At Texan At TorHNat THE SUMMER XAN W tatfitn Possible Rain High 96, Low 74 IJH I ] I Vol. 62 Price B v t Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1962 Eight Pages Today No. ii •OD t * t * S ^ o o p u o s ®XTJ°J° W is Die A /., jungle War Russians 'Nyet' US Compromise Dean Says Soviets Retreated on Ban GENEVA * — The Soviet Un- ion stiff-armed an American com­ promise move for a nuclear test ban treaty at the reopening of the 17-nation disarmament conference Monday. Soviet Delegate Valerian A. Zorin told newsmen the US plan WM “no compromise at all In our view.” Then, in his opening speech to the conference, Zorin accused the United States of “stepping up strategic and all other prepara­ tions for a nuclear war” while continuing disarmament talks. That was the Soviet position a month ago when the conference recessed after a three-month ses­ sion whose only forward step was the adoption of a treaty preamble. US Delegate Arthur H. Dean again assured the conference the United States considers world dis* armament a matter of priority. He said the Soviet Union, for its pert, “has significantly retreated on the nuclear test ban treaty.” On his arrival Saturday, Dean said the United States and Britain were ready to drop insistence on internationally staffed seismic de­ tection stations if the Soviet Union would be willing to accept international inspections on its territory. inside Russia Zorin told the news conference Russia had already made its own compromise by accepting a neu­ tralist proposal as a negotiating basis. SAIGON, South Viet Nam UP)—Three air crashes and an ambush took 51 lives in three days, in the camps of Ameri­ can servicemen and their Vietnamese allies. Five of the dead were Americans, and five others are missing. Worst of the air disasters in the jungle war with Viet Cong guerrillas was the crash Monday of a troop-laden Vietnamese air force transport that killed 22 Vietnamese troopers and a US Air Force flight instructor. The two-engine C47 caught fire and crashed on take-off at Kontum Airport, 260 miles northeast of Saigon near a guerrilla-infested region close to the Laos border. There were four survivors, all Vietnamese. Ground search parties in the same general area were un­ able to find a US enlisted man missing from a wrecked and burned Army helicopter shot down Sunday by Communist guerrillas. The charred bodies of two US Army officers and an en­ listed man were found in the wreckage. Nearby, the search­ ers found a dead Vietnamese officer and a wounded soldier. The only other certain survivor was a US Army captain, said to have been the pilot, who was found wandering in the jungle five miles from the scene. He had suffered only bruises and the story of how he escaped was not learned immediately. The helicopter apparently was attempting to spot a band of about 300 guerrillas who stormed a mountain village near the Laos border and captured a number of prisoners. Seven planes and six helicopters searched until dark for the wreckage of the third aircraft, a US Air Force trans­ port, which was believed to have cracked up Sunday against a mountain somewhere en mote from Saigon to Ban Me Thuot, 160 miles northeast of here. The C123 had an Ameri­ can crew of four. The string (rf reverses set in Saturday when a force of about 500 guerrillas dug in along a one-mile stretch of Route 13, 40 miles north of Saigon, and ambushed a convoy of 19 vehicles and about 280 Vietnamese troops. They killed 23 Vietnamese and their American adviser, Army Capt. Don J. York, Asheville, N. C., then made a clean getaway. Altogether 27 Americans have met death in Viet Nam’s jungles in about eight months, IO of them in combat and ^ 17 in accidents. K's Gripe: Berlin Based on The Associated Press MOSCOW — Soviet P r e m i e r Khrushchev, in an interview with 13 American editors released Mon­ day, hammered hard on the theme that Berlin is the main center of that the East-West dispute and it must be settled by the removal of Western troops from the city. If they would only depart, he said, the Soviet Union is willing to join them in a solemn pledge of noninterference with W e s t l i f e ; a guarantee to be Berlin “sealed with the s e a l of the United Nations.” He said he cannot understand why the US, Britain, and France dins: their “ military bridge­ head,” because as long as they are there they raise the heat of East-West relations.” to He set no new deadline, how­ ever, for the Westerners’ depar­ ture. “We shall not h u r r y , but neither shall we tarry,” he said. He threatened again to sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany if the Western troops remain. The Russians claim that such a treaty would end Western rights in West Berlin. In the wide-ranging two-and-a- half-h o u r interview, Khrushchev asserted that the Soviet Union has a global rocket that cannot be knocked down by another missile. He added that “the high altitude explosion carried out by the United States will in no way interfere” with the action of the rocket. He said he hopes reports that the US has better means of de­ tecting nuclear tests will cause it to abandon the demand for inter­ national inspectors to police a nu­ clear test ban. He a l s o declared the Soviet Union is not negotiating and has not negotiated with any power— presumably Red C h i n a—about arming them with atomic weap­ ons. He spent 37 minutes of the in­ terview stressing to the editors the importance of the Berlin issue. Led by Lee Hills, executive edi­ tor of the Knight newspapers and president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, the news­ men have been touring the Soviet Union for three weeks. They said Khrushchev referred to Berlin as the main issue, but the official R u s s i a n transcript toned this down to “one of the main obstacles.” This was one of several changes spotted in the official t e x t . At Khrushchev’s request, publication of the interview was held up until the transcript c o u l d be made ready. to The interview was released the day the Soviet Foreign Office, in notes t h e US, Britian, and France, rejected their J u n e 25 proposal that a four-power meet­ ing be called in Berlin to discuss means of easing tension caused by shootings and other violence along the Berlin wall. ii Student Cabinet WHI Meet Today J President Joseph R. Smiley will meet with the 16 students on his Summer Advisory Cabinet at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday. First in a series of informal dis­ cussions, the meeting is aimed at bettering communications between students and administration. Cabinet members are Judy Blan­ ton, Genie Brackenridge, Mike Brenan, Jim Goodnight, Sylvia Grider, Sam Kinch Jr., Gay Kok- emot, Lowell Le berm ann, Larry Lee, Ann Mobley, Hoyt Purvis, Sandy Sanford, Don Richard Smith, Barbara Tosch, Johnny Weeks, and Richard West Jr. Students serving on Dr. Smiley's advisory cabinet during the long session will be named in S e p t e t ^ ber. LBJ —Photo by Key 1 Lynda Bird Johnson, that is. The Vice-President’s daughter ducks into a Kinsolving telephone booth for a quick call during a pause in the activities that are keeping her and 200-odd other freshmen- ♦o*be busy this week. She s attending the second o f four orientation Sessions to be held on cam pus this summer. Tuesday night, the prospective freshmen will hear Dean o f Students Glenn Barnett. (See related story, p age 8.) News In Brief... From the Wire By the Associated Press I Rusk to Confer With Gromyko * WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Dean Rusk heads Thursday for Geneva and more talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko despite a fresh rebuff from Moscow. Rusk’s travel plans were announced Monday almost simultaneous­ ly with Soviet rejection of a Western request for a conference to dis­ cuss ways to end violent incidents along the Berlin wall before they can mushroom into more serious outbreaks. The secretary is going to Geneva to participate in wrapping up the agreement which it is hoped will put Laos on a permanent basis Of neutrality. Macmillan Scratches Nine More LONDON — Prime Minister Harold Macmillan swept nine more ministers oat of his government Monday night In the second phase Of s purge that has rocked the ruling Conservatives. A weekend of house-cleaning brought SS new appointments into his administration, threatened by a flight of supporters disenchant­ ed with Conservative policies. Eleven young mea moved into the government Monday for the first time. A total of Id tried and trusted colleagues of Macmillan were left without jobs. Satiate, House in Deadlock WASHINGTON — The Senate and House failed again Monday to tnd a months-long prestige feud that has knotted the federal purse- strings. And a new deadlock between the chambers began forming Off-stage. Representatives of the two appropriating committees met on neu­ tral ground to seek an end to procedural differences which have blocked passage of all bills to provide money to operate the government in the newly started fiscal year. Temporary, stop-gap legislation is enabling departments to con­ tinue meeting payrolls through this month. The conferees’ closed session resulted in no settlement but did produce an agreement to meet again Tuesday. Senator Slams Doctors9 Telegram WASHINGTON — Some influential Democrats threw their weight Meaday behind a Republican effort to kin President Kennedy’s com­ promise health care plan for the elderly la Tuesday’s showdown vote In the Senate. And a ary of intimidation was raised by Sen. Thomas H. Rachel af California, one of the few Republican supporters of the plan. He complained vigorously about a telegram la which he said ti doctors had warned him: “ ‘We strongly advise yon not ta he a party to pulling demo­ cratic chestnuts oat of the fire*.*9 Tuesday. July 17, 1962 THE SUMMER TEXAN P ay I Thunder on the le ft Shock Due To Russia At Geneva By J. Af. RO BERTS Associated Press News Analyst The Geneva disarmament con­ ference has resumed long, weary plodding toward futility in an East-West atmosphere of in­ creasing chill. its Even while Ute delegatee were gathering ^ became obvious that the hands of the Westerners would be very largely tied until their scientists complete evalua­ tion of newly tested system s for detecting violations of a nuclear agreement. The West seems to be working toward an offer to the Soviet Un­ ion of a less repugnant inspection system than could be offered when underground testing could not be reliably detected. US representative Arthur H. Dean promised a report on the new information within a few weeks, but Valerian Zorin, Soviet deputy foreign minister, didn’t w ait Whfle the new Western position remained hypothetical, Zorin re­ jected hi advance any interna­ tional inspection which the So­ viets did not voluntarily invite. This freezing of all approaches to even a minimum safety agree­ ment came almost simultaneous­ ly with two other statements of Kremlin positions which served to emphasize that the Soviet Un­ ion still believes threats will get her more than reason. to support She prefers the myth of East German sovereign­ ty rather than discuss ways of halting brutality at the Ber lls wall. That was in a formal dip­ lomatic note. In an interview with a group of American editors, Khrushchev reiterated his old demand — re­ peatedly and irrevocably reject­ ed by the Allies—that Western troops be removed from Berlin. That was expected as a part of the campaign he has been wa­ ging for years. Bat perhaps more significant la judging the man’s psychology was his characterization of Am­ erican anti-Communist policy as “Ignoble.” He thinks the non-Communist world should just lie down and let the Communist monolith fall on it. And he kept boasting about his weapons as though he believ­ ed he could cause just that by spreading enough fear. He's likely to find, at Geneva, and in Berlin, that the world isn t as naive as he thinks. i s 71 HAVE A 1 FRIEND WHO PLAV5 THE ACCORDION. HE CM PLM POLKAS, UlALUES, SCHOTTISHES...AU SORTS OF THIN6S..V0U KN0(0,TUE KINO OF TONES THAT PEOPLE UKE TO HEAR! AAUGHJ I WCO) THAT WOULD GET HIM Bossy Needs Help The difficulty Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara recently had in discussing a proposed National G u a r d reorganization plan with state governors points up a dan­ gerous ‘‘sacred cow” attitude. The sacred cow is the United States reserve forces . . . an expensive animal which milks the US budget an­ nually but which is available at all times to be milked in I_________ ;__ ... return.__________________ McNamara ran into a stone wall of opposition to the proposed 33,000-man and 295-unit reduction in National Guard strength when he appeared at the governors’ con­ ference in Pennsylvania. State governors are commanders of the Guard until it is federalized. To them, it is of value as a source of political patronage as well as an economic stimulus to the State—in addition to its frequent use in local emergencies. The military value of reserve forces has been ques­ tioned for a number of years because of the difficulty in maintaining a high state of training and a supply of modem equipment. Nevertheless, in World War II and in Korea, reserve elements responded to the nation’s call with some degree of valor—after long re-training periods. i ★ ★ The 1955 Reserve Forces Act promoted the m a l e American to a “citizen soldier” status if he would serve six months active duty and 5y* or 712 years of reserve training. Although the reserves existed prior to 1955, the RFA gave impetus to the “modem” reserve concept. Now, under f e d e r a l financing, the reserves have flourished as a body of men for the most part under­ trained, under-equipped, and unprepared for military duty. The call-up last fall of National Guard and Army Reserve components and individuals showed a shocking lack of preparedness. Almost without exception several months of re-training was necessary, as the Army jargon would put it, ‘‘to improve military posture.” ★ ★ Thus the government is perpetuating the concept of the “citizen soldier”—a tradition dating back to before the American Revolution—in a nuclear age. As if con­ ventional forces on active duty were not enough, we see ineffective conventional forces subsidized through the re­ serve programs. For many, weekly drills are a pain in the neck but still provide little if any real combat training; indeed, little military experience at all. Summer camps and cruises also are often little more than beer-drinking, hell-raising vaca­ tions. Reserve officers and NCOs—who count on a certain supplemental income from the drills—and public officials who can “use” reserve units in their states have been suc­ cessful in combatting reserve program cuts. If the reserves are a vital part of our defense strategy, why not streamline and modernize them? If in a nuclear age they are not vital, why not scrap them? The reserve cow is sick. Is there a veterinarian in the house? Loyalty Out Front Members of the AFL-CIO’s Committee on Political Education today face a serious dilemma as they meet to hear candidates for top offices from both parties. None of the four Democrats had COPE support in the primaries. Obviously neither did any of the Republicans, particularly candidate for congressman-at-large Desmond Barry, who billed himself as “the man the Teamsters found too hot to handle.” The COPE must d e c i d e whether to continue the “purge” of Republican-type Democrats from the Demo­ cratic party, typified in the election of John G. Tower over William A. Blakley for the US Senate seat. Tower is now firmly planted in the Senate and in the Republican party. One choice is to cross party lines—or just stay at home and watch—in order to elect a Republican who, theoretical­ ly, would be more easily beat in 1964. The other choice is to stick with the oath of party loyalty through thick and thin, even when it means taking a two-year political refresher course while the “bad guys” Fun the show. What reason is there to maintain a massive, anachron­ istic reserve force in a world of atomic a n d hydrogen bombs, guided missiles, and manned spacecraft? IM W I Local Government Is Less Responsible By J O H N N Y WEEKS favorite argument In last Friday’s column on con­ servatism , Richard West dragged out a that those on the right of political center like to use to defend tra­ ditional economic theory and bludgeon national economic plan­ ning about the pragmatic head and shoulders. He extolled the virtues of the free enterprise sys­ tem of Western Germany, com­ plimenting their good sense for not falling prey to the evils of unbalanced budgets, big govern­ ment spending, and other poli­ cies that nice people don’t talk about l l hi difficult la beurre Ami Germany as aa example, this Is the p antry “New E t in amirs,** ar Keynes­ ian, has had heat sneeem . The United States natftsaal budget last year wan M% e l ear Gram National Product. Cha ar Hip r Ad­ enauer*! budget was 34% af Ms eeuatry*! GNT—-the largest per­ la the uaa-Oemmaalat centage world. The differ cace is evea greater than It looks. Much el our spending is for defeme (over SS biniou dollars). West Germany Is forced to allocate very little for military strength. TW United Staten burniebee Instead, Germany’s budget has such pro­ grams aa a comprehensive ae­ cial security, so ria Hoed amdt- due, and a myriad af other pro­ gressive that would curdle the Mood of the conserva­ tives who point to Germany arith pride. features this. West quoted Dr. Ludwig E r­ hard, Germ any’s economic min­ ister, to the effect that the good old conservative principle* that were good enough for Bismarck and Adam Smith were good enough for him ( . . . gimme that old-time economics, it was good enough for Hoover and it s good enough for me . . The Pro­ gressive of July, 1962, in an in­ terview with Eh*. Erhard, quoted him as saying, “ We (the Aden­ auer government) conceive of the role of government as one of partnership with industry and la­ bor in pursuit of a common na­ tional g o a l. . . an expanding eco­ nomy.’’ Imagine the reactions of conservatives and liberals alike if the President of this country suggested a partnership of gov­ ernment and business. Dr. Erhard went on to say. “ Government intervention is nat­ ural and necessary, public spend­ ing and planning are ingredients of that concept (an expanding economy). Without them, capit­ alism cannot long survive as a healthy way of life." This statem ent of policy by Dr. E rh ard kl a far cry from the concept of free business enter­ prise held by American conser­ vatives. It is New Deal, Keynes tan, economic planning. If this were not enough, the government of free Germany is an investor in private enterprise. It owns 40% of Volkswagen and recently used tis power as a stockholder to Mock a price raise. Heard any advocating government ownership s i Gen­ eral Motors stock? No, but yon hear them praising the German economy. conservatives Lest my conservative readers should be leery of references to a liberal publication such as the Progressive, I refer them to the monthly publication of the Morg­ an Guaranty Trust Company, a firm not known for its left-wing tendencies. To quote the June, 1962, Morgan Guaranty Survey, “In short, what is being tried (in West Germany) is a persua- Job Opportunities L ie u te n a n t JR. L. Crisw ell of the U nited S tates Air Force will be here July 17. 18, and 19 tor th e purpose of interview ing seniors fo r th e Air F orce O fficers T rain in g School. lieutenant can be contacted from 9 a in st the Texas Union until 3:30 p.m. each day. The sive, rather than coercive, typa of centralized economic planning . . . more on the imposition of deliberate design.” Or for a continental look from The Economist of London, “First and by all odds foremost, their governments (France, Britain, West Germany) never balance . . Government their budgets | spending in European countries rises giddily year after year. They are doing what any sensi­ ble man knows Is im possible: them selves they are spending i rich.” tbs cesser? at! vet wha wrSMp a* Me M e af the balanced budg et ara carn et bi aaylaf that f s t s i Germany I M rn III» but ba say ar haply that It Ie tm sBiuimy wtth KMM gavern* Beaut briery l i eu Is cam pl fitly false. The cautrei cuarcieed by the gevenuueut cf Geeusuuy eyes Ms eeauamy, ae I have shewn, b sta ff wrtug romp ari d ba eau- M s bi the US* West a n i Let’s Last Friday’s column dragged up a second and much dearer sacred cow of conservatism , the virtue of focal over national gov­ ernm ent Conservatives tell us that focal government is better than national government be­ cause it is closer bo the people and therefore can look after its citizens better. This sounds very heart-warming, but how true is this in practice? How responsi­ i ble is focal government? lake rn rather stupid faucetia af focal giver— cut, hue as s ess ment. Every year y o u r lo­ cal tax’ collector reports to the elate comptroller aa the taxable gauds la Ms esuaty abaefcs own­ ed, ae easy aa dip walt la bauds, aaKwaobHfw, livestock, etc. dust how accurate sad boa ret are these reports of focal official#? According to the figures in the comptroller’s office, IMPt there wan fit s ,SSS ca deposit bi Harris County. Aouad a little low? Well, the ba ok lag business la Austin was really bud, where there were sera dotters aa dep­ osit, a c c o r d in g bo the assessor's report. But, after all, it was a r e c es s ion year. la Dallas ('ouaty the total v a lu e of all the v e h ic le s I w a s $800,000. A guess there aren’t many cars in Dallas. In H en d erso n C ounty there were no v e h ic le s , accord­ ing bo the report to the comp­ troller. The locals mast w a lk . little lo w ? ta What do these reports, which are the rule, not the exception, prove? Unfortunately, most local governments are not responMbie because no one cares or is inter­ ested in local government. Until improved, local government impress the conservatives will thinking citizens with any fe w anti-national government tirades. is THE SUMME XAN O f ia U n rtprfM dl Is Tbs T r ia s sr s U m c et th e Kditsra sr •( tbs writer of the artiele and so t neces­ sarily I'airer* it* ad- siisia tr alios. tho»o af tbs Entered as seconde l a i n last ter October 18. 1943. at tbs Peat Off ic# at Austin. The Summer T e x a n , a student newspaper of T h e University of Texas, semi-weekly during the sum­ mer on Tuesday and Friday morn­ ings. it ta not published during holi­ days. Publisher is T e x a s Student Publications. Inc. News contributions w ill be accepted by telephone (GR 3-9473) or at th# editorial office. J. B. 103, or at the news laboratory. J. B. 102. Inquires concerning delivery should be made in J. B. J07 and advertising. J. B. i l l (GR 2-2750). PERMANENT STAFF Editor ...................... Seas Black Jr. Managing Editor . . . . . . . . Larry Las New* Editor ..........................A aa Ape! Campus Life Editor Jeannlne Cappa Amusements Editor Hayden Freeman Sports Editor . . . . Mary Jo lU ndrlx Sue Cooper Editorial A s s is ta n t STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Night Editor .......... Barbara Teach Desk Editor . . . . . . Lynne McDsnald Isaac News Editor . . R age Nertbcetb Jim Davis. Copyreaders Bob Hinkle, Cr tan Reagan ............... N ight Sports JEditor Mary Jo Hendrix N ight Amusements Editor Hayden Freeman N igh t Wire Editor . . Carol Gustine Assistant ...................... Huey McNeaJy N ight Campus Life Editor J eau nine Capps Assistant ......................... Pat Sharpe Editorial Assistant . . . . . Sue Cooper Grimes Will Gesture With gestures and a Mexican Indian dialect, a linguist will show how to converse without a com* mon language at 8 p.m. Thursday In Business Administration-Econ- omics Building IOO. Dr. Joseph E. Grimes, a field linguist with the Summer Institute of Linguistics in Norman, Okla­ homa, will communicate with a sp eak er of a language unknown to him by scientific questioning and recording the speaker's re­ sponses. The linguist can learn both the vocabulary and the structure of an unwritten tongue u s i n g this method. It is used in the study of obscure languages d o n e by the S um m er Institute of Linguistics tor m issionary purposes. D r. G rim es, who speaks m any I American Indian and South Sea I Island languages, will com m unic­ ate in Huichol, a M exican Indian language. He will not m eet the in­ form ant before th e experim ent, and the inform ant’s language will not be revealed u n t i l afte r the dem onstration. The perform ance has been a r­ ranged by the U niversity Sum m er Language Institute, sponsored by the United States Office of E d u ca­ tion. George Ayer, assistant pro­ fessor of Rom ance languages, is director of the Institute. ★ UT Grad Aids Telstar Jam es M. H ardesty, U niversity graduate, Is one of the engineers working on the Tetotar rum muni ©attorn* satellite experim ent. Hard eely In bend of electrical engineering at Bell protection Telephone laboratories where the Teletar satellite w as designed and built. His grasp d eig n ed the equipment electrical protection and the cooling equipment for the com plex g round station built by the Bell System ut Andover, Me. The station ha— es the world’s largest antenna which sends and receives radio signals via the sat­ ellite. The Telstar experim ent is be­ ing conducted to help pave the way for a worldwide satellite com m unications network to trans­ m it overseas phone —lls, live television, and other signals. A native of Cleburne, Hardesty Int— m oved to Abernathy, where from high he was grad— ted . school. He received his BS degree in civil engineering from the Uni­ versity In IMS and h is m aster’s degree from the U niversity of Illinois two years later. H ardesty Joined Bed! Labora­ tories In 1M7. He Is a member of the American Society of Civil j Engineers, Tau Beta Phi, Chi Ep­ silon, Sigm a XI, and Gamma Al- j Pba. He Is presently in I Bernardsville, N. J. living | ★ Maury Maverick to Speak “Medical C are for the A ged,” J will be the topic discussed by M au­ ry M averick Jr. a t the Young D em ­ ocrats m eeting a t 7:30 p.m . W ed-1 nesday in Union 340. On July 25, D r. K. M. Schmitt. ! the professor of governm ent a t U niversity, will talk to the club on the Alliance tor P ro g re ss. P ractical dem onstrations ★ Educators in Workshops of various comm unication skills will he featured at two U niversity the sponsored redo rad functions of com m uni­ cation In school adm inistration. Identical them es w ere ches­ ter a superintendents’ workshop, July 23 25, and a work­ shop for central staff school per­ sonnel, July *5-27. conferences on school Topics and consultants for eight laboratory sessions w ill be: “The ABC’s of Clear W ritiag,” John A. W alter, associate professor of English; “Visualizing Presenta­ tion," Clifton Darby, Tecaifax education consultant; “ Informal Patterns of Communication," Dr. W. H. Wats— , associate professor of m anagem ent; and “ Staff Or­ ganization for E ffective Commun­ ication," Dr. W. E. Barron, asso­ ciate professor of educational ad­ m inistration. Also, “Conferring With Subord­ inates," Dr. Ben M. Harris, as- sis tan t professor of educational adm inistration and Dr. David Sanders, assistant professor of curriculum instruction: a n d in Group En­ “Communication deavors," Jerry H arvey, research associate in social science; “Role Perception and Role Conflict la Communication," Dr. Robert F. Peek, professor of educational psychology; and “Identifying and Assessing Community Sentim ents and Pressures," Dr. Harold H. Hilt, Midland school superinten­ dent. Tuesday, July 17. 1962 THE SU M M ER TEXAN Page 3 Substance in Blood May Cause Arthritis An abnorm al substance in the blood of persons with rheum atoid a rth ritis m ight be p artially re ­ sponsible for this crippling disease. Studies to help find out a re con­ tinuing a t the U niversity South­ w estern M edical School, D allas, under a $23,859 g ran t from the N a­ tional Foundation — M a r c h of Dim es. Awarding of the funds, covering the final y e a r of a cu rren t three- y ear grant, w as announced by D r. H arry H. Ransom , U niversity chancellor, and Basil O'Connor, N ational Foundation president. D ie project is directed by D r. M orris Ziff, professor of internal m edicine and one of the nation’s leading investigators of rheum atic diseases, D r. Ziff and his associates have been exam ining effects of the rheu­ m atoid factor on norm al tissues. Scientists have injected ra ts with rheum atoid factor and also with com binations of antibodies and an­ tigens (substances which incite the developm ent of antibodies.) MARY CARTER PAINTS Outside White Satin Enamel j 6 , 8 g . i $ 2 2 S o k Every 2nd Can FREE $2 * V Every 2nd Can FREE Satisfaction Guaranteed or Honey Refunded 5120 Burnet Road GL 2-4100 3500 Interregional Hwy. GL 2-4266 OPeCOtOPeCO«OPtCOdOPeCO*OP«CO*OP«CO*OPuCOuOP« ro u • CL O famous art New English Courses Offered UNS — The literary cafeteria from which U niversity students •elect sophomore English courses will feature plate lunches instead of sep arate dishes beginning next autumn. The plate lunches are two new courses, "Introduction to L itera­ ture ’’ p arts one and two, which offer a balanced diet of dram a, f i c t i o n and poetry from English, Amel lean and E uropean lite ra ­ ture. The four: "R eadings two courses will replace in English and American L iteratu re.” “ Readings in A m erican L iteratu re," " In tro ­ duction to P o etry ," and "R ead ­ ings in World L iteratu re." The tw o-sem ester "S urvey of English L iteratu re" will be re ­ tained as a separate course and will continue to be the choice of many sophomores, especially those who intend to teach. to L iteratu re" grew out of a study by a special ; com m ittee of the D epartm ent of ■ English faculty m em bers, headed by Dr. Joseph J. Jones. The com- f o r m any hours ! m ittee m et "Introduction THE UNIVERSITY'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER 20IO Speedway G R 8-6609 E I C O D Y N A K I T G A R R A R O G L A S E R -S T E E R S bell S e r v i n g M cIn to sh Jen sen t h # U n i v e r s i t y A r t e fo r 12 Ynar* B E D W A Y “HIGH FIDELITY AT REASONABLE PRICES’ throughout choosing courses. the spring sem ester, th e new for textbooks Ai] die books a re paperback e d ­ itions, ranging in price from 35 cents to $1.95. Cost of books for each sem ester will be no m ore than $10 p er student, a com para­ tively sm all sum com pared with textbook prices in some o ther sub­ jects, Dr. Jones points out. Although English 314K (the first sem ester of the tw o-part course) will be a prerequisite to English 314L (the second p a rti, English 314L will be offered in th e fall of 1962 and will be open to students who have completed satisfactor­ ily any of the other sophomore the English courses. T hereafter, prerequisite will be enforced. The com m ittee has attem pted to estab ­ lish a certain continuity the two courses. in In its offers addition literatu re to courses, the D epartm ent of Eng­ lish sophomore writing courses especially designed for en­ gineers, prelaw students, science m ajors, and foreign students; a course in n arrativ e w riting; and a linguistics course in the structure of English. reproductions Reproduced directly from sculptures. Each original is painstakingly scaled to show every detail. Crafted "Hydroca!,” a q u a l i t y in stone-like composition and authentically antiqued. SE L E C T F R O M OU R L A R G E C O L L E C T I O N Gift Department Street Floor QUEEN NEFERTITE R e p l i c a of t h o o r i g i n a l . A n t i q u e d b i a c k , 12" ti. Madison House W ith its fresh new ap p ro ach to college living, M adison H o u se otters the discerning coed and her parents all that could be desired. Located in the beautifully w ooded area just west o f the main campus, M adison H o u se is just a step fro m everyw here. M adison H ouse, furnished a n d lig h ted f o r co m fo rt a n d co n c en tra­ tion, puts quiet em phasis on the academ ic side o f college life. For luxurious living, m ake your reservation now . M adison H o u se will be o p en fo r inspection after July 14 and com pletely furnish ed by Aug. 15. Madison House 709 W . 22nd S t .— Austin 5, Texas— GR 6-5961 STH OE NT S O W N o I 0 R F W aster•piece eASnien Choose from an exten­ sive c o a c tio n of beauti­ fully crafted chess sets. A set for everyone from the beginner to the veteran. From $ I to $45 Summertime c a n be fun time with a family game. A complete depart­ ment devoted to games and game supplies. Gomes D eportm ent O p • c O • rvP• r o P # C O # o p # c 0 * 0 P • <' P # 4 O i O ^ t r o t O P •' Tuesday. July 17, 1962 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 4 Gary Player Predicts P G A Winning Score NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. (J) — Gary Player, the 1961 Masters champion, says it will take a 272 to win the 44th Professional Golf Association Tournament next week­ end on the 7,045-yard Aronimink Golf Club course. Player was among the first of 177 pros to converge on Aronimink for practice rounds “The course is beautiful,” said Player after turning in a par 70. •‘There are no tricky features to detract from a good shot. Under ideal conditions, discounting rain— or wind that might change things, I believe a 272 can win it.” Newtown Square, a town of some 500 in Delaware County just outside Philadelphia, has had lit­ tle rain in weeks — and this has dried out the rough, giving the golfers another assist. Aronimink’s pro Joe Capello said that because of the drought, “The rough is no problem. It’s so dry now that anyone can hit out of it. But if it rains for a couple of days, the rough will get lush and thick and I ’ll put my es­ timate back up again.” Capello originally predicted a 274 will be needed to win, now agrees with Player that it will take 272. Dont get all hot and bothered on washday... Do it all in one hour or less Visit us at one of our 9 locations . . . Relax in Air-Conditioned Com fort at KWIK-WASH LAMAR PLAZA CENTER AIRPORT AT NORTH LOOP 1804 BRIARCLIFF 2123 EAST TTH 704 WEST 24TH 2209 S. CONGRESS 3105 GUADALUPE 1302 WEST LYNN 1702 KOENIG LANE • COeOP»CO»OP»CO»OPeCOeOP»CO»OP»COeOP«COeOPeCO SUMMER SALE SAVE TO 50% CLOTHING FURNISHINGS standings, AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Los Angeles Cleveland Minnesota Chicago Baltimore Detroit Boston Kansas City Washington W 50 . . . . 48 48 47 ............... 47 46 43 43 . . . . 41 30 Monday's Results L Pct GB . 588 — 35 3% . 545 40 3*4 .545 40 5*4 .522 43 6Vfe .511 45 6V4 .511 44 8 .494 44 .489 45 8% .446 12*4 51 .349 20*4 56 New York 3. Kansas City I Washington 4. Los Angeles I Tuesday’s Schedule New York (Terry 11-8) at Boston (Conley 9-7) N Washington (Stenhouse 7 - 4 and Cheney 2-4 or Hobaugh 0-0) at Chi­ cago (Pizarro 8-7 and Wynn 4-6) 2N Cleveland (Gomez 1-1 or Latman 4-5) at Minnesota (Kralick fr-8) N Baltimore (Roberts 4-3) at Kansas City (Rakow 6-10) N Detroit (Aguirre 7-3) at Loa Angeles (McBride 9-3) N NATIONAL LEAGUE l l 2 4 Los Angeles San Francisco Pittsburgh St. Louis Cincinnati Milwaukee Philadelphia Houston Chicago New York L Pct GB W .660 — 32 . . . . 62 .638 34 . . 60 .620 35 57 .549 10V4 41 50 .545 40 48 .495 ISH 46 45 .440 20»4 51 40 . 386 25 54 34 .376 26^4 58 ............... 35 24 .273 35 64 Monday’s Results Chicago at Houston, ppd., rain Pittsburgh 5. St. Louis 2 San Francisco 3. New York 2 Milwaukee 3. Cincinnati 0 Only games scheduled. _ Philadelphia (Hamilton 5-7 and Ben­ nett 3-4) at Houston (Golden 5-8 and Farrell 5-11) 2 N Tuesday’s Schedule Los Angeles (Drysdale 16-4) at Cin­ cinnati (Purkey 14-3) N San Francisco (O’Dell 10-8) at Mil­ waukee (Spahn 8-11) N Chicago (Koonce 8-2) at St. Louis (Jackson 7-8) N Only games scheduled. Gam esm anship Develops In US-Russia Dual Meet PALO ALTO, Calif, lf) —Games­ manship—that deft art of bluff, move, and counter-move — could burst conspicuously into the US- Russia dual track and field meet Saturday and Sunday. The press books and dope sheets for the struggle at Stanford Sta­ in which dium confidently event or events each American and Soviet will appear. list Yet Coaches John Oelkers and Gabriel Korobkov aren’t talking quite so specifically. Each, wary of the other’s stratagems, waves his hand mysteriously when asked when he’ll decide on his definite line-up. “These Russians play a lot of chess,” laughs US Coach Oelkers. “Well, I can play some chess my­ self.” Each team was selected at a single national tryout meet, with the top two men in each event winning trip But neither coach is bound to use his athletes in their listed event. the mrtfmiiffi PLUS COMPLETE service AND CAMERA REPAIR! STATMAN Photo Service Telephone GR 6-4326 222 West 19th The Merry Way By MARY JO HENDRIX Sports Editor Sitting in Colt Stadium Sunday in the 95-degree swelter* ing heat, I wondered if it was worth it. The ,45s slopped through a double-header like a second- rate Minor League team. Sunday was kid day, everyone 16 and under being admitted free. The delegation of Little Lea­ guers who saw the game must have been vastly disappointed. The 6,907 paid fans laughed and booed at each boo-boo. Despite five errors in the first game, the Colts beat the Chicago Cubs 5-4. They lost the second game 4-1. General Manager Paul Richards said, “It was sickening the way we kicked the ball around. We’re not playing big league baseball.” Manager Harry Craft echoed his thoughts when he said, “We had no right to win the first game at all. I’ve never won one like we won today.” M addening Heat The heat can be blamed for some of the mistakes and short tempers of the Colt players, but first baseman Pidge Browne has no excuse. He was standing about two steps off first base when the ball was hit right into his hands. He just stood there with the ball as if he didn’t know what to do with it. The runner was safe. Later on, coming out of the dressing room for the second game, Browne was asked by a small boy for his autograph* He said, “Dammit, no!” Right fielder Roman Mejias remained a favorite of the fans, holding up well in the first game. His home run in the first inning put the .45s in the game. Reportedly worried about his family in Cuba, Mejias didn’t show any signs of concern walking from the dressing room to the playing field. An old man stopped him and tried to express how much he liked his performance in the first game. Mejias smiled and said, “Thank you very much.” The old man wanted to detain him so they could talk some more, but Mejias had to hurry off for the start of the second game. Turning around to his friends, the old man said, “You seen that, didn’t you? He talked to me. He talked to ME. You seen THAT, didn’t you?” He kept repeating this over and over again, shaking his head and smiling. The heat knocked out umpire A i Barlick and gave one fan the notion he was welcome in the Colt dugout W ear/ Fans Fans resorted to other avenues of entertainm ent during the game to keep from being bored. The dozens of conces­ sion stands extending around the stadium did a booming business. Beer sold by the gallon, it seemed. One vender caught the attention of the fans by saying, “If you think John Glenn was high, try a beer.” Paul Richards threatened Monday to launch a m ajor over­ haul of his Houston Colts. He recalled pitcher Jim Umbricht and catcher Jim Campbell from the Oklahoma City farm club and optioned Dave Giusti and catcher M erritt Ranew to the Class AAA farm club. “I may have 25 new players around here before long if we can find them ,” Richards said. Harry Craft ordered afternoon workouts in the hot sun in reaction to Sunday’s play. “Let’s say we’ll do a little re­ hearsing this week.” Let’s face it. I’m a Colt fan, but there is almost no justifi­ cation of their play Sunday. They played badly, behaved badly, and still split a doubleheader. For a first year club the Colts have made an excellent showing. But for some reason, probably a combination of reasons, the Colts have fizzled out. Losing 18 of their last 21 games is heartbreaking and disappointing to those of us who keep up with them. I hope in the near future that the .45s will come back to their old fighting form and show everyone that they aren’t a dead club. We fans know they have the ability. SCHOLZ GARDEN “Opening Friday July 21st” Meals W ill Be Served REMODELED GR 7-4171 AIR CONDITIONED NEW MANAGEMENT 1607 Son Jacinto • r 0 « 0 P 4 C 0 * 0 P i C 0 i n p o c o o 0 P o C 0 i 0 P t C 0 o 0 P 4 C 0 » o P 4 C 0 Spelunkers Find, Name Caves Tuesday, July 17, 1962 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page S left the diving gear, and continued cai their trek barefoot. Patches of mud covered with a fluffy snow-like fungus w e r e found. A clean portion of the pass­ age with a shallow pool was named the “Wash Room,” because the cavers washed off mud In it. Another passage with a jagged floor came a f t e r the “Wash Room.” The group walked 500 feet before deciding to turn back. " T h e jagged floor practically tore our feet to pieces,” Phillips said. DIM LIGHTING Sarcastically, the party named t h e passage, "Hemoglobin Hob­ ble.” But their battery flashlights were waning, and this urged them to turn back. The safety line they had taken through the underwater passage for guidance got tangled as they pulled it out, ami was left—for­ tunately so, for cm their return trip, joined by Bartel Morgan, encountered mud­ dy water in the passage. The line guided them through. the group, now On this trip, the party brought along shoes, carbide lamps, which need no batteries, cam eras, and more safety line. Again, diving gear was left at the start of the air filled passage. Traveling almost half a mile, they made their way to the back of the cave. Two large rooms were the spelunkers could found, but not go much farther p a s t the rooms because the ceiling dropped to a large crystal clear pool, 30 feet deep. EQUIPMENT HEAVY A large, triangular shaped pass­ age could be seen just below the water. One of the divers tried to go through, but found it impos­ sible. to “The next logical step,” Phil­ lips said, “ is to bring our diving this point. "B ut,” he gear added, “ bringing 75 pounds o b our backs for more than hall a mile doesn’t m ake us very enthusiastic about i t ” On their way back, the team surveyed the passage, pacing off distances, measuring directions with a wrist compass. Since pencil and paper were not available, the survey notes were scratched with a knife on a hard hat, a protec­ tive helmet used by cave explor­ ers. Bob Rogers, attempting to find fossils by breaking rocks in a room later named “ Odiferous R o o rn,” instead detected the ordor of pe­ troleum or crude oil in the rocks, a rarely found the j Edwards Limestone layer ob which many caves a re found. indicator of The spelunkers have over 1,000 Texas caves on file, but they do not confine themselves to Texas, j A few caves in M e x i c o , some j fantastically large, have b e e n found by University cave explor­ ers, Phillips said. PUSHING HIS W AY through deep water in the main passage­ way of Indian Creek Cave, A. Richard Smith, University spelunker, finds homemade rafts are invaluable. Convenience • • • on the Dreg. ty p in g sertrioe 2013 Guadalupe GR 2-3210 GR 2-7677 A complete professional typing service tailored to the specific needs of University students and faculty. TWICE A YEAR WE HOLD THIS AMAZING SALE! Price S E M I-A N N U A L S H O E C LE A R A N C E OUTSTANDING VALUES FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK AR shoes from our regular stock . , • et greet savings. A wide selection of dressy, casual and tailored styles . . • but not all sizes in alt styles. A truly great sale! WERE 1 4 95 1 2 ” NOW •J A I 6 47 ALL SPRING AND SUMMER FLATS VALUES TO ■IIH— W t Wa IO95 N O W »ri r e m it ga. r n »» ta rr'iTi S H O E I STOKS 2348 Guadalupe — On the Drag Specializing in Coflegiete Petitions By FERNANDO DOVALINA JR. Texan Staff W riter Some people f i n d adventure away from earth, either in outer space or in the depths of the sea, but University spelunkers find it in the depths of the earth. Within the last month, members of the University Grotto of the Na­ tional Speleological Society h a v e explored winding passages and found chambers never before seen by human beings. INDIAN CREEK CAVE Located in Uvalde County, the passages are part of Indian Creek Cave, found more than s e v e n years ago when a deer hunter be­ came fascinated by water vapor making its way through a small crack on the bed of normally dry Indian Creek. Told of the Incident by the hunt­ er, F red Mmod J r., owner of the reach on which the creek bed is located, went to the area with a few hired hands. After a little work, the workers broke through into a small room. Suspecting that there was more underneath, Mason had the labor­ ers hoist the boulders on the floor out of the cave. The men tied ropes around themselves and se­ cured the lines to the outside. 70-FOOT DROP They continued digging. As was expected, a roar was heard, and the floor dropped seventy feet into the cave below, leaving the work­ ers dangling on the safety line, terrified but safe. Finally descending to Ute new floor, the men found and explored a small, winding, level p**«age WW feet long. The workers could see several other passages, but they were clogged with clay. Then, in 1955, the county decided to recharge the falling water table by using the cave. The entrance was enlarged, and a dam was built which diverted water into the cave. When a flood sent bil­ lions of gallons of water through I the clay was scoured the cave, out, and the other passages were unearthed. FORMATIONS NAMED Revealed by the flood waters were long passages, eerie rooms, ! and beautiful formations. Most of j them were given names. Opened by the flood, sn in te r-: section of two passages with a sandbar was named “Charley's B ar.’’ A part ot a passage was “ Alice’s Wonderland,” after one of the feminine spelunkers who was a member of the party that found It. Other names are “Orgy Hole,” j “ Elizabeths Virgin Room,” “ Al lergy Alley,” “ Phil’s Fissure,” and “ Crayfish Crawl.” At the end of deep water in an | level of one of upper the pas­ sages, two formation rooms were found. Basins where pools h a d existed were lined with glittering I calcite crystals. Root-beer-colored columns streamed down from the j ceiling. One cave formation called “ bacon rind” was found in large I numbers in one of the rooms. BACON RIND Hanging by their thin edges from the ceiling, the crystalline calcite "bacon rind” stretches down to the floor in strips of different colors. The curtain like formation, wavy on the sides, is but a fraction of an inch wide. Three weeks ago, a three-man party made a trip into a p a s s a g e that had Bever been explored be­ fore. This does not mean, one of the spelunkers pointed out, that the passages have been unaffected by man. In one such passage, a spelunker found a milk carton and other rubbish. Composed of Terry Raines, Bob Rogers, and Thomas Phillips, the group made through a three-foot high passage. C l e a r water ran six inches deep, and later, as the passage got higher, rose to the ceiling. its way USEFUL AQUA LUNGS At this p o i n t , the spelunkers were forced to use the aqua lungs they had brought along with them. After 500 feet underwater, they •mergad into an air-filtod passage. w jg r ^ jjy 17. IW the summer Texan p ^ . «I F u lb rjq h t to E u ro p e T O D A Y AT I N T E R S T A T E ANW AOS A HOWK | DISCOUNT CASO Sigrid Berg Recital Sigrid Berg; senior majoring in applied m usic, will present a vocal recital at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Music Building Recital Hall. A Fulbright scholar who will begin studying at the Hochschule Flier Musik in DetmokJ, Germany, in the fall, Miss Berg will sing six songs by John Swanay. The songs by Mr. Swanay, who is cur­ rently working on his doctorate in musicology at the University, are “Inmate,” “Der Nachbar ” Klage,” “Herbstag,” “Herbst,” and “Vorgefuhl.” The texts are by Rainier Maria Rilke. A pupil of Willa Stewart for three years, Miss Berg will also present “ Come Unto These Yel­ low Sands* and “Since From My D oor/' by Purcell, “ O Sleep Why Dost Thou Leave Me?” and “Let Me Wander Not Unseen,” by Han­ del. Also, she wiU sing “Le Secret,” “Au Q m iticre,” and “Soir,” by Faure. _______________________ Miss Berg will be accompanied by Mrs. John Swanay. Before entering the Hochschule Flier Musik, Miss Berg will at­ two - month orientation tend a course at The Goethe Institute in Iserlohn, Germany. ACB06S n o w UNIV. e t TIEX. •rn IW I n c SNEAK 8 PM. AUSTIN’S FINE ART THEATRE! COME AT 6 or 8 AND SEE BOTH SHOWS: LAST DAY: REGULAR FEATURE AT 6 AND IO P.M. a world of suspense in W o r l d I N M y P o c k e t C A P I T O L -im a m SWS n ear* ttmr if~4 MS* W INNER O F 4 BRITISH ACADEMY AW ARDS SHO W OF THE YEAR O P E N 11:4S LAST DAY! r i.cs In COLOR awl TECHNt&OP “THE MIGHTY CRUSADERS" > Starts TOMORROW < UNCONQUERABLE BARBflRIAHS OF THE SEA! IN COLOR GUNS o f THE B LA C K r W ITCH ! PLUS— 2ND F -tu r- 2 0 0 M E N and Kin COLORSCOPE IFltom m , Bandit Nemesis Was Mild, Neat TAMING IH E NUECES STRIP. By George Durham ma told lo Clyde Wantlaad. The University of Texas Prom . 178 page#. |4 .N . B y C. RICHARD KING “Give m y compliments to the Secretary of War and tell him and his United States soldiers to go to hell." So wired Lee H. McNeJly, cap* tain of the Texas Rangers, when advised to withdraw from his pur­ suit of cattle thieves near Las Cue­ vas, Mexico. His language was strong, but Captain McNelly did not look like a fighting man. He spoke “in a weak, thin voice that didn’t c a n y very far.” He was consumptive. A native of Virginia, he had been educated to be a preacher but had joined the Fifth Texas Cavalry in Louisiana and had served more than four years without a day s Mr. King Is an assistant profes­ sor of journalism and author of “Ghost Towns of T exas.” sick leave. His brown h air wa* silky and fine and long. His beard cam e down to his chest. A neat dresser, he “ wore a good grade beaver hat, duck pants and brush jacket, soft calf-skin leggins, a hand-tooled pistol belt, and a pis­ tol with a horn grip." McNelly did, however, have the respect of his men, and he did, in the years following the Civil War, clean up the bandit-plagued a re a between and Rio the Nueces G rande riv ers. The captain operated like a chicken hawk, locating the ta rg e t and then swooping down for the kill, but he was successful. Tile incident at Nuecestown illustrates how well his orders were carried out. Ileye On Good F riday, M arch 26 1875, bandits raided Tom Noekes’ store, saddles. taking 18 Dick These “ Cadillacs of the saddle world" w ere heavily studded with silver concho* in a pattern th at was as easily re«*ognized as the V symbol. McNelly described the saddles to his troops and ordered to em pty such saddles on sight, to leave the men where they to bring the saddles to i them , fell, but cam p. One of the cap tain ’s recruits : wrote, “ The bandits took eighteen of those expensive Dick Heye sad ­ dles, and Tom has already got back twenty-six, the last count I had. But he sure can ’t sell them . He can ’t even give them away. No one w ants to be caught straddling one." Released by The U niversity of Texas P ress, “ Tam ing the Nueces Strip ’ was w ritten by Clyde Wanf- land from interviews with George Durham. W antland, a retired news­ paperm an, has taken facts of the old west and has related them in a style th at com m ands respect At the sam e tim e, he has retained the flavor of the eye-witness account. Beautifully printed and well il­ lustrated with sketches and photo­ graphs, “ Tam ing the N u e c e s Strip" is proof that The U niver­ sity of Texas P ress excels in vol­ umes that deal with regional his­ tory. l/& e/z& l£cf N O W S H O W IN G ! Features: 2 p.m. end • p.m. B E S T P IC T U R E f Winner of IO A c a d e m y A m a n te ! "West Side Story" « superb, perfectly stunning cinematic experience pulsing olive and electrically tingling in its art­ ful entertainment. John Buffin Amar.-States. ----------------- A d u lt* C h ild . , . . . ...............60 . . M A T. E V K . L u w +r B a llo n v . . l . M ----- J. .............St . . Pax List Suspended I n a screen hee never known a love story to com pere with this! I LAST 2 DAYS! O nly O ne P e r f o r m a n c e P a rti D a y ' D o o rs O p e n 6:30 p .m . flW J D Q S tiZ N IC K S w a x * m e o r / m a r g a r e t u u c h e l is sro r r o r rue cho south I "“a GONE WITH THE WINO M I CAM ■ WIEN IBB) USU! HOWARD ■ (W A deH M W IM /5/, A SQiMCK MTLRNATlOfiAL PCTUHt MWoSSS?»^y»at FREE R U E S ON "U L T O O F EN TER TA IN M ENT g u a r a n t e e d : A d s!Im. 7ftc Child. 6-1!. H e Child, antler Ai. FREE A T E R R I F Y I N G W A R O F N E R V E S ! GREGORY PECK! 'C a a m I ROBERT MITCHUM POUI Plus! "PORTRAIT in BLACK" IN COLOR—LANA T U R N ER TONIGHT ONLY! H O L LY W O O D 'S THE N EW TARZAN — IN PERSON! 11 star. Jock Mahoney (Star of "Tarzan Goes to India") AUTOGRAPH PARTY BEFORE SH O W T IM E OPEN 7 P.M.— C O M E EARLY RECEIVE SIGNED PHOTOS FREE Plus Reg. Show— Last Times Tonite •SWISS FAM ILY ROBINSON" BURNET *' t a ,, A d u lt* 7#f, C h ild 2 5 f, U n d e r 6 F r e e F IN E FOODS • PLA Y G R O U N D ’ Snack B a t Open* I D F irst Show t Carol Burnett in Dallas F o r the third show of its season. State Fair Musicals is presenting Carol Burnett “In Porson," which opened at the Music Hall in Dab las Monday and which will be seen in fourteen performances through July 29. Dallas is one of only five cities to be visited this summer by Carol Burnett in a new full- evening show that gives vent to the comic, musical and dramatic the popular television talent of With Miss Burnett are Marty Al- ! len and Steve Rossi, supper club ■ humorists in the Martin and Lewis I tradition. In addition there is a j supporting cast of 16 dancers and I singers and the Musicals orches­ tra under the direction of Irwin Kosta I. ’ In Person Executive producer of “ Carol Burnett is form er Texan Bob B anner who has guid­ the G arry Moore show, and ed ; Carol B urnett, to a top place in the nation’s television life. Ban­ production ner s staff of producer Joe Hamilton, choreographer Ernie Flatt and writer Ken Welch have collaborat­ ed to create the evening of en­ tertainment- award-winning ----- C a m p u s R i m s T h is W * * k Tuesday — "Three Ring Circus” humor in the big top with Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis, and Zsa Zsa Gabor. Open Air Theatre. Wednesday — “Miracle in Milan” beautifully told story of happen­ ings in northern Italy. Union Au­ ditorium. Thursday — “David Copporfield” based on Charles Dickens’ novel with W. C. Fields, Lionel Bar­ rymore, and Freddie Bartholo­ mew. Open Air Theatre. Showings at the Open Air Theatre begin at 8 p.m. and are free to Summer Entertainment Season Ticket holders. For non-season ticket holders: adults 2S cents, children IO cents. Showings in the Union Auditorium are at 4, 7, and 9:30 p.m. and are free of charge. wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm D E L W O O D D K IV R -IN TMK A T U BOK O F F IC E O F XPIS t : N A D M ISSIO N T il THE FAR COUNTRY J aa*** S te w a r t. M ats S tart* 7 :3# — F la t— SASKATCHEWAN A U * I .ad d . S h e lle y W l a t e n Start* 9 :7? SOUTH AUSTIN SSM 8 . C O N G R ESS D R I V E I N T H E A T R E BO K O F F IC E O P E N S l : N A D M ISSIO N 7#e LONELY ARE THE BRAVE K irk D a a g lo a . G eae R ew load* Sta rt* I : t i SO T H i n r PARIS T * a y C a r li* . G le r la D e l * * * * S tart* 9:92 T O M O R R O W / July Pepsi 'n Popcorn A uto Show! ALL T H I S B E F O R E S H O W T I M E A* T M . • c r ST O M CARS • S P E E D CARS • SH O W CARS C O L E T R ST O F SPEED SPECIALISTS 81 I Clayton PLUS 2 Hours Live Broadcast A to I p.m. by K-NOW! E L L S F R E E T H E A T R E P A SS E S OIL C H A N G E S —GA SOLI S E C O M P L IM E N T S O F CHARLES DODSON H T H U L E — A l i i M *a*r Md. N O T H IN G TO B I T ! P R E S E N C E NOT N E C E SSA R Y TO H I M Plus: 2 Action-Packed TkriBing Shows ♦ "THE RACERS" KIRK D OI GLAS * "THUNDER ROAD" R O B T. M ITCH I'M DON T M ISS A LL T H IS BURNET DRIVE IN T H E A T R E EL MAT 504 Eiit Av*. G R 7-7023 EL TORO 1601 Guadalupe G R 8-4321 EL CHARRO 912 Rad River G R 8-7735 MONROE'S "Mexicin Food to Tek# Horn#" G R 7-8744 DoJivtry Sorvico 7 D*yi T u esd a y , M f 1 7 . 1 M 2 T H E SU M M E R T E X A N P a y 7 Prize-Winning Soprano Heafner Will Sing Master s Concert Soprano Carolyn Heafner w i 11 j Miss Heafner w ill remain in the present her master’s thesis recital University next year to continue as part of the Student Recital Se- her study with her teacher, Willa Stewart. While working on her de­ Ties at 8 p.m. Friday in the Music gree here, Miss Heafner has been Building Recital Hall. a teaching assistant. She will be accompanied by Dix­ The following selections are in- ie Ann Ross and assisted by Ray- mend Schroeder at the clarinet, chided hi the program : “Qui Tollis t Peccata Mundi” from “Mass No. Schroeder is an instructor in mu­ sic. 2 in A Major” by Bach, “Der Birt Auf Dem Felsen’’ bv Schubert, lor of music degree at the Wo-, “Sale*” and “Ave Maria” from Miss Heafner received ber baehe- North Carolina in 1960. tions from the song cycle “Gypsy Prior to coming to the Univer- Melodies, Op. 55” by Dvorak, two sity, Miss Heafner made numerous j Hebrew melodies and three selec- appearanees in musical comedies tions from the song cycle “Five Popular Greek Melodies” by Ra­ and operas on the East Coast, was vel, and “To This We've Come" soloist with the University of North from “The Consul” by Menotti. Carolina Choir and Madrigal Sing­ ers, and was presented as soloist with Orchestra in North Carolina. The recital is being presented in partial fulfillment of require- the Greensboro Symphony merits for the master of music de gree. In Austin, Miss Heafner has ap- Admission to the recital is free. Mf.??' ... TWO OF THE ambiguous characters in "Last Year at M a r en- bad, opening W ednesday a* *he ~e*as theater. The latest cf ♦r-t nouvelle vague films by *ue -c ted French director, Alain It tells *he equivocal story c* a man, tis w *e, and the man she met the previous year at the luxurious sea at Merienbad—or d :a she? Lc^q awaited by a pea cinema e^Fuuasts, +he opening cf ca** and the ccu*v ~e+c r cf Wes* Side Story* Year a 4- Marienbad at the Varsity, cause Drag movie reuses to be showing two c : -*■« most discussed pictures of the oas* e*ert I seasons.— H F. peered in the principal roles of Anna in “The King and I” and Mimi in “La Boheme.” She is also a soloist with the First Methodist Church. Last year, Miss Heafner was first place winner of the ad­ vanced division of the regional au­ ditions of the National Association of Teachers of Singing which were held in Norman, Okie. SUMMER TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINES Tuesday Texan ........................Monday 3:00 p.m. Friday T e x a n ..........................Thursday 3:00 p.m. Call GR 2-2473 Later, she won third place in the regional auditions ai the Metro­ politan Opera, held in San Antonio, s u m m e r r a t e s o ne block c a n n * Room s or.iy. 1912-1911 W ich ita. H a r ­ and her latest honor came this grove H e m e M rs. T. C. H a r jct eve. spring when she won the 81.000 GR audition scholarship offered by the Fort Worth Opera Guild. Rooms for Rent For Rent Help W anted h< j«e F O R R E N T . O K E F u rn is h e d sid e of d u p lex S T U D E N T O R M A TU RE WOMAN - P R IV A T E ROOM I R E E A N D or B e a u tifu l view o v erlo o k in g all Auf- AND E a T H — M EALS — LA UN I RY iig n t house****, ng tin. P h o n e H I 2-28M. t f l > s ittin g evenings. CL 3-753f* a ex* nar.ge and u n fu rn ish e d . /o r from C H O IC E cor*-f*d h««vy b e e t I served with F r t-c k potato** and cal* slaw. I * ® / W A 4 Convenient Locations in Austin S2C t f f k .erv'y S h i i p i t in A a s t.ti— Brand new p riv a te o r e bedroom v x>d panel­ I .•\ur? ed a p a r tm e n t b ath K .; h e n e tte w ith n a tu ra l x»ood Ideal fo r I o r 2 - ne ie per (-a t i n ets -o r* A lso Ljree closet* an d i a r / / • 565 per m o n th fo r su m m e r 61-A V es’ JI - S t O pen GL 3-7943 p riv a te pat! . FO R I lent J doe r sedan. R ebu * rr.otcr • a t 2-7“ ! l i t h AIR-*' CD IT I JIN ED I ;?57 D*:d g* doe r *edan .th rad o h e a te r r.»« * in te r io r a n d e x te rn r. tire * m ileag e SH S.OO. GL _-45“ SB5» 4 ■•-od Eat Mexican Food Once A Day! A-BAR HOTEL S um m er rate* 96 25 a w eek-double 910 00 a w eck-aingle a ir co n d itio n e d Guadalupe GF. 6 Furnished Apartments A p u . C lean A T T R A C T IV E AIP. - C O N D IT IO N E D to d ie s closet c a r ta I nu. r ce r e fr g e ra to r w ith fre ez er, tow n C o r ­ s p a te - a r g * W alk to clexoes or cle VI. GR 6-8025 GR 7-S22B. SUMMER. P-ATE — L a rg e efficiency, s e p a r a te k itc h e n er,tra n c e . I ar* fig SU.- V. SIS W e st 21st. A .r-oooied. GR A IR C O N D IT IO N E D O ne B e d re l rn. P a n e le d Gas-W'**. r C olorful. S“ 4.!*u n o s W est 22nd GR 5"' s GR 8-9125. PLAY BOYS Ne** a p a r t­ tw o b ed ro o m m o d e rn m e n t H a n g .r.g fire p la ce . B eam ed f e ti­ ng*. Terraz© flo o r W ood pan els and . . . . r e room . TC* b ath . L u ../-.n -ric k k tc h en . dress* rs ’• *r*> p r.v a te O ff s tre e t p a r k in g — n e a r L n i­ te r s :ty R oom fo r 3 o r 4 3408 V, est A venue. O pen. To r e n t eau. G L 3-‘'*-43 a n i cl .*• U i>(\ w ith 20 Duplex— Unfurnished U N F U R N IS H E D F IE L D STO N E Cm- liv in g room . 16 bed­ tiled sh o w er, an d rsce k itc h en room for ©nlv 940.00. 5 m in u te s n o rth of It % a b a rg a in fo r p e rm a n e n t U. T ■*rrk,ng o r s tu d e n t couple Bab-- wel- e ■ U>^> \* .- r 7 - •“ . r - CT . -V . ^ For Sale 19 6 . -62 M O DEL MOPED S L IG H T L Y USED 1961-62 M O D EL MO­ P E D M O T O R B IK E -D R A ST IC A L L Y R E D U C E D F O R IM M E D IA T E SALE. OS D ISPL A Y TS F R O N T OF RIN EY BROS CONOCO S E R V IC E STA TIO N AT T H E C O R N E R O F EEK W H IT E BLVD. AND MANCHACA RD IN­ Q U IR E FU R TH ER . BY CA LLIN G HI 2-8576 A F T E P. 5 OO A U ST IN -H E A L E Y REM O V A BLE fib e r­ g la ss to p N ew n ev er used. S# . for s h ip p in g end v.boL:sa:e co*lf C a.. HI 2-3702 "CLY S P E C IA L . Most to 25c p er bocks Sc J u s t o ff G - a d z lupe books SA P» S II W e st 4 'rd SA ILBO A TS. N EW USED k its K ard- v .are an d tr a d e r s S a ilb o a t Ss es, ~$4 W est 7th GR 6-3X0. GR S-8118. v . v BUS 1956 CVV ST A N D A R D M a tte r en d '.v e n ex c lu siv ely b> p jo t a * r d tio n 5- Th ex - r.. r es. 9835 OO eg Cai, o w n er 65 OO* as n , g- [OOO HO r RA N IN E TERRA C E F E R PTH I be k- g ro c n d f o r m o d e m liv tm r 2053 S ab ­ r e S h a re a ; * r r -n t—roo n tj re 2418 '.P . e-5528 GR 2-7 Of ll n eeded ' aa.-: ELC CD DONORS— Ail ty p e s of 'c r usage in A u st.n P ro fe s ­ sio n a l Cf non now T ra v is C t u r 'v I cod Bank. 2 ^ 7 B Red R iver accep ted W anted Typing I H E M O O N L IG H T E R S —I E M Mu - U o lh ! b e A fter 6 00 and w eekend* M a r x ite Cnatello. GR 2-1535 3217 H a m p to n Road H E M E S L U V N O T E S out, d o u b le »t<*ce GR 6-4717 ■ es £.< Y FING. N E E D W O RK R*»M-n*b«e r ; : n C L 3-7h38 a n i HO 5-029* to*! GR S K Y 2914 Bear, na 'Otarv P^b.: Photocopy .T\£ AC' KA. I K E L A ,.'T IE L L IEM G e-T rom atio S P E C IA L IS T R e aso n a b le C o u r t s • r.: ous. c c r*a.derate s e n .-ce . . I L* G— LAW’ W O R K Ll* . ■.a „. IR $-7079 n o th in g .V .m eograpr,.r a r cln^ i ■ eseo -P ap ers-P r.n ti.n g S T E X D U PL IC A T O R S 4OO Boat l i t h FUorve GR 9 -« 8 3 Q U IT L O O K IN G A V A ILA B LE FU R IM M E I CATE OCCUPANCY GARAGE APARTMENT — Air-conde tio n e d —C o m p letely fu rn is h e d w .th I e ne* H a ll—I T • b a th — - block to T —Also 2 ROOMS w ith a d jo in in g t:.ie bath— P a r k .r g at y o u r d o o r—Excep- tio n a ily t - e t —9o5 CO a room Reapomible Rex* Day»— G L te n a n ts wanted—See Mr 2407 S ab in e o r Ca,.* GR 6 -655 .-488S N ig h ts TR N TY TERRA CE New cc^ci $SC.0C c-e:c. 'C G C " or ed : y r - ' J i- b e d lf c 5 ’z.£~ea * C r ' y j ' j r 3^* c ’ ~ G R 7-♦ 2 5 3 APARTM ENT A students-— m ale * ILA BL L a m m e r FOR rate* < E 13636 ESQUIRE A PA R T M E N T S 29C2 W h ltis oo n e . r Gan" pu» * U. T M- * • 2 Bedroom , AL--Cond. T ed Beth* 0 • A ccom m odates 9 o r 4 m e r Nice A K itc h en s A c o m fo r ta b le • P a r k in g P o rte r Sen. ice - w - t n t to U T. > A L L R E S E R V AT IO N S NOW — YOU I X L IK E LO CA TIO N CALL GL 3-3235 ■Met ISO OO M O N TH. Close N E A T g a ra g e j-.psairt ?rrii in—c le a n —re fr .*•* re t. ? fre e z e r — curtain * — 1808B L n*- w ith temb GR 6-8025. H I 2-8164 *?-er 5 awd w eekend*. I Printing re- J ALITY C ai. Multiprint Co. T in tin g GR 2-2447 Duplicate g M a...ag Th'-*** — D isse rt* : o r s — R eport* -frne. s — C _*tcm h r e r.gs U N IV E R S IT Y B O O K B IN D E R S E ast 19th S tre e t GR 2-9803 P la stic s p trs l b in d .n e Special Services R E N T - F RC H A SE T A * A Dbl A i IC Ti P* C YI ! _g R 2- A&2 L ELA* J L I D T Y P IN G a p t ! . l e t * g ra m m a r, K I *-<522 J* case. co rrtctH rn . -LLL A TY PIST for t betes c o o e r ta­ etc ? Call GR 2-9*17 report* t e r * - fie - ' 30 c t weektrnd* M ARTHA ANN ZTVXBY MBA profoooaonai ta ilo re d * c m p ie te A -- n .• * I r .v e rs ify to a x d ► * w e an d C isoerta tic na eau iP tn er.t to stu d e n ts an d th e tx pm « ree d * of Spar t i key- ia n g u a a e :nos** fo r e n g in e e r le g i 'a ne GR 4-321 3 A GJP. 2-~€T M ere C onvell.e r tl y L ocated A t O u r N ew Add re? i G U A D A L U PE E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IS T c isse i Ui'K.iM. etc. N e a r T H E S E S , n .v * r> ru . CP. . I H ES CB d i s s e r t a t i o n s p o r t s . P ro f eia ho aa l n m y hor.ie R easo n ab le blocks GR M a l 3 Ire rn carr. piat M n r e ­ t j p . n g 3646 Ba room Da rn FIC I P G P R IV A T E L E SSO N S CA LL REV A R Y a k GR > 5 2 ?: SMC1 R T (jN T Y P I N G Utr* . a ta > ? Miss G ra h am G I. 3-5725. -.............— - ----- --- - ------ -------- -............. i- m EXPERIENCED TYPING SERVICE. reoocnatje. CSU AecuraU HO 5 5F13 and ------- ■ -- ARecafiom AL ERAT10.NS AMD DRE&KUAjgXtiJQ FIX W ert 25th 9 S treet. C R 6 3 M r A u s t i n ’* " B ig F o u r99 in A u t h e n t i c M e x i c a n F o o d U-dmc M f lf. m i THI SUMMt i TEXAN Pm . I ——*'■■■ — — ■■■ ■■ ■ —— — . .. * Gary Wood Heads A&S Honor Roll Janie Marie Elkins, Carolyn Farmer, James Daniel Finley, Marilyn Virginia Gump, Jack Layne Harper, Beverly Gail Hill, Cynthia Anne Huxoll, Dennis Gene Kovar, James Robert Latham II, Bard Arnold Logan, Bruce Cam­ eron McLeod, and Jerry Richard Meyers. Douglas Hood More man, Phil- ena Jane Morton, Sam Charles N&ifeh, Dorothy A. Newton, San­ dra Janet Periowski, Linda Rae Plambeck, Mrs. Margaret Rock­ wood Porter, Joe T. Powell, and Sara Ann Sanborn. William Roger Schucany, Janet Earline Shaw, Mrs. Sally S ev er­ ing Shelton, Martina Dickson Smith, Jim Snead, Mary Cornelia Spinks, Alison Kaye Tartt, James Joseph Truchard, Calixto C. Valle DI, and Gary Lynne Wood. (bm Laude Amphi Eft Mag** Carol Louis Adams, R obot Brockett Anderson, Marilyn Sue Arnett, James Michael Arrington, Elisabeth Alice Becker, Stanley Charles Beyer, Jim Hood Browd­ er, Carol Lynn Butler, Robert Lee Boyer, Jeanell Buida, Carolyn Ann Cates, Robert G. Clarkson, Donald Vernon Coers, and Richard Mich­ ael Cooke. Don Dwight Cox, Ann Adine D a­ vis, Patricia Ann Donaghe, David James Dunlap, James Simpson Dyer, Robert David Estes, Noel Dee Evans, Allan Kirsch Fradkin. Richard Leslie Freeman, Helen Marie Graham, John Anthony Her­ ring, Earl Stephen Hines, Jane Gardner Howe, and Sue Jane Isen- I bower. Alan Keith Johnson, Hariadene Johnson, Raymond Lewis Johnson, Charles Lee Jordan, Karolen Stel­ la Kearne, Kenneth Erwin Kirsch, Elizabeth Anne Koch, Rupert C. Koeninger Jr., Maxine Renell Lamkin, George Allen Lock, Don I Ross Malone, Robert Cully Mere, Beverly Marie Mitchell, Sarah Ann Moore, and Lu Ellen Nagel. Gretchen Mas Niebuhr, Jack I Alonzo Oliver Jr., James Lemuel Park, Comer O. Patterson, Lynns Av# Pickering, M r s . Wendy Faunce Porter, Jerry Wharton Rodgers, Bobbie Ned Roper, Har­ ry Max Rosenthal, James Fred­ erick Rounsa Ville, and Robert I Taylor Russell. John Edwin Smith Jr., Frank Lewis Spring, Kenneth Charles Stanfield, Jane Ellis Stevens, Ed­ ward Arthur Stone, Paul Alan Stotts, Ciro V. Sumaya, Ivan Ed­ gard Tabors Icy, Gary Kieth Tan- nahill, William Virgil Tillery ECT, (James Willard Walker Jr., Teresa Ann Webb, and John Paul White. Gary Lyon Wood had the boat •pring oemootcr scholastic record In the College of Arts and Sci­ ences. He had all "AV* in 30 sem­ ester hours for OO grade points. Following closely behind Wood was Bard Arnold Logan with 59 grade points. Four students piled up 57 grade points each: Grace Belle Broussard, Carolyn Farmer, Bruce C. McLeod, and Sam Charles Naifeti. College of Arts and Sciences Dean J. Alton Buntine made pub­ lic the spring semester list of 567 honor students including: Sauna* Com Laude Jamie Ann Bavouset, Muriel Irene Bolding, Grace Belle Brous­ sard, Kenneth Logan Buis, Gary Jefferson Byrd, Richard Allen Cox, Charles Clay Doyle, Michael Duren, and William George Egel- hoff. Negro Officials Refused Meet ALBANY, Ga.Off—The door was slammed shut Monday on rising h o p e s few an accord between Negro leaders and officials in this racially disturbed city. The Negroes sought a meeting With the city commission to iron out grievances dating to Decern ber integration demonstrations in which m o r e than 700 Negroes were arrested. A terse refusal came from Ma yor Asa D. Kelley Jr. He called the Negro leaders law violators and said the commission would not negotiate with them. Among those seeking the com ­ mission conference was Dr. Mar tin Luther King Jr., Atlanta in tegration leader. He was released against his wishes last week from Jail where he sought to serve a 45-day sentence to rally sympathy and support for desegregation. W i t h the mayor's rebuff, Dr. King said the only recourse “is a non-violent direct action move ment to open channels of nego­ tiation." He said there will be no letup until “justice and freedom are realities." Just what form the “direct ac­ tion" will take was left for con­ ferences among the Negro lead­ ers. The Rev. Ralph Abernathy, an associate of Dr. King, sug­ gested a number of church meet­ ings to get “the non-violent army cm the move." Session Being Held The University’s second of four summer orientation sessions is be­ ing held this week through Sat­ urday. Principal s p e a k e r s are Dr. Glenn Barnett, dean of*students; Dr. Paul K e l l e y , Testing and Counseling Center coordinator of measurement services; B y r o n Shipp, registrar and director of ad­ missions; Dr. John A. Mierzwa, Testing a n d Counseling Center psychologist; A. M. Cory, College of Arts a n d Sciences assistant dean; Dr. Lorrin Kennamer, Col­ lege of Arts and Sciences associ­ ate dean, and Fred Folmer, as­ sociate librarian. Dr. Gordon V. Anderson, Testing * n d Counseling Center director, will supervise an evaluation ses­ sion Saturday morning. Other orientation programs for Incoming freshmen are scheduled July 30-Aug. 4 and Aug. 13-18. University Coed Named Miss Wool SAN ANGELO (JV—M.ss Kath­ erine Anne Spence, 19, of Austin was named Miss Wool of Texas Monday night. The University of Texas sophomore will represent the state the national Miss Wool contest later this year in San Angelo. in First runner-up was Miss Terry Lee Butler of Abilene. Remember! The Deadline for CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING in the BIG second Orientation | New Students Edition is Tuesday, August 7 3:30 p. rn. Call GR 2-2473 Texas Student Publications, Inc. J. B. 107