dye, Sherwood M. Sullivan, Ben ny lf Hughes, M ax It. S h e rm a n , Jo h n I ’ C’ha|M»lon, Otis I). Cha|w> I*ow. William B. teen, 'G ilb e r t I. M a ssin , E d w ard ll. F o rg o tte n . B e t­ ty J o \\ lest, Jo s e p h Shaele, J e r r y I P . J o n e s, and Hilton I. Cborioiow. C h a llie rick N crack, s tu d e n t, on June l l in Austin. ★ ★ JoAn Roberta N ovotny, giaeluate, lo John David Baird, D elta Sigma Phi on J u n e IO in Austin. ★ ★ J tut ice Mildred Kuhn, ex-student* to H om er Edward WielMitd, *HF elent, on J u n e 4 in Autsin. ★ it Mary Ellen D avenp ort, « x **tu- lf ar Gelt, rient, to F ran ces Edwin Jr., e x -stu d e n t, in Austin. it it Jane Ann Moore, Zeta I ail Al­ p ha, to W illiam Allan Taylor, gi.ci­ liate, on J u n e 4 in Austin. it it Carole ('line, g r a d u a t e , to M«r- \ in Brown, D elta K a p p a Epsilon, on June* 3 in San Antonio A it S a m riia T om lin to Jc*e VI six ne W hite, stu d e n t, on J u n e 4 in H ut* pie * it it it * it it it Mary Elisa G,chillo to F l o r e n t i n e H u e r ta , stu d en t, on June* 5 in Ans* t in Becky flax id--oil, Alpha L.m iM a to (files H a y e s M adrax J ’ « De lta s tu d e n t, on J u n e I in Austin. P a tricia Hay W est, ex student, to B ertram Charles R o g e r s III. * x- storient, on J u n e 4 in Austin J a c q u e l in e 1/cRoy, gt adital* < 1,1 to Houston Bennett V\ ik in Austin Ome g a , h a m s on J u n e 4 S tate School Asks fo r t iefp V o lu n tee rs a re n e e d e d he ip with an old fash io n ed w a term elo n s u p p e r at the Austin S ta te Sc ho* * T h u r s d a y , T h e g r o u p will I**1' 1’ the C o n g re g a tio n a l C h u rc h ai J 1 p m . Douglass to Direct Specialized Seminar The G raduate School of Library Science, d irected by Dr. Robert R. D ouglass, is w orking with the Tex­ as Chapter, Special Libraries Asso- ciation, to g iv e specialized training in a com p reh en sive lecture se m ­ inar at the U niversity this sum ­ m er. B ecau se busin ess and industry recognize the need for having ac­ c e ss to assem b led and organized training lec­ ture sem in ar at the U niversity this sum m er. in a com p rehensive t h o se B ecause b u siness and industry recognize the need for having ac­ c e ss to a ssem b led and organized know ledge d ealin g with the tech­ nical ph ases of their operations, they are settin g up plant and busi­ n ess libraries as rapidly as cir­ cum stan ces p e r m i t . L ibrarians the scien tific and technical with to m an th ese training needed li­ in great dem and. In br a r i e s are librarians wi t h de ­ T e xa s, gre e s in t he physic al sc i e n c e s ha v e a l mo st un l i m i t e d opport u ni t i e s, a c ­ cordi ng to D r. Dougl ass. a n d wo m e n , l i bra ry “ Men e spec i al l y t hose wi t h t ra i ni ng and st lentific o r t e c h n i c a l b a c k ­ grounds, h a v e to the opp o r t uni t y a d v a n c e m o r e qui ckl y these in in busi n e ss and we ll -pa yi ng i nd ust ry t h a n in ot he r l i b r a r y f*o- the T ex a s s it ions. Acc o rdi ng the a v e r a g e C h a p t e r 1959 Re port, li­ s a l a r y b r a r i a n s is $6,775,” said Dr. Doug­ lass. scie nt ific -te chnic al j obs for to To help suppl y l i b ra ri a ns ne eded for t hese l i b ra ri e s, the Uni ve rsi t y ba s a p r o g r a m of study de si gn e d to p r e p a r e st u de n t s for a d e g r e e in special l i b ra ri a nshi p. In t h e s e m ­ inar being offe red this s u m m e r , li­ b r a r i a n s fro m busine ss a nd indus­ t ry a r e be i ng sent at no e xpe nse a s guest to t he U n i v e r ­ sity to l e c t u re for one or t wo we eks e a c h Dr. Dougl a ss, who i nt roduc ed l e c t u re r s Theta Sigma Phi Receives A w a rd The Un i v e rs i t y c h a p t e r of Thet a Si gma Phi , nati onal professional fra t e rn i t y j o u r na l ­ for wom e n ism, w a s a w a r d e d a c e rt i fi c a t e of m e ri t at t he f ra t e r n i t y 's national c onve nt ion in Col or ado Spi ings. in Ann A d a m s , the c h a p t e r ’s dele­ t he convention, a c c e pt e d to ga t e the a w a r d . The a w a r d wa s given the c h a p t e r ' s v a ri e t y and origi na li ty in profe ssiona l p r o g r a m s for the program and serv es as one of the lecturers, conducts the reviews and is the co-ordinator of the sum ­ m er course. M artin P . M cDonough of "M aterialization of the project is due in la rg e m easure to the able and enthusiastic a ssista n c e of the Special Libraries A ssociation Tex­ as C hapter president, M iss Sara Aull of the U niversity of Houston lib rary,” Dr. D ouglass explained. the Houston P ost was the first visiting j lecturer. M iss Mildred Hogan, li­ brarian for Transcontinental Gas Pipe L ine Corporation of Houston, spoke from June 27 to July I. Mr. McDonough and M iss Hogan repre­ sent the business-industrial librar­ ies. C harles Zenve.kh Jr., of the Humble Oil & Refining Company R esearch and D evelopm ent D ivi­ sion of Baytown, will lecture July i 18-29 on scientific-technical librar- j ; ies. the s u m m e r l ibr ar ie s t he class D u r i n g will visit in Da l l a s and Houston, and the l i b r a r i a n s in each will l e c t ure on the ope r a t i o n and se rvi c e of t hei r spe ci a l l ibr ar y. In Dal las, the class will visit Cha nc e Vought a nd the At lant ic Refining Com pa n y , July 15, a nd Texas In­ s t r u m e n t s a nd the Da l l a s Public L i b r a r y ’s Science a n d In dust ry De ­ p a r t m e n t , July 16. In Houston, tho Shell De vel opm ent C o rn p a n y , Hum bl e Oil & Refining Com pa ny, t h e Houston Post , August 4. and They will visit the T r a n sc o n t i n e n ­ tal G a s Pi pe Line Cor por a t i on and H um b l e Oil & Refining Com pany R e s e a r c h and D e v e l op m e nt Divi­ sion. August 5. they will visit T wo Uni ve rsi ty l i b r a r i a n s c o m ­ plete the l ect ure t e a m . F r e d t Di ­ l i bra ri an, will lec­ me r, a ssoc ia te t ure on gov e rn m e n t docume nt s, li­ and He a r t si l l Young, a ssi s t a n t b r a r i a n , on serial publ ic at ions in the spe ci al l i br a r ­ ians, a s well as the guest librar- | ians, h a v e vol unte ered thei r t ime and e xpe ri e nc e without r e m u n e r a ­ tion. library. T he se Edgar W ill Speak To UT Educators D r J. W. E dg a r , St a te Co m m i s­ sio ne r of Educ ati on, will speak at l u n c h e o n . the W e d ne s da y in the I l onghorn Room of from noon to 12:50 p. rn t he Student Union t hi rd E d u c a t o r s D r E d g a r will spe a k on Schools Toda y a nd T o m o r r o w . ” ' Our Political Hopefuls Turn got sues M a n y Faces to Public By HAI. BO VLK NE W YORK •residential a s p i r a n t s gel c a i m g : R e m a r k s that tired of “ W h a t ’<1 he e v e r do tor anybtidy? ' ‘T h e r e a r e TIKI kids in thai baby •canty c on te st, and if y o u ’r e sm a r t > on 11 kiss e v e ry one of t hem. I dun k Ins eyes a r e loo d o s e blintz, senat or. This neighi ng hood is a Jewi sh ‘ Dr op out that p a r a g r a p h about our fine Angl o-Ameri ca n relations, se na t or . This is a n Iri sh w a r d . ” “ W h a t ’s he favor of rea ll y be side free sunshine, m othe rhood and bi gge r highs*ays'.' ’ in “ N<». h e ’s not a cow t o v , son. He is­ t hat way fr om st ra ddl i ng og e the r I • pm I.” •ii Im e . ' ’ think his eyes a r e loo far “ Hold ii, senat or. Just one m ot e lf you could pro m i se us a new su re we H e r a n s hospit al. E m (mid swi ng the district lot you “ I wo u l dn 't vote for h i m be s • hi y o u n g . " oo o l d .” “ I woul d n't vote for hi m he s (lier yo ur speech, “ The* re raffling o d a new rat i f to IO nun we r e you I d hold ii se na t o r, so lies ” “ So wha t ii they did Ism you It h o w s t hey w e r e listening ’’Now wh e n they a sk you ques ions fro m •lek on l> t hei r lands up They'l l he ou r U»vs the floor, r e m c m b o i those, with left ‘N e v e r mind tx»mb md Ame l l ean p r e p a r e d n e s s How k> von s t a n d on vivisection the a t o m Sm il e wh e n they ha nd you that ml a pie. se n a t o r W e 're in an Ital an di st ric t ” " G r in rea d b ig w h e n y i* u e a t th a t to hold “ One m or e se nat or. When tip. that new for Non br e a k ground high school, the try not shovel like it w.is a pl a t t e r of hors d ’o e u v r e s . ” I Kin I r eel i(X*k “ you in Ila' fish on it We’ve ml it fixed light too su rpr i se d when find a leaning that fence while you talk a g a i n st !•• the f a r m e rs. But w ha t e ve r von do. d o n ’t let t he m phot ograp h you sit ting on the fence line and “ It s all jxise to I “ R u m p l e your shirt and se na t or . We re going ra ll y now “ I ca n sense a g r e a t gr ound swell at the m ent i on of your n a m e se n a t o r , hut I c a n t tell yet whe th ei i f s pro or con “ I ll give $20.(KH) \ o u r c a m ­ pa ign, if you ll appoint m y hi ot he r in law to a p o s t a br o a d He basil t wa l k e d i i i TO ve a l s senat or, to j " H e r e , fait on this Stetson and s t ri ng tie w e ’re ha c k in the c a tt le 1 c o u n t i v again “ It th e l»est m a n w i n s senat or, •••at. to the la I tor wh a t a r e your fu t ur e p l a n s ? ” Eckman H e a d s M other Church W e d n e sd a y , July 6 , I9 6 0 THE SU M M ER TEXAN Pa g e > Austin Merchants Say N o Arthur W. E ckm an, C am bridge, M ass., attorney and form er stu­ dent of The U n iversity of T exas, h a s been elected president of the M other Church, F irst Church of C hrist, Scientist, in Boston. M r. Eckm an su cceed s Mrs. K athryn F. Cook of Boston in the post, and will serve a one-year term . His election w a s announced by the Christian Scien ce Board of D irectors at the annual m eetin g of the denom ination. Mr. Eckm an attended The Uni­ v ersity of T exas after receivin g his bachelor of law d egree from the U n iversity of Southern California in 1910. He later did graduate work at H arvard Law School. Mr. Eckm an has been general counsel of the L egal D epartm ent of the Mother Church sin ce 1944. To Short-Sleeved Suit M en s suits soon m a y be sport­ ing a new look it the d ream s of a d esign er com e tw w . R ecen tly in­ troduced in N ew Turk by a prom ­ inent departm ent store is the new short-sleeved suit. The new suit is d esign ed to be cooler, lighter, and m ore com fort­ able. The sleev es are just short enough to bare the elbow s to on­ looker’s eyes L ocal m erchants d isagree on the su ccess of such a daring innovation in m en s fashions. One Congress A venue m erchan­ d iser said the new suit w as just a "little too new, too fast, and too ; e x tr e m e .” "At the m om ent, little too high styled for us in Austin," he added. “ A fter all, w e ’re T ex­ a n s ! ” is a it It w as the opinion of m ost other m erchants that such fashions w ill take a w hile to get here. the short-sleeved d ress Another C ongress A venue m er­ chant said that it m ight catch on as s h ill has. He stated that he now se lls three tim es as m any short-sleeved .d r e ss shirts, w hich w ere alm o st unheard of tw o years ago, as long- sleeved dress shirts. C alling the new suit an "interesting fe a tu r e ,” he added that it could be m ade to look very d ressy and would be good the college m an “ who isn t afraid to show his a r m s .” for innovation, A m en s store m an ager on the D rag, when asked to com m ent on “ We the new aren't going to m ake any com m en t on it and a r e n ’t going to stock it.” the new short-sleeved suit com e to be the thing of the d ay? We will have to w ait and see. said , Will BRILL ANT NEWEST DIAMONDS E x q u isite 14k gold interlock* ing pair with fiery em erald c u t c e n t e r d i a m o n d , 4 b a g u e t t e s . Easy Terms. America’s most wanted diamond style! Unriv­ alled brilliance in the fabulous em erald cu t. Choose from a magnifi­ cent collection, at low prices possible only at Zale’s! E m e r a l d c u t c e n te r diamond w i t h 9 r o u n d diam onds in 14k gold bridal set. ILLUSTRATIONS ENLARGED TO SH O W DETAIL M ltCIS INCLUDE FEDERAL T A X DRAMATIC NEW EMERALDETTES F i v e b a g u e t t e d ia m on d s lend b r i l l i a n c e t o emerald-cut cen­ t e r d ia m o n d 14k white gold settings. _____ J C I a s s i c E in e r a I d e 11 e , j h r i d a I s e t i n ' l u s t r o u s 14 k g o l d m o u n t ­ i n g s $ 7 5 . 0 0 »1 7 S " Longhorn TL cit a •into* e n c * * t t • t i t ! K m e r a i d et ti cut in rich 14k gol d w e d d i n g pair. $100.00 N o M o n t y Dov»n $ 2 OO W « « U y no money down easy weekly or m o n th ly terms Wednesday, July 6, I960 THE S U M M E R T E X A N Page 8 32 'M a ste r Prints' O n Display at UT “ Master Prints From the Met­ ropolitan,” 32 original print, by prime Northern European R enais­ sance artists, will l>e displayed through August IO from 9 to a in the Regents' Room of the Univer­ sity ’s Main Building. Form ing the nucleus of the e x ­ hibit, lent to the University bv the of New Metropolitan Museum York, are 17 prints by Albrecht Durer. m ost versatile of the Ger­ man Renaissance artists. These prints are exam p les ol hi., artistic development over two decades, be­ ginning with one of his earliest in 1197, interests and style evident in his later work. A l s o shown are import int prede­ cessors and followers of Durer, i binding out a century a n d a half ct G e r m a n graphic' a c c o m p lis h ­ m en t technical showing Engravings, woodcuts, and etch­ ings by 15th and Pith century Flem ish artists Lucas van Leyden, Pieter Brueghel the* elder, and An­ thony van Dyck, are also on dis­ play. Working in prints and in wood­ cut dry-point etching, Durer was into a l s o a painter and a seek er scientific and humanist m atters. The exhibit includes two of Ou­ t e r ', fam ous allegorical e s sa y s in engraving on the tem peram ent of the man, “ Knight, Death, D e v il” and “ St. Jerom e in His CVH.” Contrasting with the tonal and richn ess of these engravin gs, the large woodcut, “ E r c u le s ,” shows characteristics of m ed ieval print techniques, combined with Durer’s version of a R e n a issa n ce cla ssi­ cal figure. T h ese classic prints have come to the U niversity in a “ share our loan from the Metropoli­ wealth" tan M useum of Art of New York The exhibit is open to the public. Violist S c h e d u le s S u m m e r C o n c e r t Frank Musick, viola, will Ive presented in concert at I p.m. Thursday in R ecital H a ll of the M usic Building, M usick will Ive a ssisted by J a m e s Dick, piano, who presented the Birmingham P o p s Concert on June 2k. The program w il include “ So­ nata in D M inor” by Con in ck, “ Sonata ‘A r p e g g i o s ’“ by Schu­ bert, and “ Concerto” by Bar- tok. M usick is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. O, Musick and the pu­ is pil of Donald Wright. Dick a pupil of Dalles Frantz. AT INTERSTATE P A R A M O U N T L A S T D A Y ! F IR S T S H O W I O l / : U U MGM presents Ae AIIHU8 WED Prediction t S t t t S c lf iE Pledges Climb For Channel 9 Tile Austin C om m ittee for Chan­ nel 9 has r e f u t e d that pledges for activation of the educational tele­ in vision late June. tot tied $74,500 station An additional SIO,OOO will be giv­ en by an anonym ous donor when the total reaches SOO,OOO. Com m ittee leaders Gary Mor­ rison, Howard Cox. and Gene B ar­ tholomew seem ed pleased with the progress, but Cox stated: “ We have only about two weeks in which to finish this drive. We can certainly reach our goal and tiring educational television to Aus­ tin. but we will h a v e to redouble our efforts.” Rober t F. Schenkk in, director of radio and television at the Univer­ sity. said that because of national interest in educational television, IO new FTY stations will be put on tho air by Septem ber. One of them is C hannel 13, Dallas. Austin’s station will be built be­ tween here and San Antonio. a license Mr. S< henkkan expressed hope for that Channel 9 will be filed with the F ederal Communications C om m is­ sion within a week or ten days. application Early Liz Taylor Film Set by Open - Air Movie Elizabeth Taylor, in one of her first appearances, stars in “ N a­ tional Velvet" at the Open-Air The­ ater Thursday night at 8. The young M iss Taylor shares hilling with M ickey Rooney and IX) na Id Crisp F ilm ed techni­ color, the picture is a family-style story of a girl, her h o r s e , rind the crowded racetrack. in Admission to all of the m ovies on the University Sum m er E n ter­ tainment Program is 25 cents e x ­ cept for holders of season tickets. Dr. M. J. Thompson, chairman of the Department of Aero-Space Engineering at the University, w as a major speaker at the annual .Society m eeting of the. Am erican for Engineering Education at West Lafayette. Ind., recently. STARTS TODAY! E L A B O R A T E C O S T U M E S a d d e d to the realism of the first night p roduction of Two G e n tle m en of Verona. Jam e s M c G u y e r (Antonio) adjusts his costum e before the b e g in n in g of the U n iv e r ­ sity D e p a rtm e n t of D ra m a p ro d uctio n . 'Verona' Disappointing To First Night Crowd B y D I M P E F . H U T C H I N G S I The U niversity’s D ram a D e p a r t­ ment began i i , 19(10 Sum m er S e a ­ son with a rather sluggish version of Shak esp eare’s "The Two G en­ tlem en of V erona” last night at Hogg Auditorium. I Two friends, Valentine, played by Roy Lyon, and Proteus, played | by Bob Beard, begin the story with declarations of their beliefs on love leaves and adventure. Valentine the Verona to join Duke of Milan and Proteus stays to WIX) his sweetheart, the blonde the court of VARSITY F E A T U R E S 2:00 — 5:10 — 8:20 beauty, Julia, played by S a p id i Skousgard. In Milan, Valentine b e co m es a c ­ quainted with the lovely Silvia, the I Duke of Milan's daughter, played by Jo Jac Bludworth. They fall in love im m ediately, and ho d ecid es that he prefers love to adventure. Even though the IXikc of Milan (John Halest wants her to m arry Thurio (Frank Hill*, tile lovers are secretly betrothed. I To broaden his education with leaves Julia and travel, Proteus joins Valentine in Milan, w here he im m ediately falls in love with Sil­ via. Silvia, knowing of his love for Julia and of his en g a g em en t, spurns his love. Julia, pining for Proteus, d is ­ guises herself as a page and g o e s to Milan where she serves as a letters ami m essenger to deliver j gifts to Silvia, from Proteus. Eventually the peculiar triangle is resolved with Valentine’s return identity, and revelation of Julia's and the couples plan to l>o m arried in a double wedding. Valentine’s m ischievous servant, Speed (Leroy Miller) and P r o teu s’ servant, I-tunce, (Rick Branchi), capered about the stage and car- : Tied the com ed y w ith their asid es. Crab, I-aunce’s mongrel dog, lis­ tened tirades know­ ingly, and played his part a s a scene stea ler most modestly. to I .ounce s it the Needing the experience of ap- the i pea ring before an audience, j cast needs to pick up the tem p o lighten the tone of the play and J to give light-hearted spirit lacked on opening night. Via ch lit player s e e m e d to take his part so I seriously fact I that the play was a c o m ed y w as forgotten by the ai tors as well as by the* audience. that at times the D E L W O O D 3931 Eost Avenin a d m i s s i o n ran- PORK CHOP HILL 4.r**u«»ry T u r k , k i p T i m ii f i r s t s h o w S t u r t * 7 — I*I ii* — l.» PLATINUM HIGH SCHOOL I t o o n t - y , T r r r . y M o u r n M i r h r y x rnmr/.; • The Towering Story of a Giant of a M an — Simon Peter of Galilee Brought to the Big Motion Picture Screen with Unsurpassed Pageantry! lUOft P+OOw. 'Ow ■ T H E B I G I T I M E R M A N , STORY Of SIMON K U R OF G A U L l^ ^ M r C C M N I C G L O V * M A N A / I S I o H i ll PANTED BY W A R N E R B R O S . T E C H N I C O L O R * RICHARD CAROLYN MARTHA n m KEEL s u n KOHNER a a SAXON MNM HYER m o d i LOM fmmtL mmi ■ I HIH ■ ........ M M M M I , ■ M M I.AST DAV! II HST SHOW f» PVI TW O FEATURES IRIK' tWlW' MR-towijtOT BLANKE '^VINCENT SHERMAN k u n k k i MUST! _ Ewe of I Eternity CORNEL WILDE VICTORIA SHAW t i d e snauch*!t i t (•1*1 (UCHMAN i WW*ftA » CTV* | RANDOLPH * & £ scon. JBBT® - I onesome rn EASTMAN COLON aho ClNCMASCOff • K A R C H 9 T C X M I _ A D M I S S I O N SOT F ir * ! S h o w S t a r t * THE BLACK SLEEP B r l * I . i c m I !«•■» V O O D O O ISLAND H u rls K a r lo ff Weekend Entertainment Austin Invites Fun Wednesday, July 6. I960 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 9 A N T H O N Y Q U IN N a nd Lana Turner share a tense moment from Portrait in Black,' which starts today at the State Theater. G rant A w arded KUT Grants totaling more than $24,-, in OOO have been awarded the fourth year of the joint education­ al radio program m ing project of the National Educational Televi­ sion and Radio Center and the Na­ tional Association (rf Educational Broadcasters, Harry J. Skornia, president of the NAEB, and John F. White, president (rf the NETRC, announced. As a recipient of one of these grants, KUT of the University of Texas will produce thirteen 15- minute programs on “The Ameri­ can Cowboy,” which will document the American cowboy’s role as a force in history and national folk hero. Similar grants were also present­ ed to six other universities through­ out the United States and Canada. According to present plans, the series will be broadcast on NAEB stations by the fall of 1961. Each week Radio Free Europe broadcasts alm ost 3.000 program hours of news, information, and entertainment to the captive people (rf Poland, Hungary, Czechoslova­ kia, Romania, and Bulgaria. the local library and its stations serve almost any part of town. For the sportsmen, or other of strenuous bent, two golf courses, two skating rinks, six bowling al­ leys, and five gym nasium s and health studios are on hand to help you keep that waistline trim. A more novel attraction is the tram­ poline center. Within the city lim its are the Colorado River and Lake Austin. Five other highland lakes are all less of easy within an hour or driving, offering swim ­ ming, beaches, and almost any type of water sport. fishing, If there is a little of the Huck Finn in you, you’ll enjoy the Long­ horn Caverns, largest in Texas, lo­ from Austin on cated 47 miles State Highway 71 and US 281. Won­ der Cave, 28 miles south of Aus­ tin, in San Marcos, though not as large as is equally as beautiful. longhorn Caverns, Austin City Park, Zilker Park, and Woodlawn Park are all easily accessible, while further away are Landa Park in New Braunfels, and Bastrop State Park, home of the famous “Lost P in es.” Swimming pools stud the city like emeralds. inviting when They’re especially the sun has evaporated the clouds and the temperature has becom e slightly more than warm. None of these appear on your course card and excelling in them will probably mean sacrificing a gradepoint. But summer weekends weren't made for study anyway. then SL low caSe WEDNESDAY, JULY 6 6:30: WAGON TRAIN: Mickey Rooney stars in “The Greenhorn Story.” As a young Easterner, Rooney first am uses Major Adams (Ward Bond) and then worries him when the Major begins to think sharpies will try to cheat the new­ comer. 0: ARMSTRONG CIRCLE THE­ ATER: “Full D isclosure” is the story of an unscrupulous business­ man who uses high-pressure tac­ tics to sell his com pany’s stock. A prospective buyer asks for an investigation. THURSDAY, JULY 7 seller contains 8:30 MARKHAM: Although a cur­ facts rent best about him which only one man could know, Markham knows that the man is dead. Ray Milland stars. 0:30: TOMBSTONE T E R R I ­ TORY: While Clay Hollister (Rich­ ard Eastm an) is taking an attrac­ tive prisoner to trial on a robbery charge, her partners attempt a rescue. Dr. Guy T. McBride, engineering graduate of The University of Tex­ is the new vice-president of as, Texas Gulf Sulphur Company in Houston. He joined the company in 1958 after being associated with Rice University. The weekend is near, those all- too-brief days cerem oniously cater­ ing to King Combo, Czar Culture, and all the other potentates of lei­ sure who ask a few moments of our time. Austin is w ell equipped to cater to them all. the Night spots designed to furnish taste, to suit entertainment it “ elite” or “ b eat” variety, be spread out from the Forty Acres like a Japanese the Moulin Rouge to the atmosphere­ laden espresso houses. from fan, For the culturally inclined, the Austin Civic Theater, Austin Sym­ phony Orchestra, Laguna Gloria Art Gallery, and E lisabet Ney Mu­ seum are popular attractions. In addition to the University Library, Dramatists Scatter For 'Play' Work Students and teachers from the Departm ent of D ram a have scat­ tered from Mexico to Canada and from the Atlantic to the Pacific for work in sum m er stock and courses in all phases of drama. Jam es L. Martin and Blair Brooks are working as technicians at the Gateway Playhouse, Bell­ port, Long Island. Brent Hickman and Tommy the State Tune are dancers at Fair M usicals in D allas, and Rob­ ert Fahey sum m er stock is a stage m anager in Sullivan, 111. Don Ess ary, Joe Kaough, and Charles Taylor are actor-techni- cians, and Amanda Taylor is a choreographer the Ashland at Shakespearean F estival, Ashland, Ore. Dr. Franc is Hodge, associate professor of d r a m a at the Univer­ sity is the director, Robert West, actor, and Coley Summers, co s­ the Colorado Shake­ tumer, spe are Festival in Boulder. Colo. at Yvonne Bronowicz is a costumer is a dancer the Colorado College Summer and L a r r y Burgoon at Stock in Colorado Springs. Dr. E. P. Conkle, professor of d r a m a at the University, is a play­ the Banff School of wright at Fine Arts, Banff, Alberta, Canada. IV Men Payne, guest professor of d r a m a at the University, is direc­ tor at Banff, David Dannenbaum, a c t o r , and William ll Crain, actor- playwright. G u ild S h o w s L o c a l A r t S u n d a y s a t N e y M u s e u m Austin Artists Guild S u mm er Ex ­ the hibit ion can now be seen at I loabef Ney Museum, 304 Forty- fourth Street, daily at IO 12 a rn and 3 5 p m., and Sundays from 3 to 5 p.m. in the in 1955. Among Austin Artists Guild was organ­ ized local Guild m e m b e r s now exhibiting works in im mediate vi­ Austin and cinity ar e Elizabeth Keefer Boat- right, Maud Kolmar, Robert Gage, F rancois Rubitsehung, Pauline G West, O pal Van Pelt, and Ivy Shepperd. EL MAT 504 East A ve. GR 7-7023 EL TORO 1601 G uadalupe GR 8-4321 MONROE'S "M e xica n Food to Take H o m e " G R 7-8744 EL CHARRO 912 Red River GR 8-7735 Schenkkan in A rk a n sa s For TV Conferences Dr. Robert F. Schenkkan, direc­ tor of Radio/TV at the University, is conferring with the Arkansas legislature's study committee on plans for educational television in Arkansas The committee is study­ ing plans for development of three educational station applications. Dr. Schenkkan, a me mber of the Television Advisory Committee of the Southern Regional Education Board, has made similar trips to North Carolina and Virginia. the distances between G a l a x i e s contain myriad st a r s them But tvvo g a l a x i e s a r e so vast should come together, they could pass safely through one another that it The Cabaret Espresso < ■ i i a l i n I ll |t«‘ i.k or.’!* 101? S t . A u s t i n ' * I i l l e s t I o ff # -«■ NOW O P E N N IG H TL Y *8 :i0 I* vt.) i t v i i ai st; F IN E FO LK SINGERS GU ITARISTS » n i l I NTK, It K S TI N G Kl I M S I f e f t i d e n t ' u f f o e * ? l < m n S iu k Iu it hen a I > " l n ' d r i n k * S h o w t i m e S i r Iu U ( ’r e a m * rn l e e IO 15 I* M. Si. Si ... Es Muy Deliciosa! Austin's “Big Four"in Authentic Mexican Food r - ^ C O L O R | rn C O S J ARAIN ti AS MATTHEW c a b o t * RAY WALSTON VIRGINIA GREY A N N A M A Y WONG CO&YAftfttMC ' ANO ' RICHARD BASEHART MICHAL I GOO OOM * IVAN G O H Ut N ROBT WTS R O SS M U N U R • A UNtVlRSAl lNUHMAT*ONAl M H U * ! STARTS TODAY STATE PLUS— HORSE HARE Bugs Bunny Cartoon • LATE NEWS # I KATI MKH lf H - 1 AA A AA - 1 : I A • A# SHEILA... who had to live her love on a timetable of terror! JH I f DAVID... whose dark desires drove I* \«+ him beyond the breaking ^ point! CATHY... who learned that even love can have an evil side! ■ BLAKE... who found himself trapped in a web of shame! , MATTHEW... whose / love-cheated 7 wife scorned ] him as half a man! HOWARD., who let temptation set him up for murder! _ TANI... who shared the secrets of this strange household! Wednesday, July 6, I960 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page IO Newport Ja zz Documentary Provides Moviegoirtg Relief Louis Armstrong - Jazz - Dixieland M ayn a rd Ferguson - Trumpeteer Newport's Fall--Austin's G a in ? jazz. The a b s e n c e of wildly u n d i­ rected frenzy so often a s so c ia te d with c o n te m p o r a r y jazz is no lim i­ tation on th e d e p th of feeling in H a m ilto n ’s m u sic . His is the work of a p erfe c tio n ist. “ S a tc h ” A r m s tr o n g is, of course, given a big spot and, th o u g h it is to u n d e rs ta n d m o re impossible To for jazz a n d people it th an h a lf of w hat he s a y s , his en­ is th u s ia s m co n tag io u s. Besides, is kind of nice s e e in g a legend a t w ork. the tell m u c h m o re ab o u t m u sic ia n s in the m o v ie would ten d tho e le m e n t of s u rp r is e to spoil and w o n d e r for the p e o p le who go th o se w ho d o n ’t, to se e th ere for th e m s e lv e s th ey will be c h e a tin g out of a p r e tty w o n d e rfu l e n te r ­ ta in m e n t e x p e rien c e . isn't m u c h hope, it. F o r j u s t A final c o m m e n d a tio n m u s t go to B ort S te rn , who m a d e the movie. Tho th in g s he does w ith photog­ r a p h y a r e not u n b e lie v ab le , but th ey a r e good e n o u g h to m a k e m o re of the s a m e k in d of thing d e ­ in o th er film p ro d u ctio n s. s ira b le D A V E B R U B E C K : O n e of the leaders in fazz-small g r o u p tame is B ru b e c k s well-traveled quar- By BOB JOHNSON is “ J a z z on a S u m m e r ’s D a y ’* to m o v ieg o ers w h a t a good book is to television v ie w e rs a blessed relief. it is thing fro m T h e movie is a b o u t the N e w p o rt the f u r ­ J a z z F e stiv a l, but th e s t the usual kind of dull d o c u m e n ta r y . Its only d i a ­ logue consists of th e Jazz F e s t i ­ v a l e m c e e ’s voice in troducing a n d in terv iew in g s t a r s a n d a couple of in te rv ie w s with v is ito rs to .the F e s ­ tiv al. jazz T h e r e is no s to r y as such, hut ingenious use of p h o to g ra p h y a n d color, coupled w ith lots of jazz good s to ry in itself. is a M ost ev eryone c o m e s out of th e to it reso lv ed to m ak e t h e a t e r N e w p o rt if a n d w h e n a n o th e r F e s ­ tiv al rolls a ro u n d (next July, we h o p e >. Chico H am ilton. G e r r y M ulligan, Louis A rm stro n g , G e o rg e S h e a r ­ ing, a n d Thelonious Monk head th e list of jazz g r e a t s who a re g iven big spots in the m ovie. g r e a t , but it T h e y a re all is H a m ilto n who m e s m e r i z e s the a u ­ d ien c e with his a r t i s t r y . Tho s t u n ­ ning beau ty of his m u sic is w e ig h ty testim o n y in th e c a s e for precisio n Since the N ew port people didn t show the taste to keep their Jazz F estiv a l a true jazz festival, m a y ­ be it is better that the riot broke out early, even if such greats a s D izzy G illespie w ere playing d u r­ ing the fiasco. This year's esca p a d e only proves the axiom that one bad apple can spoil the barrel. L et’s face is probably it. Jazz doom ed in N ew port, and the Rhode Island hom e of the rich will a gain ; be the hom e of the rich. While this is taking place, a n ­ other city w ill h ave a chance to lovers. Why I cash couldn't that be Austin, with the 1 U niversity as a sponsor. in on the jazz it Lh lim ited We already h a v e a resp ectable jazz festival occurring on the c a m ­ pus, even though in ! scope. But the T exan Union’s Jitter I Nolen could collab orate with jazz- j m en about town like Harry J o h n ­ son and Bob P eck (Invth of whom have som e professional jazz e x ­ perience) to drum up a going affair. F o r tho first y e a r o r two, Z ilk e r P a r k offers a d e q u a t e facilities for a jazz festival. S u re ly in th at tim e civic th e local m e r c h a n t s and leaders could be convinced that a jazz festiv a l would be a boon to the city, and would arrange for better facilities. Public relation s m en like Dr. Alan Scott of the U n iversity Jour­ nalism School, Joe H om aday, who has his ow n PR firm , Jack M a­ guire of the E x-students’ A ssocia­ tion, and ex-students in the Winn- M cLane advertisin g should be able to properly prom ote the activity. firm Jazz F e s tiv a ls need not die b e­ in program ­ cause of a m istake m ing by one young group. Four Names Added to List Attending NSA Meeting Four s tu d e n t s h av e b e e n added to a to the list of UT d e le g a te s N ational S tu d e n t A ssociation con­ vention in M inneapolis, M inn , Au­ gust 22 th ro u g h S e p te m b e r I. Ben Novvotny, Mike F r y , Sam Dibrell, a n d J a n e t G a le e n e r w e re n a m e d b y C a m e ro n H ig h to w er, p resident of the U n iv e rs ity S tu ­ d e n ts ’ A sso ciatio n . Nine stu d e n ts a lre a d y h a d been n a m e d COME! CELEBRATE OUR JULY . . . F O U R Freshmen were first in tro d u c e d to jazzdom b y Stan Kenton. A ft e r they broke from the n o te d p ro g re ssive jazz a r ­ ranger, they b e c a m e a p op ular attraction at nightclubs and tours across the country. They have a p p e a r e d with Kenton se v­ eral times since. U t Mr. 4 % , "Tho Moil Who Poyt Moro? Toll You How To So fog word Your Children's Future. Mr. 4 % in A U S T I N Representing The Jefferson Standard Life JACK W. WERNER 1501 L A V A C A G R 8-9379 $1,000,000 Masterpiece of Jazz Greats SOUTHWEST PREMIERE <»«*rrv M u l l i g a n (i«-<»rg«* S h e a r i n g A n i t a 0 ’!»av Th clo i i i u < t Monk In Full Color l . o u i s A r m s t r o n g ( l i n o I i >*iii i 11 ii J a c k T r i m >• r ti ** ii M . i h i t l i n . ! « < k s « n I ) i i i i i h VV a r l i n g t o n C H I E F D R I V E - I N — 15 Years. B U R N E T D R I V E - I N — IO Years TEXAS “O N T H E D R A G " CHIEF D R I V E IN Last Day! O p e n 5:45 P.M. Snack Bar O p e n s 7 P M , C o m e in a 1930 or older car g e t in Free at the C h ie f SOBER! YOUNGSON U $ A . OS % CAPITOL H S BURNET 'jw nN m . W ith T h # x C a s t of C o m t d ln M t C v a r l c l i t i v * i n I I n- at r«* 0|>«*ii 7 I* TI. S e r v i c e f i l l i e s THRILL TO THI D t M O N - R M S O f THf W ITCH OOODfSS Sta n Kenton-progressive arranger | By ED W ALTHER In seven short y e a r s, Newport, K I. rose to the pinnacle of jazz- dom and fell. Why did a for its presentation of such jazz greats a s Louis A rm strong, D ave Bru- b eck , Dizzy G illesp ie, and others fa ll victim to a bunch of em otional crazed rioters? festiv a l known P art of the an sw er is because th ere just w asn't room tor all the potential audience on (fie park grounds. But m ore of the answ er i* prob­ ab ly from the typ e of entertain n ieiit presented thl* year. ‘'Mud­ d y ” Waters and other rook aud - rollers just have no place at a to enter them jazz festival, and is a under Crime . the nam e of blues B eing well out of m y teens, I jazz, Dixieland, r e m e m b e r when a n d A rm stro n g w ere synonym ous, ' anti n a m e s like D a v e B ru b eck and S tu n Kenton w e r e asso c ia te d with •‘f a r o u t.” I r e m e m b e r when Ken- ! to n introduced the F o u r F r e s h m e n , 1 a n d Ju n e C h risty . And when th ey j d e s e r te d tile m a s t e r p ro g re s s iv e ja z z m a n , he in tro d u c e d his Voices ! in Modern. T h e s e ty p es of m u s h j Clans w ere c o m m o n ly re fe rre d to a s ‘‘West C oast F u r th e r in g jazz c a m e new sou n d s fro m the “ F a s t the pi m o and C o a s t.” Some of th a t b iss, or xylophone or vibes o rig in a te d the n ation W ere in this c la ss. jazz musicians.** th ro u g h o u t tre n d th e in th e enough Some of the o ff-b eat vocal g ro u p s lik e the La r o b e r t -I I end lacks-R oss T r io c tine into b eing along w ith Hie F a s t C oast g r o u p s These str ay f r o m m ost tru e j a z z feelings, hut h i v e re la x e d of r h y t h m to d e e m t h e m a c c e p ta b le . But nobody, ev en those m ost fan ­ a tic anti jazz people, considered rock and roll a true form ut jazz. K am es like M uddy W aters, Little ICirliard, E lvis P r e sle y , T om m y Bands, all belong together, as far a w a y from a jazz festival as pos- Bible. C om nlele P h o f o c j r c i n h i c STUDTMAN Photo Service Telephone G R 6-4326 222 W e s t 19th do uglas "PATHS OF GLORY" STARTS a t TOMORROW THE A u f tin’i Fine A rts Theatre - Wednesday, July 6. I960 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 11 Promotions . . . (Continued on P a g e 7) t i»nal A ssociation ol Corrosion E n ­ g i n e e r s ’ Whitney A w a rd in 195G. The d ir e c to r of the personnel of­ fice will he s i m i l a r to the previous d ire c to r of the office of classified I >r. R a n s o m said, but personnel, office activ ities will be broadened in the future. W. C. L a n c a s t e r has I >r. been left a s director of C h arles C lark the office. D r. C la r k is now teach - j jng and working full time in busi­ ness s e rv ic e s . actin g d i r e c t o r since M r. L a n c a s t e r will he asso cia te d ire c to r o f the office. the Mr. Holland said his duties as line of in d ire c to r would be to U n iv e r s it y non-teach­ s e rv ic e s record s ing personnel, including and re c r u itm e n t. T he office will ho broadened to he­ r o i n e a real s e r v i c e office for Uni­ e m ­ versity and ployes by s e rv in g the lies! inter­ ests of the c a m p u s c o m m u n ity ,” he stated . in the future “ a d m in is tra tio n and said since “ I l l m iss ‘‘Dean t h e m , ” ."lack” of the stu den ts he has con ­ lf) Kl, sulted ad v ise d when he b e c a m e assistan t to the D ean of Men. In lh 18 he took o v e r the as dean. Ile g r a d u a t e d from U n iv ers ity in 1937 with a BBA d e ­ g re e and w orked in industrial p e r­ sonnel before retu rn in g to the c a m ­ pus. the c h a n g e Why w o rk ? took “ I Ran som asked m e mented. I rn looking f o r w a rd to it.” from student it becau se D r. t o ,” he c o m ­ a promotion and “ I t’s F a c u l t y prom otion s for the a c a ­ in Sep tem ­ dem ie y e a r beginning ber also w e re ann ou nced. t o f r o F r i s s o n s It Ams t e a d . m e c h a n i c a l e n g i n e e r i n g I hue s B a r t o n , d r a m a VV M a r i a n Davis, a r t Ko v a l P Kn i hr e e J r . e d u c a t i o n a l L y n n B r o w n , p s y c h o l o g y - et i ol ogy Ullages F r e d e r i c k V' L o r g r e n p h a r m a c y R a m o n M a r t i n e z I .opt*/. R o m a n c e Inn R o g e r VV S h a t t u c k . R o m a n c e l a n g u a g e s Bd ss a rd T a h o r s k v . g o v e r n m e n t VV B T o d d . Ang l i s h I Kat heri ne* W h e a t l e y , c h e m i c a l e n g i n e e r i n g R o m a n c e We i s s lung tinges t ion TO A SSO CIA TE P R O F E S S O R S L i m y ('aly in I* Bl a i r , m a r k e t i n g a d m i n i s t r a It A l e x a n d e r a r c h i t e c t u r e I ( ' r une. c h e m i s t r y R o b e r t B B r o w n p h a r m a c y I-' Ral ph I. Duke. e d u c a t i o n a l psychol ogy Br a n k Klliott. I Ilion K Michael B r a n , a r t • ai l Hel en H a r g r a v e , I a u r e n e B r n n r t h II ( i a t Im, p e t r o l e u m e n g i ne e r i ng law a r e n s p a c e engin<*er F e r g u s o n , p h y s i c s l i e i m a n n . m u s i c J o h n l a w m g Dani el K a d i n g p h i l o s o p h y K a r t K Kl i c n, p h y s i c a l t r a i ni ng for c h e m i s t r y e d u c a t i o n a l psychol ogy / o o l o g y VV R o b e r t s Kn g l l s h Moran, ps yc ho l o g y VV Ol m m a n a g e m e n t Beek P e t t i t , n u n D o m s J. Ken net h lohn R. Row land A u s t e l l B i g g s * H S Sc bet Iller, c h e m i c a l e n g i ne e r i ng ( ' h a i l s VV Robe r t F Sel l er a c c o u n t i n g l^erov B Shaw B e r m a nit’ l a n g u a g e s VViiii.mi I J ’ Be t t y A Slslo. R o m a n c e ' t h o m p s o n I S he f f i e l d , p h a r m a e v S c h e r r . physic** l a n g u a g e s p h y s i c a l t r a i n i ng fen w o m e n J C l i f t o n W il l i a m s , m usic TO A SSISTA N T P R O F E S S O R S r\ ■ Rare! c hit i U-s K Br o o k bn ct ) 'or ot h v B aretes ha cc c h e m i s t ! \" m u s i c p h\ steal I rn ini n » f a r w o m e n I IRVIX, a i t J a c o b s o n J a e o h s o n Ba i el Iv A a l o n e (; B a r n e b S H i |>hen Manawa Ba s s e t t M a g u i r e J r J* R i c h a r d B S w a l l o w D o n < S a n k o w s k v . •’ a r t /< a d o g v' / o o l o g y z o o l o g y c l a s s i c a l a r c h i t e c t u r e la h m m KC* T r a v i s . D e i m a n i c l a n g u a g e s Red Rocket on Target M O S C O W — S o v i e t s c i e n t i s t * s ho t ft huge r o c k e t i n t o (lit* m i d P a c i f i c t u e s d a y a n d ail o f f i c i a l a n n o u n c e lilt c l o s e to the t a r •lieut s a i d it Ret X.01X m i l e s a w a y . L i n s, (lie S o v i e t n e w s a g e n c y , ( i n d i c a t e d o t h e r t e s t s ho ts wo u l d in follow B e f o r e a p r o g r a m to p e r f e c t r o c k e t * a b l e . Mar* o r V e n u s a n d put •(* r e a c h a m a n t h e e n d of J u l y int o s | m c c . Veep Expresses Teaching Views UT Benefits State Says Dr. Sm iley Til rough its r e s e a r c h d iscoveries and its. oth er s e r v i c e s , the Univer­ sity h a s repaid the S ta te of T e x a s m a n y tim es o v e r w h a t it has re­ ce iv e d . T h a t ’s w hat Dr. J. R . .Smiley, w ho will b e c o m e vice-presiden t and the M ain University p ro v o s t of ihinks. In a special S e p te m b e r I interview with the T e x a n S a tu r­ d a y , Dr. Sm iley e x p r e s s e d himself on m u c h of the soup-to-nuts yrs. Fxpei lorn e on Sam* ^TH A N D SA N J A C IN T O GR 8 3984 t h* fac t * now G e t Spe c i a l Plan for col l e ge men featuring iums and money for r e t i r e me n t , a b o u t New Y o d I de t low p r e m ­ i----------------------------------------------------------------------------1 NEW VORK LIFE in slur m c * C o m p a n y I Ed, I’d like som e in form a tion . c | J I I I • I N am e ............................................................ J : Addfe» ...................................... ............................................................ i : Phone J Ed G olden your n y l i c | Representative on tho U i C a m p u s S u it e 6 - P e r r y B ro ok s B ld g Wednesday, July 6. I960 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 12 Like Soldiers, Crapshooters Old Words Fade 'Bonnie Scotsman' Seem s N o Novelty To University Life Strangers from far places are the University no novelty on cam pus. Louis White, graduate of Cen­ tral Catholic High School of San Antonio, found this out when he paraded about the cam pus In a full dress Scottish uniform, kilt and all. “I expected to be heckled and teased, but everyone has been pleasant and given m e sm iling greetings. People have been only m ildly curious about my co s­ tum e," White said. Some had seen him on TV as Angus, the wise Scotsman, rep ­ resenting a savings and loan a s­ sociation. When asked if he w o r e ; lie demured, as have hundreds of kiltie wearers for centuries. Flier Claims Proof Japs Killed Earhart LOS ANGELES m — Photo­ graphic proof that flier Am elia Earhart was executed and buried by the Japanese on the island of Saipan in 1937 w as claimed by an Air Force officer Tuesday. Capt. Paul L. Briand Jr., a s­ sistant professor of English at said the Air Force Academy, he has word that a fellow officer has obtained Japanese photo­ graphs proving Miss E a r h a r t and her navigator, Fred Noonan, were captured as spies. and killed troop Briand said Capt. Joseph G e r­ s t a ­ vais, tioned at Okinawa, recently c a m e into possession of the Japanese photographs and also has affi­ c a rrie r pilot davits from 72 eyewitnesses of the capture and execution. “We have the details of the life, the food and the clothes, but most of all, and what I least expected to find, the original and only burial site of Amelia E ar­ hart and Fred Noonan. It has re­ mained untouched and undis- utrbed in 23 years, not even by the war." Briand. 39, is the author of a recent book on Miss E a r h a r t titled “ D aughter of the Sky.” In it he proposes a theory th a t she and Noonan could have land­ ed far off course on Saipan and that they w ere executed because the Jap a n e se did not w ant the world to know they were fortify­ ing the island in preparation for war against the United States. construction has given way to the use of commercial products. Even the Sears Roebuck cata­ logue wields its influence on vo­ cabulary. It now offers a “chest of drawers” to replace the “chif­ forobe" of 1908. Commercial has changed “ clabber" cheese to “cot­ tage" cheese, “snap” beans to “ butter" beans, “green" beans to Timas.” distribution and “ ‘T ea’ cakes are no longer avail­ able on any cookie counter,” he explained; thus the word is hard­ ly knowm to the younger genera­ tion. But even though Grandpa never “ went steady with” G randm a and never modern “ court,” somehow there is always another generation its changes to vocabulary. people young add to Ifs Results You Want Use A Classified Ad B U Y SELL R E N T H I R E Accordion Fur C o a ts Phonograph Records Engagem ent Rings Living Room Sets Stereo Record Players Dinette Sets Automobiles Tables Anything and Everything Sailboats Sewing M achines Autom obiles Summer C o tta g e O ffice Supplies Recording Equipm enf Restaurant-Lounge Outboard M o t o r Used Books Drafting Table Rooms Apartm ents C o tta ge s Houses Television Se ts Typewriters A ddin g M ach in e s Almost A n yth in g Cleaning W o m a n Ironing and W ashing Salesman O ffice W orker Stenographer Radio A ctor* Bands A ny Kind o f H e lp D O IT N O W IN THE CLASSIFIED AD S OF THE SUMMER! XAN CALL G R 2-2473 Probably a heavy majority of the younger University students termed the vegetable they ate for lunch “ corn on the cob,” but most of their parents and grandparents would have called the same food • roasting ears." And only the youngsters are •‘pooped’' after IO hours in class. Their more mature colleagues are * worn out” when they stop by to see G randm a who is “ all tuckered out’’ after sweeping the “gallery.” terminology are some of the synonymic sub­ stitutes Dr. E. B. Atwood listed on a chart w'hich he gave to m em ­ bers of the Linguistic Institute last week before his lecture on “ Ob­ in solescence and Replacement Texas Vocabulary." Dr. Atwood compiled the list with the assis­ tance of advanced English stu­ dents who interviewed 273 inform­ ants ranging in age from 20 to 80 and over. These changes in Dr. Atwood pointed out that into disuse be­ is they name some words fall the object cause no longer used, such as “ single- I tree.” or because the nature of the object has changed to such an ex­ tant that the word no longer fits. Wi mess how a “ gallery” has been replaced by a “ porch,” which may in turn give way to a “ patio” or a “ terrace." “ A few farmers have trained their cows to react to a car horn.” , Dr. Atwood explained, “ because the trend toward urbanization has left few people who know how to call cows from the pasture.” “ Paling” fences and “ stake and rid e r” also been doomed to oblivion because home fences have Legislative Group To Study Budget I Hearings on the legislative bud­ get requests from the Main Uni­ versity have been scheduled for 2 p m. Tuesday, September 6, in Senate Committee Room I in the Capitol. Vernon McGee, Legislative Bud- j get Board Director, states that September 7-9 will be devoted to hearing budget requests of other Units of the University. The budget requests have not yet been received; therefore Mr. indication McGee could give no of expected treatment of the t ee- j omrnendations. Lee A p p o in te d Director O f Scholastic P ro gram Dr. Addison E. Lee, professor of science education at The Uni­ versity of Texas, has l>een appoint­ ed Director of the Texas Academy Of Science visiting scientists pro­ gram in Texas high schools for 1960-61. The National Science Foundation In Washington, in announcing this appointment, also said a $25,300 the grant was voted Texas program designed im­ prove the status of science edu­ cation in Texas schools. to support to Research Center A sk s C o lu m b ia to V e rify Relic A scroll which is believed to he an ancient Samaritan relic has been sent to Columbia University for examination by the world's expert on Samaritan artifacts. Tile scroll was discovered d u r­ ing examination of articles in the fit* rk Collection which was given to the University 30 years ago. The authenticity of the scroll Which is written on waxed paper is in Hebrew, not Samaritan, Q uestioned by W. B. Todd, associ­ a te Curator of the Humanities Re­ s ea rc h Center. He thinks it was m ade about 50 years ago for tourists. that >r. Alan Scott represented the »ool of Journalism arui tile Ans Advertising Club at a recent ivention of the Advertising Fed tion of America rn New York