,500 to Receive Diplomas In May 29 Commencement R abbi Levi A. d a n , of T em ple E m anu-E l in D allas, and L ester L. j Colbert, C h ry sler C orporation p re s­ ident, will be key sp e ak e rs a t the joint U niversity gi-aduation serv ices S aturday, M ay 29. io is will get d i v e r s i t y of diplom as M ay 29. F ifteen hundred g rad u a tin g sen -' At 7:30 p.m . ap p ro x im ate ly 1.5001 obtaining of a diplom a, l c x a s ; g rad u a tin g students in black robes and cap s w ith different-colored ta s ­ sels w ill assem b le a t Littlefield F ountain for the colorful acad em ic procession. THE FIRST INDIVIDUAL cere­ mony S atu rd ay will be the com ­ m issioning of n ea rly 150 A rm y, N avy, and A ir F o rce ROTO mon in joint cerem onies in Hogg Audi- M ay 24 is the la st day for r e n t - ; torium a t 9 a.m . P re sid en t Logan ing gowns a t the U niversity Co-Op. I Wilson wall give the w elcom ing ad- B ach elo r’s robes and caps a re av a ila b le for a $2 ren tal fee, m as- $6.50, and P h D ’s for $7.50. tc r s the d ress. Lt. Gen. R. evem ng com m encem ent service M r. C olbert, a U niversity gradu- R abbi O lan, au th o r and holder of the pulpit of W o r c e s te r , M ass., for tw enty y e a rs, will deliver t h e 1 Robes w ill be w orn only a t b a c c a la u re a te serm on a t l l a.m . in Hogg A uditorium . W. H arp er, USAF, I E x ercises for 170 g ra d u a tin g en will be th e gingers will be in B a tts A uditori com m issioning exercises. B e h e a d s um a t 1:30 p.m . John F iles, vice the w orld’s la rg e st known m ilitary presid en t and part-o w n er of organization, train in g T raining C om m and. M aj. Gen. H the ! L. B oatner, US A rm y, and Vice com m encem ent ex e rcise s on different schools and colleges. A t A dm iral IL M. M artin, USN, will In addition to tile two joint cere monies, se p a ra te graduation e x e r a t the ag e of 19, will speak a t vises will be held by ea ch of in H ouston, Will be the m ain sp e ak er. Files g rad u a ted from the U n iv ersity in 1912 w ith a m a ste r of a r ts d egree in chem ical engineering. I ate the the Building a t 8 p.m . He rose from to president of resident a tto rn ey C"" 'cr C orporation in sev enteen m ents for th e ir degrees. A post-1 m issions and ceive co n g ra tu lato ry le tte rs statin g j C om m ander T. H. Wells, USN, th a t they have fulfilled the require- • will give the oath of office. Com- the g ra d u a te s will r e - 1 also speak. te rra c e in front of the M ain | Air i M e rid iem Com pany le tte rs of appoint I c a rd will also be included for the | m ent will be p resented to all new the key speaker a t tim e this the officers by G eneral Boatner, Gen­ e ra l H arp er, and Vice Adm. Mar­ tin. The individual college and school ex e rcise s a re scheduled between 1:30 and 6 p.m . In fo rm a l recep­ tions for friends, the g ra d u a te s, and fam ilies will im m ed ia te ly fol­ low' the different services. gineer, w ill g iv e the stVKlent spouse to the welcome by Rami shorn, U T alum ni organization for engineers. C om m encem ent exercises for the College of B u sin ess Administration w ill be at 2:30 p.m . in the Mafc Lounge of the T exas Union. E . G. Sm ith, professor of market. ing, will d iscu ss business ethics in a short address. Dean W. fc. S priegel will give the welcoming the ad d re ss and present the horrors, aw a rd s, certifying eligibility for a degree to the grad­ uating sen io rs. letters and The College of A rts and S cien ces, la rg e st num ber o f boasting D E A N W. R. WOOLRICH o f th e g r a d u a te s , w ill h old its com m ence- o f’ E ngineering will he m ent ex e rc ise s ™ Hogg Auditori- College m a ste r u m ’ r a th e r th an B atts Auditorium of cerem onies C harles Rundell, g raduating chem ical en- as Previously reported. The cere- th e m ony is scheduled for 3 p.m . Dr. VV. J . Battle, professor em eritu s of classical languages, will d eliver the main address. In­ vocation and benediction will be given by D r. S. L. Joekel, instruc­ tor in B ible a t the Presbyterian Bible C hair. THE GRADUATE S C H O O L co m m encem ent exercises w ill be­ gin in R e cital H all a t 3 p.m . Dr. A. P . B rogan, dean of the Gradu­ ate School, w ill present certificates and le tte rs to about 130 candidates for d o cto ra tes and 230 candidates for m a s te r ’s degrees. At 3.30 p m. com m encem ent ex­ ercises for the College of E d uca­ tion w ill be hold in B atts Auditori­ um. D r. L a u re n c e H askew , dean of the college, and M iss D orothy Dur- ren b e rg e r, student re p re se n ta tiv e from the g rad u a tin g class, will both speak. The cerem onies w ill also include a short, inform al mu­ sical p ro g ra m . A reception at 3 o'clock in the lobby of B atts Audi­ torium w ill cere­ m onies. precede the Eight Pages T o d a y NO. 172 Bulletin Urges Exam Honesty With final ex am s approaching, U niversity officials a re placing added em phasis on scholastic hon­ esty. m ends the punishm ent the offender receives. "In to the enrollm ent stu d en ts will receive relation fairly good I ^a c ^ or d e g re e s in the School of in crease, w e’re on on grounds a s fa r as honesty on e x a m - 1 A rc h itectu re cerem onies a t 4 p.m . A m o Nowotny, dean of student in A rc h itectu re Building 112. The D ean No- life, and D r. F. J. A dam s, chair- inations is concerned reception following the service will w otny stated . "W e’ve had no fla- m an of the U niversity D isciplinary Com m ittee, have sent out a billie- g ran t violations this y e a r, and what be in the patio. tin to a le rt faculty m em b ers as to fairly precautions to curb cheating. Suggestions The College of F ine A rts w ill hold its eo m m en rem en t ex ercises in R ecital H all a t 4 p.m . cases we have h ad w ere isolated a tte m p ts ." they should T hirteen take IT’S NOT REAL! Ph o to grap h e r M ik e W h e y had to bring h:s own m odel a lo n g for this p :c- ture. H e w an d ered a ro u n d the pool at Bartow s, looking f c r one stu d e n t w ith books. A m ong all J the sunbathers an d swimmers o u t there Friday atfernoon, not one studious person could be found. S o we b e g :n the first week of f.nals. - S t a f f P h oto by W iley y ea rs. Integrity Council Wants Changes In Discipline Rule Revision Asked In Membership, Punishment Meted The Scholastn- In te g rity Council, a f te r a discussion w ith m e m b e rs the Student C ourt w ho have of the D isciplinary G im - se rv ed on m itte e . h as rev i­ sions in the c o m m itte e ’s ru les and p rac tice s. rec o m m en d ed rep rese n tatio n of The Council first reco m m en d ed •q u a l students an d faculty m e m b ers on th e com ­ m ittee . At p rese n t the u su al m e m ­ b ersh ip consists of th re e faculty m e m b ers and two stu d en ts. and b ackground, S tressing the im p o rta n c e of ex­ perien ce the Council also recom m ended th a t the sa m e students and fa c u lty m e m ­ to se rv e a t b ers be sum m oned com m ittee h earin g s as often as possible. po C a rl V'. B redt, a sso c ia te d ean of tu d e n t life and ex-officio m erri­ er of the com m ittee sa ti he fa v ­ ored in creased student re p re s e n ts - i tion. "S tudents alw ays m a k e good m e m b ers on com m ented. the c o m m itte e ," h e 1 . Se T h e T e x a n VOL. 53 Price 5 Cents *The First C o lle g e D aily in the So uth9 AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, M A Y 16, 1954 SW C Council Refuses To Admit Texas Tech B v IKE NEWMAN (30) T e x a n S p u r t s S t a f f WACO. M ay 15 resp e ct. W hereas be- CouneU dealt w ith the p u n ish m en ts I ,0„ , he t:onferen« has voted o u t- 1 handed out for offenses, T he Coun­ , right against offering an invitation recom m ended punish m en t be cil i to any school, this tim e they m e re ­ definitely fixed for each offense to tab le (or ly passed a m otion Instead of being decided on an in­ lay aside until the next conference dividual basis for each case. m eeting) the m otion to ad m it Tech, Houston, o r O klahom a. D ean B redt, w ithout q u alifica­ tion, opposed the C ouncil’s think­ ing in reg a rd to the la st recom - m endation. There a re ex ten u a tin g c irc u m sta n c e s in ev e ry e a s e .’ he •aid , unless these sp ecial c irc u m s ta n c e s ' a r e considered decided ac co rd in g ly .” and punishm ent a m a jo rity vote from re p re se n ta tiv e s of schools show ing th a t and th e re can be no ju stice schools w ere against, The motion for sion. tabling needed the seven the ro nferenee four of the any expan- News in Brief... By Th# A ssociated P ress S T U D E N T S SH O T C H A PE L H IL L , N. C. O n e U niversity ai N orth C arolina stu­ d e n t died and two w ere w ounded b y g u n fir e a t a fra te rn ity house h ere S aturday. C oroner Allen W alker rep o rted th a t P utnam D avis J r ., a senior from L archm ont, N. Y , w as found d e a d in his bed on the th ird floor of the Phi D elta T heta fra te rn ity house. The coroner said D avis, shot .22 in th*' head, w as clutching a c a lib e r pistol. ■k A M A R IL L O — S e n a to r L yn d on J o h n so n o f T e x a s sa id S a tu r d a y th e U n ited S ta te s g o v e r n m e n t I “ w ill ta k e e v e r y c o u r s e w e c a n ' to a v o id se n d in g onr m e n Into a J u n g le c o n flic t." In a press conference held S at­ u rd ay a t noon, im m ed iately a fte r the com pletion of two day m eeting in Waco, H ow ard G rubbs, executive s e c re ta ry of SWC, gave a run-dow n on the expansion pro­ cedure. the F irst a m otion w as m ade and seconded to invite T exas Tech to the conference be a m em b er of It w as believed the motion w as m ade by T exas and seconded by TOU. th a t N ext a m otion w as m ade to am end the previous sta te m e n t by Journalists’ -30-’s Signed to Indicate ’This Is the Last’ Those who h av e been aw ard ed ce rtific a te s a re listed below. C o m m ittee C hairm en I ^ R o y Bird- w ell, Jai k L ittle, Tom C low e. Jack R atliff, G eorge P u tn a n W lllle M orris, lim M eK eithan, Ray Fa rebec B etty T hom pson Lon R osen field. Matt! Al- Aish, John Jim L o v ett, B e lt Cox, W in slow . T om m y T hom p son and L an ­ ett!* Sherm an. ; etts. Civil D efen se C om m ittee J a n et H old­ er B arbara Burr. T om m y Rodm an, /la r r y N ess R obert Kipp. Dick R lek- In tern ation al Council M a r y B lasin gam e, V irg in ia D iam ond, H arold Arthur ] .Sew ing, Arialberto V iesca, I Thrustor). S a lly Sparks. S h irley N elso n , Ma T otah Triana D u gat, Don Mor­ gan. S tu d en t E m p lo y m en t C o m m ittee”: Bill A nderson, N an cy Shepherd, M ade­ lin e Moore, Carol" G oodw in, Larr> Steinberg. , a u *l th a t th e end of Tho -30- m ark is th e tradition- the end I t is also the trad itio n al m ark s tT r ’ hS ? a1 sym bol used by jo u rn alists S h ir le y B ay less Mariaiyru* B ushm an, l a c k F rled lan d er, S. L. ,11 t h , end of th e ir ro p y , 0 m oan "*?rrin. Roy H uff, Hmm ie H u gh es, C harles i*s King, Jean n e _ VViedeman. J o el Brand. S y lv ia Cohen, Irvin E baugh. Tom B<»s'juc*t Ann/ U sed ny these sam e jo u rn alists Luedem an, L o ris Anno Elrod. Fat D il­ at th e ir c a re e rs. The -30-’s in to d a y ’s T exan be­ in­ side the nam es of sta ffe rs the th e ir w ork on dicate g re a te st college n ew sp ap er in the U nited S tates has been com ­ pleted by g rad u a tio n , d raft, or any o th e r m e an s you can think a e n ha urn Linda e if fe l: lon. Boh T h om pson, Max L o u t, J u n e Lew is. L illia n O rm sn. M artv P helps, S y lvia S p u rger Fat T r a c y , John W in slow . C harles D ish ­ m an, M artha E rgle, M orris A lb righ t. P ub lic R ela tio n s C o m m ittee A n n ette Morris. T om P eterso n , Chesle*. W ood, Vernon K ludge, C harlie McCollum, T erry M cK enzie, Carol Sutherland, D eje D a lly . D ick Busby. M sr v Dan- ja c k n a n k in s Jim E ea h ey S h iri/ y_ C ohen. G ricvanc/ C o m m ittee N orm a Jean Arnold, Bob- la ,-t of by D ew ar. Ph;. I G reen, N elson Green, Cum G inn- Jen u ll G ilb ert Malden W allace aum - H icks. P aul M cK ean. Bill M /R eyn old s. R alph M aster* B u m- ness R ela tio n s < o m m itte e: ( lark Now- un Arnold B a r to n , Tom McCarr)nbell, Jim m y Boh S ieg e), Richard Sim on S m ith , Jack V au gh t, EL j . W ohlt. the se m ester. The firs t m e r T exan w ill he published Ju n e 8. S h irley S te fica is the I f o r c e s D a y • la n d by and w a tc h th e B u t he sa id A m e r ic a " w ill not lo s s of - S o u th e a s t A s ia " to C o m m u n ism . J o h n so n , w h o a tte n d e d A rm ed c e r e m o n ie s h e r e, •a ld th e U n ited S ta te s m u s t e x ­ p lo r e e v e r y c o u r s e b e fo r e con* ring a r m e d in te r v e n tio n . " inners Announced T oday’s T exan f V t • W In Writing Contests In g ,” by G ladys B urrow s E llis, P ra tt. D r. Alice L. Cooke, and D r won firs t prize in H em p h ill's Book Guy Steffan. S to re s’ Short S tory C ontest. W inner o f second place w as “ One Kid, One K id,’ by M ichael W igodsky. P e rse c u te d C at ’ by John R yan, third place. Ju d g e s for the won co n test w ere D r. M. M. Crow , D r. E . J . Lovell, and Dr. O sca r M aur­ er. The Co-Op S hort Story Contest, open to E nglish 319 students only, w as judged by Dr. Gordon Mills, Dr. N L. K aderly, and A M. Cory F irs t prize w as won by flans B eacham w ith "T h e O ther F lo w er.” "G oing Down the A isle," by Bob Shannon, won second place. R o b ert G. S herrill won firs t piace in the D. A. F ra n k P o e tr y C ontest w ith "Y oung M alcolm ’s R e q u ie m ." "K orean D irge ’ by C layton L. ichelberger. won second place, "R ock Notions in M any W ays,” T o Z D on M. Files, w as th ird . The , M ain B uilding 1802 The first inform ation given out on the contest w inners contained sev eral e rro rs, said D r. Langford, The above resu lts a re official. •“I II . Clock T h a t N eeded Wind- contest w as judged by D r. Vt,His " J ' . ' ' w in'," AS S £ " ___ rKawyifYn e r anf* th in n er they be/ ome, th e ir Miss R euthinger, an a ttra c tiv e young lady who d o esn 't m ind s tir­ ring h er h ands around in a ja r of d irt, sta rv e s ea rth w o rm s and cuts off tails. K urtz m e a su re s the am ount of elec tric ch arg e w ith­ in th e ir bodies. The g en eral thesis experim ent, M iss R euthinger ex ­ plains, to see how m uch punishm ent a w orm ca n take, but to study effects of sta rv a tio n on growl h. idea or h er is not "S ta rv in g e a rth w o rm s is not a big p ro b lem ,” she sa y s. "W e put t h e m in p a n s o f w a t e r a n d b u b b l e them to b r e a th e /’ in oxygen for the w orm s re m a in u n d erw ater w ithout food, the short- longer The " I t ’s am azing to see how they lose tw o-thirds of th e ir w eight and the end of 60 d a y s ,” length by re se a rc h e r R euthinger said, pick ing up a thread -th in sta rv e d w orm * four m onths vironm ent. ljf o r this foodless e n ­ in K urtz m e asu res elec tric ch arg e of worm s -som e of them tailless by placing them in a com ­ plicated m achine. the The tail of a w orm whose re a r end has been lopped off should grow until the e le c tric a l potentiality of a norm al w orm is reach ed . This is the theory K u rtz is investigate ing. If this proves tru e, sc ien tists m ay have a p a rtia l an sw e r to w hy an im als stop grow ing when t h e y reach a c e rta in size Cam pus S u rv ey Council K u 'cra . D ou g D apper, Eilenor Wafk er. K athryn E ms/ F resh m an C ouncil: J oan n e C opeland, G in g er Stark, N an cy P eavy, S h irley C ohen. H ay G orges, __ B ob K in sey. Ed H am m er. Nutcigall Lloyd H ev< m y K lavcr S ta n ley Adam s, M arty P h elp s, S ch o la stic In teg rity Coro­ < % : .. _____ Ruch mon. _ Phi Psi W ins Trophy For Blood Drive Effort Phi K appa P si fra te rn ity wall third annual cam pus receiv e the Blood D riv e tro p h y for participa- tion in the re c e n t drive. E ight o th e r ca m p u s organizations h av e p articip a tio n o f over IO per cent. They a re Arnold Air Society, T helem e Co-op, Sigm a Alpha Mu, Phi S igm a D elta, Phi K appa Tau. G am m a P hi B eta. K appa Alpha C utting off w o rm s’ tails for oh- Picked UP in j Tuleta, D elta G am m a, and Alpha serv atio n of the reg en eratio n pro- j cess m e an s m ore than ju st getting i Chi O m ega. V IR G IN IA R E U T H IN G E R • • . O ff go the tails .staff P h o to by WIW v 51 Segments Mean Surgery F irs t the c re a tu re is put to s l e e p , Sponsored S tu d en ts: Sue T r ig g Carol fellows V irginia R eu th in g er and lr - so it "w on t wiggle all o v e r ." Its segm ents a re then counted under win Kurtz, is no place for sm a rt, hom e-loving ea rth w o rm s. teaching B y BO R R N K ,IIT The office of zoology a knife and chopping. a m icroscope until Die fifty-first reach ed . H ere is is the cutting m ade, the w orm m inus leaving one-fourth of its body. ’Free Minds' to Be Great Issues Topic THE COLLEGE OF PHARMACY will hold its com m encem ent exer­ cise for ap p ro x im ately 47 seniors a t 5 p.m . in Home E conom ics Building 105. D r. J. P. G ray, m edi­ cal co n su ltan t w ith P ark e, D avis, and C om pany of D etroit, M ich., will he the guest speaker. D r. Hen­ ry M. B urlage, dean of the College _ in­ stru c to r; and T. F'. Jones w ill present a w a rd s and honors and an­ nounce in Rho the m em berships Chi, h o n o rary p h arm a ce u tic al fra- , tern ity . L u th er P a rk e r, g rad u a t- „ w ju the The them e of the 1954 G reat Issu es se rie s xvi IJ be " F r e e Minds and F re e M en." The se rie s will be concerned w ith the lim ita tio n s ;0 P h a rm a c y ; W alter Guess, placed on m an s freedom .search for tru th . in his to speak inf, seni the invitation Robert H utchins, asso cia te d irec­ the F ord F oundation, has tor of ac cep ted ea rly in N ovem ber. No o th e r speak- add ress ors have definitely ac c e p te d yet. in w orking on the G re at Issues Com­ m ittee, especially those who will be in su m m e r school, should con­ ta c t Ann Davis, ch a irm an , or M ary D annenbaum , publicity ch a irm an . S tudents who a re in te re ste d A P O P ic n ic s S a tu r d a y Ju d g e R obert Wr. Stay ton w ill be guest sp e a k e r a t the School of Law graduation ex ercises at 5 p.m . in Townes H all A uditorium . D ean P ag e K eeton will give a sh o rt h is ­ tory of the tradition of w earin g a sunflow er a t com m encem ent tim e. Follow ing the cerem ony the fac- hono rary ’ u^ y h as planned to give a supper A lpha Phi O m ega, service organization, w ill have a picnic Saturday for new ly elected m e m b ers of the executive council and then' dates. New officers who g rad u a tin g a re scheduled plan to atten d will m eet at APO office a t 5 p.m . S a tu rd a y . a t the U niversity Tea House. the Follow ing the to to tiro individual exer­ cises the m o re-than 1,500 s tu d e n ts a s ­ sem ble a t 7:30 p.m . by L ittlefield F ountain for the ac ad e m ic p ro ces­ sion the M ain Building. The joint com m encem ent exercises, w ith L. L. Colbert as guest sp e ak er, a re scheduled to begin p ro m p tly a t 8 p rn By this tim e m ore than 46 different kinds of d eg re es w ill h ave been confer­ red. te rra c e of JO H N D O M .L Y , chairm an of the com m encem ent said th at his group has endeavored to in voluntary in te rest fu rth e r com m encem ent atten d an ce. com m ittee, the P resid en t Logan Wilson told his Student Ad . isory Council th at vol­ un tary ex e rcise s a re given ano th er chance th is y e a r because the a t ­ tendant c la st y e a r w as "e x tre m e ­ ly g ra tify in g .” All of the graduation exercises were scheduled for one day to con­ veniens* the g rad u atin g seniors. ^ o r t if ere A By R IC H A R D B I S B Y th ree T exans w alked T e Hank - and the three-year-old boy. into The father, the m other, W h a t ’ll you h a v e ? ” asked the "G ive me two b e e rs," the fa th e r barten d er. said. “ Hey, Pa w h a t’s the m a tte r? Ain t Ma d rin k in g ? " ♦ "A ny nice girls in this town?'* "S u re, th e y ’re all nice." fa r to the next "How ♦ to w n ?’* Some girls a re indecent. think low-cut gow ns O thers a re well-built. ♦ The jo u rn alism g rad u ate went to w ork on a daily new spaper. th a t Tile w orm s, tail of a starv in g w orm Miss R euthinger points out to in her Expel im ental v i s i t o r s the Science Building office new is th in n er th an the rest of its body. t e ll you, don't <•.11 /■ m uch for sunlight. In­ stead , they clum p to g eth er in one knotted m ass during the day "W e could sit for hours w atc h in g the w ay togeth­ er th ey tip she adds th em selves s h e will A ctually. Miss R eu th in g er and Kurtz, ra re ly h a v e tim e to just Mf and w atch the le th arg ic an tics of the u n d erw ater w orm s T hey have ca lc u latio n s they a r e to finish th eir t h e s e s in tune. At v ario u s stages of the s ta rv a ­ tion exp erim en t, a food-de­ prived w orm s a r e taken from the w a te r a n d placed in a device which m e a su re s th e ir oxygen to com pile, intake few if One of Miss R e u 'h m g e r's most unusual o b servations about these w orm s is that th eir b rea th in g in­ c re a se s rapidly a fte r 23 days of being w ithout food "I still h av e n 't figured it o u t!” exclaim s M iss R euthinger. N eith er has --he d eterm in e d why w o rm s vv uh reg e n erate d ta ils shun intertw ined the fellow s. society of their W orm s put through the b re a th ­ in to the dis­ ing test a re dum ped card bucket. "W henever we have tim e to go fishing, we pick up the bucket and h ave plenty of b a it.” M iss R euthin­ g e r concluded. A rts S e n io r s Iz ir s e n H e a d s F in e The city editor said. "Son, be brief. A lw ays rem e m b er that, be Bill L arsen has been elected brief. Be b rief is our w atchw ord.” p resid e n t of the senior class of the The next d ay the rep o rter handed College of Kine A rts. W esley Flinn in a sto ry : " J a m e s C. C unningham looked up w as and elected vice-president, the M al- the shaft of Ju lia B eall w as c h o s e n secretary- j bourne Hotel to see if the elev ato r | w as com ing down. It w as. Age 33.” i tre a s u re r. Sunday, May 16, 1954 THE DAILY TEXAN Page t In This C o m r . I A s Thousands Cheer, I Ifs 130' Time at Last I I • B y SAM B L A IR (30) Texan Sport* Editor “Sports writing,’’ a veteran of the trade oner observed, “is a weird racket. The hours are terrible, you’re underpaid, .and it's nerve-racking work at times, but. there’s oho redeem­ ing factor. You’r never bored by your job.” A nd th a t, as w e see it, o ffers a c a p su la description of the life of a sp o rts w r i t e r , F orty A cres v a r ie ty . T o sa y that the hours are terrib le is a m a ste rp ie c e of u n d e r sta te ­ m e n t for an y T exan sports sta ffe r . O urs is u su a lly a c a se of 2 a.m . b ed tim e and 8 a .m . c l a s s e s so i f s ea sy to see w hy w e c la im the drooping ey e lid and bloodshot eve a s our trad em ark . in J E As for p a y , any guy who se r v e s his a p p ren ticesh ip IOTA soon re a liz e s t h a t h e re is ‘he o rig i­ nal h om e of th a t a g e le s s p r o v e r b : “ T h e r e’s not m u c h money the job, but you get. lots of good e x ­ perience.” in th is bu sin ess w hen N e r v e s ? Y ou'd b e tt e r c h e c k th e m a t th e d oor. F o r i f s sh e e r b e d la m In the d e a d ­ li n e 's looking o v e r your shoulder a n d the g u y s in the c o m po sing ro om keep y ellin g for But, as w e hold forth in this c o r n e r for the inst tim e y o u r sto ry , w f c a n h o ne stly s a y th a t life d u r i n g o u r four y e a r s on the T e x a n has n e . * r been dull H a p p y , s a d , d is a p p o in t e d ’’ Yes F r u s t r a t e d ? At But. b o r e d " N e v e r. WI L BUR EVANS m a s t e r o f Hit t r a d e tim* ♦ * * For the F o rty A cres is a g r e a t b e a t. A g uy w ho le a r n s ho sp o r ts w riting here is fortunate, for he u su ally w a tc h e s the c h a m p io n s p e rf o rm and he w orks under som e of the b e s t t e a c h e r s in the business. O u r best t e a c h e r , if the p ro f e s s o r s will p a r d o n u- h as b*>**n W ilbur E v a n s , the U n i v e r s ity S ports New* I m e r t o r a n d i m a ter c r a f t s m a n in his t r a d e He ta u g h t us long a g o that you re not really e a rn in g y o u r w a y until you c a n tell the r e a d e r m o r e abo ut th e g a m e than he sa w him self. We'll co u rs e. l e a r n In fu tu re y e a r s w h e th e r o r not vs*- re altv p.i <*d th a t B u t now let s turn from this d is c o u rse on 'h a life of a T ex an sp o rts sta ffer to a couple of su p erlatives picker! from four y e a r s of l o n g h o r n sports an d then to a q uick ' a n d no’ too seriou look at th* future F irst, le t ’s reminispp H appiest m o m en t: "Texas 21, B a y lo r JU S a d d e s t m o m e n t : O k la h o m a 49, T e x a s 2(i N ow, let s look ahead P r e d i c t i o n s : The T A sso ciatio n w ill ln v r ^ ig a f* B la n k e t T a x fimds. the C u r ta i n H u h s use of its B ibb F a lk will gree t a n o t h e r b ase b a ll r e a s o n by grow ling th a t " t h is b u n c h of m u lle ts will be lu cky to win one c o n f r ’ e n r e g a m e ' T e x a s will win a n o th e r S o u thw * C Confrr*>ni? b a s e b a l l cha m p io n hip —a n d F a lk wall st;D he g ro w lin g C lyde Littlefield vrlJI say " t h e 1955 T e x a s R e la y s w e re the g r e a t e s t e v e r , ’’ (a r T e x a s will b e a t N o tre L a m e an I 'or O k la h o m a but will br a m b u s h e d s o m e w h e r e along ti n T e x a s w ill lose to N o tre D am e an d or O k la h o m a m d then sw eep its SWC srhedule. the Southwest C o n fe re n c e trail, o r T e x a s T ech . a s u sual, will p ro v id e the T e x a n S p orts E d it o r with so m e good c o lu m n m a t e r i a l on Its hope* for S outhw est C on fe ren ce m e m ­ b ersh ip T e x a s T ech , a s usual, will no* be invited to Join 'h e Southwest Cor fp ra n c e F a ll R e g is tra tio n will find the Student In te g rity Council d e m a n d in g a n i m e s tig a tio n of tu to rs w ho r e p o r te d ly ar* s u p p ly in g ’ Til! Hall w ilh forged I royalty Oat h i U T s tu d e n ts will b u r n red < andU in hopes of b e a ti n g N otre D a m e a n d S e n a to r M c C a rt h y will s t m t an in v es tig atio n In closing we r a n t help re c a llin g one of m u D e w i t t R e d d ick * f e a t u ' e w ritin g oour*. f i r s t cia.* a* in L r “ To be in t e r e s t i n g ,’’ he c o m m e n te d , " a thought m u s t p a ss t h o u g h th e m ind of an in te re s tin g p e rs o n " The o c c u p a n t of thia c o m e r re a liz e r th at a p p e a r e d u n d e r the abo ve byline for th* p i ♦ four ye n m a y h av e you sta tem en t, w e s in c e re ly hoj*e tha t it h as r a se r left you yaw n ing th e m a t e r i a l w hich b a a left th*' ab o v e lau g h in g , sw e a rin g , o r bew ildered But, in view of Tech’s Weaver Says A & M Blocks Expansion By I k * N E W M A N (SO) Texan Sport* Staff ( on y ou r -adc ” in WACO, M a y 15 “ T he U niv ersity of T e x a s h a s m a d e a g r e a t n u m ­ in West T e x a s by b e r of frie n d s b a c k in g T e c h for a in then bid p la c e the S o uthw est C o n fe r­ e n c e , ” said D e w i tt W eav er, h e a d coach and a th l e ti c d ir e c to r a t T e x ­ a s Tech, soon a f t e r h e a ri n g th a t his school ha d on ce a g a in been denied a p la c e in the C o nferen ce. the w ay, and T ech a n d W est T e x a s will n e v e r fo r g e t it,” continued W ea­ v e r . “ T e x a s b a c k e d us all T h e big, dignified-looking r o a c h w ith the g r a y h a i r and soft sp eech o f his n a tiv e T e n n e s s e e w a s still thirty n o tic e a b ly m i n u te s a f t e r i n n o u n c e m e n t h a d been m ad e. so m e c ru s h in g n e rv o u s the football the n a tio n a l fall g ra c i o u s ly spoke As the big m a n w ho ra is e d T e ch spotlight t o l a s t re ­ p o r t e r s . a m a r k e d note of mxont- m e n t filled his talk. “ W hy do yo u i t ? ” He r e p e a t e d a r e p o r te r . think we m i s s e d the q u estio n of rn “ Well, I believ e A&M w a s the k e y to the situ ation . A rk a n s a s w a s rea d y to follow the Aggie*; in v o t­ ing for us, but w hen A&M w e n t a g a i n s t us, w e w e r e g o re ” s u r e “ I ’m p r e t t y th a t T e x a s TCU, an d R a y lo r w e r e for us. bu* th e y enough s t r e n g th lo g e t us in .” d i d n t h a v e just “ W hat g ot into A & M : ’ a s k e d a r e p o r te r . “ I th o u g h t th* w e re “ I don t know ju s t exac tly w h a t h app en ed. Hut I arn pretty sure it w a s a m atter of recruiting West Texas b o y s ,” c a m e back the per­ sonable W eaver. like just “ Ami I would to sax that A&M is going to h a v e a hart! I time getting m a n y m o re boys fro m ■ out o ur w ay. This is going to turn our whole end of the state igam st them "W hy if I h e a r that an athlete out o u r w a y tx going to T exas. I w o n ’t h a r d l y oven talk t0 him but : you ca n bet I a m going to do m y I to A&M," con best. know from going to kee p e v e r y good boy i tin ued W eaver. “ D o y ou think B e a r B ry ant had in i A&M policy to w a rd T e c h ? ” a sk e d to do w ith the c h a n g e m u ch a n o th e r r e p o r t e r . B e a r h a d a w hole lot to d o with (he A&M s t a n d , ” sn ap p e d ba< k the large m a n w ho w a s p ra c t ic a l ly chain sm o kin g. “ And I c a n t fig u re I oui w hy he did it. He is new h ero i in T exas a n d doe sn t know a b o u t j West T e x a n s ” “ Sam* think th a t it would d ro p the p re s tig e of th e C o n fere n c e to g et us in , ” c o n tin u ed W eav er. “ B u t right. S ure we won t th a t s not r a t e with som e of the intel sectio n­ al foes such a s N o tre D a m e a n d the C o nference t e a m s play , but we a r e on tin' par o r b e t t e r th a n m ost of th a t SWC clu b s m e e t th ai so m e of t e a m s j M ichigan S ta b j the in n o n -co n fe ren ce b a t t l e .” S u m m e r F o r R igh t af the C a m p u s R e frige ra te d A ir-C o n d itio n in g Private Baths with each R o o m $15 to $30 per month The Bridgeway 2616 W ich ita L o n g h o r n s W i n S W C T ra c k T i t l e S j ^ 2 Victory Ends 3-year Reign By Texas A g s By HAM B L A IR CIO) Texan Sport*i Editor sw iftness an d WACO. M a y IS T e x a s ’ v icto ry ! m a r c h n a * a serer..trie of sco rch ­ ing te r r if ic m a n ­ p o w e r S a t u r d a y as th e L o n g h o rn s S o u th w e s t C on fere nce field s u p r e m a c y a ft e r j re g a i n e d j t r a c k a n d a t h r e e - y e a r d ro u th . s q u a d C o a c h Clyde L ittle fie ld 's ta le n t­ ed ev e n m o r e flashed s tre n g th th a n e x p e c t e d in scoring a tr e m e n d o u s 9 5 \ p o in ts to ea sily c h a m p io n o v e r s h a d o w d e fe n d in g leag ue T e x a s A&vf T he Aggies, ; titlists d u rin g six of the la s t seven y e a r s m u s t e r e d only 54 7/12 th ird -p la c e b a tt le SMU a n d R ic e w a g e d th e w e ir d ­ e s t in h istory the M u s ta n g s p r e v a i li n g by w ith the p a p e r- th m m a r g i n of 9/14 of a point SMU had 32 23/24 an d the O wls 52 7'12 B a y lo r finished fifth w ith 25!k, followed b y A rk a n s a s 15 m d TCU, l l T e x a s ’ c l a s s y r u n n e l s c o n tr ib u t­ ed th r e e of four re v isio n * in th e * j re c o r d book by setting one stan d -! ty in g a r r i a n d tw o m o r e . S M U ’s sp len did m ile re l a y f o u r s o m e a c ­ co u n ted for the o t h e r new m a r k with a * i//! in g 3:13 9 work in ea rn est. J a m es B lain e w as h is te a m ’s lone cinder w inner with his 4:17.5 m ile. T e x a s p r e s e n te d th r e e m o r e gold in T h o m a s , Bob m e d a l w in n e r s Billings, a n d E lb e r t S p ence. C an’t Swing Hard Without Sharp Pain in the furlon g B A L T IM O R E , M a y 15 Lffk—T e d sw un g a b at w ith h is T h o m a s b r e e z e d to a n e a s y 220 w i l l ja m s f r a c tu re (j f i r s t for sh o u ld e r tim e this y e a r in a g a m e S a t u r d a y , to 2 ° | a n d a f t e r w a r d the Boston R e d Sox v ic t o ry in 21.1 a s the O r a n g e scor- cd a grand-* la rn by c op pin g all five p la c e s w ith the top four won e a r l i e r . T h e L ong ho rn c a p t a i n add- - T h e r e s no use kidding m y s e l f , ” b a s e b a l l’s g r e a t e s t , “ I ed stin ts in the sp rint re l a y a n d cen- g e l a s h a r p pain e a c h tim e I s w in g t u r y with s id ek ick S m ith a t 111 a - led a in t h e IOO stap r e p o r te d *«jt still h u r t s . ” s h a r e high-point. h o n o rs h a r d . ’’ i m p r e s s iv e <.a j j on e the 220 victory’ He s e e m e d d u bio us a b o u t b e in g r e a d y y e t to p la y r e g u l a r l y a f t e r t h e , w i « a g a i n s t fiv e -m a n Long- j u m p th e h ig h Billings th e to to in h o n , c o m p a n y with his w in n in g leap of 6-6 And „ Sp e n c e o ffered the best p e r f o r m ­ a n c e of h is c a r e e r for his last ra c e a s he r a n a w a y fr o m SMU s fav­ o r e d L e n ro y Lowe to win th e two- m ile in a good 9:28.9. T h e h o st B a y lo r t e a m p r e s e n te d tw o w in n e rs in s o p h o m o re s R a y ­ m on d V ic k e ry a n d fiobby Herod. Both p e r f o r m e d im p re ss iv e ly . V ic k e r y h i t a c re d i ta b l e 24-0 in th e b r o a d j u m p a n d H ero d sk im - m e d o v e r in a s m a r t 23 5. low hurd le* the 220 B a lt im o r e Orioles. ^ if is g o in g “ But w e 'll g iv e it a n o t h e r t r y in D etro it, m a y b e , ” he said. “M a y as t o t h a t pin well see w o rk the w a y the d o c s sa y it w i l l . " B oston d o c to r s p ut in a six -in ch sta in l e s s steel pm to h elp h e a l i n g of the left cla v ic le a b o u t six w e e k s ago. T h e y r e o p e n e d the s h o u l d e r to c u t off the top of the pin l a s t w e e k . ________ ( liK o x Win on 9th inning S in g le , • • CHICAGO. M a y 15 <3—C a r l Sa» P rob ab ly ’he ha pp est Longhorn w a tsk i s m a s h e d a single o v e r G u i in the crow d when it ended w a s Z e m i a l ’s h e a d w ith tw o o u t in the C harles R enfroe Th husky java- ninth in n in g S a t u r d a y , s c o r in g B ob bn throw er uncorked his fin e-: all- Boyd with the w inning ru n a s th e tim e effort of 190-!2 to w in three C h ic a g o W hite Sox th * third phi* e. a m edal, P h i l a d e lp h i a A thletics 7-6 befor* su rp rises 10,331 fan s. and a letter. s h a d e d You don’t have to be a beaver to be eager or... th / ( trrjcnlum On/.- th*ri- moat r*f his Puramt*, with rorr^xpondin^l v <*mpba*n on a Junior who denote! an J energrea to v or-xl iittl*- tis th* ' onaequcnlly, whil* 6 / wa* ifab )* tiiRhr I p Therf im^jxllT, acadrmtrall* » «**s clone to the L int of No R**’im Topn:n* it off was an Du*/ Ultimatum from lh* Mi!* Par/nt, warninz that his next arqui-ifion had be'f/r b/ zither a I tat of Pauxins C,t$Ae* or a S,-wta| leciirrty Car i All O u r R< v roul4 fore- re wa- a lifetime at ILrrj f^ibor, nnlr»» Somrthinf Drastjr h ap p e n e d it h a p p e n . In xeate d h e a v ily m b e t i/ e d r in r an d black coffer, and lined up t h r e e *uper ^kult T utors. Vjdit and lay he Ywetted It Out - atta w o u n d un with RerrmrkaLy Re. • p e r table f,raib-« D rat thins h r did, n a t u r a lly , * is to r o n a u lt h is Tro uty ! rjegrammar. (^X h at— yon haven't got he m ad e a Teleprammar? Ju-t drop a tine to Ro- m I??"", U rstrrn I m on, 6 0 Hud- ann Nt . N e w York L ily and a e t a ropy o f th a bright and bre^-rv little auide, fo r free.) On its advice, he railed extern f mon and fla»hed the Joyous Tiding* hom -w ard bv Telegram. The Reardan cam* an hon* Int** A Telegraphic Money n rd * r for $'*00, p lus a m e-saae that read D elighted at voiir con fou n d I an the Prophet*, in clu d ­ ing m yself. Hope vou will join me on two m onth European trip, ex p en ses paid, starting June 20th ' maned, PO P M ora!' AX hen you've ant a^od n ew t to impart, strike while the Item ta H ot — hv Telegram! It add* weight, as well a s, wings, to Your Word*. In ant kind r . Communique from Da?* Talk to D r e a ii Talk to Job T d k . you']! R*t farther, faster, when you use the Yellow Blank. Just rail W estern U n ion . 613 C o n g r e s s Telephone 6-432 D E A N S M I TH HITS TAPE A H E A D OF THREE T E A M M A T E S IN THE 100-YARD D A S H fa r rlq h y C h a r l e y T hom t e r m y e**, f * -.had 2-3 4 v, t h a t o r d e r , S M U s r o f Je rry Pro// ** second rd fro m A ' n Fr e-;e- io f * f Photo of T om R o g e rs s ta g e d c o m e b a c k the m ost c r 0 wd co u ra g e o u s this b a lm y , a lm o s t Windless a ftern o o n to se* a new 880 re c o r d of I 52 1 junior clo sed with T he sle n d e r last IOO a sc o rc h in g kick so p h o m o re y a r d s foot. W eav er D av id W e a v e r by a h a d se t a b liste rin g p a c e th** en ­ ti r e i set and held a fix e -y a rd L i d at to b e a t SMU final turn th e th e in to Uh of 1,500 feet. That s p a r k lin g clocking e r a s e d th e old standard of 1 53 6 tty R ice ’s Otha Byrd in i m Lh k Foersl.er, a co-favorite with) R ogers arid W eaver, couldn’t m atch their orrid pace and finished IO /a ! fj third p lace. T he yards back lanky blonde Was clocked at a fine I 55 5 how ever in w ho unreel- ti in in s p ire d 17 7. A&M lo om ed a s a d a n g e r o u s Don M orto n a n d F o e t s t e r whip- th r e a t d u rin g th e e a r l y e v e n t s S at­ d r o p p e d s o p h o m o re t e r r i f i c a n c h o r du el a s u n l a y a c th e A g g ies s c o r e d h e a v ily I o r i up a ’he M u s ta n g t w o y a r d s a h e a d o n t h e h a c k s t r e t c h , a n d t h e n k i r k - o f 52 . ? H a n f j 153-31 uis Cincinnati M ilw aukee China go P it ts b u rg h / C hicago Now York Clrv eland D etroit Baltimou e Pbiladelptr a Wa Abington Roxton i 1 a I 2 D R P c t . 600 577 556 .519 517 480 3 I 135 .321 7*2 \\ I 10 13 ll 15 12 15 11 13 l l 15 12 13 IO 13 9 19 l l A f . I K I, AA r e t . IO 613 18 16 JO .r>15 IO .615 16 12 9 .571 IO 13 ,435 IO 15 toff 8 16 6 13 D B I 1 2 Lr 5 Ti 6!a 8 .316 V 2 B ut R o gers, the d e fe n d in g c h a m ­ pion. r e f ’ ;ed to s u r r e n d e r an d his the c h e e rin g te rrific bid b rou gh t I J a v e lin NI IIVI It! IS 1 VV*** RU.-hr 2 D ick H a za rd Arkan**H^ 190 I i a C hark-* R e n fr o e T e x a s P e te M aven u T o m D o n a h u e , T e x a s A&M, 173-9T T F C 190- 121-1; 4 5 T e x a s AA M 1J8-I ']>*■;) 140.yard U H , 5 SM s e t b v T e x a s flu n J e r r y P r e .v jt Alvin F r ie d e n 3 P ic / 2 P a r lo r l l I S m i t h C h a r l e y T h o m a s j I c* s s AAM i record Ties P er tv Ma if • m d Charley P; rk**r in 1980 tiro.-,*. T ex; I 2 T old b o fiord* 11 T ex! ■ y y I te a m o f F i n - d R ogue* Oar! t 7 '>mrn', {far mo SMI S n o t Cot 52 « AAM AAM Biff SA 9 * 4 5 Orviiu* fraD Kir* 47-3}* S a m u e * : H , - r T im e re,bt, , ax * 145-3 148-1 4 fc - L a n g f o r d J a c k s o n . R|c«* Cir u t T a x i s AAM. H m m * I i F’n b h 1 ■ FS • >1 3 R o d rn* v W il l |» ma S M U son Pie :* 0 -l; S need T ex as 139-11’., *’ n ” lo* , n rii itrtnh ) < f a M o rt o n SM! ■ H ar old I,riff n R < 3 Jan O h m Ar; ins/.- Auld, Tmas 5 fame* Caruthers, Texas Tim" ’-lines Bixin* bal* DeRourn Texas I mile 'is AAM AAM 3 * fu ion Halo T e x a s . 3 - D o n .Wighbor* texas tim T e n n l s o n . A r k a n s a s : I itll ii : I 2 Tim/ 4 17 5 18!* lo* lo x /i x 2 A lv in F r i e d e n , T h o m a s T e x as is Ie l o as * ,i Bdl" 1939 Allen l,awler Texas Bill a a m * j <*»* IOO yard D a sh : I Dean S m i t h Te ■ 3 *Tiar l»rouit t :> B nb ny H e r od, B m Im T im e I u s recor d so* hy Fr«*d W o l c o n toifi F e r n .•.mith 1952 I 'n r I f.' ir lt n es on . S a v i o r BHS t e x a s BMS a n d I J •• va ;d ll ii rd lek terrv ll Iff h f . J f . n . i y f o r d Donaldson Ba H‘“ C l to r I Ta i;i* Holiink's'.vorih, ; r e x e s AA-vt i o*;, ; B y U a r f u n g . T e x a s AAM a - 'I n m D o tla h lf* rim . SM! I o * is '• # !l 11; h I ii nip 1 O d ) i t e m D i c k s o n Bi- between Ita-. mord Herr' m I f. -x a n j ll es P.ii ii 11 Texas fill 5 H • n iohn ■Cd VT, between Marvin Swink and -Ic II bonn \ ( narles Cow , ,■* ,s AAM ley Bailor. S t e p h e n James and Terr I lingier Rice. birk Hem S M B *■ nv rn Sides Texas 5 10 b i l l a r d D ash lv / Dean Smith - k rleden, Ie*a* 1 J. r r ’ ' v I - - as > Bober I I < , r lc 7 1 Texas , 3 ! r#w • ('nixon. Texas, lim* E a r l y WI; • I .elan. and a nd I 480 lard Run I Torn Roger* ; 2 T>nv i rl Weaver as k n e r .s t e r , Texas u w SMU 3 Dick 4 Brl Davis. R i m 152.1 'I I m e 'V'-e I S3 6 r e c o r d o f ()ld BB* O R D I p her’ Spei < T ; r , . - *[>encc 3 Int ’■ O O -, p. rd Bi •nile Hun > Benzol L ow e SMI i amu, Ti \ as s.n \ ! m o ri-I.-md T e x a s A&M I> High. A r k a n s a s I inn .“MB . arx! In s Hurdles V Lj i „ T i Ba v mr is Harlung. Texas AAM BH I Curtis 3 ' ’a Tan ’ Frti- 9 ;* ■> i ' c, m,, IC! t 5 J a n e s H oi ,n v«.rf h Texas l o x a s AA M In Mile ' aillt I 23 5 r i m e S t a p h , n mies B o o H u ffm an c m , t I h« v P hPtwjrf*n an d a nd J o h n N o w T ex as 13 d I ut or rexes A&M t w e e n Bd Bern e! SM C I ; '• *s AAM, an d Stev* 12 6 : * b e * /arle, Rice, Mile Relay T, V Don Morton* v f u- a e t by Hl'-e In l.f v n 't , ’’ B 1-,( ( ) R f / ; <50 ' 1 SM C r‘" 2 -Texas: ( A d e l b - r t Bar 1 ■ 1 u - aver 3 Texas Time 3:13* I lid r e c o r d of 3 i i t B r „ . d J u m p : ! R a y m o n d T ic k e rs ' X M W iDt(,k A rk an lr w f James Beaver r r , 23 * Jerry House Texas 22 BV, Bobby Robinson, Texan A&M 72-7 T fronts sprint F o r hi ill-- SMU s reco rd -td e n k - I c h n p e r f o r m a n c e s h a r ­ irrg mil* ed that S tirlin g due-1 b e t w e e n R o g e rs a n d W e a v e r. It w as h to rrid battle b e tw e e n (fie M t i t h i n g s a n d T e x a s a l l t h e w a y . tjillin;' with lop ('r<)okA an d R o b e rt C a r s o n 's sp len d id 49.1 o pen ing I* ’ h an d e d J i m C -a ru th frs a fiv e-y ard lead o y e r SMC s Hol> junior by th re e -y a rd a d v a n t a g e still hr!*! a a f t e r his 49 ! second lap. G e o rg e then c l i p p e d o f f a h n - k 48 1 N a 1 slig htly behind W e a . e r , fell bul the S te e r P it t nhtii ku n« fnits Bra vex, 6 I j F ITT;MU IRf lf, M a ,y 15 P f*‘rn nk u T h o n as clout "v.». S H O E STORE 2348 Guadalupe > On the Drag f G ET HEMPHILL'S TOP CASH OFFER before YOU SELL YOUR BOOKS! First Foe in N C A A Playoffs Unknown to Texas' Bibb Falk > B v W ILLIE M O R RIS •>*•»* Sport* S u f f M r . Ribb Augustus F a lk , who's to know more baseball just about anybody, hasn’t reputed than the faintest inkling w h o .his Long­ horns’ first foe in the N C A A base­ ball playoffs w ill be. N o one else has the answer either. The acquisition of another S W C is nothing new to campus title oldhands. thir­ It m ark s T exas' tieth undisputed crown in the past Nears. The Horns have shared THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS offers through the EXTENSION DIVISION 255 courses b y Correspondence given by 130 Faculty Members For Further Information addrest Extension Teaching and Field Service Bureau Division of Extension TK* University of Texas Austin, Texas Phone 2-3408 The Steers, who copped another S W C crown despite the B ib b e r’s CHir seniors— Bob Tow ery, P a u l perennial moanmgs hack in M arch. established some sort of record in ^iohr. r i a n k Bro ck, and T ra v is E c k e r t—are closing out their ca- doing veers. - in thsee others, „ it. F o r Texas is now the ^>nlv school in the nation to have qualified for the N C A A playoffs in each of the eight ye a rs the post­ cam paign (om petition has been in effect. Several factors enter the play- off equation: 1. N orm ally, the Horns would oppose the B o rd e r Conference v ic ­ tor for the right to enter the college World Series in O m aha. The N C AA has changed its system , however. Now the S W C kingpin w ill play the M issouri V a lle y Conference w inner for regional honors. 2. O klahom a’s Aggies, the south­ ern sector cham p in the Missouri V a lle y and St. Louis U niversity. the northern winner, a re embroiled in a play-off series at St. Lo u is’ Sportsman P a rk this week end. then take Should St. Lo u is the 3 the Steers W ill ad­ series, vance to Om aha, without having to play the Missouri school. Should Oklahoma A At NI win howe\er, a showdown w ill develop between the Longhorns and the Aggies, to decide w ho’ll represent this dis­ trict in Omaha. 4. Then again, there s a slim possibility that Arizona, the B o r­ der Conference tit list, w ill play Texds or the Aggies or both, for regional honors ponding an an­ nouncement by the N C A A . Arizona was originally scheduled to meet the Skyline Conference champ, hut Skvhne officials protested If the Oklahoma Aggies win over S lou is, there w ill he no home- and-home arrangem ent in r e g a r d s to the I e.xas-AiSrM series T ither w e ’ll play a ll tho games in Stillw ater, or we I] p|a% them all down here,” B a lk said Satur­ day. Hie NCA A showdown is due to open in Omaha .Tune TO. Any p lay­ off must m aterialize before June 7 or thereabouts in „ S E A S O N ’S H K O R O Minnesota l l M innesota I | O f the four. E c k e r t is the surest bet for all-Am erican honors. Reliu- bie sources contend it ll be either E c k e r t or B a y lo r's oft-hitting M ick ­ ey Sullivan the all-Am erican outfield. Both finished their con­ ference cam paigns w ith .450-plus batting averages. _ Texas 9. Oklahom a 8 Tex** 5. o klah o m a 5 (12 innings) Texas 4 Texa* 8 Texas 12 B a y lo r 4 T exas 15, Bis.' tor Texas 3, Rice 8 Texas 3, R ice 2 Texas \ Sui Ross 4 ( l l innings) texas 3 TCL 2 T exas 13, T C I ' 3 Texas 6 A A M 2 Texas IO, Nebraska 5 Texas i*. Nebraska 4 T e x a s Texas Texas 13, S a v io r 13 T e x a s *5 R ice 0 Texas k. TC L 3 Texas 3 A AM 'J Texas 4, A A M 5 I. S a m H o u sto n 0 I S M I ' 0 IO Track T-men Give Littlefield S5.000 W A C O , M a y 15 Clyde L ittle ­ field. track coach of the U n ive rsity of Texas for 34 years, Satu rd ay w as given a check for $5,000 by men who have been on his teams. The presentation w as during the Southwest Conference meet. The track men said they w elt it because "it has become doing known that you plan to build an edifice in the near future to house not only yourself, but to house as w ell your m emoirs with a place in retro­ com fortably to spect.” indulge The men lauded Littlefield for his devotion to the university and to the spoil of track and field, for his influence and good “ im­ parted to your track boys. ( J i b * W h i p N Y , 13 on F.rrors The Steers, who com piled a 11-5 rei ord for the ye ar. haven t skip­ ped a day of workout since the seasons end the daily grind has increased in temjK) to, a deviate as much as possible the ills of not having g a m e tion and conditions com po ti* fact, In in the sixth N E W Y O R K , M a y 15 W ild throws by W illie M ays and vJim inning helped H earn th e Chicago Cubs snap th e New Yo rk Giants six-game winning streak Saturday. 4-3 behind Jo h n ­ ny K lip p s te in s three-hit pit* hing steady Texas' Golden W ins 1 League Golf Crown B y M I R R A Y F O RS V A L L (30) T e x a n S p o rts S t a f f Texas’ Jo e Bob Golden clim axed to stardom at an uphill battle F r id a y by annexing the V^aco Southwest Conference individual links crow n with a 2-under p a r 278 total. Golden's victory was a clutch perform ance as he had to sink a 20-foot birdie deuce on the final hole team m ate Roane Puett by a single stroke. Golden put together rounds of 68, 69, 71. the coveted and 70 in winning to edge , championship. Puett. the tourney’* re a l dark- horse, fashioned rounds of 71, 68. 70. and 70 for his runner-up 279 score which is one under p a r for I the 72 holes played at the p a r 70 j Ridgewood Country Club course. for Defending co-champion Flo yd Addington of S M U finished in a fellow third place w ith tie M ustang Tom m y T o w ry w ith totals of 285. a full seven strokes be­ hind Golden's winning m a rk . Lee Pinkston, senior and cap­ tain of the Longhorn squad, made a bid for the crow n w ith a three- under-par 67 in the morning round F rid a y hut slumped in the afternoon to finish in fifth place with a 72-hole total of 286. to a 75 Longhorn sophomore R a y Ix?g- gett fired two ev en p a r 70 s F r i ­ day to lift him self frorh the twelfth posit ion he held at 1he half-way point to a sixth place finish, one stroke behind Pinkston at 287, Thus Longhorn golfers captured four of the top six places in the tourney and Golden becam e the eighteenth Ixmghron in the last 22 years to w ea r the individual crown. Golden and P u ett almost did not play in the tourney. Had Texas elected to send the four men that in the most Confer­ had played ence m atches. Golden and Puett would have had to stay at home. the How ever, team m em bers decided to let seniors Pinkston and Golden p la y in the tourney and Puett won one of the other two spots in a playoff among the other four squadmen. for two slot Golden began the season in the number the Long­ horns but dropped to num ber liv e m idway the season w hen he lost challange m atches to Leggett. Love, and T ed dy W hite, in Puett on the other hand had not played in a single Conference dual match and w as the num ber s ix man throughout t h e season. In qualifying tria ls he b arely made t h e team b y edging squadman Nosom Burt by one stroke. Hernandez, Springer W in Singles, D oub les Titles W A C O , M a y 15 dP> Texas m ade a clean sweep of the Southwest Conference tennis tournament S a t­ urday when Jo h n n y Hernandez, re ­ peated as singles champion and Hernandez and T om m y Springer again won tho doubles title. team ­ Hernandez defeated his mate. Spring er, 8-6, 6-1. 6-1, for the singles championship. The Her- nandez-Springer team then downed P a le M ille r and Robin Robinson of Rice. 2-6, 6-4 6-0, 6-3, V or the doubles crown. Several Changes M ade In 1955 S W C Rules (Continued From P a g e I t y e a r ’s eligibility for accepting a loan of $150 from an alum ni in the form of a down paym ent on a car. a varsity or B-game in one week can ’t compete for in seven days. This means that an athlete can I p la y in both types of events in one week. the other UT's Senior Athletes Leaving But Many’ll Return to 40 Acres laid aside Many a senior the Orange and W hite for the last tim e during the seasons of 1953-54, yet they w ill not be forgotten for their exploits on the gridiron, hardwood. or diamond. Ten boys w ill move on from M em orial Stadium to other en­ deavors. C arlton M assey. all-Am er­ ican end. w ill return to school in the fall to finish w ork on his degree while the opposite flankm an. G il­ mer Spring, has signed to play with Edmonton in the Canadian Football League. After the season up there Spring plans to return to the F o rty Acres and complete his degree work also. Clifford P o lk and Bull Johnson are not sure about their plans, hut Polk hopes to get into pro ball somewhere. O la rips P e tro v ic h has already gone into the A rm y and B ill Bib le will receive his commission in the A rm y Transportation Corps this summer. Bunny Andrew s. quarterback and tri-captain along with M assey and Spring, w ill graduate w ith a P E degree in August and w ill go into j the A ir Fo rce soon after. B ill W hite and Dougal Cameron w ill both be back next fall. White w ill be completing w ork on a B B A , j while Cam eron w ill finish work on ! a P E degree. P h il Bran ch , all-Southw est Cen ference guard, has been drafted by I the Washington Redskins for the 1951 pro season. Three of the five seniors on Slue H u ll’s quintet w ill be back next fall working on their degrees. Those returning are B i lly Pow ell, Jim Richardson, and F r e d Saunders. Pow ell, co-captain of the Steers along with G ib Fo rd, has to com­ plete his practice teaching for his degree and then he ll go into the A ir Fo rce sometime a fte r Ja n u a ry of 1955. Fo rd has decided to play w ith the Phillips 66 A A U learn out o f 1 B a rtle sv ille , Okla., for a w hile and I then he ll also go Force. the A ir into Bob Waggener, < enter of the '54 Longhorns, will g r a d u a t e this month and go into the service. As for the lad* from C la rk F ie ld , th ey’ll be heading different w ays. T ra v is E c k e rt will probably sign a pro contract at the end of the N C A A playoffs and P a u l M ohr w ill probably play semi-pro ball in M innesota this summer. F r a n k Brock, rightfielder, has a com m ission in the A ir F o rc e and w ill be donning the blue and khaki come sum m er. Bob T ow ery w ill be over in Townes H a ll come next term w o rk ­ ing en his law' degree. Bob Tim m ins, captain of H ank C hapm an’s to tankers, complete work on his chem ical engineering degree and Bud dy Hoyt is coming back to U T to do graduate work in personnel. is going Bob by Brodnax will be m aking a trip to the altar this sum m er before going into the A ir F o rc e and A lbert Y r ia r t is hoping to w ork in Pittsburgh at a steel m ill w hile doing graduate work in industrial psychology out of Purdue. THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE THIS SPRING! The Board of Directors and Management of the University Co-Op are proud to announce that we can pay a 1 4 % C A S H R E B A T E on purchases made this Spring. This has been made possible through your continued patronage. n/vers/Lu co- //coop M e S t V f t C N T . ’ } o w n S T O A I 9 Attendance of high school ath­ letes at college or university a lu m ­ ni banquets is not in violation of the rules if the person taking the athlete doesn’t furnish transporta- for the dinner. An tion or pjiy exception to this rule is applied in a situation when the dinner is held in the sam e city as the insti­ tution. ll) The 1955 spring meeting (track, golf. and tennis) w ill be held in Houston at R ice Stadium M ay 13 and 14. How ever, if tele­ vision is approved for the meet and facilities a re not availab le for IV in Houston, Hie meet w ill be moved to Austin and the U n iv e r­ sity. l l . R u les governing spring foot­ ball practice w ere changed from a standard of 18 working days in a period of 25 calendar days to IS working days in a period of 28 calendar d ays. This move w as to give more leew ay in case ni bad weather. R a y. v\ho dropped out of AAM af the end of last semester, hrokc the conference rule that prohibits excessive loans tan aggregate of over $150) accepted before one sem ester in school 3. A A M will he host to the con­ ference cross country meet next fall, and it w ill he held on the Monday preceding the N C A A meet 4 If a tie for the conference cham pionship in baseball appears, the conference w ill designate the team to represent the S W U in the N C A A play-offs If o n e of tile cham ­ pions ha> beaten all of the other co-champions two out of the three that school games plaved is the representative In cases w here a decision c a n ’t be reached, a coin w ill be tossed 5. The S W C representative to the N C A A basketball playoffs will be determ ined in case of a tie by one gam e at a neutral cite bv the two tied dubs If there a rc three tied. one \yj)| g^t a bye teams w hile the first two play and then the second playoff game is held. 6. No requests w ill he considered for. exceptions to the conferem e league basketball bv-law's about team playing in post-season tourna­ ments. In other words no $ 1 0 0 .0 0 FAtHOVf BHI 5000 Ronsort ghters *or the -'an o- woman g 'a d 5.50 up %¥ * j M JZ S ?* w N A M E A D D RESS ttrstmctfw j m l n 2268 Guadalupe Austin i only K E E P S A K E D A M O N D J e w e l e r for th# Gifts youU Give with Pride . . . Let Shtftalh’ « Be your Guide. Austin’s O n ly K E E P S A K E D IA M O N D Je w e le r ii st hi d m lewelrv 2268 Guadalupe O n the Drag T O W N ................................................................................S T A T E (A ustin d elivery zones a re from 19th to 27th streets and ban Ja c in to to R io Grande, t Sunday. May 16, 1954 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 Ona Point of Viow Texan, UT Futures Take Road Upward By BOB KENNY (30) Daily Texan Editor This is th e last. T h a t’s w h a t the (30) m e a n s . The desk a t which I s i t is no longer mine, even th o u g h its scratches and stains a r e a s fa m ilia ' »s yes­ te rd a y . W ith this issue The Daily T exa n a s s u m e s fresh new lead­ ership a n d to looks b right n e w d ay s forw ard As th e r e tirin g editor I give up m y ty p e w r it e r and four walls with full confidence in w hat I believe to b e a proud tradition a n d a g r e a t destiny of service by The D aily T exan to the Uni­ v ersity a n d the people of Tex­ as. D u ring a y e a r as editor one cannot help but p erceiv e an un­ broken h e r it a g e and a c h a r a c te r th a t is b ig g e r and g rea ter than an y individual ever a p a r t of it. This enduring personality d o m in a te s the little people who give th e ir y e a r s to it, gives it continuity and m a k es it g r e a t and I humbly believe th a t ours is a great col­ lege new sp aper. stability, and But it goes unsaid that a p a r t from tho com m unity to which it belongs and to whose future it is bound, a new spaper is no­ thing. So the future of the Texan can be p ro u d only as the future of the U niversity is great. And a s if. g rea t, all of us, the single in­ dividuals who live in its shadow, have a tie with eternity. the U niversity’s future the In a n o t h e r 15 years, this Uni­ v ersity ’s enrollm ent and phys­ ical size m a y be doubled, it al­ third greatest re a d y h a s the US. capital endow m ent Its buildings will push out to the e a s t a n d north and rise high­ e r the F orty Acres w ill grow. the air, and in in too it will get its Som eday a m e n d m e n t g r e a te r freedom of investment with its capital and w ider use of its gen­ It m a y even get eral allowing funds. 5,000 More by 1960 parkin g lots and an expanded Union. But a big U niversity is not necessarily a g r e a t U niversity. G re atn ess is intangible and in­ definable, dependent on d ed ica t­ inspired ed teach­ leadership, ing, and good luck. The first we can give if we will; the s e c ­ ond we can get if we will p a y ; the third we can p ra y for. I D ave m y job now a g r e a t deal richer than I c a m e to St. T h a t is inevitable; one can only hope the job could say som e­ It has m e a n t thing of the sam e making decisions drat affect, the lives of people around m e; it h a s meant working for ca use s it has bigger than I can b e ; the finest m e a n t dealing with people in the world. r have been shown a g r e a te r generosity than I knew existed; a selflessness that a m a z e s m e to over and over. One begins suspect the height of h u m a n nobility after one w atc h es peo­ ple shortening their Jives with­ out. chance to do something they believe in, or to give up for th in g ' cherished somebody they believe In. for r e w a r d their own course with the petty; the noble Of com es the n a rro w little people who c a n 't lift the ir eyes above sickly purposes and the big expansive ones too nearsighted to perceive their own gross­ anything but long enough ness. But to forget them , and other things big enough into to push place them life is Is the Too orally things h a v e h ap ­ pened s i n c e I first sa t in this ch a ir 13 months ago, com pletely .stricken by responsibility the that was mine. Now it looks like It I will miss as much as anything else. The responsibility and the quiet, never-old thrill of seeing three stran g e rs walk up to the Union counter from three directions, pick up Texans, arid walk away. r e s p o n s i b l y About that tim e I wrote in an editorial that it wa* the T ex a n 's duty to m ake the news a s well a s to pi t sent it. T hat p a r t of the job, at least, has been ac­ c o m p l i s h e d how well, it is for to j u d g e But events have other frequent and m e m ories been to a re crowded untangle. too c r o w d e d In the s u m m e r the baseball te am went to the national play­ offs and three University stu­ dents w ere kicked out of a cafe I-a»in in Lockhart for being A m erican the fall c a m e Chan' ellor H art s d epa rture , the election a n d the T ex a n ’s court suit, the Baylor g a m e , the foot­ ball reception. In protest; Their- we re fight-, with th e a ­ ter p r ire s and w'ith high fees in a r t Jab courses, for traffic lights and b e tte r low-cost hous­ ing. The proudest m o m e n t w as the McCarthy the p r o u d e s t m o m e n t and the most s i g n i f i c a n t a< corr pl)xh- ment. Then another election and a report by the Scholastic In­ tegrity G out ' ii, and the y e a r ’s duties w ere over All this, and the unimportant, things th a t r eal­ ly m atter. A lot w as controversial; a lot caused hurt and outrage. But. all of them left, as a residue an unshakeable confidence in the Intelligence, articulateness, good the judgem ent, an d ability of University student body. “ The people, y e s ,” said Carl Sand­ burg. The people know what th e y 're doing and th e y ’re more than any one of nearly right them could e v e r tnt, no m a tte r how gifted and how wise. So this is the last It is a y e a r that has given too much, cost too much, and m e a n t too much, A lot has happened, but there is a lot m ore to lunk I >rward to. The p a s t is good, rich, fruitful, but the ro ad to the future leads upw ard. Enrollment Growth Requires Increased Building Program By OTIS RHEA SCHMIDT Tn 1960 there will be approxi­ m ately 5.0(H) more students en ­ rolled in The University of Tex­ as than th e re w ere in the Long Session, 1953-1954. before they are given official status, however. T h re e s e p a r a te groups a r e included in this list, which w as presented the P re sid ent on J a n u a r y ll, 1954. No one of these groups has priority over the others. to \ A ccording to W. Byron Shipp, a s sista n t r e g is t r a r and reg istra - tion sup e rv iso r, the nu m b e r of young people of college age in T e x a s w ill increase by 170 per cent by 1970. Using this a s a the U niversity adm inis­ basis, tration h a s estim ated that en­ rollment. will be 15,500 in 1955, 16,000 in 1956 and will increase 500 e a c h y e a r until 1960. In 1960, a c co rd in g to this estim ate, en ro llm en t will be 18,189. If e nrollm ent w as to increase as this tho num ­ indicates, ber would stand at aboul 29,- 210 by 1970, Mr. Shipp said. This improbable, though, because housing facili­ ties a r e to m e e t inadequate these es tim a tes , Mr. Shipp a d d ­ ed. n u m b e r tren d is has This expected increase in en ­ rollm ent caused m a n y p h as es of the administration to begin planning for added facili­ la rge r staff. The ties an d a D ean of Women s staff has been w orking closely with the adm in­ istration in planning additional housing. The staff is expecting a t le a s t 5,(HK) women students by 1960. In line with this planning, a w om en s dormitory to house 270 s tud e nts is under construction in th e T ri-D o rm a r e a behind C a ro ­ l l e r s D orm itory. Another w om ­ e n ’s dorm itory, to house 776, is in the planning stage, Mr. F. C. McConnell, Director of Auxi­ a n d Service Activities, liary said. Two dorm itories a r e planned to house 525 men students, one a t the G re g o ry Gym site and one on San Ja cinto Street across from the University Tea House. In April, 1954, the Board of R egents a w a rd e d contracts to­ taling $1,061,642 for construction of a new English classroom and oftice building. Construction has sta rte d on this building which wall be located on the South Mall between the Main Building and the M usic Building. The B oard of Regents, m eet­ ing in Galveston on April 9 and IO a p p ro v e d a list of construc­ tion for the n ea r future at the Main University. On this priori­ ty list a r e a ir conditioning of the M ain Building and Hogg Au­ d itorium con­ struction of an ROTO building, and construction of an a r t class­ room building, listed in o rd er of priority. simultaneously, A list of building priorities has been recom m ended by the F a c ­ ulty Building Committee. These re c o m m e n d a tio n s m ust be a p ­ proved by the Board of Regents the following U nder additions and improve­ re c o m ­ ments, mendations w e ir m a d e : in­ crease1 of capacity of Utility Plant, expansion of Utility Dis­ facilities, air condi­ tribution tioning of the Main L ib rary and B a rk e r L ibrary, completion of the th ud and fourth floors of the east and west wings of the Science Build­ E x perim ental lab oratory ing, u n d ergradu ate to present C hem istry addition Building and the p re se n t Physics Building, m a jo r repa ir reroofing of work r e ­ p e rm a n e n t buildings and pairs on the E ngineering Build­ ing and on the C hem istry and Physics Buildings. including to It also lists a lib ra ry addition according to the C ret Develop­ m e n t Plan as previously a p ­ proved by the Regents, addition to the Union Building, including provision for a F acu lty Club, development of the E ast Mall, additions to G regory G ym , and additions to the W om en’* G ym . R ecom m endations m a d e un­ d e r the heading of new buildings w ere an Engineering Building on a Twenty-fourth Street site, Business Administration Build­ ing, Social Science Building, E x ­ tension-Economic G e o l o g y (Nineteenth at Red River), Con­ tinuation Center (vicinity of L aw -G raduate D o r m ) , F in e (west of Music Arts Building Building), second E n gin eering Building on E ast Mall (south of the present E ngineering Build­ ing), Auditorium and Radio-TV Center, and N u rs e ry School. in the Kinsolving Dormitory expansion the rec o m m en d a tio n s C om m ittee’s included a 750 unit g ir ls ’ d o rm i­ tory on tract, m e n ’s co-ops (as rec o m m en d e d by a special co m m ittee ), w o m ­ en's co-ops on Driskill T ra c t, gradu a te w o m en's dorm ito ry on front of Driskill T ract (east side), and m e n ’s dorm itories a s recom m ended by special committee. the This entire p r o g ra m a s r e c ­ om m ended by the F a c u lty Build­ ing Committee would cost a p ­ proximately b u t would be spaced over a period $30,OOO.(XKJ Sick rJiht Frank Aaron. G. E. A lm q u ist J r , Carol Helen Barnes. E rn estin e E. Broussard, Joh n n ie C. Carroll, Car­ olyn Sue Oui bort. J. Brown Cut.- birth, M arjorie J ea n n ette lia n es, John E. H eltler J e ss Jo e Jabour, R oger Dean Martin. S h irley J o Needham Barbara R ose R av,’ B ar­ bara Ann R edditt. W illiam C ia ” R ichie. N ew ton S ch o en ly . R obert Clinton Smith, Ague* Ann Warren. of a decade or two. This ex­ pansion p ro g ra m is only a r e c ­ om m endation a n d m ust be a p ­ p r o v e d by the Board of Regents before any ac tu a l planning can be done. I*. Boner A co m m ittee to study die core the College of curriculum of Arts and Sciences w as appoint­ ed by Dean C in May of 1950. T he com mittee, u n ­ der the c ha irm anship of Dr. E m m e tte S. Redford, profes­ its sor of governm ent, m a d e report in 1952. The faculty voted down a motion the pro­ posed core c urriculum p ro g ra m be tried on a experim ental 'oasis for 300 students for a defined period of time. that At tile present time another com m ittee has been appointed with study of a core cu rriculum for the entire University being done. C h a irm an of the co m m it­ tee is Dr. Philip G ra h am , pro­ fessor of English. The University is growing the in physically, plans a re the m aking for expansion of the building p ro g ra m and of c u rric u la r progra m . What tile next ten y e a r s will bring for The U niversity of Texas can only he predicted through these te rm s. But no m a tte r w h a t the future, the University a dm inis­ tration and faculty a r e a w a re as always of their responsibili­ in to the citizens of T ex a s ty providing a University of the first ord er in all ways. n ^ \Jn n orlu n i lies M oore B u sin ess Form *, Inc . in H ouston, has tw o o p en in g s for sa les in Corpus C hristi rep resen ta tiv es anc salary and co m m ission . F or fu rth er in for­ m ation S'1 cr S tu d en t K niploy merit Bureau, S p eech B u ild in g 111 th e V a lley . W ill pay P art-tim e ft trie t;. peu rit< 1 a Week Sejiii dent vv ifp ie years. For fu student t i pie B u ild in g l l ! . .tic secretary . Liec- shorthafid 20 hour* . g rad u ate, o r slu ­ rred Be here tw o lier in fo rm atio n soc merit B ureau, Speech T rans-W orld A irlines h as open­ in gs for h o stesses (or th eir in creas­ ed sch ed u le of ! (iring and sum m er flig h ts. O p p ortu n ities for prom otion are ex cellen t For further in fo rm a ­ tion s«e S tu d en t F m p lovm en t Bur­ eau. S p * 'c h B u ild in g i i i . ★ ★ tvw, ex p erien ced The Half B roth ers. In” tu sk ers of H allm ark g reetin g cards is in need of sty lists. for a nj you n g A good opportune, man or w om an w ith ex cep tio n a l crea tiv e ahi it sta n d ­ ards For fu rth er in form ation go to •student E m p lo y m en t B ureau, S p eech B u ild in g 111. and high tast the com p any T he C on tain er C orporation of Am erica w ill have a rep resen ta ­ tiv e on the cam p us d u rin g th e w eek of May 17-22. T here are o p en in g s in in sa le s and prod u ction , g ra d u a tes w ith Industrial en g in eerin g b u sin ess, or interest In arts and sc ien ces w ith sales and p rod u ction are desired. A p p lication s are a v a ila b le the Student E m p lo y m en t B u reau, S p eech B u ild in g ILL tra in ees for in To the Editor: to lie;-;. those Hill Hall residents a r e no dif­ f erent scholastically in m ost organized living units. This is w here trouble the limelight, in An athlete the is and because of is more this he open to judgm ent thaM the av e rag e m an. If he represents an institu­ tion he is responsible to its m e m ­ bers and to criticize Athletes m u st adhere to stric ter moral and a c a d e m ic a in rode ord e r I is not suggest willing th e se above­ s ta n d a r d codes sta y out of inter­ collegiate competition. typical student to stay above censure. that, a m a n who to they hold the right live by than the the U niversity, This a rg u m e n t is based on the assum ption th at our athletic team s represent r hope that o u r team s will neve r become so se p arate d from the ca m p u s to the extent that the students con­ sider them bargain en tertainm ent. - A f . B E R T YRIART To the E ditor; In the Scholastic Integrity Court* r ii report in The Daily Texan on May 12, 1954, reports of scholastic dishonesty in the athlete-tutor pro­ g r a m were mentioned. I a m an athlete, and am in position to know that some of the s ta te m e n ts are I also know that such things true ororif.y exist as files, g rad e rs helping fra tern ity brothers, buying of e x a m s from tutors (other than athletic!, steal­ ing of e x a m s , cheating on t es t s , etc. fraternity and jjf, trouble does not With this in mind, I am asking you to consider the fact that pos­ sibly the in Hill Hall. It seems th a t the que - bon is m u - h m ore b asil1 than that. There is some factor in o ur society that has taught people that. that sort of thing is condoned by so­ ciety as a whole It m a y be our training in high school, o r it m a y even go back to our homes. What it is, I do not know. If you can tind the answ er, you will solve one of the basic problems of o ur educa­ tional system. to I believe that the tutor p ro g ra m is a necessity because the athlete has to spend an a v e r a g e of three hours a day working out when h* could be studying. What m akes him begin to use the tutor dishon­ estly is relater! to the basic prob­ lem discussed above. I do not be­ found the answ er will he lieve the Athletic, in Hill Hall, solely Council, or any oth e r single o r ­ ganization. T herefore I would like to ask the Council to consider m a k ­ ing a public sta te m en t that effect so the boys of Hill Hall would not a p p e a r to have such a reputation. Though not undeserved, this reputation should not apply to th e m alone. These boys a re not perfect, but neither is anyone else If the boys knew that the Council investiga­ w as carrying on tion with it w as m e re ly a small p a r t of the basic problem you arc trying to solve, they would not develop the strong feeling that has been aroused la te­ ly. They feel th a t you a re .stirring up antagonism against th e m from sh e er jealousy. With this feeling, relations cannot possibly improve. the hope that it will he one step in the im­ provem ent of relations and the d is­ solving of prejudices between Hill Hall and the rest of the cam pus. —F R E D R IC M SAUNDERS I am writing this the spirit that this in ★ To the Editor: In view of several articles re­ cently published in the T exan con­ cerning the findings of the St ho- lastic Integrity Council, I feel that it is my duty as a f arm er m e m b er of the accused to present before tile student body an opinion from the other side of the fence. in the F ir s t of all, it se em s lo me that Frank lin Spears and his student political friends a r e m aking sev­ that are eral serious accusations based on h ea rsay and an attem pt to cover up their own violations: least of all on facts. My in­ but terpretation of their "re c o m m e n ­ dation s” boils down to three dis­ tinct accusations: (I * They a re accusing D. X. Bible, a m an that has hren elected to tile Football Hall of F a m e as one of the greatest c h a r a c te r builders of all tim e and a m a n that is considered one of the most outstanding persons the history of the Southwest, of gross negiigance (2.) T hey a r e pulling tile well known trick of point and now obsolete the accusing finger at the athletes the mort dishonest group on as the cam pus Of course the fact that they could get m o re publicity ‘‘stink” bv. and choosing ‘‘old stand-bys” of criticism doesn't have anything to do with it I 'm sure. and (3.) They a r e flatly accusing the University they w ere nice athletes, whom enough to also consider students, of being completely dishonest and of violating every principle of scholastic integrity. Now le t’s check and dishonesty, raise a bigger the records’ a little. Mr. Spears says the that students n say should have a w hat is happening to their Blank­ et T ax money In the first p i n e to ask Mr. Spears I would just whom he m e ans when he uses the term ‘‘s t u d e n t s " ’ It is m y opin­ ion th a t his sam ple w as not very this representative. w rite r 's experience th at v ery well m o st pleased with the present Blanket Tax setup. Not only a r e they al­ lowed to see e v e r y football gam e, basketball gam e, baseball swim­ ming, and track events but also . m a n y civic functions. And ail for the price of $16.50. Just how many It h a s been find to students like a r e firing oCi m e Stars In Our -30- Copy Graduation Is Like Dying- Dots, Snatches Show Life / dissatisfied n am e, Mr. Spears? custom era can you in a states in which she that nine out of Miss D urre nbu rg e r, another of S p e a r ’s ‘‘scholastic integrity m e m ­ b e r s ,” re c e n t th a t interviewed su rv ey tutors, ten said th a t they had plagiarized work for athletes. I have two questions to ask Miss D urrenbu rger, eserved ^ p resen ted fo r N ational A d v ertisin g by N ational A d vertisin g S ervice, in c.. 120 .Madison Ave Mew York, N.Y, C h icago — B oston — L os A n isic * — San F ra n cisco C ollege P u b lish ers R ep resen t*vive Associated CoUeg ate Press All Americas Fseemske* lf EMBER SU B SC R IPT IO N RATES (Minimum Subscription — Three Months) Delivered In Austin ........................................................................... S .75 month 51.00 month Mal.ed In Austin Mailed out of town ............................................................................f .75 month s ............... P E R M A N E N T STA FF E ditor in chief ............................................................. ROB K E N N Y (30) ............................................................. BOB HILBURN M anaging Editor ..................................................................... J i m C a r k E ditorial Assistant ...................................... E d g a r Watking Editorial R e sea rch Assistant ......................................................................... Shirley Strum N ew s E ditor D ay E d itors ........................... Carolyn G ilb e rt, P a t Dilworth, T ommy Thompson. E d g a r Watkins, Jo e L. Schott, J . C. Goulden Night E d i t o r s ..................N orris Ivoefflor <30>. M u rra y F o rsv a ll (30), Jo Ann Dicker on <305, J im K eahey, Ruth P en d erg rass, Thom H ansard A m usem ents Editor ......... Jai k Walker (30) ............................................................... Luke L. PatreneUa Book Editor E x ch a n g e Editor ................................................................. Pochard Busby ....................................... .. Nick Johnson in tr a m u r a ls Co-ordinator Society E dito r ..................................................................... Helen Cox (30) Sports E ditor ................................................................... S am Blair (30) W ire E ditor .............................................................................. A it Berwick P ic tu r e E d ito r ............................................................................. Phyl Green STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE D ay E d ito r ......................................................................... J. C. GOULDEN Night Editor .................................................................... BOB KENNY (36) Assistant Night Editor ...................................... Jo Ann Dickerson (3ftj Assistant D ay Editor ............................................................ J im T^mplin C opyreaders ..................N orris Loeffler (30). M urray Forsvall (30), J im Gilbert (30*. Ruth Pendergrass! ^ Shirley S t r u n v * I Night Sports E ditor ......................................................... Sam Blair Z l f ................................................................................... Joe Sanders A ssistant Night A m usem ents Editor ......................................... J a c k Walker -30, Night Wire Editor ......................................................... Ike Newman (30) A ssistant .................................................................................... Meda Miller Night Society E d itor ................................................. Millicent Huff (30) A s s i s t a n t s ................................ Helen Cox (30), Gwyn McCullough (30f Bettye Rawland (30) By W alt Kelly- HELPS YOU GAIN POPULARITY Heaven Is a Place' |4 Co-eds to Vie On KTBC-TV Today For Miss Austin "Heaven Is a Place. ^ a aO-min­ vite TV drama the firt-t to be produced this year, w ill be broad­ cast over KTBC-TY at I p.m. Sun­ day. Student* in the drama depart­ ment w ill make up the eleven- member cast and TV students will be in charge of pi eduction work. Fred Sitton, who directed the on- Two Radio Shows Go off Air Monday Two regular R.adio House pro­ grams, ‘‘Serenade'’ and "M eet the P ro f," w ill be heard Monday night for the last time this year. On "M eet the Prof ’ Ju lia Beall, gr? duating senior radio ma ior, will interview Dr. W illiam S. Livings­ ton, assistant professor of govern­ ment, over K T E C at 11:05 p m. ‘‘Serenade,’’ a weekly fraternity and sorority sing-song, will feature the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity choral group at 11 30 p.m. over the same station. I 54700 per month Room & Board Twin Pines Co-op 2800 Whitis Phone 2-0231 A p p lica tio n s now ava ila b le for Sum m er M em bership gmal stage production, w ill also di­ rect the T V version. M ary Lou Lynch Is the student producer, and Ja c Farm er is assistant director. "Heaven Is a Place" concerns the struggle of four orphans left in poor economic circumstances who try to remain together and not be committed to an orphan's home. The plav s name was taken from the youngest child’s efforts to find out where his father is. The drama, written by Jean S. Browne, a graduate drama student, was first produced in a three-act version earlier this semester in the Experim ental Theater. It was originally designed for the theater- in-the-round but was easily adapt­ ed to TV, Malcolm West, assistant professor of drama and TV produc­ tion supervisor, said. Summer Activities Cost Students $2 The Summer Texan and tickets to three Depaitment of Drama plays, four concerts, and 22 movies can all be bought this vear by sum- mei school students for only $2 Anyone who bas time and in­ clination to see all these events and read The Texan can save about 59 on the investment. A Summer Activities Ticket costs SI and can bo bought a1 Speech Building TOI The .Summer Texan may be pur- i based for $1 at the time of regis­ tration. I n iv e r s it y G r a d u a t e s University of Texas Plates bv Wedgwood in Bluebonnet Blue will be a permanent remindet of Texas Days. On Sale Lx- Students Assn Union Building. Winner W ill Try For Miss Texas Four University co-eds and one ex-student were selected as finalists in the Miss Austin contest in pre­ liminary judging held M ay 12 in tho LO RA auditorium. Vying for the crown are Karlene Whitt, Betty Call, Shirley Lang, and Betty Tieken, The ex-student finalist is Connie Clark. i The winner in the finals to be held M ay 27, will be the Capitol City's representative in the Miss Texas contest scheduled in Fort Worth in Ju ly . The winner in Fort Worth will enter the Miss Am erica pageant in Atlantic City, N. J., in September. Texas has never had a Miss America crown winner. Judging in this selection is divid­ ed into four parts personality and J poise, appearance in a date dress, talent, and bathing suit appeal. Other contestants in the Miss Austin prelim inary judging were Harriet Law yer. Ironwood, M ich.: Boltyc DeRese Port Arthur C a r­ Sa Rita olyn Grumbles, Austin: Obelgoner. Hallettsville J o v o e Anne Goy ne. Kilgore: Carolyn Out­ law. Houston; Jean Smith, Baytown. and Etta Janzen Portrait Hung in Commons The cost of the portrait placed in the Commons of Mis- Anna Ja n ­ zen late direetoi of the Commons, has been completely covered by ' nations announced Mrs. E v a Tir- off manager The price of the portrait, Which was painted by Em ily Guthrie Smith of Fort Worth, was approxi- It was purchased with n ately SEO Ex Stu­ the from contributions dents Association, cafeteria em­ ployes, and friends. is now on display on the south wall of the Commons foyer. faculty members, It Miss Janzen was associated with the University for 29 years as as­ sonate professor of home econ­ omic- and duel tot of the Com­ mon- She died in 195! at G R F G SH O T T STUD IO A ttra c tiv e m str-ctorv at o r e g ituden+j S c o tt te a c h U r b a n i t y to popularity, the e asier w a y more d a te s and m e a fun. easy and to ai) the new est d an ce s at reaso n ab le I t s learn GREG SCOTT DANCE STUDIO to m e brr for free dance A nahola Above Texas T h eater 2-.>6?9 Use the Texan Classifieds QUEEN LAST DAY! OPEN 11:45 KUMFER HUMPHREY BOGART JONES GMA L0U0BRI6IDA Tomorrow! SIX P E O P L E C A U G H T IN A D E S E R T S r i l T H 'S 'flA P ! mm S t e p h e n M C N A L L Y A b i i t SMITH Jo* STIRLING TEXAS Prince V a lia n t,1 IN S E A R C H O F A D V E N T U R E are +wo of in current attraction of the Param ount T h eater Robert W a g g e r, left, plays +he part of Val •net Ja m e s Mason plays Sir Brack, the traitorous Black Knight of King A rthur's Round Table. ‘ he principals *B«ot the Devil* Forget About the Plot; Listen to the Jokes of portly Robert M o tleys bulbous profile. So does Morley. The look of disgust on his puckered face when an Arabian official informs him " It s execution d ay" is dassie pantomime. Betel I xeric sporting a crew­ cut and gaudy double-breasted vest, plays screenwriter Truman Capote to the hilt, Throughout ihe movie he is introduced as "M r, Horror. Each time his soft-boiled eyes light up like a pinball ma­ chine “ How many times do I have to tell you my name is O'Hara Humphrey Bogart never really rises lo the raucous doings, al­ though his is an adequate perform­ ance As his wife with a roving eye sultry Gina Lollobrigida ad­ vertises her natural endowments in an attractive package The movie draws most of its humor from the asinine dialogue written into the screenplay. Pic- I tine the first mate running down the deck of Bye ship tinkling a triangle yelling. “ It is my belief that we ire sinking.” Or Morley urging a chauffer driving a snail- p a c e d piece of automobile antiqui­ ty to "P re ss on I Press on' By L l K E L. P A T R A N E L L A Texan Amusements S ta ff "B e a l the Devil squelches the funniest shaggy dog story ever told into a lifeless, hairless pup. This flea's delight of a screenplay heads off on more tangents than a disconnected trigonometry lec­ ture Forget about the plot. After five minutes of this screwball classic at Hie Queen you will anyway. When it rarely stays on course, it concerns some international evil- doings in Italy over some uranium deposits in Africa What makes- this celluloid romp hilarious entertainment is its fun­ ny' lines and the whacky carica­ tures created bv its performers As a discontented wife and chron­ ic bar. Jennifer Jones squeezes every drop of humor out of the Ignored plum role in the movie by a quartet of villains in one scene, she concludes, “ They re des­ perate characters. Not one of them looked a1 my legs The cameraman makes good use Reservations Accepted For ‘Paint Your W agon’ “ Paint Your Wagon ’ by Alan Lrrner and Frederick I-owe, will be pifsgnted for the first time in San Antonio by the Little Theatet on May 19-29 This musical tells tie story ot the beginning of a gold minnie camp. its growth to a boom town, and is its subsequent decline also a play of dialects, having Irish. Scotch, Cockney, Swedish, Spanish, and French people who sing and speak in it It Reservations are being im opted tickets 'Meet fo* I may be sent to 506 Villen now by mail Money San Antonio. Sunday, May IE 1954 THE DAILY TEXKN Fag* Concert to Premiere Work for Two Pianos The final Faculty Concert Series percussion, will assist the two of the year will feature Miss Anna j pianists. Jackson and Mrs. Lois Banke, in­ structors in piano, playing the Aus­ tin premiere of “ Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion" at 4:30 p.m. Sunday in Recital Hall. Harvey Biskin, pr ncipal per­ cussionist of the San Antonio Sym ­ phony Orchestra and instructor of Miss Jackson rec Jived her bach­ elor’s and master’s degrees from! Texas State College for Women and did advanced work at title] University of Indiana, where she was a teaching fellow’. Later, she studied for two years with Jam es Frishin in New York. She has a ls o 1 studied with Dalies Frantz, pro­ fessor of music here at the U nl-! j v ersity. Mrs. Banke, who studied piano , for several years with M r. Frantz, is a graduate of the College ai Fine Arts. H er master's degree was the first advanced degree in applied music awarded by that col­ lege. As a student. Mrs. Banke ; won awards for musicianship three years in succession. Busy Radio House Gets No Break While most of the U niversity rakes a break for *inal exams, Radio House is scheduled to keep the airways crammed with music and programs next week. Eleanor Page, at the Music Building Recital H ail’s organ, w ill program, at g p.m . Sun. day over KNOW7 on the “ Organ Claques" program. Other Sunday offering* include “ Here Is M usic,'' over KNOW at G 30 p m . The pro­ gram features well-known classics pla.ved by outstanding orchestras and artists. “ Just Listening Thanks” w ill serenade late studiers at l l p m. Sunday over KNOW. "M eet the Prof w ill be present­ l l 05 pm Monday over ll 20 the serenade of heard over K T B C ed at K T B C . At the week w ill from a U T fraternity house. Radio House Completes Series Three UT Musicians Get Study Grants Dr. Richard H. Hoppin. assist­ ant professor of musicology who received his doctor of philosophy degree from H arvard University last year, has been granted a F u l­ bright Scholarship for postdoctor­ al study in Belgium. ★ I June Stokes, who received her master of music degree from the University in 1953. is now study­ ing piano in Vienna on a Fulbright Scholarship. Robert Collins, who got his mar­ rer of music degree here in 1953. has received a Fulbright Scholar­ ship to study a year in England. a, u M erit Clayton, who sot h i. mas- ^ i /-M k l. 4 ter of music degree from the Uni versify in 1952, is now at the Uni­ versity of Houston as a cello in­ structor. 2 Students Win RoUs In ‘Th# Moon Is Blu*1 Two University students have roles in Austin Civic Theaters summer production of "The Moon Is Blue Barbara Tuck will play the h a d ­ ing role of Pattie OiN'eal and Claude A Allen will play David Slater. Production date* a ir set for June 9-11 and June 16-19. “ D irty Work at the Crossroads.” Radio House has recently com­ pleted a series of four show s which the current ACT offering, will con- appeared on the Texas School of the Air. The included tinue through June 5. Perform ­ “ Pleading Is Adventure.” “ Music ances begin at 8 13 p.m. on F r i­ Is Yours." “ On Your M ark and day and Saturday nights. “ It s All in the Fam ily.” series Music Award Available Mu Phi Epsilon, national music sorority, is awarding a $50 scho­ larship to music students. Those interested may submit a ten-min- ute program to Joseph Blanken- i ship. faculty member. W eir Receives Drama Aw, rd Jam es D Weir, senior dram a the Donna major, has received Dcllenger Memorial Scholarship Fund Award for the 1954 fall se­ mester. Call Connie at 2-2473 FOR QUICK ACTION WITH DAILY T EX A N C LA SS IFIE D ADS Coaching For Sal© Special Services .D A C H LNCi in teacher. Neat Spa nis ti Unlvcrslt.', fc> uerlcnreo , Ph 2-8652 T R U C H O N , translation I Milt Dupuis 2508 Rio H O U S E T R A I L E R and adjoining room re n d i­ Trailer vt U n fvo rtttv C a d e n t furnished Good adequate!' tion P a rk $7po Phono 2-5873 WASHINGS wanted. F a it aervtca Spec­ ialty! Shirt*, Dresses. 2-4862. KIDDIE KORR AL licensed nursery- k ndergarten. 914 W. 22V*. Ph. 7-6061. E L I S H Experienced or ! alc era! ty Extension 6*1" S E T OF TAI IJS oa> and white ’ est' «dze .36 C H E A P Call K e n n e r 7-589* DRESSMAKING w e st 25th Pa. — a . berat ton*. 6-3360. 608 F R E N C H IT Phone 6 2: C l a n < 1 * < :o a c h j ISH Al pi cpar, n ox po CT. r courses Fv- na! examine IHT with MA broadcast N E W N A T IO N A L S. W . — 54 radio. sh a ft wave. w ith Cornell ''i r e O rig na! price < a 5-9478. f ter -mil aeria l $«'* (s'* W i ll sr- r , , ; s r* Typing ;\ P K R IE N < I'nill Mrs ‘E D Enon* I them 6 1876 these* I A T and Accurate typin g Icle. 7-2100, M rs F o ra (Electric; Room For Rent L A R G E B E D R O O M for girl in p rivate h'I able surroundings < >n bus Spend',sat Phone 2-5647 E L E C T RI<' T V P H ('a lI 7 8693. EX HF RI EN PED 53 ;C> 16 Mrs I IG Ed itin g lf desired A IR C O N D IT IO N E D R O O M S Convenient between e s p ia l and versitv. 1819 Confr**** Phone 8-2755 I ni- * Hunt* 6-1291 G I L L E S P I * H O U S F M „n student* one block campus n e" ; a' fur r shed ro .ie I IM , — typing — term pa pert, reports, thesis, disserts'ions, >3-54 <1. T Y P IN G — editing -- —term papers Ca: •ports — them e! 7 5 €84. E X P E R I E N C E D f'rlefs. Thesis T Y P I N G I yplst s Papers. Bureau — i-8712. E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I N G Univ ersity neighborhood. Ail kinds. Ph. 6-5789, IT I E S E S , dissertations, books. Electro* Petm ecky. ty p e w rite r M rs matte 53-2212 T Y P IN G — Dissertations, Gail 5 6866 Lo ;s Addy. themes, etc T Y P IN G reasonable, eieetrom aUe tvpe ,11 M h r KS and Rooms fur men I 01 ss campus * 2 0 v. TY IT Ph 8-1834 Rh 6-41 .CG E f im! * P riv a te bed roo -6 :ran ■ ,o’ s o r, J-2168 a 1 no — neat A'ork 98*16 or A F P ! <■ hoi !d.-» E X P E R I E N C !: divserat.ons. > typist* Reports Lo rrain e Schm o theses 2-4715. G O O D experlen work done P T Y P IN G VV A the-, st A il Kinds P a rtic u la r! v A B A K Ut YI f I I G R M E N RO O M S A V A LLA B E I POP. S U M M r P. AIR-( ’O N I .1 I TH >N E D ..*612 Guada i>e Piton- 6 56 - M A L E S U M M E R S T I D E N T S sirabte root V home of shad t <1 ra g W a t Vet 8 Select no ■ quiet, pri i nt cf. also Ju st off r ‘•Ai OO Pi ss n spacious k’orv conven >r ■ ic- v;arde! SEW LNG — Specialized — C ollege and Children*. Call Hazel. Ph. 8-7160. Western Wear J O VVB O Y B O O T S B E L T S L E A T H E R to order. W e *te rn w ear H at* Moccasins B o o t! and Shoe Repair* C A P I T A L S A D D L E R Y . 1614 LA V A C A G O O D S maae Apartment For Rent F U R N I S H E D for 4 or 5 girls, large tw o ■•tory. 4 bedrooms, 2 * baths, ear cool. secluded, bills paid. $125 00 a month N ea r bus line. Pm 5-1622 v\ M E A H L F d iplex apartm ent N E p a rtia lly furnished for co ipie. O n e l a s t bedroom Near stadium at 2- 'c s p c month Phono 2-1043 t*06 R EO C H F R O M Southeast stud kitchen Dom ani C h e m litr' R.dgs 8-5S88 A M I — for men. sleeping porch and ’(■ E n g in e e rin g and tllitles paid. Rhone T O W N A N D C O U N T R Y A P T S . A • Conditioned U * abie Ju n e tit One and two bed­ room apartm ents all tile baths oak fu rn itu re carpets tile kitchen B en d ix and d rve r Also tsking re se rva tio n ! for mversit,' bo-t in Sept. 3P1 I .a i t 34th. Phone 8 MR] For Rent G A R A G E ROC )M for 2 bor* o r couple clos C’s * shem e r Also .' rooms vs St hi p riv a ’ e Bah e ' Pts 0 on-one 6-4270. "r " ,n 1beds garage a pi Als* 11* * 1-, w* a : P. c< ' v o n lo x ; f d a p t . * R M S Ava a n c J un** ! st.. P o rte r s e n ice SC H O H N H O U S E 1704 Phone 8-7ORT ’ASO H O USF :den--e for men. Portei ce Rooms a va ila b le fo r sac « $42 SO ’8* '-' \ per ■ est month - double -aith - Single f Phone 2-33U6 B L O C K KR H O I S E us ,n a r conditioned rooms de h o i - meals optional. Q nu* P ro n e 24)594 Furnished Apartm ent N E A R nr NT. t FISI TY. targe 2 bodr-voin, for students • - I ■ can apartm en ts d in ’ bed roo Ski -nth Phone 7-5458 t ( >R S i NEM E R A N D K A E L .Dartm cnts for '.unm et term s and \ Lr conditioned. Two bi-^'ks cam- 4 po, ia summ er rates Ph, 6-8476. M O D E R N ' '.A R A G E ap artm en t fo r ruer P riv a te bath - indow'cc- t J - paid bow er entrance. KngSdaire. M aid serv- . V>5 V Sabine. 2-1043. \ CK 'N' apart: od C >p $4" IT. fu ll .*2C*6 furnished .idles Re- .Antonio. vc San Rocky Mountain R a i n b o w T r o u t Served with Baked Potato and Large Green S a l a d $ 1 5 0 I HARRIS' WAYSIDE INN tine Charcoaled STEAKS O n e block west of Lam ar on Barton Springs R oad C losed M O N D A Y S Scholtz Garten 1607 San Jacinto W e serve a d elicio us lunch e v e ry d a y from l l a. rn. to 8 JO p. rn. Su n d a y 's Special N e ve r h e sitate until your w atch ii in poor co n d itio n . C o me jn * o our store and g et a p e rio d ic check and c le a n ­ ing of your clock or wa*ch. A short stay wi th us and your w atch runs as good as new. • Expansion Bands • • Straps • UlTCHHAHttS CW TH£ [iPAC AT 2238 OY ’ ' ' Open Bowling H A S H A * JEFF CHANDLER RHONDA FIEMING MAMIE Van DOREN ---------- P L U S ! ----------- Daffy and Elmer in “ D E S I G N F O R I.F A V I M . ' v o w SHOW I V t. F IR S T SHOW I SO P.M . IJA M E S STEWART m * JUNE ALLYSON tx* GLENN > M il l e r LA STORY f. TGj* K I'tal G*#o*; os Ctif '*!»«' hmm; uterus us,'. Mumm un tim Kl MILICI • TK Mil KWIIX Owrui Wentaani Men F IR S T SHOW 2 P .M . ^ Alan UDOS M * WEIERS CAPITOL STARTS TODAY! DOORS OPEN 11:30 Z&PATA) Tiger on a White Hone1 — MARLON BRANDO J EA N PETERS PLUS! 2nd HIT i Sombrero I ft GASSMAN • ca CHAUSSE t a de CARIO ll I No. Fried Chicken (3 large pieces W a n te d Riders English Peas & Beets Mashed Potatoes Combination Salad Dessert & C o ffee 65 Garlic Bread Lost and Found No. 2 Shrimp Cocktail Kansas C ity Fillet Mignon Steak R o o m and B o a ’d ll M U I A ( I V D ! ! f( 'N I) furnish* I Every Sa tu rd a y and Sunday I p.m. til closing Every M o n d a y thru Frid ay I p.m. til S IO p.m. til closing Y o u are W elcom e A ir C onditioned Tower Bowlingside 409 S. Congree. P- 7 9 50 W ra p p e d in Bacon Combination Salad French Fried Potatoes G arlic Bread Dessert & C o ffee I OO O u r Garten Will Be O p e n S u n d a y lf W eather Permits. Dine Under the Stars W a n t e d u lt be ma 1; ngi. to shai *-■ apartment W i t h two U iy *. very n. u. Ctok* to O N E S T U D K NT U n iv e rs ity Ph. 8-919’.’ aft<>r F iv e N A T IO N A E ! IN A N ’C E erg ‘.en M I S ■ovid- nd kl IPU!. I l l 1 _ B V C H E L D R A P A R '. M T IN T S . sarge tu i bedrooms kitchen and fo ur individua y furnished $25 'X1 ■ - man B ills paid. Ph . for R e fr i­ U R N I S H E E gerator Rope orange. E n tve rsitv, bus, geratoi b ils paid $35. 842.50. P i ’. 2-1656 A P A R T M E N T S . ' X I V K R S IT V M E N S in rn r rates evaporative coolers 2015A I > Red River, modern jol 51-. Red Riv t r J- > I TC * 932 Sa Antonio I Red R iver 2 bedrooms . .............$65 I rooms ............... $40. rear No. I <£- 2 .JIO Board ^ointm ent. (Sim p son , 61598 d Phone > G-o tm ap- -.mrttr s -.I - A E s urn mr 1 1 : n. c a .. M r* -4D San Vntonlo 6 room house ...$75. See and phone C. P VV 'd ia m * - E l Nueces. 6-S1T6 S » Oo W°T® on a vacation pleasure-planned for YOU by. .. Continental Tramways YOU do this... Check th* vacation you’d moat like to enjoy. Fill out th* coupon below and mail entire advertisement to Continental Tramways. COLORADO AND CANADIAN ROCKIES FLORIDA MEXICAN LAND CRUISE PACIFIC NORTHWEST COLORADO ROCKIES AND SLACK HILLS Instood of tours listed a boy* ploos© sond mo information and cost of a vocation to ... W E L l handle at no extra cost to you * H O m ACCOMMODATIONS A U TRANSPORTATION INTERESTING SIGHTSEEING TRIPS v * FREI loon of Hollywood Carnot T h r e e of the a r e a s c o v e r the a th l e ti c t e a m itself. On th e s e a r e a s , o v e r 60 judge.; will vote. T hey in­ c lu d e a th letic d ir e c to r s , d e a n s of s e c r e ta r i e s , s t u d e n ts , a lu m n i the s p o r ts vv rite: s, SWC officials, th e SWC, E x e c u ti v e S e c r e t a r y of v a r s i t y te a m r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s , stu ­ school p a ­ d e n t body p re s id e n ts , p e r editors, a n d h e a d yell le a d ­ e r s . T h e o th e r eig h t a r e a s c o v e r con­ duct. of the s t u d e n t body, an d a r e r a t e d only by the 28 m e m b e r s of th e SWC S p o r t s m a n s h ip C o m m itte e 'a t h l e t i c student r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s , p r e s id e n ts , ed ito rs, an d yell e r s of ea h s c h o o l'. lead- j O F T H E SE EIGHT, w ith p r e - g a m e c o n d u c t, g a m e c o u rte sy , p o s t - g a m e conduct. a n d th r e e deal two wit a th r e r with O c to b e r 23 t e a m s , w a s a d a y w hen m o *’ SWC t e a m s will be p lay in g out-of­ c o n fe r e n c e selected fo r the second a n n u e l S p o r t s m a n ­ ship D ay T e x a s p la y s Rice s t H ouston th at day. No official ac tio n wax *aken a b o u t out-of-town g a m e c a r d sec­ tions, but in te re ste d schools w e re a s k e d to c o n ta c t other schools who s e c t o r s . ! o c u la r ly use re p r e - s e n te d by J e r r y W ilson stu den t p r e s id e n t; Boh H ilb urn, T ex an m a n a g i n g e d ito r; D e la n o W om ack r e p r e s e n t a t i v e ; an d te a m v a r s i t y J o e Brown, h e a d yell T HE EMN ERHITY w a s the c a r d l e a d e r U n d e r a ro t a ti n g c h a i r m a n s h i p plan . A r k a n s a s U n i v e r s ity will be bos* for the C o m m it te e s m ee tin g next school y e a r T h e post of e x e ­ c u ti v e r e m a i n s w ith AAM, o r i g in a t o r of th e C o m m itte e . s e c r e t a r y U n iv e r s it y G r a d u a te s U n iv e rs ity of T e x a s P l a t e s by Wedgwood ;n B lueb on net Blue will he a p e r m a n e n t r e m i n d e r of T e x a s D ay s. On Sale Ex- S tu d e n ts Assn . Union Building. Continental Trailways 1001 Congress Phone t-4655 'typewriters CLEANED a n d REPAIRED Al! Makes S ta n d a r d and Portable Rental S ervice Adders — C alculators Electric T ypew riters PH. 6-3525 — Dalivary 2234 G u a d a l u p e — 1008 C o n q r a n See* ate M I Retail* ee Hie eeaeUes I ’ve atocha* eto vaTT* abe N I* e •apy et I M NEW. to e etiM f y Htwaftwta* ptee»ara-pta*aa* taw* tat Par. N A M I___________ ADDRESS. c m . .STATE. Use Texan Classified Ads Sunray, May T6, 1954 TH ? DAILY TEXAN Pag© 6' excin it Kruger's Society 'Spectacle Is Subtle Conflict of Morals I Sportsmanship Trophy Rating System New # A r e v i s e d m eth o d for s e le c tin g s p o r ts m a n s h ip In s te a d of p ic k i n g first, second. I e a c h a r e a . All schools c a n !b e ra t e d in o r d e r 3 , o r all c a n b e r a t e d 0. T h e r e will S W C t r o p h y : a n d the third p la c e schools w in n e r a n d the settin g of O c t o b e r of d e m o n s tr a t e d s p o r ts m a n s h ip , in b e no c o m p e titiv e 1-2-., r a n k i n g 23 a s S p o r t s m a n s h ip D a y hig h- lighted S p o r t s m a n s h ip C o m m it te e in W a c o S a t u r d a y the future ju d g e s will use a break- the SW C down ra tin g s y s t e m . a m e e t in g of In add itio n , p la n s w e re d is c c a s e d for e a c h school to ta k e c a r d sec- be given a s c o r e of 3 t i o n s to out-of-town g a m e s . 2 (g o o d 1, I ELEVEN A R E A S, d escrib e d in the s p o r t s m a n s h i p code, will be ra t e d s e p a r a te l y . E a c h school will 'excellent*, ( f a i n , o r 0 (poor) in , / I U J k a t G o e s o n J 4 e r e * ra s p y -v o ic e d T H E S P E C T A C L E . B y R a y n e K ru - ger. The M aem tlllan C om pany, N e w York. 222 p p : SS. N o one w e p t w h e n M r. B o ok er, large-headed, fin a g ­ ler in finance a n d d e a l e r in lawful usury, d i s a p e a r e d , l a t e r to be found m urdered, s u f fo c a te d in h is office s a f e . N o o n e w a s s u r p r i s e d a t th e dearth of c lu e s a n d th e a b u n d a n c e of m o t iv e s . T h e f a c t of his d e a th w a s a c c e p t e d a n d p a r t i a l l y fo rg o t­ ten b y M r . B o o k e r ’s f o r m e r a s s o c i­ a te s . B u t S c o tla n d Y a r d r e m e m ­ ju s ti c e b e r e d , a n d g ro u n d on. th e g e a r s of “ T h e S p e c t a c l e ” is not, h o w ­ e v e r , a s t u d y in d e te c tio n . I t is, r a t h e r , a s u b tle e x p lo r a tio n of the ef­ c h a r a c t e r , a n a n a l y s i s of fe c t of c o n s c i e n c e on will— in th is c a s e , th e only im p e rfe c tio n in a n o th e r w i s e p e r f e c t m u r d e r . In his book M r. K r u g e r p r e s e n t s , th r o u g h th e w o rd s of a n a iv e , s e n t i­ m e n t a l yo u n g w r i t e r , th e s t o r y of G r a n t H o ath ly , a m a n of intelli­ ge n c e , in te g rity , a n d c h a r m w ho s t a n d s t r i a l for m u r d e r . H e p r e ­ s e n t s a s w ell “ the s p e c t a c le of so­ c i e t y b rin g in g its flo u te rs to h e e l , ’ the c h a lle n g in g c o n flic t be- w ith tw e e n th e m o r a l i t y of o n e m a n a n d c o m p l a c e n t social s a f e g u a r d s b r illia n tly p o r t r a y e d . T h o u g h th e m i n o r c h a r a c t e r s M rs. B o o k er, N a d ia , a n d M a u r e e n —a r e too sk e tc h ily d r a w n an d fla t­ ly p r e s e n te d , th e a u t h o r show s e x ­ c e p tio n a l ab ility the e x p lo r a ­ tion of th e tw o m a j o r c h a r a c t e r s . T h e n a r r a t o r is a p e rf e c t c h a r a c - , , . t e r foil to H o a th ly ’s a n d r e b e l l i o n a g a i n s t of society. in d ep e n d e n c e the inhibition in SUNDAY 8:3(1 -Cai 3 leav e L u th e r a n S tud en t C e n t e r for picnic. 12:30- S enio r d in ner, G r a c e Hall. 2-5—L i b r a r y open. 3 Ba ha i World He .th stu d y c las s, h o m e of M rs. J a m e s E. M o r ris , 1204 N u e c e s . 4 A u stin P r e s b y t e r i a n S e m i n a r y to IOO d e d i c a t e n ew chape) o rg a n , West T w en ty -sev en th Street 4:30—L ois B a n k e and Anna J a c k ­ son in tw o-piano fa c u lty c o n c e rt, R ecital Hall. 5:30 W S F to h e a r the R ev J a c k L ew is, U n iv e rs ity P r e s b y t e r i a n C h u r c h . 6 .Seymour Fogel to s p eak a t .Sun­ d a y S u pp er, l l die I F oun d atio n . 6 D isc ip le s F e llo w s h ip Student b a n q u e t, U n iv e rsity C h ris ti a n C h u rc h . 6:30 D r. J. R. R oach W esley Fou nd atio n. to sp e a k , MO NDAY 1-5 D is trib u tio n of s e r v i l e c e r t i ­ ficate s for S tu d en t G o v e r n m e n t , T e x a s Union 206 I “ H e a v e n Is a P la c e , KTB C - e r th a n in the solution of its c e n ­ fr e e d o m tr a l p r o b l e m of w h e r e res p o n sib ility should . , T he solution, one, a n d should begin . is deed e n d - — th e r e if ^ tory, and a con clusio n on ly e n d s ; S p e c ta c le is u n s a t i s f a c - ; sto ry -tellin g Rayne Kruger's k n o w le dg e of the in tric a c ie s of c r i m i n a l law a n d Anglish c o u r t p r o c e d u r e , his fac- TV. in- uity for c h a r a c t e r i z a t i o n , and his ' T h e 7—D r. W. H. R. Shaw to give “ T he D e m o n s t r a ti o n L e c t u r e , ,# B a tt s Hall 101. a b ility m a k e of a < o up le of h o u rs Union. 4-5- All-Campus A dvisors, T e x a s - G E N E V I E V E E. l i t PSON 7:30- D e m o la y s , Scottish R it e T h e a r t of this novel is in its , the novel a n d does no t illu m in a te e n te r ta i n in g re a d in g , c h a r a c t e r i z a t i o n a n d su s p e n s e rath-* the p ro b le m . Sylvia Tells of Young Girl Growing U p in British Guiana THE L IF E A M ) DEATH OF SYL­ VIA. By Edgar MlttHholaer. The John D a y Company, New York. 31ft pp: IM. sub-cliques a n d E d g a r M itte lh o ls e r’g " D i e Life a n d D e a th of S y lv ia ” is a l m o s t a good novel. His u n d e r s ta n d in g of th e “ ta n g le d m a s s of cliques an d c la n s a n d sub ­ c l a n s ” of the B ritish G u ia n a so­ cial s t r a t a a n d his a b ility to ad d life a n d color to his excellent d e s­ c rip tion of this s e ttin g p a r t l y c o m ­ p e n s a t e fo r his u n c on vin cin g a n a ­ lysis of Sylvia R u s s e l l’s c h a r a c t e r a n d d e te r io r a tio n . is in t e r ­ only half of this—Sylvia esting, T h e c h a r a c t e r d e l i n e a t i o n of se v e r a l of the m i n o r ro les, n o t­ a b ly the fa th e r, is e x c elle n t. T h e novel su f fe rs g r e a t l y by the f a t h ­ e r ’s d e a th about m i d w a y th r o u g h the fxx>k T h e sto ry of Sylvia is the sto ry of the g r a d u a l d e a th of a se n s i­ tive, idealistic spirit. S y lvia is the child of a m ixed m a r r i a g e . H e r is fa t h e r h alf N egro , half G u ia n a , a p o ly ­ glot city w h e r e p r i m i ti v e e m o ­ tions a r c c o v ere d only by the th in ­ nest v e n e e r of civ ilization. is E n g lish ; h e r m o t h e r A b a s i c gift for a n ovelist is the a b ility to m a k e his c h a r a c t e r s in- te r e s ti n g p la u s ib le . With h is m a j o r c h a r a c - an d a w hining s l a tt e r n m o th e r, te r Mr. M i tt e lh o l s e r s u c c e e d s is th e p o r t r a it of a y ou n g girl grow ing up in p r e - w a r G u ia n a , the child of a n a m o r a l a n d cy nic a l but a m u s in g and c h a r m i n g f a t h e r in 1 With the d e a th of her father t h e i r m o tiv a tio n s __ ' r h i ' a n d t o sh e w ag m u c h a t t a c h e d , 1 s e c u r ity , th en w h o m Sylvia, in h e r a t t e m p t to find love first tu r n s a n d to h e r b ro th e r, tim id, naiv e to a P o r t u g u e s e boy, a n d th e n to a n in- J telligen t, s y m p a th e t ic a r t is t . E a c h le av e h e r —th e f i rs t two of go to sea. last. g o A E a c h m a n could h a v e s a v e d h e r; b u t w ith sinks f a r t h e r a n d into a p a th y a n d d e f e a t is m . th e s e to w a r , f a r t h e r th e i r loss, sh e the H e r ph y sical d e a th is a nti-cli­ is sig n ific a n t only a s h e r con clusio n to m a t i c a n d th e sp iritu a l d e a th logical M r. M ittelh olse r h a s a fine v e r ­ bal facility, and he h a s end ow ed his novel w ith a ble ak , a u tu m n a l b e a u ty a p p r o p r i a t e its m e l a n ­ choly th e m e to T e m p l e . 8—D r a m a 670 s c e n e s fro m p lays, D r a m a Building 103. to p re s e n t T U E S D A Y 3.30—Faculty W ives Social Club, 3207 G r a n d v ie w . 7- Mu Phi Epsilon, M u sic R e c i t a l 7:30—“ T e x a s in R e v ie w , ” KTBC- H a ll. TV. 7:30 Co-Wed Club, T e x a s U n ion W E D N E S D A Y 12 U n iv e rs ity A rea K iw an is Club, G e o r g ia n T e a R oom. I -N e w c o m e rs Club c e rs . D riskill Hotel. to e le c t offi­ 5 30- L a d ie s I n t e r m e d i a t e C lub lake pic nic , Phi G a m m a D e lta house. T H U R S D A Y 7:30— 482nd Q u a r t e r m a s t e r C o m ­ p a n y , A ustin A r m y R e s e r v e A rm o r y , 4601 F a ir v ie w D riv e. F R ID A Y 8;15—“ D i r t y Work a t th e C r o s s ­ r o a d s , ” ACT P lay h o u se. HAT! KOAY 5 Alpha Phi O m e g a m e e ts at T e x ­ J A HUDSON a s U nion to go on picnic. SELL YOUR TEXTBOOKS NOW Co-Op Book Buying Policy: I. Buy at 50 per cent of publisher's list and sell at 60 per cent of that price , huyiny on(j lite amount that can Le resold* 2. Buy unsaleable books at market list less IO percent j a r p a c lu n y a n d fre iy lt. ma/vers/iu co-op ~ “ I 'u m L II. * ; M W I . i i $ 15—*T)irty W o rk a t the C ross­ r o a d s ,” ACI' P la y h o u s e . F RIDA Y ( M a y 23) 8 IS “ D irty W ork a t the C ro ss­ r o a d s .” ACT P la y h o u s e S A H RD AY (M a y 29) 5 - ROTO g r a d u a t i o n , Hogg Audi­ to rium . l l - R ab bi I * v i A. d a n to sp eak a t B a c c a l a u r e a t e .Services, H ogg A u dito riu m . 1.30 C o lle g e of E n g in e e r in g g r a d ­ uation. B a t t s A u dito rium . 2.30 College of B u s in e s s A dm inis­ tratio n g r a d u a t i o n , M ain [/Hinge, T e x a s Union 3 College of A rts and Sciences g rad u a tio n , H ogg Auditorium , 3 -G ra d u a t e S chool Music R e c it a l H all g rad u atio n . 3 30 -College of E d u c a ti o n g r a d u ­ ation, B a tt s A u d ito riu m . 4 School of A r c h i t e c t u r e g r a d u a ­ tion, A r c h i t e c t u r e Building 112. 4 College of F in e A r ts g ra d u a tio n , M u s i c R e c it a l Hall. 5 College of P h a r m a c y g r a d u a ­ tion, H o m e E c o n o m i c s Building 105. 5 School of L a w g ra d u a tio n , Townes H all A u d ito riu m 7 30 A c a d e m i c p ro ces sio n at L ittlefield F o u n ta in . form s 8 - C o m m e n c e m e n t ex ercises, T e r ­ rac e of M ain B uildin g 8:15 “ D irty W o rk a* the C ro s s ­ r o a d s ” ACT P la y h o u s e Nelson N e w Secretary Of UT Faculty Council E u gen e W. N elso n , a s s o c ia te p ro ­ r e ­ the law, w as s e c r e t a r y of fessor of b u s in e s s cently e le c te d F a c u lt y C ouncil He will r e p l a c e F. I.. Cox, w ho the h a s bcpn n a m e d a s s is ta n t the U n iv e rs ity . B e ­ C han cellor o f leav ing o ffice M r Cox p r e ­ fore sented the te n th a n n u a l re p o r t of the Council c o v e r i n g the p ast y e a r s w ork. to McQueen Get* PeatMidy A w ard R o b e rt M cQ u e e n , g r a d u a t e s t u ­ psy< h o lo gy , be en the P e a b o d y F un d F e l ­ th e C o llege of E d u c a ­ dent in a w a rd e d lowship tion for th e 11154-55 school y e a r. h a s in Remarque Vt rite* Ne w Novel “ A T i m e to I^ovr an d a T im e to D ie ,” by E r i c h M a r i a R e m a rq u e , i* the J u n e se le c tio n of the Book- of-the-M onth C lub. A uthor R e m a r ­ que w ro te “ All Q uiet on the W est­ ern F r o n t ” “ A rch of T r i ­ um ph ” a n d POETRY COMPETITION C A S H PRIZES D e a d l i n e I S J a n e ISM i n f o r m a t i o n w r i t e F o r POETRY EDITOR THE H EPTA G O N CLUB SAO F ifth Avenue N e w F o r k 3*. N . T. W A N T E D CASH FOR Portable Typewriters B E R K M A N ’S 2 2 1 4 S u a d i l u p a ] S P E E D W A Y I R A D IO & TELEVISION SALES 4 SERVICE PH. 7-3846 I o ta af Oratory Oym I I THE BEST M EX IC AN FOOD and the MOST COURTEOUS SERVICE ic At El M A T A M O R O S 504 East Ave. Phon* 7-7023 Graduating Seniors lf you do not plan to be In Austin In September when the 1954 Cactus comes off the press, please come by J. B. 107 before June I to check your address and pay the mailing charges to have the book sent to you. Bring Your Auditor's Receipt Showing Payment of Fee M A I L I N G C H A R G E S 50c in Texas 75c Out of State Office Hours 8-1; 2-5 Ellie Luckett Sunday, May TA. 1954 THE DAILY TEXAN Fags 7 Bob Kenny Signs Thirty' Next Fall E llie Luckett, form er sweetheart of the U n iv e rsity, w ill m a rry Dr. John P . Schneider, graduate of the U n ive rsity and T u la re Medical School, next fall. M iss Lu ck ett has received many beauty aw ards at the U n iversity. She has been Most Beautiful Fresh ­ man. one of the Ten Most Beauti­ ful, Queen of the Texas Relays, Queen of the M ilita r y B a ll, Cotton Queen, and Duchess to the San Antonio Fie s ta de San Jacinto. She is a m em ber of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and Orange Ja c k ­ ets. and has been president of the U n ive rsity “ Y . " M iss Luckett w ill receive her bachelor of science degree from the U n ive rsity in Au­ gust. Dr. Schneider served his intern­ ship at Philadelphia G eneral Hos­ pital and Es now a fellowship from the M ayo Foundation at Rochester, Minn. He is a m em ber of Delta K appa Epsilon, Alpha Epsilon D el­ ta, P h i B e ta K ap p a, N u Sigm a Nu, I Alpha Omega Alpha, and Omicron Delta Kappa. ★ • M iss Anne Shaw , U n ive rsity of A labam a associate director of P r e s b y t e r ia n student work at the U n iversity, w ill be m arried Ju n e 18 to- the R e v . M a c ly n N . Turnage, Southwestern at M em phis and U n ­ ion Sem in ary acting regional direc­ tor o' C hristian Education for the Synod of M ississippi. • J E R I E J E A N W IE C K H O F F , Alpha O m icron P i, w ill m a rry E A R L E B R IT T O N , A A A E , Ju n e I in Dallas. • W A N D A L E E T A Y I jO R, U n i­ versity graduate, Gam m a P h i Beta. Home Econom ies Club, to K. C O W S E R T , form er U n ive rsity student. They w ill he m arried Ju ly 3 in Hutto. Alpha Phi, • A L I C E G A R D IN E R , senior stu­ to L E O N A. dent M E E K S , student 'Ehe cerem ony w ill be Ju n e 7 at the F’irst Baptist Church in Austin. • L Y N E L L N I E D E R A U E R . Uni­ versity graduate, to A L L E N G. S M A L E , form er U n iv ersity student. They w ill be m arried Ju n e 12 in the F'irst Methodist Church chapel. ELLIE LUCKETT Fogel to Speak at Hillel Seym our Fogel, artist and m u ral­ ist, w ill speak at fhp Sunday sup­ per forum at H ille l Foundation a* 6 p.m. can Reservations hr made through the foundation by « ailing 6-2695 Pla te s are 60 cents each * Tile new K r i l l meet for th* I ppcrrlas** Advisors last time this in th* v In te rn atio n al Room of the Student ' tm r®Jn ion. •etnester M onday at 4 p rn The Hom e Econom ics d u b will meet Monday at 5 p m. in the patio of the Home Econom ics Building ♦ D r. J . R. Roach w ill speak on the F a r East Sunday evening at 6:30 at W esley Foundation. + The Senior Acting ( lass, D ram a 670, w ill present a group of scenes for a ll dram a students Monday at 8 p m . in D ram a Building 103. SHIRLEY STRUM Short-nap Advocate Takes Over Texan. B y R IC H A R D B I S B Y cd moments “ I get tired, so a little nap re ally helps m e ," says the big-smile, bright-eyed girl, who sometimes m akes you wonder how she made Phi Beta Kappa It w a s 4:30 a.rn. two days before spring elections. The m orning was v e ry d a rk and a ( old breeze was blowing in from the south. Seven trudged along shadowy W hitis Street from S R O . They were c a rry in g a sagging eighteen-foot sign. figures “ H alt On Ju n e 8 Shirley w ill become editor of The D aily Texan, follow­ ing her good friend and part-time advisor Bob Kenny. “ I'm scared to it down E ve ryb o d y set d e a th ." she says. But when she and take a five-minute n a p ," said a feminine voice at the corner of says it you can see determ ination and eagerness w ritten in her eyes. 26th Street They did. And the girl “ But ii I w eren ’t seared, I know a c tu a lly went to sleep in the street for fix o minutes. Then the 1111lr party carried the huge sign to the it up after m all, where they put two more quick naps. S h irle y 's own peculiar type of "sc a re d n e s s" has hit her in other important periods of her journalis­ tic ca re er In 1951 the first night s h e w orked on the Texan volunteer tor of The D a ily Texan, known in the Texan office for her staff, night editor J o Ann Dicker- and ten-minute naps, five- she proposes at the most unexpeet- w hich son scared her by telling lier to three S h irle y Strum, new ly elected edi­ is W ell­ I ’d ne ve r be a good editor took It last-name apportions. I off lh a rr*nted charming]? aa you discover tho newest make up*. This is an FJi/aheth Arden •penalty a make-up that is naturally beauti­ ful, neither timid nor theatric!. method* in raring for ?onr hair . . . shampoos., -cts and p e r m a n e n t waves that von ran do yourself. E x e r c i s e s : to ton*, to stretch, to slim, to firm your bodv into new longed-for line* Special posture exercises are included and you are taught the art of moving, sitting, re lasing, as beautiful!v a= a professional model. S w i m Mi Rf,, Test >ri, \ r c h f. R Y ; classes under expert instructors help to de\e]op gra^e and poi«e. D i e t s : that area joy! Delicious tre«h fruits, vegetable* and protein- are served beautifully Everything inclusive, $ I SO per w rsk, I win w e rk « , a n d p re fe ra b le i h r r r , to obtain full benefit* fro m y o u r alae Only a limited number rd a p p lir a - firm* may Itr accepted, no act quick Iv. All reservation* arr rradf th ro u g h the Elizabeth Arden Salon, ff) I f ifth A v e n u e , N e w A ort. 112 A che* k for one week in advaiu e m ust a< < inn* p a n v s o u r r e s e r v a t io n I n ite r the a l p e n m o n o f x\ h t l 4 m e t, h ottest o f Jo mot LB Maine ( h n n r e in M a in e u n it - Ir im n a . m FIFT H A V EN U E, NKW VORK 22 • PL*r* 9-29V) lorn* accent a co e ' '■ OOO r'e A "8 3.95 blouses lip!© be '■'"sr s-d bries 2,98 from first floor sportswaar inlay, May TS, 1*54 T H I D AILY TEXAN fag* 8 Summer Classes Sa///e Nash to Leave Job To Begin June 8 As 'Y ' Executive Director Registrant!! Forms Are Available Now Summer session final announce­ ments are still available free of charge at the Registrar’s office, tile University OfrOp, and Hem­ phill’s Book Stores. Students who are entering the summer session and have not filed advance registration forms can get material a n d tim e assignm ents June 4 through June 7 at the R egis­ trar’s office. Photostatic copies of previous records are required for registration Tuition fee for Texas residents is SI5 per term. It is $50 per term for non-resident students. Not more than fourteen semester hours will be counted for credit in the whole summer session. First term registration is June 7 with classes beginning June 8. Second term registration is July 19, and classes will extend from July 20 through August 30. Clas­ ses will be one and one-half hours long, Monday through Friday. By BU J J E JO LA VALLE (30) Mrs. Bailie Roller Nash has made campus life just a little nicer for hundreds of students through hor position a s executive director of the YM-YWCA. She this position at the end of the semes­ ter. leaves Born and reared in Virginia. I Mrs. Nash attended Mary Wash- | ington College in Fredericksburg. She spent a year as a Danforth fellow at Cornell and graduate three years at Yale Divinity School in New Haven, where die re- reived a bachelor of divinity de­ btee in IOT8 before corning to the ; University. M a y Be ‘Best in U S1 N ew G irls' Dorm in " T h e the finest dormitory United States’’ may hows*- 750 to 800 women students at the University in the future, said F. C. M< Connell, director of auxiliary and s e r v i c e activities "Very t e n t a t i v e plans,’’ said Mr, McConnell, are that the structure may he as high as five stories and contain four elevators. It will have all the comforts Did Somebody G oof? Nope, Just A Name Change Have you been wondering where In to the dickens you’re going take your final that is listed in t h e pxam for Pearce schedule Hall? Most students, finding that they had an exam there, either had no idea where to go or thought they were to go to the Pearce Co-op for girls. Actually, the exam will be in the old I ^ w Building on the south­ east end of the campus, behind Mezes Hall. It has been renamed Pearce Hall. Lost & Found Sale Nets Union S56.28 Proceeds from the lost-and-found auction amounted to $56.28, said Mrs. Bruce Taylor, Union account- , mg clerk. The money was placed in the Union building fund. Some articles were not sold be­ cause of lack of time. These will ! be stored during the summer and another auction will he held next fall. "Bidding on clothing and glass frames seemed to be the most com­ petitive,*' said Mrs. Taylor. Articles not placed on the auc­ tion list are rn the I/>st and Found Department the the t'ninn. There is no charge for re­ taining lost articles. lobby of in Shaw to Address COTA Monday Dr W H P Shaw, associate professor of chemistry, will address the College Classroom Teachers Association on "The Demorvstra- tion-Decture” Monday at 7:30 p m . in Batts Hall IQI. Recently awarded the Scarbor­ ough award for outstanding teach­ ing, Dr Shaw will demonstrate to the group simple devices for arousing student interest in subject matter. The association has put a col­ lection of notetiooks about economic value for the faculty on reserve in the Reserve Library. These note­ books contain several volumes of "Consum er’s Union’’ and books on insurance and income tax. This is the beginning of a large collection which the CCTA hope^ to p r e p a r e for faculty use. After three years In Austin she met her husband Bill through the Y. Bill, a plan TI pre-mod student, completes his studies this spring and will enter Southwestern Medi­ cal School in Dallas in the fall. "When Bill completes his train­ ing. we plan to enter missionary service together,” s h e said Mr*. Nash has observed two types of students in connection with her work the student who grow* into maturity and the stu­ dent who lacks mental, spiritual, or social maturity. She explains ♦he three understandings which characterize a m ature person are the concepts of tru ’h in terms of into his the power which comes life a fair evaluation of himself with his strengths and weaknesses, and a complete acceptance of ev­ ery human being together with an appreciation of every living being. SOME STUDENTS DO NOT at­ tain this maturity, she feels, be­ cause they stop after searching the first or second understanding and fail to move on to the third. "Life its used itself and what for is the test. of what you really believe The commitments and con­ victions of religious faith are the disciplines upon which the life of a man in a group enables that man to live and act c re a tiv e ly /' shc said. is To Mrs. Nash, R WHILE MRS. NASH important that people grow by realizing in every choice the possibility of a creative decision. Truth and the power of truth can perm eate our lives and decisions, she explained. is aware of the importance of international understanding she feels, "it- better to work than fear national and in­ ternational affairs because fear to breed distrust. Deep seems principals of ere moo ra c y and Chris­ tianity are universally accessable but we can’t afford to be afraid or act in self-protecting manner. To do this denies the faith t h a t s in you.’’ Upon Mrs. N ash’s resignation. Miss Rosalie Oakes from Virginia, a member of the national staff of southern in student YWCA region ^thirteen states) will assume Mrs. Nash’s position. the McConnell Gets Fulbrlght Ja m e s V. McConnell, graduate student in psychology, bas receiv­ ed a Fulbright .Scholarship for a y e a r’s study and rese a rc h at the University of Oslo, Norway, be­ ginning July I, 1954. of home including probably a num­ ber of comfortable lounges, wash rooms with washers and dryers, and m any facilitits.wtiich are un- common in most dorms. It has been proposed that 50 per cen* of the rooms have one bath connecting every two rooms and the remaining have one lavatory in each and group bath facilities. The entire project, however, from the blueprint stage up, is tentative, said Mr McConnell. He will deliver initial plans to ♦he architect in Dallas next week. The architect will then draw up preliminary plans which may he presented to the Board of Regents for approval at their next meeting May 28 and 29. "However,’’ Mr. McConnell add­ ed, "if thf* architect cannot finish the drawings in time for the May Regents’ meeting. presentation may have to wait for the following meeting.’’ Teaching Problem Workshop Offered Fight two general conferences independent workshops in md teaching problems for graduate students will he offered this sum ­ mer. General conferences run June 7-25 and August 9-27. Dr. J. G. Umstaftd, professor of secondary education, is in charge of both ses­ sions. Students enrolled in any of these courses will he expected to limit their studies to these courses only. Semester-hour credit is optional and is given on the basis of one hour for each week's work. Registration these courses for will he held during thp sum m er session each Monday at 9 a rn. N EED C A S H ? SELL Y O U R BOOKS AND SELL THEM ALL EARLY TO HEMPHILLS S I E V Y o « ‘ F au ltless Helanco Nylon Briefs < Offered by ' g ro w e r}' H E LA N C A (Swiss type) Nylon Yarns FULL-FASHIONED for solid com fort tnd individually cellophane wrapped, these wonderful WIL-FIT briefs wash and dry in a jiffy. You will enjoy their trim fit and firm support. Get som e today. Siie A for 28 to 56 w ti« S u e B for 58 to 44 waist $225 ii1hi nills 709 CONGRESS • Next to the Austin H o te l Milliken's Visa Tropical tailored by Renwood The fabric that "stands up" when you sit down. the original 55% Dacron*-45% worsted blend Visa is b le n d e d o f enough Dacron to retard wrinkling and hold its c r e a s e ... c o o le r than any tropical because i f s 2 0 % lighter . . . tougher and longer wearing, thanks to the strength o f Dacron ... sheds wrinkles q u ic k ly ... holds trouser crease even in the rain and stays in shape as the fabric is not affected by moisture. Try one on tom orrow in the fibeine color effects o f light blue and tan. ’5950 flap pockets m ay ba worn inside or out • • • « n u l l s ii Ixonia lid Renwood suits exclusively in Austin at Reynolds-Penlend 709 CONGRESS e r r I, 1,500 to Receive Diplomas In M ay 29 Commencement Fifteen hundred graduating sen­ iors will get University of Texas diplomas May 29. Rabbi Levi A. d a n , of Temple Emanu-El in Dallas, and Lester L. Colbert, Chrysler Corporation pres­ ident, will be key speakers at the joint University graduation serv ices Saturday, May 29. Rabbi Olan. author and holder of the pulpit of W o rc e ste r, Mass., for twenty years, will deliver the baccalaureate sermon at l l a.m. in Hogg Auditorium. Mr. Colbert, a University gradu­ ate at the age of 19. will speak at the commencement exercises on the terrace in front of the Main Building at 8 p.m. He rose from resident attorney to president of 'or Corporation in seventeen CT1’" years. At 7:30 p.m. approximately 1,500 graduating students in black robes and caps with different-colored tas­ sels will assemble at Littlefield Fountain for the colorful academic- process ion. May 24 is the last day for rent­ ing gowns at the University Co-Op. Bachelor’s robes and caps are available for a $2 rental fee, m as­ ter's for $6.50, and PhD’s for $7.50. Robes will be worn only at the evening commencement service. In addition to the two joint cere monies, separate graduation exer­ cises will be held by each of the different schools and colleges. At this time the graduates will re­ ceive congratulatory letters stating that they have fulfilled the require­ ments for their degrees. A post­ card will also be included for the obtaining of a diploma. THE FIRST INDIVIDUAL cere­ mony Saturday will be the com­ missioning of nearly 150 Army, Navy, and Air Force ROTO men in joint ceremonies in Hogg Audi­ torium at 9 a.m. President D>gan Wilson will give the welcoming ad­ dress. the key speaker at Et. (ion. R. W. Harper, USa F, will be the commissioning exercises. He heads the world’s largest known military training the Air organization, Training Command. Maj. Gen. IL L. Boat nor, US Army, and Vice Admiral IL M. Martin, USN, will also speak. Commander T. II. Wells, USN, will give the oath of office. Com­ letters of appoint missions and ment will be presented to all new officers by General Boatner, Gen­ eral Harper, and Vice Adm. M ar­ tin. The individual college and school exercises are scheduled between 1 :30 and 6 p.m. Informal recep­ tions for friends, the graduates, and families will immediately fol­ low the different services. Exercises for 170 graduating en gineers will be in Batts Auditori­ um at 1 :30 p.m. John Files, vice­ president and part-owner ot the in Houston, Meridiem Company will be the main speaker. Files graduated from the University in 19-12 with a master of arts degree in chemical engineering. DEAN W. IL WOOLRICH of the College of Engineering will he master of ceremonies. Charles Rundell, graduating chemical en- t _ ___________ _____________ _____________________________ IT 'S N O T R E A L ! Ph o to grap her M ike W ile y had to bring his own m odel alon g for this p ic ­ ture. H e w andered around the pool at Barton's, looking fo r one student with books. A m o n g a!! the sunbathers and swimmers out there Friday afternoon, not one studious person co u ld be found. So we begin the first week of finals. - - S t a f f P hoto by Wiley receives. to “ In relation the enrollment in c r e a s e , we're on fairly good grounds as far as honesty on exam inations is concerned vvotny stated. “ We’ve had no fla­ grant violations this year, and what cases we have had were fairly isolated attempts.’' Thirteen students will receive bachelor degrees in the School of Architecture ceremonies at 4 p.m. Dean No-' in Architecture Building 112. The reception following the service will he in the patio. Stressing the importance of ex- J anxioUs background, and Integrity Council Wants Changes In Discipline Rule Revision Asked In M em bership, Punishm ent Meted The Scholastic Integrity Council after a discussion with members the Student Court who have of the Disciplinary Com­ served on mittee, has revi­ sions in the committee s rules and practices. recommended The Council first recommended •qual representation of students; and faculty members on the com- mittec. At present the usual m e m - 1 hership consists ut three faculty! m em bers and two students. perienre the Council also recommended that the same students and faculty m em ­ bers he summoned to serve at committee hearings as often as possible. C irl V. Bredt. associate dean of life and cx-officio mem- tudent of the committee, said he fav­ ored increased student representa­ tion. “ Students always make good members on the committee,’’ he commented. The final recommendation sub­ mitted by the Scholastic Integrity Council dealt with the punishments handed out for offenses. The Coun­ recommended punishment be cil definitely fixed for each offense Instead of being decided on an in­ dividual basis for each case. Dean Bredt, without qualifica­ tion, opposed the Council’s think­ ing in regard to the last recoin­ mendation. ’ I here are extenuating circumstances in every case,’’ he •aid, “ and there can be no justice unless these special circumstances are considered and punishment decided accordingly.” News in Brief • • • By Th# Assoc la te*1 Pres* STUDENTS SHOT CHAPEL HILL. N. C. O n e University of North Carolina stu­ dent died and two were wounded by gunfire at a fraternity house here Saturday. Coroner Allen Walker reported that Putnam Davis Jr., a senior from Larchmont, N. Y , was found dead in his bed on the third floor of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house. The coroner said Davis, shot in the head, was clutching a .22 caliber pistol. ★ AMARI IXO — Senator Lyndon Johnson of Texas said Saturday the United States government “ will take every course we can to avoid sending our men Into a Jungle conflict ” But he said America “ vs ill not •land by and watch the loss of Southeast Asia” to Communism. Johnson, who attended trin e d T o rre s Day ceremonies here, •aid the United States must ex­ plore every course before eon- ^tiering armed intervention. T h e T e x a n T h e First Co liege Daily in the South' VOL. 53 Price 5 C e n ts A U ST IN , TEXAS, S U N D A Y , M A Y 16, 1954 Eight Pages T o d a y N O . 172 SWC Council Refuses To Admit Texas Tech By im * NEWMAN (SO) ‘ texan sport# staff ^ dnm. of admlttanc(, May 15 (Spl.) The South- , Conf„r „nr(. again s, , mrr,ed the face of Texas Tech as conference faculty council vol- ed against expansion at their bi­ annual meeting held in Waco .Sat­ urday. in adding the University of Houston j on Hie agenda of the faculty eoun- to the invitation. This died for the cil until taken off, or a substitute want of a second. motion is made. for fell Then the death blow Thus the conference, which has the first time. A motion was made not taken in a new member since and seconded that the initial mo- 1922, retained its present strength tion he tabled, and after some 30 of seven members. minutes' discussion was passed. Eleven other rule changes were the made by the council during this motion The advocates of expansion were I meeting. They a n ­ I. The rule was changed in SWC Tech, who along with the Uni­ baseball so that tie games do not versity of Houston and Oklahoma count as a half game for th*' win­ for University were brought up ners and a half game for the losers. admission at the meeting, was the A By taking this course of action, given the best chance of securing an invitation Rut by a series of I the council kept itself from actually conference championship must now tabling motions, the council killed I voting down expansion, hut at the he played off all possibilities of expansion. not beaten, however, and they moved and seconded a proposition to admit Tech and Oklahoma. But this too was tabled. same time closed the que tion until Saturday’s meeting of the conn- : hie next meeting of the council, that will affect tie game lh** cil was different from the earlier i which will he in December, ones in one respect. Whereas he- j fore the conference has voted out- right against offering an invitation to any school, this time they m e r e - 1 ly passed a motion to facile (or lay aside until the next conference meeting) the motion to admit Tech, Houston, or Oklahoma. tabled motion will remain ~ — Committee Members Receive Service Awards 2. John “ Sonny” Ray, freshman football player for the A&M fresh­ men last fall, was penalized one See SEIVER AL CHANGES, Page 3 conference Certificates for outstanding s e r v - l ^ r a n k Cooksy Louise C ity Shanghais San Jacinto's Light For New Bridqe • * The traffic light long promised to San Jacinto Dorm residents has finally arrived, but it won t j tie blinking on San Jacinto yet, I the j short of I fate would have ran As it, Bulletin Urges Exam Honesty With final exams approaching, , mends the punishment the offender City of Austin signal lights for the new Colora-1 University officials are placing do River Bridge the same day added emphasis on scholastic hon- this particular tho city warehouse. Result a new light arrived nt csty. light for bridge and a blank space San Jacinto. the on But Walter Seaholm, city man­ ager. has promised that the next light received by the city will ha' designated for that controversial corner. ; Amo Nowotny, dean of student anf* ^ r - r . J. Adams, chair­ man of the University Disciplinary Committee, have sent out a bulle­ tin to alert faculty members as to precautions to curb cheating. they should take Suggestions include making put the exam as close as possible to the time it is to be given, making sure it cannot he obtained by any student, training proctors properly, and arranging seating so as to discourage dishonesty. Summer Texans On Sale for SI Penalties caught cheating range from receiving an the course to being ex­ “ F ” faculty pelled lished on June 8, and on every discipline committee of three pro- two students recom- Tuesday and Friday throughout the summer. - ..................... thereafter lessors and j ............................ Tile Summer Texan will he pub­ from school. The anyone for in Union N o w Accepting Room Reservations Students registering for the sum­ mer session may get T h e Summer Texan by purchasing their sub- scription at the time of registra­ tion for $1, or by mailing in the Mrs. Bruce Taylor, assistant to the director of the Texas Union, subscription fee, or by coming by the circulation office, Journalism is now accepting reservations from Building 107, Deliveries will he groups wishing to meet in Union made to all subscribers between rooms during the summer session. the Nineteenth Tentative plans are and Twenty-seventh that ’Free Minds' to Be Great Issues Topic , Tile theme of the 1954 Great Issues series will be "F ree Minds and Free Men.” The series will he concerned with the limitations placed on m an ’s freedom in his search for truth. . . . . invitation Robert Hutchins, assot late direc- tor of the Ford Foundation, has accepted to speak early in November. No other speak­ ers have definitely accepted yet. interested in working on the Great Issues Com­ mittee, especially those wtio will be in summer school, should con­ tact Ann Davis, chairman, or Mary Dannenbaum, publicity chairman. Students who are the Little. Tom Clowe Jack j Sarah Tubb. E d g a r Watkins Marlin Jim col- S t r e e t s a n d S a n J a c i n t o a n d R io U n i o n w ill b e o p e n < illy o n e n ig h t APO P i c n i c s Saturday , , * , . J , :ri<- Greenfield, Je a n - pra n d e Streets. They will also he the least to any h o u s e outside that has at J u d y made Jackson. . delivery zone twenty subscription*. The Summer Texan will he mail­ ed anywhere in the United States for the same $1 subscription price a week during the summer. Reservations for the fall semes­ in the ter are also being taken Union business office. These res­ ervations may he made either by letter to Mrs. Taylor. Texas Union, or by calling her office. Alpha Phi Omega, honorary service organization, will have a picnic Saturday for newly elected members of the executive council and their dates. Ne\ plan to attend will APO office at 5 p m. Saturday. I st ill, Joyce Allyn I* ogulhur u.. rom Lolta. Phi Kappa Tau, G am m a P h i Beta, Kappa Alpha Manuscript* may be picked up in Theta, Delta G amma, and Alpha The first information given out on the contest winners contained several errors said Dr I^ngford The above results are official. I Chi Omega, B y B O B R N K . IIT The office of zoology teaching fellows Virginia Reuthinger and Ir­ win Kurtz is no place for smart, home-loving earthworms. their Miss Reuthinger, an attractive young lady who doesn t mind stir­ ring her hands around in a jar of dirt, starves earthworms and cuts off tails. Kurtz measures the amount of electric c h a r g e with­ in their bodies. The general idea or her thesis experiment, Miss Reuthinger ex­ plains, to see how much punishment a worm can take, hut to study effects of starvation on growl h . is not “ Starving earthworms is not a big problem,” she says. “ We put them in pans of water and bubble in oxygen for them to breathe.” the worms remain underwater w ithout food the short- longer The “ I t’s amazing to see how they lose two-thirds of their weight and the end of 60 days,” length by re sea rr^,*r Reuthinger said, pirk- ing up a thread-thin starved worm. Hardy worms may three or four months this foodless en- ■ vironrnent. last in Kurtz measures electric charge of worms -some of them j tailless by placing them in a com­ plicated machine. the The tail of a worm whose rear end has been lopped off should grow until the electrical potentiality of a normal worm is reached, This is the theory Kurtz is investigat­ ing. lf this proves true scientists may have a partial answer to why animals stop growing when they reach a certain size. Cutting off worms' tails for ob­ servation of the regeneration pro­ c e s s means more than just getting ; or and thinner th. we have time to go ■k up the bucket and bait.” Miss Rcuthin* F i n e A r ts Senior* lr sen has been elected of the senior class of the t Fine Arts. Wesley F’linn •fed vice-president, and Julia Beall was chosen secretary- i treasurer. V1RGINIA REUTHINGER • * . O ff go th* f a i l s N e rv e s ? Yo u’d better cheek them a t the door. F o r if s sheer bedlam in this business when the dead­ lin e's looking over your shoulder an d the guys in the com posing room keep y e llin g fo r y o u r story. T e x a s ’ c la s s y ru n n e rs co n trib u t­ ed three of four re v isio n s in the reco rd ixx>k by setting one stand­ a rd and ty in g tw o m ore. S M U ’s But, as we hold forth in this c o rn e r for th** last tim e w e can ho nestly splendid m ile r e la y foursom e un­ counted for the o th er new m a rk w ith a sizzling 3:13 9 say that life during our four years on the Texan has nevi * bei n dull Happy, sad, disappointed'’ Yes F ru s tra te d ’’ At tim*" But bored” N ever. WILBUR EVANS . . . master of his trade w " i. ____________ _ —S ta ff P hoto by W iley DEAN SMITH HITS TAPE AHEAD OF THREE TEAMMATES IN THE 100-YARD DASH A lv in F e e d e r fa r right, C h a r e / Thom as left, f'n Y n e d 2-3-A in th a t o rd e r. S M U ’s T o m m y fo u rth fro m left, and J e r r y Pre w itt, seco n d from A rm s tro n g , th rd fro m le ft did'- t p lac e . to its feet, T h a t w ho unreeled an in sp ired 17,7. A A M loom ed as a dangerous T om R o g e rs staged courageous c o m e b ack b alm y, a lm o st w in d less afternoon ' to se* a new K80 reco rd of 1:52 1 R y td in 1950 the m ost crow d 0f 3 5 0 0 of this sp a rk lin g c lo ck in g erased the old standard of 1 53 6 by R ic e 's Otha last in the to beat junior closed w ith The sle n d er a sco rch in g k ick sophom ore y a rd s D a v id W e a v e r by a foot. W e a v e r had set a b liste rin g pace the en­ tire ra ce and held a five-yard lead at the final S M U tu n ) IOO' D ic k F o e rs te r, a co-favorite w ith Rogers and W eaver, co u ld n ’t m atch on ip 0 back stretch, and then kick- 0f 5 2 . 7, IO th e ir to rrid pace and finished y a r d s hack third place. T he la n k y blonde w a s clocked at a fine I -53 5. h o w eve r <■*1 brilliantly to edge. the longhorn ru n n er by four yards. M orton ran 17.6, F o e rs te r 48 I. in Coach F ra n k Anderson’s men m anaged only one triumph on th** track, how ever, and soon fell be­ to hind when the Orange went Don M orton and F o e r s te r whip- th re a t d u rin g the e a r ly even ts Sat- ped up a te r rific a n c h o r duel as u rd a y a s the A g g ies scored h e a v ily J the M ustang sophom ore sophom ore in the shot put and discus th ro w . hn'xtt-i tt'ffh f At v ne Punhhr; ( I r-/ *?_ Iw o y a rd s ahead, dropped behind B o b b y G ro s s w on both w ith tosses and 153-8'a, respectively. M u sta n g started ti Longhorns W in SW C Track work in earnest. Ja m e s B la in e was his team ’s lone cinder w inner with his 4:17.5 mile. Texas presented three more gold in Thom as, Bob medal winners Billings, and E lb e rt Spence. Against Orioles C an ’t Sw ing Hard Without Sharp Pain for the Billin g s B A L T IM O R E , M a y 15 to im pressive sajd one 'Jb - T e d W illia m s swung a bat w ith his fractured shoulder first time this ye a r in a game Saturd ay, in the furlong to £ ° j anC} a fterw ard the Boston Red Sox Thomas breezed to an easy 220 victory’ in 21.1 as the Orange scor­ ed a grand-slam by copping all five places with the top four won in the IOO star report ed “ it still hurts.’’ -T here's no use kidding m yself.’* e arlier The Longhorn captain add- ed the 220 victor:* baseball s greatest. “ I stints in the sprint relay and cen- get a sparp pain each tim e I swing tu rv w ith sidekick Smith at l l 1 a. to share hieh-point honors h ard /* He seemed dubious about being ready yet to p la y re g u la rly a fter being up only tw ice against the Baltim o re Orioles. led a ’ five-man Long­ horn com pany in the high jump with hts winning leap of 0-6. And Spence offered the best perform ­ ance of his c a re e r for his last race a s he ran aw a y from S M U s fav­ ored Lenroy Low e to win the two- m ile in a good 9:28 9. “ But w e 'll give it another try in Detroit, m ayb e,” be said. “ M a y as well see is going to w ork the w ay the docs say it w ill.” Boston doctors put in a six-inch The host B a y lo r 'earn presented stainjess sleej pin to help healing in sophomores Ray- Qf ^ Jeft c la v ic le about six weeks two winners mood V ic k e ry and Bobby Herod. Q They reopened the shoulder to Both p e r f o r m e d im pressively. cut Qff the tf>p of the p,n la , t vveek> V ic k e ry hit a creditable 24-0 in the broad jum p and Herod skim ­ med over the 220 low hurdles in a s m a n z.5 0 . C H IC A G O . A la y 15 rP C a r l Sa* sm art 23.5. P r o b a b ly the happ.e>? L o n g h o rn w ats kl sm ashed a single over G u t Z e m i a l’s head w ith tw o out. in the ninth inning S a tu rd a y , sco rin g B o b B o y d w ith the w in n in g run as the tile C h ic a g o W h ite Sox P h ila d e lp h ia A th le tic s 7-6 before in the cro w d w hen it ended w a s C h a rle s R en fro e. T he h u sk y ja v e ­ lin th ro w e r un co rked his finest, all- tim e e ffo rt of 190-G to w in th re e s u rp ris e s : th ird place, a m edal, and a letter. Chisox Win on 9th inning Single ____________ if that pin 10,331 fans. shaded ...... . You don’t have to be a beaver to be eager or... BE ITS OWN REWARD? the C u rric u lu m rn O n ce there wax a Ju n io r w ho d evoted rnoU o f hi* tim e and e n e m ie s to S o c ia l little, P u rs u its , w ith co rresp o n d in g ! v the em phasis on Catalog C o n se q u e n tly , w h ile he wa* it I d T h e re fo c i a lly , a c a d e m ic a l!» fight c jo ae to the P o in t o f N o R e tu rn . ic was *J T o p p in g it off w i« an Ira te U ltim a tu m from the V ille P a re n t, w a rn in z that his next a cq u isitio n had b etter be e ith e r a I tst of Pas-m g f .raile s or a S o c ia l - e c ijritv C ar I VII O u r R o y co u ld fnr*s. re » a s a life tim e at IG r d L ab o r, antes* b o m e flu n r D rastic happened it happ en. In ve cte d ie * v i!v in ben /c I ri ne and black ooffee and line.! up three super sk u ll Tutor*. N a lit an i Cav he Sw e a te d It O u t — ana w ound un w ith R e m a rk a b ly R e ­ spectable G rad e* F irs t th in * he did, n a tu ra lly , wa* to c o n s u lt h i* T ru s ty l eies’ratnm ar. I ' * hat — yon b axen t got S n he ma I* J u . t drop a line to a T eleg ram m a r? Ror m 172"’, W estern U n io n , 60 Hud­ son S t , -New Y o rk Cit> and *et a m n y o f this bright and b ree ** little guide, fo r fre e .) O n its ad vice , he raile d W e*tern I m on and Hashed the jo y o u s T id in g * ho m ew ard b v T e i'S ra m . T h e Reaction came an bein* la te r, A T eiejrrap hie M o n e y O rd e r fo r $ AO, p lu s a message that read D elig hted at v o iir co n fo u n d in g the P ro p h e ts, in c lu d ­ ing m yse lf. Hope you w ill join me on two m o nth trip , expense* paid, s fa rtin e Ju n e 20th ’ ~--gned, P O P , I uropean M o r a l ' IX hen y o u ’ ve got good new * to im part, strik e w h ile the Item is H o t — bv T e le g ra m ' It adds w eight, ss well as wings, to Y o u r W urds. In any kind re C o m m u n que, f r o m D a t e T a l k to D r e a d s T alk to Jo b T a lk , y o u ’ll get fa rth e r, laste r, w hen von use the Y e llo w B la n k . Ju s t ca ll W e s te r n U n io n . 613 Congress Telephone 6-432 SENIORS ’55 M U S T VI RTUE S M U G cri#p (locking of 3.13 3 eclipsed the 3 14.3 set. by R u e in j o i n e d 1950. Ade I bet t B a r te k C ro o k 4, W eaver in that te r rific effort. and Morton T e x a s ’ tim e w a s a fine 3:11.4 M ajor League Standings N V riO N VI, l l V C I F, Philadelphia Brooklyn N ew York St. I -ny i s Cincinnati M ilw aukee Chicago Pittsburgh t Chicago N ew York Cleveland Detroit B altim ore Philadelph-a Washington Boston I M F H K W Ti Pet. D R I, SS 15 IO 600 ,577 15 l l 15 12 .556 I 14 13 .519 2 15 11 ,517 2 180 3 12 13 IO 13 ,135 4 (.It Pet. I* 9 19 .321 7fa I I \D I E I, SS 18 IO 16 IO 615 I 16 IO .615 1 9 .571 2 Vi 12 IO 13 .435 51 a IO 15 104) 6H 8 16 .333 8 6 13 .316 7 'j ORDER YOUR RING N O W ! W EAR IT THIS SUMMER! This top quality ring •t nexv low priers BERKMANS ” 31 (.I u n i t r r Sunday, May 16, 1954 THE DAILY TEXAN Page t In This Corner . . . I A s Thousands Cheer, If s ’30' Time at Last I I . B y S A M b l a h ; cwt) T e x a n S p o r t * E d it o r “ Sports writing,” a veteran of the trade once observed, “ is a weird racket. The hours are terrible, you’re underpaid, .and it’s nerve-racking work at times, but there’s one redeem­ ing factor. You’r never bored by your jo b A n d that, as we see it. offers a capsula description of the life of a sports w r i t e r . F o rty Acres v a rie ty . T o say that the hours are terrible is a m asterpiece of understate­ m ent for any Texan sports staffer. O urs is usually a case of 2 a rn. bedtime and 8 a.m . classes, so it ’s easy to see w hy we claim the drooping eyelid and bloodshot ev*> as our trad em ark. in JP* A s for pay, any guy who serves IO T A his apprenticeship soon realizes that here is the origi­ nal home of that ageless proverb: “ T h e re's not much money in the job. but you get lots of good ex­ p e rien ce .” Victory Ends 3-year Reign By Texas Ags B y H A M B I A I R wen* in non-eonfercnee battle,” S u m m e r F o r Right at the Cam pus Refrigerated Air-Conditioning Private Baths with each Room $15 to $30 per month The Bridgeway 2616 W ic h ita But Rogers, the defending cham- T e x a s ' blazing sprint b rig ad e o f­ fered tw o re c o rd -rn at ching efforts. pion, refu sed to su rre n d e r and his The- 140-relay tea m of D ean Sm ith , te rrific bid brought the ch eerin g j e r r y P r e w it, A lv in F rie d c n , and * j C h a rle y T h o m a s heat spirited Bay- •favpiin- 1 S w “ M R t t K ? TO T 109- by seven y a rd s Ho >*r<1 Relay: i-j 2 Dick Hazard Arkansas 194-1; 4 9 - Charles Renfroe. Texas 190-G. Pete Maycauv Texas AAM * May eaux Texas AAM IW W 5 Torn Do iii D o n a h u e T e x a s A A M , 178-9 * I 'Dean Je rry Prewit, A lv in Frie/len Smith Charley Thomas/ 2 B a y lo r 4 Ties record set by Texas Perry Samuels M a ' m d Char!*" Parker In 1950 .3-Rice leva* AAM 5 S M ” Tim e: 41 I of Floyd Rogers Carl Tex/) x team sVii.t Put a AAM A AM VI C, 3 H arr Cox, J ax LH 9 . «A . 5 Orviile I Robb' Cr* s Texas 2 Tom Bonordic Texas AAM If a i f ton SM I., V* f ra»k R ic a I Tom ms 47-31* Cd Olsens 140-1; 5— Langford I Rnbbv Dr of Tfxa.x AAM. Ja rk s o n . R ic e 148-1 P W * 1* A Rodney W illiam s SM U , 145-3, 4 I ton Wilson P> Sneed Texas 139*1 IG IM* * a rd Mash : I J Harold Drift,n R A rk a n s a s lames I Ce<,rg* Auld, T m u l o Morton S M I ' druthers, Texa s Time Jam es Blain* 2 Dab DeRouen, Texas ax AAM A A Vt Mule/) Hale Texas. 5 Don Neighbors Texas Tim e: 4 17 5 lim T e n n lro n A rk a n s a n : 4 I ; 3- B l!) Di.-n I I mile Run: » 48.0 Tax I I j HW \ s rd D ash I [)*'!in S m ith T e ­ I A lv in Fried en. T e x a s . 3 Char I ns ley T h o m a s Texas Je r r y Press it. I .V B o b b y Herod, B a y lo r . T im e T e x a s 9 5 Ties re co rd set by I red Wolcott Rio-, 1939 A lle n Bawler Texas 1948 BHI M a r t i n t o n . Baylor S a m u e ls > x « * p.mo and S m ith 1952 I p.i s < or I J. a I H ig h Hurdles 19)6 Perr\ ! 3 Tom tin, TOU. 2 -Cuayford Donaldson Bav-.1 tor Texas AAM [lollahlte. Ja m e s H o llin g s w o r t h . Texas A A M I 5 Harley Hart.ung, Texas AAM Time I ll.uh lump • ■ ti *i Hem I Boh I D ick so n liln-; ’D*xa lex os 4 R O 5 8 tie between Rasonond I ex te i{orr SMI . ■nd J . tin e s P a b b John tie between Marvin Swink and Mellbenns lex ia AAM C Maries Cow ley. Buy Ion Stephen Jam es and Terrs Tangler. Rice. Dirk Hein SM C and VV ay ne Delano" and Karl v Whit sides Texas 5-10 SZO-sard D ash I Charles* Th.on * 3 2 Dean Sm ith Texas re as -Mein FT * eden .Terr- P re *,' l e , « s texas 5 Robert Carson, Texas, lim e I SHO viird Run: 1 Tom Roger* I. 2 David Weaver SM U 3 Dirk j as (Foerster, Texas; 4 Kd Davis, Rice I 52 I J N E W RK( ORD. Old record of I 53 6 5 Date Spence, Rice Tim* ’ 1 < •» t * u rd Ri ,.. •mile Run P i b e r t Sper.,» I I Denrov I .owe SM C * antu, Texas T- ms Inocen- I V e rk in West- x'O mon land T e x a s AAM 5 Alan I sh- bmigh, Arkansas Time I .ow Hurdles 9 23 i MO ■ a rd 3 j i Herod Baylor 2 Bill Curtis I j H a r le y H a r tu n g T e x a s A A M A u stin Pa lm e r Texas 5 P bin IC I I J a n u s Hoi , l i n y -w orth. T e x a s A A M Tim e 23 5 I I I ’ I j a o'* Pull* Vault tween F.d Hornet SM C .and John Noviy, Texas, Kid j Tutor. Texas AAM 12-6 5 ‘■stephen James Rue J I tie between Clenn Hoffman t B|J1\ tic be James Carle, 11,1'I Steve Si nuns, Rue, (Adalbert Bar 'A. av, : I'D- 3 Texas J Texas •/ Don Morton i ■X7 o NI \. RT.( DRI > Did record of 3 l l J , f* Ba s lor. Time 3 1321 'lite R e la y S M C * J '■ I I ! j set by Rice in IWW. Bread I Raymond V i k c rv I B a y l o r 24-0 , 2 D ic k H a z a rd A rkan - Jum p sax 23-2 J-va't A —Jam es Beavers Rice, l l * . . 4 J Prr>’ tE ’ii**’ Texas 22-104* Bobby Robinson. Texas AAM 22-7'* j S m ith sm oked : tir.„ ( u n , ting tho tnpo 1 t,n « tfie tape in 11 I and the IOO in 9 5, hit- :MC« „ t *r iHc ahead lust a lust a strid e an ean of F ric tio n and Tho m as. T h e sp rin t r e la y team tied the m a rk set b y T e x a s in 1950 Sm ith in 1952 eq ualled the tim** he ran and also p erfo rm e d b y four e a r lie r ' sprint g re a ts top h illin g w ith F o r ♦hrtlls, S M U s reco rd-b reak­ ing m ile r e la y p e rfo rm an ce shar* ^ that slit ring od duel b etw een R o g e rs and W e a v e r. It w a s a to rrid battle betw een the M u sta n g s and T e x a s all the w a y . R o b ert C a rs o n s splendid 19.1 opening leg handed Jim Caruthers a five yard lead over S M I s Bols­ hy C ro o k s and junior still held a three-yard a d v a n ta g e a fte r tits 19 1 .second lap. G e o rg e Auld then d ip p e d off a b risk 18 I fell slightly behind W eaver, but the S te e r P i t t s b u r g h D e f e a t s B r i n e s 6 I P IT T S B U R G H . M a y 15 B Fra n k ie Thom as clouted a double and a s i n g l e Saturday a s t h e Pitts- burgh P ira te s defeated the M ilw au­ kee B ra v e s 6-1 behind t h e foul h i t pitching of Vernon I Alw. FORMALS R e s i s t S t a i n s l f TRFATED WITH 4 * W A T FR R E P E L L E N T S SH E D S SH O W ER S | Y A U T H O R I Z E D A 6 E H T BU RTO NS Laundry & Cleaners Btth V Kin t>ramle — I’ll H Dill B. C. ROGERS Dispensing Optician Have S o u r Health C e n t e r ’s P r e s c r i p t i o n C o r ( B a s s e s Accurately I Hied W e Do Repairs We are within easy w a lk in g distance of UT S E T HEMPHILL'S TOP C A SH OFFER before YOU SELL YOUR BOOKS! 1512 Guadalupe Rh. 7-1422 W in t h r o p built for slipper-soft com fort. f o o t n o te s b y W l N T H R O P They’re styled to flatter . . « W h a te v e r the occasion there s a W in th ro p that's just right. C o m e in and choose from a wide va rie ty bf styles and rich leathers. S H O E S T O R E 2348 Guadalupe ’ On the Drag f First Foe Unknown in N C A A Playoffs to Texas' Bibb Falk s B y W I L L I E M O R R IS r f u n S p o r t * S t a f f M r. Bib b Augustus F a lk , w ho's to know more baseball just about anybody, hasn’t reputed than the faintest inkling w ho. his Long- horns' first foe in the N C A A base- title ball playoffs w ill be. N o one else oldhands. has the answ er either. The acquisition of another S W C is nothing new to campus thir- It m ark s T ex a s’ Texas Golden W in s League Golf Crown UTs Senior Athletes Leaving But Many'll Return to 40 Acres M an y a senior Golden and Puett alm ost did not p la y in the tourney. Had Texas elected to send the four mon that in tho most Confer- Orange and W hite for the last time had played once matches, Golden and Puett during the seasons of 1953-54, yet they w ill not be forgotten for their exploits on the gridiron, hardwood, w ill both be hack next fall. W hite tao* w ill be com pleting w ork on a B B A . or diamond. while C am eron w ill finish w ork on a P E degree. degree in August and w ill go into ' month and go into the service. the A ir F o rc e soon after. As for the lads from C lark Field, B ill W hite and Dougal Cam eron th ey’ll be heading different w ays. T ra v is E c k e r t will probably sign a pro contract at the end of the N C A A playoffs and P a u l M ohr w ill probably play semi-pro ball in M innesota this summer. the Spring, w ill graduate with a P E Longhorns, will g r a d u a t e this laid aside How ever t u tho . . . . . . , tieth undisputed crown in the past Southwest Conference 39 years. The ’Horns have shared in three others. links crow n w ith a 2-under par 278 total. individual j wouiuis' Sportsman P a r k this week end take I /rn is Should St. then the 3 series, the Steers W ill ad­ vance to O m aha, without having to play the M issouri school. Should Oklahoma A A M win, however, a showdown w ill develop between the Longhorns and the Aggies. to deride w ho'll represent this dis­ trict in Om aha. 4. Then again, there s a slim possibility that Arizona, the B o r­ der Conference titlist, w ill play Texas or the Aggies, or both, for regional honors pending an an­ nouncement by the N C AA . Arizona j vs as o riginally scheduled to meet | the Sky ane Conference champ, hut do^ ,V Sk>line officials protested If the O klahom a Aggies win over St Louis, there w ill be no home- and-home arrangem ent in regards to the Te.xas-A&M series, “ E ith e r w e ’ll p la y all the games I in Stillw ater, or we ll play them F a lk said S a tu r­ all down here day. Fhe N C A A showdown is due to open in O m aha .Tune in. Any play­ off must m aterialize before June 7 or thereabouts Hie Steers, who compiled a 14-5 record for the ye a r, haven t skip- ped a day of workout since the In season s end. the d aily in temj>o to increased grind has alleviate as much as possible the ills of not having game com peti­ tion and conditions fact, For Further Inform ation Extension Teaching addr®** and Field Service Bureau Division of Ewtgnsion . A intl n, Texas Phone 2-3408 * 0 1 1 1 1 * 0 coot* B y M U R R A Y F O R S Y A L L (SO) T e x a n S p o r t s S t a f f T exas’ Jo e Bob Golden clim axed an uphill battle to stardom at W aco F r id a y by annexing the Golden's victory’ w as a clutch perform ance as he had to sink a 20-foot birdie deuce on the final hole to edge Teammate Roane Puett by a single stroke. Golden put together rounds of 68, 69. 71. the coveted and TO in winning Puett, the tourney’s real dark- horse, fashioned rounds of 71. 68, 70. and 70 for his runner-up 279 score w hich is one under p a r for the 72 holes played at the p a r 70 Ridgewood Country Club course. for Defending co-champion Flo yd in a Addington of S M U finished tie fellow third place with Mustang T om m y T o w ry with totals of 285, a full seven strokes be­ hind Golden's winning m ark. Lee Pinkston, senior and cap­ tain of the I/tnghorn squad, made a hid for the crown with a three- under-par 67 in the morning round F rid a y hut slumped in the afternoon to finish in fifth plat e w ith a 72-hole total of 286. to a 75 I >onghorn sophomore R a y l/>g- gett fired two even par 70 s F r i ­ day to lift him self froth tile twelfth position he held a1 the half-way point to a sixth place finish, one stroke behind Pinkston at 287. Fo u r seniors—Bob Tow ery, P a u l Mohr. F ra n k Brock, and T ra v is E c k e rt are closing out their ca ­ reers. - $ O f the four, E c k e rt is the surest bet for all-Am erican honors. R e lia ­ ble sources contend it ll be either E c k e rt or B a y lo r's oft-hitting M ic k - 1 championship. ey Sullivan the all-Am erican outfield. Both finished their con­ ference cam paigns w ith 450-plus batting averages. in ' K A S O N S UKC O K O O k l a h o m a 8 i n n i n g s ) IO B a i l o r 4 Bas lor 5. O k l a h o m a 5 (1 2 4. M i n n e s o t a T e x a s 9. T e x a s T e x a s l l T e x a s 8 M in n e s o t a I * T e x a s 12, T e x a s 13 T e x a s 3, R ic e 8 T e x a - 3, R O e J T e x a s 3. Su i R o s s I ( l l Texas 3. TCL’ 2 T e x a s 13. T C L 3 T e x a s 6 AA M 2 T e x a s to. N e b r a s k a 5 T e x a - N e b r a s k a 4 0. I. S a m H o u s t o n 0 T e x a s T e x a s I. T e x a s 13. B a y l o r 13 T e x a s 6. R ic e 0 T e x a s 8. TCC 3 T e x a s 3 AAM 2 T e x a s 4. AAM 5 S M U I' i n n i n g s i Track T men Give Littlefield $5,000 W A C O , M a y 15 Clyde L ittle ­ field. track coach of the U n ive rsity o f Texas for 34 years. Saturday w as given a check for 55,000 bv men who have been on his teams. The presentation w as during the Mll Southwest C o n feree e meet. ju i. The track men said they were use “ it has become known that you plan to build an edifice m the near future to house not only yourself, but to house as w ell your memoirs w ith a place com fortably to in retro­ spect.-' indulge The men lauded Littlefield for his devotion to the university and to the sport of track and field, for hi* influence and good " im ­ parted to your track boys loans in the sixth Cub* W hip N Y , t i on E r ro r * inning helped semester in school N E W Y O R K , M a y 15 t3P? W ild excessive R a y, w ho dropped out of A& M at the end of last semester, broke the conference rule that prohibits (an aggregate of throws by’ W illie M a y s and J i m o ver $150* accepted before one H earn the Chicago Cutis snap the N ew Yo rk G iants streak Saturday 4-3 behind Jo h n ­ ny Klippstein s three-hit pitching 3 A & M w ill lie host to the ron- six-game winning ferencr cross country’ meet next fall, and it w ill he field on the M onday preceding the N C AA meet. for the conference cham pionship in baseball appears, the conference will designate the team to represefit the S W C in the N C A A play-offs If one of the cham ­ pions ha* beaten all of the other co-rham pions two out of the three games played, that school is Hie representative In cases where a decision can't be reached, a coin w ill fie tossed steady If a lie 4 Hernandez defeated his team ­ mate. Springer, 8-6, 6-1, 6-1, foi Thus I/m ghorn golfers captured the singles championship. The Hor- four of the top six places in the nandc/.-Springer team then downed tourney and Golden became (lie Dale M ille r and Robin Robinson eighteenth Longhron in the last 22 of Rice 2-6, 6-4. 6-0, 6-3, Vor Hie years to w ea r the individual crown. I doubles crown. Se venal Changes Made In 1955 S W C Rules (Continued From Page Ti ye a r's e lig ib ility for accepting a loan of $150 from an alum ni in the form of a down payment on a car. a v arsity or B-game in one week can't compete for in seven days. This means that an athlete can t play in both types of events in one week. the other 9. Attendance of high school ath­ letes at college or university alum ­ ni banquets is not in violation of the tules if the person taking lite .athlete doesn’t furnish transporta­ for the dinner. An tion or pity exception to this rule is applied in a situation when the dinner i* held in the same city as the insti­ tution. 10. The 1955 spring meeting (track, golf, and tennis I w ill be held m Houston at R ice Stadium M ay 13 and 14. How ever, if tele­ vision is approved for the meet and facilities are not a vailab le for T V in Houston, Hie meet w ill be moved to Austin and the U n iv e r­ sity. 11. R ules governing spring foot­ ball practice were changed from a standard of 18 working dav$ in a period of 25 calendar days to 18 period of 28 move w as to give more leew ay in ease of bad weather. w o r k u p day's in a ,.alendar d a y s. T h l, Iii To tire students and faculty: P ease a c ce p t our thanks for your patronage A M O N D this year. For 38 years it has been a pleasure GUARANTEED PERFECT! Tho w o rld ’* finest q u a l i t y d i a m o n d r i n g s i n m a n y b e a u tifu l sty le s to bring you the finest in men s appere at prices students can afford to pay. O u r summer hours remain 8:30 to 5:30 and w e're 'oolong forward to seeing you often. C o rd ially THE T O G G E R Y O n the Drag Giv e H i m A Gift From The Toggery 5. Tfie S W C representative to the N C A A basketball playoffs w ill be determ ined rn rase of a tie by one gam e at a neutral site by the two tied c l u b s If t h e r e a rr tille r tied. o n e w ill get a bye team s w hile the first two play, and then the second playoff game is held 6. No requests will he considered for. exceptions to the conference by-laws about league basketball team playing in post-season tourna­ ments. In other words no conference club ran play in any post-season tournament other than the N C A A tourney. 7. TTie sw im m ing conference meet w’ill he held a week e a rlin this y'ear, 8 . A ny athlete who competes in E r s k in e B la n k * L a r d * . I i i B R O O K L Y N , M a y 15 C arl Erskine shut out St. I /ans with two hits Sa tu rd ay 1-0 as Brooklyn scor­ ed the only run in the second inn­ ing on R a y Jablonski s two have er ror and B illy Cox s '•ingle. Er- skine retired 17 C ard in als in sucre- sion from the third to the eighth T U P X r l Jut $575.00 JU. IFT r*(kfi»g Slog 175-0® $300.00 WE LOON A Wedding ting 97 JO $200.00 CAM ESON Alto HOC to 2475 W adding tin g 12 50 ^ $ 1 0 0 . 0 0 EAIOIOVE W « 4 * « g K eg 50 0 0 For Him or Her, a watch is a cherished gift. Longue:, W ittn e ^ e r, E ain M ido froo* $34 50 to $1,000. A ’ady *eeds «•* F'g V American Compact. 5.00 to 30.00 Rorson gofer* for the man c r woman g*ad 5.50 up fctiiictiw lenin 2268 G u a d a lu p e Acetin I only KEEPSAKE D A M O N D Jeweler f o r tb ® G i f t s y o u U G i v e with Pride . . . Let Sheftallr * Be your Guide. A u ? * V s O n 1/ K E E P S A K E r JgW(|*gr i m l r i 2268 G uad alupe O n the Drag Ten boys w ill move on team mem bers decided to let seniors Pinkston and in the tourney and Golden* play Puett won one of the other two spots in a playoff among the other four squadmen. from to other en­ M em orial Stadium deavors. Carlton M assey, all-Am er­ ican end. w ill return to school in the fall to finish w ork on his degree Golden began the season in the while the opposite Bankm an, Gil- the Long- m er Spring, has signed to play in the Canadian num ber horns but dropped to number five with Edmonton m id w ay the season when he Football League. lost challange m atches to Leggett, l/ive, and Teddy White. two slot for in P h il B ra n ch , all-Southwest C on­ F ra n k B ro c k , rightfielder, has a ference guard, has been drafted by the Washington Redskins for the commission in the A ir F o rc e and w ill be donning the blue and khaki 1954 pro season. Three of the five seniors on Slue t ome sum m er. H u ll’s quintet w ill be back next fall j in working on their -degrees. Those j Townes H a ll come next term work- Bob T o w e ry w ill be over After the season up there Spring returning are B i lly Pow ell .Tim ing on his law degree. plans to return to the F o rty Acres and complete his degree work also. Clifford Polk and B u ll Johnson are not sure about their plans, but Po lk hopes to get into pro hall somewhere. Richardson, and F re d Saunders. Pow ell, co-captain of the Steers along w ith G ib Fo rd, has to com ­ plete his practice teaching for his degree and then he ll go into the A ir Fo rce som etime afte r Ja n u a ry d ia r ie s P etro vich has already of 1955. Ford has decided to p lay with gone into the A rm y and BU I Bible w ill receive his commission in the Hic Phillips 66 A A U team out of this B a rtle sville. O kla., for a w hile and A rm y Transportation Corps into the A ir summer. then he’ll also go Force Bunny Andrews, quarterback and tri-captain along with M assey and Bob W aggener, center of the ’54 Bob T im m ins, captain of H a n k to tankers, C hapm an’s complete w ork on his chem ical engineering degree and Bu d d y Hoyt is coming back to U T to do graduate w ork in personnel. is going Bobby Brodnax will he m aking a trip to the a lta r this sum m er before going into the A ir Fo rce and Albert Y r ia r t is hoping to w ork in Pittsburgh at a steel mill w hile doing graduate w ork in industrial psychology out of Purdue. Puett on the other hand had not played in a single Conference dual match and w as the number six man throughout t h e season. In qualifying trials he barely made t h e team by edging squadman Nosoni Burt by one stroke. ★ Hernandez, Springer Win Singles, Doubles Titles W A C O , May la 'Pi Texas made a clean sweep of tho Southwest Conference tennis tournament Sat­ in (lay when Johnny Hernandez re­ pealed as singles champion and Hernandez and T om m y Springer again won the doubles title. THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE THIS SPRING! The Board of Directors and Management of the University C o - O p are proud to announce that we can pay a . . . 14% CASH REBATE on purchases made this Spring. This has been made possible through your continued patronage. n h e r m t / c o o p M C J I ti » I k I ’ J O W N S T O * ! A ll Summer For A Buck Keep Up With Your University Friends A N D U.T. News in The Summer Texan O N L Y $1 for all sum m er — m ailed to your h om etow n or d e live re d in A u stin . M a ile d in A ustin, $1.50. D o n ’t fo rg e t to check The Sum m er Texan on your A u d ito r's R e c e ip t. It is N O T in clud ed in the A c t iv it y Ticket. D ro p the coupon, along with your check, in F a c u lty M a il add ressed to J . B. 107, or b y regular m ail to Bo* 8040, U n iv e rs ity S ta tio n . N O T E : A booth will ba open for your convenience in front of the Union al! day M onday, and e very d a/ during finals from 8:30 to 9 IO a rn, and 1:30 to 2 .10 p.m. N A M E A D D R E S S T O W N ................................................................... S T A T E (Austin d e livery zones are from 13th to 27th sh eet* and san Ja c in to to R io G rande. ' Sunday, May 16, 1954 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 On* Point of Viow Texan, UT Futures Take Road Upward By BOB KENNY (30) Dally Texan Editor This is th e last. T h a t’s w h a t (30) m e an s. The desk a t th e w hich I sit is no longer mine, even though its sc ra tch e s and stains a r e a s fam iliar as yes­ te rd a y . W ith this issue The Daily T e x a n a s s u m e s fresh new le ad ­ ersh ip a n d to looks b rig h t n ew days. forw ard As th e retirin g editor I give u p m y ty p e w rite r arid four walls w ith full confidence in w hat I believe to be a proud tradition and a g r e a t destiny of service by T he D aily Texan the Uni­ v e r s ity an d the people of Tex­ as. to D u rin g a y ea r as editor one can n o t help but perceive an un­ b ro k e n h eritag e and a c h a r a c t e r th a t is bigger and g r e a te r than a n y individual ever a p a r t of it. This enduring personality d o m in a te s the little people w-ho give th e ir y ea rs to it, gives it continuity and it g r e a t and I hum bly m a k e s believe th a t ours is a grea t col­ lege new spaper. stability, and But it goes unsaid th at a p a r t from the com m unity to which it belongs and to whose future it is bound, a new spaper is no­ thing. So the future of the T exan ca n be proud only as the future of the University is great. And is a s g r e a t, all of us, the single in­ dividuals who live in its shadow, have a tie with eternity. the U niversity’s future the In an o th er 15 years, this Uni­ v e r s it y ’s enrollm ent and phys­ ical size m a y be doubled, it, al­ third gre a te st r e a d y has the US. cap ita l endow'ment I ts buildings will push out to the e a s t and north and rise high­ e r the F o rty A cres will grow. the air. and in in too it will get its Som eday a m e n d m e n t g r e a te r freedom of investment with its capital and wider use of its gen­ It m a y even get era l allowing funds. 5,000 More by 1960 parking lots and an expanded Union. But a big University is not necessarily a great, University. G reatness is intangible and in­ definable, dependent, on dedicat­ inspired ed teach­ leadership, ing, and good luck. The first we c a n give if we will; the sec­ ond we can get. if we will pay; the third we can p ray for. I leave m y job now a g re a t deal richer than I cam e to it. T hat is inevitable: one can only hope the job could say some­ thing of the sam e It has m eant making decisions th at affect the lives of people around me; it has m eant w-orking for causes it has bigger than m eant dealing with the finest people in the world. I can be; r have been shown a g re a te r generosity than I knew existed; a selflessness that am azes me over and over. One begins to suspect the height, of hum an nobility afte r one w atches peo­ ple shortening their lives with­ out chance to do something they believe in, or to give up for things cherished somebody they believe In. for rew ard their ow-n course with the p etty ; the noble Of comes the narrow little people who c a n ’t lift their eyes above sickly purposes and the big expansive ones too nearsighted to perceive th eir own gross­ anything but ness. But long enough to forget them , and other things big enough into to push place, them life is is the Too m a ny things have hap­ pened s i n c e I first sat in this chair 13 months ago, completely stricken by responsibility the that was mine. Now it looks like It I will miss as much a s anything else. The responsibility and the quiet, never-old thrill of seeing three strangers walk up to the Union counter from three directions, pick up Texans, arid walk away. r e s p o n s i b l y About that time I w rote in an editorial that it. w as the T e x a n ’s du ty to m ake the news a i well a s to present it. T h a t p a r t of the job. at least, h as been ac­ c o m p l i s h e d how well, it is for to judge But events have other frequent, and m e m o ries been a r e crowded to untangle. too crow ded In I / x k h a r t the su m m e r the baseball te a m went to the national play­ offs and three University stu­ dents were kicked out of a cafe for being Latin in A merican. the fall c a rn e Chancellor H a r t's d e p a rtu re , the election anti the T e x a n ’s court suit, the Baylor gam e, the foot­ ball reception. In pro test; There were fights with th e a­ te r prices and with high fees in a r t lab courses, for traffic lights and better low-cost hous­ ing. The proudest m om ent w as the McCarthy the proudest m om ent and the most. accom plish­ s i g n i f i c a n t m ent. Then another election and a report by the Scholastic In­ teg rity Council, and the y e a r ’s duties were over. All this, and the unim portant things th at real­ ly m atter. A lot was controversial; a lot caused hurt and outrage. But. all of them left as a residue an unshakeable confidence in the intelligence, articulateness, good judgement, and ability of the University student body. “ The people, yes,” said Carl Sand­ burg The people know what th e y ’re doing, and th e y ’re more n ea rly than a n y one of them could ever Ire, no m a tte r how gifted and how wise. tight So this is the last It is a year that has given too much, cost too much, and m eant too much. A lot has happened but there is a lot more to look forw ard to. The past is good, rich, fruitful, but the road to the future leads upw ard. Enrollment Growth Requires Increased Building Program By OTIS RHEA SCHMIDT In I960 there will be app ro xi­ m a tely 5,000 more students en ­ rolled in The University of T e x ­ as th a n there w ere in the Long Session, 1953-1954. before they a r e given official status, however. Three separate groups a r e included in this list, which w as presented the President on J a n u a r y ll, 1954. No one of these groups has priority over the others. to of a decade or two. This ex­ pansion program is only a rec­ om m endation and m u s t be a p ­ proved by the Board of Regents before any actual planning can be done. I*. Boner A com m ittee to study die core curriculum of the College of Arts and Sciences w a s ap;>oint- ed by Dean C. in May of 1950. The com m ittee, u n ­ d e r the c ha irm ansh ip of Dr. E m m e t to S. Redford, profes­ sor of government, m a d e its report in 1952. The faculty voted down a motion the pro­ posed core cu rricu lu m p ro g ra m be tried on a ex p e rim en tal basis for 300 students for a defined period of time. th a t At die present tim e another com m ittee has been appointed with study of a core curriculum for the entire U niversity being done. C hairm an of the com m it­ tee is Dr. Philip G ra h a m , pro­ fessor of English. The University is growing the in physically, plans a r e the making for expansion of the building p r o g ra m and of cu rricu lar p ro g ra m . What tile next ten years will bring for The University of T ex as can only be predicted through these term s. But no m a tte r w hat the future, the U niversity adm inis­ tration and faculty a r e a w a re a s always of their responsibili­ ty to the citizens of T exas in providing a U niversity of >h** first order in all wavs. JU 'nnortunified On Inc., M oor e B usiness F o rm * . in H o u sto n , lias t w o ojn-ntnKs for sa les iii C o r p u s C h risti re p r e s e n t a t i v e s a n d s a l a ry a n d com m iss ion. F o r f u r t h e r in f o r ­ see S t u d e n t E m p l o y m e n t m a t i o n B u reau , Speech B u i l d i n g t h e Valley, W ill p ay l i t fe P ar t-tl ale s e c r e t a r y . Lieo- t r i e type rtte r, s h o r t h a n d Jo h o urs w Senior, g r a d u a t e , o r stu- I*, f* r re d Be here two t wife i n f o r m a t i o n see rs F o r f u r t h e r t e n t E m p l o y m e n t B u r e a u , Speech Idliig 111. * ★ T ra n * W o r l d A irlin e s h a s o p en ­ in gs for ho ste sse s fo r t h e i r in c r e a s­ ed sc h ed ule of : (iring a n d s u m m e r f lig h ts O p p o r t u n i t i e s f o r p r o m o tio n f u r t h e r I n f o r m a ­ a r e excellen t, t i o n see s t u d e n t E m p l o y m e n t B u r ­ eau, Speech B u i l d i n g 111. t oi t u n ex p erien ced I n c ma Ka rs T h e Hall B r o t h e l - is in l a r d s of H a l l m a r k g r e e t i n g stylist*. need of for a n y j o u r .g A good opt»ortunft> m a n o r w o m a n w i t h e x c e p tio n a l c r e a t i v e ability an d h i g h t a s t e s t a n d ­ a r d s F o r f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n go to S t u d e n t Em ploym ent B ureau, Speed) B u ildin g 111. a th e co m pany T h e C o n t a i n e r C o r p o r a t i o n of r e p r e s e n t a ­ have A m erica will tiv e on the c a m p u s d u r i n g t h e week of May 17-22. T h e r e a r e o p e n i n g s In in sa les a nd p r o d u c t i o n , g r a d u a t e s w ith in d u s t r i a l e n g i n e e r i n g busin ess, o r i n t e r e s t In a r t s and sc iences w i t h .sales a n d p r o d u c t i o n a r e d esired App lication s a r e a v a i l a b l e in Hie "-turipnt Employment Bureau, Speevn h wilding ill. t r a i n e e s f o r the following Under additions and im prove­ recom ­ ments, mendations w ere m ade: in­ crease of ca p ac ity of Utility Plant, expansion of Utility Dis­ tribution facilities, air condi­ tioning of the Main Library and B arker L ibrary, completion of the third and fourth floors of the east and west wings of the Science Build­ E xperim ental ing, un d erg rad u a te laboratory to present Chemistry addition Building and the present Physics Building, m a jor repa ir reroofing of work perm a n en t buildings and r e ­ pairs on the Engineering Build­ ing and on the Chemistry and Physics Buildings. including to It also lists a library addition according to the ( ’ret Develop­ ment Plan as previously a p ­ proved by the Regents, addition to the Union Building, including provision for a Faculty Club, development of the East Mall, additions to G reg ory Gym, and additions to the Women's G ym . Recom m endations m ade un­ der the heading of new buildings were an E ngineering Building on a Twenty-fourth Street situ, Business Administration Build­ ing, Social Science Building, Ex- tension-Economic G e o l o g y (Nineteenth at Red River), Con­ tinuation Center (vicinity of Law -G raduate D o r rn), Fine Arts Building (west of Music Building), second Engineering Building on E a st Mall (south of the present Engineering Build­ ing), Auditorium and Radio-TV Center, and N u rsery School. in the Kinsolving Dormitory expansion the recom m endation s Com m ittee’s included a 750 unit girls’ d o rm i­ tory on trac t, men s co-ops (as recom m ended by a special com m ittee), w o m ­ e n ’s co-ops on Driskill T ra ct, graduate w o m e n ’s dormitory on front of Driskill T ra ct (cast side' and m e n ’s dormitories a s recom m ended by special committee. the This e n tire progra m as r e c ­ ommended hy the Fac ulty Build­ ing C om m ittee would cost a p ­ proximately b u t would be spaced over a period $30,(XX),(XX) sa Frank Aaron G. E' A lm q u t s t Jr , Ca ro l Helen B a rn e s E r n e s t i n e t B ro uss ard, J o h n n i e C C arroll, C a r ­ J. Brown C u t - olyn Sue C o l b e r t J e a n n e t t e b irth, M a r j o r i e (lan es, J***-, Jo e J a b o u r , J o h n E. H e l l i e r Rog er Dean M a rtin . Shirley J o N eed ha m B a r b a r a Rose Ray, B a r ­ bara Ann R e d d ltt W illiam C lay Richie, N e w t o n Schoenly. R o b e r t C l n l o u trim ta, A gn es A n a VV ox i t a. K According to W. Byron Shipp, as sista n t re g is tra r and reg istra - tion supervisor, the n u m b e r of \ young people of college a g e in T e x a s will increase by 170 per cent by 1970. Using this a s a the U niversity adm inis­ basis, tration has estim ated that en­ rollment. will be 15,500 in 1955, 16,000 in 1956 arni will increase In 500 ea ch y e a r until 1960. 1960, according to this estim a te, enro llm ent will be 18,189. If enrollm ent w as to increase as this the n u m ­ indicates, ber would stand at atiout 29,- 210 by 1970, Mr, Shipp said. This Improbable, though, because housing facili­ ties a r e to m e e t Inadequate th ese estim ates, Mr. Shipp a d d ­ ed. nu m ber trend is has This expected increase in en­ rollm ent caused m a n y p h as es of the adm inistration to begin planning for added facili­ ties and a la rge r staff. The D ea n of Women's staff has been w orking closely with the a d m in ­ istration in planning additional housing. The staff is expecting a t le a st 5,(XX) women students by 1960. In line with this planning, a w o m e n 's dorm itory to house 270 students is under construction in th e Tri-Dorm a re a behind C a ro ­ users Dormitory. Another w om ­ e n ’s dormitory, to house 776. is in the planning stage, Mr, F. C. McConnell, Director of Auxi­ liary and Service Activities, said. Two dormitories a r e planned to house 525 men students, one a t the Gregory Gym site an d one on San Jacinto Street acro ss from the University Tea House. In April, 1954, the Board of Regents aw arded contracts to­ taling $1,061,642 for construction of a new' English classroom and office building. Construction has sta rte d on this building which will tx- located on the South Mall between the Main Building and the Music Building. The Board of Regents, m e et­ ing in Galveston on April 9 and IO approve d a list of con struc­ tion for the near future a t the M ain University. On this priori­ ty list a r e air conditioning of the Main Building and Hogg Au­ ditorium con­ struction of an ROTO building, and construction of an a r t class­ room building, listed in o r d e r of priority. simultaneously, A list of building priorities has been recom m ended by die F ac- ui.y Building Committee. These r t r om m endations m u st be a p ­ proved by the Board of Presents To the E d ito r: to those HIU Hall residents a re no dif­ in living units. This lies. ferent scholastically most organized is w here trouble the limelight, the in is An athlete and because of is m ore this he open to ju d g m e n t thaM the av e rag e man. If he represe nts an institu­ tion he is responsible to its m e m ­ to bers and c l itic i/e Athletes m u st adhere to s tr ic te r m oral and ac a d e m ic a in code r o rder suggest is not the=-e above- willing s ta n d a r d codes sta y out of in te r­ collegiate competition. the typical student to sta y above censure, that, a m a n who to they hold the right live by than the University. This a r g u m e n t is based on the assum ption th at our athletic te a m s I hope represent, that o ur te a m s will never becom e so sepn r a te d from the ca m p us to the extent the students con­ sider them b argain entertainm ent. that —A LBERT YR! A RT To the E d ito r ; In the Scholastic I n a n i t y Coun­ cil report in The Daily Texan on May 12, 1954, report* of scholastic dishonesty in the athlete-tutor pro­ gram w ere mentioned. I am an athlete, and am in position to know that some of the statem en ts a r e true. I also know that such things exist as sorority fra te rn ity and files, g r a d e rs helping fraternity brothers, buying of exa m s from tutors os- in sibly the Hill Hall. It seem s that the qu es­ tion is m uch more basic than thaL There is some factor in our society that has that. that taught people is condoned by so­ sort of thing ciety a s a whole It m a y be our training in high school, or it m a y even go back to our homes. What it is, I do not know. If you can find the answ er, you will solve one of the basic problem s of our ed uca­ tional system. to I believe that the tutor pro gra m is a necessity because the athlete has to spend an av e ra g e of three hours a d a y working out when h*» could be studying. What m a k es him begin to use the tutor dishon­ estly is r e la te d to the b a s i c prob- lem discussed above, I do not be­ found the an s w e r will be lieve solely In Hill Hall, the Athletic Council, o r any other single o r ­ ganization. Therefore, I would like to ask the Council to consider m a k ­ that ing a pubic .statement effect so Iioys of Hill Hall the would not a p p e a r to have such a reputation. Though not undeserved, this reputation should not apply to them alone, These boys a r e not perfect, but neither is anyone else If the boys knew that the Council investiga­ was c a r ry in g on tion with it w as m erely a sm all p a r t of the basic problem you a re trying to solve, they would not develop the strong feeling that has been aroused la te ­ ly. They feel that you are stirring up an tag onism against them from sheer jealousy. With this feeling, relations cannot, possibly improve. the hope that it v\i 11 be one step in the im ­ provem ent of relations and the d is­ solving of prejudices between Hill Hall and the rest of the cam pus. — F R E D R IC M. SAUNDERS I a m w riting the spirit that this this in To the E ditor: In view of .several articles r e ­ cently published in the Texan con­ cerning the findings of the Scho­ lastic Integrity Council, I feel that it is my duty' as a form er m e m b e r of the ac'-used to present before the student lindy an opinion from the oth er side of the fence. in and dishonesty. F irs t of all, it seem s to me that F ra nklin Spears and his student political friends a r e m aking sev­ eral serious accusations that a r e based on h e a r s a y and an a t te m p t to cover up their own violations; f a c t * . My in­ but least of all on terp retatio n of their “ rec o m m en ­ d ation s” boils down to three dis­ tinct ac cusations: (I.) They a r e accusing D X. Bible, a m an that has been elected to the Football Hall of F a m e as one of the g r e a te st c h a r a c t e r builders of all tim e and a m a n that is considered one of the most outstanding persons the history of the Southwest, of gross negligance (2.) T hey a r e pulling the well known and now obsolete trick of point the accusing finger a t th** ath letes the most d is h o n o r group on as the ca m pus, Of course the fac t that they could got more publicity raise a bigger “ stink” by and choosing the “ old stand-bys” of criticism doesn’t have anything to do with it I ’m sure, and i3.) T hey a t e flatly accusing the University they were ni< e athletes, whom enough to also consider students, of being completely dishonest and of violating every principle of scholastic integrity. the records a le t’s check the that little. Mr. Spears s tys students in say should have a w hat is happening to their Blank­ In the first p i n e et T ax money I would to ask Mr. S pears just whom he m eans when he uses the te rm “ stu dents” ? Ii is my opin­ ion that his sam ple w as not very this representative. w rite r 's experience th at v ery well most pleased with the present B lanket Tax setup. Not only a r e they al­ lowed to see every football gam e, basketball gam e, baseball swim- ming. and track event-, but also m a n y civic functions. And all for the p rice of $16.50. Ju s t how many It has been find to students Now like a r e i f i n n . © L lme Stars in Our -30- Copy Graduation Is Like Dying■ Dots, Snatches Show Life ^ dissatisfied nam e, Mr. Spears? custom ers can you in a Miss D u rrenburge r, another of Spear s “ scholastic integrity m e m ­ b e rs," recent that states interviewed survey in which she tutors, th a t nine out of ten said that, they had plagiarized work for athletes. I have two questions to ask Miss D urrenburger, (I.) Did you ask them if they had done the if so sa m e for non-athletes, and why w a s n 't that answ e r published, (2.) How m a n y of your interview­ ed student tutors a r e now on the approved tutor list? If you will a n ­ these questions, Miss D ur­ sw er r enburger, m aybe the w h o le truth can be placed before the .student body. The next issue, I believe, is the f a c t that the Athletic Council does not screen its tutors enough, con­ cerning qualifications and honesty. The an s w e r to this question evi­ dently is the fact, th at processing Is the Student supposedly doric by E m ploy m ent B ureau and Dean Ja c k Holland A list of those a p ­ proved being p resented to Coach Kd Kelly. May I again ask Mr. Spears why he docs not readjust his rights to the responsible p a r ty and why the Ath­ letic Council should he blamed for vs hat to be a negligence elsew here? thereafter, s e e m s one .so that In conclusion m ay I say sincere­ ly that the athletes whom a r e stu­ dents the sa m e as anyone else, wish to do anything but fight the student body. Our sole aim is to place before the .students the real and unbiased facts their judg m ent and action will be on m e rits r a th e r than dem erits. We do not c o n c lu d e that our scholastic is spotless, but. w'e do p r o g ra m conclude th a t neither is any other organization on If there is a real desire for a clean­ up on scholastic crim inals, why not m a ke it am ong 12.(XX) students instead of 200. Tile athletes a re willing investigation th e students desire. Are your back­ ers, Mr. Spears? this cam pus. to have any like before As a closing suggestion to whom it m a y concern, I would to rec o m m end that the dirty c h a r a c ­ in your own back y ard be te rs cleaned accusing flatly someone else of being dishonest, In A merica th a t is a serious mis­ take, and if you’re looking for a group that will not stand up for its rights, y ou’ve sure picked a lose a. - M A R V I N LEATH To the E ditor; As a person who will be a stu­ the G ra d u a te School of in dent the U niversity this fall and one who h as had some experience with the subject, to w rite to you concerning your a r ­ ticles in the April 29 and 30, 1951, issues of The Daily Texan, with referen c e to the National Student Association. I a m prom pted h o r a y e a r we activated the N a­ tional Student Association on the c a m p u s of Wake F ore st College its benefits negligible. and found At it the next student election w as voted to w ithdraw from the organization, and since that time no mention of the organization has been m a d e here. th a t It a p p e a rs from reading the text. of the co m m ittee report in the Tex­ the co m m ittee has met an with the sa m e problem s which we uncovered. In all that column of small print they have not heen able to present even one concrete a c ­ com plishm ent or p ro g ra m which would benefit the students of the University. They hav e alluded to the values of the association only in te rm s as we have found to be the only possible tim e we had course During the this cam pus, the organization on the only benefit that w as ever noticed w as that of sending a few students on a nice free trip to the national convention. the most vague It w as generally concluded that the organization did not m erit the expense in curred t6 m aintain it on the cam pus. In fact, the edi­ t o r of our student new spaper even had difficulty in defining the o r­ ganization and w hat it attem p ted to accom plish; a ta>k which you hav e very' noticeably and quite wisely avoided take several the University With reference to the sta te m ent th a t is a school which should be a leader. I quite heartily agree. However, this lead­ forms. ership can I sincerely hope that the Univer­ sity m a y dem o n strate le ader­ ship not by being one of the ju m p on the bandwagon of every would- be organization which extends its hand but ra th e r be one to scrutinize the issue*-, select those worthy of the University's support and leave the chaff for the winds. its TAYLOR ll. SANFORD, Wake F orest, N. C. POGO By -IO ANN DICKERSON <30> H a n k ’s. J B —old an d new'. C7. The Tower. Clarence. B arton's, C lark field and the oth e r a r e n a s of athletic endeavor. Old P r e s s Building. And Dallas and Corpus. Hank's is first now because that’s where this “ thirty” was horn. I f s a place to settle down In the pink and purple glow and like rem em ber. Graduating is dying—your whole life passes before you. Hank’s because of the chicken fried steak, the d e­ bauches, the m em ories . . . fre sh m a n on Mina Siepel 'stopped a scared, green the ca m p u s one Ju ly day in 1950 and m ad e her prom ise she would come down th a t night to work on the Texan. The fre shm a n came, and stayed. Slayed until there w ere no more Texans. Stayed until the Texan had become hers and until she had slipped to see others take it. it and she had from I w as sc ared because it w as a world a p a r t, an adult w orld I w as afra id would not accept me. But it w a s n ’t a m a tte r of ac ce pta nce, I found out. I shall ev e r be con­ vinced th a t patience is the main virtue patience and h a rd work in the tim e patience consumes. So learn 'he head schedule, and is learn w here one until you do, frosted so that you w on’t be ob­ vious in your ignorance. And a fte r they tell you once how to edit a story, cut the wire, or type a staff sheet, don't forget how And don't the hulking, a w e ­ run off when inspiring night editor s c re a m s at you arid shouts vile words. Just w alk your calmly, fears, and gut up and come back the next night. And you come back to face them again Charlie Lewis, Clan Brewer. Murdoch D arsey , Gene Dow, Claude Mounce. aw a y hide So set an empty glass on your com e along with and head m e . . . . . To . with late one night, the old building with the crum bling plaster w here we placed our bets and I w-on 45 Coke* on the 1951 World Series the bumbling hats flying through win­ dows. w here two sm a ll children pressed their noses the pane and s ta re d as a g a in s t you wrote , . . with the blue-doored R a n g e r office w here J a m ie Dee and a new m agazine d r e a m w ere born . . . of the broken-down couch of a T housand Sighs w here E a g e r and I m u rd e re d even pidgin F r e n c h and Spanish . . . with the m y s te r i­ ous never-never land of the sports office . with the fire-trap old m o rg u e w here cuts w ere neve r found . . . and upstairs, with the offices of the great white saviors, the professors of journalism , whose c a p a c ity for and actual generosity, understanding, and affection for the staff m e m b e rs of the Texan could never be expressed . . . . . . . I to the faced Down the b a s e m e n t w here Ronnie Dugger placed a sm all bronze key in my hands and from that m om ent I w as a d edicated soul , the b asem e n t with the Coke-ringed copy-desk w here New- bn and journalistic b ap tism a l of fire, and c a m e through if with no visible sc ars those scissors h a d n 't been chained to J e a n would not have rem ained u n sc a th ­ ed. H ave you forgiven m e yet?) . . . Ixoken-out tran so m s that se rv ­ ed well as baskets for Halford s and R u s s ’ unending basketball g a m e . . . little Bobby the desk, (except . . O ver to Miz Gee s desk, w het* a solution for any problem an d a for a n y trouble soothing word could he found a s well a s . Jones and Sims involved in their to u rn am en ts of H earts and P ino­ chle . . . the two AP m ach ines and the bac k office J e r r y Wilson . . . a c ro ss the rail to the soc desk and the neatly starched and sm il­ ing Betty Segal and the first th u m b ­ nail tea-cup . . . in for our for Itself, an And then there were no more bats. In th«*ir stead, an elevator that thinks iron chute copy, a new stained-mahogany desk which eagerly accepted the lazy cig a r­ ette and Its first burning scar, a new H-deak that was in cram p ­ ed quarters because you still rem em ber the old H orsesh oe that held an orange and white cake saying “Good bye Old J B .” Pilch began again to w ork up ladder, clim bing until so m e­ the d ay he could reach for the top, but he could only clim b and at last tr y to reach. D ea r Ptlch, we w anted you here to re a c h a g a in . . . We all w ere to begin again, with a new building, a “ n e w ” T ex­ an. and the sa m e old d r e a m s of the impossible. We w an te d the the result of d r e a m , but we w anted m ore the intangible physical effort. The d r e a m s w ere laid aside until a stronger will and a more practical im agination would come along And the n a m e s w e r e n 't im p o rt­ ant, w hether it w as Rafshoon, Han­ cock. J. H. Dean, or Dale P ilsner . . . or even T hyra Mac when the bylines b ecam e an ostentatious display . . . Liz climbing the chick­ en wire to talk to the contracto rs and old B Hall fell . - - and the roof caved in with “ T arzan s Se­ cret F u r y ” . . . Is a number, C7. In that pink and purple glow- world of jour own design, there Is a jukebox and on that music- maker It doesn't particularly matter what song Is plaved when you punch lie back and that button, just feel it sweep Into you . . . We heard it when ,se w ere all to gether and it b ec am e ours . . . tile shy-looking young m a n who could m ake me just by writing or saying laugh one w ord—"free -u n d s” . the quiet young lad who understood because he knew so m a n y of the sa m e things . . . and the youngest little Zip. who shared of us all, countless gutters with me straight-standing . . . , . . . . and C7 rem inds m e of P ease P a r k and the m ost magnificent recon­ ciliation p a r ty ev e r held . . . old friends once friends w ere old again and the bitterness w as for­ gotten . . E a g e r and I forgave each other again the . night w as d a r k again in P ease the rein c arnation of P a r k w here Prevv left us rolling in the gras* and a ga in st the picnic table hold­ ing our sides with aching laugh­ te r . . . even though it w as su p ­ posed . and everyw here we went, Ed H a m ­ m e r fa r and M organ w e r e n ’t: a w a y . . . a nine-part, fugue for to Round-Up w as die Ballad of C h arly Joslin . . across Seventh Street, no m a tte r w hat kind of locomotion you had . . P eas e P a r k again to devise . r e m a rk a b le young m an and who could quote C haucer in old CT and G leason’s . English other m usic I h ea rd for the first tim e late one night . . . the next best . to be a wake the . . . . You sit h ere trying to r e m e m ­ b e r all these things and the rest, and It begins to hit you. All the things you’ve done wrong, recently and in all those Aears past. The things you’ve heen proud o f add u p to little more than nothing and you’re hitter because after four years, this place owes nothing to you. Nothing because y o u ’ve seen that no m a tte r how you feel and have felt, no m a tte r w hat you've tried to believe the p a p e r goes on and com es out, the Iittle J^tTple come their own hopes and along with they push upward. d r e a m s and Push upw ard and outw ard . E v e ry y e a r there s a new crop of them, w anting and experiencing, learn­ ing and accom plishing, and then you leave, and they leave, and the cycle is unbreakable. You fee! all wrong, dirty, sloppy, dishonored, and old—old with the tiredness only the young ca n feel. You can see how it w as. you c m see how you thought it w as, you can see how you w an te d it, and you can sc** how it should have been. tested Running s m a ck un a g a in s t the tr u ­ tried and ism s. claim ing them a s yo ur own and feeling the power of the world, as youth ever must. truths and I t s all yours now—Jiiu m ie, ( arb Jim Templin, Carol, J. Meda, Ruth Prouse, Verne, and Milma, and you others of the new era. You haven’t known us, a n d you w ill he th** ones to create the n ew Texan. You h a v e n ’t known the b ats and the broken-down couch, o r Miz Gee s treks to the old P r e s s build­ ing. o r Bascom, o r Mr. Newton, or Granville P ric e; you c a n ’t ap-* his prename w hat you h a z e m agnificent new building and the effort that m ade it yours. in F o rg e t about the has-beens and o u r d ea th -rattle m utterin g s and g e ’ on with your w ork of putting out the g rea test college new spaper in the United States. I could go on forever with th* the snatches of w h at dots and used to be Because I think they know w hat I feel without having to put it here, I have left unsaid a g r e a t deal - a b o u t th a t y e a r of being m a n ag in g editor, about An­ nie Arthur, Mr. Hays and tile gang. T uesdays and T hursdays, classes. Dallas seen from the top of a ferris wheel, P a d r e , profess sots, elections, and the thousand* of oth e r m e m o ries feat I have, enough for now and e v e r . . . N The da® ' -Texan T h e D a lly T exan «tudent n ew spap er o f T h e U n iv ersity o f T ex a s, Is in Austin d ally ex cep t sa tu rd a y . Monday and noUday periods p ublished oy T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s , mc. New* co n trib u tio n s wilt he a ccep ted by (2-2473) or s t th# ed ito ria l o ffices, JB 103, or th e n ew s lab oratory, J B 102. In q u iries con cern ­ in g d eliv ery should o s m ade 'n JB 5 and a d v ertisin g , J B 111 (2-2476' telep h o n e O p in ion s of th e le x a n are not n ecessa rily those o f tn« a d m in istra tio n or other U n iversity o ffic ia ls Entered as secon d -c.ass m a tter O ctober Id. 1SW:1 at th* P o st O fflc t at A u stin . T e x a s under th e Act o f March S, 1870. ASHUR IA I l l) PUES!* MI KE ME BV ICE T h e A ssociated '-‘res* I* exciuxlveay e n t ic e d to the use tor rep u b lica tio n of all n ew s d isp a tch es cred ited to It or not o th e rw ise cred *ed In th is n ew s­ paper, and to*, i (terns or sp o n ta n eo u s o rix in published herein. R ig h ts of p u b lica tio n of all other m s tar herein a lso «eserved R ep resen ted for N ational A d vertisin g by N atio n a l A d vertisin g S erv ice, in c .. UU Madison Ave N e w York. N.Y, C h leaxo — B oston — Dos A n g eles — San F ra n cisco C ollege P u b lish ers R epresentavive A s so ciated t'o U ec a te P re ss Ail A m arieaa P a eem a k et KF MRT! \ HT BSCB I PT IOX BATHS 'M inim um Subscription — Thre e Months) D elivered In A u stin ............................ .............................................................. g .75 m onth M al.ed In A ustin ...............................................................................................JI.OO m onth Mailed o u t o f tow n ................................ ...........................................J .75 m onth PERMANENT STAFF Editor-in-chief ............................................................. BOB KENNY (30) ............................................................... BOB HILBURN .Managing Editor ............................................................. J i m C a r k E ditorial Assistant E ditorial R e sea rch Assistant ........................................ E d g a r Watkins ......................................................................... Shirley Strum News Editor D ay E ditors ............................ Carolyn Culhert, P a t Dilworth, T om m y Thompson, E d g a r W atkins Joe L. Schott, J. C. Goulden Night E d i t o r s .................... N orris Ijocffler <30i. M u rra y F o rsv a li (30', Jo Ann Dicker-on <30', Jim K eahey, Ruth P en d erg rass, Thom H an sard A m usem ents E ditor ......................................................... Ja< k W alker (30) Book Editor Luke L. P atrenelia E x ch a n g e Editor ................................................................... Prichard Busby in tr a m u r a ls C o - o r d m a t o r ....................................................... Nick Johnson Society E ditor .................................................................. Helen Cox (30) Sports Editor ..................................................................... S am Blair <30) Wire Editor .................................................................................. AU Berwick Picture Editor .............................................................................. Phyl Green ................... ST AFT FOR THIS ISSUE D ay E ditor ......................................................................... I. C. GDI LD UN Night E ditor .................................................................... BOB KENNY (St) Assistant Night Editor .....................................lo Ann D irk mum (JO) Assistant Day Editor ............................................................... Jim Templin C o p y r e a d e r s .................. N orris Locffler (30), M u rra y F orsvali (30) J i m G ilbert (30), R uth Pendergrass! Sh ii !< v Night Sport* Editor ......................................................... Sam Bl ................................................................ ................. Joe Sander* A ssistant Night A m usem ents Editor .......................................... J a c k Walker J), Night Wire Editor ......................................................... Ike Newman (30) A ssistant ........ .............................................................................. dfria m iii cr Night Society E ditor .................................................. Miliicem Huff <30) A s s i s t a n t s ................................ Helen Cox (30), Gwyn McCullough (30 _____________________________________________Betty# Raw land (30) i j f f By Walt Kelly VV *Ak£* J T M S * \ OHMANf UNTIL J > T ’# WHAT HR GIT POZ \ #glN* A M “ HI* JAW- A Pe*Pf*MlNT*mjAT0MA TAL* NO&Oy JO N ** OOT GUMM I P UP «CMWt<3QNB RNP THE \WA# " i l l enter the M iss A m erica pageant in Atlantic City, N. J . , in tion supervisor, said. September. Texas has never had a M iss A m erica crown winner. Texas contest scheduled Summer Activities Cost Students S2 The Sum m er Texan and tickets to three D epartm ent of D ram a plays, four concerts, and 22 mov ies can nil he bought this ye a r by sum- nun s, hool students for only $2 Anyone who has time and in­ clination to see all these events and read The Texan can save about S9 on the investment. A Sum m er A ctu Hies Ticket costs SI and can be bought at Speech Building IOT The Sum m er Texan m ay he pur­ chased for SI at tin- tim e of reg is I ration. C n i v e r s i t y G r a d u a t e s U n iv e rsity of Texas Plates bv in Bluebonnet Blue Wedgwood w ill be a permanent rem inder of Texas Days. On Sale },\- Students Assn Union Building. Judging in this selection is divid­ ed into four parts personality and poise, appearance in a date dress, talent, and bathing suit appeal. the Miss in Other contestants judging were Austin p relim in ary H arriet L a w y e r Ironwood, M ich .; B e d y e D eRese. Port A rth u r: C a r­ S a R ita olyn G rum bles J o y r e Ohelgoner. H a llettsville Anne Gov ne. K ilg o re: C arolyn Out- t lav\. Houston: Sm ith, B a vtown. Austin; E tta Je a n and Janzen Portrait Hung in Commons The cost of the pot In n ! placed in the Commons of Miss Anna Jan- /on late director of the Commons, has been com pletely covered bv lonafions announced M rs. E v a ’D r ­ aff, m anager. in current a ttraction of the Param ount Theater. *n *Tuly. The w inner in t o r t ; Robert W a g n e r, left, plays the part of Val, • cd Ja m e s Mason plays yhe traitorous Black Knight of King A rthur s Round Taoie. IN S E A R C H O F A D V E N T U R E are two of the principals Prince V aliant,' in Fo rt $;r ‘Beat the Devil’ Forget About the Plot; Listen to the Jokes Bv ll WK L . P A T K E N L I . I V Texan Amusements Stuff ot p o r t l y R o b e r t M o t l e y ’ s b u l b o u s p ro file . So d o e s M o r l e y . T h e ,|lslrUn on his p u c k e r e d ()j- lo ok f a c e the Devil th e D e v i l . . B eat into a .sq u e lch e s m c tinniest shaggv dog story ever ,, ... told li f e l e s s , h a i r l e s s pup. This flea's delight of a screenplay him “ It s execution d a y ” is classic heads off on more tangents than pantomime. trigonom etry a disconnected hile’ w h e n a n A r a b i a n o f f i c i a l in f o r m s lee- , , Forget about the plot. Atter five minutes of this screw ball classic at the Queen, you w ill anyw ay. When it rare|\ slavs on course, it concerns some doings in Italy over some uranium deposits in Africa international evil- eves light up p etei D i n e sporting a erew ­ cut and gaudy double-breasted vest, plays screenw riter Trum an Capote to the hilt. Throughout the introduced as “ M r. movie he E a ch tim e his soft-boiled Horror. like a pinball m a­ chine “ How m any tim es do I have to tell von im name is O 'H a ra iv W hat makes- this celluloid romp is its tun­ H um phrey Bogart never really hilarious entertainment to the raucous doings, al- ny lines and the w hack y caries- (hough his is an adequate perform- ance As his wife with a roving eve su ltry Gina Lollobngida ad­ vertises her natural endowments in an a ttra ctive package. As a discontented w ife and chron Je n n ife r rises ic Sunday, May Ii. I954_ THE DAILY TEXAN P«g« S Concert to Premiere Work for Two Pianos The final F a c u lty Concert Series percussion, wall assist the two of the y e a r w ill feature M iss Anna 1 pianists. Jack so n and M rs. Lois Banke, in- M iss Jackson received her bach- structors in piano, playing the Aus- e lor’s and m aster’s degrees from tin prem iere of “ Sonata for Tw o Texas State College for Women Pianos and Percussion” at 4:30 and did advanced work at the U n iv e rsity of Indiana, where she p.m. Sunday in R ecital H a ll. H a rv e y Biskin, pr ncipal per- was a teaching fellow. La ter, she eussionist of the San Antonio Sym- studied for two years with Jam es phonv Orchestra and instructor of Frish in in N e w York. She has also --------------- ----------- studied w ith D alles Frantz, pro­ fessor of m usic here at the Uni­ versity. Three UT Musicians Get Study Grants M rs. Banke, who studied piano for sev e ra l y e a rs w ith M r. Frantz, is a graduate of the College of Fin e Arts. H e r m aster s degree Dr. R ich a rd H. Hoppin, assist- w as the first advanced degree in ant professor of musicology, who applied music aw arded by that col- received his doctor of philosophy lege. As a student, M rs. Banke degree from Harv ard Univ ersity i won aw ards for m usicianship three last year, has been granted a Ful- years in succession, bright Scholarship for postdoctor- a1 study in Belgium . ’ ★ Ju n e Stokes, who received her m aster of music degree from the U n ive rsity in 1953. is now study­ ing piano in Vienna on a Fulbnght Scholarship. Busy Radio House Gets No Break * Robert Collins, who got his mas- the U n iv e rsity final exams, House i* scheduled to keep ter of music degree here in 1953, the a irw a ys cram m ed w ith music has received a Fulbright Scholar- an(j program s next week. ship to study a y e a r in England. W hile most of takes a break E lfa n o r pgg(. ^ M u jlc for | M e lle C laviol,, who got his mas- * « « » ' H a ll’, organ, w ill tee of music degree Horn the Uni- sl,,rt ,h,> P ™ * ™ " " a t 6 p.m. Sun- ve rs,tv rn 1952. is now al the U n i - ^ V o ver K N O W on the "O rg a n P ro g ram ^ O ther Sunday versus- of Houston as a cello in- offerings include “ H ere Is M usic, s 1 1 ______________ over K N O W at 6:30 p rn. The pro­ 2 Students Win Roles In ‘The Moon Is Blue’ Two U n iversity students have in Austin C ivic Theater's roles summ er production of “ The Moon Is Blue B arb ara Tuck will play the lead­ ing rolp of Pattie O L e a l and Claude A Allen w ill play David Slater gram features well-known classics played by outstanding orchestras and artists. “ Ju s t Listening Thanks” w ill serenade late studiers at l l p rn. Sunday over K N O W , “ M eet the P ro f' w ill be present­ l l 05 p m Monday over ed at K T B C . Ar l l 20 the serenade of the w eek w ill be heard over K T B C from a U T frate rn ity house. I’he price of the portrait, which Hires created by its perform ers was painted ( iulhrio Sm ith of Fo rt Worth, w as approxi- Jo n es squeezes ir a te ly $430 It w as purchased with i e very drop of hum or out of the Ignored contributions from dents' Association, in one and scene, she concludes, “ They re des­ faculty members, ployes, on display on perate characters. Not one of them c e n d s . is now ll the Commons looked at m y legs the south w all of cafeteria cm- by a quartet of villa in s Ex-Stu- plum role in the m ovie liar, the The cam eram an m akes good use Miss Jan/on w as associated with the u n ive rsity for 29 years as as- Reservations Accepted so* late professor of home cc on- _ o m its and direetoi of the Com- For Pain t Your W a g o n mons She died in 1951 . . . v . , Production dates a ie set for Radio House Complete". Series Ju n e 9-11 and Ju n e 16-19. “ D irty Work at the Crossroads,” the current AC T offering, w ill con tinue ances begin at 8:15 p.m. on F r i ­ day and Saturd ay nights. Radio House has recently com ­ pleted a series of four show s which appeared on the Texas School of included Ju n e 5. Perform - the A ir. “ Reading Is A dventure,” “ M usic Is Y o u rs.” “ On Y o u r M ark ” and “ It's All in the F a m ily .” through series The m ovie draw s most of its humor from the asinine dialogue w ritten Into the screenplay. Pie-; tine the first mate running down ; Mualc Aw ard Av anabia the deck of the ship tinkling a i Mu Ph i Epsilon, national music triangle, yelling. “ It is m y belief j sorority, is aw arding a $50 scho- j that we are sinking.” O r M orley urging a chauth ! driving a snail- paced piece of automobile antique Ute program to Joseph Blanken- Fund A w ard for die *9j 4 ly to “ Press on' Press o n !” larship to m usic students. Those m ajor, has received interested m ay submit a ten-mm-, D ellenger M em orial ‘ ship. faculty mem ber. mester. Ja m e s I ’ W eir. senior d ram a the Donna Scholarship fall se- W e ir R ece ive* D ra m s Ava. rd The 'k ^ ' ' “ P a in t Y o ur W agon” by Alan Le rn e r and Fre d e ric k Ix>we, w ill he presented for the first tim e in San Antonio by the Little T h e atn on M a y 19-29. ' This m usical tells tin story ot the beginning of a gold mining camp, its growth to a boom town, and is its subsequent decline. Hist) a play of dialects, having Ir is h , Scotch, Cockney, Swedish, Spanish, and Fren ch people who sing and speak in ii. It Reservations arc being o-*ep;ed now by m ail. Money for t i c k e t s m ay be sent to .506 Villi*;* Street, San Antonio. Call Connie at 2-2473 F O R Q U IC K A C T IO N W IT H DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS C o ach in g For Sale Special Services C O A C H IN G in Experienced Spanish teacher. Neat U n iversity. PH 2-8652 T R E N C H translation Phone S 2296 Mile Dupuis '2506 Rio IN S T R !'* H O N , H O r S E T R A I L E R and wdmming roon adequate!' At J7fto Phone £-587.3 •mn Park furnished Good cpndi-B f'niverstty Student Trailer ' KID DIE W A S H IN G S wanted. F a s t service. Spec­ ia lty ! Sh irts, Dresses. 2-4862. licensed nursery* kindergarten. 914 V.’. 2 2 S. Ph. 7-606L K O R R A L Grande. C O A C H IN G instructor RN G L IS H Ex per lensed .1 preparation E N G L IS H AU lite ra tu re course* F.x- f na I 1 '.anim a­ tions bv experienced teacher w ith M A dourer CT. Chon* 2-1383 f,ii Typing I N P H R IE N C I D I I' st themes, these* Mrs T u llo s Phone 6 1876 N E A ! and A *curate typin g (E le c t r ic ) Tele. 7-2100, M rs Ford K L F .C T R IC T Y P I N G Ed itin g lf desired C a ll 7 8693 N P F r h : 53.3546 .C R I M rs typsn* Cradle: M tr H unter 6-1297 M U T I N G — term papers, typing — reports, thesi.*- dissertations, >3-5477. H Y P IN G —od I — term pap mg Ca V- — tnemes i :x p f :r I e n c e d t y p i n g p.rlefs. I he*!* T y p ist s Papers. Bureau — *-8712. Fix Pl-;H IE N c f :d T Y P IN G U n iv ersity neighborhood. AU kinds. Ph. 6-5789. UH E S E S , dissertations, book*. Filed ro ­ Petm ecky. . ty p e w rite r M rs mano 53-2212 T Y P IN G D is s e rta tio n s , themes, etc Call 5 6866 Lo is Addy. T Y P IN G reason w rite r 8-15* I* 8-1834 ibJe, e.e, ’ rom atlc tvpe S K I ’ OF’ T A IL S coat sud w h ite 'e s t ' or C n iversity Extension 64" •ii7.0 36 CHEAP r ats Kenner 7-5898 - NI radio , I VS NA 11< 'N VU S Vi short wave w ith Cornell f ilt e r and <*er,al w ire O rig in al price 3 0176. Sdi to. * W i l l s* broadcast fo r 825 Od t a Room For Rent L A R G E RI-.DROOM for g r l n p rivate home near- .tide surroundings On bus S p e e d " a ' Phone 2 '>617 I'n lv e rs it) Quiet desir line 3**>l AIR CONDITION El* ROOMS Convenient between capital and versitv 'k in Congress Pbon* 8-2755 t ni- G I L L E S P I F H O I SF M e n s t u d e n t * o n e b <»e|c c a m p .s new furnished room* t r a c t i v e h o u se *«. I Wichita "V 'H le n ' me**.* a ’ t e l a v i v , o n P h o n e J 5 7*:’ • . .-. 2411 NT! E C FIS and 2422 San Antonio I ’oi tcr service Tw o P h o n e 6-H-4'6 Rooms for men m in k s ca m p u s C O u * D R E S S M A K IN G - Alterations. 608 W est 25th PR. 6-3360. S E W I N G — Specialized — College and C hildrens. C a ll Hazel. Ph . 8-7160. W e s te rn W e a r G O O D S made J O VV KO Y B O O T S B E L T S L E A T H E R to order. W e ste rn W e ar Hat* Moccasins Boot* and Sh o e Repairs C A P I T A L S A D D L E R Y . 1614 (K W l rf* Apartment For Rent F U R N IS H E D for 4 or 5 girls, larga to o story. 4 bedrooms. 2; » baths, cool secluded, M ils paid. 3125 00 a m o n t h N e a r bus inc Pn. 5-1622 duplex apartm ent AY V IC A R I.F It \ I p a rtia lly furnished for couple. O ne im at 606 F.ast Phone 2-1943 bedroom 2"Y <45 j ar stftd rn- n'h ■Southeast si id 'southeast v P L O C K F R O M C A M P I' for men. porch and s eeping porch and int* hon Convenient to engineering and ' t uties paid. Phone Chemistrv Bldg* M E N A t t r a c t iv e so uth east room 8 5588 telephone a d jo in in g hath E v e ry d a y m aid s e n x.ng « o r double t t nnersitv drag $15 A- $17 5< h e Also g a r a g e room* " e l l furnished blo* k Call 8 7277 .429 A IR C O N D IT IO N E D R O O M S F o r Sum m er R o o t s w ith or "11 bout board B ru nette Phone Student House 39**8 VV white T O W N A N I) C O U N T R Y A P T S . Y r Conditioned W a d a b le ro om apartm ents all f u r n i t u r e and d r - e r lune 1st One and two bed­ tile baths oak tri e kitchen Bendix \ ; * o taking reservations for n arvo* bo* s rn Sept. 301 Fj»$t 34th. i s r p e ' s P h o n e 8 148) r irnii v P riva te P IN G 2 K a page, P h v,e< n d a ; s 0-4717 after bath, ct ii ng fan st? N',ci spa ce P L N G "’n 2-:*6*t or 2-4 TV! - any Kind — neat work „ , t er>rtr'» orhoo* I M TS A P P L Y N O A e » mr *- ho" if- J'- 4ge • av ?>nd Br .dg«-- V - <•- nd • -.ne* an r*" ha q . ’ F r e t $15 30 Rocky Mountain R a i n b o w T r o u t Served with Baked Potato and Large G reen S a l a d $150 I HARRIS' WAYSIDE INN fine C h a r c o a le d S T E A K S O n e block west of Lam ar on Barton Springs R oad Closed M O N D A Y S Never basnat* until your welch it in poor condition. Come jnto o u t store end get e per od e cheek end dean- ng of your clock or welch. A ihort stay w *h us end ye ,r wetch runt et good et new. • Expansion Bands • • Straps • wATCMMAKCPlQ CW THC OO AC AT A ’ 'A Cfi''.A JEFF CHANDLER RHONDA FIEMING M A M IE V an DOREN P L U S ! Daffy and Elmer in HENION FOK I.KAVIN*. usVA. V O W SHOW F I R S T k n o w I IO IY M • & JAMES STFWART v ; JUNE ALLYSON GLENN ^ - - M i l l e r * STORY r*.it V* ’ lf.! Or****, o. O', til War, * nacit uitcttt lit*’. sitttttsM itll nut Ka t l u l t i It* 1 tat a u la* it) cTk -<5o— I I H S T S H O U 2 I M I Alae IA00 Sheiks WINTERS CAPITOL STARTS TODAY! DOORS OPEN 11:30 tiger on s Whits % rf***' - - ^ U ^ i ^ w c h h i c o u x c M A R L O N B R A N D O J I A N PETERS PLUS! 2nd HIT f i H P rn “ iS 'Gwftsr.vt J S o m b r e r o I ut: MO**! A11A N f, MORI I '•TM GASSMAN d« (ARO 'gysmassas Scholtz Garten 1607 San Ja c in to Wa larva a delicious lunch every day from It * rn. to 8 30 p. rn. Sunday's Special < ii I f*. j •’ 4 it i r - 'P F . R IF ’N C E D tv plat. Hr livsera lio n i 715. L o rrain e port*. »cbml< these* Ph It »OD experienced so rk done Ph. 2-6.359 ten * t All Kind* P IN G W A N T FI D . he.sls C a ll 6 1551 Pa7t cu la rly No. Fried Chicken (3 large pieces W a n te d Rid ars English Peas & Beets Mashed Potatoes C om bination Salad Dessert & C o ffe e 65 G a rlic Bread na* s C a ll H n .vaid .taco Lost and Found A B A K H ( l l I J. F O R M E N R O O M S A V A IL .V H I.! F O R S U M M E ! AIR-CON D IT IO N FID '612 rtiiadalu[>e I’ honu 6-56- M A L E S U M M E R S T U D E N T S Select now, d*'*irabie room* in spar tour private home q u ie t *-n< e. also i l k of shad lust off -.■'Mr Uverv corn en terrace gardei ie drag V *.r ng dlstan** ' m s iv I R I A N G I . F t i COT R J* Room* for *umn er *»>** on ion XL,"' * ng N E A R I T H I M I M R ( D V D IT l( ) \ I D No. 2 Shr imp C ocktail Kansas C it y Fillet M ignon Steak Room and Boa'd I 2700 Mu-ce. Every Setu rd d y end Sunday I p.m. til closing Eve ry M o n d a y thru Friday I p.m. fil 5 IO p.m. til closing You are Welcome A ir C onditioned MW Tower Bowlingside 409 S. C o u g h s . Ph 7-91J W r a p p e d in Bacon Com bination Salad French Fried Potatoes G a rlic Bread Dessert & C o ffe e I OO Our Carien Vi/ill Be Open Sunday lf Weather Permits. Dine Under the Stars W a n te d t n t " Provide pa runt (.os* S J I D K S T S ans and kit. h- lw it hU*uk£ fro*n campus. I U RooiHJk i nj* v\ est I m n Phone BwTT Board ■np*on, 6 1598 M r* For Rent ; A K A G I KO *)M for 2 boys or roupla. ■ wots A shower A'sn room* w ith p riv a ’ e Pie r Phono 6-4270. d* ty apt a is " tv* Rel\ t- IT ID N F P A P 'un** let. P o rte r service ’H O FIN H o i s t : gre»« Phone 8-7097 * P.M ? P A S O > ............. S4u. 29151-. Red R ive r MI7* I Red Rive* 2 bedrooms ...55*1, ; 9.32 s,»i vntonto. rear No. I A 2 .54 2418 San Vnionlo 6 room house ...$75. ace and phone t . H W u I.am* - t i l Nuece*. 6*>1.6 V . a ' l l S e e * ’ " , Oo M°fe on a vacation pleasure-planned for YOU by. . . Continental Trailways Y O U do this .. Check the vacation you’d moat Uke to enjoy. FiU out the coupon below and mail entire advertisement to Continental Trailways. I— I COLORADO AND IHP— & L J CANADIAN ROCKIES FLORIDA > '* EZJ LAND CRUISE > E U PACIFIC NORTHWEST □ COLORADO ROCKIES AND BLACK HILLS Instead of tours listed above please send mo information and cost of a vacation to ... WE LL handle at no antra cost to you V* Nom ACCOMMODATIONS * A U TRANSPORTATION * INTERESTING SIGHTSEEING TRIM & FREI loan a l Hollywood Comal Continental Trailways 1001 Congress Phono 8-4655 Sand ais M l 4Mail* mm Ilia vscattoa IV* cfcackaS ahs** I'4 asay st to# HIW, bsswtiM ty WwrtrstsO Rlss w -RisnnaS tov. RU s NAMA. ADO R ISS c m ______________ j t a t l Use Texan Classified Ads each area. All schools can be rated 3, or all can be rated 0. There will be no com petitive 1-2-3 ranking. Three of the a r e a s cover the athletic te a m itself. On these areas, over 60 judge.: will vote. They in­ clude athletic directors, deans of secretaries, students, alumni sports w riters, SWC officials, the Executive S ecre tary of the SWC, varsity te a m representatives, stu­ dent body presidents, school p a ­ per editors, and head yell lead­ ers. The other eight a r e a s cover con­ duct. of the student body, and a r e rated only by the 28 m e m b e rs of the SWC .Sportsmanship Com m ittee (athletic student j representatives, presidents, editors, and yell lead- j ers of ca' h school'. OF T H E S E EK,HT, with p re-gam e conduct, g am e courtesy, and post-gam e conduct. three deal ! two with j three with I action w as team s, w as October 23. a d ay when mon' j SWC te a m s will be playing out-of- conference selected for the second annual S p o rtsm an ­ ship Day. Texas plays Rice at Houston that day. No official taken about out-of-town g am e card sec­ tions, but interested schools w ere asked to contact other schools who the card sections. regularly use I NI VERSIFY w as repre- Hcnted by J e r r y Wilson, student president: Bob Hilburn, Texan m anag ing editor; Delano Womack varsity te am rep rese n tativ e; and Joe Brown, head yell leader. TH E U nder a rotating cha irm an sh ip plan, A rkansas U niversity will be host for the C om m ittee's meeting next school year. The post of exe­ cutive rem a ins with AAM, originator of the Committee. s e c r e ta ry University Graduates U niversity of T exas Plates by :n Bluebonnet Blue Wedgwood will he a p erm a nen t rem in d er of T exas Days. On Sale Ex- Students Assn , Union Building. ypmrmrs CLEANED and REPAIRED All Makes Standard and Portable Rental Service Adder* — Calculators Electric Typewriters Ph. 6-3525 — D e l i v e r y 2 2 } 4 G u a d a l u p e — 1 0 0 8 C o n g r a i * Sunday, May 16, 1954 THC DAILY TEXAN Page 6' * ’iJ e x a n (B o o h S h e l f * Kruger's Society 'Spectacle Is Subtle Conflict of Morals Sportsmanship Trophy Rating System New A revised method for selecting the SWC trophy sportsm anship winner and the setting of October 23 as Sportsmanship D ay high­ lighted a meeting of the SWC Sportsmanship Com mittee in Waco Saturday. In addition, plans were discessed for each school to take ca rd sec­ tions to out-of-town games. Instead of picking first, se c o n d .1 third place schools and in order of dem onstrated sportsmanship, in the future judges will use a b re a k ­ down rating system . ELE V E N AREAS, described in the sportsm anship code, will be rafed .separately. Each school will be given a score of 3 'excellent), 'poor! in 2 (good', I i f a i n , or 0 lAJhat Cjoei on ^Jrere raspy-voiced TH E SPECTACLE. By Rayne K n i­ f e r . The MaomUlian Company, N ew York. I l l pp: $3. N o one w ept when Mr. Booker, la rg e -h e ad e d , finag­ le r in finance and de a le r in lawful u su ry , d isapeared, la ter to be found m u r d e r e d , suffocated in his office safe. No one w as surp rised a t the d e a r th of clues an d the abu n d a n ce of motives. The fact of his death w a s accepted and p artially forgot­ te n by Mr. Booker’s f o rm e r associ­ a te s. But Scotland Y a r d r e m e m ­ bere d, and justice ground on. the g e a r s of “ The S p ectac le” is not, how­ ev er, a study in detection. I t is, r a th e r , a subtle of ch a r a c te r , an analysis of thp ef­ fect of conscience on will—in this case, the only im perfection in an otherw ise perfect m u rd er. exploration In his book Mr. K ru g e r presents, through the words of a naive, senti­ m e n tal young w riter, the sto ry of G r a n t Hoathly, a m a n of intelli­ gence, integrity, and c h a r m who sta n d s trial for m u rd e r. He p r e ­ se n ts as well “ the spectacle of so­ ciety bringing its flouters to h e e l,” w ith the challenging conflict be­ the m orality of one m an tw een a n d com placent social safeguards brilliantly portrayed. Though the minor c h a r a c t e r s Mrs. Booker, Nadia, and M aureen —a r e too sketchily d raw n and flat­ ly presented, the author shows ex­ ceptional ability the explora­ tion of the two m a jo r charac ters. T he n a r r a to r is a perfect c h a r a c ­ te r foil to Hoathly’s independence and rebellion against the inhibition of society. in The a r t of this novel its characterization and .suspense rath- is in SUNDAY 8:30 -Cars leave L utheran .Student Center for picnic. 12:30 Senior dinner, G race Hall. 2-5—Library open 3 - B aha'i World Faith study class, home of Mrs. .James E Morris, 1204 Nueces. 4 Austin Presbyter ian Seminary to d e d i c a t e new c h a p e l organ, KXI West Twenty-seventh Street 4:30—-Lots Ranke and Anna J a c k ­ son in two-piano faculty concert, Recital Hall. 5:30 -WSF to h ea r the Rev. Jai k Lewis, University P resbyterian Church. 6 Seymour Fogel to speak at Sun­ day Supper, Hillel Foundation. 6 Disciples Fellowship Student banquet, University Christian Church. 6 30 Dr. J . R. Roach to speak. Wesley Foundation MONDAY 1-5 Distribution of .service certi­ ficates for Student G overnment, Texas Union 206. I - “ Heaven Is a P lac e,” KTBC- TV. Union. 4-5- All-Campus Advisors, Texas 7- Dr. W. lf. R. Shaw to give “ The I>cmonstration L ec tu re,” Batts Hall 101. 7:30 Demolays, Scottish Rite Temple. 8 D ram a 670 to present scenes from plays, D ra m a Building 103 TU ESD AY 3:30— F acu lty Wives Social Club, 3207 Grandview. 7 Mu Phi Epsilon, Music Recital 7 : 3 0 - “ Texas in Review,” KTBC- Hall. TV. 7 3 0 —Co-Wed Club, Texas Union WEDNESDAY 12 University Area Kiwanis Club, Georgian Tea Room. I -Newcomers Club to elect of fi­ r e r s, Driskill Hotel. 5 30- Ladies In term ediate Club lake picnic, Phi G a m m a I>eJta house. THURSDAY 7 30 482nd Q u arte rm a ste r Com­ pany, Austin Arm y Reserve Armory, 4601 F airv ie w Drive. FRIDAY 8 IS—"D irty Work at. the Cross­ roads,” ACT Playhouse. HAT! It DAY 5 Alpha Phi O mega m eets at T ex­ .J A HUDSON as Union to go on picnic. end and c r than in the solution of its cen­ tral problem of where freedom responsibility should if in­ should begin. The solution, deed is unsatisfac­ tory, and a conclusion only ends the novel and does not illuminate the problem. is one, there R a yne K ru g e r’s knowledge of the intricacies of crim inal law and English court procedure, his fac­ ulty for characterization, and his story-telling “ The S p ectacle” a couple of hours of en tertaining reading. ability m a ke - G E N E V I E V E L. HUDSON ' S y l v i a Tells of Young Girl Growing Up in British Guiana THE LIFE AND DEATH OF SYL­ VIA. By Edgar MlttelhoUer. The John Day Company, New York. 316 pp: *4. sub-cliques and E d g a r Mittelholser’s "T he Life and Death of Sylvia” is alm o st a good novel. His understanding of the “ tangled m a ss of cliques and sub­ clans and c l a n s ” of the British G uiana so­ cial s tra ta and his ability to add life and color to his excellent des­ cription of this setting partly com ­ pensate for his unconvincing a n a ­ lysis of Sylvia Russell's c h a r a c te r and deterioration. A basic gift. for a novelist is the ability to m ake his c h a r a c t e r s in­ their motivations teresting plausible With his m a jo r c h a r a c ­ in te r Mr. Mittelholser succeeds and only half of this—Sylvia is inter­ esting. The c h a r a c t e r delin ea tio n of several of the minor roles, not­ is excellent. The ably the father, novel suffers g re a tly by the fath­ e r ’s death about midway through the book The story of Sylvia is tile story of the grad u a l death of a sensi­ tive, idealistic spirit. Sylvia is the child of a mixed m a rria g e. Her father is English; her mother is half Negro, half Guiana, a poly­ glot city w h ere primitive emo- i tions a r e covered only by the thin­ nest v eneer of civilization. 'rhis is the p ortrait of a young I girl growing up in pre-war Guiana, the child of an am o ra l and cynical ' but am using and ( harm ing father and a whining slattern mother. With the death of her father, to w hom she w as much attached, Sylvia, in her attem pt to find love first turns and security, to her timid, naive to a then brother, P ortuguese t»oy. and then to an in­ telligent, sympathetic artist. Each of two these go to war, last goA; to sea. E ach m an could have saved her; sinks hut with fa r th e r and into apathy and defeatism . leave h e r —the first farther their loss, she the H er physical death is anti-cli- is significant only as her conclusion to m a tic and the spiritual death logical Mr. Mittelholser has a fine v e r ­ bal facility, and he has endowed ! his novel with a bleak, autum nal its m elan­ to beauty appropriate choly them e SELL YOUR TEXTBOOKS NOW C o -O p Book Buying Policy: I. Buy at 50 per cent of publisher's list and sell af 60 per cent of that price, I m i j i m j otll,J ( h e a m o u n t 2. Buy unsaleable books at market list £ las J IU p e r c e n t f o r p a c k i n g a n d f r e i g h t . / f a/versJh u co-op w . 8 lo—“ Dirty Work a t the Cross­ roads,” ACT Playhouse FRIDAY (M ay 2X) 8 to “ Dirty Work at the Cross­ ro a d s.” ACT Playhouse SATURDAY (May 29) 9 - ROTC graduation, Hogg Audi­ torium. l l- - R a b b i I ^ v i A. Clan to speak at B a cc ala u reate Services, Hogg Auditorium. 1 :30 College of Engineering g ra d ­ uation, Batts Auditorium. 2 3b College of Business Adminis­ tration graduation. Main lounge, Texas Union 3 College of Arts and Sciences graduation. Hogg Auditorium. 3 G r a d u a t e School Music. Recital Hall graduation, 3 30 College of Education gradu­ ation. Batts Auditorium. 4 School of A r c h it e c tu r e g r a d u a ­ tion, A r c h i t e c t u r e Building 112. 4 College of Fine Arts graduation, Music Recital Hall. 5 College of P h a r m a c y g r a d u a ­ tion, Home Economics Building 105. .> School of Law' graduation, Townes Hall Auditorium 7:30 Academic procession at Littlefield Fountain. forms 8 C om m encem ent exercises, T e r ­ ra c e of Main Building 8 IS “ Dirty Work at the Cross­ roads ’ ACT Playhouse. Nelson N e w Secretary O f UT Faculty Council Eugene W Nelson, associate pro­ re­ the law. w a s se c re ta ry of fessor of b u s i n e s s cently clefted F aculty Council He will replace F. L. Cox. who to the has been nam ed assistant Chancellor of the University. Be­ fore leaving office, Mr. Cox pre­ sented the tenth annual report of the Council covering the past y e a r s work. McQueen Gets Peabody Award Robert McQueen g rad u a te stu­ psychology, been the P eabody Fund F el­ the College of E d uca­ dent in aw arded lowship in tion for the 1954-55 school year. has R e m a rq u e Writes New Novel “ A T im e to Love and a Tim e to Die," by E rich Maria Rem arqu e, is the Ju n e selection of the Book- of-the-Month Club, Author R e m a r ­ que w rote “ All Quiet on the West­ ern F r o n t” and “ Arch of T ri­ u m p h .” EXPRESS BUS SERVICE To Houston ’ :20 a.m. — «;30 pm I <*esl H um ,, a . rn * " Noms.! • t I t m * " — 7 ** • m r j * p m — EM PM P 2 : « M pm _ Kerrville Bus Co. Inc.' Friendly Sorti e, ' ia(h , J n* r M i s s POETRY C O M PET IT IO N C A S H PRIZES D e a d l i n e IS J a n e IS M F o r I n f o r m a t i o n w r i t e POETRY EDITOR THE H E P T A G O N CLUB BKI F i f t h A r e n u e New f o r k 1«. hi. T. r a n h e r e s o l d . W A N T E D CASH POK Portable Typewriters B E R K M A N S 22)4 O uadalupa S P E E D W A Y R A D IO & T E L E V ISIO N SALES * SERVICE Ph. 7 -3 8 4 6 JsaS lo a t h af G regory U rsa THE BEST M E X IC A N FO O D and the M OST COURTEOUS SERVICE k a t EL M A T A M O R O S 504 East Avo. Phono 7-7023 Graduating Seniors lf you do not plan to be in Austin in September when the I954 Cactus comes off the press, please come by J. B. I07 before June I to check your address and pay the mailing charges to have the book sent to you. Bring Your Auditor's Receipt Showing Payment of Fee M A I L I N G C H A R G E S 50c in Texas 75c O u t of State O ffice Hours 8-1; 2-5 Ellie Luckett, former sweetheart of the U niversity, will marry Dr. John P. Schneider, graduate of the U niversity and Tulane Medical School, next fall. Miss Luckett has received many beauty aw ards at the U niversity. She has been Most Beautiful Fresh­ man. one of the Ten Most Beauti­ ful, Queen of the Texas R elays, Queen of the Military Ball, Cotton Queen, and Duchess to the San Antonio Fiesta de San Jacinto. She is a m em ber of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and Orange Jack­ ets. and has been president of the U niversity "Y .” Miss Luckett will receive her bachelor of science degree from the University in Au­ gust. Dr. Schneider served his intern­ ship at Philadelphia General Hos­ pital and Is now' a fellowship from the Mayo Foundation at Rochester. Minn. He is a m em ber of Delta Kappa Epsilon, Alpha Epsilon Del­ ta, Phi Beta Kappa, Nu Sigma Nu, Alpha Omega Alpha, and Omicron Delta Kappa. SHIRLEY STRUM Short-nap Advocate Takes Over Texan. ELLIE LUCKETT S e y m o u r F og el, a r t i s t a n d m u r a l ­ ist w ill s p e a k at th e S u n d a y s u p ­ p e r fo ru m a t H U M F o u n d a tio n at 6 p rn. R e s e r v a t i o n s b r m a d e t h r o u g h th e fo un da tion by callin g 6-2695, P l a t e s a r e 60 c e n ts e a c h u n B r i l l m e e t T h e new I ppe re las*. Advisor*. th is the S e m e s t e r M o n d ay a t 4 p rn. in th e I n t e r n a t i o n a l R oo m of the S tu d en t ■Union ti m e last fo r T he H o m e E c o n o m ic s Club will m e e t M on day a t 5 p rn. in the patio of the H om e E c o n o m i e s Building. Dr. J R R oach vs ill sp e a k on the F a r E a s t S u n d a y e v e n in g at 6 30 at W esley Foundation. T he Senior Acting ( Ina*., D r a m a 670, will p re s e n t a g ro u p of sce n e s for a ll d r a m a s t u d e n ts M on day at 6 p m . in D r a m a Building 103. A R e a u t \ S e m i n a r and \ n E n c h a n t i n g H o l i d a y at E l i z a b e t h \ r d c n s m a g ica l THE DAILY TEXAN Bob Kenny Signs 'Thirty BOB KENNY Staff Photo by Wiley off the p r e s s e s of tile edition a n ­ nouncing th e M c C a r t h y m e etin g , som e p a r t i c u l a r l y fiery F ir in g Line m a t e r i a l, a few- ro c k s picked up at S u nd ay a f t e r n o o n picnics, an d a l e t te r h e a d fro m D aily T e x a n s t a ­ tionery. H e’ll the night of ApDl 22, 1953, w h e n the then-Tex- an ed ito r sat h im dow n in the e d i­ feet to r 's c h a i r a n d p ro p p ed his on to s t a r t a tr a d itio n for in itiatin g new editors- elect. the e d i t o r ’s d esk. r e m e m b e r He ll r e m e m b e r P a d r e Island an d San Antonio a n d H a m ilto n ’s Pool an d most of all Littlefield F o u n tain into w hich h e ’d sailed nine ti m e s a s " c o n g r a t u l a t i o n s " for v a rio u s honors r e m e m b e r g iv in g an em ­ H e'll b a r r a s s e d run-down on h is v e r y - A m e r i c a n a n c e s t r y a s a p re fa c e to his ta lk at the M c C a r t h y p ro test r a lly a n d w a lk in g into th e sum ptu­ ous offn es of Hugh R oy C ullen a s a final c h a p t e r in t h a t s to ry . S a t u r d a y night. Boh K e n n y put o u t his last T ex an , H e w a s night e d ito r, ig noring o r t r y in g to ignore the u n g ra c io u s c o m m e n t s of h is c h a t t e r i n g c o n c e rn i n g his night e d itin g abilities staff W ork stopped w he n th e y b ro u g h t to h i m —a rad io -p h o n o g ra p h c o m b i n a ­ t h e i r good-bye gift for once the s t a ff w'as in s m a ll tion. And s i le n t. petticoat By SHIRLEY STRUM T h e d e s k is c l u t te r e d w ith h e a d ­ line s h e e ts , a s s o r te d n e w s m a g a ­ zines, a blue m e ta llic a s h t r a y , a ski-boot m a t c h ho ld er, an d s o m e ­ t i m e s e v e n a now -d ila p id a te d t e a ­ pot. T he collection of books on the side by th e window' r a n g e s from P o g o to “ G o v e r n m e n t of th e Soviet U n io n " to “ Irish P l a y s . ” G l a r i n g dow n like a fero cio u s g u a r d i a n a n ­ is a frow ning p a in te d v is a g e gel a b o v e w hich a r e b right re d le tte r s Is W a tc h ­ r e a d i n g “ Big B r o th e r ing Y o u ." T he c h a i r b ehin d the is fa c in g th e t y p e w r i t e r an d d e sk ; th e w ind ow s. B u t it all s e e m s c u rio u sly e m p ty u n le s s h e 's sitting th e re , his fin ger t y p e ­ tip s p e r c h e d w r i t e r g a z in g keys. * h is th o u g h tfu lly out the w indow . lightly on e y e s the an d m o r e But w h e n K enny m o v e d into the e d i t o r ’s c h a ir , he m o v e d into the art. fee c o n tr o v e rs y , the McCarth.v p ro te s t, the r e c e n t ly A thletic Council tu to rin g d e b a te And it d id n 't ta k e long b e fo re his e d it o r i a ls b ro ug ht violent r e a c t io n s from all sides J ta k e n u p with c o m m i t t e e m ee tin g s , c o n fe re n c e s, edito rials. But at night he found tim e to stick a ro u n d until 2 a . rn to w r i t e h e a d lin e s 0 per w eek, Mi*s Arden »ugj;e*t* a minimum of two week*, a n d pre/erahb three, to obtain f ul l benefit* from voile *i»v Only a limited number rd a puli* a - turn* ma* lie ie < rpted, so aet quickly. All reservations arc trad e through the f lual»eth A n ia a S a la a .M I Fifth Avenue, New ^ ork 22 A • he* k i n t one week in adv ain r must am* n m * v o u r r e s e r v a t i o n f 'r id e r /Ae loper* I Mon n j ''■shit 1 m m , A n t r e * i n f J a m m u S t a i n * ( I,a n c * i n S la m * a n ti f n z n n n Sunday, M a y TS, 1 9 S4 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N f a g s 8 Summer Classes Sal lie Nash to Leave Job To Begin June 8 As 'VExecutive Director Did Somebody G oof? Nope, Just A Name Change Registration Forms Are Available N ow Summer session final announce­ ments are still available free of charge at the Registrar’s office, the University GoOp, and Hem­ phill's Book Stores. Students who are entering the summer session and have not filed advance registration forms can get m aterial a n d tim e assignm ents June 4 through June 7 at the Regis­ trar’s office. Photostatic copies of previous records are required for registration. Tuition fee for Texas residents is $15 per term. It is $50 per term for non-resident students. Not more than fourteen sem ester hours will be counted for credit in the whole summer session. First term registration is June 7 with classes beginning June 8, Second term registration is July 19, and classes will extend from July 20 through August 30. Clas­ p s will be one and one-half hours long, Monday through Friday. VALLE (30) By B IL !JE TO Mrs. Sallie Roller Nash has made campus life just a little nicer for hundreds of students through her position as executive director of this ] the YM-YWCA. She position at the end of the semes­ ter. leaves Rom and reared in Virginia. Mrs Nash attended Mary Wash­ ington College in Fredericksburg. She spent a year as a Danforth graduate fellow at Cornell and three years at. Yale Divinity School re- in New Haven, where ceived a bachelor of divinity de­ gree in 1948 before corning to the I 'niversity. -die M a y Be ‘Best in US* New Girls' Dorm in “ The , the finest dormitory 1 United States” may house ">0 to HOO women students at tim University in the future said F. C. McConnell, director of auxiliary and service I activities “ Very tentative plans,” said Mr. j McConnell, are that the structure may he as high as five stories and I contain four elevators. It will have all the comforts After three years In Austin she met her husband Rill through the Y. Rill, a plan TI pre-med student, I completes his studies this spring and will enter Southwestern Medi­ cal School in Dallas in the fall. ’’When Rill completes his train­ ing, we plan to enter missionary service together,” she said. Mrs. Nash has o b s e r v e two in connection | types of students with her work the student who grow* into maturity and the stu­ dent who lacks mental, spiritual, or social maturity. She explains the three understandings which characterize a mature person are the concepts of truth In terms of the power which com es into his life a fair evaluation of himself with his strengths and weaknesses, I and a complete acceptance of c v - 1 ery human being together with an appreciation of every living being. SOME STUDENTS DO NOT at tam this maturity, she feels, be­ cause they stop after searching (he first, or second understanding and fail to move on to the third. "Life itself and what its used for is the test of what you really believe The commitments and con­ victions of religious faith are the discipline* upon which the life of a man in a group enables that man to live and act creatively,” she said. WHILE MRS. NASH To Mrs. Nash, It Is important that people grow by realizing in every choice the possibility of a creative decision. Truth and the power of truth can p e r m u t e our lives and decisions, she explained. is aware I of the importance of international understanding she feels, "its better to work than fear national and in- fear : ternational affairs because ! seems to breed distrust. Deep principals of nomocracy and Chris- tianity are universally accessable to be afraid but we can't afford j or act in self-protecting manner. To ' do this denies the faith that s in I you,” Upon Mrs. N ash’s resignation, ' Miss Rosalie Oakes from Virginia, a member of the national staff of student YWCA southern in region (thirteen states) will assume Mrs. Nash’s position. the McConnell ( id s Fill brig lit Jam es V. McConnell, graduate student in psychology, has receiv­ ed a Fulbright Scholarship for a year's study and research at the University of Oslo, Norway, be­ ginning July I, 1951, Have you been wondering where in to the dickens you’re going take your final that is listed in the exam schedule for Pearce Hall? Most students, finding that they had an exam there, either had no idea where to go or thought they were to go to the Pearce Co-op for girls. Actually, the exam will be in the old l a w Building on the south­ east end of the campus, behind Mezes Hall. It has been renamed Pearce Hall. Lost & Found Sale Nets Union S56.28 Proceeds from the lost-and-found auction amounted to $56.28, said Mrs. Bruce Taylor, Union account­ ing clerk. The money was placed in the Union building fund. Some articles were not sold be­ cause of lark of time. These will be stored during the sum m er and another auction will be held next fall. “ Bidding on clothing and glass frames seemed to be the most com­ petitive,” said Mrs. Taylor, Articles not placed on the auc­ tion list are in the Lost and Found the the Department, Union. There is no charge for re­ taining lost articles, lobby of in Shaw to Address CCTA Monday Dr. W If R. Shaw, associate professor of chemistry, will address the College Classroom Teachers Association on “The Demonstra­ tion-!.erture” Monday at 7 30 p m . in Batts Hall 101. Recently awarded the Scarbor­ ough award for outstanding teach­ ing, Dr Shaw will demonstrate to the group simple devices for arousing student interest in subject matter. The association has put a col­ lection of notebooks about economic value for the faculty on reserve in the Reserve Library. These note­ books contain several volumes of “ Consumer's Union" and books on insurance and income tax. This Is the beginning of a large collection which the CCTA holies to prepare for faculty use. of home, ire lading probably a num ­ ber of comfortable lounges, wash rooms with washers and dryers, and m any facilities#which are un* common if! most dorms. It has been proposed that 50 per rem of the room s have one bath connecting every two rooms and the remaining have one lavatory in each and group bath facilities. The entire project, however, from the blueprint stage up, is tentative, said Mr. McConnell. He will deliver india! plans to the architect in Dallas next week. The architect will then draw up preliminary plans which may be p r e s e n t e d to the Board of Regents for approval at 1heir next meeting May 28 and 29. “ However,” Mr. McConnell add­ ed, “ if the architect cannot finish the drawings in time for the May Regents’ meeting, presentation may have to wait for the following meeting.” Teaching Problem Workshop Offered Eight two g e n e r a l conferences independent workshops and in for graduate leaching problems students wail be offered this sum ­ mer. t/cneral conferences run June 7-25 and August 9-27. Dr. J. G. Umstattd, professor of secondary education, is in charge of both ses­ sions. Students enrolled in any of these courses will he expected to limit their studies to these courses only. Semester-hour credit is optional and is given on the basis of one hour for each week’s work. Registration these courses for will be held during the su m m er session each Monday at 9 a rn. N EED C A S H ? SELL YO UR BOOKS AND SELL THEM ALL EARLY TO HEMPHILLS s in 'f°u I B Kl , S - t - r - e - t - c - h - a - b - l - e J *a u l(le S 8 Helanco Nylon Briefs Offer**/ by H E L A N C A (Swiss type) Nylon Yarns FULL-FASHIONED for solid comfort tnd individually cellophane wrapped, these wonderful WIL-FIT briefs wash and dry in a jiffy. You will enjoy their trim fit and firm support. Get som e today. Sire A for 28 to 56 waist S u e B for 58 to 44 waist $225 (MI I ii III! 709 CONGRESS • Next to the Austin H otel Milliken's Visa Tropical tailored b y Renwood The fabric that “stands up" when you sit down. the original 55% DacrorT-45% worsted blend Visa is b len de d o f enough D acron to retard wrinkling and hold its c r e a s e ... co o le r than any tropical because it’s 2 0 % lighter . . . tougher and longer wearing, thanks to the strength o f D acron ... sheds wrinkles q u ic k ly ... holds trouser crease even in the rain and stays in shape as the fabric is not affected b y moisture. Try one on tom orrow in the fibeine co lo r effects of light blue and tan. *5950 flap pockets may He worn Inside or o u t.. • n wilds Renw ood sui** d e lu sive ly in Austin et Reynolds-Penland 709 CONGRESS i 4r * bl