T h e S u m m e r T e x a n Student N ew spaper at The University of Texas AU STIN , TEXAS, TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1965 Eight Pages Today No. 14 Dallas Coeds Still Missing Tips Flood Local Police But Shed Little Light By JOYCE JANE WEEDMAN Police are no closer to discovering the whereabouts of Shirley Ann Stark and they Susan Rigsby were a week ago, when the search for the two missing coeds w a s getting under­ way. than Monday police interviewed a second-year medical student a t Galveston who was graduated from the University last year. He was the last date Susan had the Saturday night before the girls cam e to Austin. Dozens of Shir­ ley’s and Susan’s friends and re ­ lations already have been inter­ viewed by police, and they will be talked to over and over again until new clues are turned up. TEN DAYS have passed si ne'e the two Chi Omega’s last were seen at the Holiday House on die Drag, and hundreds of false and inconclusive leads offered by a brunette-sensitive public h a v e been sifted and researched by the Austin police departm ent, the Texas Rangers, and, to a degree, the FBI. into reports of Bloody c l o t h i n g has been the station along brought with hunks of human hair, as have continual two girls in California and then North Carolina, Colorado, and every part of Texas. Innocent mounds of dirt have been dug up, tra n ­ quil meadows searched, and lo­ cal wells sounded. NO CRIME has been proven, no victim s nor crim inal found. The hands of the authorities are tied except to continue to cull out the significant from the in­ significant in the dozens of phone ing session of CPO, a Negro poli- Heal group seeking equal e m p l o y ­ ment opportunities. His speech in Municipal Auditorium Is open to the public. Admission is $1. A m em ber of the House of Rep- resentatives for 20 years, Powell has been chairm an of the Com­ m ittee on Education and Labor since 1961. He ranks thirty ninth in seniori­ ty among 435 m em bers of Con­ gress. In 3964, he won 84.4 per cent of the total vote from the Eighteenth Congressional Dis­ trict. INVITED UFO HAS from Washington other speakers for Wednesday’s session, which will be held in the Colonnade Room I of the Commodore Perry Hotel. Scheduled are George L. P. Wea­ ver, assistant secretary of labor; Randall L. Tyus, special assis­ tant to the Small Business Ad­ m inistrator; and Louis M artin, deputy chairm an of the Demo­ cratic National Committee, Also Ben Barnes, speaker of the Texas House of R e p re s e n ta ­ tives, and Mrs, Azie Taylor M or­ ton, m em ber of the P resident’s Committee on Equal Employ- m eat. calls, letters, and personal visits each day. The facts that a re known add only to the confusion and I ca v s more loose ends than tux!. Shirley and Susan can easily !>e called typical University co­ eds if such an animal exists. Shirley, an English education m a­ jor with a Spanish minor, had finished all but six hours at the University and had completed three hours of biology this sum ­ m er at North Texas, just an hour from her home in Dallas. She was planning on completing h er in philosophy, last three hours, to by correspondence, time take a in Dallas this fall. teaching job in SHIRLEY IS five fi*et two and has medium length, thick black hair. She has, if not a sh e ll, an exterior personality that is hard to crack open, to find what she something. about really She’s not moody, mixes well, and loves a party. feels She cam e to the University her junior year after being ROTO Queen a t Texas Tech as a sopho- (See DALLAS, Page 3) Exceptional Child Object of Study A new D epartm ent of Special Education will Im' established in Septem ber at the University to teachers of exceptional prepare children. The departm ent has been au­ thorized by the Board of Regents and approved by tho Texas Conv- mission on Higher Education. I m * SIX AREAS involving the ex ­ ceptional child will included in the program : m ental reta rd a­ tion, physically handicapped, gift­ ed child, visually im paired, emo­ tionally disturbed, and special education adm inistration. from The College of Education a l­ ready has a com prehensive s p e ­ cial education curriculum at all undergraduate l e v e l s through Hie doctorate. This es­ tablished program, now a part of the educational psychology de­ partm ent, will form the core of the new departm ent. in Ft Ti ICE PLANS call for m-w course sequences th e emo­ tionally disturbed area and in ad­ m inistration of special education. Expansion re ­ in search also will continue. faculty and The University m aintains a unique position in the nation in having 20 state, local, arid pri­ f a c i lit y concerned with vate educating the exceptional child within its im m ediate area which are available to faculty and stu­ dents for study and research pur­ poses. GRANTS TOTAL!XVG $450,711 have been provided by the De­ partm ent of Health, Education, and VU*]fare to aid in financing the new training program . Fifteen graduate fellowship# IO senior trains-shipt,, and ta bilsh* d with US Office of Edu­ Im* availably cation fluids, will for the 1965-66 academ ic year ut special education. Proposed Co-op Units An artist's drawing of the new co-op complex to be built across from Kinsolving Dormitory shows the contemporary design and forward look of the three buildings which will house IOO coeds. Girls approved the plans W ed* nesday. (See story, page 3.) Magazines Useful In Foreign Exchange By FORREST PREECE Texan Staff Writer Persons dealing in U n i t e d States foreign policy face a chal­ lenge to excellence in the space age. said Charles T. Vetter, spe- I / faculty Member In Rights Protest HUNTSVILLE (JI — Dr. Wil­ liam Cody Wilson, associate pro­ fessor of educational psychology, was among 24 white dem onstra­ tors who were released on $200 bond each Monday after they staged a sit-in a t a Huntsville cafe Sunday night, i Another cafe was integrated as civil rights activity continued to boil southeast Texas city. this in The 24 dem onstrators included m inisters and college professors. THEY STAGED a sit-in a t the R aven Cafe Sunday night, de­ manding that Abe Dabaghi, own­ e r of the Raven, form ally notify I k the Huntsville Action for Youth (HA-YOU) of his intention to in- teg rate his cafe. w The Dabaghi already had integrated the Raven and served two Negro men Sunday. But HA-YOU lead­ ers said they considered the Sun­ day integration token. leaders reportedly also th at Dabaghi w ere demanding hire Negro w aitresses to fill the jobs of any white w aitresses who quit because of the integration. DABAGIII HAD the dem onstra­ tors arrested on charges of dis­ turbing the peace. Twenty-five w ere put in jail. L ater, 14 Ne­ groes were served in the cafe. Approximately 30 Negroes in­ tegrated Chiles* Cafe without in­ cident Monday. Among the 25 dem onstrators ar- ■ the raigned before Justice of I P eace Mabel Franklow Monday w ere Billy Malone, 31, and Frank I Pinkerson, 37, each of the faculty at Southwest Texas State Col­ lege; die Rev. Wallace B. Poteet, 42, pastor of Ecum enical United Church of Christ, Huntsville; and the Rev. William Body Oliver, A 28, of Beaumont. —Charles Veffer cial assistant to the director of the US Information Agency. and IN A SPEECH to the combined Iran Afghanistan, Brazil, P eace Corps program s Monday night. Vetter cited three factors in the overall problem of com m u­ nication with foreigners. The first is mutuality. We can only the com municate within realm s of common experience, that V etter said. He explained women’s magazines often are useful aids in understanding for­ eign attitudes. Through intelligent questioning. we can break down the idea of “sophisticated A m erican,” the V etter said. The second problem he pointed out in foreign communication is sensitivity. WE NEED an increased sensi­ tivity to foreign reactions, Vet­ ter said. The form erly illiterate m asses a re being awakened to world problems through the tra n ­ sistor radio. These people need to under­ stand our basic policies, he said. They receive a new and intim ate through view of American television and motion pictures. THE THIRD PROBLEM communication Vetter cited perspective. in is life Communists have a set pattern of M arxist ideology to work from. This ideology is an analytical tool for a rational approach appeal. Americans reject the idea of con­ versations in term s of ideologies, Vetter said. Our society cannot be reduced to a simple line, he continued. One of sources of our strength is our diversified m eans of solving problems. the Perspective m ust be gained by discarding the idea of trying to solve problems of other countries like our own, he added. Our sqpial change has come about through a long period of tremendous uplift. One of the ba­ sic parts of this perspective m ust be a self knowledge, he pointed out. r Corps Projects For Texas Cities WASHINGTON - - The D epartm ent of Labor announced Monday that Neighborhood Youth Corps projects have been approv­ ed for IO Texas cities. federal There were Robert Leo, 32 en­ rollees, total cost $16,950, federal share $15,180; M atador, 70 en­ rollees, $37,760, share $33,490; Del Rio, 176 enrollees, $730,9.30, federal share $65,120; H em pstead, 40 enrollees, $27,885, federal share $24,424; Denton, 180 enrollees, $122,030, federal share $101,410; Comanche, 38 enrollees, $26,200, federal sh are $21,400; Abi­ lene, 150 enrollees, $71,210, feder­ al share $62,810; Snyder, 150 en­ rollees, $74,390, share $64,580; M ineral Wells, 45 enroll­ ees, $26,750, federal share $21,970; and Breckenridge, 50 enrollees, $28,430, federal share $24,300. federal A d a m Clayton Powell Jr., United States Congressman from and other prominent H arlem , Dem ocrats will speak at a two- day meeting of the United Poli­ tical Organization in Austin be­ ginning Tuesday. POWELL WILL GIVE the key­ note address at the 8 p.m. open- NY's Powell • , . se h Austin speech. A d am Clayton Powell To Talk at 8 Tonight JOHN ORR’S GA VEL Students Join Regents in D orm Plannin I study. If student opinion is to be incorporated, it must be express- ed soon. John and Wilda are both spending countless hours in they the students’ behalf, but can always use help. Surely you can think of ways your resit! could be improved to make cjp* lege life more productive. If J 1 can, write your suggestion or post card and send it to Ren 323-Union. ■ T . A . Q U I N N ’ S - Polemics Pacifist Policy Aids Russic efforts as effectively as if S and SNCC were Communist P ty functionaries. A n f p u r n c* m i n n r v o i / 1 n n J Herein lies the danger. A y< or two ago the far right, by responsible and careless s'tf ments, was giving aid and c"* fort to those they claimed to fighting. Now the far left, f< ing into the same trap or ir sponsibility, 1 very cause they say they supp —world peace. is endangering Signs of American support Soviet policy encourages Sov intransigence in the war, wh only can increase its intensi Of more proximate danger, th< statements are widely repor in Hanoi to urge the North Vi namese people not to wav j Viet Cong guerrillas, with ass ; ances that the war is unpopu ; in America, can be enticed i: fighting that much harder. AS A RESULT, pacifist rangues actually defeat the cai of peace in Viet Nam. Criticism of US foreign polio is fair play for anyone, and c demnation cannot be made criticism per se. But there is » limit, and harassment is beyc , that limit. Wild charges of “P | tagon vultures” serve no resp sible end other than d e m o n s t j I ing extremism in its most 1 form. Invitations to espionage j- I transgress revolution, sedition, not to mention reat , and bounds of freedom any nat can guarantee well as endangering the seem and liberties of all. its citizens, We have heard for three ye ■ the dangers of extremis ! of with an accusing finger poin at the Birch types. Tile time I come for frank discussion ab ! threats to national security ; basic freedoms germinating lh. on the far left. I’d say “They say we are defending in Viet Nam. Whose freedom freedom? Not the freedom of the Vietnamese. the only freedom we are defending there is freedom for the Pentagon’s military vultures,” states Paul Potter, national head of the Stu­ dents for a Democratic Society, in a newspaper article. The statement in itself repre­ sents a view Potter has every right to hold. The problem is the use of the quote. It appeared in the Pravda, official organ of Soviet Communist Party and was used to prove Pravda's six-mil­ lion Russian readers that a huge protest of American policy was brewing among the American student community. For six months the Soviet press has blasted every a s p e c t of American Vietnamese interven­ tion, particularly since the war has intensified. They reach anx­ iously for American views, albeit sincerely held, which might be twisted to indicate support for Soviet policy, identified as "an end to the imperialistic aggres­ sion in the Indochina region." THIS ARTICLE which appear­ ed April 19 and describes with Soviet coloration an SDS sponsor­ ed protest march in Washington during E aster week, quoted not only the SDS chairman, but also Democratic Sen. Grueninp of Alaska, a Yale professor, and the secretary of the Student Non- Violent Co-ordinating Committee. Theme of the march, according to Pravda. was a “mass demon­ stration against war, for reason and peaceful co-existence.” This, in Soviet the march called for American sup­ port for the Soviet Viet Nam pol­ icy. No doubt the organizers of the march did not mean it so, but, nevertheless, Soviet propa­ gandists were able to use these terms, m e a n s P E A N U I S I S5& & &g i f t I m a s # - 4 4 JL-* I 14 A - J „ ID „ V a J A Free Voice Tho United States Inform ation A gency has becom e in­ creasingly propagandistic in recent years. This is under­ standable since the governm ent agency, according to its own brochures, w as established to “m ake U S foreign policies ev­ eryw here intelligible and, w herever possible, palatable.” Yet the USI A and its Voice of Am erica have remained dedicated, least on paper, to presenting “accurate, objective, and at com prehensive” news and to present “responsible discussion and opinion” of US policies. In the propaganda war with the USSR, th e United S tates has lost som e of the im m ediate advantage because o f illest' policies, for it is com peting with propaganda m as­ t e r who present distortions and lies to further their cause. We believe this advantage to be only short run, for even the uneducated will eventually see through lies. A s a free and dem ocratic nation, the United S tates m ust conscientiously present itself and its m otives honestly, be­ c a u s e if we fought com m unism according to its own rules of distortion and half truth, we soon would have nothing left for which to fight. Under the leadership of the late Edward R. Murrow, the USI A was dedicated to just such an honest presentation, and la' strived to m ake the VGA as trustw orthy as its British counterpart, the BBC!. W hen Carl Rowan replaced Murrow, tin' VGA broadcasts becam e increasingly favorable to offi­ cial US policy. This policy has been attributed to President Johnson’s sensitivity to international criticism and his desire to justify US actions in Viet Nam and Santo D om ingo and elsew here. The USI A and the VOA became the subjects of criticism at hom e and abroad under this policy. Possibly because of such criticism , Rowan resigned and w as replaced last week by le o n a r d II. Marks, a lawyer who h as worked in various fields of com m unications. Hopefully, M arks will direct the USI A and the VOA along a less chau­ vinistic course. Sans Students Education and civic association representatives, univer­ sity adm inistrators, faculty and governm ent officials, 700 strong, gathered at the W hite House Conference on Educa­ tion last w eek to talk about the Am erican system of cadu­ ca t ion. Strangely enough, only one student, Steve Robbins, president of that unmentionable student organization which represents SOME colleges on the national scene, participated in a panel discussion. One would think that educators would be anxious to hoar student views at a conference dedicated to innovating thought on education. Yet students were conspicuously ab­ sent. Many educators and adm inistrators m ay sense the needs of this and com ing generations of students, but none could b etter explain the shortcom ings of Am erican education than th e veterans of Berkeley and Birm ingham , the frustrated students of the great education factories and the forgotten junior colleges and the southern N egro institutions. John Gardner, head of the Carnegie Foundation and chairm an of the blue ribbon conference, urged participants to “ think boldly.” Maybe President Johnson will be bold enough to include som e students next tim e he gathers a the United group to chart the d i r e c t i o n of education S tates. in Promising Results When the Civil Rights Art was passed one year ago, many flatly pi (dieted that it would not work, that a social problem so deeply rooted in tradition would not yield to legislation. Yielding has come more quickly than framers of the legislation had dared hope. A report to the President from the three departments chiefly responsible for administering the act details substantial volun­ tary compliance in nearly all areas. P ie report admits, however, that compliance has frequently stem­ med from the threat of penalties, such as withdrawal of federal funds, lath er than from a change of heart. “The next step,” it affirms, "is to achieve compliance in spirit.” School desegregation, which has continued to move at a snail’s pace, is about to achieve a major breakthrough. During the past year and even before the expected passage of the voting rights bill, Negroes have increased their voting strength in the South by almost as much as they did in die six prior years put to­ gether. All this adds up to an impressive record of achiev ement, in a com­ paratively short period of time. —CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR T h e S ummer T e x a n O p in io n s expressed in the Texan are those of the Editors or c f the the article and are not n e c e s s a r i l y those of the w riter of U n iv e rsity adm inistration. The Sim m er Texan $ p ie Inc., Drawer D, U niveri ty S* d a y end I . Jo y n >rn e J exam p second ;. S u b s c rip t n tag® paid at cd by Te'e< St. dent Pub c a ' or s. on, A .‘.tin, Texas, 78 712 en Tu©$- ..rnmer t --copt for • c days f ' e is l f .50 * c r t h # e n t i r e S i . m m # f . itiUt ~ the e*as. Tuesday, July 27, 1965 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 2 If you saw last Tuesday’s Tex­ an you probably remember the candid picture of one Regent with, of all things, knitting need­ les. No it wasn’t chairman Heath or even Mr. Erwin. The Regent with Hie fastest needle in the West was the first lady of our University, Mrs. Johnson. Did you happen to wonder what Mrs. Johnson was knitting? Well, maybe you as an average stu­ dent don’t really care what she that fact, any Regent, or for might knit but you should, be­ cause Mrs. Johnson and her eight comrades are knitting a dorm. As one might expect this is not an ordinary dorm, but hopeful­ ly, a warm and inviting one, housing 1,400 women and 1,000 men. Incorporated with this dor­ mitory will be academic facili­ ties with the objective of inte­ grating the students’ living ex­ perience and his learning ex­ perience. THE FORM of this new com­ plex is the responsibility of our Board of Regents; but unlike .similar projects in the past, the decision will not be entirely left to this board and its consulting architects. In hopes of developing a dormitory unique to this Uni­ versity, the Administration de­ cided to invite faculty and stu­ dents to submit their suggestions on facilities which would cultivate the students’ intellectual curiousi- ty. Two significant features of this decision could greatly affect the course of this University. First, the Administration has recogniz­ ed the importance of a student’s residence to his total academic experience in college. is Second and of greater impor­ tance the acknowledgement that our University is a single community of numerous parts, all of which have a vital interest in decisions affecting the whole. When the committee was for ru­ ed to assist in planning the r esi­ dence complex, two students were selected to sit on the committee. This opportunity was both long in coming and loaded with re­ sponsibility. Just as in other com­ munities, not all students are qua­ lified to make educated recom- JOHN McRAE and W i I d a the re­ Campbell both surpass quirements. Neither suffers from apathy especially when "student residences” are the subject of conversation. John was president of tile Inter Co-Op Council, pro­ organiza­ bably tion whose inter­ is est housing. He stu­ is an also dent and last semester partici­ pated in a course project design­ ing academic residences. Wilda, besides living in College House, also studied many of the con­ cepts employed in academic resi­ dences. architectural primary student largest the the most John and Wilda have carefully formulated a long list of sugges­ tions, important of which have already found their way to the Regents. Soon John will go with Administrative and faculty representatives to study similar dormitories in Michigan and Wisconsin. Within the next month many more concepts will be presented and investigated. Before the fall semester be­ ginning preliminary plans must be before thhe Regents for their S T A F F E d ito r— K aye N o rth c o tt M a n a g in g E d ito r— Em ily ta m o * Issue N ew s E d i t o r Dan R ice N ig h t A m usem ents E d 'tc r . . . . . . . . . M ak e-U p Ed ito r . . . . . R ich ard C o le •.................. Nathan Fain C o p y Eg .tor ........... Debb e Dr.»er h ght R e p o s e r . . . . . Forrest Preece C o p yread er ................. E r r F check Assi;tent ........... V ’ve Silva *t n N ig h t W ir e Editor • .. George S o w N ight Sports Editor . . . . Sam Keech Fchtori©! A s sista n t...C a ro ly n N ‘ch0is Coeds Blueprint Co-op Dream SSS? their design concept on a separa­ tion of public and private areas. floor, ON THE PUBLIC the coeds requested a rest room for men guests and an entrance foy­ er. “ The old co-ops do not have a restroom for men, which creates a problem,” Miss Vasquez point­ ed out. Because of cleaning problems, the girls decided carpeting would I k? placed only in the living room. The type of windows, built in ov­ en, and garbage disposal was al­ so specified by the co-op resi­ dents. One coed led a continual cam­ paign for a canopy-type cover at the entrance of each co-op so she would not “ get drenched” when it rained. When the coed viewed the final drawings, minus the c a n o p y , she remarked, “ There is still some question con­ cerning the front door and the rain.” A majority of the coeds re­ the roof quested a sundeck on “ After we ex­ of each co-op. the extra expense and plained the the problem of extending stairs, they decided to eliminate the sundeck,” Ata Safai, design­ er for the architects, explained. AFTER DESIGNING the new co-ops, to the architects “ sell” the coeds on one part of the plan. had “ Members of two old co-ops felt that their co-op would Ik* “ in I J the back door’’ of the 11-unit | ^ complex,” Dean Berry pointed \ J out. “ But the architects arranged j§ the three new' buildings so that the two old co-ops would not be in the back door.” “ We made proposals, and die coeds made counter proposals,” j Graeber explained. “ They told us j their pet peeves, and we tried j they! to give them everything wanted.” Elevated lawns will be a fea­ landscaping. ture of the “ T h eI high lawns will keep people from walking on the grass and direct j the traffic from place to place,” Safai explained. THE NEW UNITS WILL en­ close a rectangular area for sun­ bathing and par ties. A public en­ try court will be located in front of the three new buildings. Co-op coordinators were select­ ed to advise the architects be- I cause they are representative of , the women who live in co-ops. I Some coeds in the old co-ops, I however, said they may not live in the new co-ops because of the increased price. Planning for the five new' co-! in April. The final ops began plans were approved unanimous-1 ly by the Women’s Coordinator j Committee on Thursday, and the I Project Committtee. Before con-: tracts can be awarded, the Fac-1 ulty Building Committee and the I By CAROLYN BARKLEY Texan Staff Writer Eleven coeds have assisted in Resigning the first new women’s co-ops in 14 years. Representing each women’s co­ op. the coeds made suggestions to the University architects who designed the $375,000 contempo­ rary [lousing complex. Tho five new cooperative units, which will house IOO coeds, will be constructed across the street from Kinsolving Dormitory. Con­ struction three - story buildings is slated to begin in January, 1966. the for Livability, privacy, and differ­ ent room arrangements were the main concern of the architects and the coeds. Besides air condi­ tioning, the coeds desired more storage room, larger bathrooms, moveable furniture, and separa­ tion of public and private areas. “ALL THE WOMEN wanted moveable furniture,” David Grae- ber, architect for Brooks, Barr, 'Graeber, and White, said. “ We had wanted stationary furniture for maintenance.” Because the old rectangular- shaped co-ops lack adequate stor­ age room for luggage and appli­ ances. storage space will be three times greater than present, Zonia Vasquez, chairman of the Women’s Coordinator Council, explained. “ Adequate u t i l i t y space will also be provided in the new buildings.” THE PROBLEM OF the living room, dining room, and kitchen being in a straight line was a concern of the coeds and the architects. “ In the old co-ops, guests can see you go to the kitchen,” Miss Vasquez explained. “ In the new co-ops, the kitchen is set off from the living room and the dining room so that we can have privacy.” Although all coeds wanted air conditioning, economy was a ma­ jor consideration. “ A ir condition­ ing in the new buildings was in­ ferred from the beginning,” M ar­ garet Berry, associate dean of w o m e n , explained, “ but, the women always kept the cost in mind.” In the old co-ops, bedrooms are adjacent to the kitchen. Because the coeds desired privacy and quietness, the architects based Dallas Coeds . . . (Continued From Page One) more. She dated many, had been least once, and at pinned at Christmas time of this year be­ came engaged to B ill Norman, a pre-dental student at North Tex­ as who came his first two years to the University. They had known one another for years and had become serious last fall. Their engagement last­ ed until two weeks ago, less than a month before their wedding was to take place. The dresses were taught, the invitations sent out. It was a tedious task can­ celing the affair, but Shirley wasn’t ready to get married and B ill wasn’t the person she want- * ed to marry. % Shirley lived with her aunt and uncle in Dallas, as her parents had divorced when s h e was young. Both have since rem ar­ ried and Shirley adopted her guardians as thoroughly as they adopted her. After spending sev­ en years traveling in Europe with her mother and m ilitary step-fa­ ther, she was old enough to be almost a friend to her new pro­ viders rather than a daughter. They had sent her to school and had bought her a new yellow' Corvair Monza last vear. SUSAN R IG S B Y IS a dark, willowy girl, more given to moodiness and taken with ideas. Her friends are an assortment of personalities, varied in style and interest. She is warm, genuinely friend­ ly, and one of the most popular | girls in her sorority. She was not the demands boys r typical made of her time. She dated con­ stantly many different boys. in Susan’s parents also were di­ vorced when she was small. Her mother remarried once, for only a short while, and since then she and her mother have lived alone together in Dallas. Their rela­ tionship, because of their alone­ ness. is an unusually close one. Susan likes c l o t h e s , good clothes, and she takes good care of the dresses, skirts, and Mouses she has worked to pay for, and now and then meticulously made herself. TH IS SPR IN G siie was out of school, working in Dallas as a secretary. She had failed to make the required grades her fall se­ mester. An English major, Susan had another year and a half to go before getting a degree. A couple of weeks ago, a group of Chi Omegas were sitting around talking in Dallas. Shirley said she wanted to come down to Austin for a few days, and Su­ san said fine, I ’m going down for second semester, can I hitch a ride. The girls came down Sunday in Shirley’s Corvair, visited some friends, ate lunch more or less inadvertently with Martha Blount, Susan’s roommate for the pres­ ent semester, and her family, and left, promising to call at 4 o’clock to find out when they could move into their apartment at the River Oaks. T H E R E S T IS now' missing person statistics: Tho girls’ cloth­ ing was found Monday night and Shirley's car, Wednesday. It is known that they stopped at a Texaco service station Sunday and filled the tank, a capacity of 14 gallons. When the car was found it had 2*4 gallons in it. It also had scratches on the bot­ tom and grass between the doors and the molding. The rest is hearsay or theory as the girls continue in their second week of being missing persons. BOOK SALE! Discount on Entire Stock As Follows: Tuesday, July 27th- ••■... 10% Wednesday, July 28th. . . 2 0 % Thursday, July 29th 3 0 % Friday, July 30th............. 4 0 % 5 0 % Saturday, July 31st HOURS 10-6 TRAVIS BOOK SHOP 109 EAST I0TH GR 8-6545 Board of Regents mast give their approvals. Tile prospect of the new co ops tieing too contemporary for the campus was pondered by the architects. “ But one of the great importances of the buildings is that they represent a break in the type of architecture on cam­ pus,” Graeber explained. After viewing the final life like painting of the new building com­ plex, one coed remarked that people would no longer ask, “ Oh .so those are the co-ops. I didn't even know that they were there.” Despite tho new cxmkI dorm de­ signed to house I .OOO male and 1.100 female students, there wiH still be ax many students not living in University housing af there are new, Dr. L. D. ll as­ kew , vice-chancellor, said recent­ ly. Haskew said that by 1%9 TO, en- rollment w ill increase bv 2.500 male, 1,500 female, and 1,100 married students. He added that a IO year enrollment projection puts expected enrollment in 1975 at 35,000. D e p e n d , . I m l i l y really pronto sen ie© tya/ccfiA 2013 Guadalupe T y p in g GR 2-3210 or GR 2-7677 W h e r e typing for student* la a full time c a r e e r iSK W K 9 tM i ' M M M - pmmwpmjn* ■ rn* wmm mmm* mmm UNIVERSITY OI TEXAS I CLASS RING THE FINEST MADE! A FULL YEAR TO PAY For Your Senior Ring! Choice of While or Yellow Gold Priced From OO S O C JL O I I I n*t r a t i oa e n l a r g e d to show de t a i l • is * * .-fcjfev, .. : St Z a i r e 's * 2236 GUADALUPE Ad HAMILTON'S POOL - RECREATION AT ITS BEST Swimming — Piercing — Hiking Hgwy 290 (South Lamar) to OakhiB — Hgwy 71 pelt Trading Post U/2 miles to Hamilton Pool Road. 40c per person ilt HAMILTON'S POOL CO 4 1975 tm A Tough Customer BUT I KNOW WHERE YOU GET TREATED RIGHT! EL M AT EL TORO 504 tort Ara. I M w 4 EL CHARRO loth Rad Rod Rhrtr ALL THE MEXICAN FOOD YOU CAN EAT . SKS Como la .Today! MAXIMUM Pay Oily for tho Actual Amount Tov Eat, or $1^5, Whichwror is Loos. T*md*y, July 27, I94S THE SUMMER TEXAN Fag* 3 May End Colorful Career Injury H its C a se y N EW YORK — (JF) — Casey Stengel will undergo su rg ery T uesday on his broken left hip injury th a t will keep the celebrated baseball c h ara c te r aw ay from his New York Mots for several weeks and could m ean tin1 end of his long career. WHILE STENGEL, who will be 75 this Friday, is incapacitated Die N ational L eague’s tail-end team will be m anaged by Wes West rum, one of three Met coaches. Ile was Stengel’s nominee Monday for th e interim job. Stengel suffered a displaced frac tu re of his hip early Sunday — b u t how re ­ m ains a question.. T he prevailing version is th at he slipficd getting out of a c a r not long a fte r attending a p a rty th at lasted u n ­ til th e early m orning hours. DR. PETER LA MOTTE, tile Mots’ team physician, will perform th e operation. Stengel is expected to rem ain in Roosevelt H ospital fo r th ree weeks, th en convalesce at his home in Glendale, Calif. T h ere is a likelihood th a t th e aged m anager will not be back with th e Mots this season — if a t all. He indicated last week he would retire this year, although both he and the club’s fro n t office late r denied th a t an y th in g was definite. NOW, with a painful—and a t his age, serious— physical set-back, th ere a re strong possibilities Stengel is th ro u g h w ith base­ ball a fte r 55 years. THE MISHAP MARRED one of th e highlights of Stengel’s highlight-studded c a ree r — a week-long gala celebrating his 75th b irth d ay . He w as to have been hon­ ored by th e big crow d a t Shea Stadium Sunday b u t w as in th e hospital by then. Double Homers Give Dodgers Big Victory LOS ANGELES — CW — Two- run homers by Willie Davis and W(>s P arker, plus M aury Wills’ 68th and 69th stolen bases, c a r ­ ried Ixis Angeles to a 5-4 victory over Cincinnati Monday night and moved two gam es ahead of Die Reds in tile National League race. the Dodgers Tile Dodgers scored fve runs in the first two innings against Jim Maloney, 11-5, helping veteran left-hander Johnny Podres gain his first victory since M ay 27. The Reds scored two eighth-in­ ning runs off reliever Bob Miller turned before Ron Perranoski aside a bases-loadod th reat by retiring Tony Perez on a ground­ e r to second. You are invited to bear The Honorable A dam Clayton Powell C O N G R E S S M A N , U.S. H O U S E O F REPRESENTATIVES C H A I R M A N O F THE C O M M I T T E E O N E D U C A T I O N A N D L A B O R P ASTOR OF THE A B Y S S I N I A N BAPTIST C H U R C H , New York City, N.Y. Tuesday, July 27, IO C 5 — 8:00 P M. Municipal Auditorium, South First and Riverside D rive, Austin, Texas $1.00 (P a y a t the D o o r) (Pol. Adv. Pd. for by: United P olitical Org of T ex a s) m o m Baseball Standings im A VIK It IVAN L E A G U E M on d a y ’s B e s a ile I .os A n g eles 6. B o sto n 2, n ig h t M in n esota 8, B a ltim o re 2, n ig h t O nly g a m es sch ed u led . VV M in n esota B a ltim o r e C leveland D e tr o it C hicago N ew York L os A n g e le s W a sh in g to n B o sto n K ansas C ity .......................61 36 ...................... 56 4U .......................55 40 ............................. 53 40 ...........................52 42 .................... 48 51 ................ 46 52 ................ 42 56 .............................35 60 ................ 30 61 OH 4>/i 5 6 7V4 I. P et. . 629 .583 . 579 . 570 . 553 .485 14 .469 35’* 429 19% .368 25 .330 28 N A T IO N A L LEA G U E M o n d a y ’g K esultg M ilw au k ee 6, H ou ston 0, n ig h t St. Ix>uis 7, S a n F ran cisco 4 L os A n g e le s 5, C in cinnati 4 W L os A n g eles C in cin n a ti S a n F r a n cisco M ilw aukee P h ila d elp h ia P ittsb u r g h St. L o u is C hicago H ou ston N ew Y ork ................ 59 42 ...................... 56 43 ............52 42 .................... 52 43 ................ 49 47 ..............50 49 ...................... 49 49 ...........................45 54 ...........................43 53 .................... 32 65 2 GB I, P et. .584 . 566 .553 .547 .510 .505 .500 . 455 13 .448 13** . 330 25 4 7% 8 8’* Twins Rap Orioles; Lead by VA Games B A L T IM O R E -IP U -Home runs by Don Mincher and Harmon Killebrew sparked the American 1 League-leading Minnesota Twins to an 8-2 victory over Baltim ore Monday night. The Twins, who moved 4 ^ gam es ahead of the second-place Orioles, four un­ also scored earned runs. Mincher sm acked a three-run homer in the opening inning off Milt Pappas, who entered the gam e with a 10-3 record and a 1.67 earned run average. Kille­ brew hit a solo blast in the sixth. F rank Quilici’s double, an in­ field out, and a passed ball pro­ vided Minnesota with an un­ the fifth. Three earned run more in the seventh as Baltim ore m ade three errors, w’ith winning pitch­ e r Jim G rant and Tony Oliva driving in runs. tallies scored tainted in T H E S IS and D IS S E R T A T IO N B I N D I N G University Co-Op rn B'nding done by com pany with 38 years binding experience. Prompt dependable service. SLACKS ii ★ DACRON & W OOL ★ ORLON & W OOL ★ DACRON & ACETATE SUMMER & YEAR-ROUND FABRICS $ ^ 8 8 VALUES TO $12.95 Sports Briefs Randy Eyes 70 Feet During European Tour NEW YORK - m - Randy M at­ son, the young giant from Texas A&M who holds the world shot put record, predicted a throw of 70 feet on his European tour Monday as 70 United States athle­ tes set off for Russia and the an­ nual track and field m eet with the Soviets. MATSON, A 6-FOOT-7, 20-year- old Texan who has a pending m ark of 70 feet 7 inches for the shot, was the group of 49 men and 21 women who left New York Monday afternoon. in They are scheduled to arrive in Moscow Tuesday afternoon and will be joined there by 14 other m em bers of the team that will compete against Russia. The 14 already are in Europe. FROM MOSCOW they will go on to Kiev for the meet Sa turd* and Sunday. They also have m eets schedu cd in Poland and Germany, bi Matson said he will skip the Ge m an m eet. “I worked out in New York couple of hours Monday,” Ma son said “ and I had a couple > throws over 65 feet. T hat’s mile better than I usually do in pra* tice. ‘T V E GOT MY WEIGHT up 250 pounds and I feel I ’m comir into m y best shape ever. I thir I can get off a throw of 70 whi I ’m over th ere.” Matson said he planned to cor pete in R ussia and Poland, ski Germ any in favor of a tour i the Scandanavian countries, tiV, go on to Budapest and the W or’ University Games. Cards Overrun Giants SAN FRANCISCO - UPI - BUI White slam m ed a two-run hom er and Dick G roat doubled in two m ore Monday, powering the St. Louis Cardinals to a 7-4 victory over the San Francisco Giants. White ripped his 14th homer of the season in the second in­ ning after Ken Boyer had reach­ ed base on an error, while G roat’s double to left provided two m ore in the sixth. Boyer had a hand in two otfy Cardinal runs, driving in Gro> with a single in the sixth ar.’ scoring on Phil Gagliano’s saci fice fly in the seventh. Right-hander Bob Gibson g credit for his 12th victory, b needed relief help in the eigh when the Giants rallied for tv, runs. Don Dennis cam e on ai ended the inning by getting pin< hitter Willie Mays on a fly ba Gridiron Teams A ddec than With little m ore six weeks before the football fever takes over Texas, the Universi­ ty Interscholastic League said Monday that m ore high school team s than ever before will tangle on the gridiron. Last year there were 944 team s. H iis season there will be 950 team s. The big city confer­ the ence, Class AAA A, shows two added football, Class AA largest team s. increase with six rn » two n€, schools, Class B one school, ai’ six-man school Class AAA and eight-man fc* ball stay the sam e as last * * while Class A lost five schools,* The breakdown, by conferenc Class AAAA — 151; AAA—ll, AA—184; A—196; B—181;six ma 64; and eight-man—59. FINAL REDUCTION OF MEN’S SHOES Group I — W ere to $29.95 N O W $ 1 5 . Group 2 — W ere to $16.95 N O W S IO . Entire Stock N ot Included 2332 Guadalupe OPEN THURSDAYS TILL 8 P.M. r t i i s t u d f h Y $ o w n s i o r t Specializing in C o l l e g i a t e Fashions Textbooks — Downstairs 2348 Guadalupe — On the Drag Tuesday, July 27, 1965 THE SUM M ER TEXAN Page S H O E T u rn < ur spar* hours int., r i m s cash G I. 2 *ih»ti Miscellaneous W a te r m< ion garden Sp rin g s Road i i ) B a rto n Ice cold w Her m elon served d a ily except S a turd as Pi H U i ! G R O O M IN G h alf prna* Alx<* *■ ivei m iniature stud service. u l . J * AR I 8 ; I D E N I' S U P P L I E S I w o e a s e ls IO > 5-0743 t ! < • dcd$ Typing I \ I ENI. I * rm papers th. t in ' t % pew Titer. (.1 ,3 7979 E x p ert tx ping. Personalized, Ice Them es, reports, bro M rs M ontgom ery. G it 2 .Vie: . E D R ID G E T Y P I N G S E P 304% E . 30th Street .R 1696 G R 6 i e . T echnical papers a sp ecialty .air L B M ex tra symbols on th e * for science, engineering m allet and language. Drafting I t t ing and binding. ' 2**1 c o * r he­ rn tt t- M A R T H A A N N Z I V E E Y M B A. rvp in g . M u ltlllth in g . B in d in g A com plete professional typ in g s* rv* a c tailored t<* the nceils of I n iversrtv S p a tia l ke\ board equipm ent student* for InnguRKe. ar fence and engineering th* s< j and dissertations. Phone G R 2 3210 A G R 2-7677 2013 G U A D A L U P E A R T IS T IC . I rtefs reports A C C U R A T E T Y P IN G * theses, d itsertation a, ty p e w rite r M r*. m anuscripts I B M A n th o n y. N orth east u n iv e r s it j. i 2i >2. G R 2* P R O F I C I E N T A N D V I R Y E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G S E R V I C E L O R A L L F I E L D S IB M electro-mat Ic d istin ctive n c u ra fa typ in g and personalized s/'ri e b y eons. i« ut urns L E G A L B R I E F S , sem in ar papers a sp e c ia lty R« ;H*rts, te rm papers. X erox copies dissertations, secretary. thebes, G R 8 5894 S H O R T ON T Y P I N G G raham , G E 3 5725. T IM ! M ist F A C U L T Y -STH D E N T P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I N G S E R V I C E ( om petent typ in g Q u alified ny w id e ex|x*rienec Mnnus«Tl pts fo r diJtsi n a ­ tion* theses and reports Perso n al and cons lent iou# handling of * w*r\ n e t ) in* lulling iiiultiht lung and photo copy- M R S L A U R A B O D O I R I ‘horn G R 8-8113 907 W 2 2 % (F o u r blin ks west of D ra g ) I Y P IN G . < carbon D issertations, rib b o n i. M rs. Pica or W oods H O V i lo * j Ing. 1078 D E L A F I E L D T Y P I N G S E R V I C E. J Theses, 15 years' experience U T graduate. 20« page- up. dissertations, I l l 2 6522. re to rts. I T Y P I N G W A N T E D tions, com ments sonable G L 2-9740 a fter 6. rates C a ll B rie fs disserta­ Exp erienced R e a ­ I i bell* Ju a n ita P O R T S T H E S E S. D I S S E R T A T I O N S , R E ­ f K s c i e n c e m athem atics, engini erlfur* language accent* Greek. C a ll G R 2e 9617. IB M Se I cc trio Sym b o l* ecutive F A S T A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G Elcctrb IB M E x ­ v im t h e s e * brief*, report* Mrs. F o w le r, G G 3-8600. Guaranteed. Exp erier > e T Y P I N G E le c tric C L 3 5124. T h e s is : business. typ< a rlter. Mr- law . d r * I Ilion. Summer Texan Classified Ads Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Furnished Houses Help W anted " V i l l a 52* ’ 1307 E a s t 52nd " V il la A n ita " 3909 A n ita Dr. One-two air-conditioned bedroom units $65-1110 R eservations taken H I 2-0995 S H O A L C R E E K A P T S . L a r g e I bedroom apartm ents. In d iv i­ d u a l A/C . Fu rn ish ed , carpeted, patio. C ontact M g r.: 1008 W . 25th., Apt. C. G R 6-2547. L A F I E S T A A P T S — 409 E . SOTH tw o B a th s each. Lu x u rio u s tw o B R . L R , D R , buiit-in kitchen, separate lounge, pool, A/C, carpeting, built-in chests, walk-in closets, parking. A \ ail- a b le u n til Sept. I . bedroom. 2406 R io Grande. K E A R U N I V E R S I T Y . M odern A /C 2 I bed­ room 702 VV. 2 4 % . C L 3-5314, G R 6- 3711. H A W T H O R N E A P T S . 2413 Leon GR7-9324 Town-House style, two bedrooms. L R - p rivate patio. D R . buiit-in kitchen M aid furnished. A /C, carpeting, parking, access to pool. A vailable u n til Sept. I. service, b e a u tifu lly A p t 2 dow n! fie ld ) D A R L IN G A P T S . F O R T IN Y B U D G E T S $49.50—$79.50 Modern. Clean. Quiet. Som e A / C P le n ty closets. N ice appliances $-19 50 G as-W tr P d — 908-F W e s t 22nd $52.50 G as-W tr P d —2011 R e d R iv e r $59.50 G as-W tr Pd-908-A VV'est 22nd (So. entrance $69 50 1908-F Sp eed w ay $79.50 B ills P d — 1801 N ile s R o a d ( E n ­ $79.50 G a s- W tr P d — 3205-D Grooms $79.50 4000 B u rn e t Road O P E N F O R Y O U R IN S P E C T IO N G R 2-0952 G R 8-8935 G R 8-6881 B e a u tifu l B R I A R C L I F F M A N O R 1107 Sh oalcreek — 8 Blo cks U T & Capitol C en tral heat and a ir A ll bills paid S u m m er rates— $105— I bedroom Glass— P r iv a te P a tio — Cable T V Spacious— Q u ie t—L u x u r y L iv in g P le n ty P a r k in g — Students W elcom e G R 8 8935 M gr. Apt. 105 G R 2-0952 I B L O C K VV A I JC to campus. N ic e A / C e fficien cy. $80 per month W a ter-Rna paid. L a v in d a Apts. 20th and Sabine. G U 2 8648. H I 2-8438. $7950 D A R L IN G F U R N I S H E D H O M ! 4000 Burnt t Road R ece n tly redeco­ rated Modern. Clean. Quiet. G R a 8935, G R 8-6881. UT MEN C A V A L I E R A P T S . furnished 307 E 31st two bedroom room. la u n d r y M aid and ja n ito r B e a u tifu lly apts. A/C . D irg e pool, study Cable T V . Service. O ff street parking. M ake so u r reservation now for fa ll $55-$45 m onthly per person A L L B I L L S P A I D G R 2-7611 G R 8-3336 2711-2721 H e m p h ill P a r k One Bedroom Carpeted Paneled S w im m in g Pool A ir Conditioned Water-Gas paid Sto ra g e S u m m e r $79.50 G R 2-5742 G R 7-1637 F a ll $89 50 G R 2 t83S V A ULTED . BEA M ED C E I L I N G In fu r­ this ultra-modern 2-bedroom nished apt. H A N G IN G F I R E P L A C E . terr azo floors, paneled w alls, b u ilt­ in kitchen, p riv a te ya rd , alr-condl- tlo m d , off street parking. $130 in F a ll. 3408 West Ave. George A. O l­ son. 1-512 — CA 7-2231, l'» >9 F ro st B a n k B ld g . Sa n Antonio. T ex., now leasing. T en ants w ill show. W anted rn d o ry cleaning. B a b y sitting, IR O N IN G IN M Y H O M E O ffice, dor ('a re for elderly person 5207 Ln. H o 5 5905. 295) F E M A L E L O O K IN G room mate G raduate student-working J rl A C, sw im m ing pool, $35, one bedroom. G R 6-8648. for N E E D T W O M A IN T E N A N C E men to w ork for rent. M a tu re college stu ­ dent. G R 6-5631. l i t A P A R T M E N T M A N A G I R L a w .Student w ants to m anage apart nu ut unit for fall semester Licensed R e a l Estate B ro k e r Expert* need Con tact D ra w e r D-3, U n iv e rsity Statio n . W A N T E D , one-two roo mat es for con­ aft* r apartm ent. it 5 30. G it 2-5726. W eirdoes, tem porary' forget C a ll Furnished Rooms Furnished Apartments The BLACKSTONE APTS. New Low Rates For Men and Women Walk to Classes Now Accepting Reservations for Fall • Two bedroom— two-bath apartments • Completely furnished • All electric kitchens • Walk-in closets • Wall-to-wall carpets • Off-street parking for all tenants • Laundry facilities 2910 Red River • Opposile shopping center • All bills paid • Maid service • Private study areas • Centrally air conditioned • Individual built-in desks • Private balcony patios and bookshelves for each suite G R 6-563 Rooms for Rent TOW ER VIEW Study residence for rrer, 3002 University Avenue. 0f $35. per montK catering to outstanding freshmen end proven students. Opened September, 1964— a new privately operated study residence. Carpeted ’ourges, cable TV, air-conditioned, exclusive Ncrthside of campus, private paining c!o«« to cam­ pus. Emphasis on study atmosphere. Grade point avenage 1.3 or better. For freshmen, SAT of 1150. See 6 P.M. -8:00 P.M. nightly. $175— foil semester, $140— spring semester. Help W anted 5 - STAR OPPORTUNITY ★ PART-TIME JO B ★ FLEXIBLE W O R K IN G HOURS ★ INVALUABLE EXPERIENCE IN HUM AN RELATIONS ★ PAY RAISE EVERY SIX MONTHS ★ BOARD AND ROOM PROVIDED — ADDITIONAL LIVING A LLO W A N C E FOR SINGLE FEMALE AND MARRIED EMPLOYEES — M A L E & F E M A L E C O L L E G E S T U D E N T S N E E D E D T O S U P E R V I S E D O R M L I F E A N D R E C R E A T I O N A L A C T I V I T I E S F O R E M O T IO N ­ A L L Y D I S T U R B E D C H I L D R E N (A g es 6-18) — R E Q U I R E M E N T S : Common - sense; En th u sia sm ; and C re a tiv ity — T ra in in g Provid ed . — C O N T A C T : Mr. K ie l, T h e B ro w n .Schools Telephone: G R &4J662 Furnished Apartments T H E BLA C KSTO N E APARTM ENTS FOR MEN & W O M E N OFFERING ★ ★ ★ ★ Privacy & Sound Proofing Air Conditioning All Bills Paid Excellent S*udy Facades ★ An-p’e O rf S 'reer Parking ★ Complete Kitchens ★ Private Belee" es * Maid Service ★ 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath Apartr-re-^s SUMMER RATES — ($65 per Semester) Only Two Vacanc’es Leffr ■910 Red, River GR 6-563! P R I V A T E P A T IO ; One bedroom, furnished, new, modern I apartm ent, central heat-A/C, paneled, carpet, draperies, covered carport, s t o r ­ age space, tenants w ill show; w ater. gas. ya rd paid. C all o r w rite G. A. Olson, 1009 F ro st B a n k Bld g ., San A n ­ tonio. Texas, C A p ito l 7-2231. $35 D E L I G H T F U L B E D R O O M E n vate entrance. P riv a te bath. R e frig e ra to r M odern Clean Quiet. 1906 S a n G ab riel. G R 7-8158. G R 2 0952. j N E W , Q U I E T — Ideal for students. P r i vate entrance, bath, air-conditioned. IO m inutes drive U .T . G R 8-0505 B E D R O O M . L I V I N G R O O M , kitchen. cooler ra te — $60.00, bills paid. 909 furnished. W in d o w N ic e ly August W . 22nd. G R 8-4105. 3 - B ED R O O M private. 1953 en tire second 0673. L a rg e. A P A R T M E N T . R ed R iv e r. $125.00 for session. G E 2-2364, G L 3- $60 to Septem ber A L L S U M M E R : 803-B W . T7th. A /C I . $6o month thereafter. Gas paid. Reed. G R 7-1991. G R 8-2258. W N A A ^ V V \ A A / > A A A " V V V V N A A A A " V N A A iA A / V A / W V V V Duplex — Furnished er, carport. Also one. B R I C K D U PL E X C entral air. W a s h ­ three bedroom duplexes. N e a r U .T . G it 7* 8414. tw o, cious. 3907 M A P L E W O O D ; redecorated, spa­ tw o bedroom upper. W a te r tile bath, w all heater. N ice P re fe r U n iv e rs ity couple. cooler, fu rn itu re $75 OO. W a te r paid. G L 3-3863. For Rent R en t a T V . $10-15 per month. G R 2- 2692. G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S F re s h ly redecorated rooms and a p a rt­ In a tasteful Spanish ments for mon style. Carpeted, tile baths, drapes, A/C. E a s y w a lk in g distance of U n iv e r­ s i t y . F u lly equipped kitchen. N o un­ dergraduates. P r e fe r serious and mn- I tu r« grads law . science or engi­ tasteful s u r­ neering w ho app reciate roundings and w ill be at least a y e a r , or longer at U T. M u st see to appre­ ciate. In q u ire w ith m anager 1610 W e st Avenue. G R 7-7876 $30-$50 In ACACIA F R A T E R N I T Y Ex ce lle n t Rooms for Men $45/semester Air-Conditioned F u lly Carpeted P o rte r S ervice 2614 R io Grande G R 2-5118 IO 30 I OO or afte r 2 30 C a ll between THE PASO HOUSE 1808 W e st A vo ue "A GO O D PLACE TO STUDY* N ow renting rooms fo r the long sis slon at reduced rates. Quiet secluded environm ent; perfect for study, D irg e rooms a rran ged by suites Y e a r around la ir condition ing : carpeted h a lls; rooms Sep arate T V in d iv id u a lly decorated. lounge area. Am ple storage space F iv e I vacancies loft. C a ll G R 8 3917 F O R P A L L . U n u su ally large a/e room fo r P riv a te en trance. W a lk in g distance G R 8-4228 two men students For Sale A U T O M O B IL E S T E R E O T A P E p layer B e »t sound available. C all GL2-U806 for 5-mlnute dem onstration. N o obliga­ tion. 1961 M G A. coupe, red. R & H 32 Ck") miles. 1959 Hi nault, new paint. Both good condition G R 7-2772. 1960 B L U E A N D W H I T E C o rv a lr fo u l door sedan. M ust sell by August, j G R 2-0169 a fte r 5 j T A P E R E C O R D E R , fo u r tra ck stereo turn portable w ith speakers and table. Ex c e lle n t condition. H O 5-6024. 2300 E N F I E L D R D A/C. la rg e b rick one B R apts. N ic e ly furnished, com bi­ living-dining room. Upper or nation lower. I^arge closets, carport, on bus. Couples: no pets. $7S-$80. R educe fo r lease. G R 2-5502. M O B Y U E T T E M O T O R 2,200 miles. Bu d d y seat $90 Excellent condition. 1203-E B ra c k e n rid g e Apts G R 7-2438. B I K E . 61 P L Y M O U T H S A V O Y , Six C yl. Std Trans, R A Ii. Ex ce lle n t condition Vt a rra n ty valid. L o w m ileage $1350 G L 2-3119. M A R T H A A N N Z I V E E Y M P A iy p in g , M u ltlllth in g . B in d in g ti ping senr* A com plete professional f ’niver- ice tailored to the need* »,f student*. S p e cia l keyboard equip* sit im nt for language, ic le n re , and « ors* Deering thesis and dissertations Phone G R 2 3210 & G R 2 7677 2013 G U A D A L U P E 2404 and 2406 W I N S T E D L A N E . near In T a rry to w n . A/C, re­ W in d s o r Rd. conditioned. n ice ly furnished. One B R apts. L R carpeted, garage, >ard kept, w a te r paid, no pets. Couples $65. G R 2- 5502. B A C H E L O R A P A R T M E N T . 2216 VV est- privileges. lake D riv e ; $75 per month. w ith dock H I 4-3779 T H R E E B L O C K S C A M P U S . R e n tin g fo r sum m er and fall L a rg e one bed­ room apartm ents. A/C, off s t r u t p a rk ­ ing. AU bills paid. See or ca ll m an­ ag e r: 710 W e s t 24th, A p t. 3 G R 6*0004 afte r 5 p m. | E L E C T R O N I C P IA N O W u r llt/ e r por- | Includes I now set tone bar* fro m factory. < ash table self contained. P ric e $115. C L 3-3844. Printing A L D R I D G E T Y P IN G 304% E . 30th : j t r d t S E R V I C E G R 7 1696 G R 6-9367 ley A U S - T E X D U P L IC A T O R S W o ve Moved To 311 E a s t l i t h D iagonally Across the S tre e t P ro m O ur O ld Lo ca tio n M I 'E T I L I T H IN G M IM E O G R A P H IN G X eroxing Theses Papers P rin tin g G R 6 6593 Rooms for Rent $35 OO D E L I G H T F U L B E D R O O M Br.- vate entrance. P riv a te bath. R e f r ig ­ e ra to r Modern C lean. Quiet. 1906 S a n G ab riel. G R 7-8158. G R 2-0952, CALL G R 1-5244 TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD D A I L E Y I V ER S F ED S E R V IC E 3 Id in tin g —M u ltilitli. L c ttc rp rc B in d in g —A ll T yp es N eg atives and/or P la te * Gold Skim p in g i Gv.eg, D issertations, M anus. i rm " TU : r Letters Y* a rho* ks. C am paig ns W e st 23th S tre e t G R F A S T « « E a s t lit h . Telephone GR6-8670, V ir ­ E F F I C I E N T S E R V I* K g in ia Black . T H E M E S R E P O R T S . L A W notes, 25* page, M rj, E r a cr, G R 6 I IT T H E S E S , T E R M P A P E R S fast R* rvice. G L 3 8848. M rs. re p o rt*, I rDil­ E X P E R T T Y P I S T . 16 years •* port­ I’ffcw Theses M ac M cH oiland H I 4-1102 briefs, th* ■ si end B rie f* A R T IS T IC , A C C U R A T E T Y P I N O, reports, thesis, dissertation** mamie* rip:* ty p e w rite r. M r*. Anttiony. N orth east U n iv e rs ity , G R A* 1202. IB M P A S T P R O F E S S I O N A L t>ping s e r v ie * M ae ( fppie W A 6-1479 R E P O R T S. T H E S E S , D J -SS E W P A - IB M M rs B ra d y . 23J7 < *M* T IO N S ham. G R 2-1715. E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T M rs H o aaa* y« r 1309 Ridgernont. * IE 2 771ft. E X F E R 11 IN C E D T Y I' IN G S I R V h I k . reasonable, near Alton* A ccurate dale. H O Y5813 Call G R I-5244 To Place a Texas) Classified Ad Tuesday, July 27. 1965 TH£ SUM M ER TEXAN Pa«c I Theater: Come Blow Your Horn Now Playing at A C T What happens whon New York’s suavest bachelor turns around to find his younger brother beating his tim e? THIO LAI JGIIFD-P \( KKD re ­ sult is “ Come Blow Your Horn,” the latest comedy to play at the Austin Civic Theatre, now e n t e r ­ the its second weekend at ing playhouse on Fifth and Brazos streets. Director Sara Havens has piec­ ed together an excellent cast, led by KLUN TV's Ray Poevey, and Miss Ruth Bowie, an Austinite and freshman at the University. Miss Boone was last seen as The Cirl in ACT's “ F antasticks” this summer. ANOTHER “ F antasticks” vete­ ran, Pete Calhoun, plays the tea­ cher in the new comedy, and ACT director Ed Nichols, Marilyn Tyler, and Lucille Lyons, also a University student, complete the cast. “ Come Blow Your Horn’* tramps the dismay of an aging M anhattan wolf whose little bro­ ther arrives in town, green at the gills but willing. The little boy proves more adept at indoor sport than his mentor, who finally retires to face middle age grace­ fully and leave the field to his rival. ACT HAS retained its usual cabaret seating for the three-act comedy. Reservations for tickets (at $2) m ay be m ade by calling m m and GR 6-0541. The boxoffice opens at 7:45 p.m. Friday and S atur­ both perform ances day, nights begin at 8:30 p.m. “ Rebel's Revenge,” the ACT m elodram a offering for the sum ­ m er, is scheduled to open Thurs­ day night at the playhouse. CAST for the hiss - and - clap thriller will include Charles P res­ cott, John K. Meadows Jr., Jim Westbrooks, Jewel Meech, Cecile King, Judi Hanna, Maggi Cox, and Jim Smith. All these are “ good guys.” Paul Brown and Moe Samuel- son will lead the villains. Samuel- son is also director for the p ro ­ duction. David Ginsberg will be pianist and general musical di­ rector for the company. rn* * w m m m m m m m I Cartouche' Cuts Up Belmondo, Cardinale Happy But Harmless "JIm I of IU kind , . sure to plea**’’' —Jo h n Vt an tin .■M icMtw«nc’n|Qp|||| tOABI m m pew® raiSm w cm u m HOHM MNMIOU COUflTBftKT film vehicle, Carlo Ponti. BELMONDO, on the other toe, handles his role with all the brio that m ade Elvis Presley such a sm ash in “ Girl Happy.” If there is truly a “Belmondo cult,” then it m ust be m ade up of giggly Kinsolving little ol‘ grannvladies. For this I can read Tarzan funnybooks or go to the Saturday m atinees for horror flicks. residents and AN ATTRACTIVE side of “Car­ touche’’ is its location — Pezenas, France, where it is said Moliere wrote several plays. The country­ side is wistfully charming, a per­ fect set-up for rom antic devilry of that “ Cartouche” dishes out in heroic portions. the sort “ The classic Film Classic Wednesday Idiot,” based on Dos­ toyevsky’s novel, win be the Wednesday this film week at the Union. Continuous showings will begin at 5 p.m. in the Union Building Auditorium. Dr. William Hudson, professor of English, will discuss the Rus­ sian novel at noon Thursday in the the weekly sandwich sem inar. P e r­ sons m ay bring lunches or buy sandwiches there. Junior Ballroom at “Cartouche," st arr ing Claudia Cardinale, J eau-Paul Belm on­ do, Directed by Philippe De Braca. A n ambassy Pictures release now 'playing at the Texas I heater. In color. By NATHAN FAIN Amusements Editor “Cartouche” is a spirited a t­ tempt to combine the personali­ ties of Cyrano de Bergerac, Robin Hood, Tom Jones, and Batm an, in a film rom ance that turns out well in what it sets out to do. A L T II O ll (J H ’. “ Cartouche’ trots out every cliche you or producer Joseph E. Levine ever thought of, some people like to see cliches, and I would be the last critic to suggest that cliches should be banned forever. Bel­ mondo is a robber baron and Cardinale, his moll. They rob the rich and subsidize the poor. They insult the police and flout the authorities. Constant action supplants plot logic. Tile whole movie is like a piece of French pastry, which is a lot of fun but vaguely unsatisfying. Miss Cardinale, who has been starring a quite a few movies that recently have come to Aus­ tin, does her usual professional job, which is about all you can say for her rival, Sophia Loren, and Miss Loren m arried what to her own personal am ounts now open CINDY’S STEAK HOUSE SIRLOIN STEAK $1.15 OPEN 11 A.M. — 11 P.M. 609 W. 29th Ad ill t i MIK C h a d ........... 1.00 ........ . . .35 PARAMOUNT F R A T I HES: 12:22-2:30-4:56 7 : 1 3 9 : 3 0 S S M • im a m [nm , in PANA VISION* COLOR by DELUXE iw, UNITED ARTISTS] Ad ult* MIK .75 AFTER 6 P M. ON LOTS W W VA C A STS F E A T U R E S : 11:4 5-1 :48 -3:51 5 : 5 1 -7:57 -10:0 0 STATE Houston Theater Plans New Home HOUSTON — (Spl.) — Models for the new Alley Theatre build­ ing here will be shown by archi­ tect Ulrich Franzen in the W ar­ wick Hotel Ballroom Monday, Aug. 3. NINA VANCE, director of the theater, and Board President George A. Peterkin will be hosts for the first private showing for m em bers of tile press and Alley patrons. Franzen has said he plans two stages with related service areas to m eet the Alley’s expanded program . The new building is fi­ nanced by the Ford Foundation, Inc., and Houston Endowment, citizens of Houston. THE THEATER SITE will cover a square block of down­ town property, and construction is planned to begin at y e a r’s end. Occupancy the 1967 theater season. is planned by r n La 1* r n i iocsal Sam Havens . . . A C T director Cardinale Offers Her Own Theory About Naturalism ROME — (.TI — Actress Clau­ dia Cardinale will play the lead role the film, “A Rose for Everyone,” the story of a B ra­ zilian girl who gives freely of her favors. in Of the heroine, Miss Cardinale says: “Rosa is a character in the natural state, without inhi­ bitions or com plexes.” POSITIVELY LAST DAY! .Special Price* rn P ass F ist S n s needed : BEST ACTRESS! Plus 4 other ; ; Academy Awards! D iS B e V s i r » im > J U U E ^ S T O I C K ANDREWS * VAN DYKE TECHNICOLOR* ftMteWCROMMtoWMfetfakhi C H IE F DRIVE­ IN 5001 N. CAMAK SNACK B A B O P E N S 7 P.M. Compl e t e Show 8:00 A 10:30 EBKE B I D ES on “ E l l , T OOT ” A U S T IN THEA- TRE 2130 S. C O NGRESS BO X O FFIC E O P E N S 1:45 F E A T U R E S : 2 : 0 0 - 4 :3 0 7:00 & 9:30 Adult* S t u d - n u MIK 1.25 I OO P R E P A R K I N G A£ V la v ma c °an slt° s t s VARSITY F E A T ! KFS: I : 3 5 - 3 : 4 0 - 5 : 4 5 7 : 5 0 9 : 5 5 HELD OVER! 4th and FINAL WEEK! BARGAIN DAY! A I L S E A T S I* M. T i l . 7 75c METR'S' GOUvVYN HAVf It «•* m*Y»AVS -WsrwT ELIZABETH TAYLOR RICHARD BURTO EVA MARE SAINT N O < H U D K I N S I Ii K l j S S O I , l l R L I t e e n N O E I ) F O H M A T I K F A l O U NI I - I •ANAl A 0*F Mf* ACK JIO* tf7\ Tuesday, July 27, 1965 THE SUM M ER TEXAN Page A . S M K fy-S . p,22A -SHfrKEY'S • PIZZ • SHAMEY S ,p<£> V GOOP HME n ile at SHAKEY’S ^ ^ C O M E f a t * S H A M E Y ' PIZZA S U P R E M E ROBUST 2 9 1 5 G u a d a lu p e GR 6 -4 3 9 4 > • <) p i z z a • ' t a V Austin U O G S By VIVA SILVERSTEIN Amusements Writer There’s a new beat in Austin. It s not exactly from Liverpool or Detroit. If you’re lucky, you can hear it resounding from the basement windows of the Con­ gregational Church almost any week night. Call it the West 23rd Street sound — that’s where the “ Baby Cakes” hang out. a in PRACTICING church basement is probably a unique idea for a rock-and-roll group. But P at Russell, the Baby Cakes’ drum mer, lives there. An English the University, P a t m ajor at to be a Congregational hopes minister. Staying at the church, he can study, practice, and hear Rev. John C. Towery’s Sunday sermons, too. “ The church likes us h ere,” P a t said. “A couple of neighbors are raising a fuss about it. Some of the old folks will pass by and give us dirty looks—I guess they think it’s sacrilegious as hell.” Often times, students will com e by and peer through the win­ dow's. With little coachnig they usually end up in the basement joining the jam session. Motorists too will drive down the alley and then decide to park. TH E GROUP has been togeth­ er about a month and a half un­ the “ Baby der Cakes.'' Tile first members were the name of Open 1 :4 5 F e a t : 2-4-6-8 l f S m o k i n g P e r m i t t e d F r e e P a r k i n g — T e x a n P h o t o — J o h n r rn Pat Russell . . . beat behind it all. P a t Russell, Don Lupo on bass, and Leonard Arnold, lead guitar player. Then they met Dave Biondi, a form er KNOW disc jockey. Dave is from Phoenix, Ariz., and had managed a group there. Decid­ ing that the “ Baby Cakes” need­ ed a singer, Dave w T o te Chuck Bakondi in Phoenix. Along with Tommy Hill, rhythm guitar play­ er, the group was complete. G F 8-6641 2206 H A N CO CK HD. O N E B F K . W E S T O F B I R N E ! B I). L A S T D A Y ROSS HUNTER q h e A R T * § O f L o v e " j g j m u . i N . . - . .• Dick. Jam bs GaR.Nen.VAn Dyke elks •> an9£ S O W R - Dickinson, Starts TOMORROW Richm id Q h m b eru in lM r n x Liverpool Or, Little Church By the Drag: What Gives? THE BABY CAKES practice a s much as possible. Sometimes i f s difficult to get together since Don is in the Air Force and sta ­ tioned at Bergstrom . Leonard is to in presently going Kingsville and has to commute. the But he hopes University. to come school to Just the sam e, you can still find them at the church around 8 p.m. at least three times a week. “ The group plays Kinks, B e a ­ tles, and Rolling Stones type m u­ sic, but they’re not out to copy anyone,” said Dave. “ When we play we just express ourselves,” P a t added. Whether you like rock-and-roll or not there is still a delight in watching the young men in a c ­ tion. is CHUCK tile Englishman (sans accen t) of the group, com ­ plete to his hairstyle and boots. P a t, with his fantastic red hair and beard, looks like a musician, but hardly a potential minister. Don, Tommy, and Leonard just look like they enjoy music. S w ­ lines from ing “ Satisifaction” and “F o r Your Love” you can tell. them blast out The average age of the group is 20. But as Pat put it—“ we're all teenagers at h eart.” P E R F O R M I N G on the job. the Baby Cakes wear Beat Ie boots, jackets, and black slacks, gold BO X O F F I C E O P E N 6 CJO NOW SHOW ING THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN D e b b ie HrvnddN A H r r v * Fre^nvll 8:06 THE AMERICANIZATION OF EMILY J u l i # A n d r f w s A Jam *** G a r n e r IO OO B E G I N S W E D N E S D A Y CHEYENNE AUTUMN imr a r a S t e w a r t & C a r r o ll B a k e r 8 :4 5 — F L I S — DISNEYLAND AFTER DARK C a lo r F e a t n re I Le— F o a l * A r r a s t r a ! * * . A n n e t t e & B o b b y Bedell 8 :0 0 B a c O f f ic e Open C M Now Skewing: CHEYENNE AUTUM N <4 ara ca S t e w a r t A C a r r * ! ! B a k e r 8:ff DISNEYLAND AFTER DARK W a l t Din a c y 'a ( a l a e F e a t s r e W i t h F o n t * A r m s t r o n g l f 15 B E G I N S W E D N E S D A Y THE AMOROUS ADVENTURES OF MOLL FUNDERS K i m N af ark A Die hard J o h n * « a 8 OO — P L I S — PSYCHO A n t h o n ) Parkin* 4 Janet I eigh 10.00 THE C O L O R Mom rn I »cnhii < I jm* an­ ality and a wholesome pleb ophy concerning their brand o f m u s i c , DROP BV i: I Church some evening and se* h r tile Coiigreg Yourself. Educators' Evaluation of A NEW Classroom T e a c h i n g A i d is u r g e n t ly n e e d ­ ed. The T e a c h in g A i d will b e o n d is p la y J u ly 28, 29 a n d 30, 9 : 0 0 t o 12:00 a.rn. a n d 3:00 to 6:00 p. rn. at the U n i v e r s i t y Y M C A Award Winning HAIR STYLES Capital Beauty College Guadalupe at 14th Open I a.m. to IO p.m. GR 2-9292 eum tm si t* . Si Tuesday, July 27, 1965 THE S U M M E R T EX A N Page 7 Taped Poetry Added A poetry collection, similar to the collection at Harvard, is be­ ing installed in the third floor audio listening room of the Un­ dergraduate Library, Dr. Harry Ransom, chancellor, said Mon­ day. by The such Lyrics contain collection will tapes, discs, and records of read­ ings, poetry, speeches, and dra­ m atic presentations. Texts will also be available for students wishing to follow the audio. poets as Robert Burns, recessitations by T. S. Elliot, and dramatic read­ ings by actors such as John Barrimore will be available in the browsing room. The collec­ tion will be used mainly by un­ dergraduates for study and plea­ sure. No classes will be con­ ducted in the room, Dr. Ran­ som emphasized. A major part of the collection, which was secured through out­ side donations, will be a history of recorded song. The room is being readied for student use. Campus News In Brief slating tile School of Law in de­ velopment of curriculum, fund­ raising, nod the placement of graduates. i # I I ★ Communist regime. On the same trip he visited South Viet Nam, Indonesia, India, Pakistan, and the Soviet Union. ★ Law Officers Elected John N. Jackson, a Dallas at­ torney, has been elected presi­ dent of the University Law School Association, an alumni group. The association’s new officers were elected and installed for two-year terms during the recent State Bar of Texas convention in Fort Worth. Other officers include Tom Sealy of Midland, vice-president, and Byron Fullerton, assistant dean of the law school, secre­ tary. Thirty-one new directors were chosen by the group. The board (rf directors is charged with as- Pfiester to G erm any Sam Lee Pfiester, University junior, has been selected to par­ ticipate in the Junior Year at Heidelberg, Germany, sponsored by Heidelberg College, Tiffin, Ohio. in Pfiester, majoring liberal arts, is one of 36 junior students selected from colleges and uni­ versities all over the country to study at the German university. The group will sail on Sept. 16 and will visit Amsterdam, Brus­ sels, Cologne, and Bonn before arriving in Heidelberg on Sept. 30. ★ Watermelon Feast Set A watermelon f e a s t will be held from 4 until 5 p.m. Friday in the Union patio, Mrs. Jane Odle, program assistant, said. A nominal fee will be charged for a slice of cold melon. SH IR T M A K E B S Sees UT Library Spanish Collection Noted in Research The world famous Latin Ameri­ can Collection of the University library was visited this week by a distinguished British librarian who is embarking on expansion of his college’s Iwitin American holdings. JOSEPH W. SCOTT, librarian of University College, London, is in this country during July to become acquainted with major research libraries and attend pro­ fessional meetings. His itinerary includes the Li­ brary of Congress, National Li­ brary of Medicine, and Folger Shakespeare Library in Washing­ ton, IX C.; Yale and Harvard Universities; the University of California at Berkeley and Los Angeles; and Columbia Universi­ ty and the New York Public Li­ brary in New York City. Scott said the University Lat­ its in American Collection and l>'e Ben­ librarian, Dr. Nettie in Great son. are well known to draw on Britain. He hopes Dr. Benson's knowbvlge of the Latin American book market in building the Latin American col­ the University Col­ lection of lege library. in the forefront ALTHOUGH Latin American studies in England are “ very thin on the ground," generally speaking, University College has been that field. For 20 years, it had the only professor of Latin American history in any British universi­ ty. In the past few years, it has added Latin American specia­ lists in geography and econo­ mies. in Scholarships Given For Hebrew Study Three University students will in Hebrew receive scholarships for 1905-66. Richard Joseph Bimbo!/, junior sociology major, will receive a $200 scholarship given by Mr. and Mrs. Milton T. Smith of Austin in honor of Rabbi Israel H. Lovin- thal of Brooklyn, N Y Birnholz is a member of B'nai B’rith Hillel Foundation for Jewish students. Phi Eta Sigma, honorary scho­ lastic society, and has been list ed on the College of Arts and Sciences honor roll. Jerome Jay Bistrezki, junior mathematics major, will receive the $1T)0 sholarship given by Charles T. Henry of Austin in memory of his wife, Mrs. Juliette Henry. Patric ia Ann Ploeger junior linguistics major, will receive Slat) the Agudas Ach im Scholarship Fund and Mrs Max Lapin. from E L E G A N T T H IN G S A T . . . 2520 GUADALUPE I xi iush el) Veatn *it;* # F O U N D A T IO N S • LINGERIE # P E IG N O R A N D G O W N SETS 0 N I G H T W E A R • ROBES A N D # A C C E S S O R IE S # X PETITE to X LARG E Head of the Class This h e a d represents one segment of the 30-foot skele­ ton of a mosasaur on perma­ nent exhibit in the Texas M e ­ morial Museum on San Ja­ cinto and Twenty-fourth. The mosasaur, a giant marine liz­ ard, lived 70 million y e a r s ago. 1,000-Pound File On Goldwater Purchased by UT The Humanities Research Cen­ ter has purchased, for a five- figure sum, a file on Barry Cold­ water, according to an article in the New York Times Book Re­ view. THE STORY STATES that the University bought the papers col­ lected by Stephen C. Shadegg, a long-time Goldwater associate and author of “What Happened to Goldwater?" Prospectus of the offering was “approximate description of Cold­ water m aterial available: 15 box­ approximate weight 1,000 es, pounds." The Times article says Shadegg is packing tho material to from Phoenix, l>o shipped Ariz., to Austin. Tho University has been label­ ed "the terror of the book m ar­ ket" in national publications and has been cited as the possible lo­ cation for the Lyndon B. Johnson papers. The President, however, has made no formal commit­ ment for having his collection of documents placed here. The University already has ex­ tensive collections of many au­ thor’s works. The D. ll. Law­ the rence collection, probably most complete in the world, in­ cludes manuscripts of his m ajor books, in various stages of de­ velopment. OTHER ORIGINAL WORKS in­ clude: • Approximately 200 m anu­ script notebooks of poems by Edith Sitwell. • Page proofs of “ Ulysses." with changes in James Joyce’s hand. • Aldous Huxley’s manuscript of “Brave New World." • All extant manuscripts of including C. P. Snow’s books, “ Tlu' Affair and “The M asters." • Jam es B arrie’s manuscript of “The Little Minister.’’ • Original and revised m anu­ scripts of “A Passage to India" by E. M. Forster. • Sinclair Lewis’ typescripts of “Main Street" and “Arrowsmith" as well as letters, books, and pho­ tographs. Stump Speaking Set Stump Speaking, sponsored by the Students’ Association, will be­ gin at noon Thursday in the court yard between the Academic Cen­ ter and the Union Building. The subject will be Viet Nam. ★ ‘Grievers’ Meet Tonight The Student Assembly Sum mer Grievance Committee will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Union Building 325. Students and faculty may air complaints and suggestions about the Universi­ ty at the meeting. Tile commit­ tee also will consider complaints received from Campus Gripe Box­ es. Radiation Expert to UT Dr. Edward Lawrence Powers, one of Hie nation's foremost radiation biologists, has been named professor of zoology. He was a senior scientist at Argonne National Laboratory be­ fore joining the University. Ile is president of the Radiation Re­ to search Society and known scientists over the world for his research contributions in genetics and radiation damage. ★ Columnist to Lecture A foreign correspondent and syndicated columnist will give a behind-the-scenes view of Red China at 7 :30 p.m. Thursday in the Academic Center Auditorium. Mark Gayn, editorial writer and columnist for the Toronto Daily Star, will give a public lecture entitled “Inside Com­ munist China." Gayn also will j have coffee and conversation with government department gra-1 duate and undergraduate s tu -1 dents from 9 to 10:30 a.m. Fri- day in Waggoner Hall 116. As chief of the Tokyo bureau for the Chicago Sun foreign news service from 1945 to 1948, Gayn interviewed Mao Tse-tung, Chou En-lai, and other Communist leaders several times. During the last year, he spent two months in Communist China and ob­ served important changes in the A Distinctive Apartment Type Residence for Men Students • Opening Aug. 15 • THG CHAPARRAL 2408 Leon St. Madras Button-Down Imported-from-lndia bleeding madras. All hand-picked by Gant. Bold, bright, distinc­ tive— they keep adding character with each washing. SH O R T SLEEVE 8.95 L O N G SLEEVE 10.00 P H O N E GR 7-2662 P A R K IN G IN R E A R S T A T U M S M s s - I -tret*. 2 4 m a n unit's; l i v i n g r o o m s T K 1 \ \» V — I tb-sks full ba t h, e ve r y 2 m e n ; I O M I N i l NA K—C o m p l e t e Ki t chen, c o v e r e d p a r k i n g S e e Wh i t IMai-Aed at 1008 W, 23*2 St. or p h o n e f o r a d d i t i o n a l i n f o r m a t i o n . s t udy all for $50.-$55. per mo. (IR 6-3167 T O D A Y e i g h t h & c o n g r e s s Tuesday, July 27. 1965 THE SU M M E R TEXAN Page 8