W eather Fair and Sunny Low 48; H igh 78 T H E DAI T e x a n t a s t e * Vol. 57 P rice Five C e n ts Six Pages Today No. 154 ‘First Co liege D aily in the South' AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1958 Assembly to Hear Plea For UT Honor By KAY LON < i CO PF, An ho no r code for UT veil1 be dent body. p re s e n te d a t a special S tudent As- sembl.v m e e tin g F r i d a y at :> p .m ., I H a r r y H. R ansom , vice-president D ave M i l l i c a n a n d Alfred Miller an- and provost, a sm all group of Uni- Bounced M o n d a y night. three .Student As- months in p re p a r a ti o n of " T h e Uni If appro ved by the \ ap proved or d isap prov ed by the stu- "there is no place a m o n g our s t u - 1 I dent body for those few persons who j the e n c o u ra g e m e n t of Dr. do not wish to ach ieve and m ain -; fain a high s t a n d a r d of good c i t i - ; /e n s h ip b a se d on the honesty and the in te g rity of th e in dividual." ve rsity students has spent At sem blv. the bill will go on the Gen- v ersity of T ex as Honor Code " e r a t E lectio n ballot April 23. to be i P r e a m b le code the to » In Law School Set for Today Twelve C and id ate s Vie for Editorship, Bar Association T he code h as been p re p a r e d for " U niversity of T exas la w stud ents P°H-S to d a y to e a st the e x p re s s p urp ose of servin g as a a p r i m a r y ballot for 19:>8-a9 B a r an d l a w school r e p r e s e n ta t iv e s the D ic ta, Association ed ito r of n ew sp ap er. sta tes guide to the a c h ie v em en t and m a i n ­ ten an c e of high s t a n d a r d s for p r e s ­ ent an d in-coming students. G e n e ra l fe a tu re s of the bill in­ Million Dollars Okayed To Bolster Academics Ruling Given On Political Fees Tho Texas Commission on Higher Educa­ tion cleared tlie way Monday for appropria­ tion of $L million of the University Available Fund for a basic research and academie im­ in the fields of natural provement fund science, social science, and the humanities. tutional amendment to broaden the invest­ ment base for the Permanent University Fund,” said Logan Wilson, University presi­ dent. Final action on the allocation will he taken by tho Board of Regents at its April 26 meeting. The fund is to go into effect Sep­ tember I, the beginning of the fiscal year. “This plan stems from the approval by the legislature and the voters of the consti- While the allocation of $1 million is ex­ pected to go a long way toward furthering tho goal of making UT a “University of the first class,” the amount is far below tile graduate faculty’s estimate of $4,500,000 needed to bolster fully the University’s basic research needs. The fund plan is designed to: in for c re d it will be ° ^ L ' S sr , ^ u rsd ay . Twelve c a n d id a te s will bo vying for the top positions, with the e lec ­ tion 9 a rn. to 2 p.m . T uesday. A run- in Townes Hall foyer fr o m ! Com bos Limited To 5 Instruments T h e election c om m issio n One position w a s uncontested at the only can d id a te for D i c t a ' should a ss e ss fees only ruled th a t a political p a r t y 6 p m . M o nd ay with R ice Aston Monday a s those editor. O th e r c an d id a tes a r e : B a r c an d id a tes whose n a m e s a p p e a r Association p re s id e n t: Bill S p ark s, on the p a r t y ’s in fo rm a tiv e m ater- R ussel H ard in g , J i m D evine: B a r Association v ice-p resid en t: Joe F . Sandlin, L a r r y Tem ple, and Wayne R od ges; B a r Association s e c r e ta ry - t r e a su re r. K. L. “ M a x ” Hamilton an d Jon I>ee Law i once. Vying for T h is a ss e ssm e n t shall ho distrib­ the opposed uted equally a m o n g involved. Unopposed can did a tes ca n d id a tes will not h a v e to pay an assessm en t. to i* c lu de: All w ritte n ex am in atio n s, tests, w ritten recitations, an d o th er ma-1 tc ria ls turned s u b je c t to the Honor Code. A stu­ dent will not be w atched during such, but will be req u ire d to sign a pledge at the end of his p a p e r t h a t he has not been guilty of an y dishonesty o r ir re g u la rity in con­ the examination or nection with ass ig n m en t. Student honor bo ard s will handle the a d m in is tratio n of Ihe honor s y s te m . It will he the d u ty of ev e ry stu d e n t to r e p o r t an y evidence Of d isho nesty r e g a r d in g tu rn e d in for c red it th a t m ay o bserv ed , be any work r .° O s c a r T e e g e rstro m . Candidates are certified by an If investigation of such evidence ' rIcrtl° n ^ m i s s i o n , and appliea- the «on for office form s posttrf on the bulletin board. N am es 1)1 V'! \ rT ,nr,,I discln .es a student’s guilt, rase findings are reported to the I dean of his college or school w ith a recom m endation of the penalty vv 1 p to ho assessed neenrrtin. to the »ng the official ta lly Tuesday after- to be assessed , ac cordin g to the seriousness of ° '' J'"" rs !r' 1 the violation. noon. P' 11,1 Latest Battle W on IrTm an arP T - K - Tile com m ission also ruled tha t aini< k J i ., an d eom bos m a y a c c o m p a n y serena des but th a t the combos will he limited the g ra d u a te w ork at to five instrum ents. Tile serenad es of H om e Econom ies hav e gained a Texas W o m a n ’s U niversity in Den- will also he lim ited to five minutes, d r lay in th eir fight before the Com- ton. the D e p a r t m e n t ccn tratin g E x -stu den ls of By Hom e Eg Exes to ..L l stun ts w hich 'rho election c om m issio n w a rn s mission on H ig h er E du cation ca m p a ig n involve I seren ad es and han ds th a t a r e to be Joe Bailey, s p o k e s m a n than k f p P Ihe m a s t e r ’s d eg ree p r o g r a m ihne-> s e c r e ta r y , and Ruben S her­ m an , tr e a s u r e r . Both professional and h on o rary organ izatio ns will h av e display iiooths on first telling floors of W ag go ner Hall about the college. the ground and functions within th e ir A prize for the moxi outstan din g d isplay will b e a w a rd e d a t the BBA D an ce a t 'h e Union af 8 p rn. Friday’. T ic k e ts 51.00 p e r couple a n d may be bought from any* BBA f o u n d m e m b e r. Jo h n W hite's band will play. a re At the d a n c e Lila Johnson, BBA S w eeth eart, a n d the incoming Stu­ dent Council will he p resen ted .Special f e a t u re s of the week will he far ulty-studen* tennis m a tc h e s T h u rs d a y at 4 p rn. on the Worn- •en’s co u rts and a softball g a m e at 8 p rn. T h u r s d a y night on W hitaker Field. student life. Engineers to Get Two Scholarships A m e r i c a n ' M o o n s ' A l o n e - - A t Last MOSCOW Hie Sox let I mon m a d e it official Alon da y n . J i . . I ^og c a rr y in g Sputnik l l h a s b ro k en up and bu rn ed o ut on across Brazil. Blood donation is not eomplicat- from re g istra tio n desk to exit tak es only An official T a s s s t a te m e n t confirm ed rep o rts of foreign o b serv ers 25 m in utes The actu a l blood-giving ' f ^ e f n t jro operation a trail th a t led ed th a t Sputnik II, which had w hirled around the globe m o r e th an fixe req uires only 7 to IO m inutes, m onths, c a m e to its end as it dropped into d e n se r layers of the e a rt h s atm o sp h ere Monday m orning. The only e a r t h satellites now circling the w orld a re A m erican. The le er. At United S tates h a s th r e e aloft. if if Massachusetts Convicts Touch Off Fire CONCORD, M a s s .—A group of d e sp e r a te c o n v ic t s touched off an *0 JTUP blood e x p lo siv e fire in the furniture sh op at Concord R eform atory Mon­ day . In a riotous outbreak th e y slugg ed four guards and a civ ilian Instructor. The most seriously Injured, tile civ ilia n Boston s M assac h u se tts G en er a l Hospital su ffering Juries. He w a s not on the da n g er list. instructor, w a s taken to in from head it 4r Congre ss to Retain Appropriations Control WASHINGTON -T w o p ro m in e n t senato rs served notice M onday that Congress will hold fast to its control o v er a p p ro p ria tio n s for defense spending. recognize th a t a s a fac t of life, Senators Johnson and Bridges a g re e d in s e p a r a t e sta te m e n ts. * * Disgruntled Haitian Official Kills Fellow Diplomat H A S H I M . T O N —B u llets fired bv a disgruntled official of the H a it ­ ian E m b a s s y killed a fellow diplomat Monday and touched off a c o m p lic a ted se r ie s of dip lom atic im m unity problem s. P r e s ident E isen h o w e r in his defence reorganization plan will h a v e to n e .v. a ss ista n t d e a n of By N OEL ( ORELAN D Lh ll iiy of M 1 J ; a L - o P ” D r. M. S. Batel of the University has been p u n t e d in s e v e r a l lan- is on ca m p u s g ua ges. India, of B aroda, to s p e a k a t the C onference on the P a r t I h a t L an g u a g e C an P la y in the D evelopment of le x a s . S p eakin g a g a in T h u r s d a y night. p a t e r s talk will co m e from his latest hook, " T h e T o a d m g of E ng- B esid es visiting c la s ses to ’e a rn • Ush as a F oreign L a n g u a g e . ” m eth od s an d techn iqu es of foreign la ng uag e teac h ing , Dr. P a te l u d l give two talks. He speak s on " G a n d h ia n Phil­ o sophy" a t 7 ;30 p m W ednesday in the "Y ’ u n d er the auspices of the Indian Stu den ts Association. His book, "T h e E ducation and Seybert to Talk To Pharmacists Tho distinguished s c h o l a r points out t h a t E ng lish is beco m ing the international language. sr«* sa y s *‘f nglish Is th** window through the whole the g r a y haired Which w** ran World,” v isltor. " I n d i a can t do without E n g lish ,” he goes on to say, "A s tu d e n t in India u su ally h a s know ledge of three lan g u a g e s, his m o t h e r tongue (India h a s l l different lan g u ag e s). Hindu, the national lan g u a g e , and of cou rse, E n g lish .” I T h e r e t ir e d chief of " I t is re q u ire d th a t the student the P h a r- stu dy English for six y e a r s in the m a c og no sy D e p a r tm e n t of Eli Lilly se c o n d a r y schools, an d four St Com pany, Jo hn K. Seybert of y e a r s a t the u n i v e r s i t i e s / ’ say s the ind ianap olis, will lecture on p h ar- linguist. m a rout i eat problem s T u e sd a y and Wednesday'. with th e English lang ua ge b e c a u s e " I n d ia is very closely connected for Mr. Seybert ii is been with E ? i,o f our old ties with B ritain,” s a y s than Late!. for m o re served as a " B u t pven behind the Iron Cur- Lilly & Company IS y e a rs and has p h arm a c antical chem ist, ho’a rust, ’ain a n d in China English is being it is becom ing the U n ­ *nd p h a rm ac o g n o sist until his re- ta u g h t; Sa m u el Dev jeux, P olice said Andre Totissaint, 39, first secretary of the E m b a s s y , as Corm I U n iv e r .*>2. died from wounds in the c hest and neck. Alpha Phi Alpha ’ adm itted the shooting. He had c o m e to Washington only a ag o and last Saturday m arried an A m erica n w om an . few w e ek s inferr J o n al ar I i r ’ci ra- founded rn 1906 has b e c o m e ii with The S ch lu m h e rg e r F oundation of Houston will g ive two $500 scholar- ships a r e u n d e r g r a d u a te s to U niversity stud ents who firem e nt in 1955. sn physics, The T u e sd a y lectu res wall lie in added. it i, R u b l e s - W i n n i n g T e x a n G e i S K h r u s h c h e v B e a r H u g vi . -e MOSCOW—Van G ib u r n , the T e x a s c a p ita lis t’s -on who won the Soviet hers. under-": id mte c hapter- and chapt* in te rm e d ia te g ra d u a t e c h a p te rs t han in 36 l ' . v j j m en are two 141 states, o r p etroleu m engineering. eology or electrical, m e c h a n ic a l, B a tts A iditorinm a t i p m and in P h a r m a c y Building at 5 p.m. LOI. An additional SLOOO will be given to the U niversity. gunge of the who’e w o rld ,” P a te l L a ’J s first l>ook deals with the view s of M a h a t m a G an dh i on the relation sh ip betw een the individual and th e state. Union’s T c haik ov sky piano contest, got a b e a r hug from Nikita K h r u s h - ---------------------------------- - chev. A - - a n m e t p d p Monda* T w o C o n d i d o t O S A p p l y r m’tr a t a K: e m h n t • v rdin an d piano c o m p d t ohs h e i l here. p**<• -n for t h e c' *nmc». ant s o f t h e i n t e r n a t i o n a l B u n n -bai cd 6-f.xr i <" b u r n w a s av* - . pi ed ,'5 JKK) r ub l e* - off rn rally 16,250—and a gold m e d a l a i the w in n er of the contect. Two can d id a tes have for R an g er editor. F ra n k Stark and : rr R u s s e l l m a d e their a p p lic a ­ tion* Monday’. filed G raduation Date Set Selections of tbe sch olars will be m a d e by a U niversity faculty c o m ­ mittee Spring c o m m e n c e m e n t activities. Boldo: s of th e scholarships for scheduled f »r M a y 31, will begin the cu rr e n t y e a r a re Robert R. at 9 a rn with a combined ROTE B*-nth* dr . an electrical engineer- com m issio n.ng exercise the mg Mf .Lf I la n d , p etroleu m engineering. L o th wni ne in Hogg A u d ito r iu m ., at the U niversity of L d m b u rg h . leave Austin next week to a r e n d an Internatio nal S em in ar student, a n d Donald Ralph b accalaureat# and lf a m service a* for the " Y o u c annot have society w ith ­ out resjveet Individual. <>andhi had a m e s s a g e of u n i v e r ­ love and broth erhood,” s a y s sal Dr. P atel. H e vv ill W hen Linguists M e e t . . . 1 ’ - c c ' : rn *1-® L ’v * ’s ty c f B’ -o :*, I- i v D e M. $. P a1* 1, !ef+, s p * a t* ' " q u a a e s a t -a — t c o w ’ bout in " an st u den t 5 re a j ’r * d ’ n J u d y Eng lish f o r r ’ *£ sor c t p rofe ssor o f R< v t **-*' < • the *vp ' * A "o e ■ - Pv< ~: s - a j i * years a se c o n d a r y s c h o o l , a r * tor i c - r ^ear* at the Universities. Tuesday, April 15, 1958 THE DAILY TEXAN Pegs 2 P olitick in ’ Party H eads Lay V iew s on the L ine UT Blood Drive: Donation Urged Ju st a reminder that, th# A I M 'Diversity Blood D rive begins tomorrow and continues through Thursday — from ti a rn to 5 p.m. both do; ■> in the Texas Union Ballroom. Each minute of each day, the Red C rc -. re­ minds us, more than eight (Kitties of blood are used in treatment — more than four million bottles per year. Blood is always in demand • not only in time of emergency when it must be obtained quickly and in great quantities, but also for making of important derivatives: • gamma globulin • se ru m a lb u m in to prevent mea < to co m b a t hor;- top I m r? to to treat I "moplii'i.ir • fi br inogen • red cells to treat anemia • frozen plasma W e join the Union Activities ( ‘ouneil, the l/>ng- hom Pharmaceutical Association, and the Austin Blood Bank in urging that ‘ '"h t ’niver Sty stu­ !* who is physic­ dent between the am of IS and ally able donate blood during the annual All-Uni* versity Blood Drive ■ President Moves In' At Brooklyn College The president at Brooklyn Cfd lege was rfcarljf disturbed about controversial statements in ti a* student newspaper, the K I ’ d .SMA ,' W ithout consultation with the faculty-sfudent publications committee, set up to handle such mat­ ters, President H a rry D Gideon so ordered both an opposition editorial and opposition sports col­ umn be printed presenting “ the other side.” Immediately, the entire faculty membership of the publications committee resigned, stating they had ‘outlived their usefulness’ under such circum­ stances. Also turning in resignations were the four student editors comprising the editorial board the paper’s policy-making group and the paper’s feature writer Concluded Editor Paul Ringe: “ It is our unyield­ ing conviction that the president’s rn lings un­ questionably contradict the regulations of the Faeulty-Sttldent Committee on Publications and deny H IN D S M A N the right to function as a news­ paper. “ W e do not deny the president’s right to Issue the regulations. W e do feel, however, that any organization that is forced to operate under these conditions, cannot justly consider itself a news­ paper, “ Therefore, we resign.” President Gideon se has said there will he “ a re-thinking of the faculty legislation and the ad­ ministrative regulations governing this area ( pub­ lications),” The dispute arose over handling of a story in the men’s physical education department. Tho publications board censured the H IN D S M A N for its handling of the story, hut took no disciplinary action. A few days later, the same subject matter was again presented. Explained the paper “ Deeming last week’s editorial, 'Questionnaire,* controver­ sial, President, Gideonne, through his office as the highest responsible administrator at Brooklyn College, invoked the multiple editorial policy. “ However, until last Wednesday when the (pub­ lications board) was still in existence, th o (y) made no ruling on the enntroversiality of the said editorial. Invoking multiple editorials on contro­ versial issues was a function of the (board).’’ • To us, it s another case of what administrators often do when placed in uncomfortable spots by student newspapers: instead of working through regular channels for explanation and recourse (if such is necessary), they resort to dictatorial methods under pressure to accomplish “ justice.” And when it occurs, as it has in Brooklyn, it never fails to make us shudder with revulsion. Little Man O n the C am pus By Bibler “tfyr HE TOrPM|4T-VVOUa).LeA^ — A, 0W9 , Representative Party Speaks ru ( i i \s< r.v r HOFT tart* I h tlrm in the o q u estio n s n e rd to b f an«- v fred in the byte cf my opinion of student RO'. e m in e n t . ro \ r-rnment stu dent g o v e rn m e n t m u st JA r ot be t a b la te d b v < o m pa nos; i* to *ta t# o r no Mortal p o l i t i c S tu ­ d iffe r e n t d en t f o a l s , a n d m u s t U te d iffe r e n t those en d s. m e a n s o f a c h ie v in g t h e r e a r e no in te re s ts of ’-ital stu dent- w h ic h a r e a ffe c te d b y gfu* d en t g o v e rn m e n t h as S tu d e n t i'O* • m r r e n t in c o m p a r is ­ on to n a ’ tor ii g o v e rn m e n t h as r e l­ a t i v e ly litfjf. p ow er Whi)#» u n a r e life w e a re stu d e n t* c itiz e n s fo r for or la r k rtf the que H on of r e e le c t io n o ften fro m b e in g k e e p * o ffic e h o ld e rs r e a lly c o n c e rn e d a b ou t w h a t the st H e n ts th in k t h e s e and o th e r d if­ fe re n c e s } \ r t - o b v io u s to a n y b o d y . a -ho t w h o * ttie W h ile in som e w a y s stu d en t g o v­ e rn m e n t is d a te o r n a tio n a l R o v­ er or?lent. on a s m all sc a le , in m a n y w a y * it is not an d should be e v a l­ u a te d b y s ta n d a rd q u ite d iffe re n t fro m those p e rta in in g to n a tio n a l gov e m m e t] t VS liar v on th in k a r * the p u r ­ p o s e s of a stu d e n t p jtrtv ? Stu d en t p a rtie s h a v e s e v e r a l res- p o n s ih ilitie s f i r s t .of c o u rs e th e y sh o u ld p ro ­ I d o n ’t v id e r in d id a te s fo r o ffic e s m e a n m e r e ly cho o se th e ir n o m ­ inees fro m tho-e th a t w a n t to ru n , r a t h e r to ar l i v e l y e n c o u ra g e hut q u a lifie d p e o p le to p a r tic ip a te in Strider t go crritri! rd fro m M ill'd , •Secondly th e y sh ould discourages U n q u a lifie d < m d id a ta* ru n ­ n in g b y re fu s in R to en d o rse th e m . t h e y should p ro v id e a m o re p e rm a n e n t f r a m e w o r k upon w h ic h stu d e n t R o v e r nm en t m n he b u ilt, b v p ro d u c in g p eo p le w h o w ill w o rk n n o n e le c t iv e jo b s a s well as run for office, • • W h at is the fu n c tio n o f a p la t ­ It < n m e b e fo re fo rm , anti sh o u ld nr rife r th* < u n d u la te s a r f < P o s e n ? jre ; id e a ls and g o a ls r h e p la t f o r m should re p r e s e n t 1 1f a g re e m e n t o f t o .otiei ii It should the p if tv s c a n d id a tr fo r p re s e n t tho to w o r k w h ic h th e y a r e w illin g d u rin g the c o m in g y e a r . t h u s It c a n o n ly c o m e a f te r the c a n d id a te s h iv e been cho sen • ih ln k a r e the W h a t do \ on I s ­ sue**? I th in k th a t th e re is o n ly o n e pi u n a r y issue. t h a t is w h e th e r a p a r t y w h x h a d o p ts a p la tfo r m th a t p ro m is i s a- finn in m o re n te a s th a n is p o ssib le in one y e a r , an d w h ic h Is c o n s ta n tly a m e n d in g and ehang- 'R ig h t to K n o w ’ Stressed ing that, p it form when public r u.n- ion is critical, is better suited to serve the inhere**s of the student body than a party which after thorough co ns. dera­ lengthy and tion presents a platform from Which ■*•' lits 'Hr he accomplished in a year * time, and which is w ill­ ing to stand behind that platform Without hesitation. • t h i n k o f W h a t do y o u th e S fjj. dent Party platform? Frankly. T think t i« far too long to c cr in one lo accomplished year It sounds n ore like what the Student P a rty would like rn see done ib m what it could possibly do In a 12-month period lr seems strange »ha' one-third of this year’s planks were a l s o User! last year M y most important objection concerns the method of sclenting I don’t think tha* the parry ft should come out with part of the platform, then after they are crit­ icized in the Texan add another plank then wait and see how the Student* react, and after the Rep. ifs resentatjve party announces platform, I then chung# again think that the-/ should d ceride " hat the issues are and then stick bv those ideals, and not he changing m erely because they fear losing vote* or because of adverse criti­ cism. W h a t Is w h it p e rs o n a l op inion on stu d e n t rig h ts ? The stand that the Representa­ tive P a rty b»ok on this question expresses m y feelings so T will cla rify it here W e don’t seek to change the present situation rom- r - let el v the day the election is over However, in which the fundamental risrhfs of any student have benn abuser! through unfair discrimination urn w ill work for the rrmo'.nl of that discrimination. • in areas What do von think o f student elections? I think that generally student elections ran serve a worthwhile purpose even if some of the office?; might tie better filled if they were appointed I do fed, however, that when RO pep cent of the campus-u Ie candidates of one party belong to one fraternity, that the party is making a mockery of their party and of student government I do think, though, that. student government In general and elec­ tions in particular can and do pro­ vide a worthwhile function bv training students to be good and responsible citizens. Party Ch Hare It O ut’ On Student Polities Pi ess Vital to Personal Freedom IU OIH* \ IC \ M BI i v t *• inn stuff W rite r (I.a s t In h Hcrle-t of a r t ic le s on *'l reedom of the Press.'*) You are a part time reporter for a w eekly newspaper. You trot down to < Tty Hall for a last-minute check at the police I looks A tough-looking de?k sergeant hands you the books, You run down a newsy item which J < I . | > la p rn , Thursday, October 9, 1955 Mr Johnson. 55 Steve years old 1705 W ater Avenue, signs complaint against Miss Je a n John­ son . *• fourth grade teacher, Hous- ton School. The hither charges Mi?* Johnson with assault and battery upon lev daughter, I ’eggv, 9 years old Case turned over to J R Wit- ■ l o v e s t ig att* Ing off ii ors, D avis and Anderson. iv, c o u n t y c o u r t h o u s e is to ta ll the You finish reading the entry and the first thing that < omes to your J R ; maybe mind there s a hearing scheduled soon. But then you take another look at the police entry, There It is. at the in blocked, bottom of the page "T D TH D red-penciled petters P R KSS . . . DO N OT R U B U S H . ” Freedom of the pro**? • For je irs now w e’ve been hear­ ing glorified editors and pub’ishers It talk Tout fre e !.i!n of the press goes back to 17T.T when John Peter Zenger was acquitted on a charge of seditious libel against British Colonial Governor W illiam O ishv. T hat verdict did not guarantee our iO-e died freedom of die press Today, 200 years later, we are fill! fighting for that precious liber­ ty guaranteed in writing only by the framers of the Constitution. We vc been told how Hitler, Mus­ solini, P c on and the Commun­ ists killed freedom of the pre^s in the places thcv controlled. Tho three dictators were in time dis­ posed of bv assorted means. The Reds still imprison or kill those who won’t think as they think and say so in public. In Cuba's In Chile a bomb wrecked the office of a newspaper that criti­ cized the administration in power. Nehru s government informed In­ dian reporters the\ d im prosecuted for articles reflecting on the ac­ tivities of government officials. Spain has tough censorship. The press in a mess one editor says something against Mr. Ba tista and that editor won t he around the next. day. The same is true of Columbia and Venezuela. A Turkish publisher was sent to ja il for "insulting'' articles about the government. An opposition newspaper in Pakistan was refused a supply of newsprint, which is like cutting off a man s food. In Tijuana, Mexico, not long ago a publisher was murdered in his off ic# by some hoodlums hired by local politicians who had been linked with a border vice ring prostitution, narcotic* movement, gambling, etc The publisher's son took over. Now the young man works at his typewriter with a re­ volver on top of his copy paper. • B y comparison, the United States is gloriously free. At least that s what we d like to believe. Bu t Is it as free as those in Philadelphia said it must he ’ It s not. "O u r Said tile veteran newspaperman, Ned M ftcNf ill, forefathers knew that the republic they had founded could not live without an intelligent and informed citizenry. They also knew that the hest as­ surance of such a citizenry was a press truth a press that to'd the people what their government was doing and told the government what tile pro­ le wanted it to do.” that punted the J . R . Wigging, executive direc­ tor of tile Washington Post and Times Herald, stated. ' Die most unremitting and unrelented attack is upon the right of newspapers In the past 50 to get the facts, year of our history there has developed in government at every level an increasing disposition to withhold information from the peo­ ple. There is an impulse toward secrecy that threatens, not only our free press, hut also our free institutions in every branch of government, legis­ lative, executive, and judicial; it % met at every level of government, local, state, and federal.” is encountered It • Approximate';, tw v-thirds of all congressional committee hearings and meetings are now held behind closed doors, though only a frac­ tion of these executive sessions involve m ilitary secrets or p r o posed foreign policies. San Francisco has had several cases of assaulted cameram en. R e ­ cently unauthorized N a t i o n a l Guardsmen and highway patrolmen forced cameramen to take pictures of an airline crash in Northern Iow a from IOO yards away despite protests. In Cleveland a judge or­ dered a new trial for a killer be­ cause a juror read newspaper ac­ counts of the case (This writer has had several sim­ ila r experiences in Laredo, Webb County, around police station of­ fices and county offices ' I’m not publish” notes on public records are found here and there; an of­ ficial once refused to give informa­ tion on a $15,000 suit filed by a citizen against the c ity ; threats have been thrown at us several times one time caught a police­ man fooling around with a .juven­ ile Kir! detained overnight in jail, a policeman beat up an old man. two detectives force a woman to undress to search her. in an office supposedly One.- [ w is escorted out of a secret meeting staged by the local politicos mapping plans for anoth­ er pct 11 tax-peddling drive, Some persons might like to kill me if they had the chance once I went into county jail as a juvenile of­ fender, fixed of course, and carne out with a neat article on the jail. Result a cleanup, two jailers fired, and the sheriff was fit to be tied (The floor man died not too long ago,) Am erican newspapers have been letting the people know what their government In s i»e harmony of secret commun­ istic government in Russia or the I irbuiem e of free open democratic government rn secret A m erica’’ No politician has answered the question. • he report adds, " I f every news­ paper editor and publisher and every radio and television station would join in the fight, for • • freedom of information, secret gov­ ernment rn A m erica would end al­ most over night." • Problems confronting the press today concerning this freedom are those wo ve had for the last five ne ten years and the five or IO be- fore that. and take if all the w ay I I the first press and the people who worked for it. T h e problem is how to protect the freedom of the people who read it. and even the people who constitute it and hate if, Reason the press is. and should bo. free to speak its piece is be­ cause every Am erican is and should he free to speak his piece. The street corner orator and the » w ^ ark rimes share a common free­ dom: or, it. Freedom of the press depends on the individual. M r. Considine de- clared. . come hell or high water the U S pre?s w ill remain in fighting for your right to there know.” together they lose • We must rem ember lf our press, however, is to fight in the future for our right to know, young journalism must not think the m a jo r is more important than a human being, the sheriff’s tha* badge is a call from the Almighty, that the district attornej’ is the law, and that the governor is some­ thing between M an and God. that the newspaper has th" same obligations and rights as a citizen. The paper acts with a consciousness of the public interest and w elfare; to rec­ ognize that a good example is a great constructive force; to work for the common good, supported by the conviction that what is in the in interests of the people is the be?? interests of the newspaper. Deny a newspaper its freedom is information and a citizen of denied the right to speak. Student Party Speaks B y T H U R ST O N B J R N FT T T a r t y C h airm an 1. B h a t do yo u p a r t y re * p o n * ib i!itj ? thin k about It seems to me that a political party, and the campus' political parties in* iuded, has this re spomi- hility to the voters: to make pro­ mises and ca rry them out: in other words, to present a platform and to see that the p a rty’s candidates uphold the party's principles and put them into effect. -When a party has lived up to irs responsibilities, it leaves the vot­ ers with clear cut alternatives: do the candidates of this party seek in an active w ay to ca rry out the party's promises and are th** par­ ti s promises worth carrying out? 2. Vt hat do J o n c o n s id e r P i tie th e fu n ctio n of the p a rts p la t ­ fo rm s — a re th e j good or b a d ? fie adopted Sh o u ld the p la tfo r m fir s t, and the c a n d id a te s run on the p la tfo rm , o r sh o uld the c a n ­ d id a te s he cho sen f ir s t and a llo w ­ ed to h elp d e t e r m in e the p la t ­ f o r m ? The parry platform should be gli ding force of the candidates of that party placed .n office. Regard­ less of whether a candidate thinks he could have been elected with or without party support, if he ran on a party slate, he owes it to those who elected him to c a rry out to the hest of his ability the party plat­ form. If a party is a political party then the members of that party ought to have the prerogative of formu­ lating the promises it wishes to make and nominating the candi­ dates that bs members feel will c a rry out that platform. When the candidates write the platform as was the ease with the Rep. P a rty , then you have political in operation and not expediency formulation of a the democratic platform. Candidates should be able to express themselves concerning the platform hut they ought not have any more to say about it than other party members. The candidate himself has a very defi­ nite choice after the platform has been formulated as to whether he is w illing to make certain promises or not by running on a party ticket. S. W h a t do y o n c o n s id e r to he t h o m o s t Im p o r ta n t Issu es In this s p r in g ’* e le c t io n ? When I see the term “ issues" it brings to m y mind a situation in which two or more opinions are held concerning the same thing. It tak es people on two sides of the saute fence to have an issue; there are candidates on different sides of the fen ce, candidates with entirely different points of view concerning what a student in the Student As­ sembly ought to be and do. There are tho?e who have ex­ pressed the same old truisms about a desire to serve, more freedom, more liberty, more equality, etc, etc, etc. There are those who be­ lieve that social change does not rome about by a slow process of education but that people arp led bv' the noses out of their preju­ dices. There Is one thing in particular that I would like to mention that is in The Student P a rty contained platform that receives no mention in that cf the Representative P a rty ; this concerns decisions and resolu­ tions on state, national, and in­ ternational affairs. The Student Assembly can at its opinion on these affairs and in so doing it will be heard as the voice of the student* of The University of Texas (like it or not); and those who read these opinions w ill pay attention to them as such. least voice Ask students who were in Europe last year if the silence of the Stu­ dent Assembly w as not interpreted to mean assent to the actions of the Administration by the students of this campus with regard to the B a rb a ra Smith incident 4. W h a t do y o u the R e p ro e e n ta tix e P a r t y ’n p la t fo r m ? th in k of It is fine as fa r as it goes but it seems to me that the planks a i* nothing more to solicit votes. Everyone is for bet­ than attempts ter housing for m arried students, for baby sitters if they want them and so forth. But who wants com­ mittees on student wages? Person- a iy, I had rather have the raise than another committee A director of extra curricular a ffairs? This the band jumping on was -ast wagon of the T oh year committee concerning extra curricular a ffa irs; They are making such a reeom- mendation "n u f it is a plat­ said. ’ Nevertheless form and it does make promises. I hop** that their candidates w ill attempt to c a rr\ them out if they are elected and that the students Will remember if they do not. in their report, .J. H o w do y o u a * S t u d e n t P a r t y c h a ir m a n fee! on the d is o r im in a . tion p la n k ? Who in the world wants to he rh? rm m ired against? I don’t, do you’’ M y advice concerning dis- crimination against the Negro on this campus and off would be to ask the candidate what he intends to do about it. I personally believe that a1! men are flee and deserve equal rights and treatment — the color of i man s skin has nothing to do with any rights he m ay have as a human being. A vt hat do you think atmut student election* In general? fh.s je a r in in previous years 'Texan editors have run independ­ ently because candidates have said they believed in principal that a Texan ed/or should not affiliate himself with the views of any par­ ticular group. This is nonsense; any editor is prejudiced at certain points and it is good to know what those points are since it is much harder to get one out of office than to put one in. Dus plea by Texan editor ran- didates resembles the reply of the old spinster to her pastor when approached concerning her pledge to the church budget. H er serene reply was, ’T m sorry Reverend, I Promised God that I wouldn't pledge.” T il" Clique, representing the de­ sire of certain groups to heroins " l f fiv e " on campus; has again rounded up a sja tP — and difficult if was I might add; the Student P a rty has again put forth its slat* along with ifs promises. If it rains and few people turn out then th* Clique w ill return to power: if there Is a large turn-out on election day, tho Student P a rty w ill rem ain in office. President . . . ♦ Continued From Page D shall channel m y efforts toward a real effectuation of this end.” " I propose a reevaluation and necessary reorganization of o u r Student Association, so that it rn ivy become an active, driving force In the administration of student af­ fairs. I propose a more thorough unification of student organization* and activities which will afford an adequate representation of all. I shail endeavor to arrive at a more satisfactory arrangement of U T housing contracts; to promote the expansion and improvement of m arried students' housing facili­ ties; to press for a wage increase • or U niversity student employees; to expand the base and benefits of our Scholarship and I-oan P r o gram: to revam p the student ad­ visory system within each college and department; to complete the reorganization of Freshm an Coun­ cil: and to afford a flexible and dynamic leadership in the hest In­ terest of our entire student body.” Keeton, a pre-med student from Austin, is a member of the T- Association, the Great Issues Com­ mittee. the Cowboys, Alpha E p s i­ lon Delta, Delta Tau Delta fratern­ ity. and is a Goodfellow On campus he has served as an Arts and Sciences assembljunan, on the Rules and Appropriations Committee on the Board of D i­ rectors Of Texas Student Publica­ tions as cochairm an of the Cam ­ pus Chest, and as chairm an of th* fraternity division of a Round-T'p Parade, lbs grade average is 2 SA. T h e D a I S V T e x a n O p i n i o n s e x p r e s s e d in T h e D a ily T e x a n 'a r e those o f the Edit, o r o f th e t i n i e r o f the article a n d n o t necessarily those o f ti U n i t e r sit y a d m im stra tio n. The P a t ’ v T o v.m . a stu dent newspaper c f T h e t 'n i™ r .ih . - • ------- llsN-d in Ars- n, T e x a s d a lly except S a t u r d a y M ondav I n * h J f * 11*’ U S e p t em ber th ro u g h M a x b y T exas S tu d e n t Pu b licatio n s.' In. h o lW a y per En te re d as second class m atte r Oct 18 T e x a s, un der the a c t c f M a rch 3. 18~9 19-it a t th e Pr>«» ore*,. 7~ 0 ,t 0 f f l r * ln A « . j b i j S j S s t . L" n',’ a8 ,n j■B 1,7 ( g r i " 73’' »’*■> -T-v T h e A ss o c ia te d P r e s s Is e x c lu siv e ly e n title d . . . A S S O C IA T E D t r e s s w i r e s e r v i c e , to th e u se ror r en u h * * c.t(„ « a ll n e w s d is p a tc h e s c r e d ite d to it o r n o t o th e r w is e c r e d i t e d ^ tM . a n d a ll c a tio n o f a n o t h e r m a t t e r h e re in a a ® re s e r v e d ite m s o f s p o n ta n e o u s o rig in p u b lis h e d h e r o n local r p , ! l * h ts o f Dul R e p r e s e n te d f o r n a tio n a l a d v e r tis in g by N a tio n a l A d v e rtis in g S e rv ic e ..................... C o lle g e P u b lis h e rs R e p re s e n ta tiv e a J* j M a d i s o n Ave •, ______ _________ Chicago— Boston—Ix>s A ngeles—San Francisco Im- v w w c M e m b e r A s s o c i a t e d C o lle g ia t e P r e s s , . In A u stin _ „ . Delivered M a ile d in A u s tin M ailed out of town ....................................... ......... -..............................- . .......................................... ........................................................... ’ .................... SUBSCRIPTION R A T E S ‘ _ . * . l r m r'n h ~ 2 0r‘.u ,i5 m onth ........—— S T A F F F O R THIS ISS) K Night Editor ................................................................. ( J r f x x j o NORMAN Desk E ditor ..................................................................... IIM MY I). THORNTON Assistant Night Editor Night Reporters Night Sports Ed ito r ....... Assistant ........................... Night Amusements Ed itor ........................... Assistant v Night w ire Ed ito r ............................. _ . . •••••................................... Juha Tanttu .. Virginia M ika, F a y Longcope, Noel Copeland, J . M . Haynes, Leg Jones ...................................... Clark Carpenter ........................... Jack Feever ........................................... Jim Holman Roger Broach „ *............... Elb e rt Brewer L £ t ^ l' ,y .................................................... ................................................ Bahs Bart° " ’ C a r o l i n ^ MOOTS WALK SHORTS KNIT SHIRTS k eep cool, look w ell, onjoy you r toisur# THofs th# ticket to our w a lk ihortt. T ailored juet right, o f eooltog light-weight fabric*, they put you a t yo u r ease to the fa*hion-right w a y . A. Sketched linen crash J 5 ° G r e y or t e n . ........................... O R faded Denim* with elastic Side* and Self Belt front, Blue and tan. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2’5 8. Chaft striped waft: Short*, Black and Red, Black A Royal blue, B'ack & Grey. White Tricot knit shirt with Collar, Pocket and Sleeves trimmed to match the above shorts. t u e s d a y , A p r i l I S , 1 9 5 8 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P a g e 3 I " " " 'Horn Netters Defeat Tulane Texas v a rs ity tennis team broke Tulane s two y e a r w inning s tre a k ! M o n d a y as rbev defeated ..the Greem es 4*?-on P e n ick Court*. Undefeated since the ’Horn* beat , them in 1956. T u lan e won only two singles m atches. Texas' single* victories cam e as L a u re n c e B e c k e r won o ver P h illip Petra 6-0 6-4 and T err*' Todd de­ feated T aster Sa ck 7-5. 6-2 Texas num ber one doubles team of R ic h ­ ard Keeton and R e e k e r defeated B on Horn berg and Sa ck 7-6 6-4 6-3 and t h e num ber tw o team of Todd and R J I H inkle w’on over Tulane * E llio tt Roll and Petra 6-1. 6-3 Hoi m berg took Keeton 6.0 6-4 and B e ll won o v e r Hinkle 3-6, 6-3. 6-1 for T u la re * victo ries 'Horns... (Continued Fro m P a c e I ) and a 4-0 pitching record M y e rs tra ils P ete E m b r y the runs- batted-in departm ent w uh seven to E m b r y * eight and owns a sp a rk l­ ing I 50 eamed-nm-av crag# in the leads ATv is, sensational the Ja s p e r team and sophomore, conference in hitting w ith a 531 av e rag e including seven extra base hits w h ile W oodm an i« hitting .479. W ith Alvus and W oodm an in the line-up the H orn* startin g line-up has a hatting a v erag e of .292 and without they are hitting a m eag er .229 them Sudderth wdT! c a r r y a 3 63 E R A toto T uesdav * contes4 and a 333 so R ih h F a lk * batting avei-npp pitching corps seem* to h a v e po trouble pounding that hall B esides \h cm ath v w ill probably start Fred B u rn * second Ha se: T, rn wood Sta ll togs re n te r shortstop: J e r r y Fp «tein the Ox by R u m * , third base: Cia ide W h ite tight field : and B iff Pe rd u e left field the One of lo n g h o rn * ’ most troublesom e riv a ls du rin g the past five years, R ic e com es equipped w ith a better defense and im proved hitting than the 1957 O w ls whom Texas defeated three tim es to run its v ic to ry num ber to 105 against R ic e s i n c e the s e r i e s w a * in a u g u r­ ated in 1915 this Texas is a realizing that c ru c ia l game w ill probable keep intact its re g u la r lineup of W ood­ m an, second base: G len n Von Ro*, enberg, shortstop R o y Mongo, cen­ te r field : Je r r y Good, first base: Ah is right third base: Embry* left field field W a y n e M cD o n ald Jo h n n y E la m , catcher; and Sud­ derth TU X E D O S F O K R F N T All Longhorn NVJ# Gnada DP* Cleaners Thou* GR 6-3847 Assembly... (Continued F ro m Page D which a student considers h im self to be convicted un ju stly. The app ellate honor board w ill be composed of 17 m em bers, one elected from each college or school fall general election. The in the rem ain d e r are to he elected at large from the en tire student body in I he spring general election thus providing for total representation and o verlappin g term * perm itting continuity cif the board * action* R espon sibility for I ’niversitv-w ide this code xvi1! be orientation of under the jurisdiction of the appel­ ate honor board, w h ich shall co­ ordinate all the efforts cf the in ­ dividual honor boards for this p u r­ pose T here havp heen previous a t­ tempts to institute the honor sys­ tem at the University, and is now in existence in several classes with the ap p ro val of the students concerned. it If approv ed the honor code would go into effect in the fa ll. form ulating C om m itteem en the I T honor rode include L a r r y Stein ­ berg, Jo h n H. Strasb u rg er, Eu g en e Doughtie, Je ro m e R em stein , D ave M illic a n and A lfred M ille r, c h a ir­ man. Nots Stymie Bosox For First Win. 5-2 *> ss A SH L N G T O N P e d r o right­ R a m o s, 22-year-old C a to n h an d er pitching h » first opening d a v game dazzled P resid en t E i ­ senhow er And « n early packed house a* G riffith Stad iu m Mon­ d a y . R a m c * Boston down with fiv e hit.* and hurled Wa^h.ngton to a 5-2 au rp ns® vic to ry o ta r the Red Sox. T h e Sen ato r* m ade the most at • haky Boston fielding in th# sixth inruns the game San th three Pin s. to c ra c k open J a c k ie Je n s e n tined a hom er toto the left field b leacher* rn the th ird to account for both Boston n m *. Hon Bufidin, who had sin­ gled, trotted arrows ahead of Jen- aen. J i m Lem on drove a »olo hom er toto the sam e seats In the fourth fo r th# Sen ato rs’ first run. Shortstop Ruridin, fresh out of the A rm y , scored a Boston run hut w as one cf the ch ief Red Sox c u lp rit* afield He th rew w ide to firs t on J im L em o n 's grounder at the start of the sixth and the error enabled W ashington to hang on for It* three big runs to that inn­ ing. F r a n k Su llivan , the 6-foot. 7- tneh right-hander a n d eventual loser, then w alked N o rm Zauchin. A fte r H e r b F le w * and Rocky' B rid g e * flied out, R a m c * him self singled Lem o n hom e w ith what represented the w inning nm E d ­ die Tost s one-bagger brought in Zanehto and Pedro, 'Mural Schedule ♦ p m b o r m ' H o f ; p i t c h i n g Jo h n C o pelan d vs R L n M ount vs M ik e K ir k p a t r ic k T o t f h t ; Den H an cock vs. Char <■< Y< sx F Lou Mende l vs Y a rb ro u g h v* B e n s e l Munch ion. S alm o n * VI D a v James 'U-kc M ik k le to r Paul i i , 4 JO p m Ft ' hard P a r k e r \ Na v- VA ii .am th a n R ock: ' n R o g e r T o la r S a ' ' a s e VV i a m K< ' v vs e v a r H a ll H am m on d vs W a d e S m ith Vt’ke C an ad a v». W i am H el fro a n ; W illia m B e n s o n a's Don < sari* P e te N elson vs T e r r i n Ko. h to p) un 5 p m T. V L e ak e « R o b R rig M F vs D on M e te r vs 1 Cirl asem #« Le a M e n d e ll #on G o ld b e rg vs Mac Brown v* Tom F o itik . B rn u v e r D avid Dick Nit# S teve t nom psor Ma-on R a n k in < ca m p m a n , Frank D aim on haunt vs Jo h n .I 8 3ft p m C e " M artin. F i e in : Ton T.ncav v* A llen M e N e 'l SC H # ? W im h e r Don S to n e vs Amn A h 'n m sn n , D irk Card- per va F r a n k \ ; • B . G ru b lr* vs v s O n * H ill s o l T R A M . Ones R 4 pm O 'ff Conn* es R o b e rta P r a t h e r vs Rrackenridige 8 p m A aria O m eg a S ig m a ' u vs D o rm A vg A n d a vs L it t le C am pus Ph i G am m a D e lia OOI F HOI RI I S vs \iph a lh K a p p a A pha Tau K a p p a VU d ou b let cr.ntestanis w ho have rot finished rho sei nd pi’ind should t ’ ® V im ii»a1 G o if Course re p o rt 12 IS to I IO T iip sd a ' A r i to IL E n t r e * d ue A p ril IS. af T R * amrv G ym n a siu m " I I t NI I NG I uerda \ Yost rapped out two singles in five app earan ces and also did a slick fielding job at third P la y in g n h i s U th opening game Yost in the Senators saved the first when he m ade a diving ^tab of Je n sen s loss- liner w ith the base* loaded. two runs in A ll runs the Senators' tor sixth w e re unearned. Su lliva n who had won 1ft of his 14 previous de cising* with the Senators, yielded seven hits M u r ra y W a ll relieved S u lliva n a flee the Red Sox starter was yanked for a pinch h itter in the Red Sox «ev enth. Big Leaguers Begin Race for Pennant By Mi* A*«<*ei»ted Pre** look down at F o r at least 24 hour* the W ash ­ ington Senator*, last y e a r ’s cellar- d w el'ers, can the rest of the A m erican L eag u e from their first-plare perch afte r beat­ ing Roston 5-2 in a spec ial open­ ing gam e M o n d a y before 26 674 G riffith in­ spectator*, cluding P resid en t E isen h o w er. Stadium On T u e s d a y the w orld cham pion M ilw a u k ee B r a v e s w ill send six left-handed batters against P itts ­ burgh right-hander R o b Frien d G4- 18). W a rre n Spahn (21-ID start.* for M ilw a u k ee A crow d of about IL,OOO w ill get lr* first look at Ted Klu szew ski in a P ir a t e uniform . The big firs t basem an, traded by C in cin n ati last w inter, appears to have recovered from his back a il­ ment. Ron Ja c k s o n at I F ra n co n a in right. first A flock of new face* w ill grace the line-ups of the A th letic* and Indians in C levelan d but the most w elcom e to the 35.000 T rib e fan* w ill be an old favorite, H erb Score The southpaw ace who suffered a horrible e ve in ju ry last M a y 7. w ill hurl for the In d ian s against Ned C a r v e r (6-131. The A 's w ill have M ike Baxes late of B u ffa lo , at second base. in and B J I T uttle, fo rm er T ig er, right field T he Indians w ill have B illy M oran , a rookie, at second Indian* w ill also pre­ base T he sent in are M innie w in ter M inos# in lefi L a r r y Dobv in cen­ ter. M ick ey Vernon at first and P'red H atfield at third. four new com ers obtained trades. Thev TTvme w in be at. least one rookie the Philiies-Red'eg s in each of line-ups in C in cin n ati V ad a Pinson, the 19-year-old surprise from V is ­ alia, C alif., of Class C distinction, w ill start in right for the Redlegs Chuck E ss e g ia n , who played in ye a r, Schenectady, N . Y .. m ay be in left for the Ph illip s. last i pitching line-up righthander 110-4 •, w ill do T h * Yankees bring a veteran into Roston. TV»n L a r s e n , the right­ hander. W illa r d Nixon (12-1.3). The Red Sox have Ken Asprom onte at re- second and Don Buddm . a ‘ turned servicem an , at short. A another against crowd of 25,000 is expected. ) The C ard in als, host to Chicago n St. lyouis, w ill present a v e te r­ an bne-up to it the Cubs w ill have a p a ir of freshm en second base man T o n y T a y lo r and third base­ man Jo h n n y G o ry l. Another new C hicago face w ill be the veteran in center field. Bobby Thom pson, for the Cubs (5-5» J im Rrosnan w ill oppose lefthander W ilm e r M i­ ze!] *8-10) before some 19 OOO. ye a r. The A m e ric a n le a g u e * on ly 20- gam e w inners B illy 'ast P ie rre of the W hite Sox and J im Bunning o/ D etroit, w ill oppose e>ch other in Chicago. P ie rc e (20- 121 w ill b# shooting for hi* third straight opening d ay victory- B u n ­ ning w a* 20-8 in 1957. A crow d of 25,000 w ill see B i ly M artin p la y­ ing his first gam e for D etroit, a ’ shortstop. C h i' ago w ill have new­ third. com er* B ill y Goodm an at rookie, center W ashington, fresh from its open­ ing d a y entrust trium ph, w ill righthander C am b io Pasq u al <8- 17) w ith the ta^k of extending its w inning streak against the O rio 'es in B a ltim o re The Senators have one fielder Albie Pierson in the hne->jp The O rioles m ay have two, shortstop R onn ie Jim Hansen and M arsh a ll. G en e W addling, obtained left from C leveland , w ill be field. A crow d of somp 30.000 is expected Johnson (14-11 I. pitch for the Orioles to see Connie first basem an to B . C . R O G E R S O p th a lm ic Dispenser Within m iy walking diltiinc* of tna caropui. IM I Guild. GR 7-1422 / N / Work with th e G A S In d u stry.. . th e nation’s fifth largest T h e G a* industry the fifth largest in the nation has a total investment. of over $\R billion. L a st )e a r the industry set a in number of cus- new all-time record fom er% volum e of G a * sold, and dollar revenue. In facr, G a * contributed 2 5 % of the total energy needs of the nation at compared with 1! ' % rn 1940. T h e G a t industry is a m ajor force in thn growth development and economic health of rhn country. I heir art* m anv opportune ie* for im ] in the G a s industry. I he industry needs engineers, and does not over-hire. Y o u Tson*t be regimented. I h e ir ’s alwav s room for advancem ent. Vvuh u tility companies and w ith m anufacturers of Gag equip­ ment, there’* a future for you as an engineer. C a1! \our nearest ( od I tilitv . I he-.’ll f.f g!ad to r a !k with i on about your opporrumtv in the Gas industrv American Gds Anociation. W. B R O W N B A I D W I N R 5 Mech Eng., U of Vermont, 1949. Regac as Cadet En* -em, Boston Ga* C c 1959. B e c a m e Staff Lng-neer in Distribution Deve opment Lection, 195? Staff Engine*' in charge of De ve r o rie n t. I 955, D ’vtr,button plane.cg I r- pf- 1956. Worded c - se / With en party's nato'*1 pas convervon pm- gtar s Ur n arL or to 0 strbut on Department charged with developing processes, r ac 'ex, soar fleet ens. A-.« st* management rn p'epa- ng rntt • sbmates. joo ana yses. other project*. W . c. D A W V A N I S . G a t E g . T e - a s A A I., 1 9 3 * . B e g a n a s E n g in e e r t r a m * # w ith l o n e S t a r G a * C o m p a n y a ft e r g r a d u a tio n fr o m T e x a s A . & I, vuitb first fo u r y e a r G a s E n g in e e r ,ng d e g r e e o v e r e d h / in s titu tio n . Jo in e d H o u s to n N a tu r a l G a s C o m p a n y in 194 B a c o n a D i f 'i e t f. g in e e r in T e x a s City a n d U te ri D stric t V a - a g e r in B e e v a a n d E l C a m p o . (m a n is c u r r e n c y C a t l o g e a r Da */ » ’ n ft;,! e n g i n e e r i n g r e s p o n s e th ro u g h o u t t * » o f y c o u n t ie s n l r * c o m p a n y * T e x a s G u U C o a st S y s t e m . C O M P O S E R S F R O M A L L O V E R r e I w d P r R o ­ es- Symposium Ends on High Note FOR THE 7'he f ne! con. ct t 'if the S ’, rn po- ! im of ( o n tem p o ra ry A m e ric a n M usic included 'h o ra l w ork* and t o o o rch e stral pieces. T h e y w e ir w ed pro -a nted try the I'n iv e r s it y A ( ‘app* Ila C h o ir and the South* w estern Sym posium Orr-h'-Mra. B eau tifu l h arm on y and interest­ ing iii in m rd voices we; e p re s­ ent n T he A rro w and the Son g .” *. Alex m r I < r von B re i Ir-r, dir ector of the B n iv e r s it y Sym phony. The second num ber, "P s a lm I IT / ’ by Je a n W . M ille r of Color ado was a d ra m a tic w ork but the com ­ po c r lost the effect, at tim es by pushing ihe them e to the point of d iffractio n , in an effort to do a w a y with triteness. A soothing and beautiful “ L u lla ­ b y ” by B ru c e Sm iler la rd of C a li­ J e r v is Underwood fornia W'as next Tuesday, April IS, 1958 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 T)Oil alf i J Cl ZZ r ~ JAZZ GUITARIST B v C. T (< liff SM l f ll The KUitar is no • ani lr I jazz en-ambio bhd ■ in m**nf v, hot hor it * tho point of t< tho p a r t of th o r h y t h m s e c t io n , rhythm if pii ;o • t if>ns t'-rci to f a** i n a to th o a v r r .s . r> J ; s t r»r>o-r Harrioy Kosso!, v,i t m a - ’ >// ft l i t a n y and n rd o n alB fforr O k la­ h o m a , h a s d e v e lo p e d h is s k ill an d talent tho Cha rite UT ri Man ifl.'om to become probably th** host jazz hts to off or guitar wise that O'-or a span of ton .''a r f In One of tho bettor "p a p veto,*, wtio r an a< hiovo 'no right rhythm ic has pulsations for tho -.poop Ko tho unique talent of placing loss com plex patterns who h lo *• < or* tam graduations and figtn a v ,n « rn them to feed idea group. I* w o o d ho y e n difficu't to classify K f” el a« baku a ll’ a "p a c e setter ’ 'rh yth m artist > or a s Im s t e v e n thou. ti he h is been most outstanding to tho tho latter F o r i > w fan readily ho- a ;«■ of his it. on no ti It v rate it* p l a ss d r- s p r p a 'I r o p n 'a t io r i as th e v Ko gain art for O scar Peterson t>e-I .Vt and has tin c t a rivan w d I fo p his calling out on ’ho west roast. T a i F a r low (from Greensboro an in an exceptionally fin e! forover seeking I N, C .I guitarist who is se f im provem ent attribution rom mon to m any |a/z music ans \fter achieving ‘ne speed he so desired. T a i s attention turned to­ ward the perfection of individual*: izing o o h note We * iggest you give ar ear to I V e r o Mf iV ROZ! ta i !' -. a lh*- Johnny Hmlth Quart* t I arlovr p L P 2303> H**rb I is .o r y r an M G N 'bkl » H arney K c s x H K , . In W onderland” •- pf,r a ry C ZI • B n 'il ne I Ad i It The Finest Mexican Food in T T F Texas EL TORO - EL MAT - MONROE'S 1601 G u a d a lu p e 504 E. A v a . M exican Food lo G o TODAY AT INTERSTATE ARNY pf It A MOVII OI * ' OUM f f A loI P A R A M O U N T DOORS OPEN 11:45 A M. N A T ’ K I N G ' C O L T P A R T H A K l l f . p F A R L B A B I Y / E L IA F I T / G E P A l D * r AR C A11 O W A if STATE ACAOtMY AWARD hl/i*ine\ BEST Picture BEST Actor BEST Director BEST Photography BEST Screenplay BEST Film Editmg BEST M)MC«i Song F I R S T S H O W 12 OO i t x i i k i a m i s m ■« III ft |i rn ’Mir. I* \ »* I J S cot 'meiA pw ***** •IIMtMt a va ti set I Ct* FftfMVuCVlflQ VII UAM ROI DIN AKC tUIHNI SS -1 ACK HAWKINS T M I B R I O I I O M T M I ■ I Y I R K W A I M c>«.' n» ne • • r max lr i ' / A i m * '4 FIRST SHOW 2 P M. H E L D O V E R 2 ^ It'- xer \ a (ions for the * p iodt merit of D ram " K in g I.o a r” f re now I in ttie M usic kidding f it i - f * I U ti I Adult, r fie'* tickets arc KO , fir kl '* w ith Bi; I >eparf- , Mon of on sale Box Of* ct T ax student * a rc Hi B T I i f f Z iiT T T iT g *— * - B S TRAPEZE H urt I sr < ii r 11* - Pl.IM —. MAN IN THE VAULT M illis ,,, ( am fill* 11 K a re n *h»rfu ' C l i l M i M f l l l S S TIME LIMIT Itlrb a rd \\ ,,lm *rk Marts 7 .TV IM I - Dance With Me Henry It IMI A binit t I na t m trlli Slur!* ll rib MKV* a*i AAtnbiiiiR 86* THE TIN STAR l i m n I ium. M r. \ die Southwest, end mposmm of Cor 'J re' 9 by a rn s ;m p o ra ry Music Sorority To Give Concert A C o n c e r t of C ontem porary A m erican M usic w ill tie given at I p rn. W ednesday in R e Pal H all by the U n iv e rs ity C hapter of .Sigma Alpha Iota, national m usic sorority. The concert is sponsored by the Student R e n t a l Series of the D e­ partm ent of M usic. 'Hie program w ill include N o r­ man De I lo J o io ’s "S o n a ta No. 3,” perform ed by E lizab eth B a ile y , VI ber! Stoessel s ‘ ‘Suite A n tiq u e,” perform ed by Elizab eth H a ile y , J a n Rodme and Elm o M c ­ piano Kee, violin s; fkrth B o y c e 'a "S o n a ­ ta .'’ perform ed by the romfXi>rr, piano; and W in tte r W a tts '* “ The B ittie Shepherd s S o n g ,'1 p erfo rm ­ ed by Elizabeth Silverton soprano, and C arolyn Scott, accom panist. (H yde Du n eo n s A No Kent K e n n u n ’s "T h re e P r e ­ ludes,” perform ed by D elia Duson, piano; ’ Sonatina for C larin et and P ia n o ,” first m ove­ ment perform ed by Rita G u e rra , piano, and A rm G lennev, c la rin e t; and lo p So w erb v s "R e q u ie s c a t in P a ce ” [mu form ed by M ar tha K ey, organ. FOR G R A D U A T IO N GIVE CAMERAS Studtman Photo Finish tit «,**» lith BUSTED? We Fix ’Urn! F. M. Receivers ^ Jlu jl ^ ~ }i i i c f i! if Radio TV H o rn s A u to Portables Transistor* { R e co rd C h an g ers T ap e Decks — R eco rd ers E lectro n ic Equipm ent H pE E D \ V rA Y H i g h F i d e l i t y at R e a s o n a b l e P r i c e s 2010 S p e e d w a y G R 8-6609 eg* Ive fN R:.D IE»L0 RN E GREEN E 2 0 S C j k j e n / ' a S c o p E ’ .... •* I 1607 San Jacinto P r i v a t e D in in g R o o m H E L D O V E R ! 2 DAYS ONLY — FIRST SHOW 6:00 P.M. THE REAL. TRUE STORY CAPITOL- 2 DOUBLE BLAST! DOUBLE SHOCK HHS! S T A R T S T O D A Y O PEN I 1.45 C h ild 25c A d u lts 60c TH IY LIVID S t NlOHT ON TMI IO O ! OF I V I ll KUHS* ON A RAMPAGE ° f DR»0«! lf ”** TECHNICO LOR G L E N N F O R D * J A C K L E M M O N A N N A K A SH I! st Att* wq Ma (Apili* MmCochriB muua KROO-A,TSOI urn** a * # . - Z Z W H * ? ™ WE SEIL UM, TOO! Hurried Out St. Louis Blues’ Puts Message Before Music sp iritu al blues And M ah a lia Pi..a Fitzg erald advertised as one ever-wonderful B e a le S tre e t.’’ M iss Fitz- singing on some g re at numbers, his fa th er b e liv e * the blues are scene where she discovers sinful. He doesn't quite m ake it. the Jack so n , th# singer, of the stars of the epic, sings one booms out her p a rticu la r style of num ber gerald, of < ■ use sings wonderful- iy. but no» enough. But. as said before, the film has a mo-sage H an d y * fa th e r is op- K a rth a K-tt portrays a su ltry posed to his composing blues mu* life sic and H an d y w orries constantly singer who entered H an dy s and urged him to do som e’hsng throughout the show about his sin- good with his feeling for the m usic ful w a ys There is so m uch m usic, of his ra c e H er singing ranges so m uch hum or and pathos in his from the throaty to the whine, but m instrel days alone that it seems except ' r one s one in which she a waste to change the story of his s called upon to he an gry, there w a s n ’t m uch of a part for her other than her singing. H andy, autobiography, F a th e r of the B lu e s ,’’ proves that Ja ck so n the life (rf a N eg ro m in strel p la y e r and Cab C a lio w a y m ake up the and songwriter can he interesting, rest of the Negro stars in the film , without m aking a m essage of con- C aU o w ay does no singing or dane- version out. of it. H an d y w as not mg. p laying a straight d ra m a tic afraid to talk about his life from the standpoint of a Negro, but Hol- rn e lywood seem ed to he. life to fit Hollyw ood s term s, in his P e a r ! Baile;. M a h a lia M iss B a ile y is perfect the in HI-FI BUYER Q u an . Descrip+iori Rec . Price Sale Price H . K. TA-1040 Tuner-A m p lifie r 250.00 Stro m b e rg 35-waH Tuner-Am plifier 249.50 I I 3 6 I 2 I I I I 2 I 3 I I I I I I I I 199.50 189.95 42.50 59.95 57.50 74.50 99.50 95.00 99.50 40.00 40.00 35.00 99.50 125.00 99.50 150.00 50.00 250.00 299.50 A m p ex S te re o C o n so le I 795.00 1350.00 E M C S te re o Playb ack 189.50 135 OO Bogen 10-watt A m p lifie r Bogen 12-watt A m p lifie r U sed 35-watt K n ig h t A m p lifie r 20 w att H arm on -K ard on 40-watt H arm o n - K ard o n S c o tt 22-watt A m p lifie r H . K. T uner-A m plifier "S p u tn ik '' Sp eak er Eq u ip m en t C a b in e ts Fisher 15-watt Pow er A m p lifie r Fisher F M 40 Tuner with case C o lu m b ia C o n so le tte C o lu m b ia T able M o d e l Fisher 80T (U sed) Precise A M - F M Tuner 50.25 65.70 99.95 99.95 125.00 I 15.00 139.95 60.00 67.50 59.50 I 17.85 169.95 129.95 216.45 75.00 Ja n tz e n E lectro sta tic Sp eaker Syst. 309.00 U sed Lansing E V System 579.00 . and many other Bargains A L L S A L E S S T R IC T L Y C A S H B v J I M H O L M A N T ru A Amusement* td iior “ St, * B lu es a m essage and t e r f e r e * w ith th e film . is a film w ith in­ th e m e n a g e When you think of W . C . H andy, you n a tu ra lly think of m usic. You think of the g reat blues he has w ritte n - "S t. Ixtuis B lu e s '* “ Boaie Street ” "A u n t H a g a r's ,” "Y e llo w Dog anti H a n d y * fir * ’ (still one of the he*’ > the ' M em phis B lu es ” In the film you h e a r m any of them, with the notable exception of "A u n t H a g a r's ’’ and ‘'M e m p h is ." The story of H an d y s first attem pt a ’ song w ritin g and hi* subsequent it for 5af) w ith no copy­ sale of right guarantee is sw itched from ‘ M em p h is’’ to " Y e l ’ow Dog B lu e s .’’ N a t " K in g ’ Cole cannot act, and hi* singing voice doe* not save him from c ritic is m . In tho story P a ram o u n t has constructed from H an d y's e a rly is called upon to go blind from m ental an­ guish and be rebellion* because life he of the U n iv e rs ity M u sic facu lty played the flute p art that goes w ith the vo cal m usic, "S h a d o w on the Sn o w ,” by the < iioir a conductor, M o r r i s J . B e a c h y , m ade good use of contrast­ ing voices for It w as followed by ''S tilln e s s ,'' bv R ad io B rita in , another C alifo rn ian . This piece gave a good mood effect. its effect. Closing the choir-: portion of the program w as “ H e y N onnv N o '” ; w ritten by an Illin o is composer, R o b ert G Olson Thp outstanding thing about the voice of the baritone soloist, Ja m e s M cf iu yer. this w ork w as A fte r the interm ission the on h- esfra plaved "O v e rtu re Fe stiv e ” M r. Holzmann T he com poser con­ ducted his music. M r. Holzm ann s w o rk w as v e r y 1; melodious, w ith the use of a v a rie ty of in-trument.s to present the idea of the m usic. The interlude tech­ nique was hard on the m em bers to the orch estra, who had of sustain low notes for q u ite a w h ile but they did a good ’ob. The orch­ estra could w ell h ive p layed m ore of M r. Holzmann'.* w orks. Next w as M r. C reston ’* S y m ­ It getc off to a full phony No 4 start, with an interesting balance between the them e and the in tricate bass parts. full Flutes, horns and a full, b eau ti- ' ful m elody grow ing from calm in­ to brightness ch ara cter,/e the sec­ ond m ovem ent In the third m ovem ent piz/icatti stungs against woodwinds give an unusual effect. The final m ovem ent of the sym ­ phony is a v e ry full, satisfyin g end­ ing to a piece of mti-ic by one of A m e rica s outstanding contem por­ a r y composers. J im Holm an Student Recital Series To Present Ann Nicholl The Student R e c ita l Series of the D epartm ent of M usic w ill present Ann Nicholl, pianist in a senior recital at 4 p rn. T uesday in R e ­ cital H a ll. 'The public wihout charge. is invited to attend I* IR K O R Y O U N O U N I V K R S IT V C O U P L E M a tu re Nouns cou ple w ith o u t c h ild ­ ren to m anage a business, flood per- ann good ch a ra cte r neces- sonaiit- Idea! for g rad u ate x’ udent car- s a r ' r\ ng lim p e d s ih e d u ie N ice a p a rt­ ment fu rnish ed w ith reasonable sa l­ a ry . Contact D r f a r ! R rp d P O R 6-8371. E x te n s io n 331 for hotel c i rk H o u rs 3 Y O ! N't; W O M A N betw een 21 and 25 to ’.J p m . M ust h ave tran sp n ratlo n . C all and 'o r nterv ow betw een 7 a m 3 p rn. an- dav H o lid a y In n M o to r H otel G L 3-7341 p rn Special Services R E N T T A ' s. 1958 Portab les, rates H O 5-5597 G R 2-2692 For Rent B I R K I E F R O M C A M P U S L a rg e pleas p r ate en- fo r w om en !:v ngroom , a n - t ranee "elcohonp T i e na 'h I 'se of k itch e n e tte ( , R 8-5588 room A - B A R H O T E L 'S t i l l the F e s t ) ye r ' Take " P r in e ice. p ark in g re se rva ' ons now fo r -paclou* rooms m aid se rv­ 2612 G u ad alu p e G R 6-5658 TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS V w o rd s 30 words GR 2-2473 — Extension 29 M O N T R I.T ........ ............... C L A S S IF IE D T u o sd av T e x * n ................. Wednesday Texan ........ Thursday Texan Frid av Texrin ............................ Th rsdav| S u n d a y T e x a n ........................................ F rid a y. D F A D U N C S ............... J Londay, 4 p m ........... Toe tai I p m. W e d n esd ay , 4 p.m . 4 p.m. 4 p.m. C L A S S IF IE D R A T E S .......................... $* TO 11.00 Mrs. Pearl Ghormley D A I L ! C L A S S IF IE D R A T E S I day B a c h a d d itio n al d a v C lassifie d D is p la y . . . Y . V . Y . Y f i .15 p e r’ co lum n Inch In the e ve n t of e rro rs m ade in an advertisem ent im m e d iate notice m ust be (riven a* a re responsible fo r o n ly one In co rre ct insert on the n u h lu h m an w ord * ° L • Additional words *95.................. $ eg SS. Help W a n te d Professional Services Typing G ! LI A R L E S S O N S classic s t v l t i de pr nrip les of S eg o via based on Jo s e p h C a - 1 e A rts 200 W e st 19th O R 6-9035 , i O R T S „ E x p e rie n ced rexas School of F in e *KP,n 8- M in o r ed itin g j fro m cam pus M rs. Bodour. O R 63113 *trom a; Four block* T IO N S , T H E S E S Pe- Tutoring I S - : S s ' thcm e* R E A S O N A B L E T H E- in, O R re P ° n s Close P A R I S I A N L A N G I A G L . E x p e rt teach -' E X P E R I E N C E D « o n vc rsat'o n g ram m a r transla- I nivcrs - • n d sposa! M ad, tic — p D u riu s Apt 2 ------ — _______________________ 25(€ R io G ran d e G R 6-2296 re*-, rn: enda? on* at B a k e r, B R a ' T Y P I N G cam pus m ornings S F C R K t a r v " HO 5-0197 On M rs Reports, r L I r I I IN G G R 6-1280 a fte r 6 p m theme* H I E x per.enced R easonab • M U LT T - Nurseries " C H I P 'N D A U K I thro u gh Kin der- L wig garten. T Je m e n ta rv education grad- C L 3-294! n e c U o m a t ’- E ie c ir o m a tic . I uate. R e g R e n d n u r* " ( reative a rt i — — - — _________ D . U , fo.k d ancin g baton tw irlin g , R h y th m E X P E R I E N C E D r r * t a n s G R 8-0616 O L 3-050_ _ Q r j . . For S a le N K W W K R C O R HI-Kl. C a ll G R 8-1756 a fte r 4 and ask for P h ilip d rag g in g . F O R S A L E : alp h a! t v for Special b u ilt wi de nm w heels fo r C o rvette o r o ther using 6 30- 15 fo r sa fe ty C a ll Me G R 8-3497 davs lif e g u a r d tuhea tire. re* k W I N D S O R P A R K ow ner. M u st see to the cen-' I'wo-bedroom ap preciate. k n o tty p in e kit* hen tr a l h e a t: ! paym ent N o m o or D riv e . Open H I 2 -7 '.kl ' v ('.I I.nan. S I 500 eguitv ;osing cox'.,* c h a m ! ink den tile hath fence. Assume *72 t<>ta ;.vi6 Broad- E ^ E E R I E ' ' ' r rE D . ty p in g r.,e4g o r repo rts 3-7479 ete. AItvr>!s t1 t v PiSt. E le c tric H I 2-5583 flv experienced D TROMA tTp ON? I Mrs. i RON. A T IC . W tC hle. G R 2-4945. i S ' -rnboll ) Close F.LFC- n. M A R T H A A N N Z T V L E Y , M .E .A . A com plete a co m p ,cie professional t v ping opp. vice ta ilo re d to the need* of I m - ve rs ity students S p e cial ke- ooard equipm ent science, and eng ineering and d ia­ se ria tio n !. lang u ag e theses for C o n ve n le n tiy located at GOODALL WOOTEN DORM BLDG. 2 :32 C u ad a pe Ph o . G R 2-3210 L A R G E i 3-ROOM B R I C K hoti.-e: fo ur E a d T o ° S | S i * i e S A R p!< k" up sp eaker ° P « ’* $79 50, na: na: on corn, r at 2100 R io G ran d e G R 7-3341 C an be used fo r board ng bouse r o o m - ---------- ng house, or sn ial Jo e D aev G R 6-42.31. fra te rn ity house. 1 Se wing Apartm ents D R E S S M A K I N G T O R ea-o n ab ly tion. Dodgem G P. 8-9130 Y O U R aatlsfac- M rs. priced. U N IQ U E three-room a p artm e n t beside C olorado R iv e r : expansive view to U n iv e rs ity , arport v e ry pri vat e A fte r 4:30 m inutes lan d lad y G R 8.5124 7 M E N S E X P E R T A L T E R A T I O N S d o n # _____________ re aso n ab !’-- Q u ick service See M rs , E L E C T R I C ’ fer. M ale Men s W e a r 2332 N o : .a il A rno ld Ja c o b s o n s I G uad alup e T Y P I N G . 20c A P A G E " i i -i .n o 2t« A P A G E Spa mg. g ram ­ m a r corrected H I 2-6322. M A N U A L E X P E R T soel- G L 3-7517 an v tim e G R E E N G A R D E N A P A R T M E N T S . 307 F O R M A L S A L T - R Y A . .E a s t .33rd N ear » n iv c rs ,-■ Air-con- 6 Honed . F o u r la rg e fa m is h e d c r rn- B ” onh-. v - • ne D m iU rm shed roorr- k itch en and bath L a rg e I85-S95 G E 3-1562. sets T ile a n d s G R 8-947o > G enera R o y rtt ......... ngT ^ u a r a n t e 'd sew ■ ng < ' a' sew .ng of a ; u „ H e n sle y. M rs , 7 ~ TTT T Y P I N G , A N Y K I N D . A ccurate. Rea- M rs Vick. H O 5-1313 ‘ on* bl« ra t«* FT F r r B n u i w e E I.E G T R < M A T IC . E L E ! T R O M A T IC . Ex p e rie n c ed Theses, themes. Close _ Reas- n. onablp G R 8-6155 \ 'Want to Change?' jSsooFellowship deadline Reset Sutherland Says 'No To April 25 The deadline for the S300 fellow­ ship offered by the Austin branch of the Am erican Association of U ni­ versity Women has been extended from April 15 to April 25. Any woman enrolled in the grad­ uate school is eligible to receive the fellowship. Application blanks are available in the office of the Dean of Student Life, Speech Build­ ing 111. Tile fellowship, which is meant to promote higher education for women in keeping with the ideals of the A A U W , is offered each year. A committee composed of four members of the fellowship commit­ tee of the Austin branch of the A A U W , the Dean of Women, Dean of the Graduate School, and the chairm an of the committee on loans information will and scholarship decide on the recipient. Fu rth e r information m ay be ob- 1 tained by calling Mrs. J . H. Whe- less local president of the A A U W , at G L 3-6220 or Mrs. R. V Baker, chairm an of the fellowship com­ mittee. at G R 6-1541. Greek Film Set Tonight “ Tile Ancient World, Greece” w ill recreate the glory of the an­ cient Greek civilization of the fifth century before Christ in full color at 7 :3U p.m. Tuesday in the Main Lounge of Texas Union. Sponsored by tho Classical Club, the 66-minute consists of film readings of ancient literature with no living ch tractors seen. All that is seen are works of art or scenes from nature. The film is produced in collab­ oration with the Archeological In- stitue of Am erica and the A m eric­ an School of Classical Studies in Athens, Greece. Tired of y o u r s e l f ? Need a be desirable. change? A big change? Chances are you don't need too big a change, and moreover it is unlikely that you could change too much ev en if you wanted to. Thi'- is the opinion of Dr. Robert L . Sutherland, director of the Hogg Foundation for M ental Health, and author of the book “ Can An Adult Change?” in “ Adults, in the main, have been moderately successful fam ily life. at work, and in community affairs — some rem arkably so.,” “ Further­ Sutherland. says Dr. more. they live in a democracy which tolerates and even encour­ ages individuality — a wide range of behavior.” Dr. Sutherland explains that an adult has developed over many r ears, and that he could no more put his personality aside and take on another than he could jump out of his skin. to When docs a person need change — for the better? This Is iho important question brought up In the sm all volume. Dr. Sutherland points out what he terms “ slight danger signals.” The.sa danger signals suggest that jierhaps some small change would The first of these signals is re­ sisting change. Resenting sugges­ tions. holding defensively to pres­ ent ways, and clinging to an out­ dated status quo make a person so rigid that he cannot change if he wants to. Another signal is systematizing everything, or its opposite, just ‘‘unorganizing.” The two extremes suggest that a change might be desirable. A constant damning of things and people, even though they m ay deserve occasional criticism , de­ velops a negative and sometimes fearful attitude. W orrying just for the sake of w orrying is also a danger signal. A person can xvorrv himself into bad health, and then, to complete the cycle, worries about his bad health. Men’s Housing Meets There w ill be a general meet­ ing of the M e n ’s Housing Associa­ tion Tuesday a1 3 p.m. at the V a r­ sity Cafeteria. Tile nominating committee w ill present names from which new officers w ill he elected. WHEN YOU THINK OF LAUNDRY OR CLEANING THINK DRISKILL LAUNDRY PICK UP & DELIVERY SERVICE SUITS—DRESSES TUXEDOS EVENING GOWNS DYEING • RUGS • DRAPES FUR AND WOOLEN STORAGE 411 E. 19th Phone Q R 8-6631 SAVE CASH AND CARRY M O D E L IN G F A S H IO N S p r e s e n t ! In a style show M o r lay r ' A t given by Alpha Phi alumnae for active members are Jen n ie O lton and Mrs. Eariene Moses. Miss Olson is wearing a ,< w chem'se and slung over her arm is a matching yellow a- i ora* qe pr nt G e n duster. Mrs. Moses is wearing a long wa ted c.hemi e of black; and white checked co tter, complemented by a white pique collar. Both hats, a yellow straw and a black cloche, g /e a touch of spring to the openable. Clothes were furnished by Rae Ann s and accessories by Flair. J , l h W e d J t ll,e l f Tuesday I Program Council IO -Coffee Hour 8—Modem D ram a Study Group EN D S W E D N E S D A Y , A P R IL 16 S P E C I A L 15 S P O T R E D U C IN G T R E A T M E N T S FIGURE AHEAD . . . How do you look in your new bathing suit? Com e in today for your free Figure analysis and complimentary treatm ent . . . guaranteed results! A c c e p t Nothing But the Best— N IB L A C K ! NIBLACK Slenderizing System 2G07 H i g h l a n d Tu rk G u a d a l n p # ,, . F n f l e l H Shopping- » niitnr S h o p p i n g < e n te r G R ~ G R 7 5090 H O 5 5)7 7 Tuesday, April 15, 1958 THE DAILY TEXAN Fag* 8 Engineering UT Vrofs in D Family Picnic Set April I? For SSS/4 Meeting | The Engineering W ives Club an­ nual fam ily picnic xxiii be held Saturday at Camp Ben M cCul­ lough. The d a y’s schedule begins at for bolh 2 p rn. with activities children and adults Barbecued chicken and beef w ill be served by Dale B a k e r at 6 p m. Tile agenda includes dancing from 7:30 until l l p.m. Reservations must be made no later than Thursday at G R 6-9930, Mrs. C arey Murphey. • The Engineering W ives Club of­ ficers for 1958-59 are Mrs. Leon Kennedy, president; vice-president, Mrs. [.arry Yag gi; secretary, Mrs. Arthur Mrs. Lysle C oyer; and reporter, Mrs. W alter West. treasurer, ('linger; Committee chairm en are Mrs. J r . , Program s; .Toe Ballanfonte Mrs. Lloyd Petty, Gam es; Mrs W illiam Davis Membership: Mrs. W illiam Fow ler. W ays and Means; M rs. ('ceil Smith, Telephone; Mrs. Jess Webb, Social. The club historian is Mrs. Bob Spollin. and sponsors are M rs. Ot­ to G. Brown, and Mrs. Joseph W. Dailey. Presbyterians Honor Persons A surprise “ Canning P a rty for the Persons” was given F rid a y for the new director of the Westminster Student Fellowship, the Rev. Ralph Persons, and his wife. Members of the U niversity Pres- byterian Church student fellowship s p o n s o r e d the party, to which everyone brought a ran of “ .some­ thing.’’ University professors participat­ ed in the annual convention of the Southwestern Social Science Asso­ ciation recently in Dallas. Dr. H a rry E s till Moore, profes­ sor of sociology and editor of the SSS A Quarterly, and Dr. W ilfred Webb, associate professor of gov­ ernment, are members of the SS SA Executiv e Council. Committee m e m b e r s are Dr. Francis M ay, assistant professor of business statistics; !>r. C arl M . I I Rosenquist professor of sociology; and Dr. John Stockton, professor of business statistics. J Sectional meetings were held on * Scholarships Deadline Set Deadline for appd* ations for A rm y scholarships is May I . The Department of tho A rm y has re­ cently announced an expanded schooling program under which it w ill give four-year college educations (including full regular pay and expenses) to qualified en­ listed personnel. free F o r each veal of free education given by the A rm y the individual must re-enlist for three years. Ap­ plicants must be on active duty and meet other qualifications. M cKetta Talks to A CE It “ Profcsvionalism and W hat I W ill mean to the Chemical Engin­ eer in the Fu tu re .” w as the topic j of Dr. John J . M cKetta, chemical engineering professor, at the A m ­ erican Institute of Chemical Engin­ eers state meeting in Tulsa Satur­ day. accounting agricultural economic#, Bureau of Business Research, busi­ ness administration, economics, geography, government, history! and sociology. Robert E . Seder, assistant pro­ fessor of accounting, spoke on “ D i­ rect Costing ’ as a sectional m eet­ ing, Also speaking was Dr. Stock­ ton who talked on “ Current B u s i­ ness Research Activities In Tex­ as.” Dr. \V im R Si riegel, dean of the College of Business Adminis­ tration. discussed “ Trends or E d ­ dies and Crosscurrents in Manage­ ment Rd ti* atmo" at a business ad­ ministration section. D r Lorrin Kcnnamer and Dr. Stanley A Arbing.ast, geography professor, spoke at a joint meeting of the C( >n an!* , government, and history sermons. Dr. Kennamer dis­ cussed “ The G< igraphy Setting of Southwestern W a te r,” and Dr. A r­ bingast led the discussion group. Also speaking at thp same joint session w as T roy J . Gauley, visit­ ing professor of economics from Indiana University, Dr. Ronald F . Bunn, Instructor in government, led a government discussion section. “ 'Hie Am erican Historical Asso­ ciation and the W est” was discussed by Dr. D avid D. Van Tassel, assis­ tant professor of history, at the history sectional meeting. Dr. W. S. William s. University Medical Branch, was chairman of the sociology meeting. Dr. Nor­ man Hawkins. U niversity Medical Branch, discussed “ The Role of th# Sociolog it in Teaching Comprehen­ sive M edicine” and Sam Schul- man, U niversity School of Nurs­ ing, d.-cussed “ The Role of the Social S dentist in a School of Nurs­ ing.” Ju d d O p ens Talks A b out 'H-Bombs' Dr. Burke Judd, professor of zoology*, w ill open a series of forums on “ Should H-Bomb Test­ ing B e E n d e d ?” af 7:30 p m. Wed­ nesday in Norden lou nge of U ni­ versity Christian Church. l>eing offered Supper at 6 p m . in Fellowship H a ll w ill precede D r. Judd 's talk. This forum is a part of a series of courses in the Christian Church's spring School of Christian Enrichm ent. Col. Vance M urphy of Bergstrom A ir Force Base w ill discuss the subject of II-Bomb testing from a m ilitary viewpoint A p ril 23 a n d M elvin Zuck of the Am erican Friends Ser­ vice Committee as the pacifist secs. it. SEMINARS O N Natu re of God Nature of Man Christian Ethics OPEN TO ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS 4:30 p.m. M onday, Tuesday — 14th - 15fh 6:15 pm W e d n e sd a y Dr. C arlyle M arney First Baptist C h u re l Modnesday 3 Membership Committee 4—Campus Affairs Committee 4 World Religious Study Group 7:15—Contemporary’ View s of the Nature of M an seminar Thursday 2:30— I nt ercolleg i a te Relation s 4 Freshman Program Committee 4 R ace Relations Committee 4:30 Worship Committee 3:30 - World Relatedness Supper 7 :15—‘Y’ Fellowship Pi Tau Sigma Initiates 14 N ew initiates of P i Tau Sigma, honorary m echanical engineering fraternity, are Em m ett Albrecht, Don B a rry , Cheng-! Bien Chiang, Jam es Eckhart, Charles Gallishaw, H a rry Bardee. Also d ia rie s H arvey. David Ken­ drick, Wesley' Kuenrmann, H a rry M o , Cecil R a y Shearer, Byron Dean Ta play, Ralph W alker, and John Westover. n t j t u j i n n 'lits M artha S< blan k, Sigma Delta I 'Ti to Jferome Copei, \ipha Epsi- Ion P i, Alpha P h i Omega. D iane D u Bo lse, Z e ’ i ! to W illiam Dor Powell. in Alpha • Judith Ann Tugger, Delta Zeta 1 to Al Snider. Jan et Buchanan, Delta Delta Delta, to Jim Richardson, Sigma Chi, L a w Student, ti Patti Sue Murphy, D *a Delta D flta , to T. George Mi-hmffev (la ir # Hudspeth, I >■ ' i Delta Del* ta to Pax # Pax is, • ■ Pe Charon Gayle B .tx en, W arren Malcolm Clark. , lent, to ' Barb ara Lit, Qt 'n Ph Epsilon • * stu­ ity basket­ llorxxiti, to Kenneth dent, member of V- ball team, Alpha D p -lion P i. • Ju d y Franklin, Delta Phi E p sil­ on, Bluebonnet Belie to Bob Lit tentier*. Alpha Epsilon P i, Phi Delta Phi, I .ax* R eview . Ju d y Anne T i l e r y , f rn or attj- dent. Delta Zeta, Spooks, to Alvin J -artmo ith Col­ Snider, pre-med, lege. • • • EXPERT SHOE REPAIR m Modorn En SpmRnt ta Gu*r«nfood Wofltrearuhip m Koy» O p ' Ved Goodyear Shoe Shop Off Th# Dr#q on 23rd No Extra Charge for Fast Service at 0 ow mosf to OST QLimiK WOG' O p'n 7:00 • rn. to fc DO p.m. Mend*/ th-o^n Se* .'day SIO W . 19th St. Corr«r M a c t i Laundry S*r/ic# Young Women: After Graduation, Begin Your Career In An Executive Position I I f yca^re a college senior, you can prepare new for an important executive future by applying fo r an o ffic e r's commission in the Woraen' 3 Army Corps. In addition to an o ffic e r's pay and prestige, you w ill have a position of v it a l re s p o n s ib ility .. .working side by "side with mal© o ffice rs in such challenging s ta ff and adm inistrative assignments as: "Raraam el & Administration * Intelligence "C iv il A ffa irs and M ilita ry Government "Comptroller •Riblie Information •Information and Education "Legal and Leg islative And w ith th is challenge, come these personal rewards: •An o ffic e r's busy cu ltu ra l and so cia l lif e V a k . "The chance fa r exciting foreign assignments *A 30 day paid vacation every year *The sa tisfa ctio n of serving your country in a r e a lly important way A Y * ewe i t to y a r s e l f and j a r r country to ltrw a tig a t* th is challenging and rc ja rd in g executive opportunity. Far f u l l in f a r c t io n f i l l in and n o il th is coupon today ! JU N IO R S — Tho Vase a1 a A iry Corps w i l l se le c t a lim ited number of q u a lifie d v c n n who have car.pleted t h e ir Ju n io r year f a r A weeks tra in in g . Sumner 1958. There are no casni*uents. Iou w i l l receive an o rie n ta tio n In the Arn*/ and nay ca*:* ap p lication fo r a c em issio n a f t e r r . Jus t i en i f yrs want to b e s a * an o ff ic e r Le the United States Anay. TMI ADJUTANT CINER At D.portm.nf of tho Army Woihington 25, D. C. ATTN: AGSN-l CR m> rflrrrr fl« P.’rrrte jew J me further ir..forrrUtt:rm na riff ret in th* V’nmtn i Army Carpi, I f interested check the enclosed coupon. cokk««( c* v- <■»»»'*t P»*l 5* *»»», Tuesday, April 15, 1958 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 Dr. C ro w Receives G ra n t to Do Research on C h a u ce r Dr Crow i* one rf 27 from uni- penod of m ilitary nervine, and vias Appropriation. . Dr. M. M. Crow’, anting chair- Coes I man of the Department of English, versine* rn ti has been awarded a frant-uvald db research f r o m lo a m e d Societies. the Am erican Counr.il of The ford Found .-it ion and the Car- One of his hobbies Is visual »d> fie has prepared several Dr. Crow will do research for have mode the funds a a. able for film scrips illustrative of 'he medi- inc!-ding one which I Tni- ser.es as a ha- aground for Cfh IU* ’he program D r Crow Kus I* en at 'he net;** Corpo? at ton o ( _ S ^ eve I world, York ration first Issue the new issue of “ Chaucer Fife Record R evised ." The was published in IKK). vers ty since I t .I ex< *pt for a * e r 'i “ Canterbury T a le s," r/,.r'ry chosen to rhn.rman of th#* Department of with expense* o v e r e d English for three yeara. S P E C I A L ! M E N F O R T H E P R IC E O F leapt m a in go mem price, or one pays mem FREE calorie counters FREE dietic charts FREE exercise charts FREE steam rooms FREE shoe shine FREE parking G U A R A N T E E O N E Y E A P FR EE if you fail to get re­ sult* in 60 day* O V E R W E IG H T S : Lo** 15 pound*, V/2 inches off hip* and wsi*t. U N D E R W E IG H T S : A d d 11/, inches to arm*, V/i inche* to che*t and thoul- dert. G ain I 2 pound*. TIM S W E E N E Y , Athletic Director of C ap ital C ity Athletic Club and Mr. Am erica finalist. more here in tjlN t rn a Y EA R elsewhere! You ll get instruction* from Tim Sweeney and Charles A. Smith, former editor of Y O U R P H Y S IQ U E , M U S C L E P O W E R , and M R . A M E R IC A . R e f it s guaranteed! O pen 7 day* a week — IO a m . to IO p.m. daily; IO a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, REFRIGERATED AIR C O N D IT IO N IN G C A P I T A L C I T Y A T H L E T I C C L U B S o f t -touch requirement \t f o r school... MANSFIELD’S AUTHENTIC J WHITE BUHS ri ^ FOR COMFORT ; AND CLASS I S lip in to a pair of the**1 a u th e n ­ tic VI bite Finks b y ManefWdd and feel hose tb ev m a k e w a lk ­ ing a soft touch. V alu r-fm ced , too! < »u»c ace. Congress at Eighth I >o*»p F.ddy Pool, located along* sid« the < (dorado River just off Ijike \ti*tin Boulevard I* sched­ uled to ojw-n Sunday. Hour* will be announced later. Foreign Student Panel A panel of foreign students at tho University will discuss “ The US - A Critical V iew '’ at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Union. This is part o f tile Junior Forum, a non-credit I ii course for junior students in the International Studies program. M is s ile blasting o ff A n d clim b in g h ig h ! J e t trail blazing bright A g a in s t the sky I W h e r e th e y fire missiles, Y o u 'll find a man S to p s to tak e big p le a su re W h e n and w h e re ho ca n ., CHESTERFIELD I. ive-action shot — White Sands J'coling (Jrounds, AVa> Mexico STRIPES desired by college men, has never been more handsomely expressed than in a suit of muted stripes. Reynolds-Penland gives this gracious pattern the full treatment in this presentation of new Spring suits. Styled in authentic Ivy tradition, with natural shoulders, narrower seams an hooked vent C liggett & M yen Tobacco Co- REGULAR k in g W eather Fair and Sunny Low 48; H ig h 78 T h e T e x a n ‘First Co liege Daily in the South' Vol. 57 Price Five C e n t s AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, A PRIL 15, 1958 Six Pages Today No. 154 Assembly to Hear Plea ^ Ballot ' For UT Honor System Set for Today j By KAY LON GCO P E B y K A Y L O N G C O R E An h o no r code for UT w ill be d e n t body. I a p p ro v ed o r dis ap prov ed by the stu- “ th e r e is no place a m o n g o u r *tvt-1 | a p p ro v ed or disapproved by the stu- “ th e r e is no place a m o n g o u r stvt- j den t body for those few p erso ns who I p r e s e n te d a t a special Student As- the e n c o u ra g e m e n t of Dr. 1 do not wish to achie ve and main- se m b ly m e e tin g F ri d a y a t 5 p rn., H a r r y H. R a n so m , vice-president tain a high s ta n d a r d of good eiti- D a v e M illican a n d Alfred M iller an- a n d p r o v o s t , a s m a l l gro up of Uni- zenship b a s e d on the honesty and p o u n c e d M o nd ay night. th r e e die in tegrity of the in dividual.” v ersify students has spent At If a p p ro v e d b y the Student As- \ m on th s in p re p a r a tio n of “ T he U n i - 1 T h e code ha s been p re p a r e d for ; Wl11 ? ° . , I « s e m b lv . the bill will go on the Gen- e r a l E lec tio n ballot April 23, to be ! P r e a m b l e versify of to code T exas Honor Code.” the e x p re s s purpose of serv in g as a ^ p r i m a r y ballot for I. .>8-u9 B a r and the law Schocl guide to th e a ch ie v e m e n t and m a i n - ! Association re p r e s e n ta tiv e s I tena nc e of high s t a n d a rd s for pres- ed ltor of n ew sp ap er. ent and in-coming students. ,hp Dlcoards will handle the ad m in istratio n of the honor s y s te m . It will be the d u ty of ev ery stu d e n t to re p o r t an v evidence of r e s a r r i in s dishonesty tu rn e d in for c red it th a t m a y be observed. c a n d id a te s a r e : B a r O s c a r T e e g e rstro m ... • , T stu d e n t's guilt, If investigation of such evidence discloses a the ease findings a r e re p o r te d to the de an of his college o r school with a re co m m e n d atio n of the pen alty to he assessed, acco rding the seriousness of to C and ida tes a r e certified b y an election co m m ission, anil a p p lica­ tion for office fo rm s posted on the Townes Hall bulletin’b oard . N a m e s ! of w in n ers in th e p r i m a r y election will bp posted on the board follow­ ing the official tally T u e sd a y a f t e r ­ noon. Ruling Given On Political Fees C o m b o s Limited To 5 Instrum ents on the p a r t y 's inform ativ e m a t e r ­ iel. This a s s e s s m e n t shall be d istrib ­ the opposed uted equally am o ng can d id a tes involved. Unopposed ca n d id a tes will not h a v e to p a y an assessm en t. Tile com m ission also ruled that combos m a y a c c o m p a n y seren ade s but th a t the combos will be limited to five instrum ents. 'Hie seren ad es will also be limited to five m inutes, ia limn stun ts which cam p a ig n in g olla t person to person m u s t be ap prov ed | a t hefore it is done. This includes all c a m p a ig n involve se re n a d e s and hands that a r e to be used on the c a m p u s . to check things with the election com m ission will bp g rounds for disqualification. F a il u re these H O W A R D W OLF RICHARD KEETON Wolf, Keeton Write Cam paign Platforms P u n is h m en t of a s tu d e n t's viola­ tion will he d ete rm in e d by thp honor bo ard in the p a r t ic u l a r school o r college th e violation o ccurred . These individual boards shall consist of 12 m e m b e r s and • A m o r # effective fr e s h m a n 2 alte rna tes, who will he nom inated th e violation. ★ in which Lecture Series Continues Today T w o ca n d id a te s ha v e filed in the . . . for stu den t body p , . , , I orientation . - ' . — a n d R ic h a rd Keeton student evaluation of ch rn pus to r ni» students. race H o w a r d Wolf h a s en tere d as a can- c u r r i r u ju m ,n al! s r hools d id a t e for the R e p re se n ta tiv e P a r - ' tv • L q ual rights on an a for die — * S tud en t P a r t y . Both of the c a n d i­ d a te s h a v e sub m itted their quali- , O ra tio n s a n d p latform s to the le x - an. *aid "T ile P re s id e n t's office of the S tu d e n ts’ Association needs a p e rs o n m a t u r e enough to d e se rv e a n d re c e iv e re s p e c t of both the ad- m i n i s t r a t i o n a n d In listing his qualifications, Wolf included his m e m b e rs h ip in F r i a r s . c n n r _ Phi Delta p h i D ea l ’ 1 ia ernii.\ o r a r y political science fra te rn ity , an d Sigm a Alpha Mu fra te rn ity , SpnT d flS p a r l ,n m en ta r- S(udent Assomb]y> on renrCra n jzation comm ission, a n d ^ “ I f u l l y r e a l i z e that student g o v - a’ thp S tudent A s s e m - 1 g e n s ” will hp th e subtopic of Dr. the b,-v - SlK m e m b e r s an d one alter- j C arl Pontius Sw anson, William D. in biology, Johns long s e m e s te r who will Hopkins University', in his lectu re thus T u esd ay at I p m . in E x p e rim e n t na,p s b a b bp selected a t the end J Gill professo r • of eac h . ne sorvf> fo r a o n e-y ear te r m , for o verlapp ing pro viding an d th e re b y p erm ittin g continuity J Dr. S w an so n’s lectu re is one in i of the b o a r d s action. a special series of lectures to be the board s action. In the r a s e of a stu den t c o m ic - p re s e n te d in the o b se rv a n c e of the te r m s a1 Science Building ll! « , • , „ , ‘ in tv ^ ' an p' p r,p ^ app ellate honor b o ard to the Univer- jjon jn violation of the honor code, I U n iv e rs ity ’* 75th Y ear. This series sity's 1558 S u m m e r Session is now is sponsored by th e D e p a r tm e n t o f available at the R e g i s t r a r s Office the P l a n t R e s e a rc h For stu den ts interested in atten din g T he cata log ue shall for serve re v iew cases See A SS FM B I, Y, P a g e 3 In B otan y an d I Institute. s u m m e r .school. Bill Hinkle's petition hea rin g w as postponed until W ednesday a t 5 in T ex as Union 309. H i n k l e p.m . F o u r new n a m e s hav e been add- w as disqualified T h u rsd a y for f a i l - 1 P(j to the list of stu den ts who a r r tire to take his Constitutional quiz by the deadline. seeking c a m p u s posts in the spring election April 23. ’58 Su m m e r C a ta lo g u e R e ad y for Distribution Blood Donations Will Begin Tomorrow in Union Ballroom % A p r o g r a m to a tt r a c t outstand- ing high school students U n iv e rs ity of T exas. to The 1 stu den t affairs, as well as those th e difference b etw een a c a d e m i c , ours m ust becom e a dea th ^ To obtain m o re experienced University of the fit '• 1 to a doctor, life an d w ho then ac cep ts o r r e je c ts him. for you and som eone you R ejections for variou s h ealth reas- th* Austin on* average from 15 to 20 per cent tot ’ re q u ire s his platform Keeton said. “ In a little bit of your blood m a y m e a n however, he “ A few m in utes of y o u r tim e and ho co u n selo rs for m e n ’s an d w o m en 's p resident of y o ur student body, I Blood Bank re m in d ed prospective See P R E S ID E N T . P a g e 2 d o r m s . donors this week. I The blood-giving p ro f e ss itself is 'Hie donor s tre tch e s out painless. fu r th e r e xam in atio n, ' on a heil and a nurse rubs bis is sent a r m with pro ca in e and in serts a needle, which hr does not feel. He squeezes a piece of h ard rub be r, helping to p u m p the blood. After a 10-minute rest. he is r e a d y to leave an d re s u m e r e g u l a r a ctiv i­ ties. T he T exas Comm ission on H igher Educa­ tion cleared the w ay Monday for appropria­ tion of $1 million of the U niversity Available Fund for a basic research and academ ic im ­ provem ent fund fields of natural science, social science, and the hum anities. the in Final action on the allocation will bo taken by the Board of R egents a t its April 26 m eeting. The fund is to go into effect Sep­ tem ber I, the beginning o f the fiscal year. “This plan stem s from the approval bv the legislature and the voters of the consti- tutional am endm ent to broaden the invest­ ment base for the Perm anent U niversity Fund,” said Logan Wilson, U niversity presi­ dent. W hile the allocation of SI million is ex ­ pected to go a long w ay toward furthering the goal of m aking UT a “U niversity of the first class,” th e am ount is far below the graduate facu lty’s estim ate of $4,500,000 needed to bolster fully the U niversity’s basic research needs. Tile fund plan is designed to: Latest Battle W on By Hom e Ec Exes E x -stu d en ts of of Home E conomics ha v e gained a T ex as W om an’s U niversity in Den- de lay in th e ir fight before the Com- ton. the D e p a r tm e n t ' r e n t r a t in g the g ra d u a te w ork at •E n co u ra g e excellence; •S u p p o rt essential inter-de­ partm ental programs in basic research; • A t t r a c t leading scholar* to th* U niversity an d to keep those who a r e on the faculty; • Build up an d stre n g th e n UnW versify r e s e a r c h c ollection s; • Meet the d e m a n d s m a d e upon in te rn atio n al the universities by situation. Protest Ballots Urge Write-ins th ere has been a “ misconception-— a m isu n d e rs ta n d in g — betw een the .C om m ission on H igher E d uca tion an d the U n iv ersity's B oard of Ro- gents She said acte d in posal h a d b e e n carefully and thoroughly re s e a rc h e d and w as be- mg mission. re c o m m e n d e d by the Ix'liof th a t would a lm o st certain ly lo se .” would hp used the R egents had p ro g r a m s , and ★ He added that, none of the m oney to finance c r a s h th ere fore the r e ­ the pro- suits an d benefits would be long- ra n g e and p e rm a n e n t, The fund would be allocated by the Com- I the adm inistra tion , on advice by I See A PP R O P R IA T IO N S , P a g e 6 “ Write-in P ro te s t E lectio n” b a l­ lots w e re found tac ke d on c a m p u s bulletin boards, in res tro o m s and cla s sro o m s, and in Tile Daily T e x ­ a n ’s new s office M onday. R o y E n g r Ik e: 'Hie ballot r e a d s : P re s id e n t Vice-president. - T exa n E d ito r — E d d U C lark ; R a n g e r E d ito r - - J. M ax Smith. The T exan w as ablp Joh n R e a g a n ; Twice-Toppled Owls Face Sturdy 'Horns league Tile rev en ge-m ind ed Ri< o Owls piled the effort* ‘ ■ orne to Austin T u e sd ay to play of p itch er G eorg e M yers an d In­ fielders Woods- W oodman an d M ax dio Ah is Myers h a s ju m p ed info th* h orns a t 3 p.m . a t C lark Field, SWU h it!m g an d pitching spotlight ify| b atting a v e r a g e w th a leading T ex as th ro ug h larg ely l o n g ­ fin*-' See HORNS, P a g e 3 ,. „ to locate B e aten 11-0 and 14-1 bv T e x a s 'n th eir opening g a m e s of the sea- only one of these proposed candi- 500 in Housf™- the Owls hav e since played 9 g a m e s and won 5, inelud- . . • d ates, Roy Engolke, t e x a s m g su rp ris e triu m p h s o v e r E ngelke told The T ex an late Mon- A&M a n ,, SMU An u p , rt v jrlo ry d ay n ight “ no one w as authorized bv Hi e an i ex p e rte d verd icts by MU and T exas A&M would put by m e to do this and I 'm not r u n ­ horns and M u stang s in n ing .” the co nference lead with ggics arid Owls virtu ally tied ■'■ond. throwing the ra c e in*o I four-wnv chase. the I / a tic f th e Ag / “ This thing is a ve ry g e n eral and I sp eak d iso rg anized p ro test but for no one but myself. I do n't I re know' who is responsible for th is .” TI) that die “ write-in ;oun protest w as t alked o\ ■ r by several p erso ns including him self He said at ( he did not know an yth ing about who is distribu tin g the ballots. He did adm it Ri 'Hi the m ound ■ne, frTsh from the ir re- J 1 win o v e r the Aggies .Station, will send Boh the to est. T h eir loft- inked the Owls on throe the season opener. J e r r y rig h t­ ’ll probably s t a r t for the hard-thro w ing stylish for New ISA to Meet At 8 p.m. in Union In d epen den t students will discus* organization a n d plans for the new Independent Students Association at the Steeling C o m m ittee m e e t­ ing T uesday evening. 'Hie m eetin g w ll begin at 8 p rn. in Un. • J U / e p r -’dent stud ents to attend. A proposed constitution, project* f >r tile rest cf the spr ng an I next 8-1 fail, put :;' .tv, aud f- -shtnan orien- rn- tation will be discussed. -r ii .. been r ha< 'Hie election com m ission w a r n s mission on H igh er E ducation * lepl,on ^ m i s s i o n w a r n s ! " 1SSU1" ™ ‘ ' * ‘*,n die e a se of the I. niversity, told the , som e senior an d the I m v e isity instead of c o n - [C om m ission th a t she believes that I w ho m otherw ise Dr. Wilson s a y s the plan “ would , Mr S ' J o ° B ailey * s P °k c s m a n for g u a ra n te e th a t T e x a s would keep jun io r scholar* tho U n iversity *. ,K to . Anyone betw een the ages of 18 and 59 who is in good h ealth m a y ,T. Max Smith w er give blood. U n m a r r ie d persons less Stu dent Directory than 21 y e a r s of ag e m ust have w ritten perm ission of p a re n ts or they m a y i legal g u a rd i a n before donate. quiry w a s to no avail. laid C. ( d a r k s c o m m e n t w as, I m not to m e. “ It s all news ru n nin g for a n y th in g .” The n a m e s of John R e ag an and not listed rn the and fu rth e r in­ Ab Owl. Patel Visits From India World Value of English Seen The All-University Blood Drive will be taking blood fro m 9 a rn. to 5 p m. W ednesday the Main Ballroom of T ex as Union, an d all students a i r urged to contribute, said M arg o Wiley, Blood D riv e co­ c h a ir m a n . in Donors should w a it four hours a ft e r a m e al before giving blood. they m a y have J Before donations Business School Schedules Week BBA Week will be held April such snacks as tea or coffee, with- 17-18, out c r e a m ; fruit, fruit j u i c e s , soft d rink s; and u n l e t t e r e d c ra c k e r s. Sponsored b y the BBA Student toast o r Uouncil, the pu rpose of BBA Week is to a cq u ain t faculty and students with the functions of all profes­ sional and honorary’ organization* n the College of B usiness A dm in­ istration, and at time foster closer faculty student re la ­ tions. the s a m e Both professional and h o no rary o rganizations will ha v e display first I moths on telling floors of W agg on er Hall the atmid tho ground and functions within their News In Brief... From the Wire By the A s s o c i a t e d Press y American 'Moons' A l one - - A t Last MOSCOW rh o Soviet I nion m a d e c a r r y in g Sputnik II h a s broken up an d b urned out on a tr a il t h a t led ed ■cross Brazil. Blood donation is not complieat* from reg istratio n de^k to exit tak es only An official T a s s s ta te m e n t confirm ed re p o rts of foreign o b se rv e rs 25 m inutes The actu a l blood-giving it offici ii Monday nigh -pho e n tire o peratio n I tog- th a t Sputnik II, which had w hirled around the globe m ire than five re q u ire s only 7 to IO m i n u t e ^ m o n th s, c a m e to its end as it dro pp ed into d e n se r lay ers of the e a r t h s a tm o s p h e re M onday morning. T h e only e a rt h satellites now circling the w orld Hie A m erican. D ie United S ta tes h a s three aloft. # i A i as s a chu s e f f s Co nv i ct s Touch O ff Fire CONC O K U , M a s s . — A g r o u p o f d e s p e r a t e c o n v l e t s t o u c h e d o f f a n e x p l o s i v e f i r e In t h e f u r n i t u r e s h o p a t C o n c o r d K e f o r m a t o r y M o n ­ d a y . In a r i o t o u s o u t b r e a k t h e y s l u g g e d f o u r g u a r d s a n d a c i v i l i a n In stru cto r. T h e m o s t s e r i o u s l y i n j u r e d , t h e c i v i l i a n i n s t r u c t o r , w a s t a k e n t o B o s t o n s M a s s a c h u s e t t s ( l e n e r a l H o s p i t a l s u f f e r i n g f r o m h e a d in J u r i e s . I l e w a s no t on t h e d a n g e r l i s t . C o n g r e s s fo R? !a i n A p p r o p r i a t i o n s Control WASHIN GTON T wo prom inent sen a to rs served notice M onday that C o ng ress will hold fast to its control o v e r app rop riations for defense sp en d in g. P r e s i d e n t E isen ho w er in his defense reorgan izatio n plan will h a v e to recognize th a t a s a fact of life, .Senators Johnson and Bridges ag re e d in s e p a r a t e statem en ts. * # * it D i s g r u n t l e d Ha i t i an O ffi cial Kills F ellow D i p l o m a t Vt V M I I X ! . I O N B u l l e t s f i r e d bv a d i s g r u n t l e d o f f i c i a l o f t h e H a l t t o u c h e d o f f a f o l l o w d i p l o m a t M o n d u v a n d i a n E m b a s s y k i l l e d a r o m p l h a t e d s e r i e s of d i p l o m a t i c i m m u n i t y p r o b l e m s . After reg istration , the donor bas his t e m p e r a t u r e ta k e n by a volun- teer. At the next station, nurses check his pulse, weight, and bk»od p ressu re , and e x tr a c t a sa m p le of blood. At this {joint, he m a y he le a d y to give blood. If the n u rs e s think Inter-Racial Club Seeks UT Okay D ie constitution of the Alpha U p­ silon Tau social club w as filed last week in the office of It. U. Ken­ ney, a ss ista n t dean of student life. on vice-president gro .p, said Mon­ ad intends to or (•cognition as the Inc. presid ent, W alter and R uben Sher- A ndrew Jeff* of the inter-rac d ay night the ganiz.e and as4 Alpha Bhi Alp John Hai lox F ra t e rn it y , in. A S a m u e l D e v i e i i s , .VI d i e d f r o m w o u n d s in t h e c h e s t a n d n e « l>. P o l i c e s a i d V n d r e T o t i s s a i n t , a d m i t t e d t h e s h o o t i n g . II#* h a d c o m e t o W a s h i n g t o n on ly a fe w w e e k s agr* a n d l a s t S a t u r d a y m a r r i e d a n \ m e r u a n w o m a n . i Bhi Alj Cornell Univ em o tio nal ar under-grad e rm e d ia te < oblate chap than 25,( ire M O SCOW Van Cliburn, the T ex as cap italist s son who won the .Soviet ber*. R u b l e s - W i n n i n g T e xan Gets K h r u s h c h e v B e ar H u g f ir s t se< r o t a r y o f t h e E m b a s s y , .'th, ill b a fr in 1 ch ap te rs, and iterv, nded in 1906 has become racial, with two 141 states. m e n a re mein- in 36 Union s T chaik ov sk y piano contest, got a b e a r hug from N ikita K hrush- chow - • ............... — r -h! a* a K o n im re appert for the co ntestants of the international . | A I- et the • b Mr,rd*- Tw ° C a n d id a te s A p p ly ... . iilen Tu _ . . . j . . . . . jw o canuinatcx have . . . . if J6 Jab and a the winner t n t >nteat. 4 ( Jim Russell mac i^on» Monday. e their app Hold on wa to I o r petroleum < ngir An additional SU to the U niversity. Selections of ihe m a d e by a Univers rn iff ce H 'd d n x of the tho curre n t y e a r an »>!< (Withe .Ti mg vtufient and MvLCi*and, petrous / / M i l l. ( O P L I .V X n Batel of the U niversity India, is on c a m p u s the Conference on t h e . a n g ja g e Can B lay in ’nent of Texas, visiting classes lo chnique* of f> ing. Dr. Bate Bv MI Dr M S. I O' B aroda, to sp o a k at Bart T hat I the I lev elopr Betside* vi met hods and I - j pp i f s ; ianRi tw o tai s {>eaks He Un tandin* at th* K p rn fie, no in thie “ Y the Indi His h >hn BBA A prize for the t display will he ; BBA Dance af the F rid ay . Tickets couple and mav any BBA Count I W h ite s b a nd will At the d a n c e la] S w eetheart, and ti dent Council will t Special fe atu re s be fat ulty-student T h u rsd a y at 4 p r of the* we tennis r n. on th* atches Worn- Seybert to Talk To Pharmacists md a soft d a y night Tht Whit* •mp Engineers to Get Two Scholarships md ii cher of and phai tire m en t B atts A at 5 p n w ill to t will t>e My com- fy f a t G ra d u a tio n Date Set and the state. f o r t h o re»|M*et *’ V«iu c l i n n o t h a v e mm l e t ) w i t h ­ o u t I n d i v i d u a l , ( ■ a n d h l b a d a m e s s a g e o f u n i v e r ­ s a l l o v e arid b r o t h e r h o o d , ’* aav * H r. P a t e l . He will leave Au Min ne\* wee ar When Linguists M e et . . . i 11-a U eiv f-sity r f Baroda, \r ■ a CU. M, S. Pa*e', Jeff, ' • e -d 'x -a A r t e - ’s*'-”' I . P»*e ' . r * - a ’ p I*- o a a * . n i s ^ c gary ig h o o u , «r.u for fo«r " q u a n t s a t - • a ’"'"I a r a " - o l d o w ’b o u t i*" * s - r n re d *o st.-ry E" q I sn for a i th* U niv»riiti*i. j r - Cf er’s feature writer. Concluded Editor Paul Binge; “ It Is our unyield­ ing conviction that the president’s rulings un­ questionably contradict the regulations of the Faeulty-Student Committee on Publications and deny HINCHM AN the right to function as a news­ paper. “ We do not deny the president's right to issue the regulations. We do feel, however, that any organization that is forced to operate under these conditions, cannot justly consider itself a news­ paper. “ Therefore, we resign.” President Gideonso has said there will he “ a re-thinking of the faculty legislation and the nd- ministrntive regulations governing this aren (pub­ lications).” The dispute arose over handling of a story in the men’s physical education department. Tho publications hoard censured the HINCHMAN for its handling of tile story, hut took no disciplinary action. A few' days later, the same subject matter was again presented. Explained the paper: "Deeming last week s editorial, ‘Questionnaire,’ controver­ sial, President Cideonse, through his office as the highest responsible administrator at Brooklyn College, invoked the multiple editorial policy. "However, until last Wednesday when the (pub­ lications board) was still in existence, filets ) made no ruling on tile controversially of the said editorial. Invoking multiple editorials on contro­ versial issues was a function of the (board).” • To us, it’s another ease of what administrators often do when placed in uncomfortable sj>ots by student newspapers: instead of working through regular channels for explanation and recourse (if such is necessary), they resort to dictatorial methods under pressure to accomplish “ justice ” And when It occurs, as it has in Brooklyn, it never fails to make us shudder with revulsion. Little Man O n tile C ampus Bv Bilder ’ S u i Hi L 6 A W E A ZCJSJ*' Representative Party Speaks M y ( H \ \ ( V Y ( H O I T Tu r f y ( h » i r m » n T h * * * q u estio n s need to hr* an s­ w e rer) n th * lig h t of m y o p in ion of student g o v e rn m e n t. g o v e rn m e n t K ir - t. stu dent g o v e rn m e n t m u t tty c o m p a r in g riot b* e v a lu a te d it to s ta t* o r n atio n a l p o litic s S h i­ ft nt d iffe r e n t g o a I s, and m u st u ' * d iffe r e n t those ends. r 'M r ,' of a c h ie v in g T h e r e a r * no V ita l in te re sts o f stu d e n ts w h ic h a r * a ffe cte d h y stu­ d e n t g o v e rn m e n t h as for Stud ent g o v e rn m e n t in c o m p a r is ­ on to n a tio n a l g o v e rn m e n t h as r*l- ;it c iv little flivver W h ile w e a r * life w e a re stu dents i ti/ens la c k bort w h ile T h * for or. . a o f th* q u estio n of re e le c tio n often k eep s o ffic e h o ld e rs )>eing r e a lly c o n c e rn e d alroot w h a t stu dents ft clr Th* -* and o th e r d if­ fe re n c e s a re obv ious to a n y b o d y . fro m th * ^ is W hile in sore* w a ys student gov­ * a ' e or national gov­ ernment. ernm ent on a sm all scale in m an y way*- it is not and should be e v a l­ uated by standards quite different b o m tho-c pertaining to national gov ernm ent • t h i n k a r e W h a t <1** v a n t h e p u r ­ p o s e . * o f a s t u d e n t p a r t s ? '■bident parties have several re s ­ ponsibilities I-’ ii .of c o u rse th e y should p ro ­ I d o n t v id e i md id 'd es for of f e e s m e a n m e r e ly choose th e ir n o m ­ in e e s fro m those th a t w a n t to ru n , r a t h e r to a c t iv e ly e n c o u ra g e but in qual fieri people to p articipate student governm ent T h ird , Secondly, they should discourage unqualified candidates from run­ ning bv refuging to endorse them. th ey should provide a m ore perm anent fram ew o rk upon w h ich student gov ernm ent r an he built, bv producing people who w ill w ork rn non-e|ectiv* jobs as we 11 as f'ln for office • W fiat t ti** f u n c t i o n of a p l a t ­ Is f o r m , a n t i s h o u l d r o m e b e f o r e o r a f t e r t i n- r a n r l i d a t e s a r e r h o s * n ? it The platform should represent tile g e n o a ! area-1 of agreem ent of tim p a r ty ’s candidate* If should present tim ideals and goals for w h ich th ey are w illin g to w'ork during the com ing y e a r Thus if ra n only com e after the candidates h ave been chosen • t h i n k a r e W h a t d o v rui t h e I s ­ s u e s * I think that there is onlv on* p rim a ry issue That m w hether a p a rty w hich adopts a platform that prnmist s a 1 t ion in m ore areas than is po si ole in one year, and which Is constantly am ending and rhang- ' R i g l i t to K n o w ’ Stressed jog th a‘ platform w hen public opin­ ion is c ritic a l, is better suited to serve th* interests of the student body than a p a rty w hich a fte r thorough considera­ lengthy and tion. presents a platform from w h ich results rf,n he accom plished in a y e a r s tim *, and w-hich is w ill­ ing to stand behind that platform w ithout hesitation. • W h a t do you think of th* S tu ­ dent P a r ty p la tfo rm " F ra n k ly , I think t is fa r too long to e ve r b* accom plished in one y e a r. It sounds m ore bk* w hat th* Student P a r t y would like to se* it could possibly don* than w hat fin in a 12-month period. that r don’t think It seems strange that one-third of this -car's planks w e re a l s o U**d last y e a r M y most im portant objection corn erns th* rr ethod of selec ting P the p a rty should come out w ith part of the platform , then after they are c rit­ in the Texan add another icised plank then w aif and see how the students react, an*! a fte r th* R e p ­ resen tative p a rty announces its then change again I platform , think that they should flee id* w hat th* issue* ar*, and then stick bv those ideals a nd not he changing m e re ly because they losing votes cir irrrau se of adverse c r it i­ cism , fear • W h a t i s y o u r p e r s o n a l opinion on s t u d e n t r i g h t s " 'bhp stand that the R ep re se n ta ­ tive P a r t y tf>ok on this question expresses m y feelings so T w ill c la r if y it here XV* don’t seek to chang* the present situation com ­ p letely tile day tile election is over H o w ever, in w h ich the fundam ental rights of an y student h ave been abused through u n fair ch*-rim inntm n w * w ill w ork for the rem oval of that discrim ination. • in areas W h a t clo y o u t h i n k of s t u d e n t e l e c t i o n s ? think I that g e n e ra lly student elections can serve a w o rth w h ile purpose even if some of the offices m ight he better filled if th ey w ere appointed I flo feel, how ever, that w hen f>0 per cent of the cam pus w id* candidates of one p a rty belong to one frate rn ity , that the p a rty is m ak in g a m ockery of i h n r p a rty and of student governm ent. I do think, though, that student in general and elec­ governm ent tions in p a rtic u la r can and do pro­ vide a w orthw h ile function bv train in g students to Vie good and responsible citizens Party I lait Chairmen It Our On Stu Polities Pi ’ess Vital to Personal Freedom Ho O M I MC \ M H I I X r r u n s t u f f Wr i t e r i i a s t i n I* s e r i e s of a r t i c l e s o n " F r e e d o m o f H i * P r e s s . " ) You are a par t tim * reporter for a w eekly new paper You trot down to C ity H all for a last-minute check at the police ixwiks A tough-looking desk sergeant hands you the ixxaks You run down a new sy Item w hich reads steve I Ct p m , T hu rsday, O ctober Johnson, 55 I 'tai Mr T y e a rs ob) I TOT* W a te r Avenue, signs com plaint against M iss Je a n Jo h n ­ son . *> four th grade te n her. H ous­ ton School The fath er charges M iss Johnson w ith a* unit and battery upon Ii s ii i . lit e Peg g y, 9 ye a rs old <'ase turned over to J P XX’il- ■ iv < "U n iv courthouse In vestig at­ ing offi< er I >av is and Anderson. is tire to call You finish reading iii* entry and tire first riling that rotors to your m ind J I *; m aybe there s a hearing scheduler! soon Hut then you take another look at the police en try. T h ere it is. af the in blocked, tile page bottom r if • t o Tin: petters pent P l ’B L I S H . " it) NO P P .I . I r c c d n n i o f Ho p r e is now w e ’ve bern b e a r­ F o r v ed editors and pub’isher* Ing glor freedom of tile press It talk all. to I TTT when Jo h n Pete r goes ha Z e tiger w as acquitted on a ch arge of seditious libel against B ritis h Colonial G o vern o r W illia m Cosby. T h a t v erd ict del not guarantee our so-called freedom of Hie press T o d ay, IHM) ye irs later, we are still fighting L r that precious lib e r­ ty j; J.(ru n ic* I n w ading only by the fra m e rs of tire Constitution. solini, P e m n ists killed W e ’ve liern told how H itler, M us­ am i the Com m un­ freedom of the press they controlled. T he s w e re in tim e drs- sssorted m eans. T he iprison or kill those nk as they think and C u ba's inform ed b w recked tile »per that rriti- adrnim stration in power, In- 'ov ernm ent rters th ey’d lie prosecuted es reflecting on the ac- if governm ent o fficials, s rough censorship. T he in a mess one editor says som ething against M r. R a tis ta ano not publish” notes on public records a r* found here am i th ere; an of­ fic ia l once refused to give in fo rm a­ tion on a $15,000 suit filed by a threat* citizen against h ave been thrown at us se v e ra l tim es one tun* caught a police­ m an fooling around w ith a ju ven ­ ile g irl detained overn igh t in ja il, a policem an heat up an old m an, two detectives force a w om an to the c it y ; undress to sear. h her in rn office supposedly Once I w as escorted out of a secret m eeting staged by the local politico* m apping plans for anoth­ Som e e r poll tax-peddling d rive if me persons m ight like to kill once I went they had the chance jail as a ju ven ile of­ into county fixed of fours**, and c am * fender out w ith a neat a rtic le on tit* lad. Result a cleanup, two jap ers fired, and til* sh eriff was fit to be tied ' The |>oor m an died not bx* long ago i A m e ric a n new spapers h ave been letting the people know w hat their governm ent has tx*en tip to from the Boston T ea P a r t y to Teapot I louie, to trx iay’s story on H av e into B e r k T h e press has gone places w h ere police feared to in ­ vestigate D uring the C iv il W a r at least one publisher, having run out of new sprint, put out his paper on rolls of the unadorned hack of w allp a p er because h* believed in pl* s right to know. the p< eve Y o rk C ity, a collector [tort stole m ore than a m i'* lacs and m ade off to Kurope ars ago. M a y o r Fernando mike a ll sorts of records for In Ne at the p lion doll IOO yea Wood hr eorrupti W illia boys sir tile pre! boys in racket tra n c h e for well for the brought to earth. M al step y Tw eed $200 m illi rd in to < ad expose I selling and his »n b efo re rut do the T w e e d s ors* ca r es to supplying substitute* ■to-do m en drafted to fight t ’nion A rm y . Tire press the monstrous Tw eed down - from “ Absolut© freedof to discuss public foundation stone o b o rty ," said H e rb m an whose ad m inistration was L a s te d !>y tile A m e ric a n press of the pro icstions is A m erican t H o n e r . W a lte r I.ip p m an declared, "T h e re ra n ire no lib e rty for a com m unity w hich inform ation by lacks w hich to detect lies ” til* The K u K lu x K l an is no longer a power through large regions of the country because newspapers have told of its excesses and crim es, points out B o b Considine. N ew spa­ per* have brought a tx nit m ore ex- poses of p o litical g raft and m a l­ p ra ctice la w -enforcing institution. Hues L in g once tried to tax u n frien d ly papers out of lost his existence, hut M r. fight in the courts than any I>ang M r. Considine tells of th* tim e Potsdam , din asked T ru m a n "W h o let them in ? ’’ ’T h e m ’ w ere th* reporters. T h e question has been raised by generations of poli­ tician s and bosses. W illia m Randolph H earsf said, “ The press m ust point the truth fu lly and fearlessly. It must give the public a ccu rate Inform ation.’* “ T hera Jo sep n P u litz e r stated. there is not a crim e is not a dodge, there is not a trick , there is not a swindle, there is not a vice w hich docs not live by secrecy. G et thesp things out in the open, describe them, attack them, rid i­ later cule them, and sooner o r public opinion w ill sweep them a w a y .’' Sig m a D elta • ('iii A dvan cem en t of Freedom of Inform ation C o m m it­ tee puts forth this question: W h ich is hotter for tile people, the e ffi­ cien cy harm ony of secret com m un­ istic governm ent in R ussia or the turbulence of free open d em o cratic governm ent in secret A m e ric a ? No (Mihtician has answ ered th* question. The report adds, “ If e v e ry new s­ paper editor and publisher and e v e ry rad io and television station . in the fight for freedom of inform ation, secret gov­ ernm ent in A m e ric a would end a l­ most o ve r night ” . would join . Pro b lem s confronting die press today concerning this freedom are those w e 've had for the last five o r ten ye a rs and tile five or IO be­ fore that, anil take it all the w a y to the first press and the people who w orked for it The problem is how' to fir ’ci t the freedom of the people who read if. and even the people who constitute it and hate it R eason the press is, and should he, free to speak its piece is be­ cause e ve ry A m e rican is and should bi* free to speak his piece. The * ic ie r o ra to r md the Sow X ark T im es share a comm on free­ d o m ; or, it. Free d o m of the press depends on the in dividu al. M r. Considine de­ clared, “ . . com * hell or high w ate r tile C S press w ill rem ain in there to for know ,” jo u r right together fighting they Ins* . is W e must rem em b er the district attorney • If ou r press, how ever, Is to fight in th* future for our right to know, young jo u m a'ists m ust not think the m a yo r Is m ore im portant than a human being, the s h e riff’s that badge is a r a il from the A lm ig hty, that the law , arid that the governor is som e­ thing between M an and God. that the new spaper has the sam e obligations and rights as a citizen. The paper rots w ith a consciousness of the public interest and w e lfa re ; to rec­ ognize that a good exam ple is a great constructive force; to w ork for the com m on good, supported by the conviction that w hat is in the in interests of the people the hest interests of the newspaper. its freedom is inform ation and a citizen D eny a new spaper of denied the rig h t to speak. is — - ^ I Student Party Speaks B y T H I R S T O N B A R N E T T T a r t y C h a i r m a n 1. W hat do you p a rty responsibility? think about I t seems to me that a political party, and th* cam p u s’ political parties included, has this responsi­ b ility to the voters: to m ake pro­ m ises and c a rry them out: in other words, to present a platform and to see that the p arty s candidates uphold the p arty s principles and put them into effect. -When a p arty has lived up to its responsibilities, it leaves the vot­ ers w ith c le a r cut a lte rn a tiv e s : do the candidates of this p a rty seek in an active w a y to c a r r y out the p a rty 's promises and are th* p a r­ ty s promises worth c a rry in g out." 2. XX hat do you consider to lw» th* function of the party plat­ form s — a r* they good or bad? .Should the platform be adopted first, and the candidates run on the platform , or should the c a n ­ didates be chosen firs t and allo w ­ ed to help d eterm in e the plat­ fo rm ? The p arty platfo rm should be guiding force of the candidates of that party placed in office. R e g a rd ­ less of w hether a candidate thinks he could have been elected with or without p arty support, if he ran on a p a rty slate, he owes it to those who elected him to c a r r y out to the best of his a b ility the p a rty plat­ form . If a p a rty is a political p a rty then the m em bers of that p a rty ought to h ave the prerogative of form u­ lating the prom ises it wishes to m ake and nom inating the candi­ dates that its m em bers feel w ill c a r r y out that platform . W hen the candidates w rite the platform as w as the case w ith the Rep, P a r ty , then you h ave political expediency in operation and not the dem ocratic form ulation of a platform . Candidates should be able to express them selves concerning the platform hut th ey ought not h ave an y m ore to say about it than other p a rty m em b ers. The candidate him self has a v e r y defi­ nite choice a fte r the platform has been form ulated as to w h eth er he is w illin g to m ake c e rta in prom ises o r not by running on a p arty ticket. 3. XVhat do yon con sid er to be th* most Im portant Issues In this spring's election? just ter housing for m a rrie d students, for baby sitters if th ey w an t them , and so forth. B u t who w an ts com ­ m ittees on student w a g e s ? Person ­ ally, I had ra th er h ave the raise than another com m ittee. A d irecto r of extra c u rric u la r a ffa irs ? This w as the band jum ping on w agon of the Toth y e a r com m ittee concerning extra c u rric u la r a ffa irs ; They are m aking such a recom ­ “ nuf mendation sa id .” N evertheless is a plat­ form and it does m ake prom ises. I hope that their candidates w ill attem pt to c a rry them out if they are elected and that the students w ill rem em ber if they do not. th eir report, it in 5. How do you as Student P a r t y ch airm an feel en th* d is c rim in a ­ tion plank ? W ho in the w orld w ants to ba d iscrim inated ag ain st? I don't, do JO U ? M y advice concerning dis­ crim ination against the N eg ro on this cam pus and off would be to ask the candidate w h at he intends to do about it. I personally believe that a1! men are free and deserve equal rights and treatm en t — the color of a m an s skin has nothing to do with an y rights he m a y h ave as a hum an being. 6. XX hat do you think about This y e a r student elections in g e n e ra l? in in previous y e a rs Texan editors have run independ­ ently because candidates have said they believed in prin cipal that a Texan editor should not a ffilia te h im self with the view s of an y p ar­ tic u la r group. I b i s is nonsense; an y editor Is prejudiced at certain points and it is good to know w hat those points are since it is much h a rd e r to get one out of office than to put one in. T his plea by T exan editor ran- didates resem bles the reply’ of the old spinster to h er pastor when approached concerning her pledge to the church budget. H e r serene rep ly w as, “ I ’m so rry R e vere n d . I prom ised God that I w ouldn’t pledge.” The Clique representing th* de­ sire of certain groups to becom e “ a c tiv e " on cam p u s; has again rounded up a slate and d ifficu lt it w as I m ight add: the Student T a rty has again put forth its slate along w ith its prom ises. I f it rain s and few people turn out then the Clique w ill return to p o w er: if there is a large turn-out on election day*, th* Student P a r t y w ill rem ain in office. \ When T see the term “ issues” it brings to m y mind a situation in w h ich two o r m ore opinions are It held concerning th* sam e thing takes people on tw o sides of the sa m * fence to h ave an issue; there are candidates on d ifferen t sides of the fence, candidates w ith e n tire ly differen t points of v ie w concerning w h at a student in the Student A s­ sem b ly ought to h* and fin There are those w ho havp ex­ pressed the sam e old truism s about a desire to serve, m o re freedom , m ore liberty, m ore eq u a lity, etc, etc, etc. There a re those w ho be­ lie ve that social change does not c o m e a inuit by a slow process of education hut that people are led b v the noses out of th eir p reju ­ dices. There Is one thing in p a rticu la r that r would like to m ention that is contained in The Student P a r t y platform that re c e iv e s no m ention in that r f Ihe R e p re sen tative P a r t y ; this concerns decisions and resolu­ tions on state n ation al, and in­ The Student ternational affa irs A ssem b ly can at its opinion on these a ffa irs and in so doing it w ill he heard as the voice of the students of T he U n iv e rs ity of Texas (like it or n o t); and those who read these opinions w ill pay attention to them as such. least voice Ask students who w e re in E u ro p e last y e a r if the silence of the Stu­ dent A ssem bly w as not interpreted to m ean assent to the actions of the Adm inistration by the students of this cam pus with reg ard to the B a r b a r a Sm ith incident 4. XX hat do you think of th* R *p rcA cn tat!v* P a r ty 's p la tfo rm ? It is fine as fa r as it goes but it seems to me that the planks ate to nothing m ore solicit votes. E v e ry o n e is for bet­ than attem pts President . . . (Continued F ro m Pa g e I ) shall channel m y efforts toward a real effectuation of this end.” “ I propose a reevaluation end n e cessa ry reorganization of o u r Student Association, so that it m iry become an active, d rivin g force in th* adm inistratio n of student af­ I propose a m ore thorough fairs. unification of student organization* and activities which w ill afford sn adequate representation of all. “ I shall endeavor to a rriv e st a m ore satisfacto ry arrangem ent of U T housing co n tracts; to promote th* expansion and im provem ent of m arried students’ housing fa c ili­ ties. to press for a w age increase for U n iv e rsity student em ployees; to expand the base and benefit* of our Scholarship and lo a n P r o ­ g ram : to t ov am p the student ad- viso rv system w ithin each college and departm ent; to complete the reorganization of Fre s h m a n Coun­ c il; and to afford a flexible and dyn am ic leadership in tile hest In­ terest eif our entire student body.” Keeton a pre med student from Austin, is a m em ber of the T- Association, the G re a t Issues Com ­ m ittee the Cowboys. Alpha E p s i­ lon D elta D elta T au D elta fra te rn ­ ity’. and is a Goodfellnw. On cam pus lie has served as an A rts and Sciences assemhljmaan, on th* Rules and A ppropriation* C om m ittee on the B o ard of D i­ rectors of Texas Student P u b lic a ­ tions as co-chairm an of the C a m ­ pus Chest -md as ch airm a n of the fratern ity division of a Round-!'p P a ra d e His g rad * averag e is 2 W . T h e D a@ T exan O p in io n ! e x p re sse d in T h e D a ily T exan are t h o le o f the Editor or o f the u r U e r o f the article a n d n o t necessarily those o f the U n iv e rsity ad m in istratio n . Th# Dally Texan, a student r llshed tn A ustin. T ex as d a !;v e x c e l’ S a tu rd a y . M onday, Sep te m b e r thro u gh M a y bv T e x a s S tu d e n t Pu b licatio n s. Inc r of The U n iv e rs ity of Texas, ie put* and ho .day periods. e n J ss se ond T a s s m a tte r O rt 18 1943 a i th e P o st O ffic e In A u stin . T e x a s under the a ct o f M a rch 3. 1S79 3473) o r e t th# Ina c r ie s con cern­ e d ito ria l offices ing d e live ry should be m ade In J . I i 107 (C P . 2-2473) and a d ve rtis in g J . B . i l l ( C R 2-2750). J P..P T . o r the rn u lab o ra to ry. J P "d bv t# • I I A S S O C I A T E D I ’ K K S H XX I K K K K K V H K T h e Associated P re s s * e x c lu siv e ly en titled to th * u >• ’ or rep u b licatio n of ai! news dispatches cred ited rn it o r not o th e rs se rred »*d in th a new spaper, and a ll local Item s o f spontaneous o rig in published herein. R ig h ts of p u b li­ catio n of all o ther m a tte r herein a so reserved R epresented for n a tio n a l ad ve rtis in g by N a tio n a l A d ve rtisin g S ervice. Inc, C o lleg e P u b lis h e rs R e p re se n tative „ C h icag o — B o s to n — I n t A n g e les—S a n Fra n c is co N e w Y o rk . N, T . 120 M adison A ve. . Member Associated Celleciate Presa ISI MUM RI P I I O X B A T KS Delivered In Austin Ma *d in A usttn .. Mailed out of town t 75 mon'h .. .1 OO mon’ h .75 month .. S T X U F F O R T H I S I S S I V Night Ed ito r ........................................................... < I R E N A -IO N O R M A N l>e«*k Ed ito r .............................................................. J I M M Y I). T H O R N T O N Assistant N ight E d ito r ........................................................... Ju h a T an ttu V irg in ia M ik a, H a y I/)ngcope, N oel N ight R eporters .............. Copeland, J . M . H ayn es, L e e Jo n e s ........................ N ight Sports E d ito r A ssistant N ight Am usem ents E d it o r .................................................... Assistant Night XX ire E d ito r ................................. Night Society E d ito r ....................... Assistant .................................................. C la rk C arp en ter J a c k E e r i e r J i m H o lm an ................................................................................ R o g e r B ro a c h E lb e r t B re w e r Baba B a rto w ............................................................................... C a :G in * H o e r® T u e s d a y , A p r i l I S , 1 9 5 8 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P a g e 3 ’horn Netters Defeat Tulane Texas v a rs ity tennis team broke Tulane * tw o y e a r w inning streak M o n d a y as they defeated ,the G reen ies 4-9* on P e n irk Courts. Lrid efhated since the 'H orn* heat them in 1956. T ulane won only two single* m atches. ^ T e x a s’ singles victo ries cam e as L au ren ce B e c k e r won over P h illip Tetra 6-0. 6-4 and T e r r y Todd de­ feated T ester Sack 7-5. 6-2. Texas num ber one doubles team of R ic h ­ ard Repton and B e c k e r defeated Ron Horn berg and Sa ck 2-6, 6-4. 6-5 and thp num ber two team of Todd and B U I H inkle won over Tulane s E llio tt Rell and Pe tra 6-1. 6-5 H olm borg took Keeton 6-0. 6-4 and B e ll wnn o ver H in kle 5-6, 6-3. 6-1 for T u la n e ’* victo ries. Assem bly... (Continued F ro m P a g e 1* which a student consider* h im self to be convicted unjust\v. The appellate honor board wall he composed of 12 m em ber*, one elected from each college or school in the fall general election. The rem ain d er a re to b* elected at large from the en tire student body in 1 he spring general election thus providing for total representation and overlap p in g term s perm itting continuity of the hoard s a rtio r« orientation of R esp o n sib ility for U n iversity-w ide this elide w ill he ! under the jurisdiction of the appel­ late honor board, w hich shall co­ ordinate all the efforts of the in­ dividual honor hoards for this p u r­ pose T h ere h ave been previous a t­ tem pts to institute the honor sys­ tem at the U n iv e rs ity , and is now in existence in several classes with the ap p ro val of the students concerned. it If approved th* honor rode would go into effect in th* fall. fo rm u latin g Com m itteem en the U T honor rode include L a r r y Stein ­ berg. Jo h n H. Strasbu rger, Eu g en e Doughtie, Je ro m e R em stein , D a v e M illic a n and A lfred M ille r, c h a ir­ man. j'Horns... (Continued Fro m P a g e I ) and a 4-0 pitching record. M y e rs j trails Pe te E m b r y runs- batted-in departm ent with seven to E m b r y s eight and owns a sp a rk l­ ing I 50 eam ed-nm -avernge the in the leads ATvis, Ja s p e r team and sensational the in hitting with a sophomore, conference .531 I a ve rag e including seven extra base | hits w h ile W oodm an is hitting .429. W’ith A lv is ^nd W oodm an in the j line-up the 'H orn s starting line up I has a batting averag e of .292 and without they are hitting a m eag er .229. them Sudderth wiT! c a rr y a 3 63 E R A .333 into T u esd ay's contes* and a hatting averag e so R ih h F a lk 's pitching corps s e e m s to h ave no trouble pounding that hall Besides A bernathy, the O w ls w ill p rob ably start Fred R u m s second base: Tati wood Stallings shortstop: J e r r y Fpsfein . center field: Rod M u r ra y , first base B o b ­ third base: Claude by R u m s , ligh t field : and B iff Perd u e W h ite left field. One of the Longhorns' most troublesom e riv a ls during the past five ye ars, R ic e comes equipped j w ith a better defense and im pro ved ; hitting than the 1957 O w ls whom Texas defeated three tim es to run its v ic to ry num ber to 105 ag ain st R ic e since the series w a* in a u g u r­ ated in 1915 this Texas, is a realizing that c ru c ia l gam e w ill probably keep intact its re g u la r lineup of W ood­ m an. second base: Glenn Yon R os­ enberg, shortstop R oy M enge. cen­ J e r r y Good, first base: ter field : right third base; K m b ry, A lv is field; W a y n e M cD onald, left field Jo h n n y H a m , c atch er; and Sud- rierth T U X E D O S F O R R E N T A ll S ir e * Longhorn Cleaners 363* f in a d a ln p e T h o n a G R fi-3817 RENT TELEVISION ’V I 3 d n v m in im u m portable o r t a r t ­ er. I'sed Bit: S creen T V $10 m onth I M Iv. Also rent iap e recorder ss tuner $5 H IF! phonos!a ph SIO m o n th !' Rent applies Pu rch ase Let. ua ae rvire vo u r T V tape re co rd e r or record ria 'c r. R F R h M A n ’n < >U 6-3525 2234 Guadalupe ' Nots Stymie Bosox For First Win. 5-2 iJP W A S H IN G T O N P e d r o R am o s. 22-year-old Cuban rig h t­ h ander pitching h;s first opening d a v gam e, dazzled Presid en t E i ­ senhow er and a n early packed house ai G riffith Stadium Mon­ d ay . Fuamo* set Boston down w ith fiv e hit* and hurled W ashington to a 5-2 au rp n se vic to ry over the Red Sox. T he Senator* m a d e the moat of *h a k y Poston fielding in fhe sixth Inning the game w ith three nm *. to c ra c k open J a c k ie Je n s e n bred a hom er bito th* left field bleachers in th* third to account for both Boston run*. Don Bufidin, who had sin­ gled, trotted arrows ahead of Jen- »en. J i m Lem o n drove a solo hom er bito the sam e seats In the fourth for th* Sen ato rs’ first run. Shortstop Buddin, fresh out of the A rm y , scored a Boston run : hut w as one of the chief Red Sox | c u lp rit* afield H e threw w ide to firs t on J im L e m o n ’* grounder at th# *tart of the sixth and the error enabled W ashington to hang on for it* three big runs in that inn­ ing. F ra n k Su llivan , the 6-foot, 7- tnch right-hander a n d even tu al loser, then w alked N orm Zauchin. A fte r H e r b F le w s and Rocks' B rid g e * flied out. R am o s h im self singled Lem on home w ith w h at F.d- represented the w inning run d i* Tost * one-bagger brought in Zauehfn and Pedro. Mural Schedule BOHNA -.HOK PIT C H IN G Jo h n C o p e la n d vs 4 p m R L Ja m e s V o l g h t ; D o n H a n c o c k vs. C h a r cs V e t n . M n u n ' vs M ik e K i r k p a t r i c k w I W M M ik k le t o n F D S a lm o n * vs Lx>u M e n d e l! vs ( U K K Y a r b r o u g h 4 JA p m ' * H a n s e l M u re b so n . R ic h a r d P a r k e r v Na th a n Rvxxsrn R o g e r T o l e r vs W i l l i a m Ju iv a g*> VV i am K < v vs " i n K (■ h P a t e N e ,s o n v s T e r r ' T o p h a m m a r H a ll H a m m o n d v* V nd * S m it h M ik * C a n a d a vs VV) a m H e lf m a n . W i l l i a m B e n s o n nu D o n C la r k C a u l A p rn : I,. V*. D o n M e t e r vs >• G r is s o m v« ro n i^ s id b e r g v« M a c B r o w n vs vs I .c a k e vs B o b R n e h ' F I .en M e n d e l i R a n k in < h a m p n u in - o m p s o n B r a u v e r Das id r w k N i t ­ S t e l e M a s o n T o r n K o lt ik a 3* p rn C c ' ’ M a r t in K l * n \ c n * v W im b e r i'. D o n B ' o r e v* A an A b - a m s n n , D i r k C a rd - F r a n k D a n n e n h a u m v* J o h n L o o T.ncev vs A l'e n M c N e il B . G r u b b s vs vs O tis H i l l J ■ p e r va P r a n k N • < n im T B A I D Cla> * B B o b o r U A p rn 4 p m P r a t h t r v s A acta O ' f * C o -is em B r a e - v n r id g c \’* A lp h a Tau b c f j d S ie na ‘ 11 vs Pl K a p p a A pha D o r m A A b b a vs I , A tle C a m p o s i la m 'n a D e lta vs P h i H O M H ill Kl I n K a p p a V I d o u re r* fin shed to p o i re p o rt Y I IS to J IO '! i.iesdn1 the se ' ni c o n te s ta n ts w ho ha< e i d rn nd sh ou ld ;.a! C o i f c o u r s e A p r il 15 t e E n t n a * d o * A p m IS , ar O ' eg o v v G v m n e 'i u m l l 4 l l NC ING j* « d 8 " Yost rapped out tw o singles in five appearances and also did a slick fielding job at third P la y in g lit h opening gam e Yost in his saved in the Senators the first when he m ade a diving stab of Jensen s low lin er w ith the bases loaded. two runs in A il runs the Sen a to rs’ the sixth w ere unearned. Su lliva n who had won lh of his 14 previous de. cisions w ith the Senators, yielded seven hits M u r r a y W a ll relieved Su llivan afte r the Red Sox starter w as yanked for a pinch h itter in the R ed Sox sev enth. Big Leaguers Begin Race for Pennant B y Mi* Aaa.-elated Bree* look down at F o r at least 24 hour* the W ash ­ ington Senators. la*t y e a r's eellar- dw el!ers, can the rest of The A m erican L eag u e from their first-plare perch a fte r heat­ ing Boston 5-2 in a special open­ ing gam e M onday before 26 674 G riffith Stadium In­ spectators, cluding Presiden t Eisen h o w er. On T uesd ay the w orld cham pion M ilw a u kee B ra v e s w ill send six left-handed barters against P itts ­ burgh right-hander B o h Frie n d <14- 18). W a rre n Spahn (21-11) starts for M ilw au kee. A crow d of about 45,000 w ill get its first look at Ted Kluszew ski in a P ira te uniform . The big first basem an, traded by C in cin n ati last w inter, ap p eal* to have recovered from his back a il­ ment. T here wifi be at least one rookie in each of the Ph illies-Red'eg s line-ups in C in cin n ati. V a d a Pinson, the 19-year-old surprise from V is ­ alia, C alif , of Class Cl distinction, w ill start in right for the Redlegs in Chuck E sseg ian , who played Schenectady. N . 5’ ., ye ar, m ay be in left for the Ph illie s . last Ja c k s o n at Ron Fra n ro n a in right. first and Tito A flock of new- fa re s w ill grace the line-ups of the A th letics and Indians in C levelan d but the most w elcom e to the 35.000 T rib e fans w ill he an old favo rite, H e rb Score The southpaw ace who suffered a horrible e ye in ju ry last M a y 7, w ill hurl for the In d ian s against Ned C a r v e r <6-151. The A ’s w ill h ave M ik e Raxes I late of B u ffa lo , at second base, and B J I T uttle, fo rm er T ig er, in right field. T he Indians w ill have B illy M oran, a rookie, at second Indian* w ill also p re­ base. T he sent in w inter trades. T h e y are M innie Minoso in left L a r r y Goby in re n ­ ter. M ic k e y Vernon at tirst and Fred H atfield at third. four n ew com ers obtained against I line-up , pitching into Boston. righthander <10-4i, w ill do T h * Yankees bring a veteran !V»n Larsen, the right­ hander. W illa rd Nixon 112-131. The ( Red Sox have K en Asprom onte at re ­ second and Don Bud din. a turned servicem an , at short. A crowd of 25.000 is expected. another T he C ard in als, host to Chicago in St. I xhjis , w ill present a ve te r­ an line-up but the Cubs w ill h a v e a p air o f freshm en, second base­ man T ony T a y lo r and tined base­ man Jo h n n y G o ry l. Another new Chicago la ce w ill he the veteran in cen ter field. Bobby Thompson, J im Rrosnan <5-51 the Cubs w ill oppose lefthander W ilm e r Mi- z e ll <8-101 b e f o r e t o m e 19 OOO. fo r y e a r. The A m erican I/eague * only 20- gam e w inners B illy last P i ere a of the W h ite Sox and J im Bunning of D etro it, w ill oppose ca rh other in Chicago P ie r r e <20- 121 w ill h* shooting for hi* third straight opening d a y vic to ry . R un ­ n in g was 20-8 in 1957. A crow d of 25.(MIO w i l l see R i i l y M a rtin p l a y ­ in g his first gam e for D etroit, at shortstop. Ghicago w ill have new­ third. comers B illy fkaodman at rookie, center W ashington, fresh from its open­ ing day entrust trium ph, w ill righthander C a m b io Pa sq u al <8- 17* w ith the task of extending its winning streak against the O rio'es in B a ltim o re The Senators have one field er Albte Pierson rn the line-up The O r i o l e s shortstop Ronnie m ay have two Hansen and Jim M arshall. G ene W oodling. obtained lefi from C leveland w ill he field. A crow d of some 50 000 is Johnson expected •14-11 i. pitch for th* O r i o l e s to see Connie first basem an in B c. R O G E R S O p th a mic Dispenser W ill, n paly q divine* of ♦ P» c«rrp ,v. I $0 I G in A. GR 7 142? I / E m d r a y W ALK SHORTS KNIT SHIRTS keep cool, look well. enjoy your leisure That's the ticket In our walk s h o rts , Tailored Just right, of cooling light-weight fabrics, they put you at your ease In th* fo*h>on-right way. A . Sketched linen crash G r e y or t a n . ......................... O R Faded Denims with elastic Sides and Self Belt front. Blue and tan ........... B. Chalk striped walk Shorts, Black and Red, Black A Royal blue, Black A G re y . C W h ite Tricot knit shirt with Collar, Pocket and Sleeves trimmed to match the above shorts. D. Polished cotton w alling In white, silver Shorts. qrey, black, tan. Small Stripe Dacron cotton, placket and neck. Cha rcoal, brown, blue. E. Multi C olored Strip# Knit Shirt with Italian C o l l a r . Blue, tan, and red predominates. Another Service O ffered by JO R A C E M EN S W EA R TUXEDO RENTALS C om plete with Accessories Jorace Tuxedo Rentals 2270 G uad alupe G R 6 02/7 "Store for M en" 617 CONGRESS W ork with the O A S Industry... the nation’s fifth largest TV,* G a t in d u s try t Via* fifth largest jn the n atio n has a to ta l in ve stm en t o f over ? 1 8 b illio n L a s t } r a r the in d u s try set a in n u m b er o f a u ­ new all-tim e record to m e n , volu m e of G a s Hold, and Hollar rev rn ne. In fact, G a * cont rih u trd 2 ~ r'r of the to ta l en erg y needs of the nation a* in 1940. The G a s com pared w ith I I in d u s try is a maior force rn the g ro w th d evelo p m en t and D o n u m ic health of this country. I here a r e rnanv opportunities for vntj I lie industry needs in the ( u s industry. engineers, and docs not over-hire, ’i on won't he regimented. \ here’s alw av s room for advancement. W ith utility companies and with manufac rurei s of (la s e q u ip ­ ment, theres a future for you as an engineer. ( all sour nearer Gas I filitv. I hey ll bf glad to ta ll with son about in rhe Gas indti'tiv sour opportunity 'Amtman Ga: Ajiocuu.on. H, B R O W N B A ID W IN B 5 M* Lng., U . of Vernon', 1949. R te *’' at Lariat Erg "ae', ftovton G*» Cd , 195(0. B *'a rr« Stab Lng naar in D Unbutton Dave opm*nt S«rfion, 195,’ Staff trig na*' in cf-m'gm of Da vai''/prr'ant. I OSS, Distribution pi* nn.ng I pgm*«r, 19f>b. Won<*d closaiy wit* rfli ipany’a natu'a1 gat conversion pm (•a s No* a-I < or to Distributor! Departn'Af't ct argatj ta to ria.a op g es, toe' f 'af on* r< asta;., r a A it i i i c « '« { * ant " i''»r»f.f'8 ''n ! a tt rn a tat, y.p an aytat off ar proi* it. W C DAM! VAN B 9. Oat I rig , la .a t A A I , 1919. Began at tngnaar Ira mea wit* Iona Star Gat Company attar gra'j ,*>ion ♦ ro m Tanas A. A I. * th firtt four tr»t G a t En gineering bag raa oft arab by institution Jo mab H ouston N atural G a t (.on pan/ to 194 Bara-' a D ->’ ■ "•♦ f ginaar in T **# * C. fy an d tn *n OiVrtet M a ’ agar in B a e v a ar b f i Ca po. Da n a n i t c u rra n t1/ Cl at I - t i r t i r * 'h fu .l a n g in a a r in g r n p o n b 'y thrpugHout t 'a faaory rn.,n* as rn ira company $ Ta«at Gull Coati Syt'am, Tuesday, April 15, 1958 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 DoJatf \ Jazz ^^ r o t 'll A m J A Z Z G U IT A R IS T K> T (( liff) S M H ll in T h * g u itar I* no - the .tm;® in stru ­ ment jazz prKembl® and w hether it's the point of for us or a p art of the rhythm section, it« rh yth m ic pulsations tend to fug' 1 mite the averag e listener B a rn e y Kesse!, we-t, • on.-' t/z guitarist and on:'.naIi;, from O k la ­ hom a, has developed his skill and the C h arlie C h ristian talent Idiom to her oine probably tile hest that jazz h is to offer yuitnrw ise o ver a span of fen years In One of the better ‘ p r e setter* who can achieve the right rh yth m ic pulsations for the group K» > I has the unique talent of playing less com plex patterns which have < »*r- tam graduations and figurations in ideas to the whole them to feed group, It would tie very diffinj't. .is basic,ally a to c lassify R e 1- el “ pare setter ‘ (rh; ’hm a rtis t) or a soloist even though he h is been most outstanding • a the la tter Fo r* rnl F a l low can re a d ily I e x a m p le be ( i cd a *■'hoist tier ause of his em phasis on notes At any rate, B a rn e y Kesse) gain­ ed a w id esp read repn’ation as the y id arm .in for O scar Peterson he- J fore W I and has since advanced tun calling out on the west coast. T ai Far low (from Greensboro an is an exceptionally fine! fo rever seeking! N C l is guitarist, who se'f-improvement attribution common to m any jazz m usicians A fter achieving the speed he so desired, T al's attention turned to­ w ard the perfec tion of iridh ’.dual­ izing each note W e suggest you give ne c i r to T ai i Verv e M G V HO.'l) Th*- Johnny Sm ith Quartet Boost I* arbor F P 2203) Herb U h s . . In W o n d erlan d ” IN o w an MCN' 10H1 t H arney bessel ( (’ Director BEST Pictur* BEST Actor rn J L B A B 'j T PBohoqrapky W nj BEST Scraanp ay X Film Editmq M (heel Sonq F IR S T S H O W 12.00 i i V I I it * a i t . I S M I ll S |i in adc. b r I TS C* se HSWI BM Malt VMI VPU (.It r»<*** tio# WILHAM HOI OIH AKC CHINNI SS • (ACK HAWKINS T M I I R I D t l O M T M I ■ I Y I W K W A ! Hc m k s w i • r l'LVJHTi'4 H E L D O V E R 2 FIRST SHOW 2 P M. M O R E D A Y S ! R eservation * for the D epart­ ment of D ram a * production cif “ King L e a r ” are now on sale 'n the Music Bm ; t rig Box O f­ fice Adult, non-Blanket Tax tickets are HO rents and student ticket* with Blanket Tax are 40 cents. E H H X E 3 H Airn lesion Vftc TRAPEZE Hurt I xii' istcr Tuny ( urtU start* 7 HI C LI S - MAN IN THE VAULT Wi l l i a m < a m K i r o n Sher i f f * surf# ?♦ IO i L a i O E Z S tfilll IAH I tot I .*»v TIME LIMIT R ich a rd VV i<1 mark b la rt* 7 Cl I S Dance With Me Henry '.It lim! Abbott I ti iv I on tiff He# S ta rt* 9 'I 0S 3M f iJ£ £ 3 THE TIN STAR to III I MOH llrnrv I linda Ii.n y '0 IV rU iit* NI a ria 7 C L I N Kettles on Old MacDona’d's Farm H a rjn rix M ;i Cur ki­ ll IX Ut csexas /btuis B lu e s ,” “ B e a le fin g er who entered H a n d y * life sic. and H an d y w o rries constantly S t r e e t ” “ A unt ifa g a r's ” “ Y e llo w anfT urged him to do something throughout the show about his sin- D og,” and H an d y s first fstill one good w ith his feeling for the m usic | fill w ays. T here is so m uch m usic. of his race H er singing ranges so much hum or and pathos in his of the best) the ' M em phis B lu es from the throaty to the whine, but m instrel days alone that it seems except for one scene in w hich she a uastp to change the story of his is called upon to he an gry, there w asn 't much of a part In the film you hear m an y of them, w ith the notable ex< option of “ Aunt H a g a r 's ” and “ M e m p h is.” The story of H an d y's firs! attem pt “ F a th e r of the B lu e s ,” proves that at "song * w rit i ii g " a n d h i s s u bs eq tie nt , the life of a N eg ro m in strel p la y e r sale of it right gu aran tee is switched from and C ab C a llo w a y m ake up the j and songw riter can tie interesting, “ .M em phis” to “ Y ello w Dog B lu e s .” rest of the Negro stars in the film , without m aking a m essage of con- ( fa llo w ay does no singing or dane- version out of it. H an d y w as not ing, playing a straight d ra m a tic afraid to talk about his life from the standpoint of a Negro, but Hol- role no copy- P esri B a ile y . M a h a lia life to fit H ollyw ood s term s, ° ,h P r than hpr ,in « in«- for her H andy, autobiography, for JDO with in his J a c k s o n M iss B a ile y is perfect in the lywood seem ed to be. F O R T H E HI-FI BUYER Q u am D escrip tio n R eg. Pric# Sa le Pric# I H . K. TA-1040 Tuner-Am plifier 250.00 IRR.50 Stro m b e rg 35-watt Tuner-Am plifier 24R.50 I 8R.R5 42.50 5R.R5 57.50 74.50 RR.50 R5.00 RR.50 40.00 40.00 35.00 RR.50 I r U sed 35-watt K n ig h t A m p lifie r RR.R5 Bogen 10-watt A m p lifie r Bogen 12-watt A m p lifie r 20-watt H arm o n -K ard o n 40-watt H arm o n -K ard o n S c o tt 22-watt A m p lifie r H . K. T un er-A m plifier ' Sp u tn ik " S p e a k e r Equ ipm ent C a b in e ts 50.25 65.70 RR.R5 125.00 115.00 I3R.R5 60.00 67.50 A m pex S te re o C onsol# I7R5.00 1350.00 E M C S te re o Playb ack I8R.50 135.00 Fisher 15-watt Pow er A m p lifie r 5R.50 Fisher F M 40 Tuner with cat# I 17.85 C o lu m b ia C o n so le tte I6R.R5 125.00 C o lu m b ia T ab le M o d e l I2R.R5 RR.50 Fisher 80T (U sed ) 216.45 150.00 Precise A M - F M Tuner 75.00 50.00 J a n h e n E le c tro sta tic Sp eaker Syst. 30R.00 250.00 Used Lansing E V System 57R.00 2RR.50 and many other Bargains A L L S A L E S S T R IC T L Y C A S H Iii ;! ii; iii! Closing the choir's portion of fhe program w as “ H ey Nonny N o ” ’ w ritten by an Illin o is composer. R o b ert G , Olson The outstanding thing a flout the voice of the baritone soloist, Ja m e s M c G u y e r . this w ork w as A fte r the interm ission the o rc h ­ estra p layed “ O verturn F e s tiv a ” M r. H olzm ann. The composer con­ ducted his m usic. M r. H olzm ann s w ork w as v e r y m elodious, w ith the use of a v a rie ty of instrum ents to present the idea of the m usic. The interlude tech­ nique w as hard on the m em bers to the o rch estra, who had of sustain low notes for quite a w hile, hut th ey did a Rood job. T he o rch ­ estra could vv ell h ave played m ore of M r. Holzm ann s w-orks. N ex t w as M r. C re s to n * S y m ­ phony No, 4 It gets off to a full start, wi t h an interesting balance between the in tric a te bass parts theme and full the Flutes, horns and a full, beauti- > ful m elody growing from calm in­ to brightness characterize the sec­ ond m ovem ent In the third m ovem ent pizzicatti strings against woodwinds gi ve an unusual effect. Th- fin al m ovem ent of the sym ­ phony is a v e r y full, satisfying end­ ing to a piece of m usic by one of A m e ric a 's outstanding contem por­ a ry com poser*. .Tim H olm an r e C LIFT O N W ILL IA M S , e .rn O' ■■ /.-> <- -i Syrrpo- e of rte ■ mpo'.ers participate I en cit no c o m p o '! on# cg •'# a• ty s tnu’ -c facu lty, directs >n a reari ng of a r ec® b/ e v .m p o ru m , M r. V/i! ams ’ Le ’Le S o we' / and ,f ■ ■ t> a ''r'i.al Southw esrern Sym posium of C o r tem porary Un ' M M e e t Your Friends at G R E E N A C R E S M IN I A T U R E G O L F C O U R S E C u ll G I 2 12 J I And C tb for Party R A»«rv a Horn, R e d u c e d P a I n t until h p m, D elightful R ecreatio n 8700 BURNET ROAD OUR SPECIAL LUNCH TODAY • Fried C hicken or • C h o p p e d Filet M ash ed Potatoes String Bean* and C o rn H o t Rolls and C o rn B ie a d Dessert, C o ffe e or Tea 65 Music Sorority To Give Concert A G e n c e r t of C ontem porary A m erican M usic wi l l tie given at t p rn. W ednesday in Re* ital H all by the t ’n iversity C h ap ter of Sigm a Alpha Iota national m usic sorority. I he concert Student R ecital Series of the De- rf>rita, pnrtment of M usic. Student Recital Series To Present Ann Nicholl The Student R e cita l Series of the I)epartm ont of M usic VV)11 present , rn io r in 4 Tuesday in R e ­ cital H a ll. is sponsored by the Ann Nichol| pian i, t 'Die program w ill include N o r­ Hie public is i n v i t e d t o a t t e n d man H ello .lino s “ Sonata No. 3,” wihout charge perform ed by Kli/.abeth B a ile y . Mtiert Stoessel * “ Suite A ntiqu e.” perform ed by E lizab efh R a ile y , piano, J a n Bixiine and L im o M c ­ Kee, vio lin s; Beth B o yce n “ Sona­ ta, ” perform ed by the composer. piano; and W in tte r Wat t s * “ The L ittle She[>herd s Son g ,” perform ­ ed bv F I i zn beth Silverto n soprano, and C aro lyn Scott, accom panist. TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS G R 2-2473 — Extension 29 * wonts w ord * M O M H L S ...... ................. CLASSI PIRD ............... T u e s d a v T e x a n .......... W e d n e s d a y T e x a n .......... T h u rs d a y T e x a n P r 'd a v T e x a n ................. Sunday Texan ................ C L A S S I P l R D R A T E S ............................... $ * n n 11.00 D F A P L I N ! S .............. M o n d ay, 4 p na. ................ T u p -d ay 4 p m. W e d n e s d a y , 4 p.m. T h u rs d a y . 4 p m. .................. F r id a y . 4 p m . Mr*. Pearl G horm ley D A I L ? C I A S H I F t r n r a t e s ° ! w o A dd itio n# ! 30 w ord * t a . * * /.y I n a y l auh a d d itio n al d ay .................. 01 C lassifie d D I* p la y ................. *1 .15 p i r ’ colum n Inch In th# event of erro rs made m « n advertisem ent Im m ed iate notice m utt he s r en a , the publisher* a re re*pon*lble fo r o n ly one in co rrect insertion J 1 fr) , , , , ms .......... « d r H e lp W a n te d Professional Services Typing G u n A R L U S S O N S c ia * * ic s ty le O I S S K R T A T I o n s , " T H E S E S ha*ed on toe p rin rip le * ” of~.Segovla~ i . P ° F . T S Fx perlenced le v a t S. hoo! of F in e 1 P |n* M in o r ed itin g !<>th .Toaeph Ca A rt* 2fk) W e e ! r ,R ft-nots .......... - fro m cam pu* M r . Bo d o u r G R S - io i3 Fe- eieitrom aM'- P o u r block* Tutoring ' F‘^ r « R I,h e m Kr> T U A S O N A R !. ! ' T H E in G R report* Clos* S-3238 e‘ TOR K O R V O U N G U N I V I .R S I T Y C O L' F L E M a tu re you ng couple without c h ild ­ ren to m anage a bu» nei^ fkiod lier* *onalltv and good ch ara cte r nece*- Ideal fo r g rad u a'e ntudent car- ur> r\ ng llnu*t*d k b e d u ll N ic e apart- ment furniiihed w ith reason abi* s a l­ ary . C ontact I >r C a rl F re d It G R E^xteniion 141 for hotel clerk H o u ri 3 Y O U N G W O M A N between 21 and 25 to ’ ! p m , M u ll have tranxporatlon. C al! for and .4 p m In n M o to r Hotel G I. .4 7441 a n . da\ H o lid a '’ betw een 7 a rn In terview p rn S p ecial Services R1-24T T V * 1058 Fort at en rate* H O V 5507 G R 2-2692 D a lly For Rent B U K " K k’Ri iM C A M P I S fo r women ant t r a n t telephone T i e batn G R 8-5588 I *e of k itc h e n d te I ^ r g e p leas­ P r iv a t e e n ­ ! v ngrooin, rmirn A R A R H O T E L (S U H th# R e *?) rexer-a* n* now fo r Specio us room* m aid se rv ­ yr, r M sk# s p rin g ice p ark in g 7812 G u a d a lu p e C R 8 5658 P A R I S I A N L A N C .’ A G F F x p e rt teach­ er. C o nversation g ram m a r tran sla Hon. I niversit cs re/rmiinendation* a: disposal. Mad -n< *«. P D up iu* Apt 2 -5oft R io G ran de G R ft-2 2 % Nurseries C H I F g arten 'N D A U K thro u gh K in d e r ­ I.le m e n ta ry education g rad ­ uate. R eg istered nurse. C re a tiv e art, l a t i n tw irlin g , R h y th m fo lk dancing hand G R 8-0*18. G I. 3-0159 I For Sale N K W W 'F B C O R H i- F i ( all G R 8-1756 a fte r 4 and ask fo r P h ilip . d rag g in g K > R S A L K ; asp halt * t re* Sp e cial b u ilt w ,de for rim w h eel* fo r C o rvette o r o ther using ft Vi- 15 fo r safety C a ll Me G R 8-3497 da s L ife g u a rd tube* tire k ap preciate Iw o-hedroom kn o tty pine kilt hen tra l h e a t: ch ain lin k W IN D S O R P A R K o w n er M ust see to tile the bath cen­ fence. Assume G I Izian S I 500 equity 572 total B ro a d ­ p aym ent No (lo s in g cost* m oor D riv e Open H I 2-7181 den. I P P ! P H O N E C t M A F po k-Yp a d ■ o a m p lifie r, sp eaker ‘ i per $79 ii, L A R C K 13-ROOM B R IC K houxe four bath* on co rn e r at 2100 R io G ra n d e G R 7-3341 ----- t ’an be used fo r boarding house, room- - nu house, or sm all fra te rn ity bouse. Jo e L a c y G R 8-4231. Sewing A partm ents C o lo rad o R iv e r ; expansive view U N 1 Q U K three-room ap artm ent beside 7 m inutes No Ia n d ia d v v e ry private. A fte r 4 3u t a li G R 8 5124. t mv* r*it>. C arp o rt to D R E S S M A K I N G T O Y O U R aatlsfac- tlon. R e a -Onably priced. M r* Dodgem G R 8-9130 M EN S KX!P E R T A L T E R A T I O N S don# reason#b lv Q uick »ervice See M r* Jaco bso n * M e n » W ear ZVS2 A rnold G uad alup e G R K K N G A R D E N A P A R T M L N T ! F.a*t 33rd N e ar L n iv e r* ."v Ai r-con- db inned F o u r large furnished or un Larg e cioteta T il fu rm sned kitch en and natn S85-S95 G L 3-156.: rooms F O R M A I S A L T E R N A T I O N S for ad the fa m ily h ittin g * Butto n h o le* - L " .A f ..- R *» «y b n g M r* f iH H !#470 G enera! guaranteed sew ing of al! H enslev K X P E R I EN< HD SK< R K T A R Y cam pus m orning* H O 5-0197 R aker, R B A t y p i n g T . m f V S Ex perienced these* th i.,,^ . m , Reason* MUI G R 6-1280 a fte r R p m L K L M R Y A I . R R I G H T do your W ^ 't r o m C L *4-2941 rUnCe<1 G R 3-2029 r r M *o n ab l« g rad t.a'e * E X P K R I E N C E D t ' ping report* i r G L c ,,r O L 3-747! t ypist. E le c t r ic H I 2-558.4 . . . B , M r* R itc h ie . G R 2-4945 I ' /-,Ls ” nib'’!* ' Clo*« M A R T H A A N N Z IV 1 .E Y , M E A. A eom pieta p to te sjio R a; ty p in g ser­ vice ta ilo re d to the need* of I Di­ -f d ver- tv student* Spe tai k<*' e q u ip m e n t * enc# and e ng ineering these* and d l * se riatio n * la n g u a g e fo r C o n ve n ie n tly located at GOODALL WOOTEN DORM BLDG 21 92 G o a d s i># P ho. G R 2-3210 T Y P I N G 20c A P A G E Spe ,ng. g ram ­ m ar corrected l f ! 2-6522 E I . F C T R I C le t Male M A N U A L E X P E R T abei- G L 3-7517 an y tim e T Y P I N G . A N Y K I N D A ccurate. R e a ­ sonable rate * M r* V ic k H O 5-13S4 E L F Ona hie G R 8-ft; 55 r R< M A T IC Theses. E x p e rie n ced thenie* Close R ( Also, Kent K erm an ’* “ T hree P re ­ ludes.” jrerfotrned by D elia Duson, piano: CT yd# I ameen s “ Sonatina for C la rin et and P ia n o ," first mov e­ ment perform ed bv Rita G u erra, piano, and A m y Glenney, c larin et: and I-co So w er b y'* “ R equ iescat in P a c e .” perform ed by M artha Key, organ. F O R G R A D U A T I O N G IV E C A M E R A S Studtm an Photo Finish I. K 7 7*70 t i t M r * ! I Atli BUSTED? W e Fix 'Urn! F. M. Receivers . Uifk m d iii} Radio TV Horn# A u to Portables Transistors { R e co rd C h an g ers T ap e Decks — R eco rd ers Electronic Equipm ent 'E E D W ’A Y High Fidelity at Reasonable Pratt 2010 S p e e d w a y G R 8-660R W E SELL U M , TOO! r f Iv ? ffl RUD 'E-IO RNE GREENE 2 0 C i n e m a s c o p e \ 4 1607 San Ja c in to Priv ate Dining Room AUSTIN 2 DAYS ONLY HELD OVER! FIRST SHOW 6:00 P.M. T H E R E A L . T R U E S T O R Y CAPITOL- 2 DOUBLE BLAST! DOUBLE SHOCK HHS! STARTS TO D A Y 11.45 O P E N Adults 6 0 c Child 25c T H I V L I V I D * T N I O M T O N T H I I O O * O I I V I L ! MUHS ON A (AMPAGI of t***o*i |t|ll NO T E C H N I C O L O R G L E N N F O R D • J A C K L E M M O N A N N A KASUN & & & ii! IjJOiBO Urtt Cschrie J A * I* MUSH Mhtut r n 'Want to Change?’ |$500Fellowship Deadline Reset Sutherland Says No To April 25 The deadline for the $500 fellow­ ship offered by the Austin branch of the Am erican Association of Uni­ versity Women has been extended from April 15 to A p ril 25. Any woman enrolled in the grad­ uate school is eligible to receive the fellowship. Application blanks are available in the office of the Dean of Student Life, Speech Build- '■ ing 111. Tire fellowship, which is meant to promote higher education for women in keeping with the ideals of the A A U W , is offered each year. A committee composed of four members of the fellowship commit­ tee of the Austin branch of the A A U W , the Dean of Women, Dean of the Graduate School, and the chairm an of the committee on loans and scholarship information w’ill decide on the recipient. Fu rth er information m ay be ob- | tamed by calling M rs. J . H. Wife­ local president of the A A U W , less at G L 3-6220 or M rs. R . V. Baker, chairman of the fellowship com­ mittee, at G R 6-1541. Greek Film Set Tonight “ D ie Ancient W orld, Greece” will recreate the glory of the an- ; dent Greek civilization of the fifth ’ century before Christ in full color at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Main Lounge of Texas Union. Sponsored by the Classical Club, the 66-minute consists of film readings of ancient literature with no living characters seen. All that is seen are works of art or scenes from nature. Tile film is produced in collab­ oration with the Archeological In- stitue of A m erica and the Am eric­ an School of C lassical Studies in Athens, Greece. Tired of y o u r s e l f ? Need a be desirable. change? A big change? Chances are you don’t need too big a change, and moreover it is u n l i k e l y that you could change too much even if you wanted to. This is the opinion of D r. Robert L . Sutherland, director of the Hogg Foundation for Mental Health, and author of the book “ Can An Adult C hange?” in “ Adults, in the main, have been m oderately successful fam ily life, at work, and in community affairs — some rem arkably so.,” says Dr. Sutherland. “ Fu rth er­ more. they live in a dem ocracy which tolerates and even encour­ ages individuality — a wide range of behavior.” Dr. Sutherland explains that an adult has developed over many years, and that he could no more put his personality aside and take on another than he could jump out of his skin. When does a person need to change — for the better? This is the important question brought up in the small volume. Dr. Sutherland points out what he terms “ slight danger signals.” These danger signals suggest that perhaps some small change would The first of these signals is re­ sisting change. Resenting sugges­ tions. holding defensively to pres­ ent ways, and clinging to an out­ dated status quo make a person so rigid that he cannot change if he wants to. Another signal is systematizing everything, or its opposite, just “ unorganizing.” The two extremes suggest that a change might be desirable. A constant damning of things and people, even though they may deserve occasional criticism , de­ velops a negative and sometimes fearful attitude. Worrying just for the sake of worrying is also a danger signal. A person can w o rry himself into had health, and then, to complete the cycle, worries about his bad I health. Men's Housing Meets There will be a general meet­ ing of the M e n ’s Housing Associa­ tion Tuesday at 3 p m. at the V a r­ sity Cafeteria. The nominating committee will present names from which nesv officers w ill be elected. WHEN YOU THINK OF LAUNDRY OR CLEANING THINK DRISKILL LAUNDRY PICK UP & DELIVERY SERVICE SUITS—DRESSES TUXEDOS V EVENING GOWNS D YEIN G • RUGS • DRAPES FUR A N D W O O LE N STORAGE 411 E. 19th Phone Q R 8-6631 SAVE CASH AND CARRY M O D E L IN G F A S H IO N S preserved in a style show M ond ay night given by Alpha Phi alumnae for active members are Jen n ie Olson and Mrs. Earlene Moses. Miss Olson is wearing a yellow chemise and slung over her arm is a matching yellow and orange print linen duster. Mrs. Moses led d emise of is wearing a black and white checked cotton, complemented by a white pique collar. Both hats, a yellow straw and a black cloche, give a touch of spring to the ensemble. Clothes were furnished by P.ae Ann's and accessories by Flair. long-wa Oh is Wed Wt the y Tuesday IO -Coffee Hour I L t I A L C D C r I A I J ■lr 1 9 S P O T R E D U C IN G T R E A T M E N T S E N D S w e d n e s d a y , A P R IL 16 *1995 FIGURE AHEAD . . . How do you look in your n ew bathing suit? C om e in today for your free figure analysis and complimentary treatm ent . . . guaranteed results! A c c e p t Nothing But the Best— N IB L A C K ! NIBLACK Slenderizing System Shopping < oilier Shopping < t iller H ig hlan d P a r k 2f>07 G u a d a lu p e ti It 2 7323 E n f ie ld ( . I t 7 501(0 HO 5 5577 Engineering Family Picnic Set April 19 The Engineering W ives Club an­ nual fam ily picnic w ill be held Saturday at Camp Ben M cCul­ lough. The d ay’s schedule begins at 2 p rn. with activities for both children and adults. Barbecued chicken and beef w ill he served by Dale Ba k er at 6 p m. Tim agenda includes dancing from 7:30 until l l p.m. Reservations must be made no later than Thursday at G R 6-9930, Mrs. Carey Murphey. • The Engineering W ives Club of­ ficers for 1958-59 are Mrs. Leon Kennedy, president; vice-president, Mrs. I^arry Yaggi; secretary, Mrs. Arthur Clinger; treasurer, Mrs. ly s in C ly e r ; and reporter, Mrs. W alter West. Committee chairmen are Mrs. .Toe Ballanfontc d r . Program s; M rs. Lloyd Potty, G am es; Mrs. W illiam Davis, Membership: M rs. W illiam Fowler, W ays and Means; Mrs. Cecil Smith, Telephone; Mrs. Jess Webb, Social. The club historian is Mrs. Bob Spollin. and sponsors are M rs. Ot­ to G. Brown, and Mrs. Joseph W. Dailey. Presbyterians Honor Persons A surprise “ Canning P a r ty for the Persons” was given F rid a y for the new director of the Westminster Student Fellowship, Ihe R ev. Ralph Persons, and his wife. Members of the U niversity P re s­ byterian Church student fellowship s p o n s o r / d the party, to which everyone brought a can of "som e­ thing.” | Ju d d O pensTalks A b o u t 'H-Bombs' Dr. Burke Judd, professor of /oology, will open a series of forums on “ Should H-Bomb Test­ ing B e E n d e d ?” af 7:30 p m. W ed­ nesday in Nordan lou nge of U ni­ versity Christian Church. Supper at 6 p m , in Fellowship H ail w ill precede D r. Ju d d ’s talk. This forum is a part of a series of courses being offered in the Christian Church’s spring School of Christian Enrichm ent. Col. Vance M urphy of Bergstrom A ir Force Base w ill discuss the subject of H-Bomb testing from a m ilitary viewpoint April 23 a n d Melvin Ztjek of the Am erican Friends Ser­ vice Committee as the pacifist secs. it. Tuesday, April 15, 1958 THE DAILY TEXAN Page % UT, Pro/s in Dallas For SSS/! Meeting U niversity professors participat- accounting, agricultural economic#, cd in the annual com ention of the Bureau of Business Research bu*!- economic*, Southwestern Social Science Asso- ness administration, elation recently in Dallas. geography, government, history! and sociology. Dr. H a rry E s till Moore, profes­ sor of sociology and editor of the Robert E . Seder, assistant pro­ SSS A Quarterly, and Dr. W ilfred fessor of accounting, spoke on “Di- Webb, associate professor of gov- rect Costing” as a sectional meet- inK Also speaking was Dr. Stock- eminent, are members of the SSSA ton who talked on “ Current Bual* Executive Council. Committee m e m b e r s are Dr. ness Research Activities in Tex- Francis M ay, assistant professor a s.” of business statistics; Dr. C arl M . Rosenquist professor of sociology: and Dr. John Stockton, professor of business statistics. Sectional meetings were held on Dr. W illiam R . S p ieg el, dean of the College of Business Adminis­ tration, discussed “ Trends or Ed­ dies and Crosscurrents in Manage­ ment Education’’ at a business ad- ! ministration section. Deadline Deadline Set Scholarships D r Lo rrin Kennam er and Dr. Stanley A Arbingast, geography professor, spoke at a joint meeting of thp economics, government, and history sections. Dr. Kennam er dis­ cussed “ The Geography Setting of Southwestern W a te r,” and Dr. A r­ for bingast led the discussion group. A rm y scholarships is M a j I . Tile Also speaking at the same joint Department of the A rm y has re­ session was Troy J . Cauley, visit- cently announced an expanded schooling program under which it; inS professor of economics from will give four-year college j Indiana I niversity. D r. Ronald F . Bunn, instructor educations (including full regular pay and expenses) to qualified en- in government, led a government listed personnel. ’discussion section. for applications free F o r each ye a r of free education “ The Am erican Historical Asso­ i l von by the A rm y the individual elation and the W est” was discussed must re-enlist for three years. Ap- by Dr. D avid D. Van Tassel, assts- plicants must be on active duty tant professor of history, at th* and meet other qualifications. history sectional meeting. “ Professionalism and W hat M cKetta Talks to A !C E Dr. W . S. W illiam s, U niversity Medical Branch, was chairm an of the sociology meeting. Dr. Nor- It man Hawkins, U niversity Medical j Will mean to die Chemical Fngin- Branch, discussed "T h e R ole of th* e rr in the Fu tu re ,’’ was die topic ' Sociologist in Teaching Comprehen- jof Dr. John J . M cKotta, chem ical sive Medicine” and Sam Srhul- I engineering professor, at the Am- man, University School of Nun- ! erican Institute of Chemical Fngin- ; ing. discussed “ The Role of th* errs state meeting in Tulsa Satur- Social Scientist in a School of Nur»- day. 'in g .” SEMINARS O N Nature of God Nature of Man Christian Ethics OPEN TO ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS 4:30 p.m. M onday, T u e s d a y — 14th - 15th 6:15 pm W e d n e sd a y Dr. C arlyle M arney First Baptist C h u re l I Program Council 8—Modem Dram a Study Group Wednesday 3 Membership Committee 4 Campus Affairs Committee 4 World Religious Study Group 7.15 Contemporary’ View s of the Nature of Man seminar Thursday Intercollegiate Relations 2:39 I Freshm an Program Committee 1 R ace Relations Committee 1 30 Worship Committee 5 30 World Relatedness Supper ’ :15 ~'Y’ Fellow . hip Pi Tau Sigma Initiates 14 N e w in it ia t e of P i T au S ig m a, h o n o rary m ech an ical en gin eerin g fra te rn ity , a r * E m m e tt A lb rech t, I ton B a r r y , CTieng-Hsien C hinng, Ja m e s E c k h a rt, C h arles G a llis h a w , H a r r y H ard er, A lso C h arles H a rv e y. D a v id K e n ­ d ric k , W e sle y Kuenem ann, H a r r y M oi, C ecil R a y Sh ea re r, B y ro n D ean T ap lev R a lp h W a lk e r, and Jo h n W estover. ^ n ^ c K j e n i c n L s M a r t h a Si blan k, w a De]t,a I ill to Je ro m e ( opt*!, Alpha I psi- lon P i, Alpha Ph i Om ega. D ian e D iilto U e, Z f i to W illia m Dec Pow ell. I'm Alpha • Ju d ith Ann Tuggey, D elta Zeta to AI Snider. • Jan et Buchanan, Delta D elta Delta, to Jim Klchardaon, > gmn Chi, I nw Student. Cl P u tti Sue M urphy. I " ‘ a B eh n I >e]*i to T . tii'org** M ah affey. e Claire HuiN|w th, D a J a Pa Del- 'a to D in e D avie, grail 1 > f huron D av ie H aven, - W a rre n M alco lm C la rk , , , r.* ti ■ B a rb a ra Cit 'i> Kenneth lent, m end • - cf V > llorvvit/. e lh 'a Phi Epsilon r; *.* ,. I- ivket *\ f I hall team , Alpha • I pylori P l, Ju d v F ra n k lin . Dr ta Pi Fp e to Itoh Cit tenlo-rg, Alpha K: • n P i , P h i .D o h a 1911, I ./iv R e v ie w . J u d y A n n e F u g g c y , f cr «t,j j dent, Delta Zeta, Spooks, to A lv in J Sn id er, pre-med, Dartmouth Col- ! Ieee. • • • EXPERT SHOE REPAIR 0 Modem fqu’pmont Q ( 0 Key* Du- r*'ed | Goodyear Shoe Shop O f f The Dreg on ?3 fd S treet No Extra CHargo for Fast Service at f i f e o r t a ( A t m O p e n 7 OO e m to 6 OO p.m. M o n de/ through Saturd ay SIO W. 19th St. C o rner Nuocei la u n d ry Service in <*/n *e With re e r a red w *h navy and wh *a 7 ha « cave ess, s i *■•- nacred c h* cr % a ct* a r b ic u sa a - d s. " " wk ’a cr se pp* ‘e h ,e 14.95 Cc aga Shop, Second ricer Young Women: After Graduation, Begin Ycur Career In An Executive Position I I t you'r * a co lle g e senio r, you can prepare now for an important € x ee u tire fu tu re by a PPlying for an o f f ic e r 's commission in the Women's Array C arpe. In addition to an o f f ic e r 's pay and p r e s tig e , you w ill have a p o s itio n of v i t a l r e s p o n s i b il i t y . , .working side by side with mala o ffle e r s in such challenging s t a f f and adm inistrative assignments a s : •R&rscnnel & A d m in istratio n * In te llig e n e e • C iv il A ffa ir s and M ilit a r y Government •Com ptroller • fcib llo Inform ation •Inform ation and Ed ucation #Legal and L e g is la tiv e And with th is ch a lle n g e , corno these personal rewards: % •An o ffic e r's b la y c u ltu r a l and s o c ia l l i f e •The chance fo r e x c itin g fo re ig n assignm ents *A 30 day paid va ca tio n eve ry year T h e s a tis fa c tio n o f se rvin g your country i u _ in a r e a lly im portant way • • • • THE A D JU T A N T G E N E R A L D eportm ent of the A rm / Washington J J, D C. A T T N : A G S N - l Cf Plea \» lr--J rn/ fu r r ie r in fo r Ma ti on nu my rtjr**r rpt, c v i t to yours#I f ami y<*;r country to tov* st lg« t« th is challenging ar. I re ja rrin g axaeutiva opportunity, For 0:11 inform ation f i l l in and n a il t h is coupon today I JU !’ IORG — Tho Women's Ar-sy Corp* w ill s e le c t s H alted r,--hcr of c o a lifie d wcnen who hive ecT-.pletei th eir Junior year for U weeks tra in in g , gunner 195#. There are no casal*i«n*,3. Tis: v t l l receive an orientation Ln the Amv and nny I ? ' * application for a corrals l i —i a fter ?rc flatten i f y r s an off leer La the United States A nr/, Lf in te r e s ts ! check the encloeed coupon. want to be C4UI9I Ce V- /t-l'Ty \ / SPECIAL! M E N FOR T H E PRICE O F (except m a n a g e m em bership) bring a f r i e n d and s p l i t the price, o r one pays and one gets m e m b e r s h ip FREE • FREE sunlam p s • FREE calorie counters • FREE dietic charts A , • FREE exercise charts ; steam rooms M m g f • FREE p a rk in g • FREE . shoe shine G U A R A N T E E O M E YEAP FREE if you fa il to g e t re ­ m its in 60 days: O V E R W E IG H T S : Lose 15 pounds, V/2 inches o ff Hips and waist. U N D E R W E IG H T S : A d d H /2 Inches to arms, 3!/ 2 inches to chest and shoul­ ders. G a in I 2 pounds. T IM SW EENEY, A th le tic D ire cto r o f C a p ita l C ity A th le tic C lub and M r. A m erica fin a lis t. You will D O more here in O N E month than in a Y E A R elsewhere! Y o u 'll get in stru ction s from Tim Sweeney and C harles A . Sm ith, fo rm e r e d ito r o f YO U R P H Y S IQ U E , M USC LE PO W ER , and M R. A M E R IC A . Results gu ara ntee d! O p e n 7 days a week — IO a rn. to IO p m. d a ily; IO a.m. to 6 p.m . Sunday. REFRIGERATED AIR C O N D I T I O N I N G C A P I T A L CI TY ATHLETI C CLUB Stories Entered In SDX Contest T h e b e s t s t o r i e s o f U n i v e r s i t y j o u r n a l i s t s a r e being: s u b m i t t e d to t h e n a t i o n a l c o n t e s t o f S i e r r a D e l t a C h i , p r o f e s s i o n a l f r a ­ t e r n i t y , s a i d C R i c h a r d K i n g , f a c ­ u l t y s p o n s o r o f t h e l o c a l c h a p t e r j o u r n a l i s t i c S i x t y f i \ p c h a p t e r s w i l l e n t e r s t o r i e s to tie l o d g e d a t t h e n a t i o n a l c o n v e n t i o n o f th e f r a t e r n i t y in S a n D i e g o in N o v e m b e r . F e a t u r e s t o r i e s a r e t i e i n g e n t e r ­ .T e r ry C o n n , e d b y R o b b i e I / iv e O s c a r G r i f f i n B e v e r l y S u e F u l k e s a n d R o y P a r i s . N e w s s t o r y e n t r i e s I n c l u d e a r t ­ i c l e s b y B e n S i e g a l . J o h n l e e N e a l S p e l c e . R o b b B a r i a en I'ton s t o r i e s w r i t t e n b y K n o l e s . S fm rt C a r l o s C o n d e , P a t T r u l y . C»reg O l d s a n d B o b G r e e n b e r g w i l l n ls o b e e n t e r e d . a n d M a y a / ne s t o r i e s b y O s c a r G r i t fin P a t T e r r y O d i c A r n m h u l a , a n d D a y t o n K e l l e y a r e b e i n g e n t e r e d K d i t o r i a l s b v fin d M i m s , T e x a n e d i t o r , w i l l b e s u b m i t t e d . A l l s t o r i e s e x c e p t t h e m a g a z i n e t h e p u b l i s h e d In f e a t u r e s w e r e T e x a n . D e e p F lirty P o o l, lo c a te d alo n g - a irt* t h * C o lo ra d o R iv e r Just o ff I -ai. * A ustin B o u le v a rd is s c h e d ­ u led to open S u n d a y . H o u rs ss 111 be a n n o u n c ed la te r . Student P an e l A p a n e l o f f o r e i g n s t u d e n t s a t " T h e th o U n i v e r s i t y w i l l d i s c u s s A C r i t i c a l V i e w " a t 4 p m . U S T u e s d a y in th e l'nn>n, T h i s is p a r t o f t h e J u n i o r F o r u m , a n o n - c i c d i t c o u r s e th e in I n t e r n a t i o n a l S t u d i e s p r o g r a m . j u n i o r s t u d e n t s fu r M is s ile blasting o ff A n d clim b in g high! J e t trail b lazin g bright A g a in s t the s kyl W h e r e t h e y fire missiles, Y o u 'll find a m an S to p s to ta k e big pleasure W h e n a nd w h e r e ho can ., CHESTERFIELD / iic - o . fic a uhot W hit* Son4$ proving (.Iroundi, S ew Mexico S o ft-touch requirem ent for sc h o o l... S lip in to a p a ir o f th c *v a u th e n ­ tic W h ite Fluke by M a n s fie ld a n il feel hem th e y m ake ^ a lk ­ in e a soft to u c h . Value-{►need, to o ! < /Oftoe see. Congress STRIPES I he look or q u i e t elegance, so much de si r ed b y coll ege men, has ne ver been m o r e ha nd s o me l y expressed t han in a suit o f m u t e d stripes. Reynol ds- Penl and gives this gracious p a t t e r n t he t t r e a t m e n t in this pr esen t a t i on o f n a r r o w e r seams an ho o k e d v e n t 6 5 % D a c r o n 3 5 % C o t t o n Nothing satisfies like the BIG CLEAN TASTE OF T0P-T0BACC0 REGULAR KING C l*88**i I M,«r, robe co Co- C o n g r e s s at Eigh th .