W e a th e r: Fair and C lo u d y H igh 86, Low 56 /ol. 5: Price Five Cents Six Pages Today No. 170 T h e D a T e x a n “ First C o lle g e D a ily in the South' AUSTIN, TEXAS, W ED N ESD AY, M AY 7, 1958 ’ a s e * Gipson to Face Trial On 40 Foot' Violation Mock Bombs Hit 30 Texas Cities Estes Chairs Election Suit At 8 Tonight Briefs. • • From the Wire By the Associated P’ ets NATO Heads Agree With Dulles' Caution C O P E N H A G E N Tile NATO foreign ministers Tuesday ostab- lished a solid front on summit talks by agreeing that Secretary of State Dulles was right all along in his cautious approach. A diplomatic source said R us­ sia’s r e c e n t maneuvers “ have opened the eyes of many Eu ro ­ peans." Ile reported a marked change in Western thinking since the North Atlantic Council meet­ ing in P a ris last December. Now, the informant said. not one of Am erica's allies believes it wise to rush top top-level meetings with the Russians. it ★ Pleven France's 25th? CD Practice Tests N ation’s ‘Readiness’ By th* Associated I’rrv* Mock nuclear bombs fell Tuesday i on five Texas cities, killing almost a half million people on paper - and injuring another 350,000 in a practice C ivil Defense exercise. The make-believe attack was a : jL V - P T M * t BF You C an See Them From the Tower's Top Hundreds (count ’em) of girls From Andrews LH lefie Id dormitor:es tJianton, C a r o le r s , and for fast- a 'e spending their spare • me approaching firms wh ° toasting *o a de icious tan in the quack a eg I®. It’s tom#th - g cf a pro­ ng tor tective mechanism this t :me of year— if finals s*op them cold, they still have an attractive tan on which (Spring fr a ls are bu* a prelude *o summer romances, wh ch are but a pre iud# to . • .) to stahe their future. Start Preparations Dead Week Headed This Way ; The Double, double, toil and trouble F ire bum and cauldron bubble. foul brew Shakespeare’s three witches concocted contained nothing go ominous as the sound of that ancient University term, “ dead w eek." Students w ill enter this period for the fTfty-fourth consecutive spring gemester next Tuesday. Some will have an a ir of penitent scholarship, some w ill take a brief breather course. from study, and others will h a v e a proverbial, traditional, suicidal "b la st." ism of U T collegiates the period will its holds he spent by many in a final fling (which ac­ tually is fatal, scholastically). •* The week is specifically designed for those who will heed the threat­ ening voice of finals just over the hill, but if the time-honored fatal- are Some have expressed the opinion that the days when dead week was a party-period themselves dead. Notably, ‘ Papa P e te " Bala- gia, owner of "P e te 's On the D ra g " states that "N o w during dead week there's not so m any out, hut dur­ ing exam week business is pretty good." Pete has 33 years of exper- ! ienoe writh college recreation. This seeming drop in the number of students bat ksliding during dead week would i n d i c a t e cither a more serious generation of students or emphasis on importance of the good grades. Exes Make Coates Lifetime Member freshman and 1935 He Canada Pipe Lines. football coach in is president of Trans- Presentation of the top Texas ex­ student certificate was made at an informal ceremony in the offices of Western Pipe Line, I n c . , hy Sterl­ ing C. Holloway of Fort Worth and Ja c k Maguire, president and executive secretary of the Ex-Stu­ dents’ Association. Mr. Maguire that Mr. enates became "the first out-of- country alumnus to receive an asso­ ciation life membership.” said Upon leaving the University Mr. Coates went to work in the Corpus Christi oil fields for the Richard­ son Petroleum Company, and in 1942 he became pipeline superin­ tendent with the Chicago Corpora- ! ion, He joined the Tennessee Gas Transmission Company in October, 1943, as division pipeline superin­ tendent during the company's for­ mative period. In 1944, Mr. Coates was promoted to assistant pipeline superintendent and later became assistant, to the vice-president of operations. He advanced to the portion of general superintendent of operations, vice­ president of operations, and, in 1951. senior vwe-pre dent. Mr. Cbates joined Trans-Canada Pipe Lines, Limited as executive vice-president and g* neral manager in August, 1954, and was elected president in June 1957. Whether the students party or study, a new form of creature w ill inhabit the < ampus from the begin­ ning of dead week to the end of fi­ nals. Known only as an “ U n nh," >his only answer when spoken to), he will have a semblance of a beard hair run rampant, and bloodshot, eyes with bags under them neces­ sarily large enough to hold a sem­ ester’s notes. If you happen to take a w alk at 4 a rn. sonic morning (and admit it you just might), you may meet him walking tiredly to an all-night coffee spot. Coffee, no-do/. < igarettes. and Mmilar commodities sky-rocket in sales during the time of torture. Many students have been promis­ ing themselves daily, "Next week I'm going to start studying." In ­ variably, the “ next w eek" in this p ro m ise evolutes eventually into dead week, which is often a semes­ ter late. it It h is been said that dead week is an observance of the last of the three necessities for man being item paying taxes, and dying. It is certainly a lime for remem­ bering the wadi known words, Of a ll sad words, of tongue or pen, The saddest are these: it might have been. Charles Coates, former Longhorn tackle, all-Southwest Conference was honored Saturday w i t h the presentation of a life membership In the Ex-Students’ Association. Transplanted to Texas from Tor­ onto, M r. Coates was a ro-captain of the 1931 longhorn football team Schaefer to Talk On Rain Making "Adventures in Meteorology" Will be discussed by Dr. Vincent J. Schaefer, research director of M u n l t a l p Foundation of New York, at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Batts Auditorium. Dr. Schaefer s lecture topics will include cloud seeding to decrease lightning strikes and documenting cloud variations with time-lapse photography. Illustrating his talk with color movies, Dr. Schaefer vs ill give the amateur weatherman hints on pre­ dicting the weather by observing • loud physics. In describing his meteor oiogn a1 research, he w'ill tell how he has studied the weather with both eye and camera. Dr, Schaefer has set up movie cameras at forest fire lookouts in the West to obtain systematic photographic records of cloud v a r­ iations in the different seasons The p u b l i c lecture is jointly sponsored by the Meteorology D e­ Insti­ partment! Academic Y e a r tute, and the University * Public Lectures Committee. Argentine Press Freer P A R IS Rene Pleven told Pres- part of the nationwide exercise, OI ♦ ration alert. It is designed to te h e tho nation s defense readiness. The exercise continues through Wednes­ day. ident Reno Coty Tuesday he had enough party support to go ahead with attempts to become Fra n c e ’s 25th postwar premier. * ★ Target cities of the simulated at­ tack were Am arillo, W ichita Fa lls, San Antonio, Beaumont and Po rt Arthur, B U E N O S A I R E S — Argentina’* President Arturo Frond i/i told The C ivil In ten se control center newsmen Tuesday they w ill have in Austin said it. spread the warn­ freer access to Government House ing of die approaching mythical en­ and frequent press conferences emy planes within seven minutes under his administration. Frondizi after the alert came from the na- warned them, however, against (tonal warning system. Texas r e ­ publishing reports without f i r s t 10s ^ad about 4 hours, 45 minutes cheeking with Government House warning before any make-believe He said someone available • normal office hours their questions about reports re- fo obsorve part pf ihe reived from sources outside the government. Gov. Price Daniel was at the - to answer control renter during the afternoon system’s they wall always find bomb fPp even after operation. * * Danish Diplomat Nabbed C O P E N H A G E N , Denm ark State police announced Tuesday night they have arrested a Danish diplo­ mat on evidence that top secret papers involving this NATO nation m ay have reached Eastern hands. The diplomat is E in a r Bleching- bfrg, 62, trade adviser at the Dan­ ish embassy In Bonn for almost two years. Bomb Threat on Queen K T R C A LD Y , Scotland — An im ­ plied threat to bomb Queen Eliza ­ beth I I and Prince Philip on their v isit to Scotland June 30 was dis­ closed Tuesday. * * Dennis Already Pop? L A S V EG A S * Nev, — bennis Crosby, who m arried a showgirl on the spur of the moment Sun­ day, was reported Tuesday to be the father of a girl born last No- \ ember to a Hollywood beauty. * * Dallas Slump Struck D A L L A S — I) a I I a s builders struck a blow at the recession in for 892 April, securing permits residences, largest number the started in n c a ily thro(> years. it * British Halt Tests I LO ND O N - Britain said Tues­ day nuclear bomb tests in the Christmas Island area of the P a ­ cific ha\ p been halted. The hardest hit city in the paper exercise was San Antonio, where an estimated 390,835 were reported dead, 108,282 seriously and another 220.808 slightly injured. At W ichita Falls, an estimated 50,000 persons would have been dead, had the attack been real. the control center said Another 12,000 would have been Injured. In Jefferson County, the hypo­ thetical bomb hit the Neches R iv e r Bridge in Beaumont killing an es­ timated 1.955 In the city and in­ juring 3,020 Fatalities in Port A r­ thur were presumed to be 388 and injuries 252. There was no fatality or injury report from Am arillo But in the Panhandle City, read­ iness activities all on paper were displayed With fire fighbng equip­ ment dispersed over the area, the control center said. Some 25 other T e x a s cities parti­ cipated in the e x e r c i s e on a sm al­ ler scale. Kangaroos Topic Of Talk Tonight W h a t’s happening to kangaroos I and other animals in Australia in their fight for su rvival? i Dr. A. R. Main, Australian zo­ olo g ist Visiting at the University, w ill discuss animal evolution prob­ lems in Southwestern Australia at .Wednesday in Biology 7:30 p m ★ ★ ' Building 301. Labor Bill Split Due W A SH IN G T O N — Republican senators have split over what to put into a lalx>r bill scheduled for a floor fight next month. it # Eggheads Go Ballooning W A S H IN G T O N - Two scientists were headed into the lower Strat­ osphere Tuesday night in a balloon launched from an open iron mine near Crosby, Minn , the N a v y an­ nouncer!. The N a v y said it is the first time an astronomer will go much above the earth’s atmos­ phere for observations. His talk to taxonomy seminar students is open to the public. Dr. Main, who tear hrs at the U niversity of Western Australia, Nedlands, is visiting lite U S on a In his Carnegie Foundation grant. present research, he is studying \ why a large number of Australian animal species are becoming ex- tinct While at the University Dr Main w ill visit one of his former stu­ dents, M u rra y Littlejohn, also from Nedlands. Littlejohn came to the U niversity to do research on frog mating calls with University z>>- ologist, Dr. W. Frank B lair. R a y Gipson, recently elected Arts and Sciences Assemblyman, w ill f ice the Student Court at 8 p rn. Wednesday in Townes Hall Auditorium charged with a viola­ tion of the election code. Plaintiffs of the case. Bob Green­ berg, Ed d C. C lark, and Ken Ed- miston, have accused Gipson of campaigning within 40 feet of the polls on election day a charge that if upheld w ill mean Gipson’s dis­ qualification from office. Chief Justice C arl Estes wall hand down a decision on the trial which w ill be his first case in his newly achieved office. Estes him­ self was acquitted in a M a y I trial of sim ilar charges made by Bob Greenberg et a1. The Student Court, then under Chief Justice Tom Bousquet, held that if the violations in the Estes case did occur, their effect was trivial and inconsequential and provided no basis of a valid com­ plaint against Estes, Estes ran unopposed, and his counsel said that any campaigning he might have dona would have had little influence on the outeoma of th® election. When questioned as to whether the decision in his own recent trial might influence his decision on th® Gipson trial, Estes explained that the Gipson rase differed from his. Ile said that Gipson ran opposed and as shown by the fact that h® won by only 63 votes, his cam ­ paigning might have made a con­ siderable difference in the outcome of the election. Justice Estes said that he had consulted both the counsel for the plaintiff and the counsel for the ( defense Rnd that neither objected to his giving the ruling on the caae. Gipson is charged with violating the code on three points. Green­ ie rg said that Gipson talked to rn girl within the 40-foot voting bound­ ary, that he talked to a male voter who was* in the process of making out a b a l l o t , and that he ap­ proached other voters within the 40-foot lim it during the election day. Gipson denied the charges, stag­ ing th it if the ♦ barges were true* “ they show a violation so trivial and inconsequential that it could have no probable or possible rP e r t on the outcome of the election.” Gipson’s counsel are Allan Ad- kins and B ill Dicker son. They will iftempt t > prove that the inside area of the two dark rectangles of pavement on the m all has been ti tditi malty accepted as a legal campaigning area. Gipson also x ■ vs that an A PO showed him the boundary and told him it was an I approved area. If Gip.-. >n is convicted and dis­ qualified from office, another elec­ tion will In? held for the position of Arts and S bern * s Assembly- n in. Because of finals the elee- ‘ >n will probably be postponed until next October. " I don’t plan to lose,” Gipson stated T ;esday night. Boh Green- ) r rg plaintiff, re Dis od to make any comment. Justice t oes predicts that the I last a lin g time, possibly trial w 1 past l l p.m. Prince' to Finish Series lh > last Texas Union free movie of the semester will he shown Wed­ nesday, M a y 14, in the M ain B a ll­ room « ‘ the Union The movie is "The Student P rin c e ." The 75,000th Student Hal Hudspe*h, chapman of S t n I cif Ceh'nef, and Rob/ Stallings ponder the list of more than 50 students nominated for Mr. or Miss 75,000. The selected representative of the 1958 graduating class, one of whom will rece"/e the 75,000th degree awarded by the U n ive rsity will make a short ad Jrtss at Commencement, M a y 31. His identity will remain secret until graduation night. Ponies Defeat Longhorns, 8-1 two other occasions but each time Schlem eyer slammed the door in their E m b ry and R oy Menge were the only Longhorns to hit safely twice. faces, An error opened the dam a second time for S M U in the fifth when the Mustangs scored twice. Sudderth gave up a three-run homer to Jim W illiam s in the sixth, then gave w ay to Pau l Znvorskas, who yielded a walk and a double in two innings, but no runs, He si ruck nu? three and looked good enough that he m ay have earned a starting assignment a g a i n s t Texas A A M in one of this week s seasonal series finale at Clark Field. • V n u i h c r n M e t h o d i c Kirtnin ♦ a h 2 r ; h n D A L L A S , (Spl) The Texas Long-1 horns tasted defeat on the road for the first time this season, and it was an old nemesis, C arl Srhle- meycr, who tamed the Southwest Conference baseball champions, 8-1, here Tuesday. Sehlem eyer’s assoilment of curve balls effectively braked Coach Bibb the F a lk ’s baseball machine as Southern Methodist M u s t a n g s gained their second league victory over Texas Schlemeyi r earned both triumphs. It was a dark day for the I/»ng- horns, who booted four plays to dish up five unearned runs, while in renmr in electrical en- Veterans of Foreign W ars Pos1* ^‘ 8? award. Donald I' Baker, Mau­ gineering, was presented the Arm ­ rice J . W. Lehmann, W alter P> L is ­ ed Forces Communication and E l ­ ter, George S. Mills, and D avis A. ectronics gold medal. Sadler received rifle team awards. Members of the Orange \V,ngc, A F R O T C drill team were g van service ribbon- Other awat is went to outstanding intram ural ROTC team members and A F R O T C coed | spon*ors. A F R O T C gold medal., aw arded by the University Board of Regent•>. wen* to I >enr - G. P a re , W alter A S a u n d e r s , Jo ­ seph H Foster. John T. Sherwood, ’e ■* M. Trim , O ’Brien, W ard, and Yoynd. J hn W Clark $400 Taken in Robbery O f Co-Op M o n d a y N ight Burglars broke into the U niver­ sity C o o p Monday night and stole ?hree pocket transistor radios and ‘ approximately $100. F C. Rather, Co-Op manager, s lid Tuesday. 'I he theft w is discovered w hen the store opened at 8 a rn. Tuesday. Mr R cher said the identity of the burglars was unknown, but po­ lice detectives are investigating Fingerprints were taken an I pic- j turfs were made uf the scene. W . J . Murray to Speak A t Texas Union Fete William J. Murray, J : . chair­ man of the Texas Railroad Com­ mission, will be guest speaker of the annual Student Union Awards Banquet at 6 30 p rn. Wednesday in Main Ballroom of the Texas Union. M r. M urray, who received his masters degree in petroleum engin- ♦n ring is both a former student and faculty member of the Uni- \ r rs: t y*. C’red ted I y the late T U T a y­ lor, dean of the College of Engin­ eering. with receiving a crc,a*cr number of gr ide points than ans* o*he;- engineering student up to 1936, M r M u rray was also active in campus organizations He v. as pres dent of Tau Beta P i and Am er­ ican Institute of Mechanical Engin­ eers a representative to the Stu­ dent Assembly, and a member of Sigma \ i and P i Epsilon. Cob!' Bonner will receive s musi- . symbolizing the office ‘ of the pres,dent. S x awards to students outstand- ng in Un rn work w ill be pre­ st* ‘cd at the banquet, three for s. rv ice and three for leadership. All old md new* committee chain* so wall be recognized at th s • ♦ i Tumbleweeds Humorous incidents are profuse in the Biology 607a labs, which at present are studying the dissection of pigs. R ecently an upcoming practical examination w*as announced, and a worried student was heard to say, I wish I had a good p’g to study R E B C O G S W E L L Tom Benner w ill also be instat­ ed ;<* the Kmq et as the osident- elect of the Union Activities Chun- J cli by the out-going president, Dean w ith ." Wednesday, M ay 7, 1958 THE D A ILY T E X A N Page 2 U n i versify Hoi ds Academic Freedom W eek May 5-11 Academic Freedom: Lets Decide Academic froorlom i an intangible Hut v ery real concept — som ething that ra n bn tran slate d boat in te rm s of atm osphere, of fooling v.hirh mern- b<*rs of co m m un ity Fk •*om*- a w a re of .. the feeling of a great university. the cam po W hether or ro t The Univor-it;. of T exas truly in debate, Certainly has academie freedom Is som ething is lacking in atm osphere. One wonders if the University really knows W hether or not It has academic freedom. We Speculate, we doubt Per naps ou r th o u g h ts a re ca rry o v e rs from rl • from legislative |x?rs*‘Clition. of the R ed -’ scare C ertainly th e re are fringe a re a s wh< re acad em ­ ic freedom is onlv loosely defined: in s h a k e r s , politics, put. heat inns, And sn we w o n d e r . . . W e ’ll never know unless we try. W h a t good Is a freedom if it is not used? A freedom th a t lies d o rm a n t gradually withers, dies. If we have this freedom, ’ aer let’s make usa of it; if we do not have it, then let’s fight for it. A nd if we have it or when we have it, let's guard It — protect if carefully. But let’s rieeid#, The University_ 'Necessarily Out of Step' C olumbia’s T/miLs NT. H acker, w ritin g for “Tile N a tio n ,” talk s abo ut the problem of academ ia freedom in an article “ F ree Minds and 0[#»n Uni­ versities.” He begins bv q uoting the president of a large A m erican university: “A university almost inevitably Is oat of step with the w bier com m unity. Since one of Its essential functions Is to be a critic of conven­ tional beliefs and values, with a view to e x ­ tending the frontiers of knowledge and Intensi­ fying the appreciation of values, It must come Into conflict with uncritically adopted mores and opinions.” H acker continues: " ..T h e r e is a constant ne­ cessity for dem onstrating their validity. Other­ w ise we are guided by superstition and not in­ telligence "T he ed u c ato r — as teac h er o r m oralist — has learned o th e r tru th s . Youth is a period of cha l­ lenge and experim entation. Y outh is suspicious of Indoctrination. Y outh w an ts to s t a l l o u t by a s ­ su m ing that th e re a re a ltern ativ o roads to free­ dom, “Young men and women seek to explore, de­ bate, question every verity, every assumption, every custom and Institution - n o t to reject thorn, nee*'ssnrilv, but to test their validity with a pow­ erful new resource they have discovered, their minds. “It la the function of educators, aa teachers or moraiiHts to let such minds range freely. For this reason, no laxly of doctrine or belief or, indeed, err or, can I** kept shnt to them like a kind of Bluebeard's chaml»er. "They must, be perm itted to re ad and ponder over, sea and hear and In* exposed to the writings of Marx, Freud, and Keynes, tho pictures, soulf>- tura and music of Picasso, Moore, and S trav in ­ sky, at the same time that, they are reading, see­ ing, and hearing the great conservator* of our tradition and taste “By the same token, the open university means th at youth has the same rights we seek for our­ selves as citizens to form its own chil*, main­ tain Its own discussion groups and platforms, run its own new spaper — - without let or Interference on the part of university adm inistrators or fa­ culties . . . • “And unless we are to accept beyond question that universities, their faculties and professional associations, should protect them selves against Incompetence and the second-rate, the very heart of *he principle of free Inquiry is surrendered “The price of freedom, obviously, Is responsi­ bility and today, particularly, the obligations of the world of learning are heavy . . . “Learning will he free and will flourish the more persons It exposes, by the educational process and Sn formal courses, to the rigorous methods of analysis, experimentation and spec­ ulation. Our world requires m ore edu cated persons on all sort* of levels; and knowledge, as well as our society, will rem ain free as we continue to en­ courage the developm ent of an increasing num­ b e r of educated men and women. [his is where the true defense <*f learning real- y is to be found. This is the nature of an open university.” T I / Vc HAD -YE f BOWLS Cf 1 SNCKER-SfiAOS I KEEP Th NWN6 OF THOSE POO!? PEOPLE WORKUP AT HE ” SKI CKjg- SNACK * PLAN T .. Ch <$D A I THEY AUST UJCfK VEPvV V J 4 A R D . SU I r ^ J I FEEL O0li6ATED7O EAT A-L1HE ‘SHiCKEP-SMAOKS —I I CAN I r Student, Faculty Relationship W i t h U T J May Contain Areas OI ‘Fuzzy’ Freedom J ■*' J By ROBB Bl R E A L E T -,*n r cuter v lect Who g iv es a d a rn about a l d e r n - Ie freed o m ? of them fa c u lty a re afraid to speak th e ir m inds too fre e ly ,” sta te s th e re c e n tly released 75th Y ear S tudent S teerin g C om m ittee rep o rt. su re th a t the te n u re -ig n o ran t, ahu, sive sy stem th a t rubbed th re e m en out at T ex as T ech ta u slim m er, ra- th e r obviously fo r “ p o litic a l” re a - sons, will n e v e r be d u p licated h ere. law 1* iconoclastic b e a r a g a in st Who rn this p riv ileg ed an d anti- shake Is th e re real p ressu re brought to Septic g e n e ra tio n c a re s a facu lty 8 ;>e it such a b stru se top e s? A ren ’t m e m b e rs a t The U n iv ersity of T ex- o d d b alls the only one* th a t re a lly w o rry a r I fret about freed o m of sp e e c h ? R ad icals, .n tellectu als, t n d rn orly-pubiic s p i ll e d souls get to b e aw fi! b o res on tho to p ic, T hey D ies, give a r e u su ally o b sessed w ith free d o m th e sim ple reaso n o f sp eech for fo rev er g i v i n g a re the-, t h y •p o o ch es. th e ra th e r a s ^ Would tha A dm in istratio n r* th - m y stic rite of signing so-called “ loyalty o a th s ” a t re g istra tio n , e r a m an qu ietly perfo rm his re- before gain in g U n iv e rsity em ploy! teaching ch o res an d se a rc h a n d m en t, e tc ., all re q u ire d by th e not q uestion the U n iv ersity ’s pol- speeches expounding Mate, W hile no a riu a l abuse* fro m th is pap er-w o rk ritu a l h av e been noted, It seem * to th is w rit- a r th a t th e e n tire ro u tin e la a n the e d u c a tio n a l com - insult I>o “ co n tro v e rsia l facu lty m em b e rs believe is tru e , w h e th e r it is o r not E v id en t- ly m a n y stu d en ts think so. It is a (5) One c a m p u s “ b lu e still q u ite e x ta n t I* tope s ” this etc to R if c a n we affo rd not to he con- ci ■ o '| w ith this o ft-m entioned and so m etim e s a b u sed te rm c a l l e d “ a ca d e m ic fre e d o m '’” It t u r e erxity in a d e m o c ra c y . th e b asic p rin c ip le of a ply is, v e ry ( .VU That * why th e stu d e n t VRA < o m m ittee a t th e I d iv e rsity ha* • A cadem ic d e c la re d May th e hope F re e d o m W eek” with th a t It m ig h t s trik e the mind* of tho *tudent* and faculty alike a* the usual so m eth in g m ore - I t . Klmt I., I k * . o r “ Nm- “ ■no, ., T M to A p p ,. E v o rj « - , than • d an g ero u s situation as long as even m u n itj. a “ a , *: ude of oppression exists. W ha' would h a p p e n if w e had an exchange p ro g ra m w ith th a Sox jet I ” '> H eal acad em ic c lim a 'e , In U nion? W euld th e R u ssian .students have to s en the o ath , too'* The en­ u : l' r: 8 opinion, is one w here- q re “ lo y alty o a th ” idea, though it ln d issen t and in tellectu al centro* ' a re th e ru le ra th e r th a n th e m a y salv e som e L e g isla to r s con- p x> option. A ch eap form of a c a - Boer, e, is p ro c ed u ra lly in effective and does not n e c e ssa rily g u a ra n te e d em .,r e< e n tricity is not d e sired It loyalty • •• but sin c ere outspokenness, can - o ldness and concern w ith the issu es m e re ly m a k e s a sh a m of a “ free ’ ° m c a n d e n n g and fe a r of q . , k l 1. i l l T H ? e>‘r,'d ^ («) All should re m a in on g u a rd t h . , ho r u l , al,rid * . , tho rig h t .-a d o to to of no n ra th e r than m ole-like higher- . to w a rd o n e * co u n try society. tho ’ “ A .don O frond -rn. xii tho hot - " ' >' 1 ° | p ro fo .rio n a l ton- I , . i ,U ’,’iT .- n m ™ L 'f ™ t " f r o . f ro m m tlr Ty of H r ,h r - •• i , e , po r . th s e are-1* of th e la llv d e a r ,, ,, in h a , In tho |< of J ;hn Un?lev r nf T h ” < om m onw eaL • will ex c r h e possible to g et th e w hole popula- t d o n t x ;.po ™ .h at , . T L ; r, r h r , I ? n 1 rl Hul Ul<' n w d to .h o hjc.H»r d ism lsaal only on " *?°"“ out .o » , » g o ao ral po..- th e to teac h In*- Incom petenco or gro** ” ss’‘n ' J ^ o n d u rt U ’^ 1 j^ • " " ' " ' 7 ; " > « - n h n t to o v r a r , (ted facu lty m em b er* f-.>rn pr ,,ht„. -v-^ ^ ... ,- , a t fh," h7 n d s ‘of a n a le rt f a u l t y ! . . , Ie fre ed o m ,” n o t e d l y th e 7Sth !• ^ V o LT*; -" th a t th - ■ St mn ? rn of our r d ifferen t R show I he • as a A U ’ fund m e n ’ ll h n li h i- ir.tv o r- in- th a t o u r civil - ' „ B u t w ho - f . , th e “ civil lib erties1* of o u r a c a d e m ic c o m m u n ity a r e ju s t n ext to p a ra d ise h e re on th e F o rty A cres? A re n ’t th e r e still a re a * of facu lty a n d stu d en t con- .... in th e “ fuzzy m a im ’ of a a- d en c freedom ’ th - “ F reed o m h ' not tho u g h t of a s a p riv ileg e, not a s a concession th a t any au th o rity inside o r out- in ..,I ,,- ™ m a . p ro p e rly . . 1. g ru n t or deny, qu alify , o r re g u la te n r r o r d in e d i ^ Z . ” T i N-aTto^! Student A ssociation “ B asi'- p o licy i v , l a , at,im f W - dor” ” an A atit m in In t^ r^ sti o r its to (I) T he college or u n iv ersity should g u a ra n te e to all m em ber* of the ac a d e m ic co m m u n ity the n « h . ... h o ar all a ll o , isHfirq, A re c e n t revision of tho V niver- ro m p eten eo profi-ssional should lated by an im p a rt,al trlb . " " aI P ^ r * . and he should ^ Riven full specification of alt Charge* ag ain * , him . being given a ‘‘haneo to defend h im self, , rh e loro1 c h a p te r of the A m er- Ira n A sse c u tio n of U n iv ersity P ro - fesso ” a n d o th e r facu lty g ro u p s h av e w orked h a rd to m a k e such sr D ally T exan \ l i t - vuel th |ft ' " ' T *'1 h !V th U it I t ' f , " " ^ ^ " m e m ' T th e ir " p w * t"*1 ' ' " M n t*n ” ‘n* ^ 8tl,de" t '“vpresslon * *. Tr . . 5 ! ^ , u * I ? " * ® ? ? n n k ,'!i bm . ‘ F* * ^ an lw a *“ . fo N o* ^ T ' mCT e y * a s te rs c a re le ss jo u rn a lism , St ui O f f i r h i I K f n t i r o c l y O H C C S ?f nt 12 noon Wr-anesdav y*., tF°n^ n of rain ° Ut S f'.H rffiW f K a m U C J o u n ? li,t> I Z ' r S ™ * a ,s u m * th a t th e ir e rro rs a n d e x c e s s * w ill th e ir rlC w,fho,Jt " Un. T , , . . . . m t ^^sponsibl0 JournA lirti w in > h e ro u ntil . t u d . n t / ' L", !54 *Xrh to'! Z ! U w . ' n & " * ' - » • “ < f r Ne!en, L in -^ -r of T ex ., t'nien. A fent en AtS ' mw Graduates A ’ st fo r «» « - - r w h a t Hwy w rite . A lthough t h . art- jo u rn a lism tie re a d ily a v a ,I- ' ^ !m po*ed. ? “w - i ®r ® *-',Pn “ j!1 resfx m sih ility > .« - » • » " ex p erie n c e d ' iOP t-> . h ers should ^ „ ’ 'd m ln ts tm - i t . r a t . a s a g u a rd ia n of th<^ “ a ra d u rn io 1 n iv e rsity of Taw- ,slan<* nt leaving som a * M m h .- * 2 2 “ SHar-v ' to raU ’r to I««Wlr opln- ‘‘rn. its firs t tho u g h t m o n be rn Pvotecl ,liI' a ? a -nMt toe pnbllrd# clam o r- *nR for co n fo rm ity , co n * e rratl* m , an<1 flub* tilde, stu d en U an d R a th e r " " " - th an th e foe- j i d if fw m t d p p errn o st the m inds of in M«nw . A d rt!in l.traU o r, P e rh a p s lf this thought h ad b e e n th # rt.r ts - in i* "not f'’rm s of B a rb a ra Sm ith, N egro sh)- " m n u a d fr o m t h . o p e ra p ro . au ctio n la s t spring, and W illi# Mon* ^ ^ " L d lto r cen so red and rs n - su red ‘f,r b ls outspoken sta n d s tw o V " " R' w t *° h lrth e r quote th e S tu d en t 75th "Th<> C n iv c rrily Ad- ta k e defin ite ttu n istra tio n should ste p s to ^how th e L e g isla tu re th a t to r the good of th e state th e Un!* V * * ? * mUSt be ,',,!w ved h ro ad »<’a * demit- freedom P e rh a p s in the fij- tUre m ore r ^ r «Peou* sta n d s m u st the L e g isla tiv e preS8Ur* ln o rd «*’ to put o v e r thi* id e a .” tak en a g a in st ^Tio give* a d a rn about ae#d#m * ?n tZ , ‘S t 'n ’ h 'o ri •' r r !", S f i f n(l i ,f|'s0 nn tho bu!u- ls • r h*c-k > our * name Bor)! *1 h is 2\'r* D r K S d ' ab o u t the w orld o u tsid e and would tH h l s 9 m«mona7 " nd to th# Association itself Contribu- he a stim u lu s for o rig in al thought. pop!! Shannon” 1 the *VV« h?n*toT o * T h e re is still a c ry in g need for m o re conflict of id e a s . . . th e in- fie* or to our own secretary-treasurer, te iie c tu a l c o n tro v e rsy is so b asic to th e a c a d e m ic co m m u n ity . (?) A ccording to the te n e ts of aca ilc m lc freed o m , th e re should tux no leg islatio n o r school poll- d e s w hich re s tric t th e le g itim a te o p o rattn n of p a rtis a n political s tu d e n t group# on c a m p u s. * t #d only "to" u ndr r cracufa t* 'women r «"u? dents who are nt least 23 yoars f nu* must i f 0"*noel 0 *...... ... CLA^REaJcB AYRES th a t , . e a W onder how’ th e D ean of Stu- Promisor of Economics I® freed o m ? o b ta in e d 'fro S 8 thePng c h a ra c te r w ho h a v e a heal- ,X f , , m d " 7h> D M J « >»•<* o f < * F s to * u r ; ttr o f t k t Article and n o t necessarily those o f the or c ‘ Urn: ersity adm inistration. --------------- — _____— ________________________ Pnall * J , t xa% * *tu5l r 'lt newspaper of The Univarsity of t a i . ta wife A J f c Septembw through May. by “ TTI— z~------- ; --------------------------------------------------------------- Te%as*r under the°act*0?*March^*3. “~ r,----------- ~ r ~r------------- — ^------- ■'---------- — J ® editorial -I 18, 1943' at 111 a Post CJtflc# ta Aaatfn. 1 _I 4hou d b0 macJe bi J. ii. 107 {cfi 2 : 173') xiii - *-----—— :___________________ _ , a h so c ia t e o F li e s t w u u t s e r v ic e 7 * * * j ' ' \ J T n J T S S * u * 0 ’y Cn“” * JZZT , , r ' from th e re a re basic r e s tric . Also. tions on th e c am p u s now w hich prohrtut Y o u n g I^em o crats and cam - Y oung R e p u b lic an s fo r s ta te an d n a tio n a l p aig m n g can d id ate* h e re on the F o r t y A cres W hat poaaibl# h a rm could be done by stu d e n ts c a rry in g th e ir to the ex p res- in te re st in politic..i siv# stag e ra th e r *han th# p u rely M anaging E d ito r discu.ssionary W ould it pollute th# a fm ocpherp to ca m p a ig n 'o r per- sons for public office on th e cam - pus"* E d ito r - O d c ag o -B o .to n -L o . A*tei##-«#n F v .n m ^ New Tork* —---------------------- -ra n c h o T* _______ _ A..orv*t*dMr “ w u t « P re,, in Au*tin Delivered Malled ” *u a out °rt0W B ..................... 11 i I ! ! ! ! ! ! t !!!!!! ?!!!!! 1 8t'» S t» fP T lO N m a t e s la Austin ----------------- ..................... ................. P L R MAN'ENT ST \ F F ~ „•“ * ,'21 2 8 1 & _ “ * ................................................................................. BKN SIEG A L . . .V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V......................................... S T A FF FO R TOTS fSSUK ' " ~~ r . , . . ' „ ................................. ...................................... AKOLYif SEAT N ight E d ito r Hftek E d ito r A ssi.U n t N ight E d i t i ’ V.V.V.................................................................... ^ Mioht 0 . ^ C opyread..................... v ^ g h l S p o rt, E d ito r J . * * ™ 1..................................................................................................... Vlght A m u sem en ts E d ito r ................................................. Night W ire E d ito r N ight h e f t t # E d R r r *...P a rk e r. O rel D u g g er, R eb O ogrw ell ..................................................T ru d y S h u g a rt, B etrv W aters ...................................................................Q a r k C a rp e n te r F > ev, P ............................................... B e v e rly Sue Puik* s K r r fm ia iiu iiiltL r ' e rs ' i i 7ir^ . . . _ H*. ' ' to to th e (3) Bilbie a r a d em lo com m m nity Is th e freed o m of th e eilu c a to r in v estig a te, d ra w conclusions, to im p a rt hi* know . ledge, and to hold and prom al- g ain his hH iefs In an a tm o sp h e re of freed o m . The stu d en ts a r e xx ell avxar# o t th e fa c t th a t a g re a t p r op or h on "P ro fe s s o r, that is not what they m ean by A c a d e m ic F re e d o m !” S te e r in g C o m m itte e R e p o rt t .llf.ir * Note the w ork of tho c o m m i t t e e ' w h i c h dl IX sin iii dc- T h f l f o l lo w in g Ii t h e r e p o r t of th e u t t e r i n g com mltt< >■ for stu d en t participation In the ‘.5th A n n iv e rs a ry n h n c r v . A n r e r i f t e d th e ♦lent w o rkshop* s tu d y in g Ii I n iv e r s ity a r c a . t ill O p e ra tin g on tho n isu m p tio n t h ef T he U n iv e rsity o f T e x ** sh o u ld tm a U n iversity of (h e f i r s t class, w e h a v e found fo u r f a c to r s to tic b a s ic i n n e d ) n h in th a t c o a l tru e a c a ­ d e m ic fin an c e* . good public r e la ­ tio n s, an d a n e n c o u r a g in g *chool a tm o s p h e r e fo r F ir s t, if th e U n iv e rs ity is to ho a r e a lly g r e a t sch o o l, it m u st m a k e ro o m fre e d o m o f d isc u ssio n . T h is m e a n s th a t hr>th stu d e n t* a n d p ro fe s s o r* sh o u ld h e aHowitd to d e ­ b a te p u b lic ly o n n il re lig io u s, poll* issu e s w ith o u t H e al, o r e c o n o m ic c ith e r p r e s s u r e o r u n sjx 'k c n c e n ­ s u r e tieing a p p lie d to th e m Ih jb lio d e b a te sh o u ld h e d e m a n d e d , not m e r e ly to le ra te d H a v in g a U n iv e r s ity of the f ir s t c la s s in T e x a s w ill riot be a n e a s y ta s k . T h e fre e m in d is a lw a y s rest* Jess, a n d fre e m in d s a s well a s fre e s p e e c h a r c n e c e s s a r y fo r g r e a t In stitu tio n s W a m a y a s well f a r# u p to th e f a r t th a t a g r e a t U n iv e r­ s ity w ill a t tim e s lie a sto rm c e n ­ t e r l e t lf w e fr»c lotion. is alu m n i beco m in g a sc hool of w hich they c a n he proud. T h ird , convince th e m of the fact th a t th e ir I til- v e rs ify needs both m oney ani! th e L egislative su p p o rt w hich Is nes'essary to get It. the past the T e x a s alum ni an d the citizens of the s ta te have h e a rd of T he U n iv ersity of T ex as th ro u g h p a ra d e s o r e m b a r­ only ra s sin g m ishap*. fu tu re o u r public relatio n s should be c a r ­ rie d on at a hig h er level an d w ith g r e a te r vigor We MUST convince the public th a t we a re in stitu ­ tion of h ig h er learn in g , a n d not a play-school. th e In In in • H e h av e co n sid ered freedom , fin a n ce s and public re la tio n s a t a high level of g e n e rality . We m u st now c o n sid er school a tm o sp h e re . It m u st bo ad m itte d th a t m an y 1 D iversity students do not respef t th e ir school. T h ere a re sev eral re a so n s for this la ck of loyalty. M any of th e ir co u rse s do not c h allen g e th»*m; yet, u nless an in ­ d iv id u al is personally challen g ed he will n e v e r develop h im self o r re s p e c t the Institution of w hich he is a m e m b e r F u rth e r, w hile Uni- v e rsify sta n d a rd s h av e been raised an d m a n y been courses toughened, m uch new difficulty from newly p resen ted com es not m a te ria l, hut from h a rd e r g rad in g . should n o t m e re ly give the s a m e co u rses w ith h a rd e r g rad in g , but new co u rse s with ch allen g in g m a te r­ ia l. t n Iv entity h a v e T he I niversity' of T e x a s m ust I h e o u tgrow in fe rio rity its a c ad em ic com plex, a t both fa cu lty and stu ­ dent levels it m u st Ie im to tak e a n h o n est p rid e in itself. P e rh a p s th e be st w iv th is •md is to p la c e o u tstan d in g m en in its facu lty . to acco m p lish • (>u r I niversity d efin itely needs so m e U n it Men, a c a d e m ic re- know neds to whom stu d e n ts can be d ra w n and inspired F u rth e r, the stu d e n ts would like to see m ore m- d iv id .ality and m o re c o n tro v e rsial It fig u res am ong the p ro fesso rs ta k e s in sp ired m en to g iv e a first- ra re education. freedom , a d e q u ate If The U n i v e r s i t y of T exas a c h ie v es these four goals, intellec­ finances, tual g'xad p ublic relatio n s, a n d a first- ra te atm o sp h ere , w e b eliev e th a t ai! 'h e other evidences w hich c h a r­ a c t e r i s e ^ U n iv ersity of the first c lass w iii follow a u to m a tic a lly . We can n o t e m p h a s i s e ton stro n g ly t h e first of th e se goal*. fob Opportunities in th* f.xvl Campbell Sales Company (nationally known m a n u f a c t u re rs lh- d u i t r x i is looking for young graduate* in a selling career Prefer in t e r e s t e d men w h o ha v t th eir m l l l la rv trainin g th em Location wou ld he in b eh ind S o u th w e st a p p r o x im a te M a r t i n s saiarv Of »37t5 liberal fringe benefit* In ter­ view* " a i he conducted in t h e Studen t Employment Bureau tog on Thu rsd ay Ma> 8. Ail interview* by a p p o i n t m e n t only. J ear.-* Man All the oil in T ex as will not buy a g rea t school utile** m en arn a llow ed to speak freely there. In the p a st o u r U n iv ersity h as been c h a ra c te riz e d by an undue c o n se rv a tism , and stu d en ts are w ell th a t a g re a t fact a w a re of the facu lty a r e p rop o rtio n of th e ir a fraid too free ly , th eir m inds to spea.li No m an can re s p e c t an in stitu ­ tion w hich claim s to sta n d for th e ad va no*mofrt of know ledge, y et w hich th rough m ean s, conscious o r unconscious, su b tj" or explicit, in an y w ay tun other* the c o m m u n ic a ­ tion of free thought, free speech, an d controversy’, • We hope you (C o m m ittee of 75) will i ske o u r reco m m e n d a tio n s as the serio u s co n sid eratio n of young Citizens who a re acutely' aw ire of tho failu re of th eir school, hut a re a No a w a re th a t lan ce r" efforts a re heing m ad e by facu lty and A dm in­ istra tio n , as well a* th e citizens of the st ile, to a lle v ia te them . We hope th a t the re p o rts of o u r lk a ubcorn n u tte rs will pro v e h elp ­ ful to the U n iv ersity . We also hope th d the fact th a t we as stu d en ts h av e ta k e s a se rio u s a n d m a tu re in te re st in the fu tu re of o u r insti- t m on will im p re ss on faculty, A d­ m in istra tio n , and alu m n i, th a t the stu d en t body of T he U n iv ersity of T e x a s is com ing of agp. • RI P T I.K M EN T L ate In the co u n selin g the se m e s te r a new problem ha* been ca lled to our a tte n tio n : fa clll- tie* of the m en'* and w om en * d o rm ito ries. W hile a co m p lete c o m m itte e report I* now tieing p repared , w e feel that the follow , ing can be m ad* w ithout further analysis. M en * d o rm ito ries a re now a l­ m ost com p letely devoid of counsel­ ing service*. T he p re s e n t floor rn o n a g ers a re assig n ed only to keep noise down to a m in im u m and p re ­ vent the “ in m a te s” fro m d estro y ­ ing p ro p e rty . Since a g re a t deal of the stu ­ dent * re a l ed u catio n o ccu rs o u t­ th a t side the classro o m , we feel is an good d o rm ito ry counseling in d isp e n sib le w ay to aid a stu­ d ent'* ed u catio n and b ro ad en hi a In sh o rt The U n iv ersity of m ind. T ex as to s ta r t to h av e is going spending money on its m en s d o rm - ito ry p ro g ra m F ir s t- r a te su p e r­ v iso rs w ith college e d u c a t i o n s an d w ell tra in e d stu d en t c o u n s e lo r s a re im m e d ia tely n e c e ss a ry to im p ro v e th e situ atio n . • T h e counseling p ro g ra m In w o­ m e n 's d o rm ito rie s is in need of b e t­ te r tra in e d su p erv iso rs th a n it now has and th e stu d en t counselors a re not as w ell tra in e d as th ey should be • T he counseling p r'tg ra m in wo­ m en s d o rm ito rie s in need of b e tte r tra in e d su p e rv iso rs th an it th e stu d e n t coun­ now ha*, and selo rs a re not as well tra in e d as they should be. is th e end of The final co m m itte e re p o rt on d o rm ito ry adv isin g will be com ­ the se ­ p leted before m e s te r an d sen t to ail d e p a rtm e n t c h a irm e n an d in te re ste d A dm inis­ tra tio n m e m b e rs. B ut w e wish to re s ta te th e tru th w ith w hich th is p rim a ry re p o rt w as b eg u n : The to is going I ’n iv e rsity spend m o re tim e and m oney on Ha dovm fhwy p ro g ra m . to have Phi Gamma Delta Takes Host UT Picked Baltimore And Washington Intramural Track Crown l Host Texas University will be F" G J W»dn*«d*y, M .y 7, ! 958 THE DAILY TEXAN Fag* I Host Texas University will be favored to win the ninth annual Intercollegiate Softball Tourna­ ment, W’hich will b# held on the local intramural field Saturday. An eight-team field has been lin­ ed up for the one-day meet, accord­ ing to Texas Coach Sonny Booker. Besides T exas' entry, squads from Baylor, Southwestern, Southwest Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, and Trinity are due to take p art. If a seventh visiting team doesn t enter, Texas will field a B squad. the real dark- is horse of the m eet. “ We don't know a thing about the West T exans,’’ Booker said Tuesday. “ But a team that will travel 400 m iles by ca r for a one-day tournam ent m ust be loaded.” Texas Tech Booker’s own Texas squad owns a 5-won, 2 lost record for the y ear. The Longhorns a r e slated to clash with Baylor in a final w arm -up g a m e W ednesday afternoon at Waco. First-round pairings, tim es, and locations a re ; north fieirt. ii \;is Southwestern vs Texas, IO a rn,, l e c h vs. gue st t e e m or T e x a s D IO IS a . rn s o u th B a v lo r \ s . T r i n i t y field. lo 30 a rn., m i d ­ dle field. Southwest Texas vs Texas AAM, 11 .30 a.m., n o r th field . NEW YORK cfi—Credit th* Bal­ timore Orioles and th* W ashing­ ton Senators with having m ade the m o s t advantageous player transactions last w inter. And debit the Chicago White Sox for having m ade the least prof it a- | hie trades. T hat'* the way it itan d s at the mom ent at least. I m an and L arry Doby from The Orioles obtained Ja ck Harsh the White Sox and gave up Tho Fran- i conn, B i l l y Goodman and Ray , Moore la rt Dec. 2. Six weeks later they sent Doby to Cleveland and secured Gene W ooding. H ere's the w ay It's worked out so f a r : H arshm an, who reportedly bad a bad back last season, has won lost none. H e's four gam es and I beaten Washington twice and Chi­ cago and D etroit once each while compiling a 1.00 earned m n aver­ age. Woodling has m ade a big hit with the O rioles’ fans although h e's batting only .262. Gene has ! hit one hom e m n and driven in : eight runs. Goodman I* hitting only .120, F rancona an anemic .162 and Moor* has no pitching decisions. Doby has collected only three h i t s Cubs Get Smith From Pittsburgh a n e AGO iff _ p au l Leslie Smith, outfielder - first basem an, Tuesday was bought by th* Chi­ the Pittsburgh cago Cubs P irates the $20,000 w aiver for price. from Smith, 27, batted .253 In 81 gam es for the P irates last season a f te r ! his retu rn from two y ears in th*’ Army. He cam e up through the P irates farm system and hit .321 for H avana of die International League before entering the se rv ic e .1 In 15 tries fop * .JOO average th* Indians. The Senator* mad* a good deal by securing first baseman Norm Zauchln and outfielder Albie P e a r ­ son from Boston. They gave up P ete Runnels, who is hatting .329 for the Red Sox. But Zauchin and Pearson have solved two of W ash­ ington's m ajo r problems and ar* largely responsible for the te a m ’* high position in the pennant race. Zauchin shows a .327 m ark and P earson Is at .319. I D ie sw ap th at moved Minnie Minoso to Cleveland In exchange for Al Smith and E arly Wynn also is working to the disadvantage of the White Sox. Smith has m ade oniv nine hits in 51 at bats for a .176 m ark. Wynn has won only one of th ree decisions. Minoso, m eanw hile, has 21 safeties In 74 trips for a .284 slate. Minnie also has collected three hom ers and l l RB I's. N O W O PEN under the management of M O N R O E LOPEZ •w n*r • ! El TORO— MONROE'S— El MAT El Charro 912 RED RIVER CaO G R 8-7735 for Homa delivery at no extra charge. . a r r i sii /( j o h n s o n Providing family Income when income stops Austin Life Insurance Company 800 Lavaca Austin, Texas G R 2-5249 Open 7 days a week— 24 hours a day BLOMQUIST-CLARK fre o M s w im * r n « •a < * < C WATER ------- FOR SW IM M IN G FOR BEACH W EAR FOR SKIING By ODIE ARAMBULA T e x a s I n tra m u r a l C o-ordlnator P hi G am m a D elta m ustered Its strength w here it counts the most, in the relay s, to sneak past Cliff Courts and N avy ROTC, and take the 1958 In tra m u ral Championship M eet a t M em orial Stadium Tues­ day afternoon. The Phi G am s and Cliff Courts’ card s showed only 6’a points each going into the final two events of the day, th e 440-yard and 880-yard relays. N avy, defending champion, had failed to quality for the two m eet-deciding-relays. The Middies, leading a t this point with 18 points! w atched from the sideline as the fra tern ity and dorm atory team s jum ped ahead. The Phi G am s em erged on tc^ w ith 20'2, Cliff Courts second with 1812, and the Midshipmen close be­ hind w ith 18. B rack Hall, spearheaded by Ro­ b e rt B urchard s 220-yard anchor, established a new 880-yard relay m a rk th at did not go into the rec­ ord books as the foursome was dis­ qualified for passing out of zone on the second and third handoffs. B rack I 32.2, clocked three- tenths of a second faster than the c u rren t record of I 32 5 set by D elta K appa Epsilon last year. The disqualification moved runner­ up Cliff Courts to first, third finish­ er Phi G am m a D elta to second, and fourth place Sigma Nu to third. Phi G am m a D elta's q u artet of Bob Burkett, H erb H am ilton, Jim Gordon, and John Copeland toured the M em orial oval in 41.1, two-ten­ ths of a second slower than the 43.9 record posted by the Pekes in 1957. Second w as the PFM foursome of T erry P age, Ja m es P artaln. and B r e n t o n D ennis Kouth, Hughes. Cliff Courts was third. D elta K appa Epsilon, running with two of the four men who set the I 43 9 m ark, finished fourth but was disqualified for passing out of rone. the cinders Milton Perkins G arland Dunbar, Jo e B. U ntem eyer, and Robert B urchard burned in racing the half-mile in record time only to be disqualified Cliff Courts, w ith W. P au l Dun, H enry Jam es, Ja m es Potts, and Charley Miles handling the baton, w as aw arded | first but its tim e wa* not recorded. A rthur McCailum ported a 13.3 In taking th e 120-yard low hurdles for Phi D elta Theta. Bob Burkett, P hi G am m a D elta, w as second; Clinton Thompson, N avy, third; and W. P au l Dunn, Cliff Courts, fourth. N avy’s J. W. P ieper ended an­ other successful ’m ural track sea­ son, taking the 100-yard dash in IO flat to bring his point output for THE F L Y IN G FIJIS of Phi G am m a Delta ar* s'-own ii ‘ he process cf handing off the baton wl Ie comp - g a winning time in the 440-yard relay. The w ir - ‘ncj time wa* officially recorded es 44 I, just .2 ct a second off the intramural record. N o t only did the Phi G am s win the 440- yard re'ay, but the‘r 20'\ po'nts was t l'e h'qh- est total g a th e re d by a ry team en tered in the meet. the Midshipmen to 13. Sigma Nu’* Bill Coker w as second and P E M 's Brenton Hughes, who earlier had throw', was t a k e n die softball third. Pieper, prior to T uesday’* m eet. jum p and the high had placed second in the broad jump. taken As J. anticipated, B runette’* the R ichard Broderick captured 220-yard dash in 22 9. G ranville P aules of N avy w as second; John Copeland, Phi G a m m a D elta, th ird ; and J o h n Gibson, Oak Grove, fourth. F inal point standings, behind the Phi Gains. Cliff Courts, and Navy, showed PFM with 15; Sigma Nu IO; K appa Sigma 5%; Phi Delta Theta, LPHA, and B runette, tied with 5. • C ham p io n s h ip Rnmmarlwi 1?n yard l e v hu rd les I. Arthur McCailum. Phi D e lta T he ta 2 Doh B urkett . P h i Gam m a D e lt a . 3. C lin to n T ho m p so n , N a v y ; 4. VV. P a u l D un n , C liff Court* T im #: 13.3 100-yard das h — I. J. W . P i ep er N a v y ; 2. B il l Coke r pignut N u : fl B re n t o n H u gh e* P B M : 4 J i m Gordon, Phi Gamm a Delta. T im e : IOO. 220-j a rd das h — I. J. R ic hard B r o d ­ erick . B r u n e t t e ; 2. G r an ville P au le s. N a v y ; 3. J o h n C ope land , Ph i G am m a J o h n Gibson, Oak Grove. D e lt a ; 4 T im e : 22 3. 440-yard I. Ph i Gamm a D e l t a ( B o b B u r k e tt H e r b Ham ilt on. J im Gordon. Joh n C o p e la n d ): 2 PP M 3 C li ft C ou rts ; 4 D e lta K app a e p s i ­ r e l a y — lon ( d is q u a li fied , p a s t in g out o f tone) 880-vard r e l a y el ta: 3 S i g m a N u: 4 - I. C li ff Courts (VV. P au l D u n n H e n r y Ja m e s , Harold G old ­ urn,:. C harle s M il e s) ; 2. P h i G am m a o a k Grove. (B r a rk v o n th e 88o-yard r el ay In new le r ord t i m e I 32.2 b u t w a s d is q u a li­ f y for p a s s i n g ou t of ro ne no tim e given of I 32 5 »et by D e lt a K a p p a Kpsllon, 1957), on C l i f f C o u r t s Reco rd S h o t p u t — I. M a r v i n Marhae, L PH A . 42 2 N : 2. Carl W hit e. Brack, 421-44: 3, Rex R ar d or P h i Ka pp a P s i, 41-5 1 / 3 . 4 J a m e s McGill. Moore-HUl, 10-9: 5. M ik e Wells, K a p p a S ig m a . 39-1044. High jum p — I. J. VV Pieper, K a w , (VIN 2 and 3 ( t i e ) P a u l D unn , CHH c o u r t s , and B ob D o w d D e lt a Tau D elta, d-o 4 and 5 (t'e> L y n n Car 'er Kappa Sig m a , and J a m e s W alk er, P h i G am m a Delta. 5-10. Sof tb all th r o w — I. B re n t o n H u g h e s PHM 300-3/10, 2. J ohn Range r. Cliff Mural Schedule S O F T B A L L C h a m p i o n s h i p F i n a l * Class A — 7 p m . : B rack vs ATChF, n o r th field. ( I n . . n — 7 n m I B r a c k v*. S i g m a P h i U ps il on, m id d le field . ’M ural Scores H O R S E S H O E * F h a m p i o n « h i p F i n a l s •Ta'•It I* B o st on Oak Grove d e fe ate d D a \ ' d S w in t, Schoen. 2-0, s em if in als. H ar rel l Gold be rg. C li ff Courts, de- fe ate d Ja k Dav is , P h i K a p p a Ps i. 2-1, .semifinals •Ho B ost on beat H ar r ell Gold be rg, 2 0, fin als. WWW --A I— • tm --‘. 'n Cjk. % ¥ A / : 4 J I 24* Court* Nu, 218-0 9 /1 0 ; S ig m a Nu. 247-0 1/10. 4 3. R a x Mason. S ig m a L ouis C he na ul t, lu m p Broad I W illia m McDade, K ap p a Sig m a , 2 2 - 3 4 : 2. J. W , Pi eper, N a v y . 21-8. 3, T e r r y Page, PLM . 21- 1 U ; 4 B o b G urw lt z, SAM. 20-8V 'Amateurs Need Money' Says Pro TORONTO (Ii — Tennis profes­ sional Law Iload says he is in fa­ vor of big expense accounts for am ateu r players. The A ustralian player, here for a m atch with P ancho Gonzalez, i said “ I ’m all for am ateu rs having ! big expense accounts. In the long run it will he b etter for the g am e.” I Hoad wa* com m enting on tile d iv pute in the United States between players Rnd executives over alleg­ ed padding of expense accounts. “ Unless I had a loose expense account when I w as an am ateu r, r would not have gone anyw here in tennis,” IToad said in an Inter­ v ie w . “ I d id n 't have any money of m y own to travel all over the world and com pete against the top players of other countries.” W orld’s Fastest Miler Finishes Fourth In Meet OXFORD, England iff — D erek Ibbotson, th e world * fastest m iler, T uesday finished fourth a t 4 14 6 in his first mile ra c e of the season. Brian Ilew son, another of B ri­ tain 's 4-mlnute m ilers, won the Association in 4 l l 9. Both Ibbot- race th* A m ateur Athletic son «nd Rawson w ere com peting against Oxford University. for • i Summer Jobs F**r C ollar* Men x ii* ran »r**nd t h * ( a m m e r aw»▼ f r o m horn*. I n t « r r l * w I The Southwestern Co. Thurs., M a y 8 U ni on B l d r . 818 I f rn — l p m — 8 p m , In te rvie w * bep ln on th * hun*. J'lras* be on tim *. N E V E R B E F O R E HAS I T B E E N SO E A S Y TO OR D E R THE C A C T U S ! J U S T GO BY THE C O - O P , H E M P H I L L 1S , OR J O U R N A L I S M ! B L D G . 107 D E A D L I N E I S Ezrhangt «r«*» Ptnrti fry Ctnrrtt TiUphom vt ifro** ta dark fen*,! We’re proud to be No. 2 The people w h en ce In the^Un!te