T H E
S U M M E R ! XAN
VOL. 57
AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1957
Sixteen P ages Today
N O . 4
NCAA Carnival
Open Today
Delaney, O lym pians
Share Spotlight
News in Brief
Nikita Rejects
Inspection Plans
Finnish Tourist
Says It s Useless
H ELSINKI
N ikitta K hrush
ch ev T hursday rejected a s u seless
W estern proposals
for control of
disarm am en t. As for plans to set
up a test aerial inspection area in
the
the Arctic, K hrushchev said
Soviet Union
“ quite
c o m ic a l.”
found
this
K hrushchev, the Soviet C om m u
nist party b oss, m ade the sta te
m ent at a new s conference just
before he and P rem ier B ulganin
wound up a w e e k ’s barnstorm ing
tour of Finland.
#
Fourteen Soldiers Killed
In Army Camp Accident
FT. CAM PBELL, Ky. Uft—An
Arm y truck plunged off a bridge
into a creek in a rem ote section
of
spraw ling m ilitary base
Thursday, killing 14 paratroopers
of the 101st “ P en tronic” Airborne
D ivision. N in e w ere hurt.
this
truck
The 2 12 -ton
overturned
and pinned m ost of the sold iers
beneath
in the shallow w aters
of
the creek.
it
•
Girard To Meet Today
With Top Army Lawyer
CAMP WHITTINGTON, Japan US)
—W illiam S. G irard, Illinois soldier
in a Japanese court,
facing trial
w ill m eet F rid a y with
the U.S.
A rm y's assistan t
judge advocate
general,
flow n to Japan for G i
rard ’s “ p rotection .”
He is Brig. G en. C harles L.
D ecker, one of the A rm y’s top legal
experts.
•
Civil Rights Supporters
Win Two Strength Trials
(ZP)- T h e H ouse
continued to w restle with the civil
rights bill T hursday, with support
ers of the leg isla tio n w inning two
trials of strength.
WASHINGTON
An attem pt to attach a “ right-
to-w ork” am en d m en t to the bill
w a s ruled out of order after a
brisk debate.
The N ational Collegiate track and field spotlight will shine!
on A ustin F riday and Saturday. T he light will be shared by
Irishm an Ron D elaney and his V illanova team m ates, five
Olympic cham pions, and one world record holder.
The giant track and field carnival g ets under w a y F riday
afternoon w ith prelim inary events. Saturday’s final running
-----------— ------------------ —•
4
events begin at 8 p.m.
For complete schedule, see
page 14.
V illanova ranks as an odds-
on favorite
team ch am
the
pionship in this, the b iggest of all
collegiate track and field m eets.
for
O lym pic sta rs and world record
holders w ill be alm ost com m on
place when this prem ier field gets
together.
Ron D elan ey, O lym pic cham pion
and sub-four m inute m iler, w ill be
there, for in stan ce. So w ill Charlie
Jenkins (440), L ee Calhoun (high
hurdles), G reg B ell (broad jum pi, |
Bobby M orrow (IOO and 220 >, and
Al O erter (d isc u s), O lym pic cham
pions all.
To that im p ressive array add the
nam e of Bob G utow ski, world rec
ord pole vaulter; T e x a s’ own Eddie
Southern, O lym pic record - holder
but not an O lym pic cham pion; and
and
Don Bow den,
youngest m em ber of
four-
minute m ile club.
the new est
the
The list could go on and on. but
it would add up to just one thing -
the greatest track and field event
ever held in the South, and perhaps
the g r e a te st co lleg ia te e v en t
in
history.
S everal M issing
the
from
Still, a bit of
flavor w'as
taken aw'ay
this m eet by
NCAA action that kept perennially
strong W est Coast team s from the
affair. It also knocked out Ohio
State's O lym pic cham pion Glenn
D avis and W ashington’s T erry To
bacco.
Four records appear due, and at
least as m any m ore are within
reach of this prem ier field.
The m an gen erally regarded as
the “one m ost likely to su c c e e d ,”
is V illan ova’s D elaney, He is slated
to m ake an all-out assault at the
in the 880 and the
m eet m arks
m ile.
R ecord in D anger
The 880 m ark is one of the four
(See NCAA, page 14>
Texan Rapped 1
sharply
Dr. l-ogan
president of
the U n iversity, in a letter Wed
nesday to -Texan Editor Bint
M im s,
tho
new s stories and editorial a p
pearing
in T uesday's Texan oil
the appropriations bill as con
taining “ sev era l serious errors!
of fact and interpretation.”
criticized
(F u ll text of the P resid en t's
letter is found on page 3.)
D isagreein g
the U niver
that
sity had been “ hoodw inked,” Dr.
Wilson stated : “ It h as reeeivetl
the m ost
treatm ent
favorable
accorded a U n iversity appropri
ation request in m any y e a r s.”
D r. Wilson continued by sayin g
that the basic error iii tile T exan
an alysis w as
iii com paring the
final bill with interm ed iate v er
|»asse-
the Fifty-
propriation bill and
fourth
le g is la t iv e appropriation
for the current biennium .
I
Frantz to Speak
On Oil, Mid-East
Dr. Joe B, Frantz, a sso cia te pro
fessor of history, w ill speak at 8:30
a.m . M onday in English Building
8 on “ The A m erican Oil Industry
and the Middle E a s t.” H is topic
will include a discu ssion of the de
velopm ent of A m erican interest irt
the M iddle E ast and the diplom atic
im plications involved.
lecture
is the eighth of a
series of 20
such p resen tation s
being given this sum m er by facu lty
m em bers of the C ollege of Arts;
and S cien ces. The general su b ject
of the series
is “ E ducation and
Modern World P ro b lem s.”
The
Islanders Go to NY
B y G EO R G E RUNGE
T e xa n S taf f Writer
Islanders.
Arthur G od frey’s Talent Scouts
will feature a U n iversity m usical
group on its M onday program .
The C alypso Islanders w ill ap
pear nationw ide on both radio
and television ov er the CBS net
work. KTEC radio and television
will carry the show at 8:30 p.m .,
Monday.
Jitter N olen, director of T exas
talent
their
Union, w ill act as
scout.
F or
their num ber
they have
chosen to sing “ The Rich M aha
raja of Ma ga d o r,” a
to
which they nave w ritten their own
words.
song
John W hite of Berm uda, an ar
chitecture m ajor, and Bobby Lee,
Bastrop, an ex-petroleum en gi
neering m ajor, started a hillbilly
satire in 1954. T his act led to the
T hey then decided
to expand
and asked Don M yers. D alla s;
B ryan Schuller,
Indianola,
M iss., and Cecil Brooks, Lam
pasas. to join them .
of
White and F ee play the guitar,
M yers p lays the m aracas, Schal
ler the bongo drum , and Brooks
plays a hom e-m ade b a ss m ade of
a tub with strings.
Although
they sing and play,
none of them know how to read
m usic. White
the
basic things. After that, th ey l>e-
gan playin g all around the Uni
v ersity cam pus.
taught
them
This spring they com peted
in
the Southw est C onference Inter
c ollegiate Talent Show at Baylor.
The Island ers w ere nam ed second
place w inner at the show.
They a lso took part in the B ay
lor Inter co lleg ia te Show which
w a s non-com petitive. Tile grout*
h as also appeared at F ort Sam
Houston in San Antonio, and, on
o cca sio n
for
the P etite Club in Austin.
they have played
Jean ette D avis, singer on God
frey s program s, and Frank M ue-
sello. director for one of God
fre y ’s program s, ch ose the group
at the D allas auditions
ea rlier
th is spring.
that
Tw o w eeks before
th ey
w ere selected for the final a u
dition in D alla s during the local
auditions on the cam p us in April.
The group h as received o ffers
from M ercury R ecords for a re
cording contract. A lso they h a v e
been offered an en gagem en t t*
appear in I^as V egas.
H ow ever,
the boys
will get
th ey can sco re on
Scouts.
feel
the J
ii
the T alent
their “ best break”
WARMING UP fo r the National C ollegiate A th le tic Association
Track and Field M e e t are two Oklahoma State (form erly Oklahoma
Aggies) sprinters. The meet, being held fo r the first time in the
South, begins tod a y at M em orial Stadium and will continue through
tom o rrow nioht.
Appointments, Bills Fill
First Assembly Night
B y ROBB RURL AUK
Sum m er A ssem b ly began
the
Season Thursday night by sw earing
in 18 new rep resen tatives, being
divided into five com m ittees, ap
proving 53 presidential appoint
m e n t s , hearin g first readings on
fiv e bills, and choosing two fellow
m em b ers as “ E yes of T e x a s ” copy
right com m itteem en .
Four bills by G raduate A ssem b ly
m an W alter Coole w ere given first
readin gs. They concerned:
• a “ Steer H ere” for nurseries -
Inspection of all w ithin one m ile
by a student com m ittee,
• urging the Co-Op to sell staple
food item s to faculty, students, and
staff,
• fam ily blanket taxes, and
• less dangerous position and
Size for car registration stick ers.
Council Asks Sanction
E d ucation Council again m ade a
bid for official recognition in a bill
g iven first reading. Authored by
E ducation A ssem b lyw om an Billy
Jean Cain, it asks for student gov
ernm ent sanction of the council.
A petition for such consideration
this spring w as voted down
for
lark of inform ation on the council.
that tim e not a sin g le repre
At
sen ta tiv e of the student education
group w as present to “ present its
c a s e .”
In
the
the only “ electio n ” of
night, L aw A ssem b lym an B.
IX
M oore and P h a rm a cy A ssem b ly
m an Tom Brunson w ere elected to
the “ E y es of T e x a s ” Copyright
C om m ittee.
Frank D ou glass w as approved as
C T Ju stice of the Sum m er Stu
dent Court along w ith associate
j u i c e s P earson G rim es, Doyle
P erk in son , N orm a Fink, and Lynn
C ornelius.
Judy Scurry w as approved as
ch airm an of the H um an R elations
C om m ission for ’57-’58. H er co m
m ission handles all cam p us issu es
d ealin g with integration and works
for sm ooth relations in this area.
The appointm ent of Bobby Jacobs
as parliam entarian w as also ap
proved.
And The Sun W ill
Shine Some More
Austin enjoyed another day of
su m m er w eath er T hursday. T em
peratures ranged from a tow of 71
to an afternoon high o f 92.
rile Austin W eainer B ureau at
M unicipal Airport predicted an
oth er day of fair and w arm with
cool nights. The low expected Fri
d a y is 76, with a high of 94.
E ighteen new A ssem b lym en
to
se rv e the sum m er term w ere o ffi
cia lly sworn in. P resid en t H arley
Clark, vice-president Hal Hudspeth,
se cr e ta ry N ancy G oosby, and eight
other m em bers of
the A ssem b ly
are the only “ regular m em b e r s”
here for the first term .
Am ong the eig h teen sworn in are
six A ssem blym en not m entioned as
appointed by Clark
in la st T u es
day's Texan. They are Joe Roady,
arts and scien ces: P at Trim ble and
T om K elly, b u sin ess ad m in istra
tion; Bob Pratt, engineering; D el
bert Shankel, graduate; and Roy
V oges, pharm acy.
Standing com m ittee appointm ents
w ere announced and approved at
the m eeting. C om m ittee chairm en
are M ajorie M enefee, cam pus a f
fairs; Tom Brunson,
state, na
tional, and
international; W alter
Coole,
s t u d e n t w elfare; N eal
Spelce, academ ic a ffairs; and Hal
H udspeth, rules and appropriations.
M enefee, Tom W iley, P a t T rim
ble, Joe Roady, A llen Lingo, and
to
Jack Norwood w ere a ssig n ed
affairs. Brunson, M ary
Sula D aw son, Alan Stinson, F red
te e m e r , and D elbert Shankel are
on
interna
tional. Student W elfare h a s Coole,
Louis Neum ann, Bob D eV ries, Sal
ly K ay M axwell, Bob Pratt, and
R oy V oges.
sta te, national, and
'
•
Also. Spelce, T erry McCall, R ich
ard Parker, C larence Pfluger, and
Pat LaQuey are on the a cad em ic
affairs com m ittee. M em bers of the
rules and appropriations groups are
H udspeth, B illy U pchurch, B. D.
Moore, Tom K elly, Bonnie Vif-
quain, and Ginny Steele.
NSA D e le g a te s Nam ed
Approved as UT represen tatives
to the N ational Student C ongress
at Ann Arbor, M ichigan, August
20-30. are d eleg a tes Robb Burlage,
I H arley Clark, N a n cy Goosby, An-
I thony H enry, T erry McCall, Bud
M im s, and Jody Scurry. A lternates
appointed are M orton M eyerson
and K ay Voetm ann.
Appointed to the Sum m er D isc i
pline C om m ittee a re Shirley Bird,
N ancy G oosby, H al Hudspeth, H en
ry Jacoby, M urray Jordan. D ick
K eahey, Alan Lingo. Ann M organ,
D an Smith, and D a v e Welborn.
John Barnhill and N orm a M at
lock w ere approved a s
student
rep resen ta tives to the C e n t r a l
Round-Up C om m ittee.
‘75’ C om m ittee Listed
Tw enty-five
students w ere an
nounced as m em b ers of the 75th
A nniversary C om m ittee on E xp ec
tations and approved by the Sum
m er A ssem b ly at T hursday nigh t’s
m eetin g.
(S ee ASSEM BLY, P a g e 14)
Friday. June 14. 1957
THE SU M M ER T EXA N
Page 2
Little Man On the Campus
By Biblet
But while admitting that theoretically and ideologically T h e Class o f 1()57:
You WWW TH' KULE* APOUT HAVINS POOP IN TK MOMS?
that a _
Danger of Conformity
at WSU to send CARE p ack ag es to
th e ir disg ru n tled and slightly dis-
peptic neighbors.
WHAT T H E IR C O L L E G E S
N E E D : F iv e of 35 plead for triple-
th re a t backs to d raw alum ni gifts
into the coffers. Six dutifully say
m ore and b e tte r te ach ers a re the
im m ed iate need. The O klahom a U
sp o k esm an claim s h au ghtily
th a t
"W e don’t need any b ack s." Coach
R oyal, sir, is it tru e ?
M oney Leads
Free Speech
r In a recent editorial 'T ree Speech vs. Money,” the
’AUBURN PLAINSMAN, student newspaper at Alabama
Polytechnic Institute, elected to take money.
Commenting on the dismissal of Bud Hutchinson, a
professor without tenure, by the institution without a
hearing on charges of “expression of views not in keeping
with those of the college on the racial issue, a subject
ruled by ‘emotions and tensions,’ ” the paper admitted:
“Theoretically and ideologically Hutchinson is right.”
' TIME magazine reported the removal occurred after
the 36-year-old professor wrote a letter to the PLAINS
MAN “praising the progress of integration in New York
City’s public schools.”
THE PLAINSMAN admitted that in the dismissal, the
fcchool had “placed itself in the position of seemingly
abridging free speech among instructors on the campus.”
It added: “Such action makes excellent propaganda
material for the International Communist Party and also
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People.”
Hutchinson was right, the PLAINSMAN then called for
examination of “the situation as it actually exists.”
I We quote:
1 “Auburn is a state institution and depends on the state
legislature for appropriations to operate . . . the atmos
phere of the state is most unsuitable to an institution
fellowing any inclination toward integration.
“Hutchinson, as a member of the faculty here, repre-
feents the institution, to a great many, in anything he
feays. In a letter to the editor he has shown feelings in
feympathy with integration. Thus, to some citizens of the
fetate, API (Auburn) is also in sympathy with integration.
“Such feeling, on the outside, could be disastrous to
Auburn. Rabid segregationists might write letters to their
fetate senators and representatives to the effect that, ‘We
don’t want to support a school where our sons and daugh
ters are being taught integration.” Even some of the leg-
appropriations might be cut down to nothing. Where
Jslators themselves would take this view. As a result our
Would we be then?”
Ending the editorial with a touch of resignation, the
PLAINSMAN concluded:
“Much as we dislike to admit it, such is the situation
In this state and we’ve got to accept it and live with it
for the time being.”
So after more than a century and a half— in spite of
the toil of free men fighting to foster a tradition of free
thought and free thinking—the Alabama paper has
elected to take money.
I f s comfortable. Secure. Safe. Free speech is not so
pleasant. It may lead to thinking.
We look with understanding—and not with a sense of
rondemnation, but w ith a sense of pity, offering only this
thought:
May the old adage “Money speaks” be true. Else i f s
going to get mighty lonesome in Alabama.
. . . In Passing
In view of Dr. Wilson’s letter to the Texan, we feel that
We should call attention to several points.
Dr. Wilson—we feel— has criticized the appropriations
news story, earned in the Texan June l l , for presenting
an incomplete picture of the University’s appropriation
feituation. In particular, we feel that he has indicated that
the only fair comparison is between the recently passed
appropriations bill and the bill approved by the Fifty-
fourth Legislature for the current year.
This in our opinion is a criticism (and a legitimate one)
of the matter selected and a criticism of news judgment
Jn not presenting a complete picture, rather than a criti
cism of fact as fact.
As a matter of passing interest, the Texan ran fairly
detailed news on the appropriations w hen the bill w as in
final committee, including Administrative reaction and
feome comparison with the current year’s bill on at least
three occasions (May 12, 16, and 17.)
The major criticism, we feel, was in the Texan’s inter
pretation and editorial conclusion resulting from the
news story. In our opinion, these too, are not criticisms
c f fact, but rather of opinion.
We are sincerely appreciative of Dr. Wilson’s detailed
interpretation of our appropriation situation.
- - ■ - -
By ROBB BURLAGE
T e x a n N e w s Editor
Com placency an d com form ity are
to d a y ’s so
tw in d an g ers of
th e
ciety.
These a re th e conclusions of a
su rv ey by This WTeek M agazine
am ong 35 collegiate editors from
W est Point
the U n iv ersity of
W ashington on "W hat th e class of
'57 th in k s,"
in this Sunday’s edi
tion.
to
(I.ast y e a r ’s T exan E d ito r, N ancy
M cM eans, w as one of the 35 polled.
ALso, R oger S herm an of the SMU
cam pus is in the national su rv ey .)
The editors declare th a t " a stu
dent: ap ath y w hich has stifled the
developm ent of new ideas in the
is th e ir g re a te s t
social scien ces"
w orry. "W h at we need is a m o rale
11 w hich would produce d arin g
and im ag in atio n ," one ed ito r de
clares. “ Som e device to sh ak e stu
dent ap ath y about alm ost e v ery
th in g ," an o th er says.
They fe a r th at the youth of today
and society as a whole a re ab an
age-old d re a m of
doning
individualism and self-reliance for
the cozy an d com fortable n ich e."
" th e
With m ore secu rity h as com e less
chance to develop crea tiv e skills,
they say.
A P rin ceto n editor calls
it " a
co n serv atism w hich is not politi
ca l."
th a t
M any re m a rk e d
th e only
opportunity th a t students h av e had
to "b eco m e en th u siastic an d ex
p ress th e ir devotion to A m erican
id e als" w as the trem endous cam
pus following in the U nited S tates
of the bloody student riots in Hun
g a ry th a t
led to the carn a g e of
full O ctober revolution.
find
E ven in politics the class re p re
sen tativ es
them selves m ore
co n serv ativ e and less intense poli
tically th an th e g rad u ates of the
30 s or 40’s. They declare th a t th eir
classm ates a re "optim istic about
the future to a point ap proaching
co m p lacen cy ."
W hat else do the spokesm en say
about J u n e ’s g rad u ates and un d er
classm en alike?
FA V O RITE TO PIC: Sex. Boy-
girl talk is still blooming, as F reu d
predicted. N ext most frequent to
pop up in cam pus bull sessions is
the supposedly conversational taboo
of religion. E very th in g from Billy
G ra h a m ’s evangelism
to B ridev
M u r p h e y ’ s rein carn atio n have
lighted the fires. Also, cam pus reli
gious em phasis weeks sp u r on the
fodder, the editors say.
FU T U R E PI A N S: W hatever they
decide upon, they find youth s ta r t
ing the tre k to .success w ith little
daring or sense of adventure. Men
think ah ead only to m ilitary se rv
ice and s c ra tc h their heads about
"w h a t th e n ? "
FAVORITE PRA NK S: “ C reativ e
skill" was expressed by students a t
W ayne S tate U niversity who re s
ponded
to student gripes about
cafeteria m eals at the U niversity
of M ichigan by having a cam p aig n
>
Firing Line
In
the
th e ir ru sh to send out
s ta te m e n t supporting D r. W ilson's
speech of M ay 14, th e F acu lty Com
m ittee of Counsel on A cadem ic
F r e e d o m
and R esponsibility
couldn’t even tak e th e tim e to h av e /
th a t sta te m e n t re a d before the F a
culty Council, so as to include along
w ith it the n u m b e r of p ro fesso rs
for an d a g a in st it. This d esire to
d em o n strate u n an im ity to th e 50
people to whom th e statem en t w as
sen t assu m es th e re is com plete un
an im ity and the s ta te m e n t will give
the im pression th e re is.
B ut a p p are n tly th ere isn ’t com
plete unanim ity, an d the d eb ate as
to w h eth er o r not the co m m ittee
should sp eak for th e facu lty as a
whole or sim ply for th em selv es is
im m a te ria l, since
the 50 p erso n s
receiving it will ta k e th e s ta te m e n t
to be the sen tim en t of th e facu lty ,
as it w as p re p a re d by a re p re se n
ta tiv e com m ittee of the facu lty .
in
the classroom s.
Is it so wTong for th e re to be
in
differences of opinion am ong
is not w h at
tellig en t m en? This
these intelligent m en tr y to te a c h
us
they
also sp eak of th e m e rits of dis
cussion, which also seem s to have
been lacking in th e M ay 14 m eet
ing.)
m ira g e is th e re sim ply b ecau se it
ought to be.
insisting
(But
like
It
is
The p ro p er action would have
been to h av e su b m itted the s ta te
m ent to a faculty vote an d to have
sent a s ta te m e n t of th e dissenting
opinion along w ith the sta te m e n t
actio n .
approving D r. W ilson’s
E ven if it is only th a t of a m in o r
ity, th e m inority should be h e a rd ;
I doubt th a t any of the 50 are n aiv e
enough to think th e re w as a to tal
th is. T he stu d e n t
a g ree m en t on
body will be w atching to see
if
th e re is an y com m ent as to the
p re p a ra tio n of a dissenting opinion
in M onday’s faculty m eeting. T h ere
a re a ce rta in n u m b er of p ro fesso rs
who d o n 't have th e a ttitu d e "M y
ad m in istratio n , rig h t o r w rong !"
At one point
the co m m itte e ’s
sta te m e n t states, " I t (the goal of
in teg ratio n ) req u ires, fu rth e r, de
cisions on policy m a tte rs , as situ a
tions arise, th at a re g eare d towards*
th e ach iev em en t of this p rim a ry N
g o al." I would like to know w h at
this policy is and w here it is w rit
ten down. And who d eterm in e s this
policy? The anonym ous phone call
e rs? The th re a t of financial p res
su re from the le g is la tu re ? I can
see no "p o lic y "
th a t can be de
pended on. At p re se n t no N egro
boy or g irl can e n te r
into any
cam p u s activ ity w h atev e r w ithout
the th re a t of being w ith d raw n ; the
tim e lost (as in th e B a rb a ra Sm ith
e a se l would be b ad enough, not to
m ention the em otional effect on a
person reje cted in th a t m a n n e r
in teg ratio n only a c a rd b o a rd stage
prop like a larg e, im posing chair
(See F IR IN G L IN E , p ag e 3)
N A N C Y MCMEANS
O pinions expressed in T h e Daily T exan are those of the E ditor
or of the writer of the artnle and not necessarily those of the
U niversity ad ministration.
j
I
T h e] Su
ITexan
The S u m m e r Texan, a stu d en t n ew spap er of T h e U n iv ers ity of T e x a s
fuWished in Austin, T exas, sem i w ee k ly d u rin g th e su m m er on Tuesdav and
riday m ornings. It is not p ub lish ed during holidays. P u b lis h e r is T e x a s St ie
is
d en t P ublications, inc
N ew s con trib ution s w ill be accepted bv t ele p h o n e (GR 2-2473) or at t h e edi
torial office. J. B. 103, or at the new s laboratory, J. B. 102 Inquiries concern
i n g delivery should be made in J. 13. 107 and advertising, J R. I l l (GR 2-2750».
E ntered as second-class m atter October 18, 1943, a t the P o s t O ffice at A ustin.
T e x a s under the Act of March 3, 1879
A SSOCIATED PR ESS WI KE SER VICE
The Associated Press is e x c lu s iv e ly entitled to th e use for repu b lication o f
all news dispatches credited to it or not oth e rw ise credited in th is newspaper,
and
items of sp on tan eou s origin published herein. R ig h ts o f publication
o f all other m atter herein also reserved.
local
Associated C ollegiate Press
AU A merirnn P»eem»ke*
M E M B E R
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PE R M A N EN T ST ALT'
................................................................................................... BU B MIMS
EDITOR
MANAGING EDITOR
........................................................... E D D IE HUGHES
N ews E d ito rs ................................................ Robb B urlage. Benny Goodwin
Sports E d ito r .................................................................
G reg Olds
Society E d ito r .................................................................................... K ay M cK ay
A m usem ents E ditor .................................................................. B radford D aniel
F e a tu re E ditor ........................................................................................ Don B ott^
Ex!ito riaI A ssistants ....................................... E dd C lark. M arjo rie M encfee
P au l
Staff P h o to g rap h er .......................................................
ST A FF FOR THIS ISSU E
............................................................................... B U X CLAYTON
N ight Editor
D esk E ditor ................................................................ CHARLOTTE HANNAH
A ssistan t N ight E ditor .....................
7...................B enny Goodwin
N ight R e p o r t e r ................................................................................ R obb B u rla g e
C o p y read ers ..................................... P a t P a rk e r, R ay A utrey. N. B . Eads-,
G eorge R unge, B a rb a ra Rues* Ii
N ight Sports E d ito r ............................................................................. G rog Olds
A ssistan t N ight Sports E d ito r .....................
B en Siegal
Night A m usem ents E d ito r ........................................................B rad fo rd I daniel
N ight Society E d i t o r ......................................................................... Kit* M cKay
(KUS*
. ■
-
IU Hope
friday, June 14, 1957 THE SUMMER TEXAN
P a g e t
W ilson Hits Texan Appropriation Stories
The following is the com plete
letter given by Dr.
text of a
lo g a n Wilson to the Texan Editor
following appearance of Texan
news
stories and an editorial
June ll on the appropriations bill.
I must correct several serious
interpretation
e r ro rs of fact and
which ap p e a re d
in news stories
and editorials in the Ju n e ll issue
of H ie S um m er Texan. These
stories and editorials concern the
ap prop riation to the Main U niver
sity m ade by the Fifty-fifth Leg
islature.
not
The University h as
been
your
editorial
hoodwinked,
as
it has received
ch arg e d . Instead,
Hie m ost favorable trea tm e n t a c
corded a U niversity appropriation
req uest in m an y years.
to
to
for
recom m end
The appropriations m a d e by the
Fifty-fifth Legislature m a k e it pos
the University Admini
sible
stration
the
Board of Regents a substantial in
the
c rea se for every m e m b e r of
full-time teaching faculty. Appreci
able merit in c re ases also are be
ing recom m ended. The gross sal
a r y increases recom m ended will.
if approved by the Board, consti
tute the largest increase in salary
dollars ever received by the Uni
increases
versity
a r e the ones we discussed with the
H ouse and Senate appropriations
co m m ittees. In good faith the Leg
islature m ade
to
increases. Your
im plem ent
editorial com m ent that “ . . . leg
islative good
tr a n s
lated into dollars and c e n ts ” is in
information
com plete e rro r. Full
on
teaching s a la ry increases will
be released at the time of the ap
proval of the budget by the Board
of Regents on June 28
fatuity. These
appropriations
faith w asn 't
these
I
in
com paring
The basic e rro r in the Texan
the
analysis w as
final bill with
in term ed iate ver-
sions as passed by one house or
the other. Until final passage o f '
tile bill, there is no actual appio-
priation.
lose what
(You cannot
you do not have.) The only f a i r 1
com parison is between the final ap
propriation bill and the Fifty-fourth
the j
Legislative appropriation
cu rren t biennium. Tile
ap
the Legislature was
proved by
$14,330,826, or 97.5 per cent of our
request. This is the best we have
fared
ten y e a rs and
represents an increase in operating I
level over 1956-1957 of 25.5 per ,
cent, or $2,915,558.
for
level
in a t
least
local funds to support the entire
operation of the University, includ
ing teaching salaries, includes both
the i n c r e a s e . in tuition and other
local funds. It can be
reasoned
from this analysis that the increase
in tuition did not relieve the Gen
eral Revenue but m ade possible
the reduction of the call on the 1
Available Fund. This in turn will
m ake possible a million
dollar
building which otherw ise could not
have been constructed during each
year of the coming biennium. Actu
ally, it is not possible to tra c e in
come
items of ex
penditures. Tuition as w'ell as Gen
eral Revenue supports
total
level of operations of the U niver
sity.
to p a rtic u la r
the
local
three sources:
U niversity operations approved
financed
by the Legislature a r e
funds, !
from
the Available Fund, and G eneral I
Revenue. The Legislature ap pro
priated $1,300,000 of the Available
Fund for the current y ear. To sup
port the m a teria lly increased level
for the first y e a r of the next bien
nium, tile Legislature ap p ro p riated
the Available
only $700,000 of
Fund. Moreover, the appropriation
of General Revenue w'as in creased
32 p er cent, from
to
$10,349,946. Our current budget is
supported 23 p er cent from local
funds. 16 p e r cent from the Avail
able Fund, and 61 per cent from
the G en eral Revenue; correspond
ing p ercentages for next y e a r will
be 26. 5, and 69. It should he noted
that our budget for next y e a r will
be 17 per cent more than for this
l e g i s l a
year, and also
the
ture provided
the G eneral
Revenue an
increased proportion
of this higher total.
that
from
$7,836,048
The
increase of 3 per cent
in
by
passed
Mention was m ade that the a p
propriation bill
the
the Available Fund.
House freed
In reality, there was little differ
ence in this respect between the
House and Senate bills. The House
bill did not provide G eneral Reve
nue for desperately needed m a jo r :
rep airs and rehabilitations at die
Medical B ran ch in Galveston. Had
the bill finally passed in this form, 1
it would have been n ece ssary to
spend ap proxim ately $700,000 of
the Available Fund for this pro
g ram . Although the Senate bill ap- ;
prop riated $700.OOO of
able Fund to support the operating 1
it
level at
did provide
this
am ount from the G eneral Revenue
the Medical
for m a jo r rep airs at
Branch,
the
Available Fund of this obligation
the Main University,
app ro xim ately
the Avail
relieving
thereby
The L egislature was not able to
go all the w'ay in response to our
strong plea to free the Available
Fund completely, but it did reduce
the call on this fund from SI.550.-
000
this
last y e a r and $1,300,000
year, to $700,000 for each y e a r of
the next biennium. It also provid
ed enough money to p erm it us to
w rite next y e a r ’s budget without
any additional call on the Avail
able Fund over and above the $700 -
000, This is in contrast to the total
of $2,000,000
the
Available Fund to w rite our 1956-
1957 budget.
required
from
The following table shows clearly
the favorable trea tm e n t the Legis
lature gave the entire U niversity
system. It proves th a t
the Main
U niversity fared at least as w-ell as
any of the other component units.
% of Increase
I i i (Jen. Rev.
Appro, ax
1958 over % of Request
1957
to
98%
85
93
98
98
95
Main Univ.
. . . 32%
. . 1 6
Texas West.
Med. B ranch . . 29
Swestrn. Med. 25
6
Dental B r
20
M. D. And
I t is self-evident that we will be
im prove app reciably our
able
com petitive position with
other
m ajo r state universities. I believe
that our students should have a
feeling of pr ide in the knowledge
th a t they have been a pard in this
im provement. Their contribution
im prove
will help m aintain and
the quality
and
thereby enhance the value of their
education. Hardship to individual
students will he minimized by tu
ition scholarships granted through
our regularly established channels,
and am ple funds will be set aside
for this purpose.
instruction
of
Although we did not get all we
requested, we are convinced that
we w ere
that we
trea ted fairly,
were dealt with ir. good faith, and
the U niversity received a d egree
legislative endorsem ent which
of
should occasion gratification r a th e r
than the type of condemnation
emplified
in the stories and edi
torial to which reference has been
made.
It is a grave responsibility to a c
cuse both this office and the Legis
faith and broken
lature of bad
promises. I hope that before such
responsibilities
u n d e rta k e s
| again you will be certain of your
I facts.
are
j
Sincerely yours,
LCXJAN WILSOM
Firing Line . . .
(Continued from Page 2>
5,1
that people must be w arned not to
sit in because it s really not real?
I heartily agree with the criti
cism of Dr. Wilson’s
s ta te m e n t
that,
‘‘On basic social
it
issues,
is subject to tim
(the University)
will of the m a jo rity of its citizens,
insofar as th a t will can be inteiv
preted by
those most directly
responsible to th e m .”
like
I would
to see Monday**
faculty m eeting open to interested
students and wonder what the fa
the observation
culty has to fear
of its inaction? and why observe-
tion would stifle freedom of dis
cussion. It is up to the facility to
display a m ore m a tu re a h i nd*
than that expressed ip the M ay 14
to adjourn because of *
motion
(that
baseball gam e with A&M
received a m a jo rity
m ust have
vote i which cut off discussion, and
thereby to erase the impression of
rule by apathetic m ajority that tliat
m eeting engendered.
DONALD A. PETE SC H
the "LITTLE DRAG #1
TEXAS
Barber Shop
Flat - Top
Specialists
M a n a g e r Tobin
3 E. 21 st
G R 8 03 13
These are your
friendly
stores
and shops at 21st and S p e e d w a y
Where
Students and Faculty
ALWAYS come first
LITTLE DRAG
OR
MAIN DRAG
WHEREVER
YOU ARE
ON
CAMPUS
THERES
ALWAYS
A HEMPHILL'S
HANDY
TYPEWRITERS
SALES • SERVICE
RENTALS
:oo
*5“ M3
OO
for
for
one month
three months
] RENT
I
I
a d d i n g m a c h i n e s
a n d c a l c u l a t o r s
s6°oper month
and up
HEMPHILL'S
109 E. 2 I st
Did You Know You
Can Get A Good Plate
at
Lunch For
55c
ROBERT E. LEE
GRILL
HILSBERG'S
CAFE
Serving
Students
for
Over
30 Years
Across
from
Pearce Hall
SPEEDWAY RADIO
SA V E DOLLARS
BUILD Y O U R O W N
KITS
&
PARTS
HI-FIDELITY
R A D IO
SPEAKERS
TEST EQ UIPM ENT
O U T ST A N D IN G N A M E S TO CH O OSE FROM
EICO, ARRAY, JENSEN
CABINART, D Y N A C O
MULLARD, VIKING
ALSO we carry complete lines of:
GARRARD, WEBCOR, and R A D IO CRAFTSM AN
SPEEDWAY RADIO
SERVIN G UT A R E A O VER IO YE A R S
2010 SPEEDW AY
G R 8-660?
Friday. Jur* 14. 1957 THE SUMMER TEXAN
Page 4
A fter 41-Year Job,
Dr. Pittenger Retires
It Must
Ha
Just a Little One —
We Never Heard
Economist, Teacher
Spins Tall Texas Tales
/I
a captain and la te r a m a y r in the
S a n i t a r y Corps psychological
exam ining s ervice until 1919 Then
he returned to the U n iversity where
he resum ed his fo rm er position
L a Ter he was m ade a full pro
In 1926 he becam e dean of
fessor
the School of I d leat ion and held
that position for the next 20 years
In 1945 the School of F duration was
changed to a College.
D r Pitte n g e r has been associated
with
the N ational Association of
Colleges and D epartm ents of E d u
cators
the N ation al E d u catio n As-
sociation.
lie n a l Association of Study of E d u
cation Th; D elta K a p p a Sigm a X i.
and the Tex is A cadem y of Science
E . A . the N a-'
the N
The U n iv e r s it y of T exas P re ss
receives dozens of orders for the ii
bocks
in each day s m ail, so a
request f-*r a copy jai The V ie n
re ce iv e d
nese He volution of Iv*#
com ment
little
M o nd ay evoked
among office personnel
A t
least no com m ent w as m ade
until someone noted that the ordo’
called for The Viennese R e v o lu
tion of 1948
ra th e r than 18-48.
Righ t now there is some specu
lation in the office as to whether
or not there is any sign ificance in
’ his or if it i< m erely a typographi
cal error
The oriier c a rte from a lib ra ry
in Moscow- Russia
Rockefeller Foundation
G rant G iv e n Professor
W h ile a student at the U n iv e rsity
D r P itte n g e r met K ath erin e B ic k
er who kiter becam e his w ih
rhey hav e one daughter
In addition to his reg u lar dutte>
in the field of education on the
local and national level. T y FN nerv
i e r o t*> author of books bul
letins arx: pop* rs on that subject
D u rin g Woe I W a r l l D r P itte rv
ger urged schools to keep up th eir
standards of tea. hers and tee bing
bec a use to neglect or abandon our
• st
schools would m ean a true
generation .
R t peatedly he em-
pha
r e c e i v e d a ST 7 50 R o ck e fe lle r
Foundation grant fur research and
study at Marx ard U n iv e rsity .t ir.r
196T and 1958
W h ile
Professor
at H a rv a rd .
W itherspoon w k! study the contri
bute, r nf the ph losophical arx sub
ordinate n orm ative sciences to th*
process 4 norm itive judgm ent lr
pim tive :aw
F r le s s o r W itht r spoon jl- ned tt •
U n iversity law faculty upon re c e iv
leg re-'
ing his bachel* r of
.aw s
here He bas >pe< . dized
the
in
.*-.w and yur.spru-
phi! vsophy of
legisla
dence. a d m in istra tive law
tion and consti1utiorial aw
Anyone who meet^ D r. Robert
Montgom ery, graduate professor of
econom ics at the U n iversity, has
in distinguishing him
no trouble
from the other professors.
A< he plod* across the campus
D r Bob. as his students ca ll him.
looks
'anachronistic from the neck
up and m odernistic from the neck
down ’ The initiated and the un- j
m kiaied alike notice his sensational
h aircut and bright sports attire,
w hich
is exactly what he wants
them to do.
D r. Bob. w h o is the biggest yarn
spinner this side of the Red R is e r
doesn t mind talking to anyone woo
w*ll lay his prejudices on the tab!2
and talk sense about the problems
that face the world.
In a prepared autobiograph cid
sketch, which he gives to civic club
pi esidents who introduce him. D r
B o b says this of his ea rly years in
W est T e x a s :
‘ F irs t 20 yea rs picking cotton
in M enard
and punching cattle
O - m ty : reading all of the books in
W est Texa* »*r*
ase — Ti*yme carte**
rn r o s e s ^
^ • rssz
* rs«ac
raMC
ar r
Swne se
N . Coawc ice 4
G*r- or.*
cr ac!-* I ?-EE .*e« Cc«t.>c Sceoa •■•♦-y
r e _r
P C OTT a V S . cooer De * «« AX Le* T.m
Sc. AjNW ” *10*
g*t« TC . *
few .
OC
F & : <
•Cr 1
^ - A * . '
■ S r ?
•Or
- y f . v c
■* **4 * a
5 ,' y
•*^s* '*»r
Uls* " " ’ •Mi
.c
*c ,*s
©tF»
t r*>tn
• -a ar•
1H »*l
s teorri
-
Ce1 ^
Vt*
7*
ntvO^
\
e. -*p-r.o*
" SZ | L A l
cLt E- F irst
,
T # \c i»
**
. • AusAtfX IW'W* rn
.................... --
i n t o * *
f
I OST 5 ^
-•.cr;5
F F a COMIN FCO Kb
7w rv.-—*0* cl cr*©*abi#
rsctrw*
lo c**-
>icsrs•-
Tcwre.
/
\
.
i
f
' D r V F . Fitten g o r has retired
r #n 41 years of teaching and ad~
Jn im s tra tiv e work at the Um ver-
th spt nt bis early ye a rs on his
fa the i s fruit farm in Shelby. M ich i
gan * hero he w as born. L a te r he
attended M i ch ig a n State N ar n\ a I
C ollege, graduated frtnn there
in
1908 Fro m The U n iv e rs ity of Texas
be received his m asters degree in
1912. then he went on to take his
doctor of philosophy at the U n iv e r
sity of Chicago in 1916
r. 191.1
tie w as professor of education
bm I public speaking in Fairm o u n t
Co! levo W ich ita. K an sa s
after
gradn tire front M ichigan Sr te \
fellow s h p bn.night him to the Uni-
In 1913 he ben.ame
vers is
in stru ctor in education at the U n i
versity v * M innesota. A fte r throe
y e a rs at M innesota he becam e lec
tu re r in education at the U n iversity
r f I s r s and at the sam e tim e
beld a ft ' \\ ship in the U niversity
cif Oh,
tgo. The following y e a r he
getu''neti to the U n iv e rs ity where
bt accepted . r. asses Sate professor
ship in s •>. . a d ” im s tra tion
D r
I " r cer - stay a* the U n i
t e r s > vv s a >iv -rt one th..' time
V oh th-' o.. break of W o rld W a r I
bt en*1 1 tai the A r m w here he was
Two Join Staff
On Public Affairs
Joined
I '
Wovxiwovih G
' ’n' I ravers
Aff
T h rom lacy hr**
It < n ire of
rs st M f as a resear* h
.iv. D r
*v **g s
ti
< a*e .
' c : ie s u m m e r I r >:: * lie
I “x * r 't i : ; - * A M u T **kV has
t. \
r se.-.Tv h
re s H a
**
‘
i gd
TViivi
•- or
ai s iegiv >
: ' i t s
!: " th e I mver-
o r y fvas n ut scu w j i n tm
I r . v e i s Ty vf Kentucky F .• e hi of
G ovt nm er
R e se a rch The In-
til.-.ru I
vc
* B u reau of G overn
:k - m h arni F e Kentucky
l r err
Du. s it i e Resea rn h Co ” moss •-r.
R e h *
rn: master
t
i tv
* K e r tu i ky And rn-.* com l it *ed
f ' .rse work f r the doctor of phikv
; iv .' cnee st In d ian a U ni versity
- " c s H o w ard of D el M a r
I —
f*. r m e r a
: by rt-- Texas I < g s-
ta arm * istc«r>
'.-'-'N.'* pw
i n , -
- - j
C» c rc C i v . ' U r st:
w - -
lat * -
Sit th*' '
} :
,
r n si cr
I
.
r f r
I
■ v tin * c c fre-r>' Hurv
r
• X. '
.' •*v
ft
-
. r - >
t A
• -
-
I
s
-
-
What Goes
On Here
F rk ia v
M..S.K Bi.
e *
vt
spit • -
R e
;•**. s rd F .. fc * d . < or.
"
rher c \ re N ■ ■ Ro ■
I iii v a rs ity B a p tist Stun
v •
>
Sepsis
tx'.
•Iv X
N C A A eRm ma tiers
M - ■" : ,.U S-a :
f •
I "v H ■.'.*■
ti s Gym.
CV *. r s the K
~ -
kpr urn
Visa * - >
J a -
Nv. a a
-
' € en * * N*. —*.
W 'n
.
I x k .'ir y k id the M.*.
F**$: isdi
d fig >
5 F.-O...TV C iX iO C ii E t *
f F «
ir e . a 1.
NCAA Track Stars Invade Austin
Friday, June 14. 1957
THE SUMMER TEXAN Page S
IN D IA N A UNIVERSITY'S WILLIE M A Y
■. . has done 13.9 in the 120 high hurdles
ALEX BRECKENRIDGE
• . . Villenova distance man
CLINT REDUS
San Jose State hurdler
JACK W IL C O X
. . . a 4:08.9 miler
r AINiNvJlN
. • • A C C hurdler
BOBBY M O R R O W of A C C
• • • O lym pian returns to Austin
GREG BELL of IN D IA N A
• • . leading broad jumper
Taylor and Reed
To Become Pro
By GREG OLDS
Texan Sports Editor
I T 's p itching aces of the
1957 seaso n — H o w ard R eed
a n d H a rry T a y lo r— should
p ro fessio n al b aseb all
sign
c o n tra c ts w ith in
th e n ex t
th e T e x a n h a s
few days,
le a rn e d
reliable
so u rce.
Tay ‘.cr
is
p re-d en tal w ork a t
sity R eed
sophom ore season.
just com pleting h *
th e U niver
his
com pleting
from
a
'Mural Schedule
j *. .y 0.r
SA -
. *
7—A l a r .
***‘t TH \I I
T Bl*, d M N
I 'd A ' ""
%•*
' - I..'
.
Tho r*Mis v
- . • ■ r
\ •*
-lr
IT SMN '.'N ,| i-N
Ep -
’
’
. a
T aylor is expected to sign w th
the D etroit T igers and Reed re
portedly w ith one New York
G iants. E ac h boy
get
54 OOO according to p resen t pros
pects.
should
Thi< am ount is the m ost a play
er rn •> sign for and not have to
spend h s first two y ears in the
majors.
The duo won 16 of T exas 20
\ ic tories in the season just com-
pleted. T aylor com piled an 8-1
reading as did Reed. E ach had
less than a 2 CO earaed-run-aver-
age
R eed * as expected to be
the
m ain stay of next y e a r s edition
of Texas baseball. The D allas boy
in
won 16 consecutive decisions
college ball before finally losing a
gam e his last rn college ball at
the rec e n t NCAA national tourna
m en t.
H ow ever
in th a t contest How
ard struck out IO and walked but
one He allowed only on#* earned
lapses by h is
run, but fielding
generally dependable team m ates
caused him the loss to Penn State,
4-1.
Taylor, a junior this year, lead
the
rn
Southwest Conference
strikeouts in 1956 by striking out
102 batters in 103 innings. That
year he posted a 3-10 record
despite often o u t « pitching his
mound foes.
Reed two years ago was named
to the All-America team in sem i
pro ball. He played for the power
ful Sinton Oilers. Following that
reason he was offered at
least
130 OOO by the New York Giants,
but turned it down. He is reported
to have had offers this year from
Cincinnati and Saint Louis.
Both Taylor and Reed were
named to the NCAA's all district
6 team recently.
S .is. ~ ;ain <— A la
LOOK!
HO R>
'HOT '
>•
i
F
H A V D B % Ll
.-sen
' I X < r I T '
F-era ~-P <-
-
E a
>
' - -
« -f* a
Fritia-Eaaer-
T e u ' I.e Ague
s i 4 A .s t a I
'
- ' n '
>' ’ *t
H ' j S t : B Cf as 0
Sac A n te - c 3
re 3-1
C a sh at Carrying Prices
M e n s Suits — 85c • Trousers — 40c
Ladies Plain Dresses 85c up • Plain Skirts 40c up
W 'ork G u a r a n te e d
A R K :^ds of M e n s & Ladies A lte ra tion s
REYES CLEANERS
2504 Guadalupe
PH. GR 2-3441
Friday, June 14. 1957
THE SU M M ER TEXAN
Page 6
'JUST O V ER-H ERD
To Study
Collegiate
Recruiting
B y G R E G O L D S
VV van S p o r ts E d ito r
Re c ru itin g of high
school
a th le tic ta le n t—one of th e
g r e a te r ills in th e m orally sick
w ork! of in te rco lleg iate sp o rts
-—c o m e s in fo r som e a tte n tio n
tin s w eekend in A ustin.
T he S o u th w e st C onference
f a th e r s will m eet h e re S a tu r
d a y w ith officials of the T exas
In te rs c h o la s tic L eague. P r i
m a ry o n th e a g en d a will be
the le tte r of in te n t p ro g ra m .
One proposal is to make
it okay to sign a prospec
tive athlete to a “contract *
in Decem ber
instead of
April.
to
T he SW C — a cco rd in g
se c re ta ry H o w ard G ru b b s —
w a n ts to m ak e th is change.
B u t th e T IL d o e sn 't ta k e to
th is idea. holding a n y boy in
eligible
in high school a t h
letics once he h a s fixed his
s ig n a tu re to one of th e le tte rs
A n o th e r point of discussion
is ex p ec te d to be co n tro l of
o ver-zealous alum ni. G ru b b s
ad d ed it w as possible the T IL
m ig h t h av e som e su g g estio n s
fo r the c o n fe ren c e along th is
I n e .
C learly , th e re c ru itin g p ro b
lem is one of the m ore serio u s
to be d ealt w ith by th e SW C
a n d
th e
its
c o u n try
like th ro u g h o u t
Too m uch h a ra ss in g of t a -
en.ted boys b> re p re se n ta tiv e s
and frien d s of schools is bad
T he excesses in e n te rta in m e n t
and in o ffers of u n d e r-th e -
c o u n te r deals to r a boy s sig
n a tu r e is bad
It is certainly (cid:0)o secret
recruiting must be
th a t
bandied in a m anner befit
ting so-rafted am ateur a th
letics.
P m w h at is to be done?
T h e re d o e sn ’t seem
to be
a ry one a n sw e r c r set of a n
th in g s a re
t h e r s B ut a few
c le a r en o u g h
1 1 rn'c r e e . am ate a true tics.
the p resen t
ic coe tm ue on
Q-aa<:-amm'-:a r basis m ust get
house
2 1 2. tut tiv *■ v..
anc
t t r r c I in t*?r
Sc- CY ER:** VRD Fig* S
m a r r v t a y l o r
H O W A R D R E E D
. . . the p/cs b e d e n
Hogan Pulls Out
Of Open Tourney
TOLEDO Omo * — The abrupt
w thdraw al of Ben Hogan and a
■ v. enc SC1- mph ■>» 'x*s*osrrn sttuck
r e 57th N aboral Open Gc t eharr.-
p
p i •. *h a ”, rn s ' > 7 1 ' -.ne* vs
t .Tee Th>.irssiAv throw reg the Tee r-
■re t x .- c rte* wa id coct"
: •,.r-"me wanner cc'
a
Hogan
no. rn r 't a ■'■•-t a t .. * -
to ..> ir e -1 *
cr te sc
.tejeote to*
r ai. ad x.t ' nor to* ie* re ' > sered*
Led
He >..•. i a !•>:• e a r-:'.d
b a ; s • c re ~ .id conte co... c •• th s -.ch
pc mild agony
that *>' cc*.:Ii ac'
sw "C I c ..7
t ase a
’.r n
• enc - I reed
*' ct
’. cole m aster
The
s t . : aer
front
Wednesday n igh t He Sued to doc-
to rn m sed w:*h ; r r tte r .t and rec
'a arch ■* is
v * -».r — ,
-
i —v-' ,
;
sh.-JTtD
A T S et*: i c e t cr :%r cr she Inver*
.is a >pe* '.corr
to ■ ~e
ness C -7 c :• ..'se
I*,
s rn rn. red
V ' i s
rot ms He > .. re is' t11 ar roux s
ay
- Hog Ir. ? st'tm ng tm**
per 'n t £.? 'on;—r ’*
.*
toe I tm. en" T,~e
ti.rn. 34
5 ■•it Ass*.**. • ■ ■ ~ s a
I V
^
_
J S T O R E
23-A8 G .a d c i. p « — On th* Drog
a
r
r m
S H O E
i u
y
.
FrtdUy. J«W W. T W TH I SOMMBt TfXAW F a y I
A B U N T A T T E M P T fails as E u ge ne D u ffy o f N o t re D a m e m issed
this a tte m p t to lay one dow n in the se co n d inning o f M o n d a y j
n ig h t's N C A A C o lle g e W o r ld Series gam e. The
Irish won, 9-0, I
e lim inating Texas from the event. D uffy, le ad -o ff man in the inrn I
J
ing, eventually flied out to righ t field.
A n Invitation
to
drop in and browse around some time
SPEEDWAY RADIO
T.V. H i - F id e lit y
Sates & Service
2010 Speedway
G R 8-6609
South of G re go ry G y m on the "Little D ra g "
ivy
bermuda
short
Hitting Power Lack
fiat a I to Texas ’Nine
By DICK SMITH
Texan Sports Staff ..
• • • •
“ We ju st didn’t have the best
* •
f
te am .”
This com m ent by a m em ber
of the Texas Longhorns is prob-
ably a perfect sum m ary of the
S teers’
trip to Omaha and the
l i t h annual NCAA College World
( Series the past week.
|
Coach Bibb F a lk ’s crew were
on the whole realistic about the
results of th eir bid for a third
national championship and didn’t
seeem particularly disgruntled
about losing.
Tho lo n g h o rn s had sound pitch-
; ing m ost of the season backed up
by a dependable defensive gam e.
B ut, they lacked the hitting prow
ess that the other entries possess
ed and therein hangs
true
story.
the
What does it take to have a
winning college baseball
team ?
Tins was the question that college
coaches are asked m ost often
and the answ er is definitely not
ju st good hitting, strong pitching,
and a sound defense.
The co rrect reply would undis-
putedly have to be experience.
to
Although every team in the tourn
am ent had terrific potential
in
the hitting, pitching, and defense
departm ents,
the championship
w ent
the California Colden
B ears, who had the most experi
enced and developed ballplayers.
rITie Bears won the tournam ent
with a rem arkable 5-0 record and
defeated Penn State in the finals,
1-0. The Pacific Coast school
entered the series with a 31-10
won-lost record.
Tile key to the B ruins’ cham
pionship was m ainly that
they
had the strongest third-line pitch
er. They would not have been in
this position had they not played
41 gam es during the season.
T ex a s Fifth
In
ranking
the entries
this
w riter would put California at the
top of tile list, followed by Penn
State, Iowa State, Notre D am e,
Texas, Connecticut, Florida State,
and Colorado State, in that order.
Present at the tournam ent w ere
thirty-nine scouts, including re p
resentation from each of the 16
m ajor
team s. The St.
Ixxiis Cardinals had the largest
force of scouts, headed by F red
league
Hutchinson, their field m anager.
As a result of this vast turnout,
m any players have probably al
ready been signed or will be in
the not-to-distant future.
THE FOR WHAT IT ’S WORTH
d e p a rtm e n t:
P lay er with the dirtiest uniform
— catcher Dick Carrington cap
tured this title, probably because
he was the busiest player on Ilia
team .
Bent Background
P lay er with
the best back
ground . in College World Series
play pitcher J. L. Smith won
this easily as he was selected
the Most Valuable P lay er of tile
1953 tournam ent when Texas was
runner-up to Michigan.
P lay er with the highest batting
average—reserve infielder C har
ley Taylor held this title as he
singled in his only official trip
to the plate for a 1.000 batting
average.
P lay er with the most hits for
tournam ent—Glen VonRos-,
the
enberg collected
in
three gam es to cop this honor.
just eight
Rosie was m arried
days pior to the opening game.
three hits
Roughest Break
P lay er with the roughest break
—Howard Reed who struck out
ten and allowed only one walk in
losing to Penn State. Reed did
not yield an earned run to the
Lions.
Most
disappointing perform
ance—the usually reliable Woody
Woodman is the receiver of this
three
unwanted aw ard for his
errors in the Penn State gam e on
crucial plays.
Best perform ance by a player—
H arry Taylor, on the basis of his
four-hit shutout over Connecticut.
H ie likeable young pre-dental stu
dent struck exit twelve Huskies.
I f* f I t
f t
O
Why our finest watch
O M EG A
was selected as the official
timer of the Olympic Games
W h e n die organizing committees of the 16th O ly m
piads convened to choose an official timer they realized
that the performance of every Olympic contestant must
be measured w ith undisputed accuracy. They realized
that only an organization with long experience in the
science of precision-tim ing could shoulder such a great
j
responsibility.
Since Omega had die knowledge and experience,
gained not only from timing all previous Olympiads
since 1 9 3 2 . . . but also the timing of the historic Ban
n is te r 3.59.4 m ile-ru n , the B ritis h C o m m o n w e a lth
Games, the 1955 Pan American Games and scores of
other contests . . . the appointment of Omega was nat
ural and logical. Such dependability is yours in every
Omega watch. See our men s and ladies’ models,
$71 .50 up, Federal tax included.
T h e O ly m p ic C ro *»
A w a r d e d to O m e g a
• Pennants
• D ecals
Your trip to Austin & the
N C A A track meet won't
be complete without sou
venirs from H E M P H IL L 'S !
• Stuffed A n im a ls
• Texas T-Shirts
• Texas Buckles
• Texas C a p s
HEMPHI LL' S
109 East 21st
2501 Guadalupe
2244 Guadalupe
2505 San Jacinto
O m e g a A u to m a tic
Se am a ster
F ro m $ 95 ,
In c . Fed . tax
GERS 1 I! '(|’J I .. *■!* -
VARSITY STORE 225$ GUADALUPE
ap S M S
by
Classic and correct with Iv7 men . . . B er
m uda shorts of cool, lightweight cotton
cord. Trim slim model with adjustable back
strap . . . ruggedly tailored for long, hard
wear. And it’s completely washable . . J
w on’t shrink or fade. Smart, subtle colors.
5OO
UNIVERSITY
(XjqW if
1310G u a d a l u p e
41 YEARS O N THE DRAG
Friday. June 14. 1957
T H E S U M M E R T E X A N
Page 8
H H
* * * • - jf
i M i B P
y
a
M
a
r
k
s
i l l
• nA-r
rn
O
N
T H E D
R A G
’
S A
V
I
A
T
t
f
a
c
a
f
o
&
f
a
0
FATHER'S DAY GIFTS
N
Y
.
S
o
x
p a 1**-*! <»n A 's o f ia t f d I’r***.*.
The New Y o rk Y ankees and the
C hicago W h ite Sox .squared a w a y
T h u rsd a y
titbit ion of two-fisted enthusiasm
Vt hen the dust cleared, five players
w ere ejected from the game.
A ping Ted W illia m s , still prov
ing that he can hit as in the old
d ays. blasted three hom ers as the
in a free-swinging ex- Boston Red Sox look a 9-3 gam e
from the slum ping C levelan d In
dians.
It started after L a r r y D oby fla t
tened Yan kee pitcher A r t D itm a r.
D oby thought that a w ild pitch by
D itm a r w as an
intended duster.
Both benches poured onto the field
to join the m elee,
that W illia m s h a s hit
It w as the second tim e this sea
son
three
hornet > in a gam e. T h ey w ere his
15th, 16th. and 17th and accounted
for five runs.
Tom B re w e r recorded the decis
ion for his seventh vic to ry . E a r ly
D itm a r sur\ ivgd the Knockdown W yn n w as the loser
The D etroit T ig ers held on to j
! second place, six games back of
Chicago, b y beating B a ltim o re 2-1. !
%nother M atch
And o ve r in the senior circu it.
'•
not to be outdone by the
junior j
loop, fists also flew as the M ilw au- 1
I
kee B ra v e s crabbed first place and | | J i
I
a 8-5 \ ic to ry o ve r the Bro o k lyn
Dodgers.
Jo h n n y
Ixiean and E d d ie Ma- ,Jo.*
J thews of the B ra v e s and Don Drys- -J.
dale of B ro o k lyn tangled a fter Ix v M
gan was hit on the side by a pitch-
cd ball. D ry sd a le and Logan w ere I
I ejected.
j H §
Bru to n and Saw atski
the
B ra v e s hom ered as did C in e G i
mel i for the B um s.
of
iH§
H e ils b n f
T h e C incinnati Redlegs dropped
l 2 gam e into second place as the
Pittsb u rg h P ira te s edged them 3-2
at F o rb es F ie ld .
Hom e runs by W h itey Lo ckm an .
Schoen-
R a y Jab lo n sk i and Red
dienst paced a 10-hit attack as
the Chicago
Cubs 7-4 for a sweep of the three-
gam e series.
yotIc "downed
Jim D avis, second of three G iant
the w inner. D ave
pitchers, w as
H illm a n lost it for Chicago.
The Ph illie s knocked
off
the
C ard in als in the Q uaker C ity. 8-1
in the ultra-tight N ational League
race. Two run outbursts
the
first and third innings and a quar-
tet-salvo in the fourth proved too
much for the R edbirds
in
In K an sas C ity, rookie Ja c k U r
ban won his first start as a m ajo r
league pitcher, lim itin g Washington
to five hits w hile the K an sa s C ity
Athletics slugged four home runs
to defeat the Senators, 6-2.
C h ic a g o .............. 003 OOO 0 1 0
IOO OOx
Nev. Y o r k
4 9 (
I
7 IO
H illm a n (0-3*. B ro s n a n (2 ) and Nee
INO
B u r n s id e D a v is < 4». G risso m <8< and
man
Thom as.
H o m e r s
( N Y ) .
L o c k m a n
• N Y ' and Sch o en d ie itst
Ja b lo n s k .
(N Y>
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. . . . O il OtiO OOI
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C in c in n a ti
P itts b u r g h
Je ff c o a t 15-31 a n d B a ile y ,
F r ie n d • 4-T» and R a n d .
Ham er*.
L o u is
St
P h i l a d e l p h i a
H o a k ( C l 2
.......... OOI OOO OOO
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D a n ie l <6' and If S m ith , L a n d r it h
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Bo sto n
C l e v e l a n d
.............. 013 040 001 — 9 13 2
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B r e w e r <7-5 > and W h it e :
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W v n n <7-7* A g u ir r e
and N a ra g o n . N ix o n
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H o m e r s W illia m s
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a n d Mal-
zone (B * .
B a ltim o re .......... OOO OOO IOO-
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M oore <2-5>, Z u v e rin k <8i and Tri-
a n d o s ;
F o > ta c k G ro m e k «41, T s ito u ris 41-0*
15*. S t e a l e r
( T i a n d House.
H o m e r- M a x w e ll and H o w a rd
030 OOO
OHO 010
Jo h n so n
P ie r c e <10-3' S t a le y ( S i H o w e ll (9 i,
L a P a I me <9> and I collar
H o m e r R iv e r a (O'
. . . . 10>
. . . . in .
W a s h in g to n
K a n sa s C liv
Ramos < 4-51 H > de
and Courtney
Ix'Hlar
U rb a n pe/
i K i ' i
L em on i VV i
S im p so n
D e M a e s tri
* * F igures ere fo r tf>« lest full fiscel y r , 1955-56.
Texas Student Publications, Inc., offers you four ways to reach this mar-
kef with your advertising message:
The Daily Texan and The Summer Texan
The Ranger Magazine
The Cactus Ye arbook
The Student Directory
Call our advertising department at G R 2-2750 and we will send a repre
sentative to tell you just how these student publications can help you
get your share of this 41 million dollar market.
TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS, INC.
Journalism Building 107
Friday, June 14, 1957 THE SUMMER TEXAN
Page 9
Variety of Gifts
Available for Dad
With only six days
left until
F a th e r 's Day, cam pus daug hters
and sons a re on the hunt for th a t
ap pro priate gift for D ad. June 16
is his big day.
It shouldn’t be h ard
to please
the old m an, for he isn t too de
manding. It isn t the expensiveness
of a gift that im presses the a v e r
age fath e r; his greatest pleasure
will come from the knowledge that
someone is thinking about him and
is proud of him.
P ro b ab ly
the m o s t welcomed
F a t h e r ’s D ay present costs a m e re
three pennies. Writing to tell Dad
what a wonderful fellow he is and
I how- m u ch you love him will m ake
him feel on the top of the world.
: E x p re s s your gratefulness to the
gray-haired fellow and tell him how
m uch he m eans to you.
C redit for first suggesting F a th
e r ’s D ay belongs
to Mrs. John
Bruce Dodd of Spokane, Wash. The
Beauty Contest
O pen to Students
Applications for the Miss Wool
pageant to be held in San Angelo
August 30 are now being accepted.
Miss Wool will be chosen out of
J l l finalists who are selected from
many state applicants.
Eligibility requires that the ap-
I plicant must never have been mar-
I ried, must be a resident of Texas,
j and must have completed at least
I one year of college. Also she must
be between the ages of 18 and 25,
between 5’6” and 510 ”, and m ust
wear a size 12 garment.
The 1957 Miss Wool will be pre
sented a $4,000 all wool wardrobe
; com plete with accessories, and will
visit, leading colleges, universities,
; and fashion markets of the nation.
She will also appear on numerous
; nationwide radio and TV shows.
Applications and further informa-
i tion m ay be obtained by writing
the San Angelo Chamber of Com
merce, Box 712, San Angelo.
Missionary to Talk
A. M. Warner. Living lank m is
sionary of the University Christian
Church to Japan, w ill speak to the
fol-
Disciples Student Fellowship
j lowing a supper at 6 p.m. Sunday
in Nordan Lounge,
j Warner’s topic will concern his
work as an evangelistic missionary
in Osaka, Japan, a city of nearly
two million population.
Both he and his wife are Texas
graduates,
Christian University
and were com m issioned
the
mission field in 1951. rl'he past year
Warner has been home on furlough
’ and studying at Union Theological
to
Seminary in New York City.
idea o ccu rred to her in 1909 as a
suitable tribute to her owrn fa th e r
w ho had succ essfully r e a re d a fam
ily of children afte r death of h er
m other.
It
in
to
She wrote
June 1910.
the Rev. C onrad
Bl uh rn, president of the Spokane
M inisterial Association, suggesting
th a t the third Sunday in June lie
set aside for honoring fathers. The
first celebration w as held in Spo
kane
received
national recognition and the cele
bration sp read to all p arts of the
country. Several y e a rs
the
third Sunday in J u n e was e stab
lished as the d ay throughout
the
United States.
In 1924,
the people of Wilkins
burg. P a., decided a dandelion w as
a suitable flower to honor D ad be
cause of the old saying “ the m o re
you tram p le a dandelion the m ore
it g row s.’'
la ter
Appropriate gifts for Dad
there
a re countless articles he would like.
Men s cloth mg and sporting goods
rank among his
favorites. Golf
clubs, fishing equipment, guns, and
cam ping supplies are suitable for
the father that’s a sport.
Cool, nylon shirts or a sum m er
straw hat are excellent choices for
sum m er weather.
Pipes,
tobacco, cigarettes, and
lighters are also liked by fathers.
You might even have your fav
orite 8x10 photo fram ed and present
it to father with an appropriate
m essage.
Teachers Invited
To Study Series
Educators in Austin for the sum
mer are in\ ited to attend a series
of five Sunday morning programs
on “ Religion and Public Educa
tion’’ in the auditorium of the Uni
versity Baptist Student Building on
the southeast corner of Twenty-
second and San Antonio Streets.
of
The second of the series sponsor
ed by the churches in the Univer
sity area is scheduled for Sunday
at 9:45 a rn. Dr. Blake Smith, pas
tor
the U niversity Baptist
Church, will speak on the subjec t
“There Are No Bad Seed.” Dr.
Ralph Duke, assistant professor of
educational psychology, will direct
the meeting.
Each program will be concluded
in tim e for those present to attend
worship ser\ ices at other churches.
Newman Advisor s Nam ed
Mildred Dorotik has been named
chairman of the Newman Hall ad-
, visors for the fall sem ester. Others
are Betty Joe Greene, Carolyn
I Tucker. W inifred Conlon. Nora
Parm a. Barbara Zuravec, and Jane
1Spacek.
fc-*
x T W ;
I
-SB
D A M A G IN G RAINS AT BARTON SPRINGS
have resuited in on estimated loss to the city of
$20,000 in gross revenue. Officials hope that the
$10,000 repair operations to the flood-wrecked
pool will be completed by next month. Mean
while, University students have been crowding
ether city pools and visiting Lake Austin, Green-
shores, and swimming spots in surrounding towns
CMI weekends.
p e a k in g o f C h u rch es • •
£ .
nejaaem enfa
| “Christ Takes the Fun Out of Life”
at the 8 p m, service
in H a m s
Memorial Chapel.
Sue Dickinson, Richardson,
. David Knight, Tampico, Mexico.
to
The F estival of the Holy Tiinity
will be observed in the First Eng
lish Lutheran Church Sunday morn
ing. Dr. I^ewis P. Speaker will
preach on “The Three Dimention-
al Cod," and Holy Communion
will be administered at the close
of the l l a.m . service and at 8
p.m.
Dr. Edmund Heinsohn will speak
on “The Preaching of Stephen’’ at
the l l a m. worship service of the
University Methodist Church. The
Rev. Richard K. Heacock, Austin
Superintendent
District
the
(Tiurch, will speak on
^ethodist
of
Father’s Day will be Dr. Marvin
V ance’s sermon topic at the 10:55
a m.
service of First Methodist
Church. “ It Makes A D ifference’’
will be discussed by the Rev. Don
R. Benton at 7:30 p.m.
The healing and protecting power
j of effective prayer will be told at
Austin Christian Science services
at ll a rn. Sunday in the lesson-
sermon entitled “God
the Pre
server of Man.”
I N C H E S D I S A P P E A R
LIKE MAGIC
There is no substitute for DR. N IB L A C K ’S
method of Scientific Spot Reducing
Come in Today for a Complimentary Treatment
AND FREE FIGURE ANALYSIS
a cI ste n d e r iz in ij
i n f i e l d S h o p p i n g 1607 G u a d a lu p e H i g h l a n d Park S h o p p in g
Center G R 7-5096
C e n te r HO 5 5677
G R 2 2523
Judi R eeves, Angleton, to Jim
Briscoe, ATO, Alvin.
Gayle Fread, San Angelo,
to
Charles Bailey, Navasota.
Carolyn Register, Dallas, to Jon
Coffee. Borger.
Barbara Ann Benson, Alpha
Delta Pi, to John Maddox, senior
physics and math major.
Em ily Estelle Dooley. Alpha D el
ta Pi, to Charles Cornell Fancher.
Margaret Howard Harris. Alpha
Chi Omega, to Jack Edward Little,
mid-law student.
Roycelene Matson
to Dewey
Lloyd Baggett, University grad
uate.
Maudie I-ane, Alpha On Omega.
Spooks, to Tony Wayne Halbert,
senior.
Nancy Lynne Shepherd, Delta
Delta Delta, Orange Jackets. Cow
boy Sweetheart, to William Michael
Higgins. Delta Tau Delta, Cowboy.
Goodfellow.
Lefty Lynn Gibson, student, to
Jerry Maloney, student, in August
in San Antonio.
Hayes Names Baby
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hayes have
given
the name Candice Ann to
their new daughter, born Monday
at St. D avid ’s Hospital.
Candice weighs four pounds 6 ^
ounces, and both
she and her
mother are reported to be doing
fine.
Hayes
is the past president of
the Student’s Association, and Mrs
Hayes, the former Barbara Boo/,
in
was the University sweetheart
1954. Both are originally from Port
Arthur.
HH •• •W e'll share a secret with
you. Classified ads in The Summer Texan
D O get results. Call G R 2-2473 and place
your ad in
THE SUMMER TEXAN
you'll save G o b s 'N G obs
of money shopping af
Chenara's Pin M oney Shop
2338 Guadalupe
Friday, June 14, 1957
THE SUM M ER TEX AN
P age IO
B o h e m i a n i s m
Texan Expose ...in a light vein
PHOTOS BY PAUL 0. HOPE
r
Drawing by DON STEGER
• * » 0
0
A V T
* * m * ♦ * ' ♦ ♦
. » * * • ’ /?A' *
. - '- v • V
v
, v ^ " W * v>
’ w’ *X
UV
<5
<>
'
?
•'
\
,
E P
I
“ There are no values external to man and no given nature
which he is obligated to fulfill. Man chooses his values and
m akes himself, and for this choice he is responsible.
“ This need not lead to quietism or despair. On the con
trary, this awareness illuminates the needless burden that
man carries and tries to force him to recognize that he is
actively carryin g it rather than is passively impelled b y it,
that he m ay choose different values and m ay choose to be a
different person. It tries to m ake man acutely aw are of his
freedom. And since freedom is an ambiguous state, both
sought and feared, this philosophy is both frightening and
liberating/*
— John Paul Sartre
(“Existentialism ” )
• ■ -V jr-C. D6
♦
#•*
? * < § •
THE LEFT BAN K OF W ALLER CREEK
. . . Paris has nothing on us
H A N D S G O S E A R C H IN G FOR VALUES
Values? W hat? Where?
r n
1
• ■.v'fts, .
- - ii-®-..
jjfcv
> a J
V»<»v e
o nd
V»<»v e
tiot
I W A N T TO BE A L O N E . . . A N D CREATE
cigarette smoke, dreams, time
TH E TREE O F LIFE STILL G R O W S
. with roots of venom and wine
J
Friday, Jut* 14, 1957 THE SUMMER TEXAN Pa?* ! F
IOedipus Rex'
Langhans Direction N ot Overly Impressive!
Lansford Scores as Ill-Fated Queen Jocasta
By BRADFORD DANIEL
Texan Amusements E d it o r
Queen Jo casta, ill-fated and tor
tured, almost stole the kingdom of
Thebes from King Oedipus in Hogg
Auditorium Wednesday night as the
Department of D ram a unleashed
its first sum m er offering— Sopho
cles’ “ Oedipus R e x ” - t o a small
audience.
In a production that w asn ’t over
ly impressive, Ja y n e Lansford gave
to the role of Jocasta a well-inte
grated and precise meaning. On
stage she suffered superbly, sup
plying the ancient m asterpiece a
realistic and convincing touch.
Hugh Feagin, appearing as King
Oedipus, didn’t fare as well, how
ever. He seemed to be throwing his
lines to no direction . . . neither
from the established point of mean
ing the ageless dram a boasts, nor
from the reaches of fury and frus
tration, hate and love, and other
contrasting and grouping qualities
the production demands.
To his role that literally screams
for authority, he gave sense of
little. He was forceful in appear
ance (Costumer Herbert Camburn
has created interesting and appro
priate masks for the U T replicas
of classical Athenian actors), but
lacked strength in properly groom
ing this striking appearance. Yet,
it should be noted that the produc
tion is one of the most difficult
that D r. Langhans, D ram a Depart
ment faculty member directing the
play, might have chosen. The ele
ments of all time mix freely in
ifs stream of representative life;
around its- core revolves both death
and hope1.
It was indeed an energetic and
heavy responsibility that Dr. Lang-
Inland Fisheries of the Texas
Gam e and Fish Commission has
received thousands of requests this
year for fish to stock tanks and
ponds.
hans placed on himself by choosing
is to be greatly
the play. This
admired, but his decision to use
several modern translations instead
of the accepted one by W illiam
Yeats was unwise. It was his free
dom to do so—but Y e a ts ’ version,
even if considered somewhat old
fashioned, gives clearer meaning
and better balance of horror and
beauty combined into one plot that
is considered flawless by authori
ties. Through the usage of these
translations and his own desire to
make the production more suitable
to modern audiences, he has re
duced the reach of conflicting, con
trasting elements to life-like size—
and death, hope, ambition, and dis
honor are bigger than life.
(lighting); costuming
Production work by H. Neil W hit
(Caley
ing
(Johnny
Sum m ers); and music
M urphy) was appropriate and add
ed much to the final effort. The
leadership of
chorus, under the
too
George Holmes, was often
screechy. Charles T aylo r and Cleve
Haubold were good in the varied
roles they portrayed. M r. Taylor
was exceptionally knowing in his
interpretation of Teiresias.
IN A WORD: Not overly impres
sive.
O U R SPECIAL
Lunch Today
Served from 11:30 a na. Ut 8:30 p.m.
Shrimp Creole with Rice or
Tenderloin of Trout
with Tartar Sauce or
Swiss Steak
Creamed New Potatoes
Cole Slaw
Blackeyed Peas and
Turnip Greens
Dessert
Hot Rolls and Cornbread
offee or Tea
/
6 5 c
FATHER'S D A Y
S U N D A Y D IN N ER
Serving from 11:30 a.m.
until 9:30 p.m.
14 BAR-B-0
CHICKEN
From 2 Pound Chicken
served with our Famous
Tennessee Bar-B-Q
Sauce
English Peas
and Potato Salad
G arlic Bread
Ice Cream & Cookies
C o ffe e or Iced Tea
$LOO
FILET
STEAK
W ra p p e d in Bacon
Served with
Shrimp Cocktail
Combination Salad
Baked or French
Fried Potatoes
Ice Cream & Cookies
G arlic Bread
Iced Tea or C offee
*1.00
A ir-Conditioned
Dine under the stars
in our garten
1607 San Jacinto
Celebrating A t
2-J
You have bought over
3 Million
2-J Hamburgers
This W eekend, Fri. Sat. & Sun.
Jun e 14, 15, & 16
SUNDAE
Strawberry
Chocolate
Pineapple
each
Regular Instant
Service Menu
Our New
Dessert Dept.
2-J Ham burger . . 19c Sundae . . . . . . . . . 19c
Cheeseburger . . . . 24c B an an a Split . . . . 29c
M a l t ................... 19c | C o n e s
5-10-15c
French Fries . . . . . . 12c J Floats . . . . . . . . . . 15c
D r in k s ................. 10c
2-J
40th at Lamar
DR. E D W A R D L A N G H A N S and C L E V E H A U B O L D
• •. director aids student performer
Committee Plans Fall Movies
The Selected F ilm Classics for
the 1957-1958 long terms,
to be
shown in Batts H all auditorium, is
being planned by the University
F ilm Program Committee.
IO
.selected
As usual, the entire program has
been
suggestions
from
submitted by students and faculty
members. The films for next sea
son w ill represent
countries
plus Fngland and the United States.
F ro m Sweden w ill be the prize
winning documentary “ The Great
Adventure.’’ French films for the
series w ill be “ P a n ic ” and “ A Nous
L a Lib erte.” Germ an films w ill be
“ Madchen in U niform ” and “ M a r
riage in the Shadows.’*
“ Ugetsu, ’ a
Japanese film
in
the prize winning tradition of the
recent Japanese films, w ill be in
cluded. Also planned are “ M a ria
Candelaria” and “ Welcome, M r.
M a rsh a ll,” from Mexico and Spain
respectively.
The Am erican films to be shown
w ill include the famous “ All Quiet
on the Western Fro n t” and a com
edy program with
such great
Am erican comedians as Charlie
Chaplin and Bu ster Keaton.
Other films w ill be “ Ten Da\s
(R u ssia),
that Shook the W orld”
“ Vagabond”
(In d ia ), “ Two Cents
Worth of Hope” (Ita ly ), and “ D ay
of W ra th ”
CHARLES BRACKETT • VICTOR VICAS • IVAN MOFFAT
B a s^ d on tt«e Novel by John Ste'nbech
N O W SHOWING AT THE
EXTRA
MR. M A G O O CARTO O N
T H E KING BROTHERS
The Brave One
REGULAR PRICES!
a
G n e m a S c o PEz
T E C H N IC O L O R
Friday. June 14, 1957
THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 13
T H E B U S runs way off the ehan-
* tered path at the Paramount
Theater and the result is a film thai
doesn’t come within a mile of John
Steinbeck’s meaning or entertain
ment in his novel, “ The W ayw ard
P u s ,” on which the celluloid pro
duct is based.
,
Starring
Ja y n e Mansfield, U n i
versity of Texas ex, and Dan
D ailey—and assisted by R ick Ja-
Jo an Collins, and Dolores
lchaels - Steinbeck’s 1947 award-
winner winds nervously on the edge
of soft highway shoulders and on
film boredom. The
the cliff of
director has attempted to follow
Steinbeck’s winding road to fame
. . . but has bogged down in a
h<»le, just as the novelist’s bus was
fated in the original story.
Whereas the book has clearly-
Wayward
characterizations,
the
developed
movie offers performers who seem
to understand nothing but the fact
that they’re
in f r o n t o f t h e
cameras. Dan Dailey is his usual,
casual (and boring) self . . . Ja yn e
Mansfield struts (she always does)
. . . Joan Collins leers at the audi
ence • . . and Rick Jason (the only
one who appeared to have read the
book) gave a fairly noteworthy per
formance, one that should net him
some praise across the nation and
send him to bigger things.
The story concerns a bus travel
ing across the Californian terrain
take refuge
j During this ride, a storm arises
J. . . and, while it rains, the pas
sengers
in different
j directions. Two people find comfort
in a barn . . . the rain causes one
j to see that he has been unfair to
I his wife (he returns to her) . . .!
I and others make silly promises i
and vague generalizations. The
weather is cool, the rain has been
refreshing, and
Ja y n e M ansfield'
(who has hugged the cam eras at 1
every turn of the road) has proven ;
one
power as an actress.
she certainly
thing:
lacks
—BRADFORD DANIEL
SWEDISH
SMORGASBORD
SERVED SUNDAYS ONLY FROM I TO 8 P.M.
$2 PER PERSON
ra ia n f\*oom
TEXAS FEDERATED CLUB BUILDING
2312 SAN GABRIEL
x= Austin s Only Smorgasbord-
YOU D O N ’T HAVE TO BE A
SWEDE TO ENJOY SMORGAS
BORD . . . BUT BRING YOUR
BEST A P P E T I T E BECAUSE
THERE S NO LIMIT BUT YOUR
CAPACITY!
CALL FOR RESERVATIONS
TO BE SURE
EDITH WILLIAMS
GS 6-5532
JUDY G A R LA N D sang on
and on at the Dallas Fairgrounds
W e d n e s d a y night as she opened
this y e a r s S ta te Fair Musicals.
The large au d ience g re e te d her
eve ry note with almost frenzied
reception. O n e lady rem arked:
She s Miss Show Business i
PIONEER DRIVE IN
829 Barton Springs Road
SEE YOU ON THE
W AY TO BARTON’S
$1.00 Sirloin
Curb Service
HOT RODS vs. ROCK I
#
n ROLL!
earwax
HE S MINE
I'M SORRY
, frodutl'O*
n*»M>«•' ,>'c
J
L
d f / U fH ! jnuuriy
« * r
.... '“MSON! nj/rn
F E ATUR I NG
HOLLY W O O D S N F W E 5 T
JI CHAct
STAAS
j
Starts
TODAY! STATE
DOORS OPEN 11:30 A.M.
PLUS!
COYOTE« ROADRUNNER
in “FAST AND FURRYOUS
Judy Wows 'Em
At Dallas Stint
‘Miss Wonderful9
Sings On end On
By CHARLES DENNIS
D A L L A S
(Sp!)- The unpredicta
ble, wonderful Ju d y Garland sang
as she has never sung before in
Dallas Wednesday night as her
show, the first in this >ear's State
F a ir M usicals program, attracted
more people than the seemingly-
sm all auditorium would hold.
to
the
She sung with the graciousness of
springtime, the fury of what lies
beyond space, and with the truth
that you know has to be nothing
but real. She took her audiences
from “ Somewhere Over the R ain
“ White Cliffs of
bow”
D o ve r." Their trip was somewhat
long 13 hours I but they loved every
minute
. even the stops on
“ Mockingbird H ill” and at “ Okla
homa! didn’t make them w ary or
disinterested. They loved her 'and
she did what she knows best how
to do . . , sing. And she sung from
the heart.
.
.
W hile in Dallas, Miss Garland is
staying with two sisters, one of
w hom is a Texas resident in B ig D.
The other flew in by plane for the
special reunion. Ju d y is scheduled
to continue performances through
Ju n e 23. They want to hold her
over. L e t ’s hope they do.
’Marty1 Makers
Hit with ’Party'
B y G R E G OI J J S
The 'M a r ty ’ crew is at it again.
This time it ’s “ Bachelor P a r t y ,"
and it’s another look at plain ole
I unadulterated man with his guard
j and his glamour down.
The story, naturally,
Is simple
enough. A fella at the office
is
: getting married, so he and four of
his cronies go out and throw- a
whing-ding.
The interest copies in, of course,
in the insights offered the audience
regarding each of the five men.
with occasional piercing glimpses
into the lives of some of the wives
sifting at home.
If there is any fault with the pro
duction and many would say there
is none
it is perhaps its being a
bit draw-n out.
M i s s i n g is the concise pun* h of
I “ M a rty ,” but • Bachelor P a r t y ” is
far from tedious.
The best work
is turned in by
| P a tric ia Sm ith tone of the w ives),
Don M u rra y (a husband), and l (cid:1)
j G. Marshall (another husband).
Realism, as you would expect, is
the idea in mind fur the produc-
is achieved with
; tion. And this
| notable success. Often a
"news-
j re e l’’ sort of thing is effected by
the actors and director Delbert
Mann.
The music of Alex North adds to
: the show, creating well the tense,
j hum-dmm mood of the big city at
, work.
AU
in all. we r e c o m m e n d
to you. You
I Bachelor P a r t y ”
won t lie disappointed.
Tucker Wins Play Prize
Ja m e s H. Tucker of the U n iver
sity recently won $500 in the fifth
annual Collegiate P layw ritin g Con
test sponsored by Samuel French,
Inc., in New- York. M r. T u ck e rs
play la tie for second place) was
entitled “ W h a t’s Papa Doin’? ”
FRAU
VOGEL’S
Home Cooked
Foods
NEXT T O W O O T E N S
D O R M
21 I t G u a d a lu p e
G R 7-0S45
Air Conditioned
Friday, June 14, 1957
TH E S U M M E R T E X A N
Page 14
Dean Shelby Retires;
Served UT 30 Years $
D r . T. H . Shelby, d ean e m e r itu s j
of the E x te n s io n D ivision, retired
J u n e I a fter m o r e than 30 y e a r s
of s e r v ic e at the U n iv ersity . The
E x te n s io n D iv ision e x p e r ie n c e d its
g r e a te s t e x p a n s io n under his le a d
ership.
T h e u nd erlyin g philosophy
that
gu id ed the D iv is io n ’s grow th has
b e e n e x p r e s s e d
in s o m e of Dean
S h e lb y ’s annual reports. “ The e x
tension s e r v ic e a im s to carry
in
stru ction al op portunities to citizens
of the s ta te q u alified to profit by
to
th em and
to ren d er
sch o o ls, c o m m u n itie s and
indivi
duals. keep ing in m ind that culture,
effic ie n c y
h a p p in e ss,
citizen sh ip ,
and
are u ltim a te
resp on sib ility
g o a l s , 0 D r. Shelby sta te s.
s e r v ic e
its
Dr. Shelby further b e lie v e s that
in a position to
is
the U n iv e r s ity
rend er this s e r v ic e with m in im u m
to s t and m a x i m u m e ffic ie n c y b e
c a u s e of
r e s e a r c h m a teria l,
library r e s o u r c e s abd its personnel.
In addition to his duties at the
E x te n s io n D iv isio n , D r. Shelby h a s
taught ed u ca tio n a l a d m in istr a tio n
and conducted ed u ca tio n a l s u r v e y s
in m a n y
the
sta te .
throughout
sch o ols
the
H e w a s one of the first to e m
p hasize
im p o r ta n c e of adult
ed u cation and founded th e South
w e stern R e g io n a l C on fer en ce on
Adult E du ca tio n . A lso he helped
prom ote the use of radio and visu a l
aids.
A form er president of the T e x a s
S tate T e a c h e r s A ssociation and N a
tional U n iv e r s ity E x te n s io n A sso
ciation. D ean S helby has r e c e iv e d
m a n y honors,
including a R o c k e
feller F ou n d ation tr a v e lin g fe llo w
ship for stu d ie s of rad io ed u cation .
B efore c o m in g to the U n iv e r s ity
D ea n S helby taught
in O k la h om a
and at S a m Houston State C ollege
in H un tsville. H e a ls o s e r v e d as
principal at H illsboro and s u p e r
intendent al Hubbard and T yler.
In addition
in co m m u n ity a ffa ir s . He
to his ed u ca tio n a l
in terests, Dr. S helby has been a c
tive
is
in terested in the work of the M etho
dist Church, the R o ta r y Club, and
he is a 32nd d eg r e e M a so n . For 25
y e a r s of d ed ica ted s e r v ic e to the
B oy Scouts. Dr. S helby receiv ed the
S ilver A n telop e Award.
He a ls o enjoys hunting, golf, and
fishing.
NCAA Carnival
(Continued from P a g e I )
in d an g er. O thers are
hurdles,
tw'o-mile.
the p ole vault, an d
the high
the
T h r e e m e n h a v e b ettere d
the
e x is tin g hurdle m ark of 13.9. Win
s to n -S a le m ’s E lia s G ilbert h as a
13.4, O ly m p ian Calhoun of North
C arolina C o lleg e h as a 13.5, and
F r e sn o S ta te's A n cel R ob inson has
a 13.8.
Also, three h a v e b ettered the two-
m ile m ark of 9:01.9. T he th ree are
L ew S t i e g I i t z of C onnecticut
(9:01.7), J im B ea tty of N orth Caro
lina
(9:01.7), and B ob H o u se of
C alifornia (9:01.6*.
Other M arks P ossib le
that
O ther
reco rd s
could b e
in
r e a ch ed h ere S a tu rd a y night
(M orrow and
clu d e both sprints
(S M U 's Don
o th e r s ), high
S tewart*,
(P a c if ic
L u th e r a n ’s John F r o m m ) , broad
ju m p (Bell*.
ja v e lin
throw
ju m p
t lii^ w e e k when it w a s lea rn ed that
two of its outstan din g p erfo rm e rs
s u stain ed m inor injuries that m a y
h am p er th em .
I E d d ie Southern,
n um ber on e hope, w a s
the l o n g h o r n s
strick en
sta te d .
Assembly . . .
(Continued from P a g e I)
T hey w ill m e e t w ith
m e m b e r s
and
citiz en s
f a c u lty
fr o m
throughout the s ta te n ex t y e a r ia
planning for the
in
the U n i v e r s i t y ’s d e v e lo p m e n t.
n ex t 25 y e a r s
Student P r e s id e n t H a rley C l a r k /
/
with a Ieg injury. H e m a y be c o n
fined to just one event rather than
the two he had planned to enter.
I T hat one probably will be the quar-
' ter-m ile.
B obby Whilden w a s hit by a leg
injury and m a y not be up to his
in this, his
u su al fleet sta n d ard s
last m eet as a collegian .
| T e x a s will en ter a good -sized
I contingent. Most of the scorin g p os
sibilities will c o m e in the p erson s
of Southern (440 and p o ss ib ly the
low h u r d les), B ru ce P a rk er ( j a v e
(broad ju m p ),
lin*, Pat M cG u ire
Joe V illarreal
(m ile and p ossib ly
tw o -m ile ), W ally Wilson (440*. and
j the Whilden - Hollis G a in e y - Frank
The c o m m itte e is an integral pari:
of the p ro g ra m of c o m m e m o r a tio n
and d ed ication for the U n iv e r s ity 's
75th a n n iv e r s a r y .
Bob A r m stro n g , B e t s y B la nton ,
Robb B u rlage, B ill C a m e s , P h il
Cecil. H a rley Clark, T h e l m a
I Clarke, B ob D e V ries. N a n c y G oos-
by, D on G riffith, P e t e G unter,
I E u g e n ia H ead , Hal H u d sp eth , John
1 M cCoy, C h arles M cCullough. Bud
and
M im s,
Clovis M orrisson h a v e b een ap-
I pointed.
Julia Ann M offett,
Also, l>arry N ich ols, G eo rg e Ol
son, D on R op er. J oe R o s s . D o n
Stodghill, Walt W arner, and P a t
I W ilcox h a v e been se le c te d .
T e x a s ’ c h a n c e s w ere g iv e n a jolt
D a u g h e r ty trio (sprints*.
CLIP OUT A N D M AIL
Board to Evaluate
Weather Programs
T H E
S U M M E R '
XAN
K e n n e th John, assista n t p ro te s
to r of m e te o r o lo g y an d KTBC-TV
w eath ei ca ster, ha-, recen tly b een
n a m e d ch a ir m a n of the Radio and
T elev isio n W ea th e rea stin g B oard
of tho A m e rica n M eteorolog ica l
S ociety.
Handy Classified Form
T H E S U M M E R T E X A N
107 Jo ur na li sm Building
Box 8 0 4 0 U n i v e r si ty Sta tio n
Austin, Texas
Please find e n c l o s e d
.................... for which y o u are t o p u b l i s h the
following classified ad f o r ............................... d ays.
r
I
“ The purpose of the n ew board
a s I u nd erstan d it.” said Jehn (it
sounds like G e n e ), “ is to e v a lu a te
radio and televisio n w e a th e r pro-1
g r a m s and to aw ard the Seal of j
A p p rov al of the A m e r ic a n M eteoro- j
logical S o c ie ty to those w h o m e e t
the high standards of the S o c ie ty .’’
stu d y in g
the e f fe c ts of
John not te a c h in g this s u m m e r ;
tho j
is
a tm o s p h e r e on the p ropagation of j
short radio w a v e s , at th e Electri-J
cal E n g in e e r in g R e s e a r c h L a b ora
tory at B a lc o n e s R e s e a r c h Center.
M eteorology as h«‘ d e s c r ib e s
it.
is the s c ie n c e of the a tm o sp h ere .
H e ’s quick to add that w e a th e r is
o n ly a part of the ov er a ll picture,
but the most popular part.
the
In p r e p a r i n g his w e a t h e r c a s t s
for E l BC, he c h e c k s the w e a th e r
tx ie ty p e s located at the U n iv e r s ity .
Thoro
from o v er
inform ation
“ 500 different w e a th e r station s and
is a s s im ila te d . He
sh ip s at s e a ”
the w e a th e r conditions at
ch e c k s
the local w e a th e r bureau. F in a lly ,
h * sk etc h e s faint g u id e lines on the
huge w e a th e r m a p so ho w o n ’t
the
m a r k th e g r e a s e pencil
air
w r o n g p la c e b rin gin g
from F lorid a and not C an ad a.
in
cold
The R a d i o and Telev ision W ea-
tlvorcasting B oard will d raw up an
operational plan for e v a lu a tin g the
w ea th ered * and d is c u s s it with the
N ation al A sso cia tio n of R ad io and
T e lev isio n B r o a d c a ste r s . J o h n ’ s
U a u d arid
then
a k 1 a joint a n n o u n cem en t of the
p a n ,
tho N A R Y B will
“ it
J eh n
s a y s ,
“ R igh t n o w .’'
>ks like • h 1 w e a th e r p ro g ra m will ;
ju d g ed on th re e m a in points.
st, tech nica lly correct w e a th e r J
'form ation h as to be p resen t. Sec-1
•and. the p rogram should be enter- j
it
ta m in g and not boring. Third,
should h a v e an e d u ca tio n a l feature
co n n ected with it."
If the w e a th e r sh o w can meet
the s ta n d a rd s set up by the B oard,
then the show w ill r e c e i v e the S e a l'
the A m e rica n
of Approval
M eteo r o lo g ic a l S ociety. The
ap
proval will b e gran ted to individual
p erfo rm e rs rather than stations.
from
“ But w h at w o r ries m e ," Jehn
adds. “ is h ow I ’m going to judge
.
m v ow n sh o w .
. ”
BBA Student Gets Aw ard
John M cL ean. J u n e g ra d u a te, has
r e c e iv e d the Wall Street Journal
Student A c h ie v e m e n t Award. At a
C ollege of B u s in e s s A d m in istration
co n vocation recen tly, M c L e a n w a s
n a m e d by a c o m m itte e of p r o f e s - ,
s ors a s the g ra d u atin g senioi h a v
ing the high est s c h o la s tic stan d in g
in fin ance.
D a v id P la n k r e c e n tly r e c e iv e d a
gold w a tc h
for his outstan din g
j s e r v ic e to the U n iv e r s it y ch ap ter
of the S o c ie ty for the A d v a n c e m e n t
[o f M a n a g e m e n t.
V isit in g E d u c a t o r
T o Present W o r k
In G u e s t P r o g ra m
in a s e r ie s
T h e
first gu est
also
cm”
‘ ‘E du ca to rs - in - R e s i d e n c e ” is I ca
V irg il H errick. U n iversity of W is
con sin professor of education and
an authority on cu rriculu m theory.
D u rin g the s u m m e r session first
is teach in g an
te rm , D r. H errick
e d u c a tio n course in h um an d ev elo p
m en t and cu rricu lu m planning and
faculty
is
con ferrin g with
m e m b e r s ,
and
c o m m i t t e e s , and a d v a n c ed g r a d
u a te stu d en ts.
is
to a d d r e s s a
C o lle g e of E d u c a tio n con vocation
in B atts Audi
J u n e 25 at 9 a m.
to r iu m . Dr. H err ick also will par
tic ip a te
in a h igh -level work-con-
f e r e n c e on cu rr ic u lu m d evelop m en t
in t e a c h e r ed u ca tio n , June 15-16.
sch ed u le d
r e s e a r c h
groups
He
Dr. G lenn B a rn ett, a s s o c ia te dean
of the C o lleg e of E d u c a t i o n .
the n e w “ Educator-in-
d e s c r ib e s
R e s i d e n c e ” p r o g r a m as
‘ an at
te m p t to bring o u tstan d in g e d u c a
to r s to p r e s e n t the heart of their
w o r k to the selnxd p eop le of T e x a s .
a s w ell as ou r facu lty h e r e .”
T h o s e in v ited wi l l be ch o sen be
th eir r e s e a r c h and w riting
c a u s e
h a v e e a r n e d
th p m d istin ction as
l e a d e r s in th e ed u c a tio n field Dr.
the U n iv e r
H e r r ic k , c h a i r m a n o!
s i t y of W is c o n s in ’s g e n e r a l faculty
c o m m i t t e e o n r e s e a r c h is au th o r of
s e v e r a l b ooks, an d is noted for his
w o r k on b e h a v io r a l a p p r o a c h e s to
c u r r ic u l u m th e o r y .
I
\
J
D ates ad is to r u n .................................... .........................................
(Texans are published only on Tuesdays and Fridays during the summer.)
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Make checks payable to Texas Student Publications, Inc.
friday, June 14. 1957 THE SUMMER TEXAN Pag* 15
t
Faculty Council
Chooses Sixteen
The General F a c u lty has an
nounced election of 16 members
to the F a cu lty Council for two year
term s, beginning in September.
Nam ed from the class of full and j
associate professors were Dr. B . H.
Amstead, Dr. Robbin C. Anderson, j
D r. How ard A. Calkins, P ro fe sso r,
F . L . Cox, D r. W . T. Guy, D r.
H. R . Henze. Dr. D avid M iller, and
Professor M. H. Ruud.
Those elected from the instruc
tors and assistant professors
in
cluded Miss Edleen Begg, Dr. Ja c k
Cashin, Dr. Fred Ginascol, Dr. Ir a
Iscoe. Kenneth Jehn, Dr. Jo e Malik,
Jo e Neal, and Dr. E r v in Prouse.
D r. J . Alton Burdine, Dean W .
Pag e Keeton, and Dr. W alter P .
Webb were re-elected to two-year
term s to the Committee of Counsel
on Academ ic Freedom and Respon
sibility, and Dr. W illia m R. L iv in g
ston w as re-elected to a two-year
term on the Union Board of D i
rectors.
F a c u lty Council w ill meet Ju n e
17.
Library Has New
Book Collection
Students and teachers interested
in reading m ay like to examine
the m any new books that have re-
I cently been purchased for the U n
dergraduate Reading Room. New
j books include “ A Distant D ru m ”
| by Charles Braoelen Flood; Vin-
Last
I cent Sheen’s
L o v e ” ; “ The M en Who Made the
N ation” by John Dos Bassos; and
John M arquand’s “ Stopover: To-
“ F ir s t
and
j kyo.”
Also included in the new book
collection is “ The D a y the Money
Stopped” by Brendan G ill; A li
stair M aclean ’s “ The Guns of Nav-
arone” ; “ A Thirsty E v i l ” by Gore
and H erbert M itgang’s
I V id a l;
' “ Lincoln, As They Saw H im .”
Prominent Brands
Decorate Garrison
By PAT GOBER
,
On the afternoon of Decem ber 8, j
1925, the cornerstone of Garrison j
H a ll was laid
in tribute to the j
mem ory of one of the U n iv e rs ity’s
best-loved faculty members.
D r. George P . Garrison,
for
whom the building is named, was
regarded as having earned the tri
bute by his contribution to the ad
vancem ent of the U niversity.
In 1885, two years after the U n i
versity was established, D r. G a r r i
son was appointed to a professor
ship. At that time the faculty to
taled 15, only a fraction of the
present number. There were ap
proxim ately 200 students enrolled. I
Dr. Garrison was recognized as j
an authority on history, to which
he gave most of his time and was
most interested in the history of
Texas and of the Southwest.
D r. Garrison died in 1910, after I
a quarter-eentury of teaching at I
the U niversity.
Garrison H all was built as a p art
of the U n ive rsity’s $10,000,000 ex
pansion program, the total cost of
the building being $580,000.
It has a seating capacity of 1,479 j
in its 20 classrooms, and houses !
offices for the professors of the
social science departments.
Thirty-two of the most prominent
and representative cattle brands
of the S o u t h w e s t and Mexico
copied and “ branded” on Garrison
H a ll recall the era of development
j in Texas when huge ranches were
operated and large fortunes amass-
led .
Chosen because—o f
the 20,000
brands examined- they best tell the
j story7 of the Texas cattle industry,
I the five leading brands are on a
level with the third floor, while
the remaining 27 are under the
j eaves.
The brands are grouped in five
divisions, each illustrating a cer- j
tain period in the ranching indus
t r y ’s history. Tile first group of
brands are those belonging to e arly
Spanish cattle raisers in Texas.
Brands representative of cattle-
raising Am erican pioneers mnke
up the second group, while the
third group consists of the brands
of Texas cattlemen who, imm edi
ately after the C ivil W ar, joined
the trail-driving movement and
drove their cattle to northern m ar
kets.
H ie brands of outstanding Tex
ans who have contributed fabulous
ly to Texas educational institutions
are included in the fourth group. In
the last group are brands repre
sentative of certain cattle-raising
sections of Texas.
Regardless of the reasons for the
chosen 32 brands, they are a ll
reminiscent of the never-to-be-for
gotten part the cattle industry has
played in the colorful development
of Texas.
Marriage Council
Elects Bowman
D r. H en ry A, Bowm an, U n ive r
sity associate professor of sociolo
gy, w ill take office next year as
president of the National Council
on F a m ily Relations.
The National Council is a pro
fessional organization in the field
of m arriage and the fam ily. It has
approxim ately 2,000 members, and
was founded more than 20 years
ago.
Dr. Bow m an is the author of the
popular book, “ M arriage for Mod
erns.”
BUILDING and REMODELING
Roofing Fencing,
Siding, Painting
W O R K GUARANTEED
NO D O W N PAYMENT
Phone G R 7-2067 or G L 2-1282
TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS
GR 2-2473 — Extension 29
M O N T H L Y C L A S S IF IE D H A T E S
D A IL Y C L A S SI I I U ) RA TH S
8 w o r d s ........................................................................ $3 00
V Si
20 v\ords . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $.) ,>C
_
i i
n p i m i v p f l
C L A S SI I- IL I ) D E A D L IN E S
or less
j d a y ..................................... $ 95
E a c h a d d i t i o n a l d a y
C la s s ifie d D is p la y ............... J I.3 5 per c o lu m n ln?h
A d d itio n a l
w o rd s
$ 02
. . . .
..............$ 8 5 * * !* ..* !!.* !!.* !!!!$ OI
w o rd s
F r i d a y T e x a n ..................................... T h u r s d a y 3 p.m.
J
T u e s d a y Texan .............
M o n d a y 3 p.m.
^
*
i ™ , '
l m m U d l a T 1
8n ;Vlv ‘'r U ? ', m,''n t'
i < Li ven, b s th e p u b lish e rs
im m e d ia te notice must
a re re sp o n s ib le fo r onl\ enc
in c o rre c t in sertio n .
Apartm ents
Rooms for Rent
Sewing
c o o l , .
F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T ,
tw o b locks fro m U n iv e r s it y . P r iv a t e
e n tra n c e . 2512 S a n A n to n io . ( J R 7-4677.
R O O M
A I R-C O O I.E R
F iv e
blocks D R E S S M A K I N G
U n iv e r s ity- *25 P e r m onth.
holes dom
a lte ra tio n s
b u tto n
in my hom e. R e a s o n a b le
G R 2-3332.
prices. G R F 9130.
F U R N I S H E D A P A R T M E N T for 3 boys.
N e w fu r n itu r e , b ills paid. G R 2-3776,
L A R G E A T T R A C T I V E A P A R T M E N T S
fo r men. Good lo ca tio n . T h re e room s,
p r iv a te bath. $20 p e r m onth. A p p ly
a fte r 5 p.m . 710 W e s t 24, A p t. 2.
F U R N IS H E D D U P L E X A P A R T M E N T ,
couple. T ile bath, sh o w e r, e v a p o ra
tiv e co o ler. N e a r U n iv e r s it y . S ta d iu m ,
COS E a s t 20’ v>,
In q u ir e 2055B S a b in e ,
e ve n in g s, w eekends. G R 2-1043.
3 - R O O M F U R N I S H E D a p a rtm e n t
th r e e g irls, $75 p e r m onth.
fo r
R ills
p aid . R e q u ir e three-m onth lease. Also.
la r g e 1ighthou*m keeping room a t $40.
A p p ly 507 W e s t 7th. G R 8-2220.
m en. M o d ern . Q u ie t.
G A R A G E A P A R T M E N T S . U n iv e r s it y
bath,
T ile
service.
B i lls
S a b in e . G R 2-1043
s h o w e r,
paid. $30. 2055B
e ve n in g s, w eekends.
cooler. M a id
Special Services
A R N O L D S
G u a d a lu p e .
H A R B E R
H a ir c u ts
S H O P
$1. F ia t
2502
t o p s
$1.25.
A N N A B E L ’S D A V N U R S E R Y . L ic e n s
ed S e v e ra l vacan cies. B lo c k w est of
cam pus. M o n th ly rates. H a lf- d a y ra te s
fo r su m m e r stud ents. 412 W e s t 23rd.
G R 2-7605.
R E N T T V ’s.
I.a te m odels.
ra te s . H O 5-5597. G R 2-2692.
L o w e s t
L I Q U I D D U P L I C A T O R S E R V I C E . M a s
te r c o p y sin g le spaced o r w ith d r a w
ing. 70c. D o u b le spaced. $50 D u p lic a
tio n s 2 cents each. G R 8 3806.
in fa n ts
J O E A
an d p la y school,
J E A N S L I C E N S E D N u rs e r\
to 6. T o
I stu d e n ts and w iv e s - A re yo u in terested
in h e lp in g in m y p la y s c h o o l? S a la r y .
D o y o u h ave a c h ild o r c h ild re n you
w a n t c a re d
tw o
fence. T r a n s p o r
acres.
ta tio n . G R 7-7964.
f o r '1 T w o houses on
B o th u n d e r
d itio n e d
N O V A C A N C I E S N O W . but air-con
fo r m en
room s a v a ila b le
J u l y I a n d 17. L in e n s , m a id se rvice,
p a r k in g space, car- w a sh in g p riv ile g e s .
$25 and $40 per m onth. N .C . A rm s
306 E a s t 30, G R 7-0501,
W a n te d
W A N T E D - B A B Y S I T T I N G b y y o u n g
w h ite la d y. G E 2-1583.
Help W anted
S I N G L E W H I T E M A L E , age 21-30 fo r
a m b u la n ce a tte n d a n t. S u m m e r. M u s t
h a v e d r iv e r s license. A p p ly 1104 Guad-
a ! u po.
W A N T E D : S T L ’ D E N T
home.
A p p ly
F u n e r a l Horne. 1104 G
era I
to w o r k in fun-
H y lt in M a n o r
uadalupe.
VV I L L G I V E
house to m ale student
a ir- co n d itio n ed
guest
in ex ch an g e
fo r F r e n c h lessons. G R 7-4660.
lad y.
A R T & D I S P L A Y
Y o u n g
E x p e r i
F u ll
e nc e d good, o p p o rtu n ity . P le a s a n t
w o r k in g co n d itio n s. D isc o u n t o n
p u rchases. A p p ly P e r s o n n e l D ir e c
tor.
tim e.
G O O D F R I E N D ^
9(i I C o n g ress
Tutoring
T U T O R I N G F R E N C H . T ra n s la tio n .
in stru ctress. M ile . D u p u is .
E x p e r t
G R 6-2296. 2506 R io G ra n d e .
tra n s la tio n C o m p l e t e ,
te rm pap ers,
T U T O R I N G E N G L I S H . F R E N C H , a l s o
th o ro u g h
re p o rts,
e x p e r i
te a ch e r.
E D I T I N G of
theses, d isse rta tio n s.
E x p e r t,
enced. q u a lifie d ; U n iv e r s it y
E n g lis h B u ild in g 403. G R 74)026.
C O A C H IN G IN S P A N I S H . E x p e r ie n c e d
teach er. N e a r U n iv e rs ity . G R 2-8652.
Typing
D E L A F I E L D T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . T h e
them es. N >tary#
d iss e rta tio n s ,
ses
G R 2 6569.
D I S S E R T A T I O N S . T H E S E S .
E le c tro -
(s y m b o ls ). M rs. R it c h ie U T .
m a l i c
N e ig h b o rh o o d G R 2-4945.
A L L T Y P E S W O R K done b y e x p e rK
enced tx pist. E le c tr o m a tic . G R 2 6359.
I H E S E s
I H E M E S .
L E G A L p ap ers.
708 W e s t 28th. G R 2-8402.
T A P I N G
21 cents p a g e : 5 cents c a r
bon. G R 7 1577. 1803 F o re s t T r a il
C A R EFU LLY -D O N E T H E S E S , disser
‘*00
F;xpei ioneed.
E le c t r ic
ta tio n s.
Vt est 31 G R 2-9444.
For Sale
A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G on I B M e le c tric .
R e a s o n a b le H O 5-8810.
1952 D O D G E G L A B C O U P E . R A H .
W S M W i l l co n s id e r t r a d e . A lso 1947
C h ry s le r. R A H . P r ic e d fo r q u ic k sale
a t $95. H O 5-6965,
A F F E C T I O N A T E . E V E N - T E M P E R E D
ob ed ien t. G i r l ? No. boy. O n e y e a r
old P o b e rm u n n P in s c h e r. R e g is te re d .
E a r s clipped. S a c r if ic e for fa rm home.
G R 0 1280 betw een 5 p.m . a n d 8 p.m .
For Rent
C O A C H IN G IN S P A N I S H . E x p e r ie n c e d
te a ch e r. N e a r U n iv e r s it y . G R 2 8652.
F O U R B L O C K S F R O M U n io n Ex p erl-
eneed d e . a ro m a tic ty p is t. M in o r e d it
ing D is s e rta tio n s , theses, re p o rts M rs .
R o d o u r G R 8-8113.
M A R T H A A N N Z 1 V L E Y , M B A .
A com plete p ro fe ssio n a l ty p in g ser-
\ in
ta ilo re d to th e needs of U n i
v e rs ity students S p e c ia l k e y b o a rd
la n g u a g e , science.
eq u ip m en t
and e n g in e e rin g
theses and dis-
se rtat ions
fe r
C o n v e n ie n tly lo cated a t
< ; OOOA L L
W O O T E N
I O R M
B L D G .
"J usi G u a d a lu p e
I ho . G R 2 3210
PRETTY C O E D J O ELLEN G IL L and Bevo the Seventh seem to
be pretty good friends now, but it is very doubtful if he will be so
am iable this fall when he takes over the m ascot’s role for the foot
ball team. Bevo will be a lot bigger than his present 180 pounds
when he enters M em orial Stadium in Septem ber.
Bevo VII To Join
New Coach, Team
There w ill be a new team, a new
coach, and a new Bevo for the
1957 football season at die U n iv e r
sity.
B e vo V II. the youngest mascot
the U n ive rsity has ever had,
is
almost four months old. Although
*e ages of Bevo I and Bevo I I are
ncertain, they were grown steers
they became U niversity
ahyn
be
before
un.
mascots.
B e vo I I I was two years old when
he cam e from
the San Antonio
zoo. Bevo IV , the meanest Bevo
of all, was seven years old when
he came from F o rt G riffin State
P a r k in Albany. Bevo V was con
sidered a calf, but he was actually
a year-and-a-half-old.
B e v o V I, our last Bevo and the
half-brother of our present one,
be
became a U n ive rsity mascot at the
age of two. E v e r y Bevo since Bevo
I V has come from F o rt G riffin
SI
tate P a rk .
SCIENTIFIC
W A T C H
REPAIR
* Depend“b\ee P r S e
E L E C T R O N IC
T IM E R U SED
B evo V I I is growing rapidly and
is already full of the i n ’ fighting
spirit. Although his horns are now
only nubs, it is estimated that they
w ill be at least six inches by foot
ball season.
Bevo has doubled his weight
since M arch, when he was first
brought in at the age of two weeks.
He now weighs 180 pounds, but will
probably weigh 300 or even 350
pounds by the time football season
is here.
“ He w ill be big enough to take
to the football gam es,’' says L. L.
Wynn, B e v o ’s guardian.
The B e vo tradition began in 1910,
' when a Longhorn was brought to
the Aggie game. The presence of
the steer .supposedly inspired the
I Longhorns to beat the Aggies 21-7.
Late r, disgruntled Aggies branded
j the U n ive rsity mascot, 13-0, humili
ating him with the score of the
1915 Aggie victory.
B u t ingenious U n ive rsity students
changed the “ 13“ to “ B . “ and with
the help of a running iron “ 13-0“
became “ B e vo .” The first Bevo
ended his career by being the main
course of barbecue to celebrate a
Longhorn victory over the Aggies.
There have been a variety of
B e v o ’s since 1920. Some have in
spired more victories than others;
some have brought more
luck.
Bevo V I I m ay be ferocious like
Bevo IV , or docile like Bevo V,
but it is hoped he brings good luck.
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