Editorial Reading: Sponsored Students T h e D a ^ t T e x a n Weather: High 78, Low SO Fair and Warmer Young Republicans attending the college, and high school group, to I and Mexico are are attending the University’s second "annual; The t a t o o d w ^ Delegates will break Into county, Delegates from 33 schools in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, 44First Co liege Daily in the0 South »» AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1962 By SHARON’ ASHTON Texan Staff Writer Draws 33 Schools^ Delegates session will con-; Students wishing to attend the luncheon should buy their Aaembl* WhiCh continues thr0USh « * » the admission: of Algeria to the United Nations and will I lunch a t the Commons cafeteria and take it to the Longhorn orientation of delegates In the Main Ballroom of the Texas I faculty and keynote speaker for the meeting, will speak Un‘° n- on ! "World University Send “WorleyUniyersity Service’' at 12:30 p.m. Friday in the Texai activities. Union le g h o r n Room. . ! Eight Pages Today No. 154 Sessions began Thursday n i g h t with registration and AllredI K. Lowenstein, member of the Stanford University S H ^ e ^ S t o T o f t t e ^ X T l t X i o u s Coundl.mVerSlty Vol. 61 Price Five Cents Canvass Precincts I A ustin By ANDRE BACON Sttntatt Seminar Friday and Saturday will canvass Austin precincts Saturday afternoon. P^ram s, d u b T rg a n il'a ’ j ^ u r l l J y ”’' ' ' ‘ tion, and special projects and ac­ tivities at 4:30 p.m. „ ... , , After Des Roc hers’ presentation size rp. The canvass will be a first for > at 7 :30 p.m., lists and checking at each I make plans for the “ precinct” the VRX and involves taking poll groups will meet at 9 - ^ • tax home to see if the names on the lists are correct. Additionally, the YR’s will survey political party preferences as part of their can­ vassing. day Before they leave for their in­ dividual precinct assignments, the delegates will hear a keynote ad­ dress by Jam es Leonard, execu­ tive director of the Republican Party in Texas, emphasizing how YR’s can make effective use of the in Texas. the GOP facing issues Delegates from Houston, San An­ tonio, Waco, Dallas, Wichita Falls, and other cities in Texas will reg­ ister at noon Friday in Texas Union 356. In preparation for their Saturday canvass, the YR’s will hear a lec­ ture with demonstration a t 7 :30 p.m. Friday night in the Longhorn ; Room on facts and figures on pro- | cinrt canvassing by Paul Des- R ochers, regional director of the Republican P arty of Texas. A discussion and slide demon- •tration cm YR publicity, the gra­ telephone committee j phic arts, work, and newsletters will be g iv -1 en at 3:30 p.m. Friday by Richard Hewitt, past editor of the SMU I Campus and former SMU Yeung Republican president. O r t g P O H ’ F H o r f *2 p> oo P u> O % O ' en ►A Ct ta A lecture and disc role of a YR club i by Susan Cunningly of the Bexar County tion, will open the sions at 9 a.m. Saturc Delegates will m et college, and high sc under their chairmer specific campaign p new ideas from IO a r After the keynote adc by leonard, p.m. groups will m eet at 2 briefly review canvas niques, and to receive and assignments. Delegates will reconve cinct group® to assembl* tion, discuss problems cr and prepare reports at 4 The entire group will hear re­ ports on problems and accomplish­ ments and a summary of the sem­ inar at 5:30 p.m. p.m. at a place to be announced during the seminar. The University YR club is spon­ soring the leadership seminar, and Lee McFadden, University YR president, will welcome the dele­ gates at 2 30 p m . Friday, after registration. Faculty to C on sid e r Entry Requirements Surplus admission units in for-; the College of Arts and Sciences, language and mathem atics This fact, coupled with our ad- eign will b© presented for the Faculty vanced examination Council s consideration at its meet- ( program, makes the language pro­ log at 2 p.m. Monday in English | vision obsolete,” Shipp wrote. Building 201. placement 3 Delegates o G o to Peru in the Model Three members of dted Nations’ Peruvian delega­ nt have been selected to accom- ty 23 students from various Te­ as of the United States and the National Student ada n< ii t i YMCA’g summer work P. e students, Jim Weatherly, Del Junior College, Everett Ses- Texas Southern University; Ruben Brown, University of *, will leave New York City 20 and return August 25, / will spend the month of ... rn Peru working to develop facilities and programs in subur­ ban area YMCA’s in Lima. The the con­ delegation will help in struction of buildings while doing en CD I % * * J j ( The remainder of the tour will include visits to Chile, Argentina, Ecuador, Brazil, Uruguay and Venezuela, Each delegation is required to raise individual funds to cover the costs of transportation. The great- er part of the costs will be paid by organizations and individuals with th© understanding that dele­ gates will be available tor lecture programs when they return. A barbecue will be held at 7:30 social work among the people. speak at the banquet Friday at 6 p.m. ^ Divine, associate professor of history, will Saturday’s agenda begins with a plenary session, followed by the principal address by Lowenstein on “The United Na­ tions— A Major Trial.” The final assembly convenes at 2 p.m. Saturday. A dance sponsored by the International Club, will begin at 8 p m. A regional meeting will be4— —-------------------- — -------- r o o m 317 of the ’a Leone: st. Mai-y’s University, held in Texas Union at 8 a.m. Sun­ day. In th© opening session Thursday Also Arlington State College, Iran; Sophie Newcomb College* Poland; North Texas State Uni­ versity, Thailand; Oklahoma Col- night, P arliam entarian F r a n k leg® for Women, Canada and Cen- Ur . , . tral African Republic; Our Lady Wright, executive secretary of the University Y, discussed ruies of of the Lake College, Hungary; assembly procedure in an effort to Sam Houston State Teachers Col- keep the group from being held Honduras; Southern Metho- back by procedural questions. ,, Somalia; McMurry, Cambodia. \\ right pointed out that speakers I University of Tulsa, Portugal, and would be selected in bloc meetings j Texas Christian University Al­ and merits for consideration must be presented in writing. that proposals and amend- ghanistan. gentina; Southwest Texas State Also, Navarro Junior College, Ar- “ We will he 400 college students College, Italy and Netherlands; gathered together at the Univer- Oklahoma City University, Mali: sity of Texas to speak in any way Texas Lutheran College, Saudi we choose about the UN,” Wright Arabia; Oklahoma Baptist Univer- said. sity, Congo; San Antonio College, Assistant Secretary-General Lee I 1)enmark; and Del M ar Junior Col- Cram er explained th© handling of !?ge> Rei>ublic of Cameroon and I resolutions and amendments. Secretary-General Bernard Ortiz X M toT cn* Me I T r n . . L™VerS,' y introduced Woe ? , „ ! r de Monteilano leaders; Cherif Faidi, Africa; Sir!: L * Madhayomchandra, Asian; Ken Longacre, Latin American; A. K. Makiya, Middle E ast; Ritchie I Reed, Soviet; and Don R. Smith, | Western. ’ I T 7 ° : andtrIndu*' ' form osa: Oklahoma Univer. sity, Bulgaria and United States; East Central State, Norway, and Concordia College, United King­ dom. i i Colleges and universities repre­ Sponsors for the program are the the Intema- senting countries in the assembly I International Club, are: Austin College, Haiti, D aho tion a1 Commission, the University mey, Indonesia and Pakistan; Tex-* *Y\ and th© Collegiate Council for as AAM, Belgium; Southwestern the United Nations. “Plenty of seating is available * nj versify. Greece and Hungary; J Southwestern Ixxiisiana University, in the back of the Main Ballroom Dominican Republic; Trinity Uni- for anyone who would like to visit varsity, Guinea; Bishop College, the assembly for a while,” Carolyn Nigeria; Langston University, Sier- J Soffar, publicity chairm an said. 3 D elegates to Peru Ruben s. Brown left, Everett Sessum, center, end J,no Weatherly, right, will travel to Peru .his summer as part cf a 25 student tour sport- sored by the National Student Council of the Y M C A . The three ere currently the Peruvian delegation to the Model United Nations being hold hero. Elly Medina T° G ° to Spain Grand Jury Action Ordered -Photo by Dmddy bloc meetings for discussion. Delegates then were dismissed to Most of the remaining countrie* are represented by University dele­ gations. Shjp said that no college credit Elly Medina has received a Ful- A report on the activities of the should be given for high school bright Scholarship to study Span- trigonometry be- ish literature and philosophy at the *e on Budgct and Person-; geometry a n d a a-k! glV*n by Dr‘ Stnn]ey caus* students who are advanced University of Madrid in Spain. r ngast, is also included in , m athematically may now g a i n Other winners will be announced college credit by passing advanced in the near future Mrs Patricia me agenda. The planned discussion of admis- placement examinations. | Roherts> student ( ' Adviser ngf By Bobby on Steel Price Hikes j ^ Atty. Gen.! view as a result of the sudden I press secretary replied in the ne? r> R o b e rtF .K ennedy sa Id Thursday wave of price night he has ordered a grand jury ! steel Industry. 1" to . the new m ln d cf s e e l price increases. increases in the L v e when n s t e d T any ! bon can lie expectedshoelie President Kennedy's J gathered at the White House to ' cr said, top aides These things take time,"" Hatch- , Hatcher left unanswered a ques lion units is the result of a le tte r1 I bon a , to whether there a re 'a n y from W. B Shipp the solid reasons for the White House * v director of admissions, to believe there might vet be a Deans’ Council requesting that the no longer be permitted to count ^ 2,9 STade-point overage. She is firm had. been subpoenaed before as "wholly unjustifiable and irre- ; cancellation or rollback of the $6- m atter be referred to the Faculty t h e beginning Council. mission to the Coneen of Arts and Miss Medina, a Plan II m ajor In mcnt by L S - steel Corp. Bo;,rd Kennedy, who denounced studcnt should Romance Languages, has an over- C a r m a n Roger Blough that his | Price rise initiated by U. S. Steel “ With registrar and « “ » ln registrar to Kennedy made the disclosure in I survey the possibilities of action I response,to questions about a suite-1 in the courts and in Congress. sat in during^the last j a-ton rise in steel prices. language for a d -1 “ U ? nte'™ ti"nal language course : a the requirement of two the Scienres in 1963 t h e 45-minute « “ • o f / I i (usually 406) in the same language bonorar>, and Alpha Lambda Del- fresh- honorary for m em ber of Pi Delta Phi, French a £rand jury. ^ ta, national men. Shipp s letter points out an out- for cedit>>> he concluded. . quarter-hour meeting. dated language provision. In the ! school year 1932-33, the require- T e l e v i s i o n A r t L e c tu r e ment of two admission units in a CL foreign language was discontinued, O h o w n By KTBC-TV * . . . and matics was changed television lee , units in algebra ami n j in n im ? tllres on a rt* with BiU Dean Fran' Cactus* cls *'f thc U nivm ity Departm ent geo rn e try to two un i t goonwirj to ro o units In mathe- Q{ A„ was p T tltn tti ^ . . ^ y , In addition to good grades, Elly has been an active leader on cam­ pus. She was chosen as the most for outstanding University girl 1961, outstanding student in 1961 t,md wa« na^ e d a Junior FeUW in the College of Arts and Sciences along with 25 other schol- t h e requirement in mathe- f r o m two * n r m i I fircf ? _ .. . In order to encourage students San Antonio. ' to continue t a k i n g foreign lan- on KTBC-TV. and on KONO-TV, ars- or 5 ? . Th- . 'I i t * Th© attorney general’* state- ment said Ute grand Jury probing Ute price rise will be convened in New York. He did not say when. • The attorney g e n e r a l had watched the first few minutes of I „ Blough’s television rebuttal to ad- secretary of the ; ministration criticism and refused' . .. i m uusuauw i uhhhsih ail . . . • . , A spokesman for the Justice De­ partm ent issued Kennedy’s state­ ment to newsmen several hours after Blough defended U.S. Steeps action in a televised New York news conference. The emphasis afterward was on orderly deliberation. Andrew T. Hatcher, assistant White House German TV Film Given Screening While socks and loafers, hall­ m ark for the UT coed, become a But in a low-key statem ent of told Kennedy’s views, Hatcher newsmen he thought it safe to say like steel the President would prices to remain as they were when the recent new labor con­ tract was signed. Ti Rh Sc’natt* anti House commit­ tee investigations already shap­ ing up, Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana, the Democratic major- * Ity leader, told reporters, “The time for talking alrnut the price increase has [Missed—the time for action hits come.” Mansfield said the Senate Anti n proJ ucts' I two unite in f L i t two units rn foreign language will j media and again be required for admission to April 26. ,Ap^ 1 19* and on the Most Beautiful contest, in sculpture, Miss Medina will sail for Spain forms Sept. 5. si hie court action. An antitrust action against “Big Steel” was described as one of several possible moves under re- New S A Masses Freshman Bill the Officers s J d tom nlh a llm ui-i sped through a limited agenda in effect this semester. 40 minutes Thursday night. student A t i h ? % i HF wuferred to a committee , The bill was referred to the Cam- u {he m jevX to go into pus Affairs Committee, j New assemblymen who were not th tT inaugural A bill by Oliver Heard, Arts and Sciences assemblyman, calling for participation of Freshm an Assem- I*-* i ,. m a n legislative assistants m s ^ T w V VSSemblyr n* Wa& the CUrrent I massed. Die bid was voted on with- to suspend rules is not debatable. : A&S assemblyman. Hood who resigned. Ma- ir* f ill -rq man, introduced a bill calling for banquet were installed. They in- bry was appointed to fill the va- law assembly­ j the amending of operating rules I eluded Steve Perel !of the SA to aflow debate on mo- man; Bill Mabry, A&S assembly- lions to suspend the rules. Under: man; Roy Guerra, pharmacy i n t r o d u c e d a h ill r a llm tr fnr- : h o n n u n t i t " t a r I T S ' f a n . a motion j semblyman; ,? a nSembF i r ° ™ and Buddy " V r z ' b r v w a * n n m in t o r l n as , , y * Perel was appointed Leberman, SA president, eatod T , Sandy s life of toe University student, be- Emanuel Ceiler D-N Y gan Wednesday, April 4. A sp ecial; Mansfield added th a t‘the Justice screening of the unedited product; Department “ has taken more than in what he was given Thursday morning. Reels will be edited sometime in ! term ed “ this uncalled for and un- j ordinary interest” May, and toe sound track is being necessary” price increase processed, in Washington. ____ _____ ____ ______ _ ! Highlights of the unfinished prod­ uct include students doing work in toe biology lab, interviews with i Daily Texan staffers, Round-Up by Lowell activities, including toe barbecue re- and Sweetheart presentation, and to Peace Corps Gets OK for Expansion sm deS sci­ ence. Maurer. .Ho is e o o n j ^ iHe S S S l S K r t fairs Committee were; helping-hand project. • A bdl by B arbara Totten. As- Amerlka" or World Stage Arne™ Thcrc was ,m l« debate and o n ly ' 1 d i n t e n t ’,'r d tho Ranger G O M - K a y C olem an ★ * With April showers comes the April Ranger. Thoughts of spring must have inspired the Rangeroos, | for Ray Coleman, Girl of the Month, is lazily lolling by a swimming pool. Other features of the cartoon-festooned magazine are new contributions by ye ole Gilbert Shelton, long-time staf­ fer of the Ranger, who just returned from a New York w a s h in g t o n IP- The P e a c e sojourn. “How the hell many days H A T H September, any- ««• *yhe T I S Bri^ ca i,; sag * f lr s t ' h a n d Judgment. « 'btempt to reduce the the orange, o ra n g e , orange booths in the usual places. ’ 10 -'>' ' l0'v' yellow, yellow covers will be on sale tomorrow expansion before the measure was j approved by voice vote. It authorizes the President to spend $63,750,000 to put 9,970 vol-! unifiers into die corps by the fall J of next year. It now has about 900 volunteers and expects that num -1 her to grow to 2,400 by June 30 and to 5,100 by fall. Accounting Institute To M e e t April 16-17 sembly secretary, calling for publi-1 ica.” Thilo Koch, a Washington °ne cation of a Students’ Association | ^ re s p o n d e n t _ for German telev and/or Activities handbook to be ; slon* *s directinK the movie, effected by the end of the 1963 spring semester. • A bill by Oliver Heard, Ja> Westbrook, and Tom Hutcheson, A&S assemblymen, desiring inves­ tigation and report of toe new tel­ ephone system planned by the Uni­ versity. Blough Holds Firm On Price Increase !.*P1- C h a i r m a n Roger M Blough of the vk~n£a Corp re fu n d Thursday D r J n ™ i n C NEW YORK ^ . • A bill by Heard and Guerra .. investigation of cost , askuig for and availability of items offered g n e e * . for sale in the Texas Union. .. , . j • Perel introduced a bill vail-; intilV „ ta hiok * ? " “ ,‘he, P,t ^ f c|!.tlVe ; 1>tood f» rn ev en in the money. The n e w auriiorization taries of Texas, will be held at the I fessor of to $30 million in the appropriation|cere’ Association, and a n d the steurI biU w h i c h provided the actual nation of City Clerks and Seer©- Edmund C Lynch assistant pry­ management, a m o n g the Asso- vicepresident and provost * ing for toe use of part of the R ’ . a I^ ndir*K federal grand parking lot behind Townes Hall as ^ a C lot. The bill was referred to investigation of the increase th . Traffic, Parking, and Safety • p ,n ? * * '“ "*««". Atty. Gen. Robert - xr Kennedy confirmed Blough's to e d . bv Sen. Frank J. U u s e h e .! and from 8 to 9 a . m . V l l I*. . I Committee. Herz announced that to- Vw n I v m could be similarly pared d o w n ! Villa Capri Motor Hotel April 16-17. later. ) Registration for the institute will . | , n , * . » a , g^and **urY in New j D-Ohio. to cut the authorization to Fins institute is a training course . . .. y « . . , those addressing toe assembly. — . Concurrent workshops w i l l be T„«e '■ d^'y £ £ % ________________ lations in Financial Management * 0 n ly one amendment w a s of- be held from 3 to 6 p.m. April 15 held Mnnrkv aftemrvi* i . v c i o - r » r w l u n / D , i b . , r p ] , re ... r e . • -* . . . . Sanfordi Leberman, and Tosch Officiate —P h oto by D rad d y brant would no longer i/o p e n to undergraduate students unless ac-!as noninflationarv companied by a law studen? S i to a & ’S t t a d b L S , d a r a d ^ t h e o tI m ‘t o S n " j ’ .. 1 by a e ‘ " n' ' H ni" CJPa* finance officers, city clerks and Investment, Accounting Con- tool of .Motor Vehicles and Equij* ment, ^ m ental officials with financial and ..................... ^ * “ . " J7T c"rf ment * designed specifically to help m uni:jin t o ^ k l'c b n W ,'C a 7 h “ pta2S S i Frid«y, April 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 Steel Deal Although Roger M. Blough, chairman of US Steel, says “there was nothing irresponsible” about the recently- announced hike in steel prices, and adds that there can be no question of US Steel's concern for the “w e l f a r e , strength, and vitality of this nation,” there must be a good reason w hy President Kennedy spoke so strongly about the steel executives. Seldom has the president spoken so forcefully. He used phrases like “utter contempt'* and “wholly unjust­ ifiable” to describe the attitude of the steel people. C ertainly any such price raise has a tremendous ef­ fect on the overall economy of the nation. And it is in­ deed very dangerous for private concerns to fail to rec­ ognize their public responsibility. It seems very clear that the J u s t i c e Department should proceed with the antitrust investigation that has been suggested. It is obviously dangerous for the country when there is a “parade” of price raises such as occurred here. Despite their recent agreement w ith the I oiled Steel­ workers Union, I S Steel went ahead with a price raise which could have serious inflationary ramifications. After “hiu steel” had started the price rises Tuesday the others quickly joined the “parade,” The simultaneous and identical price hikes definitely point out the need for investigation into the powerful steel industry. A New Term The new edition of- the Student Assembly cautiously stepped into the legislative world Thursday night as most of the opening m eeting of the new student government term was devoted to formalities, chair finding, and felicita­ tion. One of the veteran Assemblymen "-aid. “I don't know what to do with the meeting getting over so early.” As everyone know*?, it has not been too unusual for the Assem bly m eetings to last four hours or better. And som e of those four hour periods have been action packed. If the new Assembly members meet their responsi­ bility and face up to all the matters that th< \ should then we suspect that they’ll soon be in the habit of a t­ tending m eetings considerably longer t h a n Thursday night’s. There w as n o t much legislation introduced. A bill intro­ duced b y Johnny W eeks to allow' debate on motions to sus­ it pend the rules seems to have some merit. Ordinarily m ight be too confusing to be worthwhile, but because the Assem bly m eets relatively infrequently and because there is often detey in getting to im portant business, the bill c e r ­ tainly deserves consideration. W e especially like Barbara Tosch’s proposal that a new Student A ctivities or Student's Association Handbook be published within the next year. The Handbook now is use Is outdated and certainly needs to be replaced. An attempt to publish a handbook fell through once and by now it is imperative that plans be made for a new* book. The new book should not be bound to the old format but should offer the students a diversity of valuable information about the campus and its activities. Good Examples Today's page includes information about the Univer­ sity's Sponsored Student program, w hich has been responsi­ ble for 13 foreign students a? the University this .vear. This program Is an outstanding example of what stu­ dents themselves can do to help the University's valuable student program. We have long believed that this Univer­ sity' is developing a strong and important program for students from other countries. This is a vital facet of the overall project. Of the 13 visiting students, 12 have been living in either social fraternity or sorority houses. We commend these groups for their willingness to participate in this program and their leadership in aiding foreign students, but it seems that other segments of the campus would be anxious to participate too. None of the students have been co-op sponsored this year and this might make an excel­ lent project for a co-op, club, or similar group. The program has been larger this year than ever before and has been handled through the International Office and the International Commission. We are anxious to see this activity continued and hope that it can m eet with even more success next vear. The DaiIy Texan O pinions expressed in The Texan are those of the lid. tors or o f the u riser c l the af ti d e and not necessarily t h e e o f the University administration. is pubnfthud til Austin J (Was daily except Monday and Saturday and holiday end n>onthiy in August by Texas Student rexan, » student newspaper of The I’Diversity of 7ova* I abt J- adon*. Inc Second-*;, ss postage paid a- Austin Texas e l Ki TI . i New* contributions will be accepted by telephone IGR 2-24T3) or the J. B editorial office Journalism h a :.ding v.X or at the News Laboratory. o l h c e is J . lrB m OI * ^ tGR 2 *473>> * * * th e in AIU*in *1 (JO month 75c month Mailed out of town Delivered in Austin (three months minimum) .................................. 75c month ..................................................... ......... SUBSC RIPTION R AT I S CHUMANKXI STAFF F u l t o n MANAGING U D 1 T 0 8 ...................................... ............................ JIM i n VIT HK ll VKI) VANSTEENKISTE ASSISTANT MANAGING KUI TOR ........................................................ HOV I ST A FF IG R THIS ISS UK ....................................Sharon Ashton, Andre Bacon NIGHT KUI TO It ........................................................ J EA N N K R EIN ER T I)KSK EDITOR .............................................................................. JOE SELBY ISSI E NEWS EDITOR .............. MARTHA TIPPS N ight R eporters C o p y rea d e r ........................................................................................ N ath a n F a in E verett Hullum N ight Sports Editor A ssistant Bob Dupont Night A m usem ents E ditor ................................... Night Cam pus Life Editor Editorial A ssistant ....................................... Wait* Smith .................................. ................ ............ Bill Hampton L am a M cNeil KAPPAS HZ MOBLEY la g g e (standing), and Kay Recodes (right) rev aw th aw • v e n ts >? 1960-6! b y c c c triouQn f b y g o r g th ro u g h th e C a pelt), Ray s tu d e n t, KersKn H e lle b e rg — Photo* by Venn* WOLF SEKA, graduate phy­ sics ma ‘of from Austria, aligns an X -R ay spectrometer. Seka is sponsored by p‘ Kappa A l ­ pha, C O K E T IM E In the U n:on draw< sponsors.I students B H de R e a ­ ver and J oyce Zw ager from the Netherlands. De Roever lives at Kappa Alpha; M iss Zw ager stays w.fh the Delta Gam m as. ii in Student Residences Gives Foreigners Favorable Views of Am erican Students, Life 'AO A ls : LOU Are fort Kient* to th e ir hom e c o u n try Jess highly of tile Urn th a n th ey did before ti M a n y co ncerned cd e n it m oney s *eign stud en Ie or no gor I ravorabIe m a in ta in t b rin g in g f US does Ii m o t in g a a b r o a d . Not se. say eight U niversity s p o n s o r e d Intervleveed stu d en ts The stu d en ts a re »>n t h e *uhje< t *j>ec i si p ro g ra m p a r t i c i p a n t * in in w hich they live in fra te rn itie s o r so ro ritie s In the sa m e a tm o s ­ p h ere a* the* m em ber*. to 13 stu d e n ts Art in c re a se d in te re st in in te r­ n atio n al affairs Itoosted th e n u m ­ from b e r of sp o n so rin g gro u p s fo u r sn 1960-61 this y e a r. F ra te r n itie s an d so ro ritie s se lect th e fro m ap p lica tio n s re c e iv e d a t the In te rn a tio n a l Of­ fice p rovide room a n d b o a rd for o r e a c a d e m ic y e a r, an d in clu d e th e ir ac tiv itie s. th e stu d en ts f r o rn a T un on m ot cy com es f u n d, s p o n s o r ? d stu d e n ts ra ise d annual t h e in p a r t by C am p u s C hest D r a m in so ro ritie s T his y e a r stu d e n ts a re sta y in g e t D elta Tau D elta, L am b d a Chi A lpha, K ap p a A Inna, D elta Up­ silon, P i K ap p a A l p h a , D elta K ap p a E psilon, Phi K a p p a T h eta, an d A lpha Chi S ig m a fra te rn itie s. T h e sponsoring stu ­ d en ts a re P i B eta P h i, D e l t a G a m m a , K ap p a K ap p a G a m m a , K ap p a A lpha T h eta, and I >eha D elta D elta. S tu d en ts a r e p re d o m in a n tly fro m E u ro p e, b u t o th e r a r e a s of the M iddle E a s t and th e w orld L atin A m e ric a —a r e also re p r e ­ se n te d . stu d en ts The eight sponsored to give In terv iew ed weir* ask ed an e v a lu a tio n of th e ir y e a r at T ex a s, o ffe r su g g estio n s for im ­ p ro v e m e n t of th e p ro g ra m , and sp ecific p ro b lem s a n y d isc u ss in school th e y h a d « n co u n tered in te r­ o r in social life. S tudents view ed w ere Jo y c e Z w ag er, the N e th e rla n d s ; Y ves B l a n c h e , F r a n c e ; Wolf S e k a, A u stria; A n n e-C ath erin e B i e r i. S w itzer­ la n d ; A ltan t i m e r , T u rk e y ; Al­ b e rto Q u in tan a. C osta R ic a ; Bill de R o e v e r, the N e th e rlan d s, ana C elli M a d len e r, th e N eth e rlan d s. stated that the year a t T exas had In­ creased t h e i r opinion of the United State*. V iew s to the eon trary seem to com e fro m the fact that m any students return hom e overly critical of U nited State* life and institutions. em p hatically .Student* “ S u re, w e w ill h a v e som e c r it­ ic is m s ." said M iss Z w ag e r "B u t o u r few c ritic is m w ill be b ased on fa c ts -not j u s t u n in fo rm ed b la b b e rin g , “ You can re a d b o o k s ab o u t th is p ro g ra m pro- A m e ric a , but \ ides a p ra c tic a l e x p e rie n c e . In H olland you d o n ’t see th e rea l A m e ric a n people- ju s t a bum h of to u ris ts w i t h c a m e ra s and w ooden shoes. T h e re a r e m an y w rong id e a s in E u ro p e . W hen we go back , an d h a v e know ledge, we can c o u n te r-a c t th e se w r o n g id e a s ." “ P eo p le in g e n e ra l a re v e ry king, “ M a d le n e r sa id . “ T his is a v ery strong point in fa v o r of the U S." id eas Quintana ad d ed a L a tin A m eri­ can view : “ Latin A m erican stu­ dents tend lo criticize the US too FUR M S student with precon­ m uch. A ceived that all N o r t h A m ericans a re , say, cap italists, isolated, can build up these ideas in his m ind But one who com es w ith an open m in d can benefit greatly, and go back with a n ac­ curate picture. In this respect, from selection of students the Latin A m erica is a m o st im port­ ant thing.'* Talk of selection brought up another point. There w a s som e criticism th!* year of giving C am ­ po* Chest money to t h e spoil- sored student* program , based on in that t h e tin* aHr seven y e a rs, u hen u in o u r d eg re es countries ouId sc ra p e up enough r >ne- com e h ere But i-.'.uc h of the value would be lo.*’ ” fi­ L ittle e m p h asis w is given n an c ia l need th e ir selection, in h ow ever. “ T he m ain co n sid e ra ­ tion ss not fin an c es; alm o st a n y ­ one could stu d y m o re cheaply* int . I ■■ >StC( QU i go iv fc Tho of id phasi anc! ab ility to ad ju st, and alm ost th a t the s t u d e n t m entioned all selection co m m ittee s “ look w ell-rounded p eo p le.” fo r Since student* live In fraternity atnd sorority hon****, quite d if­ ferent from the “ academ ic" a t­ mosphere* of their home coun trie-., they* have a specific prob­ lem them selves into group activity on the social level while m aintaining good a c ­ adem ie records. integrating of " F r a te r n ity g ro u p s a i r clo ser than stu d e n t g ro u p s in the N e th ­ e rla n d s ,” said De R o ev er, “ but (J cou rse we do not h av e houses M ore e m p h asis is p laced h ere on d atin g , and in tellectu al le ss on discussion. At hom e it is die op­ fra te rn itie s do posite. H ow ever, to h av e m o re in te rest, since m ost of the c a m p u s le a d e rs con <•> fro m G re ek g ro u p s." ‘a f f a ir s ’ Si k ' added, "Y e s bu? those who le ad e rs h ere in stu d en t th o u g h t of as those w ho w ork a re a re 'tween the horns H O Y T PU RVIS Texan Editi r ii IN T H U R SD A Y S colum n w e re p o rte d som e c ritic a l re m a rk s about this w e e k e n d ’s M odel U n it­ ed N atio n s. A m ong the re m a rk s w ere som e b y E rn e st Sew ell of B artlesv ille , O kla., w ho critic ized w illin g n ess to co m p ro m ise in the UN, and said th at student m inds a re be ng “ n eu tralized ’ to a c ­ cep t com prom ise, c o e x is te n c e , neg o tiatio n , etc • w hen d ealin g w ith the o m m u n ist.” A dditionally M r. Sewell sa c} th a t a M odel U nited S tate s d ay should Ice con d u cted so th a t Uni­ versity' know “ how Uie UN is supposed to func­ tion an d not ju st how the UN is fu n ctio n in g .” stu d e n ts would B e rn a rd O rtiz de M onteUano. *e< ret a ry g e n e ra l of the UTMUN, to M r. pro v id ed so m e an sw e rs Sew ell’s c ritic ism s. O rtiz said , “ The ru les of p ro ­ ce d u re ap p ly to all the co u n tries the M odel UN, re p re se n te d a t the not ju st to the Soviets an d th u s w*hen w e U nited S tale s, sp e ak of this d o cs not im m ed ia te ly m e an ne­ gotiation w ith R ussia. se ek in g support He cites an ex am p le th a t oc­ cu rred la s t fall w hen th e A frican co u n tries w an ted to in tro d u c e a for econom ic reso lu tio n callin g the U nion of san ctio n s a g a in st South A frica, B efore doing this the co u n tries co n su lted o th e r n ations. T he W est­ e rn n atio n s ad v ised th a t su ch an e x tre m e resolution w ould not re c e iv e th e ir su p p o rt. T his resu lted in th e introduction of a m o d e ra te resolution. th e m are A ccording to O rtiz, “ N eg o tia­ tion an d co m p ro m ise a r e not str a n g e r s to the VS. A fte r all, if E d m u n d R an d o lp h of V irginia and W illiam P a tte rso n of New J e rs e y h ad not been w illing to c o m p ro m ise w e m ight not have a constitution.” He ad d s, “ Seek­ ing su p p o rt for b ills,/m o d e ra tio n of dem ands, and consultation with other d eleg a tes activities w hit h take place daily in the leg­ islative bodies in the US. In this resp ect, participation in the M od­ el UN help* our delegates to un­ d e rs ta n d th e p ro ce ss by which law s a r e p a s se d in th is country." Ortiz said the suggestion of a Model US is w orthw hile but adds, "There alread y are several con­ ference* which this goal. T exas A&M has sponsored for years a conference on N ation­ al Affairs (SCONA l ” lie m in ted approach out th a t UT h as se n t d eleg a tes to SCON A a n d to th e S tate D e­ p a r tm e n t’s R egional F o re ig n P ol­ ic y B riefing as w ell. * NOW W ITH T H E v ario u s c r iti­ cism s in m in d it m ig h t be in te r­ is a c ­ estin g to e x a m in e wha? tu ally h ap p en in g the U n ited N atio n s. in d ise a se tro u b le s Sooner o r la te r, e v e ry sy m p to m th e th a t of w orld to rm e n ts th e UN. I t now is facin g th e g r a v e s t c risis of its ex isten ce. As c le a rly as a n y m ir­ ro r, its difficu lties, dissension, and failu re s re fle c t tire passio n s an d conflicts of th e w o rld ’s tro u ­ ble spots. lir e UN is a t th a t difficult age It h as built-in its s tru c tu re . Chief - the m id -teen s. tro u b les am o n g its h an d ica p s a r e : in • L ack of co o p eratio n fro m Its m e m b e rsh ip . • L ac k of m oney. • The “ independent e explo­ sio n .” • E n d of th e d o m in atio n of the o rg an iz atio n by th e g r e a t pow ers. © T en d en cy of th e g r e a t pow ­ th e o rg an izatio n to b y -p ass e rs on m a jo r issues. • Of co u rse all of th e se p ro b ­ le m s a r e co m p lex a n d in effect th e y evolve a ro u n d the questio n of w h at the m e m b e r sta te s re a lly w a n t th e UN to be. ★ W E M AINTAIN th a t th e U N is of trem en d o u s im p o rta n c e to this n atio n . We n eed a forum w h ere to w e can sp e ak d ire c tly the w orld. And as th e U N long as continues to ex ist an d we a r e in it, th e dev elo p in g n atio n s a r e not to be e a sily gobbled up. going D esp ite w h a t m a n y wall ad m it, the Congo is p roof of this. The UN is the g re a t hope for o ffsettin g o r a v e rtin g the e v e r­ p re se n t vs a r th re a t. And proof of th e v alu e of the UN is th a t R u s­ sia h as so u g h t to d e s tro y it. is I t the w o rld ’s m elan ch o ly fate in this c e n tu ry to be plagued few p ro b lem s b ut by not by a a g re a t m a n y of th em . T he w e a ­ pons ra c e , co lo n ialism , tra d e , self­ g o v ern m e n t a r e all p ro b lem s th a t m u st be coped w ith. T he U N ’s goal is to h elp re so lv e these. This w eekend th e stu d e n t dele­ g a te s a n d p a rtic ip a n ts will h av e a n o p p o rtu n ity to o b se rv e th e in- ner-w orkings an d th e tro u b le s of th e UN an d le a rn so m eth in g about ch an ce the o rg an iz atio n h a s of easin g tile w orld s p ro b lem s. influence g o v ern m en t. L ittle i« given a c a d e m ic affa irs, although th ere is m ore *»>cial le ad e rsh ip . A cadem ic vv..so, m o re top people com e from the 36,000 non-G reeks, w h ere th e re is less conflict w ith social in te re sts ." Then, just how activate is the life g ained p ic tu re of stu d en ts fro m living in G reek houses? ‘one "Y ou get only one p ictu re of said Miss Zw a­ one kind of girl, "T his gives you a b ase to g e r first, b ut you the stan d on a t m u st see the o th e r sides, It de­ pends on the person. T hese a re th e little g ro u t)/ but you m u s t find out about th e o th e rs ,’’ The Militant* w ere in a g re e m e n t th a t so ro ritie s’ and fratern ities* re a d y r n aile hospitality helped im ­ m ensely In th** first few day*. w hen " e v e r y t h i n g wa* no s tr a n g e ." In th e beginning, a few things c mid be done to m a k e a d ju s t­ m e n t ea sie r. A couple of people to v o lu n tarily sp o n so r von and see you th ro u g h d ifficulties d u r­ ing the first m o n th would h e lp ,” said M adlener. A su g g estio n for p ossible im p ro v em en t cam e from M iss B ier!, ‘ At firs t tile houses a r e good; you are obliged to know A m erican s, b ec au se you a re living w ith it m ig h t be b e tte r to sw itch o v er to an a p a r tm e n t the second se m e ste r, m a in ta in in g y o u r frie n d s in th a t sorority w hile having m o re oppor­ tu n ity to m a k e new o n es," them . B ut D e Roev er, the yo u n g est of the is no group, o b jected . pro b lem , no re stric tio n on the stu d en t. H e can do w hat he “ T h e re Sponsor Explains Means For Selections By R IT C H IE REED T his y e a r 13 stu d en ts from all p a r ts of th e w orld w ere en ab led to attend the U niversity through th e S ponsored S tu d en ts Program . T h e d e sire on th e p a n of local liv in g units to p a rtic ip a te in this ex p erien ce, supplying room and board, m ade it possible for these highly qualified students to study in the United States, and for the A m erican students to learn more of foreign lands. th e inclu d in g T he stu d e n ts a r e selected by th e sponsoring g ro u p s from a p ­ p licatio n s ap p ro v e d both in th e ir ow n co u n tries an d in th e U nited S ta te s, s tu d e n t’s g ra d e s, rec o m m en d a tio n s, a bio­ g ra p h y , a a p h o to g rap h , s ta te m e n t by the a p p lic a n t e x ­ p la in in g w hy he d e sire s to study in th e U nited S tate s. The g ro u p 's obiig atin o n is fo r one y e a r ; J a stu d e n t sta y s lo n g er he m u st p ro ­ vid e his own fin an c ial su p p o rt. an d A pplications for next year's program have arrived at the In­ ternational Office, B ecause of a lim it In foreign student scholar­ ship m oney to pay tuition the num ber of students selected must be lim ited. Applicants are m ostly from f.aUii A m erica and Europe. A fraternity, sorority, co op, or other group Interested in sponsor­ ing a student, can contact Mrs. Gall Ratliff at the International Office. Early application will in­ sure larger selection. It is a hope that the Sponsored -Students P ro g ra m will continue ex p e rien c es p ro v id in g v alu ab le fo r foreign and A m eric an stu ­ d e n ts alike. Official Notices A representative Interview prospective from Levelland will leachers in our office on April it. Appoint cents should be made in Sutton J fait 209, .l«hn O, Rodger*. D irecto r Teacher i*l*ceiuent .Service is m o te opportt to know pee aits. T h ere to get, tty rn the second sem esh p ro g ra m effec tiv enc gm k.” T hen s;i> ju st be is fine $ VV .* The But B lache brought forth n of o ld er stu d en ts. "S o m etim e h av e d ifficulties m ad ju stin g for y o u n g er house dents, but older stu d en ts, use d U living alone and co n c en tra tin g h eav ily on th e ir studies, m a y find a p ro b lem in in te g ratin g into a y o u n g er g ro u p .” “ We h av e so m uch lo do w ith o u r g ra d u a te w ork th a t it is dif­ ficult fo r us to be o v er-activ e in a fra te rn ity h o u se ," Seka added “ T he b est w ay to in te g ra te into a co m m u n ity is to he at the sa m e ag e lev el a s ifs m e m b e rs.” The ' best a g e ,” it w as g en e r­ a lly ag reed , w as a fte r a t least one y e a r of college w ork in the stu d e n t’s own country*. “ Then you ru e n eith er too young or too o ld ,” sa id de R o e v er “ The y o u n g er you a re , th e m o re you get o u t of th e p ro g ra m ; tile o ld er, the m o re th e fra te rn ity gels out of it as long as you are an u n d e rg ra d ­ u a te ." U n d er the p rese n t setup, how ­ e v e r, th e sponsored stu d e n ts p ro ­ g ra m — through fra te rn itie s and so ro ritie s m a in ta in in g houses p ro v id es th e only su ch op p o rtu n ­ ity fo r g ra d u a te s an d u n d e rg ra d ­ u a te s , o u tsid e of re g u la r s c h o la r­ ship g ra n ts , T h e g ra d u a te s w ere a g re e d th a t su ch a p ro g ra m w as ex tre m e ly b en eficial to th em , but th e y felt th a t th ey would have been ab le to co n trib u te m o re to th ey h ad been th e * g ro u p s y o u n g er. if A cad em ically , how ever, they felt they had com e at the rig h t ag e. Miss B ieri c o m m e n t e d , “ T h ere is m o re v alu e in ta k in g sen io r an d g ra d u a te co u rses, be- ca u se th e w ay w e study in E u­ ro p e is m o re like g ra d u a te school h ere, T tak in g f courses easily g< Quinta m uch a g rad u a l g ’t a ( .tee tile benefit In md so phom ore ju s t a* could m an OIH horn a fre sh m a n saw ilia. d v an tag e th e u n d er- in .* co u rse s "if you plan to g rec . I took req u ired sub- anti now I h av e th e oppor* to s ta y and w o rk fo r a If I h ad taken only clee- o ld have been of no they tiv e benefit to m e ." T h * 1 th e ir group* w anted (-trident** p reo ccu p atio n with how w ell they w e r e in te g r a t­ ing b rought up a question of how m uch to gain. Mt*s /w a g e r thought, “ The group can g* t a* m uch out of a foreign stud* nl a* they w an t to —and really' m any of th em d o n 't w a n t to get m uch out of It, I am a fra id . We a re alw ay* e a g e r to t a l k n i w u t our co u n tries lf t h e r * a re those who w an t to lis te n ." M ad len er su g g ested , “ The fra ­ te rn ities could g et m o re out of us p e rh a p s if we p a rtic ip a te d on so m e of th e ir co m m ittees. “ I t is a little d ish e arte n in g to us w hen w e offer to help w ith discussions and o u r suggestions a re not ta k e n ,” Seka added, How m uch atten tio n should stu ­ d en ts h av e ? s h o u l d th ey be "spoon-fed or left co m pletely on th eir own? "W e h av e ex a ctly the am o u n t of atten tio n we w a n t," said B la­ che. Seka added, " lf we need a s­ sistan ce, w e can go to the I n te r ­ n atio n al O ffice and we g et i t , ” De Hoover su g g ested that the sponsored stu d en ts, w ith m o re au­ tom atic co n tac ts, could be of as­ sistan ce to o th er foreign stu d e n ts without so m a n y opportunities for integration. On one point all the student* th a t m a n y a g re e d : “ We hope m ore stu d en ts in the fu tu re ca n have the sa m e w onderful oppor­ tu n ities we h av e h a d ,” By J I M S E H ' T O K Ranger Associate Edina Well, to d ay is an o th e r R a n g e r It is also the last R a n g e r d ay . d ay of th e y e a r , H airy doesn t h av e to slav e o v er an o th er issu e fo r n ex t m c n th —he ca n c u rl up un d er his booth at his fav o rite b a r an d d rin k for a m onth. U ntil fin als b ut w e n e e d n 't com e, w o rry about th a t now. So your last month at the Uni­ versity will be devoid of humor - from the p ages of the R anger at any rate. You will have your room m ate to am use you —- and term them es—and the D illy Tex­ anna, E sp ecially the D illy Tex­ anna. This is the annual p a ro d y on the Texan (which, as e v e ry ­ one knows, is pretty m u ch a parody in itself.) is -sale the April H anger, w hich But gocx on funny today, enough to last for two months. It Is overbrim m ing with m irth, to coin a phrase. The G.O.M. Is sharp enough to last even longer than that. It has funny cartoons. It has risque jokes. It has, in fact, everything that m akes the censors unhappy. Now w e tell you this because if you read the T exan ’s review of the R anger, you might be m isled. We h aven ’t read the ic- view ou rselves, and, as a m at­ ter of fact, w e ’re sure it, h a sn t even been w ritten y et, but if the F ink th a t u su ally w rites such r e ­ it ag a in , he w ill tr y n e w s does to co m p are the R a n g e r w i t h the Rial a, o r th e Alcalde, or th e la d ie s H om e Jo u rn al. As w e all know, in c o m p a r­ able. the R a n g e r is the is F rid a y this R a n g e r Not th a t w e ex;>ect the T ex an to give us a bad review , though it h as set th e p re c e d e n t fo r this. We really think: is th e b e s t in m onths But you see, to d a y l i t h , an d n e a rly an y th in g could h ap p en . T he Jo u rn a lism B uilding could b u rn up b efo re we g et the copies out to the sta n d s (though th e re a r e a g r e a t m a n y people th a t d o n 't th e d estru c tio n of th e Jo u rn a lism B uilding w ould be a stro k e of m isfo rtu n e ). Or th e T o w er ( auld fall o v er on th# ed ito rs as th e y a re on th e ir w ay to c la ss sand w-holc sets of ed i­ to rs a r c g ettin g h a r d e r an d h a rd ­ er* to r e p la c e ). O r it could ra in . it could O r g et so hot it w ould m elt Ute tire s on H a iry ’* H uppm obile. it could snow. O r think Any of th e se things would h u rt sales. Vt filch autom atically m eans Hairy has Ie** m oney lo drink beer with. So do your part for H airy’! b eer, (let out and buy a R a n g e r. Buy two or three. P a p e r y o u r w alls with them . H ow ever m any of th em you buy, you w o n t be disap p o in ted . * Houston Clubs Cubs; Texas Hosts ... I a Badminton Meet LA Nudges White S o x In Gregory Gym i , . _ HOUSTON UPV* Dean Stone, a 32 year-old former American Leaguer, gave up only three hits Thursday took as his Houston Colts their second shutout victory from the Chicago Cubs, 2-0 and three-game National their swept League debut series, straight Stone a Washington Senator from 1953 through 1957, struck out nine batters and permitted only one man to reach second ba^e. Ken Hubbs doubled in the first in­ ning for Chicago only to be strand­ ed by a double play. The game was n tight battle of left-handers for the first seven innings with Stone holding a nar­ row edge over Chicago’s Jack Cur­ tis, who gave up only three hits In seven Innings. The Colts took a 1-0 lead in the fourth on two hits and an error. Joey Amalfitano opened with a walk and moved to second when Dick Gemert beat out a bunt. Roman Mejias forced Amalfitano si third but Gem ert advanced on Ron Santo’s bad to first in a double play effort. Hal Smith scored Gem ert with a single. throw Dave Gerard, a right-hander, re­ placed Curtis in the eighth and got the first two men before Rob Aspromonte singled and Amalfi­ tano walked. A wild pitch advanc­ ed the runners and Rob Anderson replaced Gerard. Anderson threw a wold pitch that scored Aspromonte. G ernert then struck out for the final out. ★ ★ CHICAGO tm — Outfielder Leon Wagner’s ninth-inning homer, bare­ ly clearing the right center field bleacher wail, decided a brilliant mound duel between Los Angeles' Ken McBride and Chicago's rookie Joe Horlen for a 1-0 Angel tri­ umph over the White Sox Thurs­ day. The game was played before only 1.087 in murky, drizzling wea­ ther with the Comiskey Park lights lighted from the third inning. McBride. 26-year-old right-hand­ er who had a 12-15 m ark last sea­ son, hurled superbly after a bit of first inning troub’e and held the White Sox to only four hits, strik­ ing out six. Horlen, 24. also a right-hander, scattered f i v e hits and fanned five. Eat Mexican Food Once A Day! EL MAT 504 E ast A v a , G R 7-7023 EL TORO 1601 Guadalupe G R 8 -4 3 2 ! EL CHARRO 912 Red River G R 8-7735 J A i f i S i IM* M MONROE’S ‘ Mexican Food to Take % = e§ 3 J — J — G R 7-8744 ^ 4 ^ Delivery Service 7 Days Austin's 14Big Four” in Authentic Mexican Food I I I P ct. GB Standings B t A ssociated I’r*-** AM ERICAN LEAGUE W L I’ct. o 1,000 I 0 1.000 .867 2 I .300 i .sod i ,500 i .500 1 1 I ,333 .OOO I .000 I ............ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...........................I I .................... i N ew Y ork .................... I W a sh in g to n M in n esota C h icago B oston C levelan d Los A n g eles . . . . . . . . K an sas C ity ............. I B a ltim o r e ................... 0 ..................0 D e tr o it NA T IO N A L I. EA ti I E I, 0 0 0 0 s 1 2 I 3 3 H ou ston ..................... San F ran cisco P ittsb u rg h . . . St. Louis .... P h ila d elp h ia . a-Los A n geles a-Cinclnnati . . N ew Y o r k ___ . . . M i l w a u k e e C hicago VV 3 a-O pponent* In n ig h t gam e. TIII RS DA V S GAMES N a t i o n a l J-rag tie H ou ston 2. C h icago 0. San F ran cisco 8 , M ilw au k ee C in cin n ati 6. L os A n g e le s a. O nly gam es. A m erica s L eagu e D e tr o it at W a sh in g to n , ppd. Lets A ngel** J, C h icago 0, M in n esota 9, K an sas C ity 5 O n ly gam es. F R I D A Y ' S SCH L D L 1.1! A m erican L eagu e N e w Y ork (S ta ffo rd 14-9) a t D etro it (C on ley 31-14! at B altim ore (L ary 23-9) B oston (E stra d a 15-9), The University of Texas Open Badminton Tournament opens Sat­ urday, April 14, at IO a m. in Greg­ ory Gym. Finals are tentatively set for 7 p.m. the same day. There will be no admission charge. Seventy participants will com­ pete in five events, men and wo­ m en’s singles, men and women’s doubles, and mixed doubles. About half of the contestants are from athletic clubs and organizations around the re­ the state, while mainder come from various Texas colleges and universities. Top seeded in men's singles are Ben Cole of Dallas, and Dick Dowell from Odessa College. Carl Rennert, Charles Holbrook, and Frank Ray are the top hopes for victories from the the University. and Harold Clark, men's doubles from Dallas, rank tops in their event Hugh Berryman Number one ranked girl Is Vir­ ginia Brown from Odessa College. Ivorrie Muldoon, Roselinda Mont­ real and Linda Fletcher are the top seeded girls from the Univcr- ‘Mural Schedule T E N N IS DOI B L E S D iv isio n Quart.- rf In*!* (la,*** A W ash in gton (B u rn sid e 4 9} at C leve­ land (L a tm a n 13-5). 4 p m Cook and Jord an vs. H er­ China go (H erb ert 12-12) at K ansas nia n.s*m a n d W illis. C ity (D ltm a r 2-8) N L o s A n g eles at M ln n eeota, ppd, sn ow . N ational L eagu e P ittsburgh (Sturdivant 5-2) at New York (Jo n e s 1-1), ( E llsw o rth I‘*-11!. S t L ou is ‘ W ashburn 1-1) a t C h icago M ilw a u k ee (B u rd ett* 18-11) at Los A n g eles (D r y sd a le 13-10!. C in cin n ati (O 'T oole 19-9) F ra n cisco (P ie r c e 10-9) N. H ou ston (F a r r e ll 8-7) at P h ila d e l­ p h ia (M cL lsh 10-13) or (H a m ilto n OO) N. 4 30 p .m .— F . M artin and Blenk vs E M artin and Sudser K uem pel and S im on vs D o ffe r and H ajovsky. ('.rant and Blank vs G allow ay and S eerod . 5 p m —Sim pson and Blake vs. Helm and S h a r p • 4 p .m .— P ic k e tt G ross and W in ter Claa* R and H errin * va 4 30 p .m .—S tr in g e r and Tip; - vs. M onos h ir e and Y oung or V oigt and H olton, 5 p rn,—C om eaux and M an n in g vs and G rube and W ood all Got! vs S im p so n and R a d ia l. Kr sty n ik SENIOR COUNSELOR positions available for males 18 years and over at the Julius Schepps Community Center Day Camp in Dallas, Enjoy a most rewarding and challanging nine weeks, June 18th t h r o u g h August 17th, with children ages 6 through l l . For more information write: Camp Director Julius Schepps Community Center 7900 Northaven Road Dallas, Texas Texas, Baylor Choices In Dallas Invitational By CARLTON STOWERS Texan Sports Staff I/me Star State's The track this week ; wars will be divided with Texas and Baylor competing in the Dallas Invitational end Abi­ le n e Christian and Texas Southern both hosting triangular m eets at home. Track Supervisor Clyde Little­ T h e d i m l y T e x a n ♦Crooks will face a fin* field at milers In Bob Mellegren of Baylor and Texas’ Loy Gunter and Steve Strickland. Another prospective } winner for the AAM crew is big Danny Roberts in the shot and dis­ cus events. Roberts has lost only one shot put event all season. The state’s first sub-47 open quarter of til* season m ay well become a reality Saturday night as Ted ford. Poage and Curson, and Friday, April 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 squad for th* first tim* sine# twisting field will take a 29 rn on to Dallas to compete in the Dallas an ankle in th* West Texas Re- Invitational to be held in C hb Stadium Saturday nicht ‘ They may well save Texas and Taylor are due to battle texas ana L ajio r .u t m e to oat ie for the team title in a field which also includes Southern Methodist and Texas A&M. P. C ! B’s early in March. the b e s t! the times on relay legs. Tedford was relay squad this season; unofficially clocked in 46.8 on his m t i l last Saturday ^ g h t. The mile and i? George Tedford gets the lead-cff leg of the victorious Aggie relfly ]ookg & {our team battle baton near the leaders he could Wk print medley relay last Saturday. every inch of the way with home- bring the Aggies home in front. I a couple of pint sized half la r r y Rhodes of Texas , town SMU, with Jim m y Langham Texas, running with Cram, Randy i milers, the anchor, holding a slight Gurson, Jam es Cooper, and Ray arKi j j m Ronbbaugh of SMU ra te Jon the 880 ’ yard over Texas. Baylor, and AAM. j ru n n in g rate i Charles Rodgers also a capable in * l° Kem P’» great 3:13 0 and could surprise the fay- dash with Rhodes’ lead-off leg, took fifth in the Texas orites, in a best of as cofavorites has turned cod behind SMU who copped fourth spot. A&M is that has been able to defeat Texas unofficially took second behind ACY’ in the Texas Relays i I " V , ! I . ! the Baylor's Roy Smalley hav* all the only team been porting some outstanding — -------------- —.......... ................... while th* Bruins were third. Both Relays last week, only .2 of a sec -1 AAM distance specialist Thad contender. I team s have a prospective double ; winning individual—Bill Kemp of Baylor in the sprints and Texas’ i Ray Cunningham in (he high and low hurdles. Kemp and Cunning- ; ham will duel with each other on j the final log of the 410 yard re­ lay where both team s have speedy foursomes. I lie Steer sprint relay has beaten the Bears three times while Baylor has bested the ’Horns j tv. ice. Casual Cotton Pants A regular J5.00 value. Y ou’ll want to select several pair at this special price. Plain front. T h e s e polished cotton pants are designed for appearance and dependability. Choose from b l u e s , beige, dark brown, d a r k olive, and licht olive. u m rER sm t 2246 Guadalupe Street — In the Co-Op * ■■ ■> «*■ —»-■ * ■ * - j-*,, - j—,i — yr j - gj— np- Another exciting duel looms in the pole vault where Texas’ co Captain Baylus Bennett and SMI s Dexter Elkins have both been we ii the 15-foot barrier, Elkins over ! having a best of 15‘6 V ’ indoors and Bennett boasting a 15 4 V ’ ef­ fort outdoors. Sieve Guy nos. Long­ horn sophomore, looks like a good bet for third by virtue of his fine showing in the Texas Relays, i Steer jumping bean Bobby Wyatt. (Who is a sen.or, will be making I his first college appearance in the Invitational, Wyatt was Dallas {hampered by leg injuries both his sophomore and junior years but j is having a good season this year, having bettered 24 feet twice this spring. Southwest Conference frosh : ti Hist last year, John Cram will . be in the broad jump competition Pagans Bat Paces Giants Win, 8-4 I SAN FRANCISCO eft — Short­ stop Jose Pagan drove in four runs : and scored one Thursday, pacing San Francisco to an 8-4 victory over Milwaukee and a iweep of their three-gam* series. Jack San fwd got credit for the I I I victory but needed help from ace reliever Stu Miller after big Joel Adcock pounded a grand slam home run in the eight)* with none lout. I The undefeated Giants take on ! defending champion Cincinnati Fri- day night. The Giants collected eight hits ! off three Milwaukee pitchers. The Braves had six. A crowd of 9,177 watched the Giants jump into a 4-0 first inning lead against Bob Buhl. The Giants scored twice without a hit off reliever Don Nottebart in th* fourth as he issued three walks and Mack Jones dropped Mays’ fly in rigli* field. ; The Noble Savager4 mf Edited by SAUL BELLOW and KEITH BOTS­ FORD. Th* most exciting Issue thus far. Featuring an ill-tempered blast at Seymour Kern; arias on fallout shelter geopolitics and the dangers of the two cultures view 'by Stephen Spender); "Count Nunn," Push kin's little-known parody of Shakespeare's • The Rape of Lucrece"; 19 poems, and ncm-fiction by Dan Jacobson. A. Sionimskl, and Louis Guilioux. "A most remarkable paperback periodical." — Herald Tribune News Service. M125 / 256 pages / $1.53 LOVE AND DEATH IN THE AMERICAN NOVEL By LESLIE FIEDLER. A provocative, frankly Freudian comparative study of American fiction from Cooper to Kerouac. "O n * of the most ambitious surveys of our liters lure since Parrmgton's Main C u rren ts..." — Malcolm Cowley/ MG43/640 pages S2 25 NOW in sn Inexpensive paperback edition THE RECOGNITIONS By w illia m CADDIS The modern novel that has become a classic. MF29 / 960 pages / Only $2,?f FREE CATALOG MERIDIAN BOOKS ars used ss Inex­ pensive paperbound texts and read­ e rs in u n iv e r s itie s and ju n io r c o lle g e s . Se n d fo r c a ta lo g of In major disciplines: basic titles M E R ID IA N B O O K S, D ept. CP, Th* World Publishing Company 119 West 57th S t , New York 19. , R a t h e r sporting old fashioned figures of a ! cricketer, doing all the traditional things with a bat. Perhaps c l o s e study could give one a working knowledge of the game. Perhaps not. In any case, a splendid I match for t h e tradi- ► clonal restraint of the I collarless V i l l a g e r classic in cotton broad W hite or Beige Black- ( cloth. ground. Sizes 6 to 14. C i x i p k . C c m p k d L iin t w r s ih j S h a p 2350 Guadalupe "OKAY, KID, HAND OVER THEM RANGERS!" A word of warning to R A N G ER readers, lf you go near the campus construction sites to­ day, guard your RANGERjs) well. The workers thereon, titillated by the R A N G E R S seamy reputation, are drooling with anticipation. Who knows, you may even be accosted by these crazed persons, lf so, clutch your RANGER(s) and run! O U T FRIDAY! SALES B O O T H S ALL O V E R THE PLACE! T W O BITS! (plus tax) H U M O R ! C A R T O O N S ! P H O T O G R A P H S! P R IN T IN G ALL O V E R IT! BUY! r a n g e r r a n g e r r a n g e r r a n g e r r a n g e r r a n g e r r a n g e r r a n g e r C ase In point: Sero*# Alpine Oxford. Not# th# softened collar, the tailor-bred body of thin half sleeved button down P im a Oxford Voile cla ssic in white. This is ahlrtm anship. $5 85 *746 Guadalupe S tre e t Friday. April 13, 1 9 6 2 T H I D AILY TEXAN Pa ga 4 Horn Homers A x Rice B r P E T E O P P E L Texan Sports Staff HOUSTON (Sol.I Tile heavy he of Gary London, i David Skinner and Chuck Knutson powered the longhorns past 4he Rice Owk, 7*2, Thursday afternoon at Rice Field. C atcher London led the Horns* attack with two home runs. as he drove across four rbi's Skinner also hit a four bager, and Knutson tagged one 360 feet over the center field fence. Ed Kasper was robbed of another home nm when Butch Frosh Thresh Owlets by 13-1 Coach Roy Enderlin’s Yearling baseballer? won t h e i r seventh straight contest Thursday afternoon as the Texas frosh bombed the Rice Owlets, 13-1. The Yearlings will play again Friday afternoon when they will take on W harton Ju n ior College at Clark Field. Game time is 3 p.m. Texas, which lost its opening game, handled t he Owlets with great ease as the Orange scored runs in every inning except the sixth and seventh. Freshm an pitching ace Joh n Collier, who racked up his fourth win against no losses, al­ lowed only four hits in seven innings. Russell Poland, who relieved Collier, allowed the Owlets only two. Texas, which gathered 13 hits off Rice loser Tex Spear, was led by the power hitting of Ed Denman, Regis Wroble- ski, and Ron Bandy. Rice T exas OOO OOO 001— 1 134 130 01X — 13 The new outrage by the IN and OUT boys WORRY BOOK by Robert Benton and Haney Schmidt An invaluable guide to the correct'w ay to worry, with special attention to which wor­ ries arc BASIC and which are BA R O Q U E. With basic illustrations, ONLY $1.95 Vt Kl NG At bookstores, probably THE DAPPER HOUSE R E S T A U R A N T OI R SPECIA LTY IS GOOD FO O D , STEAKS A SFA FOC ‘OS L u riches an d C o rn p ie ie P in n e r s Looted on right, just past first signal light after Bobby Lane s Bowling Alley 11 a.m . to 11 p.m . H I 4-1665 2034 South Lamar Closed M ondan m s s s 5501 AIRPORT BLVD. ISC0UNTS i §g WITH A CAPITAL "D” GET THE BEST EVERYDAY D ISC O U N T at ■ S P A R T A N ’S "S M O K E SH O P m SP A R T A N 'S "BOTTLE SH O P i i a a m rn i i ■ ■ I I B I I Blume Jumped high in the air and caught his fly to deep left. - The force of the ball carried Blume over the fence, but , " lS a ’ e tr> ^ anS on to the ball for the out — —*«*.«* SWtener s blast started T exas scoring in the first half of the second. A fter Knutson had flied to left, Lew Brazelton got to first via a Rice miscue. John Pinckney fouled to the catcher and London followed by hitting the first pitch over the left field barrier for his first home run of the day. The Horns continued the attack in their half of the third. P at Rigby singled to left, Kasper sacrified him to second, and Skinner drove him home with a single to left. The O r a n g e picked up*--------------------------------------------- l e f t off In the where they fourth, when Brazelton sin­ gled to left, and, after Pinck­ ney flied o u t to shortstop, London blasted his second out of tho p a r k , making it 6-0 Texas. R ice third sa ck er, followed with a double to right cen ter, driving Stephenson and B lu m e a cro ss for the Owls’ only two ta llies. After a conference on the mound, Horn Coach B ib b F a lk pulled B e l­ ch er fav or of sophom ore re ­ liev er R ob ert M yer. in R ic e ’s pitching settled down, and M yer cam e through in g r a n d style, as he stru ck out the first . refused the H orns any m ore runs t" ’0 m en to fa ce him, Jo e l T ig ett until then the eighth, when all-Am erl- ®nd Randy Kerbow. M yer l o f t e d his forced G ary West to ground out ca n Chuck Knutson round trip p er o\ c r the ce n te r field fen ce with nobody on b ase. to the pitcher fo r the third out. --- --------- . M yer put R ice down in ord er in its win, the ninth to give T exa s and ke( p the th ick of th# ra c e fo r the co n fer­ ence crown. the Longhorns in T exa s collected six singles and the four home runs for all its total of hits, with everybody e x c e p t the two Kasper Pinckney, a n d I P itchers getting a R ic e ride cm the into b itte rs ’ wagon I B e lc h e r pitched seven com plete I innings, striking out four and issu­ ing only three passes. He said a f­ te r the gam e. “ I couldn’t get my cu rv e over. The sinker w as the only thing that got m e by. They w ere bound to sta rt hitting m e sooner or la te r ." r Ii r i d 0 I I 1 o Wayne McClelland w-ent the dis- 0 2 2 la n ce for R ice in the losing effort. 1 p 0 0 The Owls host T exas again F r i ­ o 0 I 0 o o : day a t 2:30 p m. for the final gam e 0 n I 0 0 0 j in the cu rrent series. 0 0 2 0 T e x a s returns hom e fo r a two gam e session with the B a y l o r B e a r s M onday and Tuesday. Tom B e lc h e r pitched ru nless ball wbde sca tte rin g four hits until the bottom of the eighth, when Joh nny Stephenson of R i c e punched a short grounder down the third base line, B e lc h e r pounced on the bal!. b u t h is to B razelto n wt* wide a t firs* throw B lu m e, th e second m an up in the inning, clubbed an 0-1 pitch righ t for a single, pushing Stephenson to third . Jim Fo x , the field Box BICK T E X A S (|| a!> r h rb l B eth ea ss 5 0 I 0 S tep ’I R igby 2b 3 I 2 0 Blum K asp er 3b 3 Skin r r f 5 K nu t’n lf 4 B r a / n I h 4 Psnc’y r f 4 L o n d o n c 4 B e l c h e r p 3 I M v e r p SS T o t a l s a b 0 S tep ’n 2b 4 4 0 Blume 3 0 F o x 3b 2 Tis t lh 3 1 Her bo’ c 4 0 W est c f 4 3 0 P y l e ss 4 R a e s ' r r f 4 0 M et?S e’ p 4 T e x a s Rica ............. .. .................... 031 200 010—7 OOO OOO 020—3 Belcher F o x 2. T igett I. FO-A— T exas 27-7. Rice 27-5. DP—B ethea, R igby and B razeiion ; F o x. Stephen­ son and T ig ett. LOB— Texas 6, Rice 7. 2B— F o x H R — T/mdon 2, Skinner. Knutson, S Kasper 2. xB elch er (W .O -l) 7 M y e r ............................... 2 11*0-1) 9 McClel'nd fi o IO x-Faced 3 B atters tn 8th P B — London. Domingue. T —2 12. IF B R ER BB IO i I 0 0 7 5 3 4 0 3 2 4 U mpires—- Mugg and Finsterwald Leads Greensboro Open G R E E N S B O R O , N. C. UA-Dow Fin sterw ald , low m an on the totem pole in the M asters Golf Tou rna­ m ent playoff th re# days ago, re ­ bounded with a 6-under-par 65 ta k e a first round T hu rsday tw o-stroke $35,000 G re a te r G reensboro Open T ou rna­ ment. to th# lead in T h e S2-year-old T equ esta. F la ., professional, who h a sn 't w*on a tournam ent since scoring a t New O rleans ov er two y e a rs ago, put together nines of 32-33 a g a in st p ar of 36-35 for the 7,000 muddy yard s of the Sedgefieid Country Club. His score wa# one ov er the tournam ent record set 21 y e a rs ago by Byron Nelson and put him fo rm er US two shots ahead of Open Champion Ju liu s B o ro s of Southern P in es, N .C ., who carded 33-34-67, Arnold P a lm e r, M asters c h a m ­ pion, was in an eight-w ay tie fo r ( 29th place with a p ar 71. Seven m ore pros w ere one stroke b ack a t 69 and 13 shot 70. am ong them Sam Snead who Is j a fte r his eighth G reensboro v ic­ tory. C A T C H ER G A R Y L O N D O N . . . slams two round trippers a g a in st Owls Celtics Nip Lakers The n e x t g am e is scheduled here Satu rd ay night and the sixth bu* k un Los A ngeles Monday. the seventh gam e is needed it will be here n ext W ednesday. If " I think we can win one g a m e in Boston and I know w e ’ll win hack hom e M o n d ay ," said L a k e r Coach Fred S ch au s. Dallas, Houston, LA Bid For He a v y w e i g h t Fight ton and Los Angeles j N EW Y O R K UPI — D a lla s, Hous­ a re j am ong the bidders fo r tile Floyd : Patterson-Sorm y Liston h e a v y. • weight title fight, it w as learn ed I Thursday. T he site and d a te are j to be announced Monday, still to pick the rig tr P atterson , the defending ch am ­ pion, h a s the site. Chs D ’ Am a to, the ch a m p ’s ad­ viser in New Y ork and m an ag er in m an y sta tes, has been in c o n - . ta c t with groups from m any cities, j So have rep resen tativ es of Cham ­ pionship Sp orts, In c., the prom ot­ ers, It w as learn ed th a t the Cotton Bowl in D a lla s m ight be a v a ila b le j , if the D a lla s group succeeded in w resting the fight aw ay from New j Y ork , w hich appeared to be in the lead. If the fight is held in Los Angeles it would be fought in the 1 Coliseum . P resu m a b ly the new j Houston b all p ark would be the ; site in Houston, A guaran teed gate j of $1 m illion m ust be assured. BO STO N Lf) — The revived B os­ ton C eltics hav e regain ed a h air­ line edge over I.os A ngeles in the B a sk etb a ll A ssociation N ational playoff finals. Sm ooth execution of th e ir m ust form ula i-!1 relen tless running, hot shooting (50 p e r cent'1 and board • crashing produced a 115-103 v ictory at I n s A ngeles W ednesday night and evened the bost-of-7 se rie s, 2-2. " I f s down to a best-of-3 series, now ," said Boston Coach Red Auer­ bach, "a n d w e’ll be playing two I at horn''1, which is in our fa v o r ." Texas League to Begin N ew Season on Friday B y Th e A ssocltaed P resa T he T e x a s League lau n ch es its sixty-seventh season F rid a y night with two brand new m em b ers —- Albuquerque and E l P a so —- and an op tim istic outlook. An atten d an ce in cre a se of 300,- 000 is an ticip ated , this based on w hat P resid en t D ick B u tler ca lls b etter stab ility. " I n ev ery city we have good ow nership, w ealth has returned to the leagu e and every club has a g;*>i, strong w orking a g re e m e n t," said B urler. "T h e r e also wall be an in, the leagu e’s a re a with Albuquerque and E l P a s o rep la cin g Ardm ore and V ic to ria ." in population in rce a se The leagu e drew 468,181 last y ea r, Tho opening sch ed u le: E l P a so at A lbuquerque, 7:45 ‘ M S T ), 4,000 a tten d an ce. Austin a t San Antonio, 7 :4 5 p.m . p m . (C S T ), 3,750 (C S T ., 2 500. Tulsa a t A m arillo, 7:45 p.m . A m arillo, the pennant w inner last ye a r, is expected to be the clu b to b ea t once m ore, with E l P a so r a t­ ed around the top on th e basis of its spring showing. Toddy** apparel trend! toward narrow trousers and a more natural look dem and* shoe fashion! Im the same character, tighter* trimmer, dimmer W inthrop tapered toe* fashions th!* elegant trend to a T. MAIOLO# Tint m n ten? Hawi jacket •rim*# wit* -'wt af autharte Tiki Scull SS 95. Hew* iii* cut trunk* J * 95. got* af 100% toffee ie Calera et *eraiij*, |'**i ar I .« cc whit*. MAIOLO# KTV WEST terry flnad jacket la •arenae end green euler eomFnetloni wown of M iasm a 1 0 0 % cotton SS 95. Ta**'ad wits Hawaii** cwt cotton trunk* 15 95. SPINNAKER STRIPE launch#* brilliant* In kelt combo of * r m 'rad m d brown//e s * . Cotton blaiar $ 8 .9 5 w ar Hawi in trunk* $ 7 .9 5 . Cotton *nd rubbar M uir* ria knit Funk* $ 6 .9 5 . CeDcs&iTjCj tTLx_-JO U J M & T tr n a jr i i - o J «.*_> J Lug) U U ct r n n rMAH (with am All-Amtncan Look) Brighten th * shoreline scen* in b rillian t rrim w e a r created In th# g re a t American tra d itio n . . . guaranteed to command rare# from your adm iring crew ! FASHION TODAY'S NARROW TROUSERS DEMAND TRIM TAPERED TOES... STYLED BY P S J ’ W I N T H R O P spring clothing seminar topic one: THE CORRECT SPORT SHIRT iK A A s r A E J i v. M i l M il I* ben color tnt rid pullover I'. 95 atop atli*** Witt l r * Off Itrtjlh de n pants $7.95 »y*J. tomb na- en* #( aataertitr Ie* #f 10C% MUM. 1 V4LOLO® KON TIKI rugj.d wevau jacket w;tfc ambotaac aphanite Tiki haad on lac •od trv n u SE 95. Ha** un trunk* $7 55. Bot* cf cotton In eoior* ti ‘ natural, j*i» lo*, pawtar or btu*. MAIOLO* MIDSHIPMAN, banded with bold trim. In ’ whit*, natural, pewter or new. Windworthy jacket o* cotton sib $7.95, Hawaii** length testee cord trunk* ti acetate, cotton and rubbar $6 95, •featured eclat Cc a ma, inc., L ot A n gelet, Calif., Another Fine T v L K ayser-Roth P rod u ct. Y O U R C A M P U S HEADQUARTERS FOR . . . S W IM W E A R T od ay'* ta p e re d , clo se f i t g %'n-h re q u F a a ie p e re d sp ort ih trt, O u r iou re? th o Enro C o m * p a n /, Has d ev elo p e d th e p e rfe c t ta p e r e d shirt, A ve labia in a wide v a riety c f m u*' i d s c n e a t stripes, colorful prints, and ic ;ids. F R O M $4.00. Black or Copper 14.95 LARGEST M A N S SHOP “On the D r a g ” 2332 G U A D ALU PE 2348 Guadalupe — On the Drag Specializing in C ollegiate Fashions Students Dept. — 3 r d R o o t M ilk Bu. 616 C O N G R E S S A Guide to the Extremes of Politics Old Wives Tales T h e D a il y T e x a n Campus Life Friday, April 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 Bv BENNIE DALE LANSFORD » You’d better bring out your good luck charm s, for today is F riday i the Thirteenth, th a t is if you be­ lieve that thirteen is unlucky. ! sam e, it is our duty to know the j w hy’s and w herefore's of these two g re a t headhunting parties. And the job isn ’t so easy as looking to see w hat hand and foot they use on cigarettes. A lot ot them don t smoke. Of course, it is just superstition that F riday, or the thirteenth of the month, or F rid a y the Thir- j month is unlucky. It is just an old wheeze like "F rid ay is a dry d ay,” j or . . . ! white horses and the bad ones rode I J blacks. This is known as the f i r s t ! oolor line, FL en as recent as the televi­ led Three Lives,” J sion show, “ I it Wit* fvisy to tell who was good ami who was a cad, As a means of identifying to Herb themselves Philbrlrk, the HH agents would snatch a half -smoked cigarette from their clenched Ups with their right hands and grind it out with their right foot, or feet. Conven­ t h e < omman Ut agent* iently,, would use their left ham!, their left feet, ami a different Thus okl Herb knew the score all the time, cigarette, j J But alas, things were not always j easy In the life of a eounter-spy. : Once our man Herb found himself watting on the bus—it was a low' budget show—In the company of an agent from both sides. Very j calmly Herb sized up the situation. He spit the cigarette from his Ups and casually jumped on it with botii feet. Consequently, the two agents scurried off In their respec­ tive directions—left and right. This exam ple is not to say that what is right is good and w hat is j left is C om m unist On the con- J trary , it is used to illustrate the j problem in identifying the differ- j cot political right, theorists, left and qualified voters, or wives of By fHwrg# Phenix (Wives, of qualified voters need tm be Informed, for som eday they, too, might be considered qualified voters. This, then, is the family guide to periodical voting.) leftist The trouble with politics today is th a t the left hand knows what the rig h t is doing and doesn't like it. Arni both etdf* have their es trem ee. On one hand, we have the ra d ic a l, liberals, On one hand, the reactionary right con. •ervatlvea are hee kerning. On the other hand, we wear both gloves. Do we really need both hands to run the governm ent? Probably s<>, As com edian Shelly B erm an puts It, "H ave you ever heard the sound of one hand clapping?" One group is needed to hold the reins of gov­ ernm ent while the other tries to the give the hand signals. It is sw orn duty of one to oppose the other. Both liberals and conservatives sw ear to lie the best Com munis t- hunters in the nation, .Sometimes, however, their efforts to seek out people who like to paint the town red are rem indful of the two old m aids who never went to bed with­ out first looking under the bcd for b u rglars hopefully, that both It is natural sides would look first under the other s bed. Lots of tainted people have that way. But wait I tieen found How can the A m erican people be assured that they choose the right m an for the job? Who knows who finds Com munists the best? In the old days, the ta sk was a sim ple rode color test -the good guys THE UNIVERSITY’S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO A N D HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER MIO Speedway S R 8-4409 S e r v i n g the University area for I J years EEDWAY "HIGH FIDELITY AT REASONABLE PRICES” "HAVE YOU HEARD THE GOOD NEWS? IT’S EASY TO PAY FOR TSO CONTACT LENSES NOW.’ "YOU MEAN THE NEW, TSO SPECIAL STUDENT BUDGET PLAN r As Interested voters, we sta rt by gathering views from leaders on both sides as to w hat their party stands for. To the casual reader, reactionary and radical could pos­ sibly m ean the sam e thing, But this is not the case. About the only thing the two have in common is a m utual noise level. L et’s consult B arry Coldwater, who everybody knows is a conserv­ ative who (Mice shaved with peanut butter on a dare, and Adi ai Stev­ enson, the liberal who once gave the shoe rep air business as much help as Kennedy has the rocking chair industry. C oldwater once said, " I have little interest in stream lining gov­ ernm ent or in making it m ore ef­ ficient, for I m ean to reduce its size . . . I propose to extend free­ dom. “Thus for Uie A m erican conserv­ ative there Is no difficulty in Iden­ tifying the d ay 's challenge: It is to p re s e n e and extend freedom . first Always conservative's the concern will be: Are we m axim iz­ ing freedom ?” In May, 1956, Stevenson gave this definition of a liberal: j “ F irst he (the liberal) believes in the existence of a future, and believes th a t it can lie made a good future. Although he respects the past, he has no desire to tinker with the clock or turn It back. He says, ‘We cannot drift, we m ust I go.’ “ He walks ahead in courage and steadfastness, with a m inimum of the ob- I backw ard glances, : scure, unknown future. In contrast ; to this, the reactionary em always tell you w here he has been.” into ! So, we have collected the aim s of both sides. And, sad to say, nei­ ther side offers any solution as to which is the best. I Today, as always, both cam ps ane scream ing about the inadequa- ! d e s of the other. The John Birch Society has been called a worse m enace than the Communists. The Am ericans for D em ocratic Action That Unlucky D ay Is Here have occurred on this day, accord­ ing to one reference or another. Everyone knows Thirteen is believed to lie bad luck because Jesus and his twelve disciples m ade thirteen a t the last supper before the Crucifixion. This superstition is fu rther added to by ancient Egyptian, Teuton. Roman, Norse, and B rahm an tales of woe. incidents and accidents th a t happen on F r i­ day the T hirteenth a re just coin­ cidences, but for the few who get jitte rs at the m ere thought of this luckless day, two ac­ cepted methods of getting through F riday the Thirteenth without ca­ lamity. th ere a re that The Stoic system requires w rap­ ping a white sheet around the body and thinking of Truth, Honor, and Beauty for 24 hours Of course, this m ethod w as not devised for Uni­ versity students who have to think about English and chem istry ail the time. Tile E picurean system consists of throwing wild drinking parties (sounds practical, doesn't it.) This system w as probably m ade by col­ lege students for college students. But if you are the typical college student, you don’t believe in inces­ sant bad luck on F riday the Thir­ the teenth, and sanest attitude to take on the sub­ ject. this is probably After all, how m any really b e ­ lieve that just b«M*ause It’s Friday the Thirteenth, something horrible is liable to happen? But if you are one of the few who believe thirteen is unlucky and c a rry good luck charm s with you to w ard off ill luck, you m a\ be unwittingly carry in g m any sym ­ bols of the num ber in the form of A m erican dollars. Look at the back of a dollar bill (if you have one, if not borrow one). On the G reat Seal of the U nited States, there are thirteen bars, an eagle with thirteen feathers in its tail and holding in its left claw thirteen darts, and in its right, an o l i v e branch bearing thirteen leaves and thirteen olives; and the motto is thirteen letters-—“ E P luri­ bus U num .” thirteen stars, Hm ram . Come to think of it the country did go dry, or at least the 18th Am endm ent w ent into effect on a F riday. This is pure coinci­ dence, of course. Walking under ladders, stepping on banana peels, broken mirrors, and black cats are all coincidence, of course, w ith no m ore meaning than the old Pennsylvania Dutch belief ini ade your fairies house on Fridays, They won t hurt you if you say, “a blessing attend their departing and traveling; this day is Friday and they will not hear us.” that Nobody believes in this sort of; thing nowadays, but just to be on the safe side since today is F ri­ day the T hirteenth; “ A blessing a t­ tend . . In C entral T exas years ago. a m an was passing out cigars when the doctor arrived. “ Well, Doc," he said, “ you arrived just thirteen minutes too late. I t ’s a boy, th ir­ teen pounds, th irteen ounces, ' “ What did you expect?” the doc­ to r retorted. “ It s FVI day th e T hir­ teenth. and you live thirteen miles out in the country." You say, “ So w hat! It’s ju st co­ is still it incidence.” Of course, just coincidence th at this young m an on his thirteenth birthday on F riday the Thirteenth broke his leg and that some years later fail­ ed to be discharged from tile arm s on the 13th because of illness. To those few superstitious peo­ ple left, triskadekaphobia (fear of the number IS) originated for them with the Bible which gave birth to the notion of Friday being ac­ cursed. Noah’s Flood, confusion at Babel, Eve’s stealing of th«* apple, and Jesus' death all were said to J i n J n vitals on lo HOLY WEEK Devotional Services at UNIVERSITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 2203 San Antonio M O N D A Y through TH U RSD A Y April 16-19 12:05-12:30 p.m. PARTICIPATING M IN I ST I RS Monday; The Rev. Blake Smith Tuesday: The Rev. John C. Towery' The Rev.William T . Gibble Wednesday: The Rev. Lewis P. Speaker Thursday: The Rev. James W m. Morgan Worship Leader; The Rev. William M. Logan A Ugh' tun h u ill 'he 'en rd at 12 JO T h at’s right, T S O now has a special budget plan available to students who are fitted in fam ous T S O Micro-Sight C ontact Lenses. SPECIAL STUDENT BUDGET PLAN JU ST $15 DOW N AND $10 PHR M O N T H F O R F IV E M ONTH S. The total cost for f a m o u s T S O S I N G L E V I S I O N C o n t a c t Lenses is the s a m e . . . just $65 C O M P L E T E with professional eye E X A M IN A T IO N — m aintaining T S O ’s long-standing policy of convenient credit at no extra cost. T S O C o n ta c t Lenses are the finest q u a lity lenses a va ila b le an \ where, at an y price. j P R E C MMU— ■!*' ■ Hlllil llliy-1- ( SI ON VI SI ON -a* SIMC! H J J _ • iMiilTiI "T o ms Starej f | jpncflt^V CONTACT LENS SPECIALISTS Capita! Plata GL 2-4386 H E B Canter H I 4-2133 Downtown 907 Congee** G R 8-4661 ■ mm* mmfizgig Directed bv Dr S. J. Rogers. Dr N. Jay Rogers, Optomitrists e . / A s o c i a l G a ien d i a r Frida;r 6-5 -Phi Gamma D elta casual buffet, chapter house. 6:30-9 -F Sigm a Alpha Initiation ban­ quet. Kitchen' Post. 8-11 Phi Delta Theta Informal, Aus­ tin Civic Theater. 8-12—Acacia casual w ith D elta Zeta. chapter house. 8 12 Alpha E psilon P i casual. Club 8 1 2-D elta Tau D elta casual, chapter 8-12—Kappa Alpha Informal, chapter 8-12 Lambda Chi Alpha casual. Water- 8-1.: Phi D elta OU wood Rec P a rk inform al, Web- 8-12 - Pi Kappa Alpha casual, chapter Hut house house front house. Mato rd ar 12 noon -Chi Omega retreat, TA Ranch, VV im her I ny L2 noun Phi S. g n u Kappa house party Fort Claik. 12-6—Pl Beta P hi retreat, J o tt y * Ranch, Austin 1-6—Delta Upsilon lake party, Lake I 3 ■ 8 Navy ROTC picnic. Pease Park. 2- 6 T au Beta Pl picnic, Z ilker Park. 7-10—Kappa Kappa Gamma Initiation banquet. Terrace Motel. 7 ,TNH 30 — D elta G am m a Westwood Country Club. banquet, 7:30-12—C ordate* geml-formal, Berg­ strom A l B ?« r house. 8-12—Alpha Epsilon Pl casual, chap- 8-12—Crow * N est casual 1010 VV 24th. 8-12 Delta Zeta casual, Saengerrunde. 8-12—Sigma Chi casual, chapter house, Inform al, Zilker Club 8-12—TLO K Informal, fau Kappa Epsilon te r house t:lver Spurs formal, K nights of H rem edies headache has been labeled as being far more w orrisom e than the John Birchers. And have boomed to a new high sales level. the John Birch So­ Incidentally, ciety has absolutely no connections with the outdoor toilet m anufac­ tu re rs in California who call them ­ selves the Birch John Society. B ut this defining of term s still leaves a big blank in the minds of m any voters. Both sides can prove th eir capabilities as Communist headhunters, and both can illus­ tra te the failures of the other. So here we sit som etim es thinking about it, but very seldom doing a thing about finding out the G reat T ruth for ourselves, With all Ibis confusion of terms floating around ta thr voter’s it duty to see where ©an Ii candidate stands. If he is in front of you, you can observe that his right Is to your left. If he Is lo the side of you, then all hands point the same way. B ut if he is behind you, he is probably a Communist and either a right- or a left-handed cam paign­ e r would be glad to point a finger a t him. So see where you stand, see wive re they stand, and when you all get tired of standing—invite them in for a beer. Arui watch for those am ong you who smoke a cig­ a re tte with both hands. F N ow .,,find new complexion magic with a pure c o sm e tic ...andHypo-Atlergenic. u From “teen-ager” to “young at-heart" *> A I. MAY Cosmetics can make your complexion dream come true. From lipsticks and make-ups to com-*y plexion creams for normal, J dry or oily skins. Per* p i 5 5 gjrfn fumed or Unscented. * irritants screened out B I i Foundations—$1.50 plus tax 12 Lipsticks—81.25 plus tax Fowd«rs —$1.50 plus tax r FAULKNER'S DRUG GR 2-2134 W E CASH CHECKS ■ 26th Be G uadalupe . ry BR I BR r> I * Chances are, you know that Greyhound fares are less than any other form of public transportation, What you probably don’t realize is how much lass. For a pleasant surprise, check the meney-saving Greyhound fares below. You’ll see at a g la n ce w h y it alw ays pays to in sis t on e x clu sive Greyhound Scenicruiser Service?..and leave the driving to usl No other form of public transportation has fares so low For example: AMARILLO On* way $15.05 Round trip $27.10 BEAUMONT On* way $7.65 Round trip $13.80 CORPUS CHRISTI On* way $6.90 Round trip $12.45 DALLAS On* way $5.95 Round trip $10,75 FORT WORTH On* way $5.70 Round trip $10.30 LAREDO On* way $7.00 Round trip $ SAN ANTONIO On* way $2.4)5 Round trip TULSA, OKLA. On* way $14,00 R oun d trip $ W A CO On* way $3.15 Round trip Mw GR 2- AAOGAGf! Yow e*" taka r*on anta yow aa « Grayftouad >t you pr*f*i land laundry ar ait?* UMH* on ah*a« fey Gray noun* AacWf* tap-tat kl tharf rn hours . and c g»ti .yow tit 118 E. loth ANNOUNCEMENT TO FACULTY AH faculty members are invited to attend an exhibit of Coll ier's new line of qualify paperback books, Tues­ day, April 17 at HEM PHILL'S B O O K S T O R E - 2244 Guadalupe. A complimentary book will be sent every­ one attending this exhibit. (where you'll find th e nicest ways to get away!) Y ou w o n ’t fin d a v a c a t io n - brightening variety like th is any­ where else. And now that spring has sprung, th e b uys are ju st as tem p tin g as the w eather. Your choice of l l new-size C h evy II m o d e ls . F o u r te e n s p a c io u s , spirited Jet-sm ooth Chevrolets. And a n ifty , nim Vile crew of rea r-en g in e C orvairs. T h ree com plete lines of cars—and we mean com p lete—to cover ju st ab ou t an y kind of going you could have in m ind. And all under one roof, too! Y ou just w on ’t find better pickings in size, sizzle and sa v in g s an yw h ere under th e sun. And you couldn't pick a better tim e than n ow — during your C hev- rolet dealer’s F un and S u n Days. jm U M h tW ■ ■ ■ •-'» fti OW F L Y A M I S L X DAYS ATTOUR CHEVROLET DEALERS __ 4-door sta tio n WAGON Jd-sm ooikie that ride* just right, loaded or light icdA 97.5-cu.-ft. cargo cate and Full Coil C O R C IR MONZA 4-DOOR SEDAN From sn a p p y interiors to en re-footed ,*rof, th is Oiuft got the gift o f m aking sport of most an y tr ip . NEW CHITTY IT NOTA STATION WAGON Here*8 a wagon that sells at a compact m ice, yet totes in a big w ay with a longer load floor than a n y compact—over 9 ft* with second seat arid tailgate down. See the new Chevrolet Chevy II and Cortair at your Chevrolet dealer's One-Slop Shopping Cmi& Sweet Bird of Youth' O p e n s Tonight at A C T P layin g the pert of C h a n c e Wayne, a handsome gigoio Fred Murphy has returned to his home­ town to appear in the Austin Civic Theater s production of Tennessee W illiam s- "Sw eet Bird of Youth.” which opens Friday, Murphy, a movie and TV' a tor has appeared in “ Tile Alamo * and “ The i Ast Tim e I Saw A rchie1* and TV *howst ' Hie New Breed “ The R obert Taylor Show ’ M av­ erick.” and others. The P rincess, a has-been actress and Chance Wayne her chauffeur and/or lover, dominate the play with them attem pts to escape from ’ reality'. She resorts to drugs and alcohol and he looks for a quick, no-work v. ay to the top of the mo\ ;:e field. The act: rn takes j> ace In Chance's hometown where he has brought the Princess to help further his designs for fame and success. Doris Viola w ill play the actress. Supporting her and Murphy w ill be Fred Glenn and Fred Dehn who w ill alternate as Tom Fin ley Jr . and Stuff a Negro bartender. Je ri Mooney and Anna Lois Whiting w ill alternate in the part of Heav­ enly Finley. Tickets can be reserved by can­ ing th# box office, G R 6-054L Also appearing ar# W illiam T. Stew art (Boss F in le y ), Joanne Un- dig (M iss L u c y ), E th e l L ittle (Aunt I Nonnie), A lan Causey (The Heck- le r), W orth Howe (S c o tty ), Steve Sanders -Bud), G a il Sab and Mer- jr i Leu W illiam s (V io le t), Ruth Copeland and S y lv ia M urphy ( E d ­ na i, and Donald Adam s (the Pag e­ boy), Students’ Voice in Policy Subject of Radio Forum How large a voice should stu­ dents have in U n ive rsity p olicies? This question w ill be discussed at 8 10 p.m . W ednesday on “ Telopin- io n/' K T E C Radio. F ra n k Cooksey, Austin attorney and graduate of the U n iversity, w ill give his opinion in a three- m inute sum m ary. Then listeners m ay call in their opinions. ACCLAIMED ON ALL THE GREATEST PICTURE’ LISTS! -Mfw roe* TIMES •aSSocIaTEd miss •(OS ANGUIS TIMES -fiMf MACA TINI -emo/r nm mss -commonwia* Mf tv roe* M WO* — m am.1 Mfws - f : STON don SAMUEL BRONSTON c iARLTON SOPHIA ESTON LOREN Brahms1 Requiem to Be Sung By UT Chorus and Orchestra ........................ Brahm s* “ Requiem ” w ill b# pre- j George Gibson, also a Fulb right I H e made hts debut In 1958 as sented by the U n iversity Chorus winner, studied G erm an Opera in j Alidoro in Rossini's “ l-a Ceneretl- the j told” w ith the Santa F e Sum m er and the U n iversity Sym phony O r­ United States he earned his m as-j Opera. Since the fall of 1959, he ter s degree at the U n iversity. He has been on the m usic faculty of also taught voice and sang in a J Northwestern State College of Lou- chestra at 8:15 p m . Tuesday in the Texas Union M ain Ballroom . - M unich. A fter returning to - - M o rris J . Beach y, associate pro- number of operatic perform ances, isiana. fessor of m usic, w ill direct. Solo- isis are N orm a Newton, soprano, and George Gibson, baritone. M rs. Newton, who received her from m aster’s degree In m usic 1 th# U n iversity, studied a y e a r in P a ris on a Fu lb rig h t scholarship. Recen tly, she starred as M ind in the U n ive rsity presentation of " L a Bohem e.” This sum m er she w ill sing the role of Desplna in M ozart's “ Cos! F a n Tutte” w ith the Santa F e O pera Com pany. Wanner of the Southwestern R e ­ gional Auditions of the Metropoli- K iA T in tsJA i R A I I C T o c r A M A f u f ~ {ta n o p era this ye ar, M rs. Newton NATICWAL BALLET OF CANADA is shown in dance Princess I received an all-expense-paid trip to New York to sing for Rudolf Sleeping Beauty.' xvi a IL/ sink tor miaou I I be presented by the C E C W ed nesda * be presented by the CEC Wednesday evening in ; Bing, d irecto r of the M etropolitan tdiforium. rickets are now being drawn. j Opera. .rom the lchaikovsky ballet music et Aurora the com pany w M unic i pa I Au ... - - J . l • l l 815 E. 531/j HO 5-691 S P E C IA L —N ow Through Easter Colorful Cymbedium Orchid Corsages $2.00 e a c h Cut Flowers—Pot Plants—Arrangements SAN JACINTO CAFE Fro# Parking I* tha JADE ROOM Park'rg lot-next dos* SPECIALIZING IN DELICIOUS MEXICAN AND AMERICAN FOODS Visit Our Re mbow Dining Room OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK I6 T H A N D S A N JA C IN T O GR 8-3984 bacchanal A t D rip new sstands, th e C o-O p, and in fro n t o f Jack s Party Pictures M onday only. MONDAY! A MOTION PICTURE THAT BREAKS A IT DARES TO BE DIFFERENT!' IT DARES U N S AND VERY BLUNT!! A Great, Dynamic Story . . . Like None You’ve Ever Seen v 4 Before! W f I n C l rn* mascot*# F o r in t e llig e n t a d lib * . *' rh o M a r k ” -h nulil bi- n o t o nly a trip p in g . o f I *> it poignant d ra m a b u t a m ea ain t; Itll k in d o f s o cia l c in e m a a* w e ll. JO I! \ B l S U N O PEN 11:45 ADULTS ONLY T O N IG H T A T 8! R e t u r n e d fu r tho se w h o m issed H I H I N ” is re p e a te d it, fo r y o u r e n jo y m e n t “ R C I J f K D gg plus! R E G . FEA T . " . NiQU£NC£S lh 3 0 It's "Europe's Answer To Mr. Teas" m a s ; ADULT 60c K I N E K O O K S ! CHILD FREE P L A V K K O I M I ! S n a rk B a r o pen 6 :3 0 ; 1st sh o w 7:30 a n d M a t u r e ¥ o u u ( P e o p le M M M JdFRHSa(MOW) ^ i m m . J I K I I V N U W W O I N top* sure tich*«wm wmsm ll i SAWLE 3RQOT PROOUM* * DEAR FILM PROTONS * * * * * ti AIDED ARTISTS SPECIAL AUSTIN ENGAGEMENT STARTS WEDNESDAY, APRIL la V A R S IT Y t h e a t r e 16 S H O W S W E E K L Y 2 S H O W S D A IL Y M on, — Fr>. SE A T S N O T R ESER V ED 3 S H O W S D A IL Y Sat. — Sun, T O D A Y AT INTERSTATE Amy rot a **ov« DISCOUNT CAID it d ft * NOW SHOWING! Fe tlu m i 13:20 - 3:35 • 4.5# 7:#5 - 9:3# N O W IN ITS 2ND GREAT WEEK J O I N THE FUN AT THE STATE FAIR OF TEX A S ! r* * : RODGERS AND ‘ t i l * HAMMERSTEIN^BH? I i f J : . Y , FAT BOONE bobby DARIN P A M E L A TIFFIN ANN MARGRET TOM EWELL mAUCE FAYE w „ M B if W I • A c , U T \ Adult* 1.0# MIM .»(><• < bild Site ME TRD-90LDl\WJ-;A~y't'R. X ic: f NO W SHOWING! Features: 12-2-4-6-8-10 po cr: A R T H U R FREED .■■■■GOC Cf OH & i n t)hie P £ a z z a , CINEM ASCOPE... METROCOlOP Only in F lo r e n c e . . . city of love could th is sto ry h a v e h a p p e n e d ! olivia ROSSANO Y¥ETr£ GEORGE de HAViUiND • BRUZZI • MIMIEUX-HAMILTON M D C bde r—nm—m NOW SHOWING! I I HS I S H O W 2:1# I HA I I U h s 2: .M I 12 6:00-7 IS-9: lit. T I HS HAY W E L D • I ! HRT THOMAS • UK H ARD BE Y M ER C E L E S T E HOLM irrriwmwini.'.ii#*# -tt.si.1 r- m-,.: aw nm. . _________ m Z Z ' I f t * A D U I n Tit, MTK 5#« STARTS TODAY! Big Double Feature C H I U ) \ > M O N S T E C H N IC O L O R RICHARD TO DD AN N E A U B R E Y UONIl UKW***## • JAMES. BOOTH * WM ««> n 0 i Mumm E E I s POLLY BERGEN DAVID JANNSEN « BELLE SOMMERS" The Syndicate Owns Her Songs and Soul! I •'Starr* »t 7:2# - 10:14 Technicolor PLUS! 2ND FEATURE \<£SZ%L MoM Ila v m o od M a r t h a H>#> T 'DESIRE a . DUST' r \ | I T T ! in I J* <*** AC**i* A I M J T H M r n i l l . I I F R E I S O p e n 1:3# • F i r s t S ho w 7:30 n » > g ro u n d and l ine i » o d * < o lo r Mov i-.i A D I S T I N G U I S H E D A P P L T E N T E R T A I N M E N T 7e*W i&A X T PLUS! WILD RIVER STUDENT GROUPS Weekday Lunches SHADY GROVE Friday, April 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 NBG to Dance Acts O f 'Princess Aurora' la v is h ly staged, “ Princess Au-J Designer H ay Ambrose has de­ vised many costume, scenery, and special staging effects for “ Prin ­ cess Aurora.” ro ra ” fills the theater with the whirling, dancing figures and per­ sonalities from the i m m o r t a l “ Sleeping B ea u ty.” The huge pro­ duction is a veritable showcase for the soloists and the entire com­ pany of the National B allet of Canada. Th# prologue, Acts I and H r of “ Princess A u ro ra" w ill b« on the program Wednesday at M unicipal Auditorium when the C E C presents tile NRC. Artistic D irector Celia Fran ca has arranged the ballet after tile original choreography by M anus Petipa, and using the Tchaikowsky music. A classic of universal appeal, “ Princess Aurora ’ teems with the fanciful people of the world of legend. The brilliant Rose Adagio, ; the Bluebird pas de deaux, the Lila c F a ir y , Camelia F a iry , Rose F a iry , Carnation F a iry , Canary F a ir y and their stalwart Cavaliers, i the White Cat, Puss-in-Boots, Red Riding Hood and trio Wolf are all present, Film on Racial Problems To Be Presented Friday * Lost Boundaries ’ a film on racial problems, will be presented] at 8:30 p.m. F rid a y at ii.IIH Foun­ dation, 2105 San Antonio. Starrin g ; Mel Ferrer, th** film concerns a Negro doctor's attempt to pa -s for a white. Admission is 25 cents. Senior s Flute Recital Scheduled W ednesday Michael C. Stouner, senior music : student, w ill give a flute recital at 4 p m. Wednesday in the R ecital H all of the M usic Building. He w ill be assisted by John Ow­ ings, piano; Leo Milch, violin; H el­ mut B in field , viola; and Elizabeth Lane, cello. The public Is invited. r SUMMER JO BS in EUROPE THE ‘new’ W A Y TO SEE & ‘live’ EUROPE S P E C I A L IZ IN G in 'European Safari*' For Summer Jo b s or Touri W r it e : American Student Information Service 22, A venue de la Liberte, Lunembourg-City, G ran d Duchy of Luxembourg D E L W O O D 1 / E L T V V V I / 3931 East Avenue B O X O F F I C E O P E N S 6:00 A D M I S S I O N ia ut* start* !t:IM* l ir e w itte r SOUTH AUSTIN 39## SOI t H ( ONORI SS M O X ( l l I I C E O f t N S ti OO A D M I S S I O N (itll TENDER IS THE NIGHT J en n ife r Jo nes-Jam m Uobarrft Jr. s t a r t s 7:0# —pluk— GUN FIGHT lam e* Brim n-J osn S t a n le ? S t a r t * 9:11 A Wide Variety of Tours: MUSIC and DRAMA ART and ARCHITECTURE COLLEGE CREDIT MICROBUS . . . ISRAEL DRIYE YOURSELF •Rd Uw-price “ ECONOMY" Tours or Form Your Own Group Ask for Plans and profitable Organizer Arrangements Specialists in Student Travel Since 1926 for folders and details See your local travel agent or write us UTRAK U NIVERSITY TRAVEL CO. Horvord Sq., Cambridge, Matt. c a m e r a s NflS&miK PLUS COMPLETE SERVICE AND CAMERA REPAIR] STATMAN Photo Service Telephone GR 6-4326 222 West 19th from C H O I C E t corn-fed heavy . , b eef 3 5 ' * I i . . terved with French potatoes and cole slaw. fried 4 Convenienf Locations in Austin “Lets have a dinner date this week-end’ ■ wwi.Hi^iiam'iiiiBWPiu.! m f aimt Newly Decorated! AL C l m o COFFEE ROOM Monday thru Saturday after 5 p.m. All Day Sunday De Luxe Dinners The Daily Texan recommends one of the follow ing for good food . . . pleasantly served at moderate prices French Fried Shrimp Steaks • Chicken G R A C IO U S D IN IN G EXCELLENT FOOD A t Reasonable Prices V. DAVIS, Operator • 604 Guadalupe • O pa# 6:30 a.m. 'til 9:30 p Don't Cook Tonight Call Fa zl CHICKEN • SHRIMP • BAR-B-QUE RIBS • FISH • PIZZA FREE DELIVERY C A L L G R 6-6216 H o u ri: Mon.-Frl. ♦ p.m.-11 p.m. Sat., Sun. 4 H olid ay* 11 a.m. to 11 p m. 1608 L A V A C A The Best F ood is at Austin's "Big Four" Restaurants EL MAT EL TORO EL CHARRO MONROE'S MEXICAN FOOD-SEAFOOD STEAKS-CHICKEN Dining Room Facilities Delivery Service Delivery Service University Area 11-2 p.m. & 5-11 p.m. C K 8-0 F la v o r C ris p C h ic k e n 409 West 23rd Chicken Orders 59c to $2.29 Breakfast Served Anytime m m m m Mm m asm m m m O P E N 6 a m.-12 p m. E x c e p t S u n day CASER A GHI’S “A TASTE OF OLD ITALY’’ Lunch: 11-1:45 p.m. Dinner: 5-9:45 p.m. Except F ri. & Sat. 10:45 p.m. 4 Closed from M ay IO Until F irs t P a rt of September for Vacation. Call GR 2-2473 for Classified Ads ITALIAN r est a u r a n t Shakespeare s The M erry W ive s of W indsor Six Basic Settings B. Iden Payne Opens Designed by Whiting Amours of Falstaff Friday, April 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Paga 7 By ANDRE BACON For ’The Merry Wives of Wind­ sor.” Ii, Men Payne will use the forestage, the center, the inner- above, and the i n n e r below stages. Proscenium doors will be used at right and left stage In designing the sets for * Mr. Payne, Ii. Ned Whiting, Depart­ ment of Drama scene and light­ ing designer ha*. modified the De­ traditional modified partment’s elizabethan staging. This year's staging is unique. It is portable. “ There are six basic settings," Whiting said. 'Die play opens on the front of Mr. Page's home, and the action takes place on the forestage and m a i n stage arca. The second scene is at the Darter Inn, which is the portable inner-below inner-a b o v e and stages set. Mistress Quickly’*, where the third scene is set, is the same as the darter I n n, only decorated differently. The inner-above and inner-below stages give yeoman service, as they are used in the fourth irene decorated as Master Ford’s home. A staircase is add­ ed to the stages to complete the scene at Master Ford’s. I he fifth and sixth scenes are played on the forestage and the main stage. The former scene is Sir Hugh’s garden, and the latter is Windsor Forest. The differ­ ence in these last two scene* is in the scenery w h i c h is flown tufted above the stage out of audience view b The scenery and s e t pieces have been done after the man­ ner of Randolph Caldecott, a 19th century illustrator. The general color quality for the entire pro­ duction is soft, not glaring. "Colors appear stronger than t h e y actually are because we have outlined a n d highlighted everything in bla^k, as d1d Calde­ cott," said Paul D. Reinhardt, Department of Drama costume designer. Tile sets, as the cos­ tumes, will attempt to convey a middle class quality lacking the glitter and overt glamor By RILL HAMPTON One cf the most original Shake­ speare plots, "The Merry Wives of Windsor, ’ is rumored to have been written on the command of Queen Elizabeth, who wanted to see Sir John Falstaff in love. The play is a comedy of con­ temporary Elizabethan manners, and is the only one which deals exclusively with English country society. "The Merry Wives of Windsor" ii’as first entered on the Station­ ers’ Register on January 18, 1602, Scholars believe it was written after "Henry V ," which means that Shakespeare raised Falstaff from oblivion. John Dennis wrote In 1702, "This comedy was written at the Queen s command, and she was so eager to see it acted that she commanded it to be finished in 14 days." Samuel Pepys saw the play in 1660 and was at his critical best when he entered into his diary, "the humours of the country gen­ tlemen and the French doctor very well done but the rest very poorly, and Sir J. Falstaffe as bad as any.” The play has received a great deal of production, because it is highly adaptable to the stage, and its comedy increases in the performing. It was played before King James and Charles I. It has been the source for numer­ ous opera including Verdi s "Falstaff," librettos, John Henting©, a member of Shakespeare’s company and one of the editors of the 1623 Folio, is believed to have been the original Falstaff. Other players of the classic comic role have been John Lowen, Quin, George Frederick Cooke. Sir Herbert Tree—and now Robert Palmer. ’ The Merry Wives of Windsor" I* a wonderful opportunity for Mr, B, Iden Payne to pull out all the recipes of staged Eliza­ bethan comedy and whip up a de letable sauna for Sir John Falstaff* stew. The Loves of Falstaff: Mistress Ford and Page W ith Messenger Photo by Avant /— M^ctor J\ol>erl f^almer M L . . . 2—M ZJoucli of Padding . . . 3 -J n M ii U tilit _ " * « re yr Costumer Reinhardt Follows Jock and Beanstalk' Theme O f Q ra.U tty & e c o m i n (J r n * m m . *hP .-A ,, y . A* Falstaff Costume Sequence DICK POLK. Department of Drama photographer, and stu- I dent, took the photo sequence of Robert Palmer as he dressed I for the role of Falstaff. Besides being a photographer, Polk is ? studying directing in the Department. He will also be seen on stage as Pistol in the Merry Wives production. kmmmmm. mmmmmmmmmmmm ■ % mmmmmmmmmmmm WED. APR. 25»„SUN. APR. 29 WED. 7 f.M ., THURS. THRU SAT. 8 P.M. Convenient fjp ‘FLAME kissed h a m b u rg e rs Just look how close the are to the centers o f U. T. activity , . . studied under Miss Barton be­ tween 1951 and 1953 for his mas­ ter of fine arts degree. Rein­ hardt’s thesis concerned 14th, loth, and 16th Century costum­ ing of the middle class. Between 1953 and 1962. Rein­ hardt designed or acted in 12 Shakespearean productions dur­ ing three summers at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival; taught one year at the Richmond Profession­ al Institute of the College of Wil­ liam and Mary at Richmond, Va., taught four years at Northwestern University, and worked coe and a half years on his Ph.D in speech and dramatic art at State University of Iowa. This year’s Shakespeare pro­ duction costume designs will be the 14th set Reinhardt has done. It will also be the 25th Shake­ speare production in which he cither designed, acted, produced or directed. "How the costume helps the actor perform his character is the important thing,” said Rein­ hardt. 4 Some designers are con­ cerned with w’hat the actors do to the costumes: dirty them or tear them." Reinhardt recently demonstra­ ted how costumes determine movement, at the meeting of the Southern S p e e c h Association. "Seventeenth Century coats were cut to be comfortable with the arms raised for sw’ord play. To­ day's coats are cut to be com­ fortable with the arms relaxed at the sides. The cut of the cos­ tume, then, helps the actor mo\c as people moved in the period of the costume." he said. If the costumes are right, the audience takes them for granted, Reinhardt said. Only if they are wrong do they notice. Reinhardt has under his direc­ in the costume shop the tion wardrobe mistress he trained personally in 1952; a graduate assistant, and three undergrad­ uate assistants. In addition, un­ dergraduate costume crews are assigned for the various shows. The padding which Robert Pal­ mer, drama student, wears as Falstaff in the "M erry Wives," will have its tenth anniversary wearing this year. Reinhardt made the padding for the Drama Department production of "Henry the IV " in 1952. B r ANDRE BACON In production conference for this year's Shakespeare produc­ tion, "The Merry Wives of Wind­ sor." B. Iden Payne, director, re­ quested that Randolph Caldecott illustrations be used as the theme for the costumes and sets. "M r. P a y n e said that he had been impressed with the warmth and good humor of Caldecctfs illustrations of ‘Jack and tile Bean-Stalk’ and "Aesop’s Fables’ in his childhood," said Paul D . Reinhardt, costume designer for the "M erry Wives." Most of Caldecott’s illustrations were made for late 19th Century children’s books, and there are relatively few on campus, con­ tinued Reinhardt. Caldecott illustrations are wa­ ter color outlined with black ink. The bright colors are flat, rather than shiney. Thus the aura which has been attempted for the cos­ tumes by Reinhardt, and carried out in the sets by H. Ned Whit­ ing, scene and lighting designer, is of merry caricature that does not glitter, as have Shakespeare productions in the past, yet is bold. Reinhardt, replacing Miss Lucy Barton, M.A., professor emeritus of drama, as Department of Drama costume designer, is no stranger to the University. He Holiday House No. 2 2009 Guadalupe Holiday House No. 3 20th and Speedway 273 PAUL D. REINHARDT THE MONEY SHOPPE Rare Coins Bought and Sold 610 BRAZOS GR 7-1077 *s&mv Sr jU „ MAT S«t. D O PJM. fun. 130 * J P M TICKETS NOW ON SALK DAUT » » A.M. TO SJO P.M. Municipal Auditorium ALSO AVAIUSU A«*t4 * (tot * rn I Bent Cental ifttiMftt Sftftk M I C H TAX INCL. U SO $100 fD o $i oe CHILD*'N Vt P tlC I WSO. NIT! A SAT MAT. G R 6-2330 > 1 " t i " ! Y lt ! * MORRIS CH ALPIN pr*M»tt WORLD FAMOUS 0 / 962 ORDER BY MAIL S«*4 rtmitUftti to Holiday an lea. Municipal Auditorium, Cadott tall ad- dratatd. ftam pad anralopa. MUNICIPAL r jn y , H i Here s deodorant protection YOU CAN TRUST u:d Spics Stick D80dQf3nt.,,/a5fc5f, neatest llvii to ell* da*, et cry day protection f It's the acti-.r deodorant for active m en...absolutely dependable. Glides on smoothly, speedily,,.dries in record time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant — mon convenient, most economical deodorant money can buy. 1.00 plus tax. I DEODORANT S H U U T O NI Prteay, April 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag# 8 Education Convention Adviser Interviews Extended Schools Backward Economist C h arg were named vice-presidents in charge of Law School and under­ graduates respectively. Interviews for advisers, discus' aion group leaders, and orientation j leaders have been extended to 5 p m. Wednesday. Cam pus News Round-Up e s Interviews also will be held In Texas Union 319 and 321, 2-5 p.m., Friday, Monday, and Tuesday. On the basis of the interviews, 130 advisers will be selected. One hundred and ten students will be leaders ana vuvjRtri as chosen as leaders and 20 will zu w m serve as counselors for freshman C o llo c a tio n s D u g S o t u r d o y orientation in August I nated for this award, Loveman National Award. to p* . Entries may be , - ,r " - \ Mrs. Ann Rmvd Mrs. Ann Bowden, librarian in the « • turned in •« . , . the Amy O r i g i n a l K i n g . to Sh O W The original production of “ King „ ngs,’ a silent movie starring .. zz NT Ti’' . ....... ; In te r e ste d In w o r k in g In th e c a m ___ _____ palgn for Hendrix may come by tional cash prize of $1,000. The the Hal IlendrK headquarters at winning local senior will be nomi- _ J107 Nueces. , _ Seniors may compete for a na- Sanders, and Barry Barker. Noon Saturday is the entry dead- , Humanities Research Center a .a a A« .s. m I 1 1 Other students in the club's or­ ganization are Ann Lipscomb, Mike John Haney, Frank - Rheudasil, ST. LOUIS, Mo, leading appraise the results of specialized (J1'—-A economist charged Thursday that research, the essence, public education is a backward in- and to put the weight of its pres- in need of new tige behind its selection of the best dustry, urgently ideas, techniques and approaches, j and wisest and m o s t urgently to distill Theodore O. Yntema, former j needed policies.” professor and a vice president of! School board members, he said. the I’ord Motor Co., since 1949, j are the very people to assert ■ I sald tiie vast ncw demands on the the leadership* that is n eeded/’ bacchanal A t D ra g newsstands, the Co-Op, and in front o f lack’s Party Pictures Monday only. C3X3 M O N D A Y ! Call G R 2-2473 for Texan Classifieds Warner and Joseph Schild- schools cannot be met merely by v . cli ii iva i. u c m e t l u c i u i y u y ] I —- - — ........... *'■■..................... ——— — •—— ---------------— — - spending more money to expand * O P * C O * O P * C O « O P « C O « O P « C O * O P « C O « O P * C O « O P * C O * O P * C O * O P * C O * O P « C O l W'hat Wp a vp now riding what we are now doing Iy -- L . a « A w t i I I L kraut, will be shown in the Texas Union Auditorium Friday, Satur­ day and Sunday. _ . .. A IL* CT'* Sweet Treat line for the student book collection P u tn a m to A i d H end rix contest sponsored by the Humani- mar-**- ^ ■- ‘ J , r, ,__ I I M i i .AA . 4 . - _ h’ " 2 . — — - . ° r r m - - • — An3 - ................ ties Research Center. Each of D a n c e Sch ed u led for U N Tile film will be shown at 4 7, , v v« f v/i v i v •• til? three winners will receive $100. j The international Club wall soon- and 9:30 P m- Friday; 7 and 9:30 and 7 p.m. Sun- i0 | m ay enter any type of collection gates to the Model United Nations day- Admission for students is as long as it has a unifying A collection need not be an Main Ballroom of the Texas them*. in the expen- Union enrolled j.udo.1 a r A Saturday fmm q cents’ cents. P-»- and “r I for ^ s tu d e n t s , 25 r r e « Named to the campus steering sh e gathering of rare first ed:- n -„t rornmme. am Anna OOonnH, .ion, McFadden, Lewln Plunkett, I Expense and size will not be j , “ ' ' ' ' “ ( " ■ ★ H o l l i s t e r ' ^ G i v e S p e e c h j '" -tana Zimmerman. Gary KUK and considered in the judging. Doter- Daniel Club Names Head Mecheval Feudalism: New Harry Walsh. Hendrix named RHI mining factors are choice ct ma- i Vtewpotat*-- will be the subject of Swann a<« School of law coordin- ter.a), a 'a lk by Professor C. Warren Hoi Swans as School of Law exordia- lerial, completeness within T r'T u’ a TalK Dy ^ l e s s o r C. Warren Hoi- ator subject, and general p rice Daniel Club at tho Univnr! lister of the Universif> of Califon the h,« h, the has been nom'^rf completeness within BUI F tam rv scope of the L G . . . I . V I Putnam said that any student condition. ^ * He told the National S c h o o l Association, convening here, that the solution lies in greater effici­ ency, in providing more education­ al value per hour of time and dollar of cost. Yntema said the times call for a i committee educational de- velopment, along the lines of the Committee for Economic Develop- ! ment which was established early I in World War II by a group of American business leaders. f o r * , at lh . } n m ^ n i s , Santa Barbara, Friday at 4 SS,' S E ^ K S - S * cand,dacy of P-m. when he addresses members ‘ L T J rmer’ Iaw student, and members of Pfii Alpha Theta in Ned Price Jr., business major, Business-Economics Building 116. V• 01 ,h" department of History and Such a committee on education. he said, should he small enough and select enough to work effec­ tively, to “It should serve primarily take a grand view, to gather and LONG DISTANCE AND LOCAL M O V I N G •’PIONEERS IN NATION-WIDE MOVING'1 / l—1 i o iv d '* i ! S " • CRATING • PACKING • STORING • M O VIN G Fireproof Bonded W are h o u se household goods and merchandise storage Rhoades TRANSFER AND STORAGE CO. 813 AIRPORT BLVD. ARTHUR R. (ART) TIEMANN—OWNER G R 8-5681 > % ^ - ——• ii NATIONAL VAN L IN E SH NIGHT TELEPHONES—HO 5-6916. 6 R 8-7474 W I T Funeral Services Held for Geneticist Funeral services were held Wed­ nesday for Dr. Johanna Blumel, ex­ student of the University and as­ sistant research professor in gene­ tics of the orthopedic surgery di­ vision at the Medical Branch in Gal vest cm. The 47-year-old genetics consul­ tant for Moody State School for Palsied Children died in Galves­ ton Monday. Burial was in the Old City Cemetery'. She is survived by Mrs. Emma Blumel, her mother. Dr. Blumel served as technical assistant in zoology research; a teaching fellow in general biology, cytology, and embryology; and re­ search scientist while at the Uni­ versity. ta t CjoeS O n ^ H ere a n i „ ' • \f,wV i T- 5. a a.- ' * S ta te * —In th e W o rld ,** T exas Union. tvtodel U n ited Na- 6—G ra d u a te G roup d in n er. L onghorn i i ' i n na i -T - I exana on disp lay , Hu* 7*9—"(jtvRF'cre^tlop VVom#*n c fjym Room, T ex as Union Tt , ■ m a n m e . R esearch C e n te r; urQ S ), I2, r> e R t a Doom, M ain B u ild in g ; 1 1-3, S a tu r - i * T he M erry W ives of W indsor. 'V ^ on e x h ib it, 8- I n W r n a tio n a i F o lk D ance Group, S a t- I i i M a T S S f t a ’ the°Ch5c*lc G\v Jk o n , T ex as U nion J u n io r B allroom a rt. R e s e n ts 8- D e p a r t m e n t I, 8!*8 S a tu rd a y , v . i t presents ’ of D ram a Union u | o.rCa ‘\ ;vHiKw . u ^ ^ H ogg A uditorium , vnii h £ 5 « « m , L i M, n toriat M u s f i u m hi so Sntufd& y, r ^ v ai^ £ k .“ P .speech B u ild m c 102. 7 ripT I 6 , ons' ’red ra ao u sc rip ts, "L o st B oundaries * w ith J t>st' Me~ ‘ Mel F e r r e r (25 cents.', H iliel Foun- 8 ;M -M o v ie * d n 11 o n ^ 'r ite r s ; 3 .VMZ -irh th u * Coffee House, 2434 G uadalupe. S a tn r d a r Young R epublican*, T exas U nion h Model UN*. T exas Union in T r w f o * t r » v t • lr "H . _ . . . H: i f - F o u n d a tio n 9-12—L ast day fo r e n te rin g stu d e n ts’ book c ollecting contest H u m anities to speak on | R.-search C enter W orld U niversity Service ’ a t lu n ch - j l l :3 0 -M o d e l UN to h e a r A llard Low- IjOV;'fn?tpin fc,n- f 'n ’rn Uo T *»’ t r i n i t y R e iig -I Iou* Council. L o n g h o rn R oom , T ex as 12 30-- Model UN Union. enstein. T exas Union Ballroom lunch L onghorn T exas Union B allroom . 2 •'> -In terv iew s for o rie n ta tio n leaders , and advisers. T exas Union 309-321 3—K U T-FM , 90.7 inc (U n iv e rsity new s a t 5 p.m. > and also on S a tu rd a y 3-5—F a c u lty -stu d e n t C abinet, T exas I nion 202. 4—C L A SP w o rk ers to m eet, A m erican .NaUonal B ank a u d ito riu m U nion B allroom , 4—T ex as M usic T eachers Association to hold a n n u a l piano concerto con- te st. Music B uilding R ecital Hall 7 an d 9:30—Movie, K ing of K ing*,” I exas U nion A uditorium 8— " T h e M e rry W ives of W indsor,” H ogg A uditorium , to 4 - P ro fe s s o r C, W arre n H o lliste r »t>eak to Phi A lpha T h e ta on ' M ed­ ieval F eu d alism N ew V iew points ’’ B usiness-E conom ics B u ild in g l i e Un 8 30-—A ustin Civic T h e a te r to present P. 4 ,n* „S w eet B ird of Y o u th ," P lay h o u se . ,iV„ „ „ „ i n v a , rt ! Fi lorn _ T if th and Lavaca. 8-12—D ancing In T ax as Union * — I exas I . nion < Graduate l o n g h o r n Room . T exas th# Chuck W agon B allroom i Jrou nor, 8-12—M odel UN dance, T exas Union ,i ng8u .Texa*i Union Auditorium . K in P of 8:30-12— Ich th u s Coffee Guadalupe H ouse, 2434 __ I M odel I . . b a n q u e t o n t he U nited j i 8 :3(U -FT rn'*Festival: "A le x an d e r Nev- s k y ," H illel F oundation. • • O O • a . © • o u * X o • o o • a. o • o o • OL o # o o • AL O • o o • OL o • o o • CL o • o u # OL o • o u • CL o # Enjoy condy , , . give candy at Easter Candy — Street Floor [ IU E R S i i 2246 Guadalupe Street * O P * C O h C P * C O ® O P b C O * O P « C O * O P # C O » O P # C O # O P « C O « O P « C O * O P « C O « O P o C a Get Lucky the taste to start witti.Jiie taste lo stay with a • a o 9 o a rn o o • o o © © a 9 C l o o o © o -o • a o 9 o "5 O o © *0 9 o ? o • o o ^ DAILY TEXAN Classified Ads CALL GR 2-2473 Duplex— Unfurnished Room s for Rent CLEAN U N FU R N IS H E D TW O bedroom duplex. 2102 K enw ood A p a rtm e n t B C a rp eted b u ilt-in k itc h e n c e n tra l h e a t a n d air. tile b a th 390 m onthly, w ill lease bv y e a r S85. C all GR &-1606. A fte r 5 p.m . GR 2--973. R oom s—m en R E F R IG E R A T E D ATE-CONDITIONED $25. SIT Rills paid Maid. R e frig e ra to r. 803 W. IT. F oster. Lift 8-0576 H ouses— Furnished F U R N IS H E D HOUSE. T W O bedroom i o coup e w ith o u t c h ild ren in exchange fo r help in n u rse ry school. H I 2-3152. Special Services A lterations R E N T — PU RC H A SE T V. % tele v isio n R ental GR 2-2692 Alpha R E TO U C H E D . P a ss p o rt . or p rin ts Low prices G ilm ore. GR 2-4484. JO B PH O TO S 25 ho u rs fur­ . (roofs itudio A L T ER A TIO N S AND DRESSM AKING .15 W est 25th S tr e e t GR 6-3360. A L T ER A TIO N S DRESSM AKING, RE- ; W EA VING on m oth, c ig a re tte holes g e n ts At 221/2. M onogram ing. L a d i e s , re aso n a b le GR 2-7736 903 W est ra te s ' Miscellaneous Typing A p artm e n ts— Unfurnished H ouses For Rent 2403 B, m shed JA R R A T T , U p sta irs u n fu r- one m ile w est U n iv ersity . re frig e ra to r. tw o tw o bedroom s, stove, A ir c o n d itio n ers, sleep ne porch, b a th s 590 GR 7-0981 house on O N E OR T W O persons. N ice little larg e lo t w ith s..ce shade tre e s W alk in g d ista n c e cool B a rto n S p rin g s T w o blocks to bus. Nice!-, fu rn ish e d O nlv $40.00—better, h u m * GR 8-1313. A fte r 6:00 HO 5-1938 ' LOST O ran g e horse In vicinity of cam pus. I I F I T S T Y P E D by A LBRIG H T. I f s typed A LR IG H T, A ccurate, e le c tro reaso n ab le, experienced Also I m atic. j book m an u scrip t* . GL 5-2941 Se# ANN KASMAN ALPH A E PSIL O N P I booth VARSITY CARNIVAL A V AILABLE A F T E R A P R IL 15. u n fu rn ish e d tw o bedroom duplex. C e n tra l h e at and a ir. C arp eted . bul!t~tn kitch en , tile b ath c a rp o rt, u ish e r c o n n ettlo n s, fenced in back y a rd 4011 L ew is L an e A p a rtm e n t A 590 m o n th ly or w ill lease bv y e a r —SS5, Call GR 6-1606 A fte r 5 P m. GR 2-1973. Furnished A p artm ents T R IN IT Y T E R R A C E 1300 T rin ity New. m odern, one bedroom , a ir tile co nditioned, c a r p e t e d , m onth. bath. S um m er ra te s s ta r tin g May 2, 880 OO. W a te r a n d Gas paid. $95. OO per GR 7-1238 RAVINE T ER R A C E m odern b edroom w ater, fu rn ish e d . GR 8 5528 P E R F E C T living. E nfield L arge a p a rtm e n t. fur tw o E nfield. Gas FO U R BLOCKS W E S T of U.T. F u rn ish e d tw o bedroom Du- plex. T w in beds and double bed Two ton Y ork Air-Condt- t loner q u i e t. A dults please Ca.; GR 64423. 3513 B. San G abriel, Clean and M AS () N R V J if i M E. C YI' R ESS pa bell n g . beam ed ceilings, firep lac e , basem ent, a ttic . D ead end s tre e t m a r U. T. GR 8-5916 tio n OLD BOOKS, A R T objects. Id en tifica­ tags. u*ed and new fu rn itu re a n d a p p lia n c e s a t b a rg a in prices Come and bro w se: T H E FLEA M ARKET. 511 W est 43d ( J u s t o ff G u a d alu p e I. : BY O W N ER , M U ST sell tw o bedroom hom e In e x cellen t N o rth W est Aus- alr-con- fu rn ish e d . P e rfe c t size and j tin neig h b o rh o o d . C a rp eted , . . . ....... • d a m n e d , BLOOD DONORS— A il types of blood needed for usage in A ustin Profes- surrfu n d in g s for couple or sm all fam - I alonai donors now accepted. Travis pay- ! C °u n ty B lood B ank. 2907 B Red River, ' ily. B uy e q u ity . $70 m o n th ly - — . - s per .......... c e n ts . 4 ’s p e rc e n t peru T rail. C L 3-8830. loan, 4506 Chiap- H e lp W a n te d Printing For QUALITY PRINTING C all Multiprint C o . GR 2-2447 P rin tin g D u p lica tin g W A N T E D : P A R T T IM E w a lt re sse s M ust be n e a t and at in person trac tiv e . A pply a t H O O S T E R T H E R E D LOUNGE. 5602 N o rth learner o r cal! G e n e C l e rn e n t s GL 3-9422 o r FA 6-1210 a fte r 5 p.m . I M ailing R. N .’g W A N TED . S ta ff an d adm inis- tra tlv e positions. 152 beds. A ccred­ ited G eneral H o sp ita l. A ll-shifts. F o rty h o u r w eek. L ib e ra l policies. A pply; Dic*K*tor of n u rsin g , S eaton U o s p ita I of N u rsin g , S eton H ospital, A ustin, T exas. C all GR 6-6021. ‘M :';.AR UNIVERSITY snopping. $65 LAW school', R e frig e rate d Bed S i o M . 2-45,16, evenings. b*u >- “ . :r I' i?*, 1 P ,0Dr if • * L , fct 11 Sl " c o ja fo rta b ’y and l u rio u sly accom m odate 2-4. tiles* b ra n d new lw o bedroom u n its rid icu lo u sly lux­ ‘ M v h . !'3 r P laques / IR C O N D i T l O N F ^ p a r : ' Kient R edecorated, c u rta in s R efrig- o ra to r w ith freezer. W alk to < asses tow n. $63.50 GR 7-8228. H I 2-8164 I hexes - D iss e rta tio n s —- R e p o rts J o u rn a ls — C ustom B endings University Bookbinders 203 E ast 19th S tr e e t G R 2-9803 T ro p h ies — E n g rav in g Lost and Found FOUND GR 2-0952 v .\u c h a t c » ir n m t 2-.,_ W ATCH A I G reg o ry Gym. Furnished A p artm e n ts O p en for Sum m er School TOWER MANOR 1908University • On# b!oclc from campus * Reserved Parking # A r -conditioned, thermostat in each apartment * Two-bedroom, two bs rh apartments for girls • Sun deck on roof • Laundry facilities * J e n o rs, s e t 'o r s o r g r a d u a t e s * University approved GR 8 2 i 85 For Sale SA ILB O A TS, N E W USED. k its s H a rd ­ w a re a n d tra ile rs S a ilb o a t Sales. 504 W est 7th. GR 63009. GR 8-8118. F O U R T E E N FO O T GLASSTRON Ski F lite b o a t w ith Sea H o rse 35. Eiec- t n c s ta rtin g , fib e rg la ss w ith m a tc h in g C ustom red an d w h ite in te rio r. tra ile r. Sacrifice, $795. t u t , GR 8-3647 o r GR 60001. lig h ts, j FO R S A L E : R oyal type* ! w rite r, e lite type. 12" c a rria g e , e x ­ cellent cond itio n . $6) o r best o ffer. YVnte B ox 7817, U n iv ersity S ta tio n . A ustin. S ta n d a rd 1959 SI MCA e g UR DOOR sedan. E x ­ c ellen t c ondition. 25-35 MPG. F o r lot. o r w h a t sale o r tr a d e for boat have NOU. Siadek. GR 7-5032 NEA R U N IV E R SIT Y , HO M E o r in- tw o baths. Jot. S m all d o w n p aym ent, v estm ent. Five room s, V aluable O w ner H I 2-7681 B L U E JA Y CLASS S a ilb o a t, E xcellent in clu d in g sa ils and $795 tr a ile r. HO 5-6974 a fte r 5 30 co n d itio n C O R V E T T E 1961 C O N V E R T IB L E . 230 im m e d ia tely . IC P. - M u s t s e l l GR 7-4608 TENOR, B A N JO of su p e rio r q u a lity in excellen t c o ndition w ith case. Call GR 7-4306 o r GR 7-6010. FO R SA L E : U N DERW O OD p o rta b le ty p e w rite r w ith case. Good c ondition. L eaving tow n. *30. C all GR 7-8625. C redenza E IG H T E E N T H CEN TU RY LONG-BOW F re n c h edge m irr o r 24x38. c h a ir. chair. B eveled E a riv A m e r i c a n m a p le GR 8-6938. Bhan.nel B ack M ARTHA ANN ZIVLEY M B A. professional com plete ice A ty p in g serv th e needs of U niversity stu d e n ts Special kev. language board theses science and d isse rta tio n s e n g in eerin g eq u ip m e n t ta ilo re d and for to P h o n e GR 2-3210 M ore C onveniently L ocated A t O u r New A ddress 2 0 1 3 GU ADA LU PE E X P E R IE N C E D T Y PIN G R E PO R T S theses, etc. E lectric. M rs. H u n te r UL 3-Jo46. ; SH O R T ON T Y P I N G , j m oney? M iss G raham GL 3-5725. tim e and D E L A F IE L D .G r a m m a r , H I 2-6o22 TY PIN G . • p e i J i n * 20c page. c o rre c tio a T H E M O O N LIG H TER S— I.B.M .. Mul- tillth in g A fte r 6 OO and w eekends M a rg u erite Costello. GR 2-1535 3217 H am pton Road TH EM ES. R EPO R TS. ETC., E lectric. M rs Cain. 609 C Bellevue. GR 7-1512. D ISSER TA TIO N S, T H E S E S . BOOKS. re p o rts. New sym bol-equipped elec- In, R itchie, close tro m a tic M r# GR 67079 R E PO R T S. T H E S E S . D ISSER TA - (IB M ); 4V* blocks. -expert OK 0*8113 IBM electro m atlc ACCURATE B E A U T IFU L T Y PIN G — LAW' WORK SPEC IA LISE R easonable C ourteous conscP ntious. c o n sid era te service Cai! GR 8-7079 T O P QUALITY T Y PIN G theses d isse rtatio n s, notes, re­ L e r T ports. etc. L a te st m odel I B M, Seiec- tric w ith y o u r choice of typo styles. Also N o ta ry in. Call Ann a t GR 2-6573. i'u b lic Close M u lttlith ln g , M im eographing X eroxing T h eses-P ap e rs-P rln tln g A US-TEX D U PLIC A TO R S 400 E ast l i t h P h o n e GR 6-6593 TH ES ES. I ’ E PO R TS. R EASON ABLE. E le c tro m a tlc Mrs B rad y 2317 Old­ ham GR 2-4715 N E E D A T Y P IS T ? E lectro m atlc. Uni­ v e rsity a rc a Cai! GR 65446 VIRG IN IA C A LH O U N LEGAL TYPING SERVICE 2914 B eanna (off P a r k P la ce a t T ow nes H all) N o ta ry P u b lic GR 8-2636 Carbon Ribbon IBM's Q uick C opying by V erifax E X P E R IE N C E D and A ccurate HO 5-5813. T Y PIN G SE R V IC E C a l l reasonable. T H E M E S. LAW NO TES, o utlines. 25c d ouble space GR 64717. What makes Lucky Strike the favorite regular cigarette of college smokers? Fine-tobacco taste. It s a great taste to start with, and it spoils you for other cigarettes. That’s why Lucky smokers stay Lucky smokers. So, get with the taste you’ll want to stay with. Get Lucky today. €> *~T C*. P r o d iu t o j . ' M ’ j / n u u z a n . Editorial Reading: Sponsored Students T e x a n Weather: High 78, Low 50 Fair and W armer Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1962 First College D a ily in the* South Draws Schools' Delegates to Canvass YR's Austin Precincts By ANDRE BACON Young Republicans attending the T exas YR Federation Leadership Sem inar F rid a y and Saturday will canvass Austin precincts Saturday afternoon. The canvass will be a first for i the Y R’s, and involves taking poll i tax lists and checking at each I hom e to see if the nam es on the I lists a re correct. Additionally, the Y R ’s will survey political party preferences as p a rt of their can­ vassing. Before they leave for their in­ dividual precinct assignm ents, the I delegates will hear a keynote ad­ dress by Ja m e s Leonard, e x e c u -1 five director of the Republican P a rty in Texas, em phasizing how | Y R ’s can m ake effective use of in the Texas. the COP facing issues Delegates from Houston, San An­ tonio, Waco, D allas, Wichita Falls, and other cities in Texas will reg­ in T exas ister at noon F riday Union 356. In preparation for their Saturday canvass, the Y R’s will hear a lec­ tu re with dem onstration a t 7 :30 p.m . F rid ay night in the Longhorn Room on facts and figures on p re­ cinct canvassing by Paul Des­ Rochers, regional director of the Republican P a rty of Texas. A discussion and slide demon­ stration on YR publicity’, the g ra­ phic a rts, com m ittee telephone work, and new sletters will be giv­ en at 3:30 p.m . F riday by R ichard Hewitt, p ast editor of the SMU Cam pus and form er SMU Yeung R epublican president. D elegates will b reak into county, | college, and high school groups to j discuss problem s of m em bership j drives, program s, club organize- | tion, and special projects and ac­ tivities a t 4:30 p.m . After D esR ochers’ presentation I “ precinct” a t 7:30 p.m ., groups will m eet a t 9 ™ m ake plans for the day. size *3 ^ p* ?-» * o S ' co p cis O ^ * ^ fcf 3 co © ^ ® p w A lecture and dis< role of a YR club i by Susan Cunninghe of the B exar County tion, will open the sions at 9 a.m . Sa tu n Delegates will rnee college, and high sc under their ehairm er p new ideas from IO a r After the keynote adc ! specific cam paign by Leonard, p.m . groups will m eet a t 2 ; briefly review canvas I niques, and to receive and assignm ents. , Delegates will reeonvc j cinct groups to assemble I tion, discuss problem s er I and prepare reports at i ^ * The entire group will hear ro- j ports on problem s and accom plish­ m ents and a sum m ary of the sem ­ inar a t 5:30 p.m. A barbecue will be held at 7 :30 p.m . at a place to be announced during the sem inar. The University YR club is spon­ soring the leadership sem inar, and Lee M cFadden, U niversity YR president, will welcome the dele- j gates at 2:30 p.m . F riday, after j registration. eft ^ 3 J* j Faculty to C o n s id e r Entry Requirem ents the College of Arts and Sciences, j This fact, coupled with our ad- j vane ad exam ination program , m akes the language pro­ vision obsolete,” Shipp wrote. placem ent Ship said th a t no college credit should be given for high school geom etry a n d trigonom etry be­ cause students who are advanced m athem atically m ay now g a i n college credit by passing advanced placem ent exam inations. the “ With requirem ent of two units in foreign language for ad­ mission to the College of Arts and Sciences in 1963, a student should no longer be perm itted to count t h e beginning language course : (usually 406) in the sam e language for cedit,” he concluded. * 3 Delegates ro G o to Peru Three m em bers of the Model tiled Nations’ P eruvian delega­ ti have been selected to aceom- ly 25 students from various Te­ the United States and ns of ada the N ational Student neil cf YMCA’s sum m er work in e students, Jim W eatherly, Del Junior College, E v e re tt Ses- Texas Southern U niversity; Ruben Brown, U niversity of 5 , will leave New York City 20 and return August 25. / will spend the month of rn P eru working to develop facilities and program s in subur­ in L im a. The ban a re a YMCA’s delegation will help the con­ struction of buildings while doing social work among the people. _»ji in f The rem ainder of the tour will include visits to Chile, Argentina, E cuador, Brazil, U ruguay and Venezuela. E a c h delegation is required to raise individual funds to cover the costs of transportation. The great­ er p a rt of the costs will be paid by organizations and individuals with the understanding th a t dele­ gates will be available for lecture program s when they return. Elly Medina To G o to Spain O n Fulbright E lly Medina has received a F ul­ bright Scholarship to study Span­ ish literatu re and philosophy a t the U niversity of M adrid in Spain. O ther winners will be announced in the n e a r future, M rs. P atricia R oberts, Student Group Adviser at the International Office, said. M iss Medina, a P lan II m ajo r in R om ance Languages, has an over­ all 2.9 grade-point overage. Sire is a m em ber of Pi D elta P hi, F rench honorary’, and Alpha L am ixia Del­ fresh­ ta, national honorary for men. In addition to good grades, Elly has been an active lead er on cam ­ pus. She was chosen as th e most for outstanding University girl 1961, outstanding student in 1961 Cactus, and was nam ed a Junior Fellow in the College of A rts and Sciences along with 25 other schol­ ars. She is form er se cretary of the Students’ Association: m em ber of M ortar Board, national senior wom en's honorary society; Alpha ! Chi Om ega social sorority; Orange ! Jack ets and Spooks, w om en’s serv- i ice groups, and Newm an Club. She w as also a sem i-finalist in and the Ten Bluebonnet Belles Most Beautiful contest. Miss Medina will sail for Spain i Sept. 5. New SA Passes Freshman Bill Under the leadership of the new the Student Assembly officers, sped through a limited agenda in 40 m inutes Thursday night. A bill by Oliver H eard, Arts and Sciences assem blym an, calling for participation of F reshm an Assem­ blym en as legislative assistants to the Student Assem blymen, was passed. The bill w as voted on with­ out being referred to a com m ittee to enable the project to go into effect this sem ester. Johnny Weeks, A&S assem bly­ m an, introduced a bill calling for the am ending of operating rules of the SA to ullow debate on mo­ tions to suspend the rules. Under the current procedure, a motion to suspend rules is not debatable. D ie bill was referred to the Cam ­ pus Affairs Committee. New assem blym en who w ere not sworn in Tuesday at the inaugural banquet were installed. D iey in­ cluded Steve Perel, law assem bly­ m an; Bill Mabry, A&S assem bly­ m an; Roy G uerra, pharm acy a s­ sem blym an; and Buddy Herz, A&S assem blym an. Sanford, Leberman, and Tosch O fficiate 3 D elegates to Peru Ruben S. Brown, left, Everett Sessum, center, and Jim Weatherly, right, will travel to Peru this summer as part of a 25 student tour spon- sored b y the National Student Council of the three ere currently the Peruvian Y M C A . The de'egation to the M od el United Nations being held here, —Photo by Draddy G rand Jury Action O rdered By Bobby on Steel Price Hikes press secretary, replied in the neg­ ative when asked if any direct ac­ tion can be expected shortly. These things take tim e,” H atch­ e r said. H atcher left unansw ered a ques­ tion as to w hether there a re any | solid reasons for tile White House i to believe there m ight yet be a cancellation or rollback of the 36- a-ton rise in steel prices. But in a low-key statem ent of told K ennedy's views, H atcher new sm en he thought it safe to say like the President would steel prices to rem ain they w ere as when the recent new labor con­ tra c t w as signed. With Senate »uul House co m m it­ tee Investigation* already s h a p ­ i n g up, Sen. Mike M ansfield of M ontana, the D em ocratic m a jo r­ ity leader, told reporters, "The tim e for talking about the prlea increase has p a sse l—the tim e for action lias co m e.” Mansfield said the Senate Anti­ monopoly subcom m ittee headed by Sen. E stes K efauver, D.Tenn. “ has 1 taken up the ball” and another in­ quiry is planned by the House An­ titru st subcom m ittee led by Rep. E m anuel Ceiler, D-N.Y. M ansfield added th at the Justice D epartm ent “ has taken m ore titan j ordinary in w hat he 1 term ed “ this uncalled for and un­ necessary ” price increase. in terest” view as a result of the sudden wave of price in die steel industry. increases President K ennedy’s top aides gathered a t the White House to survey the possibilities of action in the courts and in Congress. Kennedy, who denounced the price rise initiated by U. S. Steel as “ wholly unjustifiable and irre ­ sponsible,” sat in during the last quarter-hour o f t h e 45-minute m eeting. The em phasis afterw ard was on orderly deliberation. Andrew T. H atcher, assistant White House White socks and loafers, hall­ m ark for the UT coed. become a neat prologue to “ Crew Cuts and Bobby Sox,” docum entary film to be shown in G erm any in June. Shooting of the movie, which concerns tile academ ic and social life of the University student, be­ gan Wednesday, April 4. A special screening of the unedited product w as given Thursday morning. Reels will be edited som etim e in May, and the sound tra c k is being processed in W ashington. Highlights of the unfinished prod­ uct include students doing work in the biology lab, interview s with Daily Texan staffers, Round-Up activities, including the barbecue and Sweetheart presentation, and an interview with G erhard M aurer, graduate student in political sci- M aurer, who is coordinating the film, com pares the goals of A m er­ ican and G erm an education, D ie film is p a rt of a G erm any docum entary series, “ Weltbuehne A m erika’* or World Stage A m er­ ica.” Thilo Koch, a W ashington correspondent for G erm an televi­ sion, is directing the movie. WASHINGTON (J)— Atty. Gen. R obert F . Kennedy said T hursday night he has ordered a grand jury investigation into the new round of steel price increases. Kennedy m ade the disclosure In response to questions about a state­ m ent by U.S. Steel Corp. B oard C hairm an R oger Slough that his firm had been subpoenaed before a grand jury. A spokesm an for the Justice De­ p artm ent issued Kennedy's sta te ­ m ent to new sm en several hours after Blough defended U.S. Steel’s action in a televised New York news conference. The attorney general'* sta te ­ ment said Ute grand jury probing Ute price rLse will be convened in New York. He did not say when. The attorney g e n e r a l had watched the first few m inutes of Blough’s television rebuttal to ad­ m inistration criticism and refused to com m ent a t th a t tim e. in His confirm ation that the Justice ; D epartm ent would seek grand jury tile steel price boosts action j carne a fte r day-long reports and I speculation th a t Justice D epart - ! m ent law yers w ere studying pos- ' sible court action. An a n titru st action against “ Big I Steel” w as described as one of I several possible moves under re­ P erel w as appointed by Lowell re­ Le ber m an, SA president, place Joe Hood, who resigned. M a­ bry was appointed to fill the v a­ cated seat of Sandy Sanford, new­ ly elected vice-president, to Bills re fe rred to the Campus Af­ fairs Com m ittee w ere: • A bill by B arbara Tosch, As­ sembly secretary , calling for publi­ cation of a Students’ Association and/or Activities handbook to be effected by the end of the 1963 spring sem ester. • A bill by Oliver Heard, Ja> Westbrook, and Tom Hutcheson, A&S assem blym en, desiring inves­ tigation and report of the new tel­ ephone system planned by the Uni­ versity. • A bill by Heard and G uerra investigation of cost items offered asking for and availability of for sale in the Texas Union. • Perel introduced a bill call­ ing for tile use of p art of the R parking lot behind Townes Hall as a C lot. The bill was referred to the T raffic, Parking, and Safety Committee. Herz announced that the law li­ brary would no longer la* open to undergraduate students unless ac­ companied by a law student. Ranger G O M - K a y Colem an With April .showers comes the April Ranger. Thoughts of spring must have inspired the Rangeroos, for Hay Coleman, Girl of the Month, is lazily lolling by a swimming pool. Other features of the cartoon-festooned magazine are new contributions by ye ole Gilbert Shelton, long-time staf­ fer of the Ranger, who just returned from a New York sojourn. “How the hell many days HATH September, any­ way?’' is a controversial piece which s o m e compare to Thurber's heights of humor—others say it runs a close sec­ ond to the Encyclopedia Brit tan ira in gag lines. Read it yourself—nothing like a first-hand judgment. The yellow, yellow, yellow covers will be on sale tomorrow at the orange, orange, orange booths in the usual places. A c c o u n tin g Institute To M e e t A p ril 16-17 D ie Eighth Governm ental Ac­ counting and Finance Institute, sponsored by the University with i the active cooperation of the Texas Municipal League, the Texas Chap­ ter of the M unicipal Finance Offi­ cers’ Association, and the Asso­ ciation of City Clerks and Secre­ taries of Texas, will be held at the Villa Capri Motor Hotel April 16-17. Registration for the institute will be held from 3 to 6 p.m. April 15 and from 8 to 9 a m. April 16. This institute is a training course designed specifically to help muni- 1 eipal finance officers, city clerks and secretaries, and other govem- i m ental officials with financial and accounting operations. The course is open to anyone with a special interest in the subjects presented. The opening general session will run from 9 a m. to 12 noon, Mon­ day, with Dr, Norman H acker m an, vice-president and provost, a n d Edm und C Lynch, assistant pro­ fessor of m anagement, a m o n g those addressing the assem bly. C oncurrent workshops w i t i bo held Monday afternoon ami Tues­ day morning covering Hum an Re­ lations in Financial M anagem ent, Internal Control, C a s h H arm ing and Investm ent, Accounting Con­ trol of Motor Vehicles and Equip- na e n c F rid ay , A pril 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 Steel Deal Although R oger M. S lo u g h . chairm an of US Steel, says “there was nothing irresponsible*’ al>out the recently- announced hike in steel prices, and adds that there can be no question of US Steel’s concern for the “w e l f a r e , strength, and vitality of this ratio n ," there must be a good reason why P resident Kennedy spoke so strongly about the steel executives. Seldom h as the president spoken so forcefully. Ile used phrases like “ u tte r contem pt" and “wholly unjust­ ifiable" to describe the attitu d e of the steel people. C ertainly arn such price raise has a tremendous ef­ fect on the overall economy of the nation, And it is in­ deed very dangerous for private concerns to fail to rec­ ognize their public responsibility. It seems very clear that the J u s t i c e Department should proceed w ith the an titru st investigation that h a s l>een suggested. It is obviously dangerous for the country w hen there is a "p arad e" of price raises such as occurred here. Despite their recent agreement with the I nited Steel­ workers Union, US Steel went ahead with a price raise which could have serious inflationary ramifications. A fter "big steer* had started th e price rises T uesday th e o th e rs quickly joined the “ parade." The sim ultaneous and identical price hikes definitely point out th e need fo r Investigation into th e pow erful steel industry. A New Term The new edition of th e S tudent Assembly cautiously stepped into th e legislative world T h u rsd ay night as m ost of th e opening m eeting of th e new student governm ent te rm w as devoted to form alities, chair finding, and felicita­ tion. One of th? veteran Assemblymen said. “I don’t know what to do with the meeting getting over so early.'" A s everyone knows, it h as not been too unusual for th e A ssem bly m eetings to last four hours or b etter. A nd som e of those four h o u r periods have been action packed. If the new Assembly members meet their responsi­ bility and face up to all the matters that they *hould then we suspect that they’ll soon be in the habit of a t­ tending meetings considerably longer t h a n Thursday' night’s. There was n o t m uch legislation introduced. A bill in tro ­ duced by Johnny” W eeks to allow debate on motions to sus­ pend the rules seem s to have some m erit. O rdinarily it m ight be too confusing to be w orthw hile, but because th e A ssem bly m eets relatively” infrequently and because th ere is often deiay in getting to im portant business, the bill c e r­ ta in ly deserves consideration. We especially like B a rb a ra T osch’s proposal th a t a new Student Activities or Student's Association Handbook be published within the next year. The Handbook now is use is outdated and certain ly needs to be replaced. An a tte m p t to publish a handbook fell th ro u g h once and by now it is im perative that plans be made for a new book. The new book should not be bound to the old format but should offer the students a d iversify of valuable inform ation about the campus and its activities. Good Examples Today's page includes information about the Univer­ sity ’s Sponsored Student program, which has been responsi­ ble for 13 foreign students s t the U niversity this year. This program is an outstanding example of what stu­ dents themselves can do to help the U niversity’s valuable student program. We have long believed that this Univer­ sity is developing a strong and important program for students from other countries. This is a vital facet of the overall project. Of the 13 visiting students, 12 have been living In either social fraternity or sorority houses. We commend these groups for their w illingness to participate in this program and their leadership in aiding foreign students, but it seems that other segments of the campus would bf* anxious to p articip ate too. None of tile students have been co-op sponsored this y ear and th is m ight m ake an excel­ lent project for a co-op, club, or .similar group, T he program has been larg er th is y e a r th a n ev er before th e In tern a tio n a l O ffice and h as been handled through and the In tern atio n al Commission. We are anxious to see th is activity continued and hope th a t it can m eet w ith even m ore success next year. T he Dai fey T exa n O p nio ti t p f t u t u i im T h e T e x a n or o f ti. e u riter o f th e a t I n a atta L ut. er­‘■J tutti ft kl e o f th e La l l > lot neces rattly th o l e of - ® T ie Delly T© x all, • ft TitBciit m m mm s • f Th® I Rivertitv < f T e x a s J* ti Tit XIii, 4&Uy except I! ■ -ida v * bd Saturday ar d h ot Ida y * Student SANSOUCI'' pub i*h«d in pert I U! ©I* S. ; •!* I iCAtiOIU, ujkUat b y *1 ex ft ©aa* tin . Im CW* cont! WUU ■ “ < Th# clit e is J. I , i i i .b u t JDDS WI m f UM. I isi rn Ollie (GR J ©dis uffll I bt MC* t p i, ,I b n Butidlng I * IS ti 107 ic J V Ud«ph< N ew * 73). and the ta i b o r a l > or t (• ary. I B i h dve tt M a l cd in Au Hill M * t o d o n t o 1 t o * “ii * *#.■ * J J© IJvc retI In A ust. r ii*trei month* nnmmy - I H SI HI I 'I JO N H A 11 A ................... . . J OO month ?5> m o re h 75c m o n t h P E R H A M N I E D IT O R MANAGI NG RDI J OK ..................... A Myth TA VT M A NA G IN G E D I T O R .,., . . . ST A F F .................HOTT PURVIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . U M H YATT , RI CHARD \ VS STEEN KI STE B t A t t I OE THIS l§ S t I. .................................................. IJ W M , HEIN KHI ........................................... JOE S E L B Y .VI OUT MJI I OH DEAK MJI I OU ISSU E NEWS E l JI TOK ................... N ig h t R e p o rte rs tu jp y w id e ? N ig h t S ports E d i t o r ........................................ A s s i s t a n t .Night A m u ae n .e ri* E d i t o r Ni ght Ca inpu t L ife E ditor E d ito ritd AmujJ a c t ............. .............................................. . .............................. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....................... MA HTH A TIPP * .Sharon Ashton, Andre B acon E v erett It uh urn Bob I JU Font HIU H am p to n W ait* Sm ith L tm 't NtcNtil, KAPPAS LIZ MOBLEY (left), Ray T agoert (standing), a n d Kay P e a c e ; {right! review th e e v e n ts of 1960-6! oy go ~g th ro u g h th e C a c tu s w ith th e ir sp o n so red stu d e n t, K erstin H e ile b e rg c f S w eden, - Photo* by Venn* W OLF SEKA, grad u ate p h ; - s'cs m a jo r from A ustria, aligns a n X -Ray s p e c tr o m e te r . Seka ts sponsored by Pi Kappa A l­ p h a . C O K E T IM E in the Union draws sponsored students Bill de R o e­ v e r and Joyce Z w a g e r fro m the N eth erlan d s, D e R oever lives at Kappa A lp h a ; Miss Z w a g e r stays w ith the D e h a G am m as . Living in Student Residences Gives Favorable Views of American Students, Life foreigners B ) J A S E P A C A S I S I a n d J A C K L O U E Are foreign stu d e n ts retu rn in g to th e ir hom e co u n tries thinking le ss h ghiv of the U nited S tates am e? th a n they did before the;, M a n y 1 tn cern cd au th o rities rn a rn? a in th a t m oney s p e n t on b ringing foreign stu d en ts rn the US does little or no good in p ro ­ m o tin g a im age a b ro a d . fav o rab le US Not so. say eight U niversity sponsored Interview ed s tu d e n t. on the su b ject. The .students are p a rtic ip a n ts in a special p ro g ra m in w hich they live in fra te rn itie s o r so ro ritie s in th*' sa m e atmos* phere a s the m e m b ers. An in c re ase d in terest in in te r­ n atio n al affairs boosted the n u m ­ b e r of sponsoring groups from t h .s > e ar. four rn 1960-6I F ra te rn itie s an d so ro ritie s se lec t th e fro m ap p lica tio n s rec eiv e d a t th e In te rn a tio n a l Of­ fice, p ro v id e room and b o ard fo r one a c ad e m ic y e a r, and include thf lr ac tiv itie s. th e stu d en ts f r o m a Tuition m oney com es s p o n s o r e d f u n d, ra ise d in p a r t by t h e an n u al C am pus C hest D rive. stu d e n ts stu d en ts to 13 in This y e a r stu d e n ts a re slay in g e t D elta T au D elta. L am b d a Chi A lpha, K ap p a A lpha, D elta U p­ silon, P i K ap p a A l p h a , D elta K ap p a E psilon, P hi K ap p a T h eta, an d Alpha (Iii S igm a fra te rn itie s. T h e sponsoring *tu- d en ts a r e P i B eta P hi, D e l t a M am m a, K ap p a K ap p a G a m m a . T heta, and D elta K ap p a Alpha D elta D elta, S’ idem - a r e pi edom i so ro ritie s in rn. Non E'urope, b u t o th e r a r e a s of th e M iddle E a s t and th e vv or Id L atin A m erica r e p r e ­ sen ted . a re also md ; for sponsored ? CI €? Hi t % give a t The eight w ere asked in terv iew ed im a l m r r an evaluate T ex as, offei 1 su g g estio n s p ro g ra p ro v c m e n t of th e .rifle pi d iscu ss a n y ape in red th e y had • n count? Student o r in social life. I Zw i view ed wet Y v es B l a n c h e N etherlands S e k a, A ustria : F ra n c e ; VV * B i r r i , Switzer* Armed lathe Ii ver, T u rk e y ; Al­ la n d ; A ltar b er to Q u in tan a a l i a R ica ; Bill d e H oover, the N eth e rlan d s, an d die N eth erlan d s, G elli M adlenei stated students t hat the year at Texas had In- * reused the United stat***, V iew s to the con lr.irv stem to com e fr<,m the fact that m any student* return home overly critical of t nit***! Stat*** lib* and institution*. t ii e i r opinion »>f em phatically "S u re , w e w ill h a v e som e c r it­ ic is m s ," sa id M iss Z w ag er. "B u t o u r few c ritic is m w ill be based j u s t unin fo rm ed on fac ts not til® assum ption that t h e upon- sored student* were not partic­ ularly in financial need. The eight student* were asked, “ Would urn have been «hi<- to study in the I nlted States without the ald of thi* program ?" Ut answered no. Dc R o c . c r *: lam ented, " p e r- h ap s a fte r six >r seven y ea rs, w hen v\ e have in our d eg re es co u n tries, we scrap e up ould enough m oney to com e here But m uch of the v alue would be lo st." L ittle e m p h a sis w as given fi­ their selection, n ancial need how ever. "T h e m ain - onsidera- tion is not finances; alm ost any ­ study m ore cheaply one could at h o m e," said Seka, " I t is more im p orta nt th a t interested, quali­ fied studen ts, re a d y for exchange of alcas, conv ,** T ee main e m ­ phasis falls on a c a d e m ic record and ability *o a d ju st, and almost the stu d e n ts m entioned th a t all in selection co m m ittee s "look w ell-rounded people ’’ for Nine© student* live in fraternity and sorority house*, quite dif­ ferent from the "academ ic" at­ m osphere* of their home roue- trie*, they have a specific prob­ lem them selves into group activity on the social level while m aintaining good ac adem te records. integrating of "Fraternity groups are closer th a n stu d en t gro u p s in th e .Neth­ e rla n d s ." said De R o ev er, " b u t of co u rse we do not h av e houses More em p h asis is placed here on dating, and in tellectu al Ie.*.* on d iscussion. At hom e it is the op­ fra te rn itie s d<> posite. H ow ever, to h av e m ore ‘affairs* in terest, since m ost of the c a m p u s lead ers com e from G reek g ro u p s," Seka added, "Y es but those who le ad e rs here in student thought of a s those who w ork a te a r e . 'mm£a I 'tween the horns E\ H O Y T 'Texan P U RV IS EJ,-: , L Wk t r n .cal EN THURSDAY S colum n we r e p c le d som e r e m a rk s about this w e e k e n d ’s Model Unit­ ed Nations, A m ong the r e m a rk s w ere some by E rn e st Sewell of B artlesville, Ok!a , who criticized w illingness to co m p ro m ise in the UN, and sa id th a t student m inds to a c ­ a r e being " n e u tr a liz e d * cept com prom ise, co-ex is t cnee, n egotiation, etc., w hen dealing w ith the O m m u n ist." A dditionally M r. Sew rd] said th a t a M odel U nited S tates day ■di mid be co n d u cted so th a t U ni­ v e rsity know stu d e n ts would ‘ how the UN is supposed to fun< - Eon and not ju st how th.? UN is functi< ru n g ." B e rn a rd O rtiz de Mont ell anc, s e t rat A r y g e n e ra l of the LTM I ’N. provided so m e a n sw e rs to M r. Sew ell’s c tat ic ism s, O rtiz sa id "T h e ru les of p ro ­ ced u re apply to all th e countries the M odel UN, re p re se n te d a t not ju st to th e S oviets an d th e th u s w hen we I nited S ta te s, sp eak of this im m ed ia te ly m ean nr- does not seek in g sup p o rt ilh J! tcs an ex a m p le til it o la s t fall w hen th e Afrit.* *5 w an ted to i n t r o d u c e for oconom on callin g the Union gainst th a t UT h as serif d eleg ates o ut to SCON A an d to the S tate D e­ p a r tm e n t’s R egional F o re ig n Pol­ ic y B riefing as w ell. * NOW W ITH T H E v ario u s c riti­ c ism s in m ind it m ig h t be m ter- is a c ­ i d in g to e x a m in e w hat tu a lly happ en in g the U nited N a ? ions in d ise a se tro u b les S ooner o r la te r, e v e ry sym p to m the th a t of w o rld to rm e n ts th e UN. It now i* facin g the g r a v e s t c risis of it* ex iste n ce, A* c le a rly as any m ir­ r o r, i’ s d ifficulties, dissension, a n d failu res reflec t th e passions a n d conflicts of the w o rld ’s tro u ­ ble spots. T he UN is at th a t difficult age It has built-in in ha s tru c tu re . Chief - t h e m id-tee rig. t r o u b l e s a m o n g its h a n d ic a p s a r e ; • L ack of co o p eratio n from its m e m b e rsh ip . • L ac k of m oney. • T he ‘'in d ep e n d en c e expul­ sion • E nd of th e d o m in atio n of the o rg an iz atio n by th e g r e a t pow ers. • T en d en cy of th e g re a t pow­ the o rg an izatio n to by-pass e rs on m a jo r issues. • Of co u rse all of th e se p ro b ­ lem s a r e co m plex an d in effect th e y evolve a ro u n d th e question of w hat the m e m b e r s ta te s really w an t th e UN to be, it W E M AINTAIN th a t the UN is to . a n [*• ik d ire c tly o f trem en d o u s im p o rta n c e to th, n atio n . We need a forum w h ere w e tic- w orld, And as l* ng a s th e UN co n tin u es to ex ist a n d w e ait* in if, th e developing n a tio n s a r e not to be ea sily gobbled up. going D esp ite w h at m a n y w ill ad m it, the Congo is proof of Ihte. T he UN is th e g r e a t hope for o ffse ttin g <*r a v e rtin g the e v e r­ p re se n t w ar th re a t And proof of th e v alue of the UN is th at R us­ sia has sought to d e s tro y it. It is the w o rld ’s m elancholy fa te in this c e n tu ry so be plagued not by a few p ro b le m s but by a g re a t m any of th em . T he we*- porn. ra c e , co lo n ialism , trade, m if- g o v ern m e n t a re all problem s th a t m u st be coped w ith . Tile U N ’s g o al is to help resolve these. T his w eekend th e stu d e n t d ele­ g a te s an d p a rtic ip a n ts xviii bavi­ a n o p p o rtu n ity to o b se rv e the in- n er-w orkings and the t io u bk s of th e I 'N and le arn so m e th in g about the o rg an iz atio n h a s of < h a n c e ea sin g flit weald** p roblem *. influence g o v ern m e n t, is ta ttle g iven a c a d e m ic a ffairs, although th e re is m ore social le ad ersh ip . A cad em ic wbse, m o re top people co m e from the 10,000 n< n-G reeks, w h ere th e re is less conflict w ith so cial in te re sts " T hen, ju st how a c u ra to is the p ic tu re of students hie g ain ed fro m living in G reek houses? ‘one "Y en get only one p ictu re of one kin.I of g irl," said Miss Zw a­ g er. "T h is gives you a b ase to sta n d on at the first, but you m u st see the o th e r sides, It d e ­ p en d s on lite person T hese a re toe little group ’ but you m u st find out about th e o th e rs." I’h r student* w ere In a g re e m e n t th a t so ro ritie s’ and fraternities* rea d y -m a d e hospitality helped lu r m e n s c h few day*. tin* first w hen " e v e r y t h i n g w as so s tr a n g e .” in In Hie beginning, a few things could be done to m a k e a d ju s t­ m e n t e a sie r, A couple of people to v o lu n tarily sp o n so r you and see you through d ifficu lties d u r­ ing the first m o n th would h e lp ,” said M ad len er. A suggestion for p ossible im p ro v em en t < im p fro m M iss B ieri. * At first th e house* a re good; you a re obliged to know A m erican s, b ec au se you a re living w ith it* m ig h t b e b e tte r to sw itch o v e r to an a p a rtm e n t the second se m e ste r, m a in ta in in g your friend* in that so ro rity w hile hav in g m o re op p o r­ tu n ity to m ak e new o n es." them . B ut D e R oever, th e yo u n g est of the is no the ta n do w h at he g ro u p o bjected. p ro b lem , no re stric tio n on stu d e n t, " T h e re lh* Sponsor Pion Explains Means For Selections B y R I T C H I E R E E D T h is y e a r 13 stu d e n ts fro m ail p a r ts of th e w orld w ere en ab led to a tte n d the U n iv ersity th ro u g h th e Sponsored Student.** P ro g ra m , 'ih e d e sire on the p a rt of local liv in g units to p a rtic ip a te in this e x p e rie n c e , supplying room and lx>aiii, m a d e it p w shin for th*. >e h ig h ly qualified stu d e n ts to study In th e U nited S tates, and for the A m e ric a n stu d en ts to le a rn m o re of fo re ig n lan d s. th e including 'n ip stu d e n ts a ie selected by th e sponsoring g ro u p s from a p ­ p lic atio n s ap p ro v ed both in their ow n co u n tries an d in th e United S ta te s, .stu d en ts g ra d e s , rec o m m en d a tio n s, a bio­ g ra p h y , a a p h o to g rap h , s ta te m e n t by th e a p p lu ant ex­ p lain in g why he d e sire s to stu d y rn th e U nited S lates. T he g ro u p 's obi i ga ti non is for one y e a r ; if a stu d e n t s ta y s longer he m u st p ro ­ v id e his own fin an cial su p p o rt. an d Application* for next y ea r’s program h av e arrived at the In­ ternational Office, B ecause of a lim it in foreign student scholar­ ship m oney ta pay tuition the num ber of student* selected m ust Ie* lim ited. Applicants are m ostly from I altin A m erica and Europe. A fraternity, sorority, co-op, or o th e r group Interested In spoil Mir­ ing a student, can contact Mrs. (•ail R atliff at the International O ffice, Early application will In­ sure larger selection. ll is a hope th a t the S p o n g e d •Students P ro g ra m will continue p ro v id in g valu ab le ex p e rien ces foreign and A m erican stu ­ fo r d en ts alik e. Official Notices from E> vellsnd ult a live teachers <*w prospective •© on April l l Appoint st ta made in Sutton Hall Jhten I), Hire* tut J ss' P r riser meat Serries , but p ra c tic a l < xpei thus progt an p he bul W hen san ctio n s a$ South A frica B efore doi. consulted oth e m n atio n s sue h an ext: not rec eiv e resu lted in I us the count rte it ions. The West the th e m teed upper Thi go H id h o unlet in P eople king, "M ad le •« v ery stronj I ' A . " I til e n c ra l a r e v ery * sa id . " T h is in joint In fa v o r of ideas Q uintana addr d a L atin Art * , can view ; " L tm A m erican stu ­ d en ts iced to criticiz e th e US Bai stu d e n t w ith p recon- m uch A ( eiv* d th a t ail N o r 1 h A m erican s a r e , say , c a p ita lists, < an build up th e se id eas iso literi, in his m ind B ut one w ho co m es w ith an open m ind ca n benefit g re a tly , and go back w ith u n ac­ re sp e c t, c u ra te p ic tu re. the selection of students from I -v in A m erica is a mofd im p o rt­ a n t th in g ." id belection brought up I .ilk antithet (mint, Tit‘Ti- wa* aoli ic rritielMii till* year of giving ( nm t h c *po» putt < hest money to se re d stud* UH p ro g ra m , b a .c d on N ath a n J- ain th is In a r e A ccording to O rtiz, "N eg o tia­ tion and co m p ro m ise a r e not s tra n g e rs to th e US A fter all, if E d m u n d R an d o lp h of V irginia grid W illiam P a tte rs o n of New J e rs e y h ad not been willing to com prom it© w e m ight not have a c o n s titu tio n ." H e ad d s, ‘‘Seek­ ing su p p o rt for b ills,/m o d e ra tio n of d em an d * , and con su ltatio n w ith o th e r d e le g a te s ac tiv itie s w hich ta k e p la ce d aily in Ute leg- is la m ? I«*ties in (he US. In this re sp e c t, p a rtic ip a tio n in the Mod d UN h e lp s o u r d eleg a tes to un­ d e r s ta n d th e p ro ce ss by w hich laws a r e p a s s e d In this c o u n try ." O rtiz sa id the su ggestion of a M odel US is w o rth w h ile but ad d s, " T h e re a lre a d y o re se v eral cqn- fet cm e s w h ich th is goal. T exas a a m h as sponsored fo r y e a r s a co n fe re n ce on N atio n ­ lie pointed a l A ffairs (SCON A J. a p p ro a c h is m ore oppon .is w ants. T h ere t*i know peopit well tty to get in the second se m ester. Th. a the p ro g ra m effectiv en ess jus! be­ gin- " is fine But B lache brought forth a view of o ld er stu d en ts. “ Som etim es we h av e d ifficulties in ad ju stin g The house for you n g er stu ­ dents, but o ld er stu d e n ts, used to living a! m e and co n c en tra tin g h eavily on th eir studies, m a y find a problem rn in te g ratin g into a y o u n g er g ro u p ." "W e h av e so m uch to do w ith o u r g ra d u a te w eek th a t it is dif­ ficult for us to be ev er-activ e in a fra te rn ity h o u se," Seka added, "T h e best w ay to in te g rate into a co m m u n ity is to he at the sa m e a g e level as its m e m b e rs." The " b e s t a g e ." it w as g e n e r­ least ally ag re ed w as a fte r a t one y e a r of college w ork in the stu d en t s ow n country. "T h en you ru e n e ith e r too young o r too old " said de R o ev er, " D ie y o u n g er you a re , th© m o re you g et o u t of th e p ro g ra m ; the older, the m o re th e fra te rn ity g ets out of it a s long HS you a re an u n d e rg ra d ­ u a te ." U n d er th e p re se n t setup, how* ev e r, the spo n so red stu d en ts p ro ­ g ra m — th ro u g h fra te rn itie s an d so ro rities m ain ta in in g houses — p ro v id es tile only such o p p o rtu n ­ ity for g ra d u a te s an d undei g ra d ­ uate*, ou tsid e of re g u la r sc h o la r­ ship g ra n ts . The g ra d u a te s w ere a g re e d th a t such a p ro g ra m w as ex tre m ely ben eficial to them , b u t they felt they would h av e been ab le to co n trib u te m o re to the* g ro u p s they had been y o unger. th at if A cad em ically , how ever they felt they h ad com e at the rig h t age. M iss B ien c o rn rn e n t e d, " T h e re is m o re value in taking sen io r an d g ra d u a te co u rses, b e ­ cau se the w ay we stu d y in E u ­ rope is m o re like g ra d u a te school is little benefit here. There 'n taking fre sh m a n and sophom oie courses th a t one could just a* e isily get a t h o m e ." a in Q uintana, fre shm a n, saw m uch ad v a n ta g e the u n d er­ g ra d u a te c o u rse s "if you p lan to get a d eg ree. I took req uired su b ­ ject , and now I hav e the oppor­ ! ) s*ay and w ork for a tunity degree If I h ad taken only elec­ tives, they would h a v e b een of no benefit to m e ." I ti e -tm h it?*’ their group* wanted prcm ru jiatin n with how w ell they w ere Integrat­ ing brought up a question of how much to gain, Mi** Zw ager thought, "The group can get a* much out of a foreign student a* they want to -—and really many of them don't want to get m uch out of It. I ani afraid. We are alw ays eager to talk about our countries if there are those who want to listen ." M adlener su g g ested , "T h e fra ­ te rn ities could get m ore out of us perhaps if w e p a rtic ip a te d on som e of th e ir co m m ittees. "It is a little disheartening to us when we* ©tier to help with d iscussions and our suggestion* a r e not ta k e n ," Seka added. How m uch atten tio n should stu­ d ents have? S h o u l d they b© "spoon-fed’ or left completely on th e ir own? We have ex actly the am ount of attention u n w a n t," said B l a ­ c h e , Seka added, " l l we need a s ­ s i s t a n c e , we < rn go to t h e Inter­ n atio n al Office and we get it.” De R oever suggested that the sponsor* d students, with more au­ tom atic contacts, could be of as­ s is te r c to other foreign student* without so m any opportunities for integration, On one point all the students a g r e e d ; "We hop© that m any m ore stu d en ts in the fu tu re can h ave the sa m e w onderful oppor­ tu n ities vve h av e h a d .” Bi J IM S E U t O S Ranger As a dult Editor W ell. to d ay is a n o th e r R a n g e r it I* also the last Rang* i day. the y e a r. H airy d o e s n ’t rrie Muldoon, Roselinda Monr- i real and Linda Fletcher are the top seeded girls from the Univcr- i sity. 'Mural Schedule T E N N I S D O U B L E S D iv isio n Q u arterfin al* Cise* A 4 p .m .—C ook and Jord an vs, H er- 4 30 p m .— F , M artin and Blrok vs E. M artin and S u sser; K uem pel and S im on vs H o ffer and Ila jo v sk y ; G rant and B lack vs. G allow ay and S eerod . 5 p m .—S im p son and B lak e vs. H elm Olm B and Sharpe. an d H errin * t i . 4 p .m .—P ic k e tt G ross and W in ter, 4:30 p .m .— S tr in g e r and T ip p s vs. M onoshina and Y oung or V o ig t and H elton . 5 p .m .—C om eau x and M anning v i I Grub© and W ood all; K rlsty n ik I G ott vs. S im p son and Rachai, and C h icago (H erb ert 12-12) at K an sas m arisen and W illis. SENIOR COUNSELOR positions available for males 18 years and over at the Julius Schcpps Community Center Day Camp in Dallas. Enjoy a most rewarding and challanging nine weeks, June 18th t h r o u g h August 17th, with children ages 6 through l l . For more information write: Camp Director Julius Schepps Community 7900 Northaven Road Dallas, Texas ♦Crooks will face a fine field of milers in Bob Mellegren of Baylor and Texas’ Loy Gunter and Steve Strickland. Another prospective winner for the A&M crew is big Danny Roberts in the shot and dis­ cus events. Roberts has lost only one shot put event all season. By CARLTON STOWERS Texan Sports Staff 4 The Lone Star State’s track' wars will be divided this week j with Texas and Baylor competing j in the Dallas Invitational and Abi­ lene Christian and Texas Southern j both hosting triangular meets at home. 1.......... '......... . Friday, A p ril 13, 1962 Track Supervisor Clyde Little- TMP HAU Y TPY AM i n c u z M L i LAMIx first sub-47 open P ,™ 9 quarter of the season may weU rage i become a reality Saturday night I as Tedford, Poage and C a rs o n , a n d field will take a 29 man squad for the first time since twisting end behind SMU who copped the Baylor’s Roy Smalley have all some outstanding to Dallas to compete in the Dallas an ankle in the West Texas Re- fourth spot. A&M is the only team been posting ; that has been able to defeat the times on relay legs. Tedford was Invitational to be held They may well save the best ACC mile relay squad this season; unofficially clocked in 46.8 on his Cobb Stadium Saturday night lead-cff leg of the victorious Aggie four team battJe baton near the leaders he could sprint medley relay last Saturday. Texas and Baylor are due to battle re]ay for the team title in a field which every inch of the way with home- bring the Aggies home in front. sized half also Includes Southern Methodist town SMU, with Jimmy Langham Fexas, running with Cram, Randy milers, Larry Rhodes of Texas on the anchor, holding a slight Uirson, Jam es Cooper, and Ray and Jim Rorobaugh of SMU, rate and Texas A&M. edge over Texas, Baylor, and A&M. P °aKe> bas turned in the 880 yard Baylor, thanks to Kemp's great (3:13.0 and could surprise the fav- dash with Rhodes’ runningmate Charles Rodgers also a capable lead-off leg, took fifth in the Texas i orRes- until last Saturday night. The mile j an<* H George Tedford gets the in a best of | as co-favorites lay* early in March. a couple of pint t> . . .ays tmrtffirGaUv in P C state's T„ v « trvdf -xas D ie ' . '.' “ . tx hind A C in me while th© Bruins were third. Both Relays last week, only .2 of a s e c - 1 A&M distance specialist Thad contender, i teams have a prospective double winning individual—Bill Kemp of Baylor In the sprints and Texas’ Ray Cunningham In the high and low hurdles, Kemp and Cunning­ ham will duel with each other on I the final leg of the 440 yard re- lay where both teams have speedy j | foursomes. The Steer sprint relay has beaten the Bears three times while Baylor has bested the ’Horns j twice. Casual Cotton Pants $3.99 ca. 2 I 5 N e t A regular |5 .0 0 value. Y ou'll want: to select several pair at this special price. Plain front. T h e s e polished cotton pants are designed for appearance and dependability. Choose from b l u e s , beige, dark brow n, d a r k olive, and ligh t olive. i w r v E R s m r 2246 Guadalupe Street — In the Co-Op "O K A Y , KID, H A N D OVER THEM R A N G E R S!" A word of warning to R A N G E R readers, lf you g o near the c a m p u s construction sites to ­ day, guard your R A N G E R (s ) well. The workers thereon, titillated by the R A N G E R S sea m y reputation, are drooling with anticipation. W h o knows, you m ay even be a c c o st e d by these crazed persons, lf so, clutch your R A N G E R (s ) and run! OUT FRIDAY! SALES BOOTHS ALL OVER THE PLACE! TWO BITS! (plus tax) HUMOR! CARTOONS! PHOTOGRAPHS! PRINTING ALL OVER IT! BUY! RANGERRAN G ER RA N G ER R AN G ERR AN G ER RA N G ER R AN G ERR AN G ER ■sanger ; R a t h e r sporting o ld ­ fashioned figures o f a J ' cricketer, doing all the traditional things w ith T a bat. Perhaps c l o s e i study could give one a I w orking know ledge o f the game. Perhaps not. In any case, a splendid i I match for t h e tradi- * tional restraint o f the collarless V i l l a g e r classic in cotton broad­ cloth. i ground. ' W h ite or B eige Black- 1 Ii 18.95 : ii i | G f t f c t u Camj&dL HnivmrihjShop ' H ie 2350 Guadalupe 9 • • rn * * C A T i * 1 r Sizes 6 to 14. rn*,'**,* ***** OtLcfct j Another exciting duel looms in j the pole vault where Texas’ co I Captain Baylus Bennett and SMU’s I Dexter Elkins have both been well i ! over the 15-foot barrier, Elkins j having a best of 1 5 '6 V ’ Indoors I and Bennett boasting a 1 5'4V ’ et- j I fort outdoors. Steve Guynes, I long­ horn sophomore, looks like a good I bet for third by virtue of his fine showing in the Texas Relays. Steer jumping bean Bobby Wyatt, who is a senior, will be making his first college appearance in the Dallas Invitational. Wyatt was hampered by leg injuries both his sophomore and junior years but is having a good season this year, having bettered 24 feet twice this spring. Southwest Conference frosh titiist last year, John Cram will be In the broad jump competition Pagan's Bat Paces Giants Win, 8-4 I SAN FRANO SCO (J) - - Short­ stop Jose Pagan drove in four run* and scored one Thursday, pacing San Francisco to an 8-4 victory over Milwaukee and a sweep of their three-game series. Jack Sanford got credit for the victory but needed help from ace reliever Stu Miller after big Joe Adcock pounded a grand slam home run in the eighth with none out. The undefeated Giants take on defending champion Cincinnati Fri­ day night Tile Giants collected eight hit* off three Milwaukee pitchers. The Braves had six. A crowd of 9,177 watched the Giants jump into a 4-0 first inning lead against Bob Buhl. The Giants scored twice without a hit off reliever Don Nottebart in th® fourth as he Issued three walks and Mack Jones dropped Mays’ fly in rig!* field. AVAILABLE NOW AT YOUR BOOKSTORE ) 1 The Noble Savage 4 {d itto by SAUL B IL L O W and K O T H BOTS- {OOO. Th# m ost t i c k i n g issue thus tar. Featuring on ill-tempered b la st at Seymour Brim: arias on fallout shelter geopolitics and the dangers of the two cultures view (by Stephen Spender); "C o u n t N u h n ," P ush­ kin 's little-known parody of Shake speare’s "T h e Rape of L u cre c e "j 19 poem s; and non-fiction by Dan Jacobson. A. Slom m sk i, and Louis Guilioux, " A m ost rem arkable paperback periodical.” — Herald Tribune News Service. M H S / 256 p a ge s / S U S Q LOVE AND DEATH IN THE AMERICAN NOVEL By L ESLIE H E D L E R . A provocative, frankly Freudian com parative stu d y of American fiction from Coop e t to Kerouac. "O n e of th# m ost am bitious surve ys of our liters* lur® since P arn n gton s M ain C u r r a n ts ...” — M alcolm Cowley, M G43 640 p ages 12 25 NOW ta an i n t ip t n s iv s paperback edit an THE RECOGNITIONS By W IL H A M fiA D O IS The modern novel that has become a c la ssic . M r2 0 / 860 p a ge s / Only |2 7| FREE CATALOG M E R ID IA N BO OKS are used a t lite* pensive paperbourtd teats and read­ in u n i v e r s i t i e s a n d ju n io r e r s c o lle g e s . S e n d f o r c a t a l o g o f in m ajor d iscip lin e s; basic title s M E R ID I A N BOOKS, Dept. CP, The World P u b lish in g Com pany 1 1 9 W e s t 5 7 t h S t . N e w f o r k 1 9 . I' F r i d a y . A p r il 1 3 , 1 9 6 2 T H I D A IL Y T E X A N f a g s 4 Hoi n H > ; rs A x Rice Bt PETE OFFED Texan Sports Staff HOUSTON— (Sp!.) —The heavy bats of Gary London, T>avid S k in n e r a n d C h u c k K n u t s o n p o w e r e d th e L o n g h o r n s past the Pace Owls, 7-2, Thursday afternoon at Rice Field. Catcher London led the Horns’ attack with two home runs, as he drove across four rbi's. Skinner also hit a four baser, and Knutson tagged one 360 feet over the center field fence, t Ed Kasper was robbed of another home run when Butch | Blume Jumped high in th* air and caught his fly to deep ! left. The force of ,he ban carr!ed over th* fence. but I ■*%. tao4" its.4-a*. m.4> -JI ,le " a s a o ,ie ba!1S o n *° t h e b a ll f o r t h e o u t - t _— i__ 2Lt_ ’O'lJk'ateftetetes Skinner’s blast started Texas scoring in the first half of the second. After Knutson had flied to left, Lew Brazelton got to first via a Rice miscue. John Pinckney fouled to the catcher and London followed by hitting the first pitch over the left field barrier for his first home run of the day. The Horns continued the attack in their half of the third. Pat Rigby singled to left, Kasper sacrified him to second, and Skinner drove him home with a single to left. The O r a n g e picked up}--------------------------------------- followed with Rice third sacker, a double to right center, driving Stephenson and Blume across for the Owls’ only two tallies. l e f t off in the where they fourth, when Brazelton sin­ gled to left, and, after Pinck­ ney flied o u t to shortstop, London blasted his second out of the p a r k , making it 6-0 Texas. Rice-’s p is h in g settled down, and refused the H orns any m ore runs the eighth, when all-Am eri­ until can Chuck Knutson l o f t e d his round trip p e r over the cen ter field fence with nobody on base. Tom B elcher pitched runless ball After a conference on the mound, Horn Coach Bibb Falk pulled Bel­ cher in favor of sophomore re ­ liever R obert Myer. M yer cam e through in g r a n d style, as he struck out the first two men to face him, Joel Tigett and Randy Kerbow. M yer then forced G ary West to ground out to the pitcher for the third out. M yer put Rice down in o rd er In the ninth to give Texas its win, the for the eonfer- while scatterin g four hits until the anc^ bottom of the eighth, when Johnny Stephenson of R i c e punched short grounder down the third base i Texas collected six singles and the four home runs for all its total line. B elcher pounced on the ball, to Brazelton we* °f hits, with everybody e x c e p t ’ but his the two J wide a t first. Blume, the second m an up in the pitchers getting a Rice ride on the R asper, Pinckney, a n d thick of the race the Longhorns a enc a b t h r b r b l r h r b ! R I C E ( 2 ) Bethea ss Rigby 2b 3 I 2 K asper 3b 3 0 (I Skin r cf 5 I 2 K nut’n lf 4 I I Bra? n lh 4 2 2 Pinc’y rf 4 0 0 London c 4 2 2 Belcher p 3 0 O Myer p T o t a l * I n o ( I IO I 3 6 0 Step’n 2b 4 I 0 B l u m e lf 4 I 0 Fox 3b 3 0 2 Tig t lb 3 0 1 Kerbo' c 4 0 0 West rf 4 0 0 Pyle ss 3 0 4 Raes’r rf 4 0 0 M c C le * p 4 0 Wayne McClelland w ent the dis­ tan ce for Rice in the losing effort, j The Owls host Texas again F ri­ d ay a t 2:30 p m. for the final gam e in the current series. T exas returns home for a two gam e session with the B a y I o r ; B ears Monday and Tuesday. ............................. 031 2n0 010—7 ................................. OOO 0(X) 020—2 j Texas Rica j E —Belcher. Fox 2. T igett 2. PO-A— I Texas 27-7, Rice 27-5. Rigby and B razelton; I son and T igett. LOB—Texas 6, Rice 7. 2, Skinner, D P—Bethea, I Fox. Stephen- j 2B—Fox HR—London Knutson. S—K asper 2. I F 7 xBelcher (W.ft-l) Myer . . . . . . . . . . . 2 McClei’nd (L.0-1) 9 H 6 0 IO x-Faced 3 B atters In St! PB—London. Domlngue T —2:12, Umpires—M u ff Finsterwald Leads Greensboro Open and R E R B B S O 2 1 3 4 GREENSBORO, N, C. LFL-Dow 0 0 s i 0 5 2 4 Finsterw ald, low m an on the totem 7 I pole in the M asters Golf Tourna- m ent playoff th ree days ago, re ­ bounded with a 6-under-par 65 to first round TTiursday take a two-stroke th* $35,000 G reater Greensboro Open Tourna­ m ent. lead in C a aa In point: S e r t > ’« Alpine Oxford. Note the softened collar, the tallor-brcd body of thl* Half sleeved button down Tim a Oxford Voile cla**ic In white. This U shlrtxn an ship. ftf.95 tTOVFTSOTT VMS Guadalupe S treet In The Co Op MALOlO* TISI tnt n terry ll**) jecket fermteV wit* row* of Tllil Cost. *8 95 H»w* <«n silt trunk* $5 SS. Set* e t 100% to rte * I* color! of * o r t* |o , groo* oz b it* or. omit*. M AIOLO* M Y W I IT terry ll* * ) |* e k # t I* • e r » * j o o * 4 f r o # * t o t e r tow b l o t t o * * woven of M t|o i* f 1009b cotton SS 95. T**m«4 p ith H tw tiio o Cut co tto n tru n k * SS 95. SPINNAKER STRI FE louneho* brilliance In knit combo of • * * « /( * d cod brown/yellow. Cotton b id e r J8 95 over H tw tn tn trunk* $7.95 Cotton te d rubber »qu*r* r j i n t trunk* $6 95. m m i i CM. Kl jfl S i U ^ L l U O U . ) j K j t i ’- s s j l i r a i s - UkJY 'jcI J Brighten th* shoreiin* ecen* in brilliant ewhnwear created In th* g reat American tra d itio n . . . guaranteed to command rave* from your adm iring crew! (with rn AU-A mf rwM Isook) • t et MAIOLO* MIDSHIPMAN banded wit* bold trim . In *wMtd. natural, pewter or now , ffmdworthy i«c**t of cotton ta b $7 95. How*!I*a le n g th li s t * * co rd trunk* of acetate, totter) and rubber S t 95 •f**tur*d wler C au lin e , Inc., Los Angeles, Calif., Another Fine D a u Keyser Roth Product, TRANSPACIFIC **t* m I I* beld tole *!• *•» F'«*'.* I r»g Mill**! ss 95 knit ti* S*f length ant* **■ •» J 95 low •» r*4 comb net’#** * ’ u t . 190% jetto n YOUR CAMPUS H E A D Q U A R T E R S FOR . . . S W I M W E A R AT . . . Frosh Thresh Owlets by 13-1 Coach Roy Enderlin^ Yearling baseballer* won t h e i r seventh straight contest Thursday afternoon as the Texas frosh bombed the Rice Owlets, 13-1. The Yearlings will play again Friday afternoon when they will take on Wharton Junior College at Clark Field. Game time is 3 p.m. Texas, which lost its opening game, handled the Owlets with great ease as the Orange scored runs in every inning except the sixth and seventh. Freshman pitching ace John Collier, who racked up his fourth win against no losses, al­ lowed only four hits in seven innings. Russell Poland, who relieved Collier, allowed the Owlets only two. Texas, which gathered 13 hits off Rice loser Tex Spear, was led by the power hitting of Ed Denman, Regis Wroble- ski, and Ron Bandy. Rice Texas OOO OOO OOI-— I 134 130 01X—13 The new outrage by the IN and OUT boys the WORRY BOOK by Robert Benton and Harvey Schmidt An in v a lu a b le g u id e to the correct way to w orry, w ith sp ecia l a tten tio n to w h ich w o r­ ries arc B A S IC and w h ich are B A R O Q U E . W ith b a sic illu stra tio n s, O N L Y $ 1 .95 V IK IN G At bookstores, probably THE DAPPER HOUSE R E S T A U R A N T O U R SP E C IA L T Y IS G O O D FO O D , S T E A K S & S E A F O O D S Lunches and C om plete D in ners Located on right, just past first sign al after B obby Lane's Bowling A lley lig h t l l a.m. to l l p.m. H I 4 -1 6 6 5 2 0 3 4 South Lamar C lo sed M o n d a v i 5501 AIRPORT BLVD. C A T C H E R G A R Y L O N D O N slams two round trippers against Owls Celtics Nip Lakers ROSTON (.Ti — The revived Bos­ ton Celtics have regained a h air­ line edge over Los Angeles in the National B asketball Association playoff finals. Smooth execution of th eir must form ula of relentless running, hot shooting (50 p er cent) and board crashing produced a 115-103 victory a t Los Angeles W ednesday night and evened the best-of-7 series, 2-2. " I f s down to a best-of-3 series, now,” said Boston Coach Red Auer­ bach, "an d w e il be playing two at home, which is in our favor.” Texas League to Begin N ew Season on Friday By H ie Aaaocltaed Pre** The next gam e is scheduled here S aturday night and the sixth back the in Los Angeles Monday. seventh gam e is needed it w ill be here next W ednesday. If " I think we can win one gam e in Boston and I know we ll win hack hom e M onday,” said L aker Coach F re d Schaus. Dallas, Houston, LA Bid For H e a v y w e i g h t Fight NEW YORK iii — Dallas, Hous­ ton and Los Angeles still are _ among the bidders for the Floyd M l Patterson-Sonny Liston h e a v y - : ■ ■ it was learned weight title fight, T hursday. The site and date are to be announced Monday, The T exas League launches its sixty-seventh season F rid ay night with two brand new m em bers — j Albuquerque and El P aso — and an optim istic outlook. An attendance increase of 300,- j OOO is anticipated, this based on w hat P resid en t Dick B utler calls better stability. "In every city we have good ownership, w ealth has returned to I the league and every club has a I good, strong working ag reem en t,” said B utler. "T h ere also will be an inrcease in population in the league’s a re a with Albuquerque and El P aso replacing A rdm ore and V ictoria.” H ie league drew 468,181 last the to pick P atterso n , the defending cham ­ pion, has the right site. Chs D ’Amato, the ch am p ’s ad­ viser in New York and m an ag er in m any states, has been in con­ ta c t with groups from m any cities. So have represen tativ es of Cham­ pionship Sports, Inc., the prom ot­ ers. It w as learned th a t the Cotton Bowl in D allas m ight be available , if the D allas group succeeded in I w resting the fight aw ay from New York, which appeared to be in the lead. If the fight is held in Los Angeles it would be fought in the Coliseum. P resu m ab ly the new Houston ball p ark would be the site in Houston. A guaranteed gate of $1 million m u st be assured. I I R I I a a I ISC0 U N T S W I T H A C A P IT A L ” D GET THE BEST EVERYDAY DISCOUNT a t SPARTAN'S "SM O K E SHOP" SPARTAN'S "BOTTLE SHOP" FASHION CU TODAY'S NARROW TROUSERS DEMAND TRIM TAPERED TOES... __rt Q J J o STYLED BY The 32-year-old T equesta. F a . , p rofessional who hasn t won a tournam ent since scoring a t New O rleans over two y e a rs ago, put together nines of 32-33 against p a r of 36-35 for the 7,000 muddy y ard s of the Sedgefield Country Club. His score was one over the tournam ent record set 21 years ago by Byron Nelson and put him two shots ahead of form er US Open Champion Julius Boros of Southern Pines, N C., who carded ^3-34-67. Arnold Palm er, M asters eham- , pion, was in an eight-way t i t for 29th place with a p a r 71, j Seven m ore pros w ere one itr o k t back at 69 and 13 shot 70, I am ong them Sam Snead who Is after his eighth G reensboro vic- I tory. year. The opening schedule: E l P aso at Albuquerque, 7 :45 p m . (MST), 4,000 attendance. Austin at San Antonio, 7 :45 p.m . (CST), 3,750. J (CST), 2,500. Tulsa a t Amarillo, 7:45 p.m. Amarillo, the pennant w inner last year, Is expected to be the club to beat once m ore, with El Paso r a t­ ed around the top on the basis of ] its spring showing. spring clothing seminar topic one: THE CORRECT S P O R T SH IR T t r Today’s a p p a re l trends tow ard narrow trousers an d a more natural look dem ands shoe fashions In the sam e character. tighter, trimmer, slimmer W inthrop ta p e re d toe* fashions this eleg an t trend to a T. Today’s tapered, close fiK r.g stacks ran %e a tapered sport shirt. C u r source, the E rro C o m ­ pany, has developed the p e rfe c t ta p e re d shirt. Black or Copper 1495 LARGEST M A N S SHOP #‘On the D r a g " 2332 GUADALUPE Student* Dept. — • 3rd F OOT Hukhm hl 616 C O N G R i -■ A X H I f i l l S H O E J S T O R E 2348 Guadalupe — On the Drag Specializing in C o lle giate Fashion* Old WI V O S Tales Guide to the Extremes of Politics V • / ^ Joel al CaLl Friday ar T h e D a il y T e x a n ■ • * d i l l i i i i i n u ■ * Friday, April 13, 1962 T H E DAILY T E X A N P a g e 5 | (bS—Phi Gamma Delta [ chapter house. 6:30-9—Pl Sigma Alpha quat, Hitch th’ Post, the John Birch So- g-n Phi Delta Theta casual buffet, Initiation ban- inform al, Au«- rem edies headache has been labeled as being far more w orrisom e than the John Birchers. have And boomed to a new high sales level. Incidentally, d e fy has absolutely no connections with the outdoor toilet m anufac­ tu re rs in California who call them ­ selves the Birch John Society. But this defining of term s still leaves a big blank in the minds of m any voters. Both sides can prove th eir capabilities as Communist headhunters, and both can illus­ tra te the failures of Hie other. So h ere we sit—som etim es thinking about it, but very seldom doing a thing about finding w it the Great T ruth for ourselves. is With all this confusion of term s floating around the voter’s it duty to se© where each candidate stands, If he Is In front of you, you <’«n observe th a t his right is to your left. If he Is to th© side of you, then all hands {xdbnt the sam e way. But if he is behind you. he is probably a Com m unist and either ; a right- or a left-handed campaign- ; e r wrould he glad to point a finger So see where you stand, see w here they stand, and when you all get tired of standing—invite them in for a beer. And w'atch for those among you who sm oke a cig­ are tte with both hands. 8-19—Acacia casual with Delta Zeta, , tin Civic Theater. chapter house. 18-12—Alpha Epsilon Pi casual. Club Hut. house. j house. front. 3-12—D elta Tau Delta casual, chapter 3-12—Kappa Alpha Informal, chapter 8-12 - Lambda Chi Alpha casual. W ater­ 8-12 Phi Delta Chi wood Rec. Park. Inform al, Web- 8-12—-Pl Kappa Alpha casual, chapter house. Saturday 12 noon -Chi Omega retreat. TA Ranch, j W imberley. 12 noon Phi party Fort Clark, 12-6-—Pi Beta Phi Sigma Kappa house retreat, Josey a Ranch. Austin. 1-Ti- D elta Upsilon lake party. Lake I 30-8—Navy ROTC picnic. P ease Park. 2-6— Tau Beta Pl picnic, Zilker Park, 7-10—Kappa Kappa Gamma Initiation banquet. Terrace Motel. 7.30-8:30 — Delta Gamma banquet, W estwood Country Club. 7:30-12—Cordettes sem i-form a!, Berg­ strom AFB. ter house. 8-12—Alpha Epsilon Pl casual, chap­ 8-12—Crow s Nest casual, 1010 VV, 24th. 8-12 Delta Zeta casual, Saengerrunde. 8-12—Sigm a Chi casual, chapter house, 8-12—TLOK. Informal, Zilker Club House, 8-12- Tau Kappa Epsilon informal, 9-12 -Silver Spurs form al. K nights of chapter house Columbus, N o w ...f i n d new complexion m agic with Jfc a pure c o s m e t i c . , . andHypo Allergenic. . L From “ teen-ager” to “ young-at-heart”, ALM AY Cosmetics can m ake your complexion dream come true. From ~ lipsticks and make-ups to c o m -* r plexion creams for n o r m a l,] ^ dry or oily skins. Per* or Unscented. F oundations St.SO plus tax Lipsticks—$1.25 plus tax 55 skin irritants screened out R R R R R Bf* f*I*I*I*I*I*l*I*I*I*I*I*I*f*I*I*I*I*F*I* 1*1* FAULKNERS DRUG 26th A G u ad alu p e < W E C A S H C H E C K S GR 2-2134 $1.50 p iu s tax Powder fly OeorR© P h en ix (Wives of qualified voters need to be inform ed, for someday they, J too, m ight be considered qualified I voters. This, then, guide to periodical voting.) is the fam ily The trouble with politics today is th a t the left hand knows what the rig h t is doing and doesn't like it. Ami both ©tole* h ave their ex- I tr e m e s. On one hand, we have tin* r a d ic a l, lib erals. On one hand, th e reactionary right con- eervaU ve* a re b eckoning, On the le ftist oth er hand, w e w ear both g lo v e s. Do we really need both ha mis to ru n the governm ent? Probably so. As com edian Shelly Berm an puts It, "H ave you ever heard tile sound of one hand clapping?” One group is needed to hold the reins of gov­ ernm ent while Ute other tries to give the hand signals. It the sworn duty of one to oppose the other. is Both liberals and conservatives sw ear to be the best Communist- hunters in the nation, Som etim es, however, their efforts to seek out people who like to paint the town re d a re rem indful of the two old m aids who never went to bed with­ out first looking under the bed for b u rg la rs hopefully. It is natural sides would look first under the other s bed. Lots of tain ted people have been found th at way. But wait I How can the Am erican people be assured that they choose the right m an for the job? Who knows who finds Com m unists the best? In the old days, the task was a sim ple rode color te s t—the good guys that both white horses and the had ones rode I blacks. This is known as the first : color line. Even as recent as the telcvi- 1 a ha lf-smoked sloe show, “ I led T hree Lives.” It was cosy to tell who was good ami who was a cad. As a m eans of identifying to Herb them selves tho FBI agent** would Phllbrick, snatch cigarette from their clenched lips with their right hands and grind it out with th eir right foot, or feet. Convell- i lently, agents t h e Communist would use their left hand, th eir left feet, and a different cigarette. Thus oUi Herb knew the score all the tim e. But alas, things were not always easy In the life of a counter-spy. Once our m an Herb found himself waiting on the bus—it was a low budget show—in the company of an agent from both sides. Very calm ly Herb sized up the situation. He spit the cigarette from his Ups it with ami casually jum ped on both feet. Consequently, two tile agents scurried off In their respec­ tive directions—left and right, j This exam ple is not to say that what is right is good and what is ! left is Communist. On the con­ tra ry , it is used to illustrate the problem in identifying the differ­ ent political left and I right. theorists, As qualified voters, or wives of sam e, it is our duty to know the why’s and w herefore’s of these j two g re a t headhunting parties. And the job isn ’t so easy as looking to see what hand and foot they use on cigarettes. A lot of Diem don’t I smoke. THE UNIVERSITY’S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-5609 Serving the University area for 11 years BEDWAY " H I G H FIDELITY A T R E A S O N A B L E PRICES’* "HAVE YOU HEARD THE GOOD NEWS? IT’S EASY TO PAY FOR TSO CONTACT LENSES NOW.’ "YOU MEAN THE NEW,TSO SPECIAL STUDENT BUDGET PLAN r As interested voters, we sta rt by gathering views from leaders on both sides as to what their party stands for. To the casual reader, reactionary and radical could pos­ sibly m ean the sam e thing. But this is not the case. About the only thing the two have in cornmeal is a m utual noise level. L et’s consult B arry Coldwater, who everybody knows is a coaserv- ative who once shaved with peanut b u tter on a dare, and Adlai Stev- ,, . , enson the liberal who once gave tt» _ .h ° e je_pa.rJ>uSlncM « m uch ba ckwartj glances, help as Kennedy has the rocking ch air industry. ... , eoncem will be: Are we m axim iz­ ing freedom ?” In May, 1956, Stevenson gave this definition of a liberal: " F irs t he (the liberal) believes in the existence of a future, and th a t it can be m ade a believes good future. Although he respects the past, he has no desire to tinker with the clock or turn it back. He says, ‘We cannot drift, we m ust go.’ “ He walks ahead in courage and with „ m lnimum ot th , ob- into scure, unknown future. In contrast to this, the reactionary can always tell you where he has been.” So, we have collected the aims of both sides. And, sad to say, nei­ th er side offers any solution as to which is the best. Today, as alway*, both cam ps are scream ing about the inadequa­ cies of the other. Tile John Birch Society has been called a worse m enace than the Communists. The Am ericans for D em ocratic Action Gold w ater once said, “ I have Little interest in stream lining gov­ ernm ent or in m aking it m ore ef­ ficient, for I m ean to reduce its size . . . I propose to extend free­ dom. "T hus for the A m erican conserv­ ative there is no difficulty in Iden­ tifying th© d ay ’s challenge: it is to preserve and extend freedom . first Always conservative’s the That Unlucky Day Is Here at him. have occurred on this day, accord ing to on© reference or another. By BENNIE DALE LANSFORD You’d better bring out your good luck charm s, for today is F rid ay T hirteen is believed to be b a d , the Thirteenth, th at is if you be-; luck because Jesus and his tw elve; disciples m ade thirteen at the last j Have th at thirteen is unlucky. supper before the Crucifixion. This superstition is further added to by j Of course, it is just superstition th a t F riday, or the thirteenth of the month, o r F rid ay the Thir­ teenth is unlucky. It is just an old wheeze like “ F rid ay is a dry d ay ,” ; o r . . . lim mm. Come to think of it the country did go dry, or at least the 18th Am endm ent went into effect on a F rid ay . This is pure coinci­ dence, of course. Walking under ladders, stepping on banana peel*, broken m irrors, and black cats are all coincidence, of course, with no m ore meaning than th© old Pennsylvania Dutch belief invade your fairies house on F ridays. They won t hurt you lf you say, “ a blessing attend their departing and traveling; this day is F riday and they will not hear us.” that Nobody believes in this sort of j thing nowadays, but just to be on the safe side since today is F ri­ day the Thirteenth; “ A blessing at- i tend . . .” In C entral Texas years ago. a m an w as passing out cigars when the doctor arrived. “ Well, Doc,” he said, “ you arrived just thirteen m inutes too late. I t’s a boy, th ir­ teen pounds, thirteen ounces.” “ What did you ex p ect?” the doc­ to r retorted. “ It's F rid ay the T hir­ teenth. and you live thirteen miles out in the country’." th at You say, “ So w hat! I t’s ju st co­ it is still incidence.” Of course, just coincidence this young m an on his thirteenth birthday on F rid ay the Thirteenth broke his leg and that some y ears la te r fail­ ed to be discharged from the arm y on the 13th because of illness, To tho** few superstitious peo­ ple left, trlskadckaphobLv (fear of the num ber 13) originated for them the Bibl© which gave birth with to the notion of F riday being a c ­ cursed. Noah’s Flood, confusion at Battel, E ve’s stealing of the apple, and Je su s’ death all were said to ancient Egyptian, Teuton, Roman, J th at Everyone knows Norse, and B rahm an tales of woe. j incidents I and accidents th at happen on F ri- j day the Thirteenth a re ju st coin- j cidences, but for the few who g e t ! jitters at the m ere thought of this : luckless day, two ac­ cepted methods of getting through F rid ay the Thirteenth without ca­ lam ity. there a re The Stoic system requires w rap­ ping a white sheet around the body and thinking of T ruth, Honor, and Beauty for 24 hours. Of course, this method w as not devised for U n i-! versify students who have to think 1 about English and chem istry all j the tim e. The E picurean system consists j of throwing wild drinking parties : I (sounds practical, doesn’t it.) This ! ; system was probably m ade by c o l-! lege students for college students. ! B ut if you are the typical college j student, you don’t believe in inces- j sant bad luck on F rid ay th e Thir­ teenth, and this is probably the sanest attitude to take on the sub­ ject. After all, how m any really b e­ lieve that just because It’s Friday the T hirteenth, som ething horrible is liable to happen? But if you are one of the few > who believe thirteen Is unlucky and j carry’ good luck charm s with you to w ard off ill luck, you may be unwittingly carrying m any sym ­ bols of the num ber in the form of A m erican dollars. Look at the back j of a dollar bill (if you have one, ; if not borrow one). On the G reat there I Seal of the United States, are thirteen stars, thirteen bars, an eagle with thirteen feathers in its tail and holding in its left claw- thirteen d arts, and in its right, an o l i v e branch bearing thirteen leaves and thirteen olives; and the motto is thirteen letters—" E Pluri­ bus U num .” Chances are, you know that Greyhound fares are less than any other form of public transportation. What you probably don’ t re a lize is how much less, For a pleasant su rprise , check the money-saving Greyhound fares below. You’ll see at a g la n c e w hy It a lw a ys pays to in s is t on e x c lu s iv e Greyhound Scenicruiser Service?..and leave the driving to us! No other form of public transportation has fares so low. For example: j AMARILLO O n # way $15.05 Round t r ip $27.10 BEAUMONT O n # way $7.65 Round t r i p $13.80 CORPUS CHRISTI O n # w ay $6.90 Rou nd trip $12.4$ DALLAS FORT WORTH LAREDO O n a way $7.00 Round trip $12.60 SAN ANTONIO On# way $2.45 Round tr ip $4.41 TULSA, OKLA. O n * way $ !4,00 Round trip $25,20 WACO O n # w ay $5.95 Round t r ip $10.75 O n # way $3.15 O n # w ay $5.70 Round trip $ !0.30 118 E. 10th Round t r ip $5.70 Plus Tax GR 2-1135 ANNOUNCEMENT TO FACULTY A ll f a c u lt y m e m b e rs are in v ite d to a tte n d an exhibit o f C o llie r 's new line o f quality p a p e r b a c k books, Tues­ day, A p r i l 17 a t H E M P H I L L ' S B O O K S T O R E - 2 2 4 4 G u a d a lu p e . A c o m p lim e n ta r y b o o k will be sent e v e r y ­ one a tt e n d in g this exhibit. (w h e re y o u 'll fin d th e n ic e st w ays to get a w a y !) You w o n ’t fin d a v a c a t io n - brightening variety like this an y ­ where else. And now that spring has sprung, th e buys are ju st as tem pting as th e weather. Your choice of l l new -size C hevy l l m o d e ls. F o u r te e n s p a c io u s , spirited Jet-sm ooth Chevrolets. And a n ifty , nim ble crew of rear-en gin e C o rv a irs. T h ree com plete lines of cars—and we mean com p lete—to cover ju st about an y kind of going you could have in mind. And a1! under one roof, too! You ju st w on’t find better pickings in size, sizzle and sa v in g s anyw here under the sun. And you couldn’t pick a better tim e than n ow — during your C h ev­ rolet dealer’s F u n a n d S u n D a y s . mamr>ki!lhT*w ■HR NSW FDX AMI SUN DAYS AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALERS N E W BET, A I R 4 - D O O R S T A T I O N W A G O N Jet-sm ooihie that rides ju st right, loaded or ligh t— w ith 97,5-cu.-ft. cargo rare and Full C oil suspension. C O R C I R M O N Z A 4 - D O O R S E D A N From s na p py interiors to sure-fooled scat, tki$ o n e's got the gift of m aking sport of most a n y tr ip . =yin ~ invitation to HOLY WEEK Devotional Services at UNIVERSITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 203 San Antonio M O N D A Y th ro ug h T H U R S D A Y April 16-19 12:05-12:30 p.m. PARTICIPATING MINISTERS Monday: The Rev, Blake Smith Tuesday: The Res'. John C. Towery The Rev ^ illiaun T. Gihble Wednesday: The Rev. Lewis P, Speaker Thursday: The Rev. James Wm. Morgan Worship Leader: The Rev. William M. Logan A l i c h t I un h u il l he t e n r d al 1 2 to That’s right, T S O now has a special budget plan available to students who are fitted in famous T S O Micro-Sight Contact Lenses. SPECIAL STUDENT BUDGET PLAN JUST $15 DOWN AND $10 PER MONTH TOR FIVE MONTHS. The total cost for f a m o u s T S O S I N G L E V I S I O N C o n t a c t Lenses is the same . . . just $65 COMPLETE with professional eye EXAM INATION — maintaining T S O ’* long-standing policy of convenient credit at no extra cost. T S O C o n t a c t l e n t e n are the finest qual i t y lenses a i ailahle a n y w h e r e , a l a n y price. I PR E C I S 10 N VI SI ON Downtown 9 07 C o n g r t t t G R 1-466* CONTACT LENS SPECIALISTS C o p i t a ) Rial# G I 2-4386 HEB C # n t # r HI 4-2133 Directed bv Dr S J Rogers, Of N. ley Rogers, Optometnsts NKW CHEVY n NOVA STATION WAGON H ere’* a w agon th at Bells at a com pact v r ie e , yet totes in a big w a y vnth a longer lo a d floor than a n y com pact—ot cr 9 JU w ith second seal a i id tailgate down. See the new Chevrolet, Chevy I I and Corvair at your Chevrolet dealer'e One-Stop Shopping Center Brahms' Requiem to Be Sung UT Chorus and Orchestra George Gibson, also a Fulbright J He made his debut in 1958 as winner, studied Germ an Opera in Alidoro in Rossini's ‘ La Ceneren- M unich. After returning the I told” with the Santa Te Summer United States he earned his m as-1 Opera. Since the fall of 19:>9. he te r’s degree at the U niversity. He has been on the music faculty of also taught voice and sang in a j Northwestern State College of Lou- number of operatic performances, isiana. to Friday, April 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 [Jtl^mBIIIIMIIIIIIWIflWIIWIIIIIMIIUiyWllfBIIWIIIillHIIHIIIIIItlHIIIWWilWIUIIIIJ N e w ly Decorated! T h e D aily Texan N BC to Dance Acts M 'Princess Aurora' Designer K a y Ambnos* has de­ vised many costume, scenery, and special staging effects for " P r in ­ cess A urora.” Brahms* “ Requiem ” w ill be pre­ sented by the U niversity Chorus and the U niversity Symphony O r­ chestra at 8:15 p m . Tuesday in the Texas Union M ain Ballroom . M orris J . Beachy, associate pro­ fessor of music, w ill direct. Solo­ ists are Norma Newton, soprano, and George Gibson, baritone. in music M rs. Newton, who received her m aster’s degree from the U niversity, studied a year in P a ris on a Fulbright scholarship. Recently, she starred as M ind in the U niversity presentation of “ La Bohem e.” This summ er she w ill sing the role of Despina in M ozart’s “ Cosi F an Tutte” with the Santa F e Opera Company. W inner of the Southwestern R e ­ gional Auditions of the Metropoli­ tan Opera this year, M rs. Newton received an all-cxpense-paid trip to N ew Y ork to sing for Rudolf Bing, director of the Metropolitan Opera. A W id e V a r ie ty o f T o u rs ; M U SIC an d ORAMA A RT an d ARCHITECTURE COLLEGE CREDIT M ICR O BU S . . . ISRAEL DRIVE YO U RSE LF and low-price “ ECONOMY" Tours o r F o r m Y o u r O w n G r o u p Ask for Plans and profitable Organizer Arrangements Specialist! in Student Travel Since 1926 f\)TRAP for folders and details See your local travel agent or write us UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CO. Harvard Sq., Cambridge, M att. CALESAS n w o M f f u i s PLUS COMPLETE SERVICE AND CAMERA REPAIR^ STATMAN Photo Service Telephone GR 6-4326 222 West 19th Sw eet Bird of Youth' O p e n s Tonight at A C T Playin g the part of C h a n c e W ayne, a handsome gigolo. Fred Murphy has returned to his home­ town to appear in the Austin C ir c Theater's production of Tennessee W illiam s' "Sw eet B ird of Youth,' which opens F rid a y, Murphy, a movie and TV actor, has appeared in "T h e Alamo' and "T h e Last Tim e I Saw Archie’’ and TV7 shows, "T h e New Breed,” "T h e Robert Taylor Show," M av­ erick,” and others. The Princess, a has-been actress, and Chance Wayne her chauffeur and/or lover, dominate die play with their attempts to escape from 1 reality. She resorts to drugs and alcohol and he looks for a quick, no-work w ay to the top of the movie field. The action takes place In Chance's hometown where he has brought the Princess to help further his designs for fame and success. Doris Viola w ill play the actress. Supporting her and Murphy will be Fred Glenn and Fred Dehn who w ill alternate as Tom Fin ley J r . and Stuff, a Negro bartender. Je r i Mooney and Anna Lois Whiting w ill alternate in the part of H eav­ enly Finley. Tickets can be reserved by call­ ing the box office, G R $-0541. Also appearing are W illiam T. Stewart (Boss F in le y ), Joanne Lin- dig (Miss L u c y), Eth el Little (Aunt Nonnie), Alan Causey (The H eck­ ler), Worth Howe (Scotty), Steve Sanders (Bu d ), G ail Sab and M er­ ci Lou W illiam s (V iolet), Ruth Copeland and S y lv ia M urphy (E d ­ na*, and Donald Adams (the Page­ boy). Students’ Voice in Policy Subject of Radio Forum How large a voice should stu­ dents have in U n ive rsity policies'’ This question w ill be discussed at 8:10 p.m. Wednesday on “ Telopin- ion,” K T B C Radio. Fra n k Cooksey. Austin attorney and graduate of the University, w ill give his opinion in a three- minute sum m ary. Then listeners m ay call in their opinions. N A T IO N A L B A LLE T O F C A N A D A is shown in dance Princess A u ro ra" from the Tchaikovsky b a le i music of "Sleeping Beauty.'* jay evening in ra mom :ompany wi be presented by the C E C W ednesoa drawn. Auditorium. Tickers are now M i 815 E. 531/2 H O 5-6911 SPECIAL—Now Through Easter Colorful Cymbedium Orchid Corsages $2.00 each Cut Flowers— Pot Plants— Arrangements SAN JACINTO CAFE Now Fro* Parking Ie th* JADE ROOM Parking tot—-next door S P E C IA L IZ IN G IN D E L IC IO U S M E X IC A N A N D A M E R IC A N FO O D S Visit Our Rainbow Dining Room O P E N 7 D A Y S A W E E K I6TH A N D S A N JA C IN T O G R 8-3984 bacchanal At Drag newsstands, the C o-O p , and in front o f Jack s Party Pictures M onday only. A M O T IO N PIC T U R IT DARES T O BE DIFFERENT!! LING A N D VERY BLU N T !! T W A T A Great, D y n am ic Story . . . Like None Y o u ’ve Ever Seen Before! — S T A U R I N G — Xom in ee A w a rd S T U A R T M ll I T M A X w ith .M U H A S C H R I X R O D S I K l G K K maw ope F o r In tellig en t adult*. ‘‘Tho M a rk ’’ should ho not only a gripping. « f I <> n poignant dram a hut a m eanin gfu l kind of aortal cinem a a* w ell. JO H N K l M IN O P E N 11:45 CAPITOL A D U L T S ONLY SNEAK PREVIEW T O N IG H T A T 8! R e tu rn ed for thoae who missed it, “ I I I I M . I I K H I I N ’’ ta repeated for jo u r enjoym ent plus! R E G . FEAT. a wewTTM... P U R I M ) It s “Europe's A n sw e r To Mr. Teas" I f t l M - G M O T m m t o m TOUW SUPR If OWKMtt IKHWCOtOT •SAtEBROKSION PRODUCTION . . r n . * DEAR HIM T O U C A N S •rtowtPf ALUEO ARTISTS SPECIAL A U S T IN E N G A G E M E N T S T A R T S W E D N E S D A Y , A P R IL IS VARSITY THEATRE 6 S H O W S W E E K L Y 2 S H O W S D A IL Y Mon. — Fri. S E A T S N O T R E SE R V ED 3 S H O W S D A IL Y Sat. — Sun. T O D A Y at in t e r st a t e Amt roe a MOV* ■ DISCOUNT Q ID J N O W S H O W I N G ! F e a t o r r * : 12 ;20 - 5 :35 - 4 .50 2:05 - 9:20 N O W IN ITS 2 N D G REA T W E E K J O I N THE F U N AT THE STA TE F A IR O F T E X A S I lo . - RODGERS AND ' V T W h V FAT B00NE * HAMMERSTEIN'S BEJ A . R i f . : B O B B Y D A R IN P A M E L A TIF F IN A N N M A R G R E T • ' T M O E W E L L R A L I C H F A Y E IOU* V f l b t i H T I adult* i oo M IX 50 <• I hi Id 55* N O W S H O W I N G ! Features: 12-2-4-6-8-10 c?r:r.‘/rs A P J M UR. P R E E D . I L M a l l e t i n t h e . / v P i a z z a 1 A\ } V Tf » CINEMASCOPE ... METROCOlOW V i ' . £ - O n l y i n F l o r e n c e . . . c i t y o f l o v e c o u l d t h i s s t o r y h a v e h a p p e n e d ! ie HtViLlID • BRIZZI • MHI-HAMILTON A H IL T S KW M UC 50c ( I I H . I ) 25. ■M M I ——I Maut nee % in j o N O W SH O W IN G ! K l RH T S H O W 2;|6 I K A I I U K * 2:24 1:12 6:60-7 :414-9 IM, W S M ! A D U L T 60c I K M l i m i t s ! C H IL D F R EE P L A V I. K it I M I ! Is l show 7 "SO sn a rk lia r o|irii 6 iii anti M ature Vounjc People T I F S H A X VS F I X • 11 H K V T lf O M AH • I t l l H A M I) K F S M F B « K l.I s I h H O I M i Alii I I H Tin Mix sn, < im it STARTS TODAY! B g Double Feature ^H ELLIO N S . ' Mr. f.o t O K R IC H A R D T O D D ■ A N N E A U B R E Y MONI I. JiPP»e« • JAM* MOOTH a ne 0 % mr. ham ' { n ' t ‘C b * I x V G O F M R S S T O N E ; M ’ CO STARRING W A R R E N B E A D Y It NUESSE! WILLIAMS' ONLY NOVEL BIZARRE STORY Of Technicolor ,:vr 'desire PLUS! 2ND FEATURE B d u s t1 l ; ft m*sw*r 1/ J? ** 4*rf V lillh S A11 ( I I H MX ( M IK I) F I I K F Open ti: SCI e I Aret Shul* 7 KCI F la t ground and l i n e Funds a d i s t i n g u i s h e d a d i ;i ; i i m i r t a j n m i . n i La vish ly staged, “ Princess Au-! ro ra ” fills the theater with the j whirling, dancing figures and per- j sonalities from the i m m o r t a l ! “ Sleeping Beauty.” The huge pro­ duction is a veritable showcase for the soloists and the entire com­ pany of the National Ballet of Canada. The prologue, Acts I and H I of “ Princess Aurora” w ill be on the j program Wednesday at Municipal Auditorium when the C E C presents the N BG . Artistic Director Celia Franca has arranged the ballet after the original choreography by Marius Petipa, and using the Tchaikowsky music. A classic of universal appeal, “ Princess Aurora” teems with the the world of fanciful people of legend. The brilliant Rose Adagio, the Bluebird pas de de aux the L ila c F a iry , Camelia F a ir y , Rcse Fairy', Carnation F a iry , Canary F a ir y and their stalwart Cavaliers, the White Cat, Puss-in-Boots, Red Riding Hood and the Wolf are a1! present. Film on Racial Problems To Be Presented Friday “ Lost Boundaries,” a film on racial problems, will be presented at 8:30 p.m. Frid a y at B illet Foun­ dation, 2105 San Antonio. Starring M el Ferrer, the film concerns a Negro doctor s attempt to pass for a white. Admission is 25 cents. Senior’s Flute Recital Scheduled W e d n e s d a y M ichael C. Stouner, senior music student, will give a flute recital at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Recital H all of the Music Building. He w ill be assisted by John Ow- | ings, piano; Ix?o Nitch, violin; Hel- I mut Bielfield, viola; and Elizabeth I Lane, cello. The public Is invited. SUMMER JO BS in EUROPE THE ‘n e w ’ W A Y TO SEE & ‘live’ EUROPE S P E C IA L IZ IN G in European Safari*' For Summer Jo b * or Tour* W rit# : Am erican Student Inform ation Service 22, Avenue de Ie lib e rte , Luxembourg-City, G ra n d Duchy of Luxembourg DELWOOD 3931 lost Avenin M , MOV C IU IC F O F F .N S 6:00 A ll M IS S IO N OOe THE ROMAN SPRING OF MRS. STONE I ris h M x r r r a M a rt* 7.00 I t r x l i j V iv ie n QU AN TR ILL'S RAIDERS 'C ele Iii»- w vier I tx Ii ran-tisane starts 9 CMI SOUTH’AUSTIN VWO S O I I ll C O N I.IC I s s M OX O I I IC K O F I N s t , OO A ll M IS S IO N Of), TEN D ER IS T H E N IG H T Je n n if e r Ju n es J a* un B o lla rd * J r . H I*rf* 7 (Kl G U N F I G H T Ja n ie * Fro w n Ju a n S ta n le y Start* 9:41 “ Let’s have a dinner date this week-end’’ c i m a COFFEE R O O M M ond ay thru Saturday after 5 p .m . All Day Sunday De Luxe Dinners 95 ' W e e k d a y Lunches 75c „ French Fried Shrimp Steaks • Chicken GRACIOUS DINING EXCELLENT FOOD At Reportable Price* V. D A V IS, O p erato r i i • 604 G u a d a lu p e • I Open 6 30 a.m. ‘til 9:30 p m. fL H M M M n M H M M IM M H H M H H M recommends one of the follow ing for good food . . . pleasantly served at moderate prices SHADY GROVE BAR-B-QUE Bring a Party of 4 or more and Play L O W B O Y Every M onday. Open I Days a Week 1728 Barton Springs Road G R 7 0277 Don t Cook Tonight C all F A S S L 'D j n A c v t M f - DELIGHT a I a o t t o * 1 * v » C H IC K E N • S H R IM P • BAR-B-QUE R IB S • F IS H • P IZ Z A E D U C r r c i U / C D V r - K t t U t L I V t K Y CALL GR 6-621 a Hour*: Mon.-Fri. 4 p.m.-l I p.m. Sat., Sun. a Holiday* 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1608 La v a c a The Best Food is at Austin's ’ Big Four" Restaurants EL MAT EL C H A R R O EL TORO M O N RO E'S MEXICAN FOOD-SEAFOOD STEAKS-CHICKEN D in in g Room Facilities Delivery Service D elivery Service U niversity Area 11-2 p.m. Sc 5-11 p.m. G R 8-0242 Flavor Crisp Chicken 409 W e s t 23rd Chicken Orders 59c to $2.29 Breakfast Served Anytim e O P E N I 6 a.m.-12 p m. Except Sunday from C H O I C E ^ corn-led heavy beef , . tarred with French potatoes end cola slew. . fried C A S T R A G J E F S I “ A T A S T E OF 1901 WHI ttth ll. HL. ^ a A f o a g h i’d fih • SU* 4 Convenient Location* in Auitin OLD ITALY* a p ? I M 15 p.m. I .ucn Ii D i n n e r : 5 -9 :4 5 p .m . > - 2 - " •[ ~ xY J. , E x c e p t F r i . Sc S a t . 1 0 :4 5 p m . } , i ‘P O L L Y B E R G E N D A V ID J A N N S E N "BELLE SOMMERS" The Synd icate Own* H e r Song* and Soul! I r i l u r n e l 7:24 * 16:1* PLUS 'WILD RIVER' en GR 2-2473 <»> Classified Ads Cloned IO Until from M a y F irs t P a rt of September for V a c a t i o n , IT A L IA N R EST A I'R A NT S h a k e sp e a re s T he M e r r y W i v e s of W in d s o r Six Basic Settings Designed by Whiting B. Idee Payne Opens Amours of Fa I staff Friday, April 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Pa ga 7 By A NDRE BACON F o r “ Tho M erry Wives of Wind­ so r,'' B. Men Payne will use the forests go, the center, the inner- i n n e r below above, and stages. Proscenium doors will be used at right and left stage, the In designing the sets for Mr. Payne, ll. Ned Whiting, D epart­ m ent of D ram a scene and light­ ing designer has modified the De­ partm en t's traditional modified Elizabethan staging. This y ear's staging is unique. It is portable. “ There a re six basic settings,“ Whiting said, The play opens on the front of Mr. Page's home, and takes place on the forest age and m a i n stage n' °a. The second scene is at the G a rte r Inn. which is the portable inner-a b o s e inner-belovv Stages set. the action and M istress Q uickly's% where the third scene is set, is the sam e as hie G arter I n n , only decorated differently. The inner-above and I oner-below stages give yeoman a d v ic e , as they a re used in the fourth scene decorated as M aster Ford s home. A staircase is add­ ed to the stages to complete the scene at M aster Ford's. The fifth and sixth scenes are played on the forestage and the main stage. The form er scene is •Sir Hugh's garden, and the latter is Windsor Forest. The differ­ ence in these last two scenes is in the scenery w h i c h is flown (lifted above the stage out of audience view '. The scenery and s e t pieces have been done after the m an­ ner of Randolph Caldecott, a 19th century illustrator. The general color quality for the entire pro­ duction is soft, not glaring. “ Colors appear stronger than t h e y actually are because we have outlined a n d highlighted everything in black, as did Calde­ cott," said Paul D. Reinhardt, I 'epnrtm ent of D ram a costume designer. Tile sets, as the cos­ tum es, will attem pt to convey a middle class quality lacking the glitter and overt glam or The Loves of Falstaff: Mistress Ford and Page W ith Messenger Photo by Avant B y B U X H A M P T O N One cf the most original Shake­ sp eare plots, “The M erry Wives of W indsor," is rum ored to have been w ritten on the command of Queen Elizabeth, who wanted to see Sir John Falstaff in love. The play is a comedy of con­ tem porary' Elizabethan m anners, and is the only one which deals exclusively w ith English country society. “ The Merry Wives of Windsor” w as first entered on the Station­ ers* R egister on Ja n u a ry 18,1602. Scholars believe it was w ritten afte r “ Henry V ,” which means th at Shakespeare raised Falstaff from oblivion. John Dennis w rote in 1702 “ This comedy w as w ritten at the Queen s com m and, and she was so eager to see it acted th at she com m anded it to be finished in 14 days." Samuel Pepys saw the play In 1660 and was a t his critical best when he entered into his diary, “ the hum ours of the country gen­ tlem en and the French doctor \ ery well done, but the re st very poorly, and Sir J , Falstaff® as bad as any.” to The play has received a g re a t deal of production, because it is highly adaptable the stage, and its comedy increases in the perform ing. It was played before King Jam es and Charles I. It has been the source for n um er­ ous opera including V erdi's “ F alstaff.” librettos, to have been John Heminge, a m em ber of S hakespeare^ com pany and one of the editors of the 1623 Folio, is believed the original Falstaff. O ther players of the classic comic role have been John Lowen, Quin, George Frederick Cooke. Sir H erbert Tree -a n d now R obert P alm er. “ The M erry Wives of W indsor” is a wonderful opportunity for M r, B. Men Payne to pull out all the recipes of staged Kliia- bothan comedy and whip up a delectable sauce for Sir John Falstaff s stew. Falstaff Costume Sequence DK K POLK, D epartm ent of D ram a photographer, and stu­ dent, look the photo sequence of R obert P alm er as he dressed for the role of F alstaff. Besides being a photographer, Polk is studying directing in the D epartm ent. He will also be in speech and dram atic a rt at State University of Iowa. This y e a r's Shakespeare pro­ duction costum e designs will be the 14th set R einhardt lias done. the costume helps It will also be the 25th Shake­ speare production in which he either designed, acted, produced or directed. “ Hew the actor perform his c h aracter is the im portant thing,’* said Rein­ hardt. “ Some designers a re con­ cerned with what the actors do to the costum es; dirty them or te a r th em .” how R einhardt recently dem on-tea­ determ ine costumes ted m ovem ent, a t the m eeting of the Southern S p e r , h Association. “ Seventeenth Century coats were ru t to be com fortable with th e arm s raised for sword play. To­ d ay ’s coats a re cut to bo com­ fortable w ith the arm s relaxed at the s id e s . The cut of the cos­ tume, then. helps the actor move as people moved in the period of the costum e,” he said. lf die costum es are right, the audience takes them for granted, Reinhardt said. Only if they are wrong do they notice. in the costum e shop R einhardt has under his direc­ the tion trained w ardrobe m istress he in 1952; a graduate personally assistant, and three undergrad­ uate assistants, In addition, un­ dergraduate costum e crews are assigned for the various shows. H ie padding which Robert P a l­ m er, dram a student, w ears as F alstaff in the “ M erry W ives," tenth anniversary will have w earing this y e a r. R einhardt m ade the padding tor the D ram a D epartm ent production of “ Henry tho IV” in 1952. its B y ANDRE BACON In production conference for this y e a r's Shakespeare produc­ tion, “ The M erry Wives of Wind­ so r,” B. Men Payne, director, re­ quested that Randolph Caldecott illustrations be used as the them e for the costum es and sets. “ M r. Payne said th a t he had been im pressed with the w arm th and good hum or of C aldecott's illustrations of the Bean-Stalk’ and “ Aesop’s F ab les’ in his childhood,” said P a u l D. R einhardt, costum e designer for the “ M erry Wives,” ‘Ja c k and M ost of Caldecott’s illustrations w ere m ade for late 19th Century ch ildren's books, and there are relatively few on cam pus, con­ tinued R einhardt. Caldecott illustrations are w a­ te r color outlined with black ink. The bright colors are flat, ra th e r th an shm ey. Thus the a u ra which has been attem pted for the cos­ tum es by Reinhardt, and carried out in the sets by H. Neil Whit­ ing, scene and lighting designer, is of m erry caricature th a t does not glitter, as have Shakespeare productions is bold. in the past, yet R einhardt, replacing Miss Lucy B arton, M.A., professor em eritus of d ra m a , as D epartm ent of D ram a costum e designer, is no the U niversity. He stra n g e r to Convenient 0 Just look how close the ‘F L A M E KISSED H AM BURGERS’ are to the centers of U. T. activity . , . Holiday House No. 2 2009 Guadalupe Holiday House No. 3 I 20th and Speedway I I I H &~JT3t'W—* S r U n P M J f . WED. APR. 25 SUN. APR. 29 WED. 7 P.M., THURS. THRU SAT. 8 P.M. MAT* i« t. l u p .m . 1 • Swn. HIO A S P M. T I C K E T S NOW ON SALI DAILY T SO A M. TO S IO P.M. M»wici»»o1 A u d i t »>mm AUO Al A t u t u A#M'» R«t taal i t a l Cactal (btl m u I ta a l m e n TAX IMCL W I® M OO M OO M OO CHHOR 'N Vt M S C I WIO. N m A SAT MAT. ORDER BY TtLEPHONE GR * - 2 3 3 0 ^ M O R R IS C H A L F I N pr W O R L D F A M • r n i j i ij i i . I > ‘ i f , ' j \ ORDER BY Hoi (AM ISAM# I* Men ic p« I A«dit*fi«m mmm M U N IC IP A L r^rfnripifl "I PAUL D. REINHARDT G R 7-1077 *simv THE HONEY SHOPPE Ram Coins Bought and Sold 610 BRAZO S Here’s deodorant protection YO U C A N TRUST urn OJHL.C alien ucuuunnL.../Cjn>/, n m ie ti ire? lo a th day, every day protectionf It* lite act ii r deodorant for active m m . , . absolutely dependable. Glide* on smoothly, speedily,,.dries in record time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant — most convenient, most economical deodvraut money can buy. 1.00 plus tax. S T I C K D E O D O R A N T 3 M U L- T O NI p Prtdsy, April 13, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 8 Adviser Interviews Extended Campus News Round-Up , w ere nam ed vice-presidents In if | charge of Law School and under- I graduates respectively. Interview-* for advisers, d iscu s­ sion group leaders, and orientation leaders have been extended to 5 p m . W ednesday. Interview s also will be held in T exas Union 319 and 321, 2-5 p.m ., F riday, Monday, and Tuesday. On the basis of the interviews, 130 advisers will be selected. One hundred and ten students w ill be chosen as leaders and 20 will serve as counselors for freshman orientation in August. in terested in working in the cam-1 Seniors m ay com pete for a na- paign for H endrix m ay com e by tional cash prize of $1,000. The the Hal Hendrix headquarters at winning local senior w ill he nomi- HOT Nueces, for this award, nated Loveman N ational Award. Other students in the club’s or- ganization are Ann Lipscom b, Mike R heudasil, John Haney, Frank I public education is a backward in- Sanders, and Barry B arker. ST, LOUIS, Mo. UPI—A econom ist charged Thursday that j research, to distill the essence, | dustry, urgently ; id eas, techniques and approaches, j and w isest and m o s t to put the w eigh t of its pres- j in need of new j tige behind its selection of the best I urgently and leading appraise the resu lts of specialized! * , C L ^ ia/ Theodore O. Y ntem a, form er j r a id e d p olicies.” Collections Due Saturday Entries m ay ba turned in to of K in gs,” a silent m ovie starring said the vast new dem ands on th e | the leadership that is needed.” * line for the student book collection Noon Saturday is the entry dead- Hum anities R esearch Center. Mrs. Ann Bowden, librarian in the H. B. Warner and Joseph Schild- schools cannot be m et m erely b y . kraut, w ill be shown in the Texas spending more m oney to expand • O P * C O ® O P * C O # O P # C O * O P * C O # O P * C O # O P * C O * O P * C O * O P # C O # O P » € O # O P * C 0 Union Auditorium F riday, Satur- w hat w e are now doing. day and Sunday, the Amy y J T I Q i n o l IKIHQ FO J n O W prof essor an(j a v ic e president of School board m em b ers, he said. I I The original production of "King the Ford Motor Co., since 1949,1 “ are the very p eop le to assert C a ll GR 2-2473 fo r Texan C lassifieds Education Convention Schools Backward, Economist Charges b a c c h a n a l At Drag newsstands, the Co-Op, and in front o f jack’s Party Pictures Monday only. M O N D A Y ! P u t n a m t o A i d H e n d r i x - t e s t H u m a n ; - D o n c e Sch ed u l e d f o r U N Jive Putnam . Junior econom ics ^ three winners will receive SIDO. I The International Club w ill spon- Tile film w ill be shown at 4, 7, and 9:30 p.m . Friday; 7 and 9:30 for all d e le - ^ p m ‘ Saturday; and 7 p.m . Sua- m ajor, has l>een named coordlnator for Hal Hendrix, local m ay enter any type of collection ga te s to the Model U nited Nations ' d ay’ Adm ission for students is IO d 25 Republican as }ong as jt has a unifying them e. cam pus Any regularly enrolled student sor an informal dance in the Main Ballroom of the Texas I “ "!*• cents. for nonstudel,ts- ~ 1A collection need not be an expen- Union Saturday from 8 to mid candidate for Con H e told the National S c h o o l A ssociation, convening here, that the solution lies in greater effici­ en cy, in providing m ore education­ al value per hour of tim e and dollar of cost. Y ntem a said the tim es call for a educational de- com m ittee H ollister to Give Speech velopm ent, along the lines of the “ M edieval F e u d a l i s m : N ew ; C om m ittee for Econom ic D evelop f o r a n N am ed to the cam pus steering give gathering of rare first edi- night, com m ittee are Anne O'Connel, l^ee M cFadden, Lewln Plunkett, I Expense and size d an a Z im m erm an . C ary E llis, and Harry Walsh, H cndriv named RUI mining factors are choice of ma- Swann as School of Law coordin- ator. com pleteness within will not be r - i r r i tions. terial, scope of the subject, and general p rice Daniel Club at Futnam said that aux student condition. Deter- Daniel Club N am es Head t ie j : la n e . D eter- u u i i i b i v , i u u i v a m e s n e a o Viewpoint s ’’* will "be tho' siibiect of m e n t which w as established early a group of B ill F lanary, U niversity senior, a talk bv Professor C Warren H o i-‘ in World War 11 the has been named president of the lister of the University of Califor- A m erican business leaders. SIK, supporting the candidacy of p m . w hen he a d d r e s s e s m e m b e r s h e .* a“ . Gov. P rice D aniel. |w sm all enough | 0( , he D epartment of History and j ®"d . selcct enou*h to lvork cftec' should the Univer- nia c . nta Barbara F riday at 4 : Such a com m ittee on education, B ill Armer, law student, and m em bers of Phi Alpha Theta in j 1V,fT;v ’ Ned P r i c e Jr., business major, B usiness-E conom ics Building 116. I & to take a grand view-, to gather and should s e n e primarily * * LONG DISTANCE AND LOCAL M O V I N G -PIONEERS IN NATiON-WiDE M O VIN G " a t (jo e s O n Iiere Funeral Services Held for Geneticist Friday tions. Texas Union. I S ta te s—In the World.*’ Texas Union. 8—Bloc m eetings of Model U nited Na- 6—G raduate Group dinner. Longhorn I 8-12 and 1-5—'T exans on display, H u -1 7-&—Co-Recreation, W omen's Gym, inanities Research C enter; 8-12, S a t- ! 8-12—Dancing j T exas Union, I urday, j 8-12 and 2-5—C hildren's a rt on exhibit, j S—-International Folk Dance Group. 9- 5 Exhibit of students' art, Regents \ 8—D epartm ent of Drama 1 Room, Main B uilding; 11-3, Satur- j I Texas Union Junior Ballroom. Laguna Gloria; also Saturday. Funeral services w ere held Wed­ nesday fo r Dr. Johanna Blume!, ex­ student of the U niversity and as­ sistant research professor in gene- ,, presents I tics of the orthopedic surgery di- ‘'T he M erry Wives of W indsor," i vision At the M edical Branch in Hogg Auditorium, Room. Texas Union, the Chuck Wagon, day. . . . in ,, ., , . I I 9-5—E x h ib it of photographs of heroes 8:30—Movie. "Lost Boundaries'* with I kl ais e sto n . datlon and heroines of the Old West, Me- I Mel F e rre r (25 cents), H lllel Foun- I morlal Museum; also Saturday. 47-vo a r-nld frenetic* m n e n l- j m e 8<-year-0ia gen etics consui- j 9-5—V arsity Carnival I Speeeh Building 102. ioftnSe?oored m aouscriPts- script w riters 8:30-12—Icb th us Coffee House, Guadalupe. 9-5—Young Republicans. Texas Union 8- Model UN, Texas Union. I , r,356. „ . , IO—Coffee Hour. H iilel Foundation. „ , Saturday in Galves- , ., • I to n Monday. Burial w as in the Old j 9*12—L ast day for entering students' City C em etery. She is survived by I M rs. Em m a Blum el, her mother. TYr B lum e! s e rv e d a s te c h n ic a l book collecting contest. Humanities Research Center. Palsied Children died . , , n x- , , orld university Bervie© a t lunch- , 11:30—Model UN to hear Allard Low"- 12:30—A llard Low enstein to speak on 2434 : tant for Moody State School for eon sponsored by U niversity Relig- j Iou© Council, Longhorn Room, Texas 12 30—Model UN Union enstein. Texas Union Ballroom. lunch. Longhorn assistan t B lum e! served as lecnrueai in zoology research; a - I Model UN, 2—Model UN general assembly, Texas Room, Texas Union. Union Ballroom, j teaching fellow in general biology, : cytology, and em bryology; and re- 4—Texas Music Teachers Association search scientist w hile at the Uni- " 1—General assembly of Texas Union Ballroom. I 2—5—Interview s for orientation leaders and advisers. Texas Union 309*331. 3—KUT-FM, 90.7 mc (U niversity news at 5 p.m .) and also on Saturday-, 3-5—Faculty-student Cabinet, Texas Union 202. 4—CLASP workers to meet. American N ational Bank auditorium . to hold annual piano concerto con­ test, Music Building Recital Hall. 7 and 9:30—Movie. "K ing of Kings," Texas Union Auditorium. H ogg Auditorium. 8—"T h e M erry Wives of W indsor," 8-12—Model UN dane©, Texas Union ! , Ballroom. in th© Chuck Wagon versify. I 4—Professor C. W arren H ollister speak to Phi Alpha T heta on Med- I 8-12—D ancing I oval Feudalism New Viewpoints." j Texas Union Business-Economics Building 116. to 8—Texas Union G raduate Group din- j ner. Longhorn Room, Texas Union. 4, 7. and 9:30—Movie. "T he King of 8:30-12— Ichthui Coffee House 2434 ! j 8:30—A ustin Civic T heater to present “ S w ift Bird of Youth." Playhouse, F ifth and Lavaca K ings.' Texas Union Auditorium . j Guadalupe 6—Dr Robert A, Divine to speak at i 8:30— Film Festival: "A lexander Nev- I Model UN banquet on * The United ; sk y ," Hiilel Foundation, CRATING I PACKING • STORING • M O V IN G F ireproof Bonded Warehouse household goods and merchandise storage Rhoades TRANSFER AND STORAGE CO. 813 A IR P O R T BLVD. G R 8-5681 ARTHUR R. (ART) H E M A N N — O W N E R ,------------ £ —a S f t h g [[NATIONAL VAN l l N E S l ] — N IG H T TELEPHONES— H O 5-6916, GR 8-7474 Q U I P o o • ft. © • o o • X o • o u • CL o • o o • Cl o o Q • CL O # o o• o• o o • CL O • o o • a. o • o o • CL o CL A ttra c tiv e ly b o x e d fo r Easter, our fla v o rfu l choc­ o lates m a k e g ra n d gifts, g o o d e a tin g . rom g i v e c a n d y a t E a s t e r C and y — S treet Floor » O P r C O * O P « C O c O P * C O r O P * C O « O P r C O * O P « C O « O P « C O « O P « C O * O P * C O « O P « C O 2246 G uadalupe Street DAILY TEXAN Classified Ads CALL GR 2 -247 3 the taste to start with...the taste to stay with Duplex— Unfurnished Rooms for Rent Special Services Alterations RENT — PURCHASE T V. s Alpha Television Rental. GR 2-2692 ALTERATIONS AND DRESSMAKING 715 W est 25th Street. GR 6-3360, CLEAN UNFURNISHED TWO bedroom duplex. 2102 Kenwood A partm ent B, Carpeted, built-in kitchen, central heat and air, tile bath S90 m onthly, will lease bv year $85. Call GR 6-I606. A fter 5 p.m. GR 2-1973. REFRIGERATED AIR-CONDITIONED. Rooms men. $25. $45. Bills paid Maid. R efrigerator. 803 VV*. 17. Foster. GR 8-0576 Houses— Furnished FURNISHED HOUSE, TWO bedroom To couple w ithout children in exchange for help in nursery school. HI 2-3152. Miscellaneous Typing A partm ents— Unfurnished Houses For Rent 2403 E nished JARRATT. U pstairs, u n fu r­ one mile west University. refrigerator, two two bedrooms, stove, Air conditioners, sleeping porch, baths $90. GR 7-0981. ONE OR TWO persons. Nice little house on large lot with nice shade trees W alking distance cool Barton Springs Two block* to bus. Niceiv furnished Only $40,00— better, hurry: GR 8-1313. A fter 6:00 HO 5-1938 LOST O range horse In vicinity of campus. See ANN KASMAN ALPHA EPSILON P l boo VARSITY CARNIVAL AVAILABLE A FTER APRIL 15. Unfurnished tw o bedroom duplex. Central heat and air. Carpeted, built-in kitchen, tile bath carport, w asher connections, fenced-in back yard 4011 Lewis Lane A partm ent A. $90 m onthly or will lease bv year- $85, Cai! GP. t i 606. A fter 5 p m GR 2-1973. Furnished Apartm ents TRINITY TERRACE 1300 T rinity New. modern, one bedroom, air conditioned c a r p e t e d , tile per month. bath, Summ er rates starting May I, $80 OO. W ater and Gas paid. $95.00 G R 7 -1298 RAVINE TERRACE modern bedroom w ater, furnished. GR 8 5528 PERFECT living Enfield. Large apartm ent. for tw o Enfield- Gas. FOUR BLTKTOS WEST of I Furnished two bedroom Di g « * JTwIin beds and doiub ti oner, Cllean q u I e Adults, pi*lase flail GR 6-4>42 2513 B. Sa n Gabriel ton York Air-Co and NEAR UNIVERSITY LAW shopping. Refrigerated $85 room. 1‘vW room kitchen, ba Elmwood. CL 2-4516, evenings, W E ARE OFFERING these bra at 1307 East' 52nd a t a rldlc low rate. Will comfortably ar urioualy Accommodate 2-4 DA RUNG. AIR CONDI TI ON EL mend Redecorated, curtains orator w ith freezer Walk to town. $69.59 GR 7-HJJ* HI 2 > Houses for Sale MASONRY HOME, CYPRESS paneling. beamed ceilings, fireplace, basement, attic. Dead end street near U. T. GR 8 5916 BY OWN FTI. MUST sell two bedroom home in excellent N orth West Aus­ tin neighborhood. Carpeted, air-con­ ditioned, furnished. Perfect size and surroundings for couple or small fam ­ ily. Buy equity. pay­ m ents 4L* percent loan. 4506 Chiap- pero T rail. GL 3-8630, $70 monthly Printing For Q U A L IT Y PR IN TIN G Call M u ltip rirrt C o. GR 2 2447 P rin tin g • D uplicating • Mailing Theses — D issertations --- R eports Journals — Custom Bindings University Bookbinders 203 East 19th S treet GR 2-9803 Plaques —• Trophies — Engraving Lost and Found Furnished A partm ents Open [or Summer School TOWER MANOR 1908 Uni versify • O ' e block from com • Air-condition«d, rher in ©ach apartm ent • Sun deck on roo1 • Laundry facilities W a n te d BLOOD DONORS—All types of blood needed for usage in Austin Profes­ sional donors now accepted Travis County Blood Bank. 2907 B Red River. H elp W a n te d W ANTED: PAR cesses. Must be tractive. Apply T H E LOUNGE. 5602 o r call G e n e GL 3-9422 or F, 5 p m . R E D For Sale SAILBOATS, NEW USED, kits Hard­ w are and trailers Sailboat Sales. 504 West 7th GR 6-3009, GR 8-8118. FOURTEEN FOOT GI.ASST RON Ski F lite boat w ith Sea H orse 35, Elec­ red and white Interior. trailer. Sacrifice. $795. tric startin g , fiberglass with m atching Custom GR 8-3647 or GR 6-0001. light*, tilt FOR SALE: Royal type­ w riter. elite type, 12" carriage, ex­ cellent condition, $60 or best offer. W rite Box 7817, U niversity Station. Austin, S tandard | 1959 SIMLA FOUR DOOR sedan. Ex­ cellent condition. 25-35 MPG. For lot, or what vale or trade for boat I ha*e you. Sladek. GR 7-5032 NEAR UNIVERSITY. HOME or In­ two baths. lot. Sm all down payment. vestment. Five rooms, [V aluable Owner HI 2-7681 ■ c o n v 'E l ETE: m i COT4VERP I Ii LE. 230 immediately. M u • t s e J11 H I GR 7 46 JU 1 TENTJR BA,NJO io f SUip*H or quality in condition wRh case. Call ear ell*•nt I GR 7 43J6 c»r GR 7-60!to. FOR SjULIii Uh1DERW'OOIJ portable typevrritme with case. Glo u d condition. - Lex vimg to )sn. $2IO. c all GR 7-8625 Credenza. Hhannei Back EIGHTEENTH CENTURY I/)N G H O W French edge m irro r 24x38. chair. chair. Beveled Early A m e r i c a n maple GR 6-6938. ALTERATIONS DRESSMAKING. RE­ IN HAVING on moth, cigarette holes gents. At 903 West 22 1/2. Monograrnlng. L a d i e s , reasonable GR 2-7736 rates IF IT S TYPED by ALBRIGHT, it s typed ALRIGHT. Accurate, electro- reasonable, experienced. Also matfc. book m anuscripts. CL 3-2941. MARTHA ANN ZIVLEY MB A . tailored com plete professional typing A service the needs ox U niversity students. Special key­ language board theses silence and dissertations engineering equipm ent and for to Phone GR 2-3210 More Conveniently Located At Our New Address 21)13', GUADALUPE EXPERIENCED TYPING. REPORTS. etc. Electric. Mrs. H unter theses GI. 3-3546 SHORT ON T Y P I N G, time and m oney’ Miss Graham. GL 3-5725, D ELA FIELD TYPING. s p e l l i n g G ram m ar, HI 2-6522 20c page. correction. T H E MOONLIGHTERS—I B M.. Mu!- tilith in g After 6 OO and weekends. M arguerite Costello. GR 2-1535. 3217 H am pton Road THEMES REPORTS. ETC.. Electric. Mrs Cain. 609 C Bellevue. GR 7-l5l2. DISSERTATIONS, THESES. BOOKS. reports. New symbol-equipped elee- In. Ritchie. close Mrs trom atii GR 6-7079 REPORTS. T H E S E S. DISSERTA­ (IBM); 4V* blocks. TION'S expert GR 8-8113 BEAUTIFUL TYPING— ctromatlc I-AW WORK I* Reasonable Courteous, clem lout, considerate serv ice, Call 8-7079 MuitUIthing Mimeographing Xeroxing T heses-Papers-Prlntlng A US TEX DUPLICATORS 490 East li th Phone GR 6-6593 THESES* REPORTS. REASONABLE Elect ruinate Mrs Brady 2317 Old ham GR 2-4715 NEED A TYPIST? Eteetrornatlc. Uni­ versity arca Call GR 8-5446 V IR G IN IA C A L H O U N LEGAL TYPING SERVICE 2914 Beanna (off P a rk Place at Townes Hall) N otary Public GR 8-2636 Carbon Ribbon IB M ’s Quick Copying by Verlfax NG SERVICE ma bk*. C a l l What makes Lucky Strike the favorite regular cigarette of college smokers? Fine-tobacco taste. It’s a great taste to start with, and it spoils you for other cigarettes. T hat’s why Lucky smokers stay Lucky smokers. So, get with the taste you’ll want to stay with. Get Lucky today. THEMES LAW NOTES, outlines, 25c double space GR 6 4717. 0 *~r cw h o d u c t o J j M l j/rn A U c a n — Jv& u& cy y our m iddle n a m ?