T h e D a ® T e x a n “ First College D a ily in the South” Vol. 60 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, APRIL 23, 1961 Eight Pages Today Vol. 158 JFK. Ike Discuss Situation in Cuba By The A ssociated P ress ! Eisenhower’s statement appeared to be more in the nature CAMP DAVID, Md.— Former President Dwight D. Ei- of an expression of unity behind the President than direct senhower discussed the tense Cuban situation with Presi- approval of Kennedy’s outspoken position or of the adminis- dent Kennedy Saturday, then sidestepped a direct answer frat ion’s role in encouraging the ill-fated attempt to invade on whether he endorsed Kennedy’s position. Cuba. 0 East vs. W e s t . . . Kennedy’s apparent purpose in arranging the meeting was to help rally strong national support for whatever further steps he thinks this country must take in the Cuban crisis. ★ Kennedy previously had discussed the Cuban crisis with ♦two other Republican leaders — former Vice-President Ric­ hard M. Nixon and Senator Barry Coldwater of Arizona. The W h i t e House said he plans to see Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York this week. tra n sp o rte d the m e rc e n a ry b an d s which invaded C u b a .” “ I say I am all in favor of the United States supporting the man who has to carry the responsibility for our foreign af­ fairs,” was his reply when asked if he approved Kennedy’s blunt stand on Communist-oriented Cuba. W ith YR's YD S Mum On Debate A sp o k esm an for the Y o u n g D e m o c ra ts said S a tu rd a y his club h as nothing to sa y now co ncern­ ing a re p o rte d Y oung R epublican challenge the M ay 27 T e x a s se n a to ria l election. to d e b a te Andy Schouval, v I c e-president of th e Y D ’s, sa id th a t the club has h ad no notification of the challenge and th a t he h ad no com m ents un­ til notification h a s l>een receiv ed . The resolution, as released F ri­ day read: “ We, The U niversity of T exas Young Republican Club, do hereby challenge the Young D em ocrats to a senatorial de­ bate In which w e will speak on behalf of John Tower, and the Young D em ocrats m ay attem pt to defend BHI Blakley. Prom pt reply is requested so that a r ­ rangem ents m ay he m ade agree­ able to both parties. "It la hoped that such a d e­ bate w ill se rv e to enlighten the student body on the issu es of the cam paign." The resolution was signed by Lee executive vice-presi­ McFadden, dent of the Young Republicans. MOSCOW — W ith a w arning of d a n g e r ah ea d , P re m ie r K h ru ­ shch ev b lam ed the U nited S tates .Saturday for la st w eek s w reck ed invasion of C uba and called the a tte m p t topple F id e l C astro “ a c rim e w hich h a s revolted the w hole w o rld .’’ to it been “ Now e s ta b ­ h a s lished in c o n tro v e rtib ly ,” K h ru sh ­ chev said in a le tte r to P resid en t K ennedy, " th a t it w as the U nited in te r­ S tates and vention, th a t p re p a re d financed, the a rm e d Awards Feature Of Swing-Out S pecial a w a rd s to o u tstan d in g stu d e n ts and introduction of new p re sid e n ts of ca m p u s o rg a n iz a ­ tions w ill h ig h lig h t th e U n iv e rsity ’s Swing-O ut cere m o n y F rid a y a t 6 :45 p.m . on th e M ain M all include T op le a d e rsh ip a w a rd s to be an ­ nounced th e M ike F lynn C itizenship A w ard to th e o u tsta n d ­ ing m a le stu d e n t; S ilv er Spurs A w ard to th e o u tsta n d in g w om an stu d e n t; a n d th e M a rjo rie D arilek M em orial A w ard to the o u ts ta n d ­ ing independe nt coed. O th er sp ecial a w a rd s to be p re ­ th e Bill M cG ill i th e T ex as sented include A w ard p re se n te d by Cowboys, m e n ’s se rv ice o rg an iza- I to its o u tsta n d in g m e m b e r; I lion, th e Jo h n F ry M em o rial S ch o lar­ ship p re se n ted by S ilver Spurs, m e n 's se rv ic e o rg an izatio n , to its top m e m b e r; a Service A w ard p re ­ sented by Spooks, w o m en ’s serv ice o rg an izatio n , to a seco n d -se m e ste r fre sh m a n o r a sophom ore coed who h as re n d e re d all-round c a m ­ pus se rv ic e ; a n a w a rd by the In ­ te r fra te rn ity Council its out- sta n d in g m e m b e r; an A lpha L am b- The sto ry re la tin g th e tra v e lin g d a D elta book a w a rd to a senior the for th re e and a half y e a rs , and a M o r­ to th e sophom ore coed w ith the high­ e st g ra d e a v e ra g e . ★ C hevrolet engine block has gone w om an who has m ain ta in e d to A ggieland a n d re tu rn e d . F o u r h ig h e st a v e ra g e U n iv e rsity stu d e n ts p u t the block in a v isitin g A ggie frie n d ’s c a r ; t a r B o ard S cholarship A w ard t r u n k R ound-U p W eekend. T he B a tta lio n , c a m p u s n e w sp ap er a t A&M, re la te d tile sto ry to th e Ag­ gies. By CHARLIE SMITH sch o lastic to Referring to K ennedy’s declara­ tion that the United States has an obligation to defend the Western Hem isphere from outside ag g res­ sion, Khrushchev s a i d : “ Mr. President, you are following a dangerous path. Ponder that.” Ile feels the goose told K ennedy in e ffe c t: is W hat’s sa u c e for the sau ce for the g a n d e r — if U nited S tates the it h as right to help bring down C a stro 's c om m unist-b a c k e d reg im e b e ­ c a u se it th re a te n s A m erican se­ cu rity , then the Soviet Union has an equal rig h t to d e stro y A m eri­ can-backed g o v ern m en ts on its own b orders. He insisted, how­ ev er, th a t M oscow would not try to do this. * 'A Distortion . . WASHINGTON — The U nited S tates denounced Soviet P re m ie r K h ru sh ch e v 's la te s t m e ssa g e on C uba S a tu rd a y as “a d istortion of th e the b asic concepts of rig h ts of m a n .” Trials Foreseen MIAMI — C uban ra d io b ro a d ­ c a sts a p p e a re d S a tu rd ay to be laying the groundw ork for show ­ tria ls of an ti-C astro p ris­ c a se the Z ap ata in o n ers c a p tu re d P en in su la. In th e w ake of F rid ay '* te le ­ vised “ in te rro g a tio n ” of the pris- I oners, the H av a n a rad io ch a rg e d a t le a st tw o of th e m w ith m u rd e r I and theft. Castro to Speak The g o v e rn m en t controlled Cu­ b a n ra d io said S a tu rd a y P rim e M inister F id e l C a stro will a p p e a r on nationw ide television and r a ­ dio hookups Sunday to tell how his reg im e sm ash e d the reb el in­ vasion. As fa r a s is known C astro has n o t a p p e a re d publicly since the C uban in v ad e rs stru c k la st M on­ d a y . ★ Guerrilla Survey Set Nixon said F rid a y night h e h ad a ssu re d K ennedy of his su p p o rt, even to the c o m m itm e n t of A m e r­ ican a rm e d lie said he forces, w ould b ac k the P re s id e n t in such a m ove if K ennedy co n sid ered it n e c e ss a ry to stop the buildup of th e C om m unist b each h ead in C uba If K ennedy got any s im ila r a s ­ the su ra n c e s fo rm e r p re sid e n t d id n 't tell new s­ m en a b o u t it. from E isen h o w er, T en U n iv e rsity stu d e n ts w ill be selected to p a rtic ip a te in th e th ird T exas Student L e a d e r S e m in a r in Chile th is su m m e r. A pplication fo rm s m a y be ob­ tained s ta rtin g T u esd ay fro m th e In te rn a tio n a l O ffice, IOO W e s t T w enty-sixth Street. C om pleted applications, t r a n s- a c rip ts of com pleted c o u rses, are including Mortar Board Picks Sixteen Sixteen new in itiates w e re ta p ­ for M o rta r B oard F rid a y ped m orning. The new M o rta r B o ard s will w e a r black m o r ta r bo ard s and all w hite d re s se s to classes M onday and T uesday. Initiation be held M onday a t 6:30 a rn. a t the U n iv ersity T ea House. c e rem o n ies will A r e tr e a t is scheduled for Sun­ to 4 p m . a t P e a se d ay from 2 P ark . The new initiate* are Kolinila B ailey, Beth Blazek, France* ’coper, Nancy Cotton, France* Irake, Roberta H o u s e , Elly Med aa, P eggy P ace, JoAnn Pan- ratz, Sally Predock, S u s a n teed, S a l l y Hundquist, Pat XuHch, Martha R u s s e l l , Beth Kobertaon, and Barbara Word. M o n d a y De a dl i ne Set For Flynn No m i n a ti o n s M ike F lynn a w a rd nom inations w ill be a c c e p te d until 5 p.m . M on­ d ay in Speech B uilding 102. The rea so n for nom ination and list of the n o m in e e ’s a c tiv itie s a m u st be included. WASHINGTON — R e t i r e d A rm y G e n eral M axw ell I). T a y ­ lor, who in W orld W ar II m ade a d an g ero u s excursion behind en e m y lines a s an im p o ita n t secret ag en t, w as assigned by P resid en K ennedy S a tu rd a y ; special survey of the m ilita ry 's g u e rrilla w a rfa re organization. to m ak e S a tu rd a y th is le tte r c a m e to the T e x an , signed by The B a tta lio n ’s Bob Sloan, m a n a g in g editor, and T om m y H olbein, new s e d ito r: Included “ T u e sd a y ’s B a tta lio n re la y ed the in sto ry to the A ggies T he B a tta lio n 's account w as the notation th a t th e U n iv e rsity w anted th e ir m o to r b ack , so p a i n t e d o ra n g e and w hite, it could be shipped collect to som e o th e r uni­ v ersity . "T u e sd a y night one W a y n e Ahr. a g ra d u a te o cean o g rap h y m a ­ jo r from San Antonio, c am e into o u r office. He had just discovered the c ra n k c a se . In "A hr w a sn 't m ad. fact he thought th e w hole idea w as g re a t - so m uch so th a t he went rig h t out arid bought a paint brush and two cans of p a in t (m aroon and w hite). “ W hat A hr p la n s to do w ith the c ra n k c a s e w e d o n 't know. We can only guess. At an y ra te , w e'd be on the lookout for the w andering engine bloc k. “ B ed-pushing nev er ap p ealed to Aggies m uch B ut th i s ’ The pos­ sibilities of cngine-block sending a re unlim ited. • And why lim it o u r­ selves to just the block. You send us an oran g e an d w hite C ad illac; we send you a m aroon and w hite John D e e re .” Well, a fte r m uch in n er thought on the su b ject, I feel like the Ag­ gies would have about as m uch use for an o ra n g e and w h i t e C adillac as I would for a J o h n D eere, whrnh a in ’t ju st a heckuva 'ct. * * Here s the answ er to the m arble problem, published In F r i d a y'n T e x a n : The student put one white m ar­ ble in one box and the rem aining m arbles — nine white and IO black —in the other box. The chances of the dean drawing a white m ar­ ble then would be one plus ninc- ntneteenths divided by two, which would be 73.7 per cent. T h a t's nearly three to one odd* in the student'* favor. Work on VC Speeds Up Shelly Flato, Linda Morris, a n d Lucijane Stro­ lle r, members o f last y e a ' s sorority division w inner, K appa Kappa G am m a, try th e ’r hands a t construction and painting as Varsity Carnival a c tiv ity speeds up. P ap e r a n d p e e 1 U ‘/ra n g e forms as co n te stin g g ro u p : p rep are ‘he ’- e r*rie . Publicity fo r the ezent w i b e g in M o n d a y . J i g ' '. may be put up beginning a t midnight Sunday. .Union 323, P hoto by A. ant Du e M o n d a y for SA Preparing to Kick Up Dust J ohn Pinckney, Texas catcher, flies throu gh the air before slid­ ing across home p la te Saturday ahead o f the b a ll and R:ce C atcher Jim Fox. U m p ire Rusty Lyons looks on. The Longhorns continued three-game the ir w inning ways, b e a tin g Rico to sweep a tw ic e ,erier. The victo ry wa* Texas' 17th w ithout a 'oss and gave th * Longhorns a 2-qam e lead over Baylor in the Southwest C onference baseball race. (For the gam e stories and more p ic tu rec, see page 4.) —Photo by Avant Chilean Group To Be Chosen th e In te rn a tio n a l Office Briefs... From the Wire By The Associated Preis Control of R ig h t-W in g is not Spreads Fast in A lg e ria On Exchange Program I Soviet Students To Arrive Tuesday P la n s for the visit call for an o p ­ po rtu n ity to o b se rv e sta te govern­ m en t in action, to v isit a n e le m e n ­ ta r y school, to d isc u ss race re la ­ tions, a n d to e x p e rie n c e a n u m b e r of fe a tu re s of U n iv ersity life, In addition to sight-seeing. T he p la n s for th e visit h a v e been developed in an effort to p ro v id e a s thorough and n a tu ra l an o p p ortunity a s pos­ sible fo r the Soviets to o b serv e an d fe a ­ e x p e rie n c e tu re s of A m erican life, according to F ra n k L W right, YMCA exec­ utive w ho is s u p e rv ise r and adm in- is tra to r for th e A ustin visit. The group w ill spen d tim e In New Y ork C ity, F o rt W ayne, Ind.. O berlin C ollege in O hio an d at. th e U n iv e rsity of M issouri before a r ­ riving h ere. T hey w ill h av e a few d ay s in W ashington before le a v in g New Y ork for M oscow M ay 7. im p o rta n t som e The visit is p a r t of the fo u rth annual US I ’SSK ex c h a n g e p ro ­ g ra m w hich h as b ro u g h t 60 Soviet stu d e n ts to th e U nited S tates and sent 187 A m eric a n stu d e n ts to th® Soviet Union o v er the p a st th re e y e a rs. F our th® U niversity h a v e previously v isite d the Soviet Union. Two w ill go th e re this su m m er. stu d e n ts from PA R IS- 'The F re n c h g o v ern m en t ( said S a tu rd a y night the right-w ing ; m ilita ry ju n ta w hich seized A lgiers i in a bloodless coup e a rlie r in the d ay h a s e x ten d e d to w e ste rn A lg eria by ta k in g over the city of O ran. its control T he coup p ro m p ted P re s id e n t C h arles de G au lle t o a ss u m e ex­ tra o rd in a ry police flowers a n d call a C abinet session Which p ro c la im ­ ed a sta te of e m e rg e n c y in F ra n c e . ★ Laotian Truce P e n d i n g \S VSI! IN ( . T O N — S e c r e t a r y of s a i d S a t u r d a y S t a t e D e a n R u s k n i g h t h e e x p e c t * a c e a s e f i r e to Im< a n n o u n c e d f o r I j u i * w i t h i n t h e in h o u r * . H e p l e d g e d n e x t to e s ­ t h e I o i l e d Stat*'* w ill t r y t a b l i s h a ii e ii t r a I, I n d e p e n d e n t L a o s t h r o u g h n e g o t i a t i o n . ft t o N e w Peak Due in Trial JE R U S A L E M - The hour n e a rs fo r Adolf Fi< Itm ann to confront proscc ition w itn esses who knew him ix m o ra lly as Nazi G e rm a n y ’s No, I. Ji a -h u n te r during the H itler e ra . Sly G u n m a n Robs B a n k M A M O , T e x . - Xii a g i l e , d e a t h th re a ten in g gunm an of 53 c u t a h o le in tile f i r s t State B a n k ro o f h ere S a tu rd a y , dropped t h r o u g h , patiently tied up em ploye* a * t h e y a rriv e d e s c a p e d w i t h a r r e s t e d h i m t w o h o u r s l i t e r . a n d S,Vi,(MMI O fficers for w o r k UN Asks Cuban Peace U NI TKR NATIONS ’Hie G e n eral A ssem bly finished its ret >rd stop- and-go la th ann u al session a t 6:02 a .m . S a tu rd a y a fte r a post m id­ night plea for Cuban - A m erican peace* and to save the UN Congo ope rat it rn from bankrupt! y. last-m inute action C ounc il to Help A g g i e s T e x i s < OI . I , I . ( . I S T M I ON W M d i r e c t o r * N a t u r i t a \ c r e a t e d a “ C e n t u r y C o u n c i l ” of KH) o u t ­ s t a n d i n g T e x a n * to h e l p m a p t h e t h e c o l l e g e . f u t u r e of T h e p l a n is a i m e d a t d e v e l o p ­ in g VIM f u l l y In l i n e w i t h n e e d s t h e p e r i o d of t i s x.",1h w a r , a n d b e t w e e n in 197fi i ts I hot Ii a n n i v e r s a r y s t a t e , d u r i n g t h i s , t h e Seven Soviet students will a rriv e in A ustin T u esd ay to spend a w eek u n d er an ex change p ro g ra m w ork­ ed out by th e N ational Student YMCA and YWCA. The p ro g ra m is in cooperation w ith the US Council ! on S tu d en t T rav e l and the USSR C om m ittee on Youth O rg an iza­ tions. The seven Soviets will be e n te r­ selected gro u p of tain ed by a “ h o st” stu d en ts a t the U niversity. The hosts w ill hold th e ir la s t orien­ tation the a rriv a l of th e R ussian* to discuss th e ir a rr iv a l arid g reetin g s. ic ssio n Sunday before Education Sets Council Election The C ollege of E d u c a tio n will hold its annual election fo r m em - tiers of the E ducation C ouncil Mon­ d a y from 9 a .rn to 3 p m . The poll w ill tx* located un the n orth side of S utton H all. T w elve stu d en t m e m b e rs will be the following nom i­ elec ted from nees : M a r g a re t Bowles, N ancy Mon­ day. L inda K ay Phillips, R ay Ann Johnson, K ay K ocurek, K aren P a r ­ ker, H a rrie t Fr iedm an, M ary Wef- feb a ch , B etty D ennard, Ann E isen­ stein, M a rth a E sten, Shirley P rice, Suzanne La M aste r, B everly B rind­ ley, L inda M orris, N ancy Andrew's, M ary L ois F rid a y , Linda R allahan, Anita H ard y , • C olleen C opeland, K aren C u sh m an , M ary Anne H erd­ m an, A rden R eed, M ary Shigley, Sue B trd en . Also, Connie H e rb ert, K arol K irk, G lenda Firikclstein, Susie (.re e v e s, D inah K ay K eiser, N ancy K leir, P a tr ic ia L oughry, Vicki I Lovelady, R e b ecca Sue M atthew s, P au la N orm an, S uzanne P rince, B everly S tevenson, B a rb a ra W atts, E lea n o r W e i s s , M ary C a th ry n Sau­ er, E lain e C ollins, I^aurie H argis, And, B ib b le Ann H a rp e r, N ancy Swift M ichele K ranz, Penlopc B urleson J a n e C lem ents, M a rg a re t " B i t s y ’ D utton, C aro ly n “ Jo Jo " K >ppei Alice A M arshall, Lydia Mocxly K atu n Stein, M abel Ann Brown. C arolyn Tull. * * * * * * due a t no la te r th a n 5 p .m . F rid a y . K now ledge of S panish re q u ire d a s a p re re q u isite selection. f o r , in S tu d en ts p a rtic ip a tin g the e x ch an g e w ill be chosen larg e ly on the b asis of a c a d e m ic re c o rd s lead e rsh ip , a c c o rd ­ and c am p u s . N eal, d ire c to r ing to D r. Jo e W o f th e In te rn a tio n a l Office. at R esid en ce the 1961-62 the U n iv ersity long session d u ring is a re q u ire m e n t fo r selection. Sophom ores a n d ju n io rs w ill lie given p re fe re n c e . in one of S tu d en ts m u st a lso lie m a jo r­ ing o r m in o rin g the fields of stu d y ta u g h t a t th e In­ stitu te P e d a g o g u e , the b ra n c h of th e U n iv e rsity of Chile with is b e i n g w hich th e ex ch a n g e includes m ost conducted. T his lan g u ag e s, edu­ social scien ces, cation, and th e p hysical and n a ­ tu ra l scien ces. F ull tra n sp o rta tio n and m a in ­ te n a n c e costs will be p aid for the p a rtic ip a n ts. In terv ie w s will begin for tho ap p lic a n ts M ay I, w ith final s e ­ lection announced M ay 7 o r 8, a c co rd in g to D r. N eal. A se rie s of o rie n ta tio n sessions, including a th ree d a y briefing in W ashing­ ton, D .C., will p re c ed e tho p ro ­ g ra m . Olian Case Due Monday Hearing Tow nes Hall in eithci ium o r Room 111 In C ourt. O lian is c h a :god wilt. tho a u d ito r­ the Student • D istrib u tin g of c am p a ig n slo- 1 grins on slips of p a p e r enclosed in p e a n u t shells. •C a m p a ig n in g a1 a m eeting of th e R e p re se n ta tiv e P a rty on F e b ­ ru a ry 12, • W earing n e w sp a p e r clippings as lapel p la c a rd s by O lian sup­ p o rte rs. in v itatio n • Telling The D aily T ex an of an to a W a s h i n g t o n conference w ith P resid en t K en­ nedy. M onday night at 8 the student C ourt will ag ain convene in T o.1.ut • H all to hear a rg u m e n ts for re -open- ing of the c a se of Don Y a through The A ppellate Court h as g . m the Student C ourt the pow er to re-ojw n fhp t hi>e if sufficient cause * n h shown to do so Y arbrough w a s d i s q u a l i f i e d bv the f < th*' S tu d en ts' tile S tudent f o u r ’ vc e -p re-id en cy of A ssociation. to i in Committee Applications R ec o m m en d atio n s and a p p lic a ­ tions w ill Ire ta k e n for a p la in tiv e positions on c o m m ittees of tho Stu­ through dent A ssem bly M onday in W ednesday fro m to 6 p rn. I Tax Fate Held by D aniel A1 .si IN T exas has edged clos* i than evei before to a gene: ai sales t a x as ,i fiscal, c u re-all in tho face of a blunt w a rn in g from G overnor P ric e D aniel th a t the fight is not over Texan to H e a d Editors U - \ S H I N G T O N — F e l i x R . Me n i g h t , e x e c u t i v e e d i t o r of t h e D a l l a s T i rn e * H e r a l d a n d o n e o f t h e n a t i o n s b e s t k n o w n n e w s p a p ­ e r m e n . S a t u r d a y wa.* e l e c t e d p r e s i d e n t of t h e A m e r i c a n S o c i e t y of N e w s p a p e r E d i t o r s , Seats A v a ila b le to H ear Tow er Speak Tuesday S< its t i I m a r John T ow er speak ; at tile -• I ients A ssociation Inau- I B ii met T uesday night in the gui M u n B allroom of the T e x as Union are now tieing m ade av aila b le , a c ­ cord. \g to M umice O lian, S tu d en ts’ A ssociation president. A dm iss! in for the speech will be $1 Ho to bo paid at the door. D in n er will be se rv e d at 6:30 p.m . followed im m ed iately by the the cerem onies in a u g u ra l an d J speech. * S U S A N H A M M O N D , s e n i o r 7 e f a Tau A rn e e * * t business a i m 'istration sf udentl» as ,-ew / e l r ; ;ed sweet­ heart’. She wa m r ' ' j " red a* w -me' of th a t title at a Friday pa rty climaxing C S A Week. th ei" Weather: Cloudy, Windy Low 70, High 80 Laymen Apply W Ord To Everyday Living T he L ay M ovem ent— th e em ergence of groups of con cern ed persons w ho are involved in b oth th e life of th e cu ltu re and th e C hurch an d m eet fo r reflection on th a t com m on life— h as de­ veloping o v er th e w orld ever since th e end of W orld W ar IL P a rtic u la rly in post w ar G e rm an y an d F ran ce, cen­ te rs an d in stitu te s have come in to being w hich .struggle in th e k n o tty a re a of th e r e ­ sponsible involvem ent of lay m en an d w om en in th e lives w hich th e y live daily and th e sym bols by w hich th is life can be understood. in T h e s e the I n stitu te s h a v e , m a i n , no o r g a n ic re la ti o n s h ip with e a c h o th e r , h a v i n g c o m e into b e ­ it in g a u to n o m o u s l y . s e e m s a s th o u g h th e L a y M o ve ­ m e n t is s p r i n g i n g into b e ing all o v e r t h e w ork ! like p o p c o r n pop­ p i n g i n d e p e n d e n t l y w ith in a single I n d e e d , h o p p e r . All are c o n c e r n e d for the life of a person and his self conscious relation to his world, but each h a s its own being apart from th* o th e r s. A look a t h i s t o r y is suffic ie n t to r e v e a l t h a t w h e n e v e r t h e C h u r c h h a s c o m e a liv e , c r u c i a l r e s u l ts h a v e o c c u r r e d th r o u g h o u t the e n ­ tire c u ltu r e . W h e n e v e r this h a s h a p p e n e d , it h is b e e n l a y m e n w h o h a v e d one the w o rld , the c r e a t i v e w o r k in a lth o u g h o ften th e y h a v e b e en led by a w a k e n e d c le r g y . T his is c e r t a i n l y the e a s e in t h e p r e s e n t L a y M o v e m e n t , w h ic h w a s b e g u n a n d l a y m e n th r o u g h o u t the world . is m a i n t a i n e d b y is one of th ese T h e C hristian F a ith -and-Ll! a C om m u n ity lay cen ter s xxhich Is now having a world xx hie I m p a c t . In term s of program exten t and size of staff and fa c ilitie s, it Is one of the la r g ­ est, second on ly to one of the m a ­ jor in stitu tes In Sw itzerland . M e a n in g f u l r e la ti o n s h ip s a r e m a i n t a i n e d w i t h a ll of th e m a j o r c e n t e r s t h r o u g h c o r r e s p o n d e n c e a n d p e r s o n a l visits. E a c h y e a r m a n y v i s i to r s c o m e to th e C o m ­ m u n i t y f r o m E u r o p e , N o r t h lay A m e r i c a , a c a d e m i e s . M e m b e r s of the sta ff in A u s tin visit w ith t h e m f ro m t i m e to tim e . ★ f r o m o t h e r a n d ★ I-as t s u m m e r , W. J a c k L ew is, e x e c u t i v e d i r e c to r , a n d his wife v i s i te d t h r o u g h o u t E u r o p e . N e w s u m m e r , tw’o o t h e r s t a f f f a m i l i e s Will cro ss the A t la n tic to g a in in­ sight a n d p e r s p e c t i v e f r o m th e L a y M o v e m e n t e v id e n c e d e ls e ­ w h e r e . One of the c e n t r a l c o n c e r n s of the E u r o p e a n L a y M o v e m e n t h a s b e en v o c a t i o n a l c o n f e r e n c e s t o g e t h e r m e n a n d w h ic h brin g w o m e n e n g a g e d in t h e s a m e p r o ­ fession o r t r a d e . T h e y d i s c u s s t h e m e a n i n g of life in t h a t p a r t i c u l a r situ a tio n a n d th e w a y s a n d m e a n s by w h ic h t h e W o r d c a n be p r o ­ c l a i m e d is sig n i f ic a n t life e v e n in th e m i d s t of h o r r i b le p e r ­ plex itie s a n d p r o b l e m s . t h a t On© of the F in n ish la y r e n te r s I* concerned w ith the relation sh ip betw een the Church and m en ta l health. Dr. Aam© S ilrala, lea d er of that in the in stitu te, v isited C om m unity r e c en tly and w h ile here spoke to the C o llege H ouse about m en tal h ealth . H e sa id t h a t it is b e c o m i n g a p ­ p a r e n t t h a t t h e m e n t a l l y ill p e r ­ to s a y con­ son h a s s o m e t h i n g th e e n ­ the s i c k n e s s of c e r n i n g tir e c u ltu re. F a r f r o m b e e n a n a b e r a ti o n , t h e s i c k p e r s o n is th© e x t r e m e a n d o p e n i ll u s t r a ti o n of th e sp lit in c u l t u r e itself. ★ ★ E a s t w eek, th e C h r i s t i a n F a i t h - an d-L ife C o m m u n i t y w a s h o s t to th e a n n u al m e e t i n g o f l a y c e n t e r s in the U n ited S t a t e s a n d C a n a d a . M e e ti n g in t h e L a o s H o u s e , th is is s u e s c o m m o n g r o u p d i s c u s s e d to t h e m a n d t h e m e a n i n g of I .a y M o v e m e n t in N o r t h A m e r i c a . the C h u r c h As a p a r t of t h is g r o u p t h e C o m ­ m u n i t y r e m a i n s in c o n s t a n t to u c h this d i v e r s e m a n i f e s t a t i o n w ith of the m o s t i m p o r t a n t n e w s u r g e w ith in in d e c a d e s . T h e L a y M o v e m e n t t a k e s w i t h u t ­ t e r s e r i o u s n e s s t h e W ord t h a t it is on ly in t h e m i d s t o f t h e w o rld in w hich w e live t h a t life is m e a n ­ ingful, a n d a t t e m p t s to e m b o d y t h a t Word in its life. Job Opportunities for appeal* Application* referees In the Texas Em ploym ent Commis­ sion are now being acei pted a t th* Merit System Council. 505 B r o w n Building Minimum qualifications are graduation from an accredited law the Stats school and admission Bar of Texas. or th ree years of In- service claims exam ining experience Salary range Is J397.5>$507 30 per month. to The t'S Civil Servlc* Commission announces an exam ination for Fuel D istribution System Mechanic. W-9, for employment a t Bergstrom Air Force Base. This position pays a be­ ginning salary of $2.08 per hour. Full inform ation and applications may be obtained from the Executive Secretary. Board of US Civil Service Examiners Bergstrom A I r Forces Base, Texas. fine of the basic goals of the (Christian Faith-and-Life Com m unity Is to brinie to tho student an aw areness of w hat it moans to live in the 20th Century. To help achieve this goal speakers are brought to F rid a y night su p p ers to ta lk on v ario u s asp ects of the problem . H ere, D r. M artin A. K ra m er, a s s is ta n t p ro fesso r of philos­ ophy, sp eak s to stu d en ts of tho College H ouse on new philosophical concepts. Laos House Offers Four For Training Laymen, Programs Ministers s t u d e n t s a r e g iv en a n o p p o r t u n it y to s t u d y to g e t h c i a n d c o m p a r e n o tes a t fo u r - d a y C a m p u s M in is­ t e r s S y m p o s i u m s . T h e m i n i s t e r s h e a r l e c t u r e r s fro m the C o m m u n i t y f a c u l t y a n d guest, s p e a k e r s from T e x a s schools, in clu d in g D r W illia m A r r o w s m i t h , D r. J o h n S ilb er, a n d D r. D on W e i s m a n n of the U n i v r- s ity a n d I>r. S c h u b e r t O g d e n of SMU. 0 P arish I.ax m en'* S em in ars ar* w eek en d p rogram s for Au*- tin a r e a ch u rch m en . T h ese s e m ­ inars, xv i 11i an allied program , th* Stu d ies, flax* been d escrib ed bv a (Vim- inunity m in iste r a s “ havin g a *lg im p a r t on c h u rch es In n iflean t local c o m m u n itie s .” fjilc T h eological S t u d e n ts at r a n g e of philoso phy . fr o m th e f a r m e r s l a y p r o g r a m s t o d o c to r s T h o se xvho a t t e n d t h e w e e k e n d to g eth er study groups for live tw o (lays. T hey ho ld riin n er-tab le discussions an d w o r s h ip t o g e t h e r in a b a se m e n t chapel. ■k * All lay students a r e exposed to the C om m unity cata logs "I’heological Core C ourse is an e xam ination of This m eaning of hu m an exist- ' a n d su bsequent study in- in eth ics and w hat call l-A .” " th e once, elude theology, readinga • In planning is a series of V ocational C onference S em in a rs w hich will c o n c e n trate on the rela tio n sh ip betw een the church and p a rtic u la r vocations. One p u rp o se underlies th e I.aos House ex p erim en ts. "W e ’re c o n c e rn ed ,” a said the C om m unity m in iste r, " th a t ch u rch becom e a vital social re a lity in o u r tim e no lo n g er a place w h ere people run to h id e.” College House Seeks to Basic Issues for Texas Resolve Students . y w 'ff m z v z ?" ■ S p ' W k I 'Wp- By K I C H A R J ) V A N S T E E S K I S T E Panorama Editor F rom launching t h e pad of togethem aeii, activi­ ties a t the multi-faithed Col­ lege H ouse aim a t the hard- to-hit ideal of multi-purposed existence. According to a pamphlet issued by the C h r i s t i a n Faith-and-Life Comm unity, the College H ouse is “a resi­ dential tutorial program for U niversity students provid­ ing a dialogue b e t w e e n thought and life, leading to Understanding of Life Goal of Study Program B r T H E C O R P O R A T E M I N I S T R Y Christian Baith and Life Community X he w orld of th e m id- T w en tieth C e n tu ry is a new w orld, such as h a s n o t b ro k ­ en in upon m an in cen tu ries. W e do n o t fully u n d e rsta n d th is new w orld, w hich we did n o t ask for, and do n o t o ften w ish to be o u r w orld, b u t it is h ere, and m an in o u r tim e h a s no c hoice fin al­ ly b u t to live w ith in it. T h is n e w w o r l d m a y he charac­ terized In s e v e r a l w a y s . It Is a n a c u t e l y d y n a m i c w o r l d of flux, o n t h e m o v e f r o m fine c r i s i s to t h e n e x t. It is a h i g h ly i n d u s t r i a l ­ ized u r b a n w o r l d toot. Is p"ishtr>K o u t the old l a s t v e s t i g e s of agrarian e c o n o m y . t h e t o liv e b efo re It la an In ten sely te ch n o lo g ic a l that Is In w o r ld of A u t o m a t i o n r reusing the need for lh* train ed e x p e rt and b rin gin g a w h ole new problem of leisu r e tim e. It Is a rad ically sc ie n tific and h isto r ica l world w hich e lim in a te s t r a d i t i o n ­ al other w o r l d l y m e ta p h y s ic s a n d forces m an the actual w o rld of sp a ce and tim e. It is a c o m p l e x w o r l d of t e c h ­ n i c a l p sy c h o lo g y a n d I n w a r d n e s s w h ic h is t r a n s f o r m i n g m a n ' s u n ­ d e r s t a n d i n g of p e r s o n a l f r e e d o m F in a lly , it is a b e w ild e rin g w o r ld of s p a r e c o n q u e s t a n d n u c l e a r p o w e r s w h ic h p r e s e n t p r o b l e m s of suc h t e r r i f y i n g global propcir- t ions t h a t it is diffic ult to i m a g i n e t h e i r s c o p e a n d in te n sity . •k ★ T h is n e w w o r l d is not g o in g to go a w a y . Of th is w a c a n be c e r ­ r a n be c e r t a i n of t a i n a s w e few fact* In o u r tim e . T h e q u*s- tlon is h o w w e n r c going to live in th is w o r ld , not how w e a r e going to liv e in th e w o rld w h ic h w e w ish w e r e h e r e o r w hic h " o u g h t ” to bo h e r e . (se e n In Chit of th is new world a new m an Is b egin n in g lo e m er g e. This tile graphic new m ini art* aa the c le a rly defined hum an from a b a e l figure ap p earin g ground of ch a o s and m eaning- I.F/JWness?) Is t h i n n i n g to str u g ­ g le with th e life Im age by w hich he Is ab le to live. In so d o in g h e is u s in g his c r i t i c a l In tellig e n ce to m a k e h i s o w n d e c i s i o n s a n d to live h is own life We h a v e n o w p a s s e d t h r o u g h t h e t i m e xvhen, a s a f t e r t h e e nd of it the w a r . m e a n i n g l e s s n e s s live, a n d se lf g a v e m e a n i n g a r e n ow e n t e r i n g a t im e w h e n th e po ssib ility f o r g e n u in e m e a n i n g In h u m a n e x i s t e n c e is o n c e m o r e r a i s i n g Its h e a d . t o ★ *■ It la n o w o n d e r , t h e r e f o r e , t h a t t a s k is a a s e n s e of a u t h e n t i c c h a r a c t e r i s t i c of t h e n e w m a n . T h e p e r f o r m a n c e of t h is t a s k r e ­ q u i r e s t h e d i s c ip l i n e a n d s u s t e n ­ a n c e o f c o r p o r a t e stru c tu re s, a n d the n e w m a n la s e a r c h i n g o u t the w a y s a n d m e a n s by w h i c h h e c a n s a k e d isc ip lin e h i m s e l f of th e t a s k w hich th e w o rld . for is his the in ta k es with this new world The C hristian F aith . and • F ife radical C om m u nity In se lindane** w hich w e liv e and w r e stle s In th* a r ea of w hat It m e a n s to liv e authentic liv e s In Its c o n te st. t h r o u g h o u t serious look a t T he C o m m u n i t y , a f t e r t a k i n g t h e h i s t o r y o f a western civilization, is a w a r e t h a t th* C h u r c h the c e n ­ t u r ie s h a s a lw a y s b e en c o m p l e t e ­ ly i m m e r s e d in the w o rld of its d a y , a n d w h e n if h a s c o m e alive. i m p a c t h a s m a d e a up on c u ltu re . T h e w h ole soc iety h a s b e en r e n e w e d t e r m s of se n s i t iv i t y to w h a t In a c t u a l l y h a p p e n i n g in ifs m i d s t . sig n ific a nt e n t i r e the * * of h i s t o r ic th r o u g h t r a d i t io n the y e a r s T h u s t h e C o m m u n i t y h a s l>een c o n c e r n e d to s t a n d w ith ifs feed f ir m l y in troth t h e the C h u r c h , a n d , a t the s a m e t im e , in t h e w o r ld In w h ic h w e a r c c u r ­ it h a s r e n t l y set. w o r k e d t h i s in to Ire a f f i r m e d , w h b h w o r l d Is r e je c t i o n of th e c u l t u r a l s t r u c t u r e s is finally futile a n d to s t e r il e c y n i ­ c is m . In so d o ing i m a g e the is to s u g g e s t l e a d s t h a t th a t Is th* Church of T ile p r o b l e m , th* m issio n , w h ich .frau* C hrist, Is th erefo re, to proclaim In th* m id st of the so c ieta l s tn ic - lu r es, that this w orld Is good as It Is g iv en , that all mew are re- cels cd Into th* world Just a s they are. and Is given th* opportunity to pick up th* to life. w hich often c o m e s him a s utterly m e a n in g le ss, that Is h is life and live It to th* full, savorin g each m om en t a s th* c o m p lete m eaning of h is e s s ­ en ce. th a t each person p r o g r a m ! a n d th ro u g h o u t If is ou t of this c o n te x t a n d in th e C o m m u n i t y t h a t i m a g e th is fu r on its c a r r i e s c l e r g y m e n a w a k e l a y m e n t h e in A ustin nnd S o u th w e st T h e s e p r o g r a m s , w h ic h both U n i v e r s i t y Students nnd p e r s o n s of jxxst-col- ]og« s t a t u s , r a i s e th e b a s i c q u e s ­ tio ns o f h u m a n e x is te n c e in a n y the m id - n g c nnd t w e n t i e t h century. in sp e c ific involve in is Any p e r s o n w ho Is a liv e to the a m a z i n g p e r r ’e x itie s of o u r d a y n n d th * p r o b l e m o f h ow it Is th a t he is go ing lo live h i s life w i t h m e a n i n g , is w e l c o m e to p a r t i c i p a t e . r a i s i n g in m o r e d e ta i l, b u t A c c o m p a n y in g a r ti c l e s on this p a g e spe ll ou t s o m e of t h e s e p r o ­ g r a m s tile C o m m u n i t y w e l c o m e s a n y In q u iry c o n c e r n in g spe c ific p r o g r a m ai tiv ifies o r t h e se lf u n d e r s t a n d i n g w h ic h lies b e y o n d n n d b e h ind t h e m . T h e D a® ’ t e x a n Sund.y, April 23. 19,1 THE D A ILY T E X A N P .g . 2 O pinions expressed in T h e Texan are those of the Editors or o f the writer of the article and not nctcsSitnly those of the University administration. The Dally Texan, a student newspaper cf The University cf Texas tx published In Austin, Texas, dally except Monday and Saturday and holiday periods September through Ma-, nnd m-mi-weeklv In the summer term bv 'ne. Second-* lass postage paid at Austin. Texas. Texas Student Publication* Delivered In Austin (three months minimum) Mailed Malled out of town " V month ........................................................................................11.00 month ...................................................................................... 75c month In Austin .................. St list RITTION KATI S Associated Collegiste Pre** All tm e r lr sa I’sermaWrr M t: St PHH I diversity Press S#-r*ife South v» rste rn .fiiiirnallsm ( i n u r n s News contributions will Pe accepted bv (UU 2-11473) or editorial office. Journalism Building I al or at the New* laboratory. J 102, The circulation of fir c Is J. Ii 107. office is J. Ii. IU . (GR 2-2750) the It. the advertising (GR2-2473), and telephone P E R M A N E N T S T A F F E D I T O R ................................................................................................. JO EIC K M A N N M A N A G IN G E D I T O R ................................................................ C H A R U K S M ITH N e w s E d i t o r ..................................... D a v id T. Lopez A s s i s t a n t N e w s E d i t o r s .................................... C a r o ly n C o k e r, C a r y M a y e r , ( Je rald L ow e , C h a r l e s E s k r i d g e S po rts E d i t o r ................................................................................................ Hoyt P u r v i s F e a t u r e E d i t o r ........................................................................ ...................... P a t R u s c h A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r ................................................................................. D a v e Helton Assot Sate A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r .............................................................. L a r r y Hall C a m p u s Life E d i t o r .......................................................................R o s e m a r y J e r s i g A ssocia te C a m p u s Life E d i t o r ........................................... C m d y P e n d e r g r a s s E d ito r ia l A s s i s t a n t s ............................ J a n e t P e a v y , R i c h a r d V a n S te e n k is te . D e b bie Howell. J o a n n e W illia m s, J c a n n c R c i n c r t Bill H a m il t o n W ire C o o r d i n a t o r ................................................ S T A F F FO K T H IS IS S U E N IG H T E D I T O R ................... ...........................................................IAI K K E E V E R D E S K E D I T O R ..................................................................... DON R U T H E R F O R D Issue News, E d i t o r ........................ C h a r l e t E s k r i d g e C o p y r e a d e r .............................................. ..................................... C ind y P e n d e r g r a s s N ig h t S p o r t s E d i t o r ................................................................................ H o y t P u r v i s .V - v A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r ....................................................................D a v e Helton ................................................ ................ C a r o ly n Ste p h en s o n N J R W ir e E d itor Nig ht C u n p u s Life E d i t o r .........................................R o s e m a r y J e r s i g E d i t o r i a l A s s i s t a n t ............................................................. R i c h a r d V a n S te e n k is te responsible involvem ent In the issues of com tem porary society as free and creative intelligent persons.” re n e w a l Til* bulletin goes on to e x p la i n t h a t th* p ro g ra m iM " a n e x p e r i ­ m e n t in th* m id s t of th e w o r ld ­ w id e in C h r i s t e n d o m w h ic h o ffers th e U n i v e r s i ty s t u ­ de n t an o p p o r t u n it y to c o m e to life g r i p s w ith a n d in lh* the p r e s e n t world. the m e a n i n g of r ’* n t u ry in the T w e n ti e t h t h e c h u r c h role of In a n Interview , Allan B r o c k ­ w a y , a m e m b e r of th* C o r p o r a te M i n i s t r y of th e (T iristian F a i th - e x p la in e d a n d - t J f * C o m m u n i t y , t h a t th e pro ­ g r a m Is th e theolog ical e d u c a tio n o f l a y m e n . t h e ba sic goal of Concepts and Program t h i s , ” he " T o d o lo u n d e r s t a n d said, " w e s e e k two m a j o r c o n c e p ts . F i r s t , w e stu d y th e h is­ th* c h u r c h t o r ic a l S e c o nd, w e a t t e m p t to e v a l u a t e th e p r o b l e m s of th* T w e n t i e t h C e n tu r y . t r a d i t i o n of living in " W e s o r r y on o u r p r o g r a m in t h r e e a r e a s , ” he c ontinue d . " W e w o r s h i p t o g e t h e r e v e r y m o r n in g in C h a p e l ; w e s t u d y t o g e t h e r on s u b j e c t s s u c h a s s c r i p tu r e , c h u r c h h i s t o r y , c u lt u r e , e thic s, c h u r c h l e a d e r s a n d citizenship. F in a lly , w e e n jo y c o m m o n fellowship by living, to­ g e t h e r . ” e a t i n g a n d w o r k in g Mr. B r o c k w a y e x p la in e d t h a t w h e n he *j*ok* of " t h * c h u r c h ” h* m e a n t no p a r t i c u l a r d e n o m i ­ n a tio n , hat th * “ h i s t o r ic a l c om in an ity W h ich I* s y m b o l i z e d bv th * C h r i s t ia n w o r s h ip s e r v lc * and h a s aa Ila s y m b o l J e s u s C b r l a t .’* " W e h a v e n o o r g a n ic c o n n e c ­ tion w ith a n y p a r t i c u l a r d e n o m i ­ n a tion , but m a i n t a i n a n ex* client w o r k i n g r e la tio n w ith all P r o t e s ­ t a n t d e n o m i n a t i o n s , ” said " B o t h in th e p a s t an d a t p re se n t. rneml>er* of th* C o m m u n i t y h a ’.* r e p r e s e n t e d d e n o m i n a ti o n s a n d fa ith s ’ all h e in Diverse M em b ership At p r e s e n t 48 m e n , 20 w o m e n a n d f a * m a r r i e d couples a r e fak tog part. th* C ollege House p r o g r a m . T h is g r o u p include* 0 JI M e tho dists, 2 Episeof>alians, U n i t a r i a n s , 0 In ­ l u t h e r a n s , 7 q u i r e r s , I D u tc h R e f o rm , I D i e jt , Ii B a p tis t, 1 C h u rc h of C h rist, 7 I J e w , I I>isriple, P r e s b y t e r i a n , 1 H u m a n i s t , I Agnostic- a n d C h r i s t i a n . Th* C ollege H ouse m em b ersh ip fresh m en , 12 Ii Is m ad* up o f sop h om ores, Id Juniors, 21 sen tors, and 13 graduate, stu d en ts. T h ey ar* m ajorin g In everyth in g from E nglish and city planning and to m eteo ro lo g y . en gin eerin g c h e m ic a l In ad d itio n t h e C o m m u n i t y ea< h y e a r h a s a n u m b e r o f pe o ­ ple f r o m th e I n t e r n a t i o n a l I n t e r n V isito r s p r o g r a m . S t u d e n ts fro m a n d Asia in E u r o p e * oun tra e s r o m e t o sp e n d n y e a r at lh* (Col­ l e g e H ouse. 'Phis y e a r th e C o m ­ m u n i t y h a s tw o people f r o m Hol­ land, tw o f r o m G e r m a n y arid one f r o m F i n l a n d to g uide th eo lo g ica lly 'Ute C o m m u n i t y m a i n t a i n s a t r a i n e d staff of n p e rs o n s Ihe p r o g r a m . All h a v e d e g r e e s In th eo lo g y a n d a r e a p p o in t e d from t h e i r d e n o m ­ in atio ns to s e r v e at th e C o m m u n ­ ity. T h e y w o r k not only w ith th e College H o use, hu t w i t h o t h e r the p r o g r a m a s well. j J i n s e s of Otic Year o f Study in M e m b e r s h i p th e College is u s u a l ly on a o n e y e a r H o u s e b a s i s a c c o r d i n g to M r . B r o c k ­ w a y . H e sa id th e p r o g r a m Is d e ­ s ig n e d so t h a t m o s t pe o p le will h a v e fin is h ed t h e i r s t u d y a n d will l e a v e a f t e r o n e y e a r . H o w ev e r. he e x p la i n e d l h a t a s m a ll , s e le c t g ro u p , u s u a l l y of a b o u t ten s t u ­ d e n ts . a r e a s k e d to s t a y fo r a s e c o n d y e a r of d e e p e r , m o r e in­ t e n s e st u d y . for an To b e c o m e a m em b er of the C om m u n ity the C ollege aud H ouse, nu In terested jwrson m ust first a r ra n g e Interview with on* of Hie sta ff m em b ers In order to b eco m e acquain ted nnd to find o at m ore alKnit th* program . Then lf he Is still In (c re ste d , he xxiii fill out and sign an app lication f o r m . F in a lly , the corp orate m inistry goes over th* ap p lication s and picks out the p eop le xx ho are to be inx ited to p a rticip a te In lh* program . " W e h a v e n o e c o n o m ic o r so* th e College < ial b a r r i e r s . And H o u s e h a s b e en in te g r a t e d since Hie U n i v e r s i t y h a s b e e n , ” M r. B r o c k w a y s t a t e d . " W e a r e p r i ­ m a r i l y i n te r e s t e d in p e o p le w ho a r e a w a k e We w a n t people w h o a r e i n t e r e s t e d in d e a l i n g s e ri o u s ­ ly w ith h a s t e issues of life .” Broad Impact Mr. B r o c k w a y s a id t h a t I n t e r ­ est in t h e C ollege H ou se p r o g r a m h a s b e e n h i g h e r th is y e a r t h a n e v e r be fore . U n f o r t u n a t e ly , he a d d e d , the p r o g r a m w ill not he a b le to e x p a n d too m u c h f o r th e n e x t s e v e ra l y e a r s b e c a u s e of la< k of fa cilitie s a n d bonds. Th* C nlleg* H ouse Is th* first program of Ila typ e In th* I ni ted S tates. H ow ever. Mr. Brock w a y exp lain ed that the work done here has had an im p a c t far be the Austin a r ea . "O ther yond c a m p u se s are picking up the Id ea.” he said , "and although there Is no actu al ti* b etw een us, we keep In c los* c o n ta c t w ith on* a n o th er .” to th e C o m m u n i t y He p o in te d th e C o m m u n i t y H o use a t SM U, of the I -ny S c h o l a r s a t D u k e , C h r i s t ia n F a i th a n d Life C o m ­ m u n it y a t t h e U n i v e r s i t y of M o n ­ ta n a a n d o t h e r s a s e x a m p l e s . By I. AR R Y LEI I cxan "staff Writer A t I-aes House, laymen past college age and Austin- area m inisters are given a to sample capsule (hance versions of t h e Christian Faith and Life Com m unity’s programs. Laos House is a Greek* pillarded mansion at 700 W est N ineteenth Street. It was once the home of a pio­ neer A u s t i n resident, Dr. doodad W oolen, and from 1952 to 1958 it w as the Com­ m unity’s w om en’s residence hall. to In this ( a s e , " I - a o a ” docs not t r o u b le the F a r - E a s t r e f e r is a G r e e k w'ord w h i c h spot. It m e a n s of " t h e w h ole G o d , ” a w o rd w h ic h is th e s o u r c e of o u r E n g lish w o r d " l a y m a n ” p e op le * * L a y m e n a n d m in i s t e r s a b o u t (UXJ a y e a r c o m e to L a o * H ou se for w e e k -n i g h t a n d w e e k e n d s e s ­ sion s of w o rs h ip , s t u d y a n d co n ­ v e r s a t i o n . F o u r p r o g r a m s a r e ( e n t e r e d a t I a\ os H ouse 0 The P arish M in iste r * C o l­ lo q u ie s are a se r ie s o f three day s e s s io n s for w orking m in iste rs. S em in ars, g u e s t lec tu r er s and d isc u ssio n s of " a rt fo r m s” sr * Included In th© C olloqu ies. " A r t f o r m s , " In t h e c a s e of th e Collo quies, a r e m o v i e s : " M o b y D i c k , ” " T h e S h r i k e , ” " H e a r t of th e M a t t e r ” a n d “ An I n s p e c t o r C a l l s . ” a s well p r o g r a m s , F i l m i a r e u s e d In o t h e r I ji os Hou se as p a in t i n g s , p o e m s a n d s h o r t s t o r ­ ies. T h e s e " a r t f o r m s ” a r e not re lig ious a r t t r a d i t io n a l in se n se . P i c a s s o , F r a n z K a f k a a n d o e c u m m i n g s all se e s e r v i c e a t L a o s Ho use t h e ★ ★ 0 M i n i s t e r s w h o s e t a e c olle g e Official Notices R egistration for the Hummer Ses­ sion 19til, w ill ore ar nu Tuesday. June 13. Any student who Kus pre­ viously attended The Untversltv of Texas m iv receive Ms registration m aterials by mull by f i l i n g un application which Is available at a box front of the Otfle* of the Registrar. This must be done not later than W oodsy. May 9 in Perrin C. Smith A ssistan t R e g is tra r The In tertratern ity and Panhellenic Councils through their Special Fund Com m ittee have generously donated a Polaroid Ioind Camera K it for use In the Student Em ploym ent Bureau. This equipm ent w ill provide addi­ tional services to the gtudenU u tiliz­ ing this office. P ictures for em ploy­ ment applications and data sheets are available upon request Only a nominal pro rata fee Is required to cover the actual cost of the film All students are Invited to u st this s e r\ ice. W illiam J. B a ll. Ut recto r ★ • student All student* who pian to com plete teaching assignm ents their durmg the l » n g Term 1961-62. fait or spring, are aksed to assem ble In the Texas Union Auditorium April 25 at 4 p rn. D r. E n m ilt D. S m ith A ssociate P ro fe s so r e t C m rrtcalam an d In stru c tio n Notice to all students from Iran The National Iranian Oil Company Is offering scholarships to students from iran for the academic year 1961-62 lf you are Interested In applying for these scholarships., please see Mrs. Gall Ratliff at the Gall Ratliff at the International Of- flee Deadline Is April 3©. . « * JE>1 ‘ PANORAMA The Christian Faith-and-Life Communi Far-Sighted Planning of Founder Cause for Growth of Community N ow rn * . . com pleting its ninth y e a r of w ork, th e C h r i s t i a n F aith -an d -L ife Com m unity w a s conceived and b ro u g h t into being by the Rev. W. Ja c k L e w i s, form er P re sb y te ria n m inis­ ter to students on T he U ni­ versity of T ex as cam pus. H e continues to s e r v e a s th e Com m unity’s E x ecu tiv e D i­ rector. H is Mr. Lewis, a g ra d u a te of The U niversity of T ex as and Austin Presbyterian T h eo ­ logical Sem inary, served as a N a v y chaplain d u r i n g World W ar II and th e n re­ turned to the campus to be- gain his work w ith students. th e u s u a l s t r u c t u r e of "c a m p u s C h ris­ t i a n w o r k ” a n d h is sense of the n e e d f o r r e n e w a l w ith in th e w he re in C h u r c h , 1951 to s t u d y a n d visit la y tr a in ­ ing c e n t e r s in S w itz e r la n d , G e r ­ m a n y , G r e e c e . S c a n d i n a v i a an d e l s e w h e r e . A se rie s of 12 a rti­ cles b y M r . L ew is, w r i t t e n at t h a t t im e , r e v e a l the ideas w hich b e c a m e the p r e s e n t p r o g r a m . d i s s a t is f a c t io n w ith t h e a n t e c e d e n t s of to E u ro p e led him I n Community Planned laid t h e s e article^. Lew is out t h e p l a n b y w hich the C om ­ m u n i t y w as the it y e a r s B a s i c a l ly , f o u r f a c e t s . T h e w a s to d e v elo p follo w in g. to h ave in f.....I ..t .. U ; .I.................... ..I.a first of these, w hich w as brought into being a t inception of the the C om m unity, is w hat is now known as th e C ollege H ouse. T h is xx nrk w ith c o lle g e laym en xx an to be a resid en tia l train in g program for U n iv ersity stu d en ts w ho w ould liv e togeth er in sp e c ia l r e sid e n c e s and p a r ticip a te in a program of train in g at the sa m e tim e they w ere to ­ tally in volved In the life of the U n iv e r sity and carryin g full Uni- xe rslty a c a d e m ic load s. th eo lo g ica l for T he p hysical p a tte rn the re sid e n tia l p ro g ra m w as m odeled on th a t o p e ra tiv e a t the E nglish u n iv e rsitie s, C am b rid g e and Ox­ ford, w h ere a se rie s of re sid e n ­ tia l. su rro u n d the m a in u n iv e rsity . tu to ria l colleges T he re s id e n tia l p ro g ra m for students, w'hich b e g an w ith th irty se lected m e n in 1952, now serv es 72 m en a n d w om en plus 5 m a r ­ rie d couples in its first an d sec­ ond y e a r p ro g ra m s. T he stu ­ dents, living u n d e r c o rp o ra te dis­ cipline, e n g ag e in a p ro g ra m of study and w orship for a period of one y e a r. A selected n u m b e r continue stu d ies in depth an d p a r ­ tic ip a te in the m in istry to first- v c a r stu d e n ts a s p a rt of the Senior Fellow p ro g ra m . W ork Expanded T he second fa c e t of L e w i s ’ plan involved w ork w ith o l d e r la y m e n a n d c lerg y . T his p ro ­ g ra m w as bro u g h t into being in 1958 w hen a pilot group of lay­ m en from the A ustin a re a began study a t the I,aos House. In th* epring of 1939 the pro­ gram w a s fully e sta b lish e d , with . for . . . a A ustin lax m en studding on T h u rs- d a y nigh ts tw o eight-w eek ( L a i e " s e m e s te r s ” ©acta y ea r T h eological S tu d ies), and groups of parish c le rg y m e n who com e for a se r ie s of m e etin g s in which th ey ra ise for se r io u s discussion th e m ean in g of their liv e s in the parish a s w e ll a s study In depth co n tem p o ra ry sociolo ­ g y , and p sych ology. th eology, in T he P a rish L a y m e n ’s Sem inar a n d th e P a ris h M in iste r’s Collo­ quy as well as the C am pus Min­ is te r ’s Sym posium w ere all in­ itia te d the 1959-60 p rogram , in the C o m m u n ity ’s eighth year. T he P a ris h L a y m e n ’s S em inars m e e t on w eekends wtoen laym en e n g ag e in in ten siv e study of the sa m e c u rric u lu m w hich the Uni­ v e rs ity stu d e n ts consider in con- tinuou* resid en ce. Idea Spreads A th ird a sp e c t of L ew is’ ori g­ in al p la n involved the extension of to th e C o m m u n ity ’s w'ork o th e r cam p u se s and cities and tow ns. T his extension pro g ram is only now beginning to g e t un­ d e r w ay a s groups from other c a m p u se s begin to develop "C om ­ m u n itie s” in th e ir own situation. S cattered over th© country now are m an y of th e se groups, such a s at the C om m u n ity H ouse Southern M eth odist U n iversity. In th e n e x t four y e a r s, th is e x te n ­ sion work w ill in c re a se a s ch urch­ e s and ca m p u s groups becom e a w a re of th e ex p e rim en t w hich is being carried on in Austin and the sig n ifica n ce o f fur their own life. it T h e f o u r t h d e v e l o p m e n t w hich I>»wi* envisioned was begun very e a rly and, indeed, g rew out of the letters w hich he w rote lo in­ te reste d friends w hile he w as in E urope for th e first tim e . P u b ­ lication in a m ovem ent such as the C h ris­ tian I aith-and-Life C om m unity, arni thus L ew is saw the need for a re g u la r publication. is a v ital n e c e ssity A m onthly journal, L e tter is now pu blished to I-ay men, IO tim e s during the y e a r, Septum - he It is se n t to through -June. interested p erso n s in 41 s ta te s and 31 foreign co u n tries. expanded In the next th re e y e a rs the puix- jtoations of the C om m unity will to m ore n e a rly 0° m atch the o rig in al goal w hich Lewis had in m ind. This e x p an ­ sion will include a p u blication especially for stu d e n ts a n d w rit­ ten by th e m as w’ell as a m o re com prehensive jo u rn a l w hich will * aim ed a t th e grow ing edge i i in th is coun­ of tap id ly e x panding t y and around the w orld. o f th* < om m u n ity h a s ex p an d ed in th* .xears sin e * 1933 from a sm a * group of 30 m a le stu d en ts to th* current In v olv em en t of n e a r ly 109 students during an y g iv en a c a ­ dem ic y e a r s and m ore than 600 nori c o lle g ia te p a rticip a n ts. the la y m o v em en t a s en tire program The it Thus 700-plus persons a r e in­ volved y e a rly its p ro g ra m s in touching com m unities all o v e r T exas and th e n ation. T he fu tu re is com pletely open fo r a lm o st unlim ited expansion b a se d upon toe experien ce of the p a s t and the need of th e w orld for serio u s reflection upon th e m e a n in g of hum an existence. Sunday, April 23, 1961 THE DAILY TEXAN Raga I UT Student Group Lobbies at Capitol the bills? Q. How have you been fighting The legislative Commission of the Students’ Association has been called the only true accomplish­ ment of the University’s injunc­ tion-shaken student government during the past year. A. We have contacted personally the House leaders. We feel that they aren t impressed by demon- i sta tio n s and petitions. We also are Whether the Commission’s work working through the constituents will have any effect on the Texas of the legislators. Currently, we Legislature is yet to se seen. But are planning to write letters to the commission members are having parents of all University students the opportunity to air their views , who are Texas residents. This is to on tuition increase before legisla­ be financed from the Eyes of Texas tors. Fund. Last Tuesday, a group from the commission spoke to the House Appropriations Committee which is currently considering the hills. The follow ing is an interview with Keith Armstrong, one of the lead­ ers of the Legislative Commission, concerning the current lobbying ac­ tivities of the group. Q. Have there been any recent attem pts to increase tuition? commission doing now? Q. Keith, exactly what is the A. In 1957, tuition was raised from $25 to $50. In 1959, another attem pt was made, but it was de­ feated. in Q. What arguments did you use before the Appropriations Commit­ tee? A. Right now, the commission is lobbying against two bills, House Bill 993 and HB 1014. House Bill 993, which was submitted by Rep­ resentative Frank McGregor of Waco at the request of Governor I A. We feel that low tuition is in- Price Daniel, proposes a $50 per herent in the very nature of public tuition. House I education. If there is no real dif- sem ester raise Bill 1014, which was introduced | ferenee between the cost of at­ tending public and private school, by Representative Reed Quilliam of Lubbock, proposes a $50 per se­ there is no reason for having pub­ lic school*. m ester increase with a possible $50 reduction for a student who can It is economically basic that the prove his need. The bill also pro­ State should provide for education vides for a $25 rebate for those or that education should somehow students whose grades are higher be provided. To deny an education to an able student in a State insti- than the overall grade average in the school or department in which i tution is wrong. All who have the the student is enrolled. ability should be given a chance. Runoff Planned In Law Elections Oakes, Santiesteban Try to Break Tie Steve Oak* and H. Tati Santies­ teban, candidates for president of the Student B ar Association, will be in a runoff election as a result of their tie in the first runoff. Each candidate received 235 votes. The second runoff will be held Tuesday from 9 a rn. to 2 p m. Santiesteban, second - year law student from El Paso, is past pres­ ident of the Mid-Law Class. He re­ signed that post last fall to run for president of the Bar Associa­ tion. law in Thursday’s Oaks, from Houston, also a sec­ student, vacated ond-year other offices to run in the present election. He former Law is a School Assemblyman and past edi- j tor of the Peregrinus, I-aw School ; yearbook. Elected runoff were Charles R. McClure, Bar As­ sociation vice-president; Ben T u r-! ner Jr., Honor Council chairman; J Bob Young, I^aw School Assembly­ m an; Robert E. Wade, president ■ of the Mid-Law class; Jimmy Ivy, vice-president of the Mid-Law class; and Henry T. Brooks, Mid- Law Honor Council representative Place 2. — MIU I WU New Buildings Force Fences “ The campus has not been so fenced off since the early Fifties,” the Main University Newsletter of April l l reports. There are nine buildings either being built or re- nbvated and more to come, the bulletin said. The College of Business Admin- istration, the Department of Eco- J nomlcs, and the Bureau of B usi-; ness Research will be in their new ; home, the seven-story Business Ad- ministration-Economics Building, j by August, 1961. Construction of j this building was begun in Aug­ ust, 1959, and it is expected to cost more than four million dol­ lars. the Loans and Sciences offices, Scholarships Office, the Student Employment Bureau, and the US Post Office. Other buildings presently under construction are the Computation Center, due to open in May, 1962; an addition to the Chemistry Build­ ing to be completed next month; a warehouse for the University Press; a Water Chilling Station; and an expansion program for th# Utilities Distribution Systems. At the March meeting of th* Board of Regents, contracts were awarded for the remodeling and air conditioning of Sutton H a l l and Taylor Hall. M a r c h , 1963, is the scheduled j completion date for the new Un- i dcrgraduate lib ra ry and Academ- i ic Center being built on the West I Mall between the Main Building 1 and the Texas Union. Estimated cost for the project is nearly four and a hrflf million dollars. Work was begun this month on the West Mall Office Building be­ tween the Barker Texas History Center and the Architecture Build­ ing. Scheduled for completion in August, 1962, at a cost of more than three-quarters of a million dollars, the building will house the Stenographic Bureau, Arts and Other building projects tentative­ ly approved by the Board of Re­ gents, w i t h preliminary p l a n a either authorized or approved, ara an Engineering-Science Building; an addition to Gregory Gymnasi­ um; an addition to Townes Hall; modernization and remodeling of Waggener Hall, Garrison Hall, the Old Library Building (Barker Texas History Center), the Archi­ the Women’s tecture Building, Gymnasium, the Biology labs, and the Home Economics Building; and the conversion of rooms in the east end of the Experim ental Science Building. iii?U J* L 5*v UNIVERSITY ^’WWBBsrii Wmm rn-:. ' — *•'’■■■»»*■' <*• ___ t£u*> - ■’■roar*, -*#*» ■ imunmatM rn* Campus News in Brief Complaints Heard By Grievance Group Charges of poor service at sev- criticisms on legislative investigat- eral laundry and dry cleaning es- mg committees, tablishments in the University area Defending the film will be New- were made by J. Gus Nixon, sopho- man jackson, a member of the more, to the Grievance Committee | church of the Student Assembly Thursday night. Nixon specifically cited high pric­ es, “pretty lousy” service, unlist­ ed prices, and extra charges for quick service. He said that clothes upon occasion are list or damaged. The committee decided to invite laundry operators to appear at the next meeting. The intent of the forum Is to give fair hearing to both sides. Time will be allowed for questions from the floor. Views of the discus­ sants will be their own and not the church's. + UT Mariners Get Grant Institute of Other grievances heard were: Marine Science has been given a e Charges of noise and inefficien- $124,000 grant to conduct a large- scale study of pollution in Texas eThe need for a spring student Coastal waters Dr. Howard Odum. The University’s cy in the library. directory. director, said Saturday. mons food. eL ack of price notations on Com­ The grant is from the National Institutes of Health and will be •P a rk in g difficulties at Kinsolv- userj jn a four-year research aimed at determining the effect o f pol­ lution in chemical processes. • A smelly Littlefield Fountain. ing Dormitory. Areas where seasonal patterns of chemical processes will be Annual Pan-Am Grant include: Nueces Bay, measured Given Graduate Student ^orpus C h r i s t i Bay, Mission River Copano Bay, Galveston Bay, Sa­ bine Lake and Laguna Madre. Paul Hagle received the Pan American Round Table a n n u a l scholarship at the r e c e n t Pan American Day observance held in the Driskill Hotel. Hagle, who is working toward a ★ TSP Meets M o n d a y Consideration of changes in the m aster s degree in the Latin Amer- r a(? US I,-an Studies Institute, tv,ll do fur book wl11 ^ amon* the bu,lnM ! on the agenda for the Board of ther work In history under the di­ Directors of Texas Student Publi- rection of Dr. Thomas F. McGann. i cations, Inr., at its meeting Mon­ “ Peru, Land of Vocanoes and the day at 7 :30 p m in Journalism Incas” was the title of the talk giv­ Building 305 en at the observance by Dr. Fred the M. Bullard, professor of geology at the University. Dr Bullard was meeting will be contracts for print- ing the Cactus Texas Ranger, and in Peru on a Fulbnght grant in Student Directory for 1961-62. 1959 and taught geology at the Uni­ versity of Arequipa. Also up for discussion at ★ Faculty, Staff Members To Attend Convention Three University faculty a n d The Board will appoint associate editors for the Cactus and the Ran­ ger as well as hear a report from the its Executive Committee on appointment of the Texan manag­ ing editor. Members will also approve a staff members will participate in huft£pt Edmonds, general manager a convention of the National Edu- TSP, will report on the payroll, cation Association’s Department of Audio-Visual Instruction Monday the working agreement with the through Friday in Miami Beach, mechanical staff, and rate changes Fla. Dr E rnest F. Tiemann, Visual 1 for 1960-61 advertising. The Summer Texan. * Instruction Bureau director and as- •ocm ,. p rofe sso r of erturafionai Interscholastic L ea g u e I will begin his term as Lays Final M eet Plans 1961 DAVI president. Miss Virginia C. P aterson, au- dio-visual programming specialist for the Instruction Bureau, will serve as evaluating consultant for a session on creative crafts. Final plans are in the WTap-up or * Diversity I n t e r scholastic League state meet here, May 4-6. take part High school students from an over T e x a s will in workshops and contests in the 51st annual UIL gathering. Clayton W. Chance, assistant professor of drawing, will present a paper on results of a 15-month Regional winners will vie for research project concerning the use of an overhead projector and sta,e »w«i*d* in their conference transparencies to replace black- 1pvp1s- Events are scheduled for board drawings in lecture demon- debate, declamation, extemporary eous speaking, golf, journalism, Stratton. n u m b e r cense, original oration. reading, ready writing, science, shorthand, slide rule, tennis, and track and field. United States Office of Education onP*a rt Play. grant. The research was supported by a poetry ★ Geologists Plan M eeting Thirteen members of the Geology faculty and Bureau of Economic Geology staff, will take part in meetings of the American Associa­ tion of Petroleum Geologists and affiliated societies Monday through Thursday in Denver. ★ Group to Plan Workshop Fall workshops will be planned by the Texas Joint English Com­ mittee for School and College when is meets at the University April 28-29. The Joint English Committee will also elect officer* to succeed Dr. Robert A. Law, professor emeritus of English, and Prentiss C. Wind­ sor of Central High School In San Angelo, the present chairman and co-chairman. Attendance at district workshops in the fall of 1961 reached a rec­ ord number of 1.872 English teach­ ers. Meetings were held at Free­ port, Kingsville, San Antonio, Odes­ sa, Denton. El Paso, H a s k e l l , D e c a t u r , Amarillo, Corsicana, Brownwood, Victoria, and Lub­ bock. * Southwestern U. Names Fleming New President Dr. Durwood Fleming, pastor of in St. Luke s Methodist Church Houston, was elected president of Southwestern Univer­ sity, Georgetown recently Dr. Fleming, 47, is a graduate of SMU and the Perkins School of Theology. He also studied at East T e x a s State College and Union Theological in New York City. .Seminary Dr. Fleming succeeds Dr Wil­ liam C. Finch, who resigned the presidency to become dean of the divinity school at Vanderbilt Uni­ versity in Nashville, Tenn. The new president will begin Selective Service Exam Set Thursday in Union College men who turned In ap­ plications before April 6 to take the 1961 Selective Service College Qualification Test will meet from 8:30 a rn. to noon Thursday In Tex­ as Union 340. The test will he the only one of­ school fered during year, according to Col. Morris S. Schwartz, Selective Service direc­ tor for Texas. the 1960-61 Scores made on the test are used by local boards as one guide In considering requests for deferment from military service to continue studies. ♦ Public Affair A nsw ers G iven by M acCorkle the Institute, Questions regarding the nature and function of the Institute of Public Affairs are answered by Dr. Stuart A. MacCorkle, profes­ sor of government and director of the current issue of Public Affairs Comment. He explained the Institute's his­ tory, saying that it began in 1913 as the Bureau of Municipal Re­ search and Reference, and was one of the country. the first of its kind in in The program of the Institute is discussed under the headings of research, training, and service Rnd informational activities. Research in problems relating to governmen­ tal units and agencies is one of the top aims of the program, he said to he unrelated “ While the activities of the In­ stitute are varied, and may even seem they are held together by a common phil­ thar a great university, osophy: as both the servant and the leader of a vital democracy, must place its brains and its facilities at the the public out of command of it receives its w h o s e sustenance support,” he said. UT Pharmacists To Visit Chicago Twelve member* of the College of Pharmacy faculty will partici­ pate in the annual meeting of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy, Sunday through Tuesday in Chicago. Dr. Henry M. Burlage, phar­ macy dean, will preside as Asso­ ciation president. He will be in­ stalled as a member of the Ameri­ can Pharmaceutical Association Council for a three-year term and will attend meetings of the Ameri­ can College of Apothecaries. Dr. Lee Worrell, pharmaceutical chemistry professor, will preside over the section of teachers of chemistry'. Dr. pharmaceutical Frederick V. Lofgren. pharmacy professor, will preside during a section on practical pharmacy. Presenting papers will be Drs. John Autian, associate professor of pharmacy: Robert G. Brown, associate professor of pharmacol­ ogy; F r a n k Cosgrove, assistant professor of pharmacy; J a i m e N. Delgado, assistant professor of pharmaceutical chemistry; Vernon A. Green, assistant professor of pharmacology-; Dr. Esther J a n e Hall, assistant professor of phar macy administration; and Dr. Wal­ lace L. Guess, assistant professor of pharmacy. Attending an American Society of Hospital Pharm acists meeting will be Luther Parker, pharmacy lecturer; Harold D. Powell, special instructor in pharmacy; and Dr. Autian. Association membership includes 77 accredited United State* col­ leges of pharmacy plus a number of Canadian schools. Corps Volunteers May Be Deferred Peace Corps volunteers can he deferred from the draft, according to Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, di rector of Selective Service. In an editorial in the Selective Service Bulletin, Gen. Hershey said that “ the classification of reg istrants in the Peace Corps can be any as other registrant engaged in activi ties in the national health, safety or interest.” handled that of W h e n volunteer* return home the they could qualify after overseas service with Peace Corps, for further deferment. Important factors listed by Gen Hershey for consideration when the volunteers returns home include his age, physical condition, marl tai status, the regulations which apply when he is released,” and whether or not the registrant on his return from service with the Peace Corps engages in an activity which permits him to be deferred in the national health, safety, or interest.” The fact the registrant that has been a member of the Peace Corps will not prevent him from qualifying for further deferm ent,” concludede Gen. Hershey, concluded Gen. Hershey. UT Teacher Tells Of Indians in Book Written accounts left by soldiers, missionaries, and explorers who first visited many of the Texas In­ dians tell much of Texas' former inhabitants, explains Dr. W. W. Newcomb Jr. in “ The Indians of Texas ” In his hook “ The Indians of Texas: From Prehistoric to Mod­ em Times.” recently published by The University of Texas Press, Dr. Newcomb records the origins, appearance* in Texas, life cycles, livelihoods, warfares, varied cus­ toms, and beliefs of the state’* original Inhabitants, Dr Newcomb Is the director of the Texas Memorial Museum, a professor of anthropology, and has served on th* University faculty for ll years. State Workshop On Nursing Ends Texas college nursing instructors ended a two-day workshop Satur­ day morning in the Texas Union with a discussion of “Implementa­ tion of Evaluation Techniques.” Dr. Paul H. Kelley, assistant professor of educational psycholo­ gy, led the discussion. Represen­ tatives at the workshop w e r e from The University of T e x a s School of Nursing, Harris College of Nursing at TOU, Baylor Univer­ sity School of Nursing, and Incar­ nate Work College at San Antonio. The workshop on “ Evaluation of Student lo a m in g .” sponsored by the Texas for Nursing, league opened Friday morning with a welcome by Jimmie K. Bratton of Fort Worth, iteering committee chairman. his duties this summer. fo, Body Chem ical Process Engineers Allowed Use O f New LGP-30 Machine *Abolition1 Critical Talk Engineering student* may sign up in the Electronics Laboratory, P lanned by Witherspoon Taylor Hall 113, to use the new “ Operation Abolition," s h o w n I Lihrascope General Purpose Com­ at the April 9 public forum of the Dr. Roger J. Williams, profes- puter, LGP-30. Unitarian Church, 4700 Grover, will sor of chemistry and director of I U*e of the machine is under the be criticized by Joe Witherspoon, The University of Texas Clayton direction of the Bureau of Engine­ University law professor and con- Foundation Biochemical Institute, ering Research. According to Mr*. *titutional law scholar, at the Sun­ and Dr. Jam es B. Gilbert, Insti­ Sylvia Goodrich, graduate student tute research scientist, will conduct day forum. of mathematic* who work* in the research, under a two-year grant, bureau, the LGP-30 computer is on the manner in which chemical to erv without charge processes in the human body are students faculty and promoted by metal-enzyme* pro- There is a small charge tem substances containing metal* when the machine i* used for *poo- Mr. Witherspoon will discuss the role of investigating committees and their relationship to this film. He will try to deter­ mine whether this film represents the continuing pattern of earlier , such as zinc, copper, and iron. available gineering members. I sored r n firth., she legislative Back on the M ain Floor T h at’s right, the shop th at has set the Uni­ versity m en’s styles for 45 years is hack in its handsom e quarters on the street floor of the U niversity Co-Op. W e think our new quarters are arranged to serve you better then ever. Of course, the T oggery services you have grown to expect over the years are still yours. W e invite all the fashion­ conscious men in the U niversity com m unity to stop in and look over our new store. Surely you will be as proud of it as we are. Choose from these Distinctive Brands Clothing by M ichaels-Stern Furnishings by Arrow Scro of N ew Haven College Hall Haspel Alligator Champion McGregor Albert Givens Catalina McGregor Cooper Tex-Tan Pioneer Burlington R e i s of N e w H aven Mister Cravate Crosby Square Interwoven Pleetway T he Key M en on Cam pus Select T heir W ard ro b e from 2246 Guadalupe Street In th® Co-Op Box Scores T H IR D GAM E l cf T E X A S <12> Bsthea. is R ig b j. 3b Skinner Br&xeiton. Htpp* 2b KnuUon Thrash London c C a ll* v * y , p ............. .............. .......... lb ....... .............. . . . . . . . rf .............. .............. .............. ................. lf sh r 4 * bi i 2 I I 2 I I 4 2 I 0 3 2 I I I 2 5 ti 0 0 5 I 2 2 3 1 I 0 . .3 I I 1 4 3ft 12 14 It h hi ab I I I I 2 I (I 2 ft n 0 I 2 <1 I I ft ft n n 5 » .......... Total* R U E Ut* Stephenson 2b ....... ....... Kristlntk 3b Blume ** Lively, rf ........ Fox c .................... Hartm an P re y e r West S^hoppc d ............ D e n n iso n , o ......... ................ . ...... • I ll « « I OZ ft— S S S <— 12 Bethea 2 r I I I ft I ft 2 ft ft 0 3# ll „ Total* R i f f T E X A S E — R igb v 2 . 5 5 s . 3 . 5 . 5 . 4 ............. ............ . . . t o * H ! Kristlr. k l h ....... lf rf Stephen*or Knutson R o e 24-11 Texas 27-13 D P Krlstintk and Stephenson I re- r Kristin k_#nd Stephenson La ft Rice IO T* .as Blume PO-A 2 B - W es! Htpps 2 H a r t m a n Thrash, London K r s' ni- Rigbj 3L C a lla wa stepn»n*on H IPP* HH Blume. S B K ru tlttlk S Schoppe Lon­ don. S h o p p e Ct, S-2* Donaldson Ca I la'sa- H B P tv .. !W VO) 9 Rrhonp# P B London Ma re I na k T*~-2 44 A ip h ft 2 I l l 0 0 ' .1 1 3 3 3 1 0 r cr oh to I 9 f t 2 3 5 Sh o p p e < Thrash ■ r ’ Smith and ' j. ♦ S EC O N D G A M E ) * h T E X A S <8) ................................3 B a th e s, »a .............................. 4 R ig b y . 3 b ................ •} Skinner cf lb .................. 3 Brazeiton ...................... •} Hi PPS 2b lf ...................... 4 Knutaon rf ........................ ^ Thraan .................... I Pin< k n e y . c Belcher p ........................ 1 Total* .........................71 » b R IC E <»> ............. 2 Stephenson 2b K ria tin lk 3 b ........................... 3 Blume. *s ..................... I rf ..................... 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Rigby 2. Blume 2. Fox. I1' i A Rice 24-15 T e m * Pi •>T V; DP- Bium*' Stephenaon and h ex. L e ft—Rice 0 Texas ' tSkinner 2 B Beth en i .mn 1 1 1 Far and brist mil !B -Skinner HR- Blume, S— K< rbo-v Jackson Mo- Kerbow, Lively. S B — Rigby, h r *t bb to 6 T 7 4 J 3 3 2 4 1 I I I 3 I 7 5 4 3 1 3 1 1 0 1 Hlpps S F Brazeiton ip ; . 3 3 2 1/3 5 4 (UT M, ! 'it-: and i L) .. M Far and ......... Donald sen Jackson v . Burleson v P'a cd 1 hnttrr itj> by ' I Cle la,od 6. A— 1,750. 6th Andrews’ Nelson Sets New Mark O D ESSA P Ted Nelson of An- drews broke the national scholastic record for the quarter-mile Satur­ day av ha ran the event in a reg­ ional high school track and field meet in 46.5 seconds. It bettered the record of 46 6 set by David M ills of Lakewood High School of Ohio in 1958. Nelson also ran the 220-yard dash in 20 6 seconds, which w-sg only a tenth of a second over the national record. De^pit# Nelson s heroics, An­ drews finished second in the reg­ ional meet which w-as w-on by Sny­ der with 97 points. Andrews had 82 and Dumas 8J Andrews is defend­ ing State Class A A A champion Andrews holds the national schol­ astic records for the mile relay and 4i0-yard relay with 3:15.2 and 41 5 but failed Saturday to better its marks. Thp first runner drop­ per the baton in the 440-yard relay and Andrews was eliminated from the race. Duma< won it in 42 I. Thomson, th# leader after 18 and 36 holes, had seen Bolt and Ven­ turi surge lead on die into the 16th gre^n. D ie Australian then sank a 15-foot#r on the 17th and a 4-foot#r on the final green for a two-over-par 72 and a 54-hole 208. Venturi, the Californian who is seeking his first championship of the year, had started the birdie parade at 18 by hitting an 8-footer of Mills was set for a 70-70-68- 208, only one curve. Nelson did not run on th# An­ drews mile relay team which won with a time of 3 22 2. Nelson’s quarter was mad# run­ ning around two curves. There was no favoring wind and a1] conditions for a record were met. The record running around T H E U N I V E R S I T Y ’S O N L Y E X C L U S I V E R A D I O A N D H I - F I S A L E S A N D S E R V I C E C E N T E R 2010 Spe«dway GR 8-6609 Serving the University area for IO years E E D W A V ’HIGH FIDELITY AT REASONABLE PRICES’ Capture Rice Series S T R E T C H IN G O U T h i »‘ ride n attem pt to beat the throw ♦o first Ii Rice t Bo co y I veiy. Bu* 'exes first baseman Lew Braze -on ta d a"1 ess/ Dugout in the first gaw-e of Saturday s doub eheader in wh'zn Tom Be cher pitched a one-hitter. Live / was a foot­ ball star for the O w s in the fall. ■J. A r t ) ' * ) . ■ ■ . .. r. 1% ....... ^ , T h e D a ily T ex a n S p o r t s Sunday, April 23, 1961 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 Baseman Richard KnsUnik on Plate Umpire Bob Smith. Knstinik, for his antic*, almost got thrown out of the game and received the vehemence of the partisan Iv>ng- homs crowd the remainder of the sun-filled afternoon. I* It ll *» T e x a s now posse**#* a 7 ft con I 5. fe re rw * reco rd and I/vnghorn* w ill p la y B ro o k e T h e \ r im M e d ic a l t e n t e r In a re tu rn mal/ h In San Antonio T u e s d a y . T e x a s won an e a r lie r co n test, l l 4. Bafon Teams Star Aggies, Froggies Zn Kansas Relays : I Split Wild Pair fy in the open 400-meter hurdles He was running in a badly cut-up lane, and none of the m#n in his heat made the finals. B a s e d on H ire R e p o rt* L A W R E N C E , Kan. Blistering ba­ ton teams from Texas, topped by North Texas State’s 9:49.3 in the university di-ance medley, dom­ inated the 36th running of the K a n ­ sas Relays Saturday. Texas Southern of Houston set two of the four records rn the col­ lege division, lowering the 440 te- ll and the 880 relay to lay to I 24 2. Th# foursome of Homer Jones, Barney Allen, Charles F r a ­ zier and Lester Milburn ran both events. In the T e x a s ’ le a d in g the p a c k la m g h o rn s m a d e m u ch less of a sp lash h e re than they (la v e in year* gone b y. H o w e v e r ’H o rn s p rin t a ce , R a lp h Al- the sp a u g h . d id m a n a g e to r a p tu r e a fir s t p la c e , in the <>[>en IOO m e t e r d ash . T h e Tex a s c a p ta in fin ish ed th ird I n i l c rs itv c o lle g e c e n tu ry . The Grange didn t win any firs:.* in the university bracket, although R a y Cunningham came close in the high hurdles The Texas star fin­ ished behind an old rival. Rex Stinker of Kansas State. It was Cunningham s first outing since early March, and he was outstand­ ing in view of his long inactivity. II# had been .sidelined with a leg i n j u r y . Cunningham’s running- male, Rex Wilson, failed to quali­ two Texas’ top men field events each got a fourth. Jim A l­ lison was fourth in the shot put. and Jim Smith had a sim ilar place in the javelin. in The ’Horns entered only on# re­ lay event — the two mile, and fin­ ished far bac k in seventh place Howard Payne won its sixth con­ secutive two-mile college relay in record tune of 7,32, and Em poria (K an.) State set a new standard of 3:12.2 in die college mile relay. B a y l o r w on th# u n iv e r s ity TIO re la y in :U».8 and the 8Kft re la y in 1:25.1. B i l l K e m p a n c h o re d both r e la y te a m * . Houston University won the uni­ versity mile relay in 3 IO, and East Texas State tile college dis­ tance medley in 10:09.3. John Cooper anchored North Tex­ as home in the distance medley with a 4 :07 I mile. Richard Bothm er ran the 440- the John Spencer in 1:53.6 and Richard i n three-qualie rs .48.7, the in leg haif-mile Manchaca 2:59.9. North Texas beat Missouri by 30 yards and broke the relay s rec ord of 9:50.8, set bv Oklahoma in 1958. Longhorns Belchers One-Hitter Highlights Triumphs B t C H A R U K A M IT H T # x »n M anaging: E d ito r A sparkling ss^m was delivered by the second half of T p x s s ’ nnc-two pitching punch S atu rd a y sending th** R ice O w l* back to Houston a threc-timc loser. Tom Belcher, a stubby righthander, fired a one-hit shut­ out as the Southwest Conference pace-setters swept a double­ header from Rice with 8-0 and 11-6 victories. B e lch e r has had trouble finding himself this season a fte r a s ta rtlin g ly s iiccrssful sophomore campaign. p itc h in g the seven-innm g o p en er. ♦ rom p letely he allowed only a fluke double os the j v C a r k Field v astor* w ith « w icked ap a rtm e n t nf curve hall* vanquished T h e Ixtng horn * n \ e r jie « e r « 1 the O w l* In the second con test. l l 6. to aw rep the three game a erlea and win th e ir l it h g a m e thla arn Min without A lo**. T e m * won the d ra t gam e F r id a y , I- 6, behind the alout h u rlin g of B o b b y C a lla w a y . in C n e rh Bibl* F a lk • one tw o plan P h il Hipt*a stopped rail four h ilt Inc hiding tw o doe blew and a trip le t o u n te rp a rt B e lc h e r ’* In the F r id a y v ic to ry . Hippo did not let down Satu rd ay, pounding out three hit* in six at­ tem pts including a four-base shot onto the Centerfield cliff the h a t game traveled about 400 feet. The d rive to ju n io r B e lc h e r , a from O k ie H om a C ity , O k la .. w a * the p la y e r of the d a y w ith hts h u rlin g gem . I l e blear d o w n the h a t IS H ire b atten * w ith o u t a m an reaching; bane to g a in hie th ird v ic t o r y of inning, the y e a r . w ith 1,7,Vt fa n s ro a rin g w ith e v e r t p itc h , B e lc h e r a tm c k fait the aide. In th e seven th lofted a d rive R ic e s o n ly hit against Belch er ram # In the second inning C atch er the J i m Fox hase of the C e n te rfie ld c liff D ave Skin ner pedaled backw ards, but misjudged the ball as It fell g ran t feet aw a y from him. to In the fifth inn mg. how ever, the f/w ghorn* chased a c rr* * six run* to nail down the coffin on O w l c a rv e r and k<«cr W eldon M< Far- land. in trouble the six run Mr F a rla n d , who later w a* called on for re lie f duty after pitching the entire fir at gam e, ran into con­ trol fifth The fast-bailing righ th an d er hit a b a t t e r before giving up hair s irs.g ilt bases on Im Ila A p a ir of Single* by B ill B e th e a and P a t R ig b y closed out the scoring M c F a rla n d , Who had won four game* w ithout a loss p reviou sly, allowed nine w alks w h ile striking out three ({)* team m ate* co m m it­ ted two erro rs T e x a s ’ only extra base blow cam e on a double from Chuck Knutson in the seventh in rung Into ete rn ity R ic# w atched th eir on ly inning in of m arg in pass the second Inning of the last gam e Atter pushing across one run in the first fram e, R ic e p i t c h e r W ayne M cC lellan d grooved a pitch whit h HI pp# b ia s e d on top of the I-1 iff B efore M cC le llan d could re tire tha side, the I/m g h om * had scored twtc# more Bethea did the honors with a two-run double T e rry received Jackso n , w ho ! credit for the vic to ry, lasted five innings before being relieved by D avid Burleson, Burleson finished the mop-up job, giving up one run and three hits in four innings. B elch er w alked three and struck rait four aa the fn og h o m s played errorlesg afield T exas led 2-0 moat of the game I T h e tying h o rn* u nleash ed a 1ft. hit a tta c k a g a in s t M c C le lla n d , the lo s e r; M c F a r la n d , w h o re tu rn e d In n in g s a f te r p itch in g fo r thr# # Kelly Leads Field In 'M ural Prelims Records worn near sd in several i events, but none fell In the intra­ m u ral tra c k p relim in a rie s at M e­ m orial Stadium F r id a y afternoon Jo hn K e lly of P h i Sigm a K a p p a w a* the outstanding individual per­ form er of the afternoon a* he led the qu alifier* In both th# IOO- and 220-yard dashes H e was clocked ar 9 9 In the IOO and 21 I In the 220. H# wag just off the century record of 9 A and the 220 m ark of 21 A. W a lte r W h ite cf N a v y th rew the s h o t a respectable 43 feet, 3 \ incites to In that event. H e w a* only a little more than a foot off G eorg e B la n c h ’s 44-5*4 record. lead qu alifiers T. W . B a ile y of Sigm a P h i E p ­ silon and Jo h n Patton of Sigm a Alpha Ep silo n set the pace in the 120-yard low hurdles w ith 13 2 clockings. Ph i G a m m a D elta and SA FI w ere top re la y q u alifiers, with the Ph i G am s leading in the 440 w ith 45.1, and S A E In the WO with I :35 3 T h ree high Jum p ers eleared A1, Lone Star Teams To Be Featured P H I L A D E L P H I A if* 'Die eyes of track fans w ill i#» on " T e x a s " at next w e e k e n d * Penn R ein -* A talented group of pinner* from A bilene Christian of Texas is headed east with design* on L a ir re la y title* The opinion here­ abouts is that they just m ight turn the trick. A ll told, m ore than 4 '>00 ath­ letes from 103 colieges, 527 sec­ ondary schools, 15 A A T clubs and the armed force* are expected for Frid ay and Saturday’s competi­ tion. hut didn’t near the oldest record in the hook - L a r r y Ix>tt ■ ft-4'4 in 1943 W a rre n H a rt of Sigm a Nu, R ob ert Dowd of D elta Tau D elta, and lunula Spradlin of N a v y w ere the three who w ere credited with A l leaps, Qualifier* for th* final* ar# I l a Yard Low Hurdle*'. Fratern ity T VV Ballsy, Duk» Carlisle, Charlet Jo h n Patton. M lk* M auev. Nsblsl.t Kent womack. I lab— J i m r i Gandy txinni# Fog',* Lout* Spradlin C a r l t o n Anrterion Jam ** Thom ai Ralph Ponflck Hash Joh n ny Genung Moira, Roger ram >* Domingo** ( barie* Helm, Aiian Steen Mitchell A ller Club— Allan Stanburg Ben B o r e n Carlton Anderson, W illia m Parma. Jim .Sander* John Klekar. Rodney O t ­ well Robert W right 44ft-Yard R e t * * F ra te rn ity Phi Gamma Delta Sigma Alpha Elation, Phi Sigma Kappa Phi Delta Theta, Kappa Sigma Sign,a Phi S p ille r I tub— A ir Force, N avy, Army, Kappa Alpha Pal MO T»rd Relay Alpha Epsilon. Kappa Sigma Gamma Delta Ph< I .rim Them Fratern ity Sigma S i g m a Phi Epsilon . Phi Sigma Kappa Phi C l u b — Kappa Alpha Pal Air Force Artm P F M C lub N u n Theieme Frntern 1 Mhnt Tnt Ovaries New ton George Blanch W U I n m Melnnl* Stanley Faulkner. W ; nam lyre Ander ion Independent—T e rm T o d d Gentr ? ce Rarnev Eram » v n n . John Haa*e Max Marronko ( lob-—’A alter W h 1 t e Kd Padgett R l ’h W a liim lth Monte Le# Charle* F ritirh Dorm -Charles Ha el " <>* Of-ment David Normand, M i c h a e l DeHart. Johnnie Henr> High J u m p Frater nit J W a r r e n Hart Robert Dow d M a \ ne Slaughter toe DeLorenio, Tom Bunkley, John Cook Independent: SilJ Tm ri o I" a r I Mat- tlage P ln i Ulrich Park- r Tjoefficr c lu b — I.oui* S;.-iid'. W llllam Lamb- dln W a lte r <;#' r. lack Bonner F,,"|9iiWH!iBfWiwiimsiaiitrai(Ftim'i!HW!T?iimwi(!iif»i0!aii.ii«iTTs»timiw)nm«!i{'kr jit! a symbolic lasting, l o fie rem i u d cr THE CLIM AX OF YOUR FO RM A L EDUCATION W k a r # v * f m * * in your p r o u n io n gatt>#r, in !k# la b o ra to ry , in fk# fa c to ry , a t th# eor>l#r*nca ta b !* or rn !H# L a id , a a c k m an i c o lla g e rin g g a in * fo r b m tka la m * q u ie t re c o g n itio n of Ki» e d u c a tio n a l q u a li­ fic a tio n * th a t your ring w in* fo r you. the ojK-ncr; and BHI I)«fn>»ld»,on Texas acored In every In n in g but the first and the seventh. Th# mos' dram atic play of the day occurred when Bethea drove IvHme th# two tic-breaking nans in th# second inning Chuck Knutxon w a* on second base and Gordon Ginn was on first Bo'bea * j>c>I

reyer, the Owl left fielder, had retrieved th ball and threw home the th# bail, | Ginn, Pinckney, the j umpire, and Rice cat) her Randy K#rt>ow arrived at the plate af ap­ proximately tie same time The ball got through Ginn slid across, and Pm< kney befit a hasty pMh I hack to the third base roaching ! box. ’Hie 10-minute hassle which fol- : lowed brought the wrath of Rice Coach Dell Morgan and Third- Barnett Paces Baylor Victory DA I J.A S P Boh Barnett lim­ ited .Southern Methodist to f i v e single* find drove in two r u n s himself S a t ii r d a v as Rnylor gained a J I victory in Southwest Conference baseball It w a * B a y lo r’s si Uh triumph in eight games ami kept th# Bears hot on the trail of Texan in th# c o n fe re n c e race. It wa* th# ninth loss for winless Southern Metho­ dist Innings, then Barnett and ,1 >e M ille r hurled on fa irly equal terms for th# first in the seventh, six Robert with Baylor owning a 2-1 edge, the SM U hurler blew sky high. Seven runs were acored as M il­ ler. then T>oug Thompson w e r e batted from th# box before SMT' * third hurler, Don Murdock, got things under control. Barnett was registering hi* fifth pitching triumph against no defeats Ronnie Goodwin hatted in two runs, scored twice, stole a base th# game s only and double play for Baylor. started 'Mural Schedule S O I I R A I I ( Im*-* \ ♦ la*.* ti 7 p m Kappa i s vs Nav I Roberts Vt. h r I ’ n ••r. (I p rn, —-I lei t a ( ’hi Phi «.tni nm I v ita Epftilnn, Roberts \ \ s \ - ' m u I Htft P h i . ta Alpha ark T I N N I*. ♦ I** i A 41M p m Th of,, P Pr«th# r v* Fb -ii v* W it . ■ > k and J ord on Beta S r I >’ rort start in an 1 R ir ck S erchant#. and An elf a nj Na\ 4 : 3 f t v r n ( l a s s I l l a '■ d T , e P a c a I ’an ii a, New- wmwTOiOTnwitifsiiimni '"’’tHCftlJlllfmiRpftBH ■I'immwiiMiiiiiiwwiiiiiwii mwi* tai,id D o r m — Tom A n d r r . o n Paul Berry, Rlookfr. vs Motor a n j John Hannum O v e r th# y e a n a i your ra w e rd t b e c o m e g re a te r, f*<* i# n t.m *n t# | r a f U c t io n i w ill b * * n io y * d b r you m o t* then yo u r chough** f r a t e r ­ ■BMMMMMIM HI K M H W R M H Ik n al and a c a d e m ic c o lU g * 1 i* i «nd fri*n d »h ip ». Y o u r ring It yo jr c o n ite n t c o m r* d a to rem in d you of th * » * m * m o ri* i. Jo m yo ur c ! * u m * * * i th * n»4,0n o v * r |R w e a rin g yo ur c o lla g e rin g , lh # e n v ie d b a d g e of yo u r e d u ca tio n a l a c h ie v e m e n t, No money down six months to pay sworn a c c o u n ts wino • 2236 GUADALUPE • ^ L o n g h o r n . “A t eU p M f * rot and Prrfrrr nr n nf wright*, iln n r*. * n In*, and preri- nu» mrtal* n**pU rni*drind din work w th all Inttnring pmrUn- ind 'cid n ally Iv Bn lith pH thirl* «hank* Extrnm rlv for pnrfnct halanro and rug gad wnar W rit trnatnd f ’.ni*h on run no nm Ird nimnnsmnal ♦» r n rn k I nrru*ttng I nttnr I lilly guarantned. with a goid hardnnu of u n ?ftO Brinnll Fa*tn«t dnllvery indu*try f o r the I* F O R T W O R T H P Texas AAM And Texas Christian split a double hea ler Saturday which saw the two teams battle for over six hour*. The Aggies won th# first game 18-3, TCH bounced back in th# short nightcap for an 18-17 victory. A to ta l of 6ft lins# h its veer# s p ra v e d In the tw o g a m e s , tnclud Ing l l horn# ru n s. Texas AAM got a stout seven-irv ning stint by soph Kd Singlev in the opener, and a seven-run rally in th# eighth helped sew up the 'rh# Aggies lopsided 18-3 verdict, rapped out 22 hits. four r ich by left fielder Byron Barb er and second Baseman T erry Cobb. Barber, Cobb, Ja c k Singley, R a y Hall and Clifford Davis also hit home runs in the first game In the seven inning second game, T O ’ overcame a 14 7 lead to push across six runs in the last of the sixth for the 18-17 triumph. After outfielder Cliff Ju stic e ’s three-run homer tied the game at 16-16, a walk and a double by Buddy lies set the stage for Ken Anderson * winning 2-run double. T e x a s A A M hit I ’I ru n s In the second to c h a s e s t a r t e r ♦ •ray V illi*. 17 m en d o w n to th# p la te , w ith the N g M o w * being ho m e runs b y B a r b e r , B H I P ic k e t t and H a ll. Inning T C C won F rid a y ’s opener, 11-10. Pender Decisions Stubborn Basilio BO STO N - Artful P a u l Pender retained his version of the w o r l d middleweight title Satur­ day night, using his rapier-hk# left hand as a double-edged weap­ on for a unanimous 15-round de­ cision over stubborn Carmen B a ­ silio. Th<» 30-> ear-old B r o o k l i n e M a ss, (hmapion weighed 160, one [xvind more than the challenger. Pender twice floored the veter­ an former middle and w e l t e r - weight king. Basilio look an eight count when hammered off his feet bv Pender’s smashing left in the 13th Paul Uf-ed the le ft hook to send Basilio to the canvas again in the 15th. Basilio earlier had claimed he had not been knocked down in 78 previous pm fights IO other title contests including counter-punching Pender, fighting his usual w ait­ g a m e ing against a hard-hitting foe. had to withstand some Basilio bomb* in the eariv stages before carrs ing out his prefight battle plan. Referee fiddle Braille', s c o r e d 148-135 for Pender on the 10-point “ must’’ scoring svstem in M assa­ chusetts while Judges Jive Rlum- sack and H arry Sundberg called it 147-132 and 147-138 fo r th# champ in this nationally televised show from Boston Garden. GET YOUR t a c o 9 KITS AM PLIFIER-TUNERS AT { § J p e e d w a y YO UK HI-FI CENTER 2010 Sptftdwty GR 8-6609 a.o •o o • CL o •o o • fluo •oo CLo •o • a • AL O •o o • o o OLo •o •a. o •o L •o •a. o •o O o o C O v O P K O t O P t C O t O P t C O t O P t C O t O P t C O t O P t C O t O P t C O f l O P i C O t O P t C O t O P l C O l O P l C O t O P l C M P a Men on the :z Go = Use a R E M IN G T O N R o il - . A . W a t i c l Auto-Home Electric Shaver From the Co-Op Save Now on This Special Purchase Sale N ow , enjoy the exclusive com fort of adjustable R o lle r Comb shaving ac­ tion an yw h ere . . . cars, trains, planes, h o t e l s , motels, and at home. The new A U T O - H O M E Roll-A-M atic shaves equally well on auto b a tte ry circuit and 110 volt AC-DC house current. Deluxe tra v e l case, complete w ith cigarette lighter adapter and cord. Models for F-volt and 12-volt auto systems. Ideal for college men, graduates, and F a th e r ’s D a y gifts. Regular 28.95 19.95 DOWNSTAIRS I H E S T U D E N T S O W N S T O R E 2246 Guadalupe Street c o # o e # c o * o e # e o # o e # c o * o p # c o * o i » * c o * o i » * c o * o p * e o # o p * c o # o p # c o # o p # c o * o p * c o * o p # c o # o p I I o a o •o u • ao s•a r>o •o • •« • oo •o fi8 5 Os%• oo a% 8 ?O ■* Sunday, April 23, 1961 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 Tech Golfers I Oa&rfU&ii. TripUTTeam rnrnI fix M onday Eye Opener L U B B O C K I Spit — L a g e r to avenge a humiliating 6-0 defeat at the hands of the Texas Longhorns last year. Texas Tech * golf team took advantage of the home course to defeat the visiting ’Horns 4 V I 1 a Saturday. the Although top Tech hand, Blocker, was beaten by Dill, his teammates fared much hotter. However, Boh nankins, the num­ ber four Longhorn hnksman. man­ aged in his match with [Jim m y Johnson. to tie The loss was the worst suffered David Moody and John Shackel­ by Texas this season, and dropped ford of Tech won their matches the team 's record to 13-11 in South- without too much difficulty. Moody west Conference play. The defeat disposed of Stuart Chancellor I severely hampers any hopes for a and 3 in the number two match, Texas title this year. urith two of and Shackelford put down Charles the top teams, S M U and Texas Brid w ell by the same count in the AAM , still to he met. number three match. Only T e rry Dill, the number one Texas player, could break through for a victory against the Raiders. Dill defeated O m s Blocker, the Tech ace, 2 and I. KC Athletics Win First Home Game K A N S A S C IT Y (.ft K a n s a s C ity’s Athletics won their f i r s t home game of the season Satur­ day, defeating the Cleveland In­ lefty Bud D a l e y dians 5-2 as hurled his the year. first victory of Rookie E d Keegan gave Daley j a perfect ninth-inning relief assist after Bubba Phillips opened the In ­ 'fra m e with a single fc * the dians' e.ghth hit. Blocker and Moody were victor­ ious over Dill and Chancellor 2 and I. and Shackelford and John­ son downed Bnd w ell and nankins by a like margin. Next aition for Coach Harvey Pen ick ’s Texas squad will be on F rid a y when the 'Horns host strong Southern Methodist. Wait for Nothing In San Francisco teased SAN FR A N C ISC O p The wea thor the Cardinals and Giants along for more than four hours Saturday before rain post­ poned the St. Louis-San Francisco baseball game. After four innings, often delayed, tile game was rescheduled as part of a double-header Sunday. Um pire Torn Gorman called Hie game after the fourth inning with the score tied at 1-1. All records were washed from the books. j M a rv Thom ebrrrv provided the run when he homered ' winning with Andy Carey on base in the second inning Carey had j u s t driven in the A's first nm with a Gorm an ended the waiting match single that scored Bill Tuttle who at 5 p m , PST , four hours aft* r was on have via Phillips' throw- the game was supposed to hav e begun There were six deiavs, to­ ing error The homer r a .rn e off taling two hours and 41 minutes, starter and Johnny An- l o s e r before Gorman finally ended it. tonelli. BERMUDA SH O R T S HOO & $5.00 VALUES $ KNIT SHIRTS ■ $4.00 a $5.00 VALUES I 77 3 (or $8.00 O H L LARGEST M A N ’S SHOP “ ON THE DRAG” M* ■ Wk ' LETS EAT OUT W henever You “Eat O u t’ The D aily Texan S A N J A C IN T O C A F E EAST-WEST HOUSE R E S T A U R A N T Featuring exotic and nutritious dishes of the F a r East In their native atmosphere. Special Luncheon Prices Yoga Post ire ( lasses by Appointment, (. all D R 6 9259 RO D T H O M P S O N , M a n a g e r 2813 Guadalupe _____________ I recommends one of the fo llo w in g for Good Food! Moderate Prices! SPEC IA LIZIN G IN DELICIOUS M EXIC AN AND A M ERIC A N FOODS REGULAR LUN C H ES EVERY DAY AT REASONABLE PRICES Visit Our Rainbow Dining Room OPEN 7 DAYS A W EEK I6TH AND SAN JA C IN T O GR 8-3984 S M I # - ar % n a aa mesmar: ie CT STR A CHI ’S Green Pastures A N D Y ’S Fine Foods D I N I N O R O O M O R C U R B S E R V IC E “A TASTE OF OLD ITALY"iv Southern Hospitality Delicious Food L I N C if A N D D I N N ! R D A I L Y — C L O S E D T U L S D A Y Speed /’ • ''( ' or Banquets at all Timef 811 W e s t Live O ak H I 2-2343 3 5 0 0 G u a d a l u p e Wit, AA A A A A AAA A.*. A .A. * AA * A A A. A A. A AA A *4 SA AA A * A A AAAAAAAAAA.0 d ...v *-■ C L O S E D ON MONDAY AUSTIN'S ITALIAN RESTAURANT M A C W H IT E A N D N E IL U N T E R S E H E R . . . Juniors pace league-leaderj Major Leagues Rookies Sacrifice Gives Twins Win first in the baseman Don Mini her, got Twins off to a 1-0 lead scoring first the inning W illie Tasby, Senators’ renter fie'der, homered in the second to tie it. Longhorn Netters Smash Red Raiders Losing only one set ell after­ noon the Texas Longhorns pow­ ered their w ay past the T e x a s Tech tennis squad 6-0 at Pemck Courts Saturday, m the doubles where Unterseher and White dropped the first set to Allison and Gottsehall. 6-4. But the Texas aces for 6-2, 6-3 wins Tech used the unusual combination of its first and fourth men as a doubles team. rallied Heath I e a g u e-leading The jumped ence record to 17-1 the visiting Red Raiders. ’Horns their Southwest Confer­ in blanking a rugged time in the first set with Chrane and Ronald Damron, but '>-2, put on a big after trailing terseher, the Orange s number one comeback to take a 9-7 win. The second set went to K am rath and and two men, were able to shake Heath. 6-4. off injuries and take easy vic­ tories in the match. Both M ac \\ hit* and Neil Un- and K am rath had White, the classy junior f r o m Corpus Christi, started slowly but then flashed past Tech s top man, D aryl Allison, 6-4, 6-2. Next action for the ’Horns is a non-conference match with L a s t Texas State here on Tuesday. Next weekend the Longhorns visit S M I’ and TCC. Sophomore Unterseher put down Jim Aus­ tin with no trouble, taking the first pet 6-3, then piling up a 6-1 win. Ja c k Kam rath and John Heath each had a r o u g h set. but won in two straight. K a m ­ rath, playing th ° number t h r e e spot, won over Dan Chrane K a m ­ rath took the first set 6-3, hut B A L T IM O R E (IV- The Baltim ore was extended to a 10-S win in the Orioles beat the New York Yan- second kees in home runs Saturday, hut had to settle for one victory and a tie in a i ain-shortened day-night double-header. homers Bolster Baltimore Cause Heath polished off Jon Gotschal! 6-1 in the opener, but was pushed to take a 7-5 se> ond set victor? The only set that was kist was Zimmer Stars In Cub Victory P H IL A D E L P H IA (.ft — Don Zim ­ mer s two-run homer in the lit h inning gave the Chicago C u b s a 6-4 victory Saturday over the Philadelphia Phillies The Orioles won the day game 5-3 on a two-run homer by Gus Triandns in the eighth inning. An­ other two-! un homer bv Ja c k ie Brandt tied the nightcap 5-5 in the seventh rain ended the contest with the Oriole* at hat. just before inning H ie se< ond game, delayed 51 minutes by rain at the start and called after a 32-minute w ait in the seventh, goes into the books as a tie game and will have to he replayed in its entirety. The per­ formances by the plavers will br added to their records. in Ashburn, a Other four-p!v wallops by veter­ ans Fran k Thomas in the second inning and Ernie Ranks the sixth contributed to the victory. Zim m er drove home pinch hit­ ter Richie Ashburn with his first homer of the year. ST. P A I 'L - M IN N E A P O L IS Rookie shortstop Zoilo Versalles' sacrifice fly in the bottom of the Brandt s seventh - inning homer 10th inning with the bases loaded off relief pitcher R ill Stafford, hi* lifted the Minnesota Twins to a second of the night game and the 5-4 victory o\ er the Washington fifth of the twin hill by the Ori- Senators Saturday, oles, enabled Baltim ore to over- come a 5-1 New York lead manu- opened the inning with a single off factored by B ill Skowron s grand slam homer in the fourth inning reliefer Dick Farrell, loser The Yankees scored one run off and the last of three Philadelphia in toe Oriole starter Hoi Brown pitchers Don Elston got the vic­ third on singles by Elston Howard tory. Cletis Royer and Bobby R ichard­ son. Brown departed in the fourth when New York loaded the bases. reliefer Wes into toe Versalles. who had gone 0-for-5 ln the nip-and-tock contest, hlast- n ijnp drive to center off relief pitcher Dave Sisler and catcher E a rl Battey scored the winning run. The game had been tied 4-al] in former Phil, had the sixth. SkowTor sliced the Standings .N A T IO N A L I > AOI I W x—Cincinnati .......... 5 ................ 5 P itts b u rg h 5 San F r a n c is c o S? L o u is .................... 5 ..................... 5 C h icag o \ - L o s A ng eles ........6 ................ 2 M ilw a u k e e P h i lartelpiiia ............ 2 x— N ig h t game. 3 ret. O R .556 .,156 — Mf) — , 556 — VV> — 545 — .400 I 222 3 SA T I K D A t S lU .x l I T S l l innings Chteau-' 6 Phi lade phi* 4 M ilwaukee at PUtsbuiuh. postponed, L o u is at San Fra n c is co , post­ ram. Si poned rain C in c in n a ti at Im* Angeles, n ght. NI M M I VS *>< H K .IX I I Cincinnati (b a rk ey 2-Oj a t 1ms An­ geles 'C ra ig 1-0 St Lou s i Brogi'.o 1-1 > at San Fran cisco (Jo n e s C h icag o l-o (E lls w o r t h 0-0 and Ander­ son 0-11 a» P P inrie p h ia and M a h a ffe y "-I > (S u lliv a n CFI M ilw a u k e e (Spann 0-1) at P itts b u rg h (L a w 0-2' A M E R IC AN I F AO I ( VC I. Pet C. n ......................... 5 I D e tro it Minnesota ................... 6 2 New York ................. 5 2 ................. 4 4 Cleveland ......................... 3 3 Boston C h icag o 4 Kansas C ity ............. 2 3 ................ 3 W a s h in g to n 5 B a ltim o re ................... 2 5 L o s A n g eles ............ I 5 ........................3 .833 750 .714 .500 .Son .429 . 4 0 0 .375 .286 167 •SAT I RH A V R ( O M I T S B o sto n 7 C h icag o 6 Kansas Cit.' 5 < Vveiand 2 M in neso ta 5 Washington 4 l l m n.ng* IO in ­ nings Bait more 5-5 N e w York 3-5 ond gam e ca lle d in seventh, r a in '. Lo s A ng eles at I jet ro il rain (sec­ R I NI I A I ’N Rf HF, D I I ( Im* Angeles M cBride 0-1 * r d K! ne (veil at Detroit (B ru ce 0-0 and Bunning 0 1 I 2 N e w Y o r k < M c D e v itt 0-6' at. B a l t i ­ m ore (K s tr a d .i 0- 1 ) Bo sto n ( E r e " er ’ n and M u ffe d 0-11 (S h a w 0-0 and P ie rre 0-1 > s t C h icag o 2 W ash ngton < Donovan 0-2) at M'nne- s o ' a (K r a lic k 0-0i (Meveland ' I ' C i t y ( W a l k e r 0-1 i b>0) at K a n s a s Stork s first pitch high right field bleachers. Baltim ore which had scored one run in the first on two singles and a double by Triandos, picked up Two more in the fifth on solo hom­ er* by Brandt and Jim Gentile off Yankee starter in first game loss snapped a five-game New York winning streak and dropped the first-piace tie Yankees out of a with the idle Detroit Tigers. B a lti­ more ended a three-game losing streak. Jim Coates. the The Richardson Tops Australian Star D A L L A S P - Ham Richard­ son of Dallas beat Neale Fraser of Australia, I amateur, in the semifina is of the Dallas Invitational Tennis Tourna­ ment .Saturday. the w orlds No. Richardson whipped Fraser. seeded No. 1 in the tournament 8-6, 6-4 to reach 'he finals against Bernard Bart/en. Dallas D a v i s Cupper Bartzen defeated Ron Holmberg of Brooklyn, 9-7, 8-6. Australia's FU>d La ve r and Luis Av ala of Chile advanced to the doubles final with an 8-6. 6-4 v ic ­ tory over M artin Mulligan of Aus­ tralia and W arren Jacques of L a ­ m ar Tech College. The other doubles semifinal was halted by darkness with Roy E m ­ erson and Fraser holding a one- set advantage over Rartzen and Richardson. They won 6-4. The second set was tied 12-12 Have you tried the new t ^ l COIN OPERATED DRY CLEANER? DRY CLEAN 8 LBS. OF CLOTHES FOR ESQUIRE CLEANERS $ o o o OPEN 7 A.M. to 9 P.M. 5244 B U R N ET R O A D G L 2 7117 EICO ANNOUNCING EICO th* open ne of a N E H D O IT Y O ! K S K L l ELECTRONIC SHOP Featuring : • E l c o T u n e r K it s and U p raisers • ( o m p le te C o n s tru c tio n F a c ilit ie s • Expert on Duty to (five Any Aid ( . E T T H E B E S T F O R L E S S — B t I L D \ O I R O W N IRO* S a n Ja c in t o G R 3 1,533 SCOTT-GARRISON S A N J A C IN T O C A F E SPEC IA LIZIN G IN DELICIOUS M EXICAN AND A M ERIC A N FOODS REGULAR LUN CHES EVERY DAY AT REASO NABLE PRICES Visit Our Rainbow Dining Room OPEN 7 DAYS A W EEK Battey had opened the T w ins- half of the 10th with a single and went to second on a balk by right­ hander Rudy Hernandez the third of four pitchers who followed start­ er Bennie Daniels Third baseman B illy Gardner sacrificed Battey to third and Reno Bertoia, who had been purposely passed, to second Pinch hitter Dan Dohbek walked. the bases, then Versalles filling delivered. Rookie left-hander B ill Pleis, w ho relieved Twins starter Pedro Ramos in the ninth, got the vic­ tory. Hernandez was the loser Left fielder Jim D m o t n ‘■ingle Greens Home Run | Ends Wild Game in toe Pumpsie Green s C H IC A G O lf( lith broke leadoff homer up a wild, si.x-homer game Satur­ day and gave the Boston Red Sox a 7-6 victory over toe Chicago White Sox. The game got woolly in a ninth inning which produced five Boston runs as Pete Runnels and G ary Geiger each belted two-run hom­ ers for a 6-4 Red Sox lead and White Sox J . C. Martin slammed a two-run homer to tie it at 6-6. rookie Bostons explosive ninth nulli­ fied a 4-1 Chicago lead built on Sherm Collar s three-run homer in the fourth and Al Smith a solo ho­ mer in the sixth. The winner was Ted Wills, fourth Red Sox pitcher, who entered the game in the ninth The loser was Turk Lown. third White Sox hurler, who started the lOto Chicago starter Frank Baumann appeared headed for his second victory against one defeat on a four-hitter until the ninth. Then he was ^helled from the mound hy Runnels' two-run homer Green s double and Rip Repulski s single, scoring Green. G e rry Staley whiffed the next batter but was tagged for a two- run homer by Geiger, which put Boston ahead 6-4 In the bottom of the ninth the th d Boston pitcher, Mike For- niele.x, walked the leadoff Chicago Then rookie Martin stroxed bar e his homer to tie it The Sox almost had the victory stowed away in the ninth late' when Nellie Fox. who hanged for hits, singled to center with men on second and fust But pined runnr Flee d R o b i n s o n cart-wheeled rounding third and was nailed a ’ the plate. CHARTER BUSES A r-Omdtttoned A r Saipan-. in Restroom Aboard KERRVILLE BUS CO., IN C GR 8-9361 Goodyear Sho# Shop # ii per* Sko# Reps r # Modern Ipuipmee* # Ksyi Oup’lcptsd W k 1* You Cusick 405 W . 23rd Street h i uh I HOUR CLEANING I DAY LAUNDRY LONGHORN CLEANERS G R 8-384? 2538 Guadalupe AUSTIN S BIG FOUR IN AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD “ The Home of The Crispy Tacos” 504 EAST AVE. G R 7-7023 EL M AT EL TORO “Austin's Original Mexican Restaurant” 16 A G UADALUPE G R 8-4321 912 RED RIVE0 GR 8-7735 EL CHARRO ‘ Big Sleeks, M e x ic a n Style” MONROES “Mexican Food to Go” 16 rj. Expe- r - .a o i Same I6TH AND SAN JA C IN T O GR 8-3984 500 EAST AVE, GR 7 8744 Next to You . . . She Loves FLAME-KISSED HAMBURGERS af all three rn HOLIDAY HOUSES 9 § t A h i d uxyO e,- nos** a m d y e t CC! A U -» a w e n s M M G -KAI T b m k o u x .* THURSDAY! PARAMOUNT L i J O f f i i Yay intshstat* »»»! f »0» * ROVI) s n ' o u » ’ (#io P a r a m o u n t N o w i . s : ; ; , , , T H E Y * F L I P P 'J ‘.v French Culture Free: Morot-Sir World Soot Nation By Bardot, Sagan Bardot Arfresa Srigitte end Franco I *« Sagan have novelist cauaed the world tr> regard France frivolous nation, Edouard as a Moro! Sir. representative of French unlvemitie* to the United States, said recently. very serious matter. Speaking at a lecture at B ene­ dict Mall, Mr Morot-Sir explained that to a Frenchm an, freedom Is a The French demand not (inly political freedom hut cultural freedom also, he said “ Liberty is linked to In­ dividual lndeferr.s arc light and some nonsensical revelry. The m ajority, though show a cons’ int sense of romanticism. They drift in theme from childishness to uni­ versality on the same page. The book is an excellent show­ case of current fwietic thought and as the jacket states, "W e are not particularly interested in the merit of a single poem, but in the merit in the group." of all the poems The anthology carries through this theme with m any varied, but all modem, types of poetry from blank verse to heroic couplets. None of the poems in the an­ thology possess the chanting qual­ ity of Glntburg, but several pro­ duce the beauty of an A. F,. House­ man sorrow or the lovable guf­ faw of Ogden Nash. A Lot of Blues This Year B y R E E S T R A N G E A green unman reclining on a floor at the high ornamented ceil- board letters strewn haphazardly mg. Paintings of tarted shapes, [o ver form uninteW highly polished table. The face of subjects and styles care.essiy lean- a man staring haughtily from the int against the high-backed chairs. This is an art exhibit before it is. A big multi-colored painting is lying on its side against a table. The picture of a faded bouquet lying next to an old photograph in an open drawer leans against a red and blue painting of a play­ ground scene. Pt'thil Y oitr P .iiL llc BOAT RENTALS On Austin’s N ew Town Lake SERVIN G DELICATE C A N T O N E S E A N D C H IN ESE F O O D Canoes Pedal Boats P R K PA A IM I. T S I 38 ( A K I ) A ir .........35« ( H I M ) l l We Prepare Food to Go Closed Monday* 223 Congree Ave. G R 8-7641 Directly Across from Armstrong J Between Congress and South hnsoris Ford Sbou F irst Street Bridges Room O P L N A l T I R N ( J O N S & E V E N I N G S > ► I ► ) •• A » V A R S I T Y n o w ! F P A T I R P S ! II 0« ...IT WILL BE REMEMBERED FOREVER! T r a n s ~S. fix a s Th e a t r e s I IJOHN W I K I B o u n MMURX I UWKMCE NOTH I (RANKE MOmCK M / UHM O RIA — AVALON MIMI O UM / Oft! MUS / £ RICKARD ROOKE ■ TECHNICOLOR'* C O M I N G S O O N ! W IN N ER OF 16 IN T ER N A T IO N A L A W A R D S !* featuring Star* of the Internationally Famed BALLET DE L’ETOILE— PARIS m u m A U S T I IM ACADEMY A W A RD W IN NER ELIZABETH TAYLOR "BEST ACTRESS OF THE YEA R" M IT IC GOtOWYK MA fix (Atunti B A M * * J . ELIZABETH TAYLOR LAURANCE HARVEY (IU EDDIE FISHER rn tC MN O H A I A S i BUTTERFIELD swdhi DIN* MERRILL Cine na Scop* s 'cpc^o i OR v C A PIT O L SM ) L u m s g OPEN — EVERY DAY I LOO A.M. 1608 L A V A C A ■fV uC L TDj i S c v C A C ^ D - lic io it plum p a i d m ea ty, f e n d e r g r o w * C h ic k e n p re p a re d and th# . w e C h ic k e n D e lig h t m e th o d ta rv e d r f .: in en d d e liv e re d to your d o o r p ip in g hot m in ute* a fte r you c a ll. GR 6-6216 llCONN CAPERSff Featuring Popular Dot Recording Artist, NUKE MINE MINK TERRY THOMAS mmmmm Recommended o n l y to those who want to Laugh — Laugh — Laugh — Laugh — Laugh — Laugh — O N THE D R A G D o o n O p e * I ( S P M. m m I Feature* 3-4-41 A— IO mmmm MMM mmmm S N A C K B A R O P E N S « MI F R F F . P L A Y G R O U N D ! A l l T I M K S G R F . A T * B R O U G H T b a c k f o b Y O U R F N JO Y M F N T I JOHN WAYNE DEAN MARTIN RICKY NELSON S A M B R A N O «thmi SUDIE DICKINSON KHOU BOEHN*! TECHNICOLOR* Roe* IWARNIR A M Y G R IF F IT H S*! myron McCormick 'M ER VYN ler o y_ t-r i n s e ; .SSO! N. I . A M A R — H O ft-1? 19 M I A n n TS MR — ( HU D FREIS F I R S T D R I* F IN S H O W IN G B O X O F F I C E O P E N S S SS F I R S T S H O W S T A R T S T W B0 LLINGT0 N K e y b o a r d S o ld ier of F o r tu n e * M r Bo llin g to n w ill p la y J O U R differen t Coni* O rg a n * fo r yo u r Intoning p leasu re . Intlw dod on the pro gram w ill be tho no w I M S Conn Capric#. "R a p to B a c h " it the nautical fa ro , pro m ising a a evening o f m usical fun fa r ovory- t n t . NO ADMISSION CHARGE FREE TICKETS A V A IL A B L E AT HEMPHILL'S N O . 2— 2501 G U A D A L U P E S H O W W IL L BE April 26 at 8 p.m. C o n n o r r / a n s ¥ IN THE M u n i c i p a l A u d i t o r i u m • T« iu * e t t im to m * ' Brought to you through tho cou rtesy a f Y o u r C o r r Organ D ealer FRED P. SAVAGE EL MAT 504 East Ave. G R 7-7023 EL TORO 1601 Guadalups G R 8-4321 EL CHARRO "Mexican Food to Take Hom e" MONROE'S G R 7-8744 912 Red River G R 8-7735 Delivery Service 7 Days FEATURES TO DAY: 2:03— 4:00— 6:00— 8:00— 10:00 A L A N LADD "The B e d ia p e rs " plus! IN C O L O R 3939 Balcones Drive Studio Show room PH G I 3 -5 6 0 4 A u stin , T exas Austin's “Big Four” in Authentic Mexican Food German Play Local Success B v T O N Y P F A N N R U C H E This year's production by tile Department of Germ anic La n ­ guages was a comedy by August von Kotzebue. “ Die Deutsche!) Kleinstaedter," roughly, the "G e r­ man Country Tow n." Though a play of no particular distinction, its wildly over-acted production was thoroughly delightful. The play takes place on the night before a very important day in the history of the town of Kraehw inkel; on the next day the m ayor's daughter Sabine tJutta Haubold * will announce her en­ gagement. and a notorious lady thief, who has stolen a skinny cow nine year* earlier, w'lll final­ ly be punished. jurisdiction dispute It has taken nine years to settle a during which the crim inal has waited in prison, but the dispute is .settled now, and fortunately the criminal is still alive. Sabine's engagement poses a bit of a problem. While she was in Berlin she met and secretly became engaged to a young man, K a rl (Dimers (M ike D y m o n d l , however her f a m i l y has de­ that she s h o u l d m ar­ cree in important young man ry an Kraehwinkel, Sperling, the local poet, who incidentally has a most impressive title, a prerequisite to m arriage in Kraehwinkel. But just as Sabine is about to give up hope and m arry Sperling ("fir s t m arriage, then love." ad­ vises her grandmother, • a strang­ er. an envoy from the State Min­ ister, arrives in town. It is none other than K a rl Olmcrs. Ahaf The plot thickens. The mayor s family, as well a* the townspeople, are also immed­ iately disappointed in the visitor, because he has no manners. He doesn t call the giandmother by her correct title Fra u Untersteue- I Assistant - collec- reinnehmerin! tor-of-revenue s w ife ); he w o n t eat when he is n t hungry; he hasnt a title; he is. in short, a barbarian. F in a lly the entire fam ­ ily tells him off. The problem in this small town it is hard to meet someone in private without get^ ting a bad reputation. It is Sper­ ling, who still doesnt know that he has been spumed as a bride­ groom. who unwittingly makes th# suggestion which the lovers fol­ low. They will meet at night rn front of the mayor's door. is that Their meeting is complicated by the night watchman's report that the lady cow thief has escaped. The mayor, his brother, and Sper­ ling come down in their sleeping gowns to see what can be done about the disaster. The lovers are discovered. But, as you know, everything comes out all right. This only generally amusing little play becomes, in the hands of the Germ an students under the direction of W. F. Michael, a very funny, totally enjoyable produc­ tion. Special credit should go to impressive, scene - stealing the priggishness of Sperling (Jim West), and to the adm irably pom­ pous authority of the mayor (E d ­ ward Cowan). But it was Dr. M ichael’s production, and, it fol­ lows, it was his success. T h e Da il y T ex a n Amusements Sunday, April 23, 1961 THE D A ILY T EX A N Page 6 the surface, ligible expressions. Suddenly the room is invaded by a scurrying force equipped with ladder, screws, yardsticks E ven in the activity that follows, however, a kind of silence prevails. Muffled voices converse. "Will that he too blue?* "Et erybody's painting bluet these days. There must be some significance." Conferences between th* artiste present and their assistants ar* held to consider positions for each work of art. Decisions m ade, th* placement begins. The artistic dis­ order of the room disappear* aa each object assum e* its position. Curious students wander in, look few comment*, One corner of the regal room Is dominated by a shadowy landscape of trees and rocks. A dark oil full of arches, circles, painting squares and triangles sends out its sharp colors to momentarily catch your eye. around, make a and saunter out. The janitor, paintbrush in hand, touches up smudges on the broad u bile screens, smudges prohabis left by an enthusiastic cheerier of the pres ions exhibit. Smiling con­ tagiously. the grey-haired janitor tells you the history of the screens. usually unnoticed uhen adorned The ‘‘nameless" creations receive uith paintings tells hosp the dif intent-sized screens were o r i g i n a l l y \ identifying labels. As the elderly made to fit in specific spots in the janitor carefully applies a last daub The mysterious white boxes be­ come reclining for green woman, torsos done in rose marble and stoneware, and several ceramic vases. stands the long. stately room. \ °f Pamt anJ °ff d i°ne Prect of dust," a sign announcing the A half-finished w-ord is spelled Art Department Exhibition Pro­ ms. on a desk, while other card- gram is pushed into place. D E L W O O D 3931 Eo st A vc nu- A D M IS S IO N t.Or • O P E N « P M. SEPARATE TABLES B u r t L*nci»*.t«*r — K it * H » ) w o rth S t a r t s 7:15 — P lu s — M A N O F THE WEST G a ry Cooper — J u li e London S O U T H -A U S T IN (OOO H O L T H C O N G R E S S A D M IS S IO N «Oc • O P E N « P M. JU N G LE C A T M A L T D I S N E Y 'S T R I E L I F E A I) * E N T I R E S ta rts 7:15 — P lu s — THE N IG H T FIGHTERS Ro b e rt M itrh um S ta rts 8:40 The work is done The afternoon is gone The impressive works of art await tomorrow and the open­ ing of the exhibit. If you want to see the completed exhibit, drop by the Regents’ Room. Main Building 212. The F a c ­ ulty Art Exhibit w ill continue through M a y 15. Hours are 8 a rn. to 5 pm . Monday through Frid ay, IO a rn. to 2 p m. Saturday and 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday. Concert Set for Today Katherine Branfield and W illiam Druckenm iller will he presented in a concert Sunday afternoon with the University Symphony Or­ chestra. The concert w ill be conducted by Alexander Von K reisler at 4 p.m. in the M ain Ballroom of the Texas Union. Eat Mexican Food Once A Day! Wk at CjoeS On Orere Speaking o( C d hurclieS T h e Da il y T exa n Campus Life Sunday, April 23, 1961 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 7 College Queen Contest Sets May 2 0 Deadline The 1961 National College Queen its annual is conducting ! Contest quest for ‘the nation’s m ost a t­ tractiv e and m ost intelligent col- I lege g irl.” A trip to New Y ork, television ap pearances, a sports c a r, and $5,000 w'orth of other prizes aw ait the girl who is chosen. She will I be selected on a basis of a ttra c ­ tiveness, ch arm , personality, schol­ cam pus a ctiv ities, astic and comm unity service. record , Persons wishing to en ter m ust apply before M ay 20. E n try blanks the N a­ m ay be obtained from tional College Queen A ssociation, I Suite 1606, P aram oun t Building, 1501 B road w ay, New Y ork 36, N .Y . the 8:40 and 10:55 a .m . s e n ices at F i r s t M ethod ist Church, 1200 L a v a c a . ★ ★ "T h e Living Christ and the Dis­ cou raged ” will be the topic of Dr. Lewis P . Speaker's serm on in the F i r s t E n g lis h L u th e ra n Church, Thirtieth Street and Whit is Avenue, a t the 10:30 a m . serv ice. ★ ★ The R ev . Ed w ard V. Long will the p r e a c h on C h u rch ?” a t the 8 and 10.45 a ,rn. services a t S t. M a rtin ’s L u th eran C h u rch , 606 W est F ifteen th S treet. "W ho Owns ★ « ★ " M a n ’s M orals and God’s Judg- is the topic of D r. William ' m en t” j Gibble’s serm on for the 10:50 a m. sen d ee a t the U n iv e rsity C h ristian I C h u rch , 2007 U niversity Avenue. "D eliv eran ce from F e a r ” will be D r. Blake Smith's subject at the l l a.m . service Sunday a t the U n iv e rsity Baptist C h u rch , 2130 Guadalupe. This is a continuation of the series of sermons which the pastor is preaching on "T h e T ri­ umph of the Spirit.” Lee F re e ­ m an, associate pastor, will p reach on the subject, "On the Humanity of God.” ★ ★ The R ev. John C. Towery will p reach on "T h e Gathered Com­ m unity” at the l l a.m . worship of T h e C o n g re g a tio n a l service C h u rch . 408 W. Twenty-third Street. ★ ★ The R ev. Ja m e s W. Morgan will l l a.m . speak a t the 8:30 and worship s e n il es at the U n iv e rsity M eth od ist Church, 2109 Guadalupe. His serm on title i s "W ith Single­ ness of H e a rt.” ★ * D r. M arvin S. V an ce will p reach on "A Word for the W eary” at Dr. Gates To Speak Monday Dr. David M. G ates of the N a­ tional B ureau of Standards will speak to the A m erican Chemical Society at 8 p.m . Monday in Chem­ istry Building 15. His topic will be "H igh Altitude Spectroscopy from Balloons.” He will also show' slides and a movie and describe experim ents m easur­ concentration of minor ing constituents of the atm osphere. the S unday 10 — D r. D ew itt C. Reddick to speak to Newman Club a t Hon­ ors D ay p rogram on "M aking the Most of Y ou rself,” St. Aus­ tin's Auditorium. 11 — Newman Club to h ear Dan Love of KTBC-TV, St. Austin's Auditorium. 1:30 — Bridge Tournam ent. T exas Uuion C l u b Championship of Junior Ballroom , Fou r, Union SI.50 entrance fee. 2-5 — Facu lty a rt exhibit open to public, Regents Room , M a i n Building. N O W O P E N American Heritage Book Store O P E N IN G SPECIALS Rex. Price Special W E D E M E Y E R R E P O R T S ! by Gen. A. C. W ed em eyer . . . . * 6 0 0 A D V IS E AND C O N SEN T , by A llen D rury ................................. 5.75 T H E N A K E D CO M M U N IST, by W . Cleon Skousen .............. 4 95 ...................... 3 00 T H E P E O P L E ’S P O T T A G E , by G aret G a rre tt A N TH EM , by Avn Rynd ....................................................................... 3.00 IN S ID E T H E S T A T E D E P A R T M E N T , by B ry tp n B arro n . . 2 00 .............. 1.00 CO M M U N IST A M ER IC A —M U ST IT B E ’ by Ila r g l* T H E Y A L T A B E T R A Y A L , by F e lix W lttm e r ........................... 1 2 5 ......................................................................... 2.00 K E Y N E S A T H A R V A R D ............................................................ T H E L I F E O F JO H N B IR C H *3 65 4 75 3.75 2 25 2.25 I 50 .60 1.00 I 65 I OO TAPE RECO RDERS A N D TAPES W O L L E N S A K , M odel T-1500. re g u larly priced a t *199.50 Sp ecial a t *170.00 . . 229 50 Special at 190.00 W O L L E N A SK , S te re o 4 tra ck , re g u la r p rice ................ 204.50 Sp ecial a t 165.00 W E B C O R R o y all ta re g u la rly priced at S T E E L M A N T ra n sis to r C om pact re g u la r p rice 199.50 Sp ecial a t 150.00 3 25 M Y LA R B A S E R eco rd in g tap e (IWX)') re g u la r price *6.50 S p ecial at 2 75 P la s tic B a se R eco rd in g tap e (1800 ) re g u lar price 4 95 Sp ecial a t American Heritage Bookstore (Specialising In books abont onr America and ( hrlstlan Her itage) 618 Lamar Bvd. G R 6-1488 H O U R S: 8:30 TO 5:00 W EEKDAYS O PEN T H U R SD A Y 'TIL 9 P.M. Life-Saving To Be Taught In Men's Gym Courses in life-saving will start Monday a t G regory Gym p o o l , Dorothy Lundell of the Red Cross said. A w ater-safety instructor course is scheduled to begin in M ay. them to be senior O ver IOO students a re enrolled in P .E . 213 taking tests which will life­ qualify lifesaving guards. The city-wide course will be held for m en only from 6:30 to 9:30 p .m . Monday through F rid a y , April 28. Classes are sponsored by the U niversity, City R ecreation D epartm ent, and T ravis County Red C ross. The 30-hour w ater-safety instruc­ to r’s course will be held week­ days, M ay 1-5 and M ay 8-12, dur­ ing the sam e hours a t G regory Gym pool. "E n ro llees in life-saving should be strong sw im m ers, and t h o s e taking the in stru ctor's course m ust have passed a Red Cross life-sav­ last three ing course within the y e a rs ,” Miss Lundell said, j No ch arg e will be m ade for train ­ E n rollees must have Red ing. textbooks on w ater safety Cross 1 and swim ming. T exts will be on sale the first night of each course at 75 cents each. Sim ilar courses for women are b e i n g scheduled for Northwest information on Pool. dates of these courses, con tact the Red Cross at GR 8-1601. F o r m ore Sabean E lected t o O f f i c e Sandra Sabean, returning sweet­ h eart of the College of Business Adm inistration, was elected m em ­ the CBA council b er-at-large of W ednesday night at the Council s I m eeting. 2:30 — Hiliel Student Council to elect officers, Hiliel Foundation. 3-5 — New exhibit by R o b e r t W a t s o n , artist, Ney M useum ; also Monday a t 10-12 and 3-5. 3-5 — Exhibit by Women's A rchi­ tectu ral League, Laguna Gloria, j 4 — Movie offered by P i D e l t a Phi, " F o u r B ags F u ll,” T exas Union Auditorium. 6 :30 — D r. Raphael L ev y to speak "S e cu la r a t Supper Foru m on U ses of Hebrew in the Middle A ges,” Hiliel Foundation. 7 — Union m ovie, "T h e Tender T ra p ,” T exas Union Auditorium. :30 — Second session of B rid ge ! Tournam ent, Union Ju n ior B all­ room . 8 — D epartm ent of D ram a p re­ "M acb eth ,” Hogg Audi- • sents torium . M onday 8-5 — F a tu ity a rt on exhibit, R e­ gents Room , Main Building. IO — Jew ish cu rren t events to be discussed by E . H. Saulson, Hil- lel Foundation. 1-5 — Tickets on sale for Wednes­ day night Orchesis p rogram , W omen's Gym 101. 2 — G raduate Legislative Council, Old L ib rary Building 107. 6:30-9:30 — Red Cross training session for men, G regory Gym. 6:30-10:30 — N e w m a n L ib rary open. 7-10 — Study room s open on first floor of English Building. 8 — "M a cb e th .” under the direc­ Iden P ayn e, Hogg tion of B . Auditorium. regional meeting of 8 — D r. David M. G ates to ad­ the dress A m erican Chem ical Society on "H i g h Altitude Spectroscopy from Balloons,” Chem istry Build­ ing 15. STRATFORD ARMS A p p r o v e d H ou s in g for G ir ls . Block o f Stadium. Reserva­ tions N o w A c c e p t e d for Summer and Fall. L a rg e modern Suites, for 2, 3, 4 girls; each with kitch enette a nd b a t h . Bills Paid. Rates $35 to $45 per g ' r‘. Resident Hostess 601 East 23oung men w ith sm all cars for part tim e d eliv ery on w eek­ ends. Must know U n iversity area. Call in person Chicken D eligh t 16d8 Lav aca Room and Board P I K A PP A ALPH A W ill be open for sum m er session Room s fo r men *75 OO C o-E du cational Board 5110 B re a k fa st O ptional A ir Conditioned T V R oom GR 6-4919 o r GR 6-6227 If you w ant to buy. sell, or ren t, use T H E D A IL Y T E X A N C L A S S IF IE D ADS. Call Jo h n n y . G R 2-2473 betw een 8 00 and 3 :30 dally Rooms for Rent 20 G irls Su m m er T erm A ir conditioned, sw im m ing pool, p arking l o t Tw o m eals 2610 R io G rand# G R 6-9621 W IL L IA M K . H A L L D o rm ito ry fo r Men Now A ccepting R eserv ation s F r th e Su m m er T erm A ir Conditioned I a o Man R oom —ISO S in g le R oom — * 4 ' Call M rs. W hitm an R esid ent M anager G R 8-3512 900 W est 22nd S tre e t T H E W A R R E N H O U SE 1908 San Antonio. I Vi block cam ­ pus C om pletely a ir conditioned. *22.50-130 00. D ouble o r sin gle. GR 7-7342 L O S T : P O S T V E R S ALOG S lid e R ule I .ab B u ild in g Rew ard. Hopkins H I 2-08'8. E n g in eerin g W ednesday in Interested In racing O W N E R S O F S A IL boats o r persons c r e w i n g , or cru isin g C all GR 2-5932 fo r m em b er­ ship info rm atio n A ustin S a ilin g Club. Special Services R E N T - PU R C H A SE T V T elevisio n R ental. G R 2-2692 Alpha M O T H ER S DAY P O R T R A IT S , Chad- j w ick Studio. GR 7-5903. Wanted BLO O D D O N O RS—A il types o f blood needed for usage In Austin. P ro fes­ T ravis sional donors now accepted County Blood B an k 2907B Red River A L T E R A T IO N S AND D R E S S M A K IN G 715 W est 25th S tre e t G R 6-3360. Alterations For Sale 1957 F O R D FA IR LA N D 500 A ir con­ ditioned, F o rd o m atlc, R&1I, *815.00. GR 7-4000 Typing AC C U RA TE T Y P IN G . R EA SO N A B L E . E le c trornatic. N ear U n iversity. M rs. A lb righ t. G L 3-2941. gu aran teed D IS S E R T A T IO N S . T H E S E S . R E ­ professio n ally , P O R T S ( I .B M ). P erso n al co m p eten tly service. R eason ­ sa tisfa ctio n , q u ality ab le r a t e s Fiv e blocks campus. M rs. Bod our. G R 8-8113. typed F A S T A C C U R A TE T Y P IN G E le ctro - rates. Call M rs. reaso n ab le m atic. G illespie a fte r 5 30 p m. G L 2-6287 C A L L O R CO M E by w ith your ty ping I^ega! exp erien ce V irg in ia Calhoun. G R 8-2636, 1803 N ueces. T H E S E S . D IS S E R T A T IO N S , R E P O R T S by exp erien ced , electro m a tic ty p ist. g r a d u a t e . M rs. Goodwin. f HA GR 2-2029. Close to cam pus . T R IU M P H T R 3 E X C E L L E N T cond i­ tion. All ex tras. Hard top. overdrive, tires, ra d io /h ea ter. w ire Wheels, new *1,650. (Jail P e te Low ry, G R 8-5641. M U L T IL IT H IN G A N D P R IN T IN G . T H E S E S A N D D IS S E R T A T IO N S sp ecialty . A z t e c P rin tin g Com pany. 1706 San Ja c in to . G R 2-5820 1960 A U ST IN H E A L E Y S p rit# . E x ­ cellen t condition R easo n ab ly priced 1604 B B rack en rid g e A partm en ts. Call G R 6-4110 REM IN G TO N P O R T A B L E T Y P E ­ W R I T E R Good cond ition. R easo n ­ ab ly prs cd R ile y Kelps. G R 2-0476. SM A L L SA U . BO AT G R 8-1024 a fte r 3 00, fo r sale. Call F L E R S - * 4 9 5 ; duals -* 1 1 .9 6 ; lakes plugs, U N B E L IE V A B L E B A R G A IN S: M U F ­ sk irts - $ 6 95 spilt- m anlfolds m irro rs, accesso ries. T exas A uto. 1114 E a st 1st. hubcaps 1955 R E D P L Y M O U T H C o n vertib le P ow er steerin g , b rakes Autom atic T i g h t. Quiet. tran sm issio n wsw. $785 G R 6-2659, OL 2-6553. 1960 VOLVO P V 54408. E x c e lle n t con­ dition 51595 or trad e fo r o ld er car. M ust SUI GR 7-:695 anytir:..-. C LEA N ’59 O L D S D yn am ic ’88. Tudor. Ja n e tsk y . *1995 UN 3-3727 o r UN 3-3410. Georgetow n. ( lean ard science. equipm en t lan g u ag e a n d en gin eerin g theses and dis­ se rta tio n s fo r P hon e G R 2-3210 More Conveniently Located At C o r New Address 2 0 1 3 4 G U A D A L U PE ______ P O R T S . E n glish 317 B U S IN E S S A D M IN IS T R A T IO N R E ­ term papers. C om plete service. T h eses, d isse rtatio n s. E le c tro m a tic ty p ew riter. M cQvaln s HO 5-0981 D IS S E R T A T IO N S . P O R T S . E x o crin e cd E le ctro m a tic . M rs. B rad y . G R 2-4715. T H E S E S. R E ­ R eason ab le, S a n S ln to n io — 'v i m t J Brand new R oyal p o rtab le type­ w rite r tat * 6 0 00 under re ta il ms* Also, new G E. window fan. Cost *"9 .0 0 . S e ’.; fo r *35.00. 1930 San An Wen; a Jo rn uI tor, A ir Conditioned G R 7-0617 Ope n fo r Su m m er Session $45 Double. STO S in g le K-ee S ‘ < rage Space U ntil Se m e ster B eg .n s One B lo ck Cam pus GOYA C L A SSIC . C O N C ER T, n y l o n . T O P CASH F O R used applian ces. HO 5-1423. fu rn itu re and strin g g u itar alm ost new. G E 2-7236 E x ce lle n t condition, *75.00. C all S e g le F ry . G R 8-3940 M O T H E R 'S DAY P O R T R A IT S . Chad- * w ick Studio, G R 7-5903. REAL B U Y C L 3-8783 This fink's been ea+in' my m agazines again! “ Listen, broad, you keep your kid out of my closet, for gosh sakes! You know th a t’s where I keep aJl my copies of the R a n g e r (Student Humor Magazine of The University of Texas, Student University of the State of Texas, Stu­ dent Government of the United States.) dating back to 1885, and I ’ll be damned if this little lunk doesn’t crawl in there and eat ’em everyone' up. He eats ’em, for gosh sakes! Everyone! Zap! Right down the old pipe. Gone forever! “Now the new April issue of the Ranger (Of­ ficial Public Relations Magazine of The Univer­ sity of Texas, Official Public Relations Univer­ sity of the State of Texas, Official Jo k e of the United States.) goes on sale Wednesday, the 26t,h. It is a Civil W ar issue, commemorating the finest example of the American W ay of Life ever, the Civil W ar, and I ’m gonna buy one. It only costs a quarter, but boy I ’d pay $10,000 dollars for a copy. And I wanna keep it. We may never have another war as good and clean and pure as that one, so I wanna remember it and love it and hold it against my nude body. So if this brat, this child of y o u r s , this curly headed grompf gets in my closet and e a t s , e a t s f r gosh sakes, my copy of the April Ranger, H I have his ears. Got that. broad, you got that good? Okay. W here’s your copy of Ladies Home Journal? I ’m hungry.” Price: s+uao gi Ranger Out W ednesday Not Out Sunday or Friday "Sanger On Sale at 24th and Whitis, Geology Building, Main Mall, Speedway at Waggener, Union Mall, Bookstores and Newsstands Sunday, April 23, 1961 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 8 q C u c u b a r t o n o t^ e sia n 5 cjC ad t ^ J iim e B y A N V C L A R K E “ W ear these costumes with pride. They are the finest you will find anywhere." These are the words of J . Pat Dingle, ex-student and Broadway star, spok­ en to a group of students, ile was speaking of the priceless collection of period costumes designed by Miss Lucy Barton. When the curtain rises Monday night and “ Macbeth” comes to life, Miss Barton will bring to a close 14 years of devotion to the University. She will retire. As she sat before the long table in the Costume Workshop, quiet now with its rack of completed cos­ tumes, Miss Barton explained simply, "Macbeth and D id y Macbeth are the starting point; the oth^r char­ acters revolve about them. In many productions there is a focal point, a place of interest, on which the other costumes focus. The color of the costumes may ho the focal point. T h i s is particularly true in Macbeth." “ Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are as one in the play and the colors of their costumes form a simple pla- tette," she said. Macbeth’s costumes, Miss Barton ex­ plained, move from dark to brown, to purple with murder of Duncan, and finally blaze brilliantly in red with the murder of Banfuo. Silk rustles as Miss Barton lightly fingers Lady Mac­ beth’s blood-red gowm. Calm and as elegant as the cos­ tumes, Miss Barton moved absorbedly explaining the details of each. The Renaissance Macbeth costumes represent a lifetime of research. In Europe Miss Barton studied etchings on thf‘ tombs about the graves of nobility, paintings, and illustrations in old books. “ Miss Barton has the unbelievable care about de­ tail which marks an artist," student Barbara Word said. "H er costumes have the quality of dramatizing the character and being authentic. She has great grasp and understanding of each period. For the new edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, Miss Barton wrote an article, "Costume Design— His­ torical." "She Is the only costume designer who has been asked to revise the subject material of the Britannica — scholarship of the highest possible order," said Dr. Ix>ron FT Winship, Drama Department chairman. "In the actual use and making of costumes she has won every national award that is possible for a wom­ an," he said. In 1957 Miss Barton received the South­ west Conference Award of Merit. The Eaves Award, the costume design Oscar, was given to her by The American Educational Theater Association in I960. Miss Barton has costumed 13 Shakespearean plays and all other drama department productions since her arrival at the University in 1947 from the Uni­ versity of Arizona. loathe professional world she has been costume de­ signer for many pageants and for the Shakespearean productions of the “ Globe Theater" at the Chicago World F a ir in 1934. This was the beginning of a re­ vived interest of modern times in the plays of Shakes­ peare. U[>on lier retirement Miss Barton plans to continue lecturing, although she does not plan to costume an­ other major production. "It is impossible to replace her. People like that are priceless," said Dr. Winship. She leaves behind her a store of thousands of cos­ tumes cached safely away, above the biochemists, on the fifth floor of the Experimental Science Building. ' IT'S ALMOST LIKE lomeof a i bad dream,” explain* Miss Bar­ ton, describing the witches costume whic h is mode from gray gauze. Macbeth. Topic Of CranfillTalk Dr. Tom Cranfill, professor of Shakespeare, will discuss “ Macbeth" at I p.m. Wednesday in the Union Auditorium. Dr. C ranfills presentation of background and interpretations of the play is in conjunction with the Drama Department’s production April 21-29 and May I at 8 p.m. in Hogg Memorial Auditor­ ium. The Union Speakers Committee is sponsoring invited and Dr. C ranfills lecture. The public there is no admission charge. THIS COSTUME cf M o'beth we iring drib brown is as he first appears in the play. The original Macbeth tartan colors the plain costume of the Scottish nobel. Campus Life Feature Page THE SCOTTISH SOLDIER ego i'\ <- » ,s an outfit designed from plaid rn f :c *!and for ♦he Mac” Ie red mater >. wf h w beth production. SKETCHES BY LUCY BARTON LUCY BARTON, eminent Shakespearean designer, supervises the final Macbeth costume fitting of Rip Tern, well-known actor. This is the finished creation de g~ed from the above p-e mhnary 'der h of Macbeth. A d L v Jv JU - K c U b U W N * I i .strate the rn e* ; ~ ' r . e of hew M Lady Macbeth. Th'. •- to bring out the personal y of the different cha-jefe-s." . V cus character , Barton ire-"col T h e d a v T e x a n “First Co liege Daily in the South" Vol. 60 Price Five Cents AUSTIN , TEXAS, SU N D A Y , APRIL 23, 1961 Eight Pages Today Vol. 158 JFK. Ike Discuss Situation in Cuba B y T h e A s s o c i a t e d P r e s s Eisenhower’s statement appeared to be more in the nature CAMP DAVID, Md.— Former President Dwight D. Ei- of an expression of unity behind the President than direct senhower discussed the tense Cuban situation with Presi- approval of Kennedy’s outspoken position or of the adminis- dent Kennedy Saturday, then sidestepped a direct answer tration’s role in encouraging the ill-fated attempt to invade on whether he endorsed Kennedy’s position. Cuba. W ith Y R ’s “I say I am all in favor of the United States supporting the ' Kennedy’s apparent purpose in arranging the meeting was man who has to carry the responsibility for our foreign af- to help rally strong national support for whatever further fairs,” was his reply when asked if he approved Kennedy’s steps he thinks this country must take in the Cuban crisis, Kennedy previously had discussed the Cuban crisis with blunt stand on Communist-oriented Cuba. |t w o other Republican leaders — former Vice-President Ric- hard M. Nixon and Senator Barry Coldwater of Arizona. The W h i t e House said he plans to see Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York this week. East VS. W est... YD's Mum O n Debate tra n sp o rte d the m e rc e n a ry b a n d s w hich invaded C u b a .” ★ ★ MOSCOW — W ith a w arning of d a n g e r a h e a d , P re m ie r K h ru ­ shchev b la m e d the U nited S tates .Saturday fo r la s t w e ek ’s w recked invasion of C uba and called the a tte m p t to p p le F id e l C astro “ a c rim e w hich h as revolted the whole w o rld .’’ to it been “ Now e sta b ­ h a s lished in c o n tro v e rtib ly ,” K hrush­ chev said in a le tte r to P resid en t K ennedy, “ th a t it w as the U nited in te r­ S tates and vention, th a t p re p a re d fin an ced , the a rm e d Awards Feature Of Swing-Out Special a w a rd s to outstanding in troduction of new stu d en ts and p re sid e n ts o f c a m p u s o rg an iza­ tions w ill h ig h lig h t th e U n iv ersity ’s Swing-Out c e re m o n y F rid a y a t 6 :45 p .m . on th e M ain M all. in clu d e T op le a d e rsh ip a w a rd s to be an­ nounced th e Mike F lynn C itizenship A w a rd to the ou tstan d ­ ing m a le s tu d e n t; Silver Spurs A w ard to th e o u tstan d in g w om an stu d en t; a n d th e M a rjo rie D arilek M em orial A w ard to the o u tsta n d ­ ing in d ep e n d e n t coed. O th er sp e c ial a w a rd s to lie p re ­ th e Bill McGill sented Include A w ard p re se n te d by the T exas Cowboys, m e n ’s se rv ic e o rg an iza ­ tion, to its o u tsta n d in g m e m b e r; the Jo h n F r y M em o rial Scholar­ ship p re se n te d by Silver Spurs, m e n ’s s e rv ic e o rg an izatio n , to its top m e m b e r; a S erv ice A w ard p re ­ sented by Spooks, w o m en ’s service org an izatio n , to a second-sem ester fre sh m a n o r a sophom ore coed who h a s re n d e re d all-round c a m ­ pus se rv ic e ; a n a w a rd by the In ­ its out­ te rfra te rn ity C ouncil stan d in g m e m b e r; an Alpha L am b ­ da D elta book a w a rd to a senior the w om an w ho h a s m ain tain ed for a v e ra g e sc h o lastic th re e and a h a lf y e a rs , and a M or­ to ta r B o ard S ch o la rsh ip A w ard the sophom ore coed w ith the high­ e st g ra d e a v e ra g e . to in Ho following a told K ennedy Referring to Kennedy’s d eclara­ tion that the United States has an obligation to defend the W estern Nixon said F rid a y n ig h t he had Hem isphere from outside aggres- skin. Khrushchev’ s a i d : “ Mr. a ssu re d K ennedy of his support, P resident, you are even to the c o m m itm e n t of A m er­ dangerous path. Ponder th a t.” ican a rm e d forces. H e said he w’ould h a ck the P re s id e n t in such a m ove if K ennedy considered it n e c e ssa ry the buildup of the C om m unist b eac h h e ad in Cuba If K ennedy got any sim ila r a s ­ su ra n ce s the fo rm e r p re sid e n t didn t tell new s­ m en a b o u t it. e ffe c t: is W h a t’s sa u ce for the sa u c e for U n ited S tates the right to help bring down C a s tro ’s c o m m u n ist-b a c k e d re g im e b e ­ c a u se it th re a te n s A m e ric an se­ c u rity , then the Soviet U nion has a n e q u a l right to d e stro y A m eri­ c an -b a c k e d govern m en ts on its ow n b orders. He insisted, how’- e v e r, th a t Moscow w ould not try to do this. the g a n d e r — if it h a s from E isenhow er, th e goose to stop feels 'A Distortion . . . ’ WASHINGTON — T he U nited S ta te s denounced Soviet P re m ie r K h ru sh c h e v ’* la te st m e s sa g e on C uba S atu rd a y as “ a d isto rtio n of th e th e b asic concepts of rig h ts of m a n .” Trials Foreseen MIAMI — C uban ra d io b ro a d ­ lie c a s ts a p p e a re d S atu rd a y lay in g the groundw ork fo r show ­ tria ls of a n ti-C a stro p ris ­ c a s e o n e rs c a p tu re d th e Z ap ata in P e n in su la . to In th e w ake of F rid a y ’* te le ­ v ise d “ in te rro g a tio n ” of th e p ris­ o n e rs, th e H av an a ra d io c h a rg e d a t le a s t tw o of th em w ith m u rd e r and th e ft. Castro to Speak T he g overnm ent controlled Cu­ b a n ra d io said S a tu rd a y P rim e M in ister F idel C astro will a p p e a r on nationw ide television a n d r a ­ dio hookups Sunday to tell how’ his re g im e sm ash ed th e re b el in­ v asion. As fa r as is know’n C a stro has not a p p e a re d publicly since the C uban in v ad ers stru ck la s t Mon­ d a y . ★ ★ Guerrilla Survey Set Ten U n iv e rsity stu d e n ts will he selected to p a rtic ip a te in the third T exas S tudent L e a d e r S em in ar in Chile this su m m e r. A pplication fo rm s m a y be ob- tained sta rtin g T u e sd a y from th e In tern a tio n a l O ffice, IOO W e s t T w enty-sixth S tree t. C om pleted applications, t r a n s- sc rip ts of com pleted courses, a re 4 including Mortar Board Picks Sixteen Sixteen new in itia te s w ere ta p ­ for M o rta r B o ard F rid ay ped m orning. T he new M o rta r B oards will w e a r black m o r ta r b o ard s and all w hite d re sse s to c lasses M onday and T uesday. Initiation he held M onday a t 6:30 a rn. a t the U n iv ersity T ea H ouse. c e re m o n ie s will A re tre a t is scheduled for Sun­ to 4 p m , a t P ease d ay from 2 P ark . T h e n e w Initiate)* a r e l io lin d a B a i l e y , B e th I t l a z e k , F r a n c e s ’o o p e r , N a n c y Cotto n, F r a n c e s >rake, K o licrta H o u s e , F.ll_\ Med- na, P e g g y P a c e , .lo t u n P a n- rat*. S a l l y P r e d o e k , S u s a n te e d , S a l l y R u n d q u i s t , P a t lu n ch , .Martha R u s s e l l , Beth Kolrertfton. a n d B a r b a r a Word. M o n d a y Deadline Set For Flynn Nom inations Mike F lynn a w a rd nom inations will l>e a c c e p te d until 5 p.m . Mon­ day in S peech B uilding 102. The re a s o n fo r nom ination and list of the n o m in e e ’s activ ities a m ust lie included. WASHINGTON — R e t i r e d A rm y G en eral M axw ell I). T ay ­ lor, w ho in World W ar II m a d e a d an g e ro u s excursion behind en e m y lines as an im p o rta n t s e c r e ’ a g e n t, w as assigned by P re s id e n ; K ennedy S atu rd ay to m a k e sp ecial survey of the m ilita r y ’s g u e rrilla w a rfa re org an izatio n . A spokesm an for the Y o u n g D e m o c ra ts said S a tu rd a y his club h a s nothing to say now concern­ ing a re p o rte d Y oung R epublican ch allen g e th e M ay 27 T e x a s se n a to ria l election. to d e b a te A ndy Schouval, v I c e-president of the Y D 's, said th a t the club has h a d no notification of the challenge an d th a t he h ad no co m m en ts un­ til notification h as been received. The resolution, as released F ri­ day read: “ We, The U niversity of T exas Y'oung R epublican Club, do hereby challenge the Young D em ocrats to a senatorial de­ bate in which w e will speak on behalf of John Tower, and the Young D em ocrats m ay attem pt to defend Bill Bl ak ley. Prompt is requested so that ar­ reply rangem ents m ay he m ade agree­ able to both parties. ‘I t la hoped that ouch a de­ bate will serve to enlighten the student body on the Issues of the cam p aign.’’ The resolution w as signed by Lee execu tive vice-presi­ M cFadden, d ent of th* Young Republicans. ■ *■ I ii11IJr By CHARLIE SMITH T he sto ry re la tin g th e tra v e lin g C h ev ro let engine block h as gone to A ggieland and re tu rn e d . F o u r | highest U n iv e rsity stu d e n ts p u t th e block frie n d ’s c a r in a visiting A ggie t r u n k Round-U p W eekend. The B a tta lio n , c a m p u s n e w sp ap e r a t A&M, re la te d tile sto ry to th e Ag­ gies. S a tu rd a y this le tte r c a m e to the T e x a n , signed by T he B atta lio n 's Bob Sloan, m a n a g in g ed ito r, and T o m m y Holbein, new s e d ito r: “ T u e sd a y 's B a tta lio n re la y e d the Included in sto ry to the A ggies. T he B a tta lio n 's account w as the n otation th a t the U n iv ersity w anted th e ir m otor back, so p a i n t e d o ra n g e and w hite, it could be shipped collect to som e o th e r uni­ v e rsity . “ T u e sd a y night one W a y n e A hr, a g ra d u a te o c ea n o g rap h y m a ­ jo r from San Antonio, c a m e into o u r office. He had just discovered the cra n k ca se . “ A hr w a sn 't m a d . In fa c t he thought the whol% id ea w as g re a t so m uch so th a t he went right out arid bought a paint b ru sh and two ca n s of p ain t (m aroon and w hite). “ W hat Ahr p lan s to do w ith the c ra n k c a s e we don't know. We < an only guess. At an y ra te , we d be on the lookout for the w an dering engine blot k. “ B ed-pushing n e v e r a p p ealed to A ggies m uch B ut th is ' The pos­ sibilities of engine-block sending a re unlim ited. And why lim it our­ selves to just the block You send us an o ran g e and w hite C adillac; we send you a m aroon and white John D e e re .” Well, a fte r m uch inner thought on the subject. I feel like the Ag­ gies would have a bout as m uch use for an o ra n g e and w h i t e adil)a<- as I would for a . J o h n D eere, which a in 't just a hfck u v a 'of. * * Mere s the an sw er to the m arble p roblem , published Iii F r i d a y'u T e x a n : The stu d en t put one w hite m a r ­ ble in one box and the rem aining m a rb le s — nine w hite and IO black —in the o th er box. The chance* of the dean draw ing a w hite m a r ­ ble then would be one pius nine- n in eteen th s divided by two, which would be tit." jw r cent. T h a t ' s n e a rly the stu d e n t a favor. th re e bi on* odd* In Work on V C Speeds Up Shelly C a t o , Linda M a n d Lu cijane S o o ­ last year's so ro rity division tier, m e m b e r s o f winner, K a p p a K a p p a G a m m a , try their ha nds a t c on stru ction a n d p ain tin g as V a rs it y C a r n iv a l a ct iv it y s p e e d s up. Paper a n d p form s as c o n te s tin g g r o u p Pub city for the ev ent VV) I m a / b e p c t u p b e g i n n i n g a t mi dc g h t Sun day. ake sti ’0 :r e- trie' day. jigc p r e p a r e 1 b e g i n FA Preparing to Kick Up Dust A a - * J oh n Pinckney, Texas catcher, flies through tho air b e f o r e s lid ­ in g acros s home plate S a t u r d a y a h e a d o f the ball a nd R ic e C a t c h e r J im Fox. U m p ire Rusty Lyon s looks on. The Lo n g h o r n s c on tinu e d their winning ways, b e a t i n g R ic o twice to s w e e p a t h r e e - g a m e .erie*;. The v ic t o r y w a* T exas' 17th without a loss a n d g a v e the Lo n g h o r n s a 2 g a m e le ad o v e r Baylor in the S outh w est C o n f e r e n c e ba se ba ll race, (cor th® g a m e stories a n d more pictures, sea p a g e 4.) Chilean Group To Be Chosen Briefs... From the Wire By The A sso c ia te d Pres* —P h o t o b r Avant Pro^rarn On Exchange I Soviet Students To Arrive Tuesday * * * the In te rn a tio n a l Office due a t no la te r than 5 p.m . F rid a y . K now ledge of Spanish re q u ire d as a p re re q u isite selection. is not for , in S tudents p a rtic ip a tin g the e x ch a n g e will be chosen la rg e ly on the basis of a c a d e m ic re c o rd s and c a m p u s lea d e rsh ip , a c c o rd ­ ing to D r. Jo e W. N eal, d ire c to r of th e In te rn a tio n a l Office. R esid en ce the 1961-62 at 1ho U n iv ersity d u rin g long sessio n is a re q u ire m e n t for selection. S ophom ores a n d ju n io rs will Im* given p refe re n c e . in one of S tu d en ts m u st also l>e m a jo r­ ing o r m inoring th** fields of study ta u g h t a t th e In­ s titu te Pedagogic©, the b ra n c h of th e U niversity of Chile w ith is b e i n g w hich th e exchange includes m ost conducted. T his social sciences, lan g u ag e s, edu­ cation, and the p hysical and n a ­ tu ra l scien ces. F ull tra n sp o rta tio n and m a in ­ te n a n c e costs will he paid for the p a rtic ip a n ts In terv ie w s will begin for the a p p lic a n ts M ay I, w ith final s» lection announced M ay 7 o r H, a c co rd in g to D r. N eah A se rie s of o rien ta tio n sessions, including a th re e-d a y briefing in W ashing­ ton, D .C ., will p reced e the p ro ­ g ra m . Control of R igh t-W in g Spreads Fast in A lge ria PA R IS—T he F re n c h governm ent J said S a tu rd a y night the right-w'ing m ilita ry ju n ta w hich seized A lgiers ' in a bloodless coup e a r lie r in the d a y has extended to w estern A lgeria by ta k in g over tho city of O ran. its control 'Hie coup p ro m p te d P re sid e n t C h arles de G aulle to a ssu m e ex­ tra o rd in a ry police po w ers and call a C abinet session w hich p ro c la im ­ ed a sta te of e m e rg e n c y in F ra n c e . ★ Laotian Truce P e n d i n g W A K H I N G T O N — S e c r e t a r y of S t a l e D e a n Rusk s a k i S a tu r d a y n i g h t In' e x p e c t * a c e a s e f i r e to b e annou nce*! for Iju>s w ith in the n e x t M to IM b o u n . H e p l e d g e d t he I fitted S t a t e s w ill try Pi es ta b l i s h a ii <- ii t r a I. lne ta k e n for a p p intive Ignitions on co m m itte e s of the Stu­ through dent A ssem bly M onday in W ednesday from to 6 p m , I Sly G u n m a n Robs B an k Xii a g i l e , d e a t h Tex elec ted from | n o es: t h r e a t e n i n g g u n m a n of 53 c u t a hob- iii tin* I irs! S t a t e H a n k r o o f b e r e S a t u r d a y , d r o p p e d t h r o u g h , p a t i e n t l y t i e d u p e m p l o y e s a s t hey ar i d e*ca|icd a r r i v e d w i t h a r r e s t e d h i m t wo h o u r s l a t e r . .vc., out). O f f i c e r s f or w o r k U N Asks Cuban Peace UNTT1 D NATIONS A ssem bly finished it- a m ig o loth annual is a rn. S a tu rd a y a lt o night plea for Cuba: last mini [M-a< e and sav e the I N Congo < b a n k ru p tc y . The G eneral record stop- siion at 6:02 a postm id- A m erit an to te action a ration from Council to Help A g gi e s < o i l l a. I s r M io n W M d i r e c t o r s S a tu r d a y c r e a t e d » “ I «-iitur> I OIHU l l ” of UMI out st a n d i n g Texan** lo h e l p m a p the f u t u r e of t h e c o l l e g e . T h e p l a n Is a i m e d a t d e v e l o p log VIM fully In line with n e e d s of t he p e r i o d b e t w e e n Its SMH y e a r , a n d i t s t oot h a n n i v e r s a r v s t a t e , d u r i n g in I f*“»* t hi s . th*- M a rg a re t Bowles, N ancy Mon­ day , L inda K ay P hillips, K ay Ann Johnson, K ay K ocurek. K aren P a r ­ k er, H a rrie t F ried m a n , M ary Wef- feb ach , B etty D en n ard , Ann E isen­ stein, M a rth a E sten , Shirley P rice, .Suzanne La M aster, B everly B rind­ ley, L inda M orris, N ancy A ndrew s, M ary I /u s F rid a y , Linda R allah an , A nita H ard y , • C olleen C opeland, K a re n C u sh m an , M ary Anne H erd ­ m an, A rden R eed, M ary Shigley, Sue B trd en . Also, K arol C onnie H erb ert, K irk, G lenda F in k elstein , Susie G reev es, D inah H ay K eiser, N ancy K leir, Vicki P a tr ic ia D oughty, Izrvelady, R eb e c c a Sue M atthew s, Paula N o rm an , S uzanne P rin ce, B everly Stevenson, B a rb a ra W atts, E lean o r W eiss, M a ry C ath ry n Sau­ er’, E lain e C ollins, L a u rie H arg is, Arid Bobbie Ann H a rp er, N ancy Swift P enlope M ichele K ra n /, B urleson, J a n e C lem en ts. M a rg a re t B its y ’ D utton, C arolyn “ J o J o ” Kopjiel, Ah. e A M arsh all, Lydia S lo o p K aren Stein, Mallei Ann Brown C arolyn Tull. Tax Fate Held by Daniel A* HTN T ex as h a s edged . lose, t h a n e v e r b e f o r e to a ge n e t al sal es t ax as a fiscal c u r e a l l in the face of it blunt w arn in g from G o v e r n o r is not P r i c e Dani el t ha t o v e r t he fight * Texan to H e a d Editors W A S H I N G T O N — F e l i x K. Mr n i g h t , e x e c u t i v e e d i t o r of t h e I t al l a s I I in *• s H e r a l d a u d o n e of t h e n a t i o n s Im-*! k n o w n n e w - p a p er i n* i i. S a t u r d a y wa** c l e c t e ii p r e s i d e n t of tin- A m e rica n Society Scats A v a i l a b le to Hear Tower Speak Tuesday Sr its to tx a r John T ow er speak at the N u b rits' A ssociation Inau- gur ii B anquet T u esd ay night in the Main B ag ro o m of the T exas Union a re now’ being m ad e availab le, a c ­ cording to M aurice O ban, S tudents' A ssociation p resid en t. A dm ission for the vjH-ech will l>e $1 HO to he paid a t the door. D inner will be served at 6 30 p.m . followed im m ed iately by the the c erem o n ies in au g u ral an d , Union 323, j of New spaller E ditor*. I speech. • P la n s fo r th e visit call for an o p ­ p o rtu n ity to o b serv e sta te g o v e rn ­ m e n t in actio n , to v isit an e le m e n ­ ta r y school, to d isc u ss r a c e re la ­ tions, and to ex p erien ce a n u m b e r of fe a tu re s of U n iv ersity life, In addition to sight-seeing. T he p lan s fo r th e v isit h av e been developed in an effo rt to p rovide as th orough and n a tu ra l an op p o rtu n ity a s pos­ sible for th e .Soviets to o b serv e and ex p e rien c e fea ­ tu re s of A m erican life, acco rd in g to F ra n k L. W right, YMCA e x ec­ u tiv e w ho is su p erv iso r an d adm in- is tra to r fo r th e A ustin visit. The g ro u p will spend In New Y ork C ity, F o rt W ayne, Ind.. O berlin College in Ohio an d at. th e U n iv ersity of M issouri before a r ­ riv in g h ere. T hey w ill h a v e a few d a y s in W ashington l>efore leav in g New York fo r M oscow M ay 7. Im p o rtan t som e tim e The v isit is p a r t of th e fo u rth an n u al US-USSR ex c h an g e p ro ­ g ra m w hich h as brought 60 Soviet stu d en ts to th e U nited S ta te s an d sent 1H7 A m erican stu d e n ts to th e Soviet Union o v e r the p a st th re e y e a rs . F o u r th e U n iv ersity h av e previously v isited th e Soviet Union. Two w ill go th e re this su m m er. stu d en ts from S U S A N H A M M O N D , < * b > *, $m es out et business adminis ♦ ration student*, their newly e ec+ed swee*- as --ed c l h eart. w in n er o f that t ’ !e at a Frid a y p a rty clim axing O B A W e e k . She wa Weather: Cloudy, W indy Low 70, H igh 80 College House Seeks to Basic Issues fo r Texas Resolve Students By R I C H A R D V A N S ! E E S K I S T P. P a nor a ma PJi t o r F rom launching t h e pad of togo them sos, activi­ ties at the multi-faithed Col­ lege House nim at. the harrl- to-hit ideal of multi-purposed existence. According to a pamphlet Issued by the C h r i s t i a n Faith-and-Llfe Community, the College House is "a resi­ dential tutorial program for University students provid­ ing a dialogue b e t w e e n thought and life, leading to Understanding of Life Goal of Study Program By T H E C O R P O R A ! P. M I N I S T R Y Christian Edith a n d Li f e C o m m u n i t y X he world of the rriid- Twentieth Century is a new world, such as has not brok­ en in upon man in centuries. We do not fully understand this new world, which we did not ask for, and do not often wish to be our world, but it is here, and man in our time has no choice final­ ly but to live within it. T h is n p w w o r l d m a y tx* c h a r a c ­ te r i z e d In s e v e r a l w ay *. It is a n a c u t e l y d y n a m i c w o rl d o f flux, on (he m o v e f r o m o n e c r is ic lo the n e x t. It is a h i g h ly I n d u s t r i a l ­ ized u r b a n w o r l d that, Is p u s h i n g th e old l a s t v e s t i g e s of ou t t h e a g r a r i a n e c o n o m y . to liv e b e fo r e It la an In tenably te ch n o lo g ic a l world o f au to m a tio n th at I* In c rea sin g tho nerd for tho train ed expert and b ringing a w h ole new' problem of leisu r e tim e. It Is a radically sc ie n tific and h isto r ica l world w hich e lim in a te s tr a d itio n ­ al other-w orldly m e ta p h y s ic s and forces m an the actual world of sp a ce and tim e. It is a c o m p l e x w o r l d of t e c h ­ nical p syc h olog y a n d I n w a r d n e s s w h ic h is t r a n s f o r m i n g m a n ' s u n ­ d e r s t a n d i n g of p e r s o n a l fr e e d o m . Fin ally . It is a b e w i ld e r in g w o r ld of s p a c e conquest, a n d n u c l e a r pow e rs w h ic h present p r o b l e m s of su c h t e r r i f y in g g lo b al p r o p o r ­ tions t h a t it Is difficult, to i m a g i n e t h e ir sc o p e a n d Intensity. ★ it T h is n e w wor ld is not go ing to RO a w a y , Of th is w e t a n t>e c e r ­ tain a s w e c a n he c e r t a i n of few f a c t s in o u r t i m e T ire q u e s ­ tion is how w e e r e going to live t h is w o rld , not. h ow w e a re in going t o live in th e w o rld w h ic h we w ish w e r e h e r e o r w hic h “ o u g h t ” to h e h e r e . (se en In Out of th is new world a new m an Is lceglnnlng to e m e r g e . This the graphic new m an arts a s the c le a rly d efined hum an figure ap p earin g from a b a ck ­ ground of c h a o s and m eaning- FERRn#**?) Is b egin n in g to strug gle with th e life Im age by which be la ab le to liv e . In so d o in g he is u s in g his c ritic a l Intellige n ce to m a k e his own d e c isio n s a n d to live his own life We h a v e n o w p a s s e d t h r o u g h i h e t i m e w h e n , a s a f t e r t h e end of th e w a r , m e a n i n g l e s s n e s s it se lf g a v e m e a n i n g live, and a r e now e n t e r i n g a t im e w h e n tile possibility fo r g e n u in e m e a n i n g in h u m a n e x i s t e n c e Is o n c e m o r e r a is in g It* h e a d . to ★ it It la no w o n d e r , t h e r e f o r e , th a t t a s k is a a serum of a u t h e n t i c c h a r a e te r ts t io o f t h e n e w m a n . T h e p e r f o r m a n c e of t h is t a s k r e ­ q u i r e s t h e d isc ip l i n e a n d s u s t e n ­ a n c e of c o r p o r a t e s t r u c t u r e s , a n d the n e w m a n Is s e a rc h i n g ou t th e w a y s a n d m e a n s b y w h ic h h e c a n s a k e d isc ip lin e h im se lf of th e t a s k w hich th e w orld. for is his In the ta k es with this new world The C hristian Faith ■ and • Fife radical C om m unity serio u sn e ss In which w e live and w r estle s In the are* ut w hat It m ea n s to liv e authentic liv e s In Its context. t h r o u g h o u t 'I h e C o m m u n i t y , a f t e r - ch ous t a k i n g a look a t t h e h i s t o r y of w e s t e rn civ ilizatio n, is a w a r e t h a t the C h u r c h the c e n ­ tu r ie s h a s n lw a y s be en c o m p l e t e ­ ly i m m e r s e d in the w orld of its d a y , a n d w h e n it h a s c o m e alive, I m p a r t h a s m a d e a sig n ific a n t upon c u ltu re, T h e w hole s o c ie ty h a s b e en r e n e w e d to w h a t In Is a c t u a l l y h a p p e n i n g in ifs m id s t. t e r m s of se n sitiv ity e n ti r e th e Sr * of h i s t o r ic th r o u g h t r a d itio n th e y e a r s T h u s th e C o m m u n i t y h a s !>ccn c o n c e r n e d to s t a n d w ith its feed fir m ly in bo th the the C h u r c h , a n d , a t the s a m e tim e , in th e w o r l d In w hic h w e are c u r ­ it h a s r e n t l y se t. w o r k e d this in to I>e a f fi r m e d , w h ic h w o r l d is r e l a t i o n of th e c u l t u r a l s t r u c t u r e s Is fin ally futile a n d to s te rile c y n i ­ c is m . In so doing i m a g e th e is to s u g g e s t l e a d s t h a t th a t Is the Church of Ttie p r a b l e rn, the m ission . w hich .lesiia C hrist, Is therefore, to proc I al rn In th e m id st of the so c ieta l a tn ic- lu res, th at th is w orld Is good as It Is g iv en , that all m en are r e ­ ceiv ed Into the w o r ld Just a s they are, and Is given the opportunity to pick up the to life, w hich often rom e* him a s u tterly m e a n in g less, that Is his life and live It to the full, savoring each m om en t a* the co m p lete m eaning of his e x is t ­ ence. that ea ch person p r o g r a m s a u d th r o u g h o u t It is fait of this c o n te x t a n d in t h e C o m m u n i t y t h a t i m a g e this fo r its on c a r r i e s c le r g y m e n n w a k e l a y m e n in A ustin n n d tile S ou thw e st. T h e s e p r o g r a m s , w hich in v o lv e both U n i v e r s i ty s t u d e n ts nnd p e rs o n s of post-c ol­ lege s t a t u s , ra is e th e ba sic q u e s ­ tions o f h u m a n e x is te n c e in a n y a g e a n d in sp e c ific in th e m id - t w e n ti e th c e n t u r y . is Any p e r s o n w ho Is alive to the a m a z i n g i*er[ ’e s p i e s of o u r d a y a n d t h e p r o b le m o f I low it Is t h a t h e is going t o live h is life w ith m e a n i n g , is w e l c o m e to p a r t i c i p a t e . r a i s i n g in m o r e d e ta il, b u t A c c o m p a n y in g a r ti c l e s on this p a g e spell out s o m e of t h e s e p r o ­ g r a m * the C o m m u n i t y w e l c o m e s a n y Inq uiry c o n c e r n in g specific p r o g r a m n< tivities o r t h e self u n d e r s t a n d i n g w hic h hex b e yon d nnd beh ind th e m . T h e D a® T e x a n Sunday, April 23, 1961 TH E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 2 O p i ni o n s e x p r e s s e d in T h e Tex a n are t hose o f t he Edi t ort or o f t he wri t er o f t he article a nd not necessarily those of the Un i v e rsi t y administrat ion. Th* Dully T exan. * stu d e n t newspaper of T h e University of Texas Is published In Austin, Texas, dally except Mond ay and S st u r d s \ and holiday periods S e p te m b e r t h r o u g h May and semi-weekly In the su m m er term hv Texas S tu d e n t P ublications tnr, Sec ond-claas postage paid al Austin. Texas Delivered in Austin ( t h r e e m o nth s m in im um ) Malled Malled ou t of to wn SI MNC Kl PTI ON RAT KH ........ .............................................. ............... ............................................................ In Austtn . 7 V month JI (si month . 7 V month A s s o c i a t e d ( ' u l t r a i s t * P r e s * All (merit s n T a r e iii a I, rr MI MPI It I l i b e r a l l y I ' r e s s *« -r *ir # S o u t h w e s t e r n . I n u r n n l U i n I n n i r r t i News co ntrib u tio n s will editorial office, Jo u r n a lis m build in g I ira. Th* clr< ulation off lr* riffle* is J. Ii 111. ( t m 2-2730) is J. I e accepted bv telep ho n e th e iud or a t the News l a b o r a t o r y , J B. thi ad vertising (CIR 2-247.7), and (GR 2-2473) o r IT RYT, PFIRMAN E D IT O R ................................................. MANAGING E D IT O R ...................... N e w s E d i t o r ..................... ....................... A ssistan t N e w s E d i t o r s ................... Sports E d i t o r ........................................... F e a t u r e E d i t o r ...................................... A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r ............................ A s s o n a t e A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r . . . . C a m p u s Life E d i t o r ............................ Associate C a m p u s Life E d i t o r , . , . E d ito rial A s s i s t a n t s ............................. D e b b ie How Wire C o - O r d i n a to r ................................ EN T ST A FF JO EIC KMANN .......................................CHARI J E SMITH ................................. I Ira id T Lopes ............... C a r o ly n C o k e r, C a r y M a y e r , ( l e t ald Ixjwe, C h a r le s E s k r i d g e ................................................... Hoyt P u r v i s ....................................................... P a t R u s c h ............................................. D a t e Helton ........................................ ........................ R o s e m a r y J e r s i g .....................................C m d y P e n d e r g r a s s Janet P e a v y , R i c h a r d V a n S te e n k iste , ell, J o a n n e W illiam s, J e a n n e R e tn e r t ................................................. Bill H a m ilto n L a r r y H ail STAI I’ FOR l l l i s ISSI E NIGHT E D IT O R .. DESK EDITOR .. I ss u e N e w s E d it o r . C o p y r e a d e r ............... N ight S p o r ts E d i t o r ............... ’* A m u se m en t* E dito r.. N ............... I- Night C a m p u s L ife E d i t o r . E d it o ri a l A s s i s t a n t ................. .......................................................................J A i K K E E N E R ............................................................DON RI THEKFO KD ......................................................................C h a r le s E s k r i d g e ....................................................... Cindy P e n d e r g r a s s Hoyt P u r v i s ............. D a ve Helton C a r o ly n Ste p hen son ..................R o s e m a r y J e r s i g . . . Richard Va n St e e n ki s t e .in W ire E d ito i » involvement In responsible the issues of comtpmporary society as free and creative intelligent, persons.” re n ew a l T h e bulletin goex on to e x p la i n t h a t th# p r o g r a m is “ a n e x p e r i ­ m e n t in th* m id st of th e w o r l d ­ w id e in C h rix te n d o m w h ic h offer* the U n i v e r s i ty stu ­ to d e n t an o p p o rtu n ity to r o m e grip* with life the T w e n tieth C e n t u r y a n d in th# th e the c h u r c h role of p r e s e n t world the m e a n i n g of in In a n Interview . Allan B r o c k ­ w a y , a m e m b e r of th* C o r p o r a te M in istry of th* C h ristia n F a ith - e x p la in e d a nd -L if* C o m m u n ity , t h a t the pro­ g r a m I* th* theological e d u ca tio n o f l a y m e n . th e basic goal of Concepts and Program th is ,” he “ To d o to u n d e r s t a n d said, “ we s e e k tw o m a j o r c oni cpi*. F i r s t , we s t u d y the h is­ th# c h u rc h to r ic a l tra d i t io n of to e v a l u a t e S e c o nd, w e a t t e m p t the in th e p ro b le m * of T w e n ti e t h C e n tu ry . living “ We c a r r y on o u r p r o g r a m in t h r e e a r e a * , ” he co n tin u e d . “ We w o r s h i p to g e t h e r e v e r y m o rn in g in C h a p e l ; we s tu d y t o g e t h e r on s u b j e c t s su c h a s s c r i p tu r e , c h u r c h h i s t o r y , c u ltu r e , e th ic s, c h u rc h le a d e r s a n d citizenship. F in a lly , w e e n jo y c o m m o n fellow ship by living, e a t i n g a n d w o r k in g to­ g e t h e r . ” Mr. B rock w ay explain ed that w hen he *|>ok* o f “ th# ch u rch ” he m eant no particu lar d en om i­ nation, but the “ h istorical com m unlty which I* sym b olized by the ( b r l st Inn w orship se r v ic e and ha* a* It* sym b ol J e su s C h rist.” “ We h a v e no o r g a n i c c o n n e c ­ tion w ith a n y p a r t i c u l a r d e n o m i ­ n a tio n , lint m a i n t a i n a n excellent w o r k i n g re la tio n with all P r o t e c ­ ta n t sa id “ Both in th e p a st a n d a t p r e se n t, m e m b e r s of th e C o m m u n i t y h a v e r e p r e s e n t e d d e n o m i n a ti o n s a n d f a i t h s . ” d e n o m i n a t i o n s , ” all he Diverse Membership At p r e s e n t 48 m e n , 20 w o m e n a n d five m a r r i e d c o u p le s a r e fak th* C ollege H o use m g p a r t in p r o g r a m . T h is g r o u p in clu d e s 0 JI M e th odists, 2 E p is c o p a l ia n s , U n i t a r i a n s , In ­ l u t h e r a n * , 7 ti q u i r e r* , I I h itc h R e f o r m , 1 D i n t , T> B a p tis t. I C h u rc h of C h r ist, 7 P r e s b y t e r i a n , I J e w , I Disciple, 1 H u m a n i s t , I A gn ostic ­ an d a l cist mn Th* C ollege H ouse m em b ersh ip Is m ad* up of fresh m en , 13 ti sop h om ores, I* Juniors, 21 sen lors, and EN grad u al* stu dents. T hey ar* m ajoring In e veryth in g from E nglish and c ity planning to and m eteorology. en gin eerin g c h e m ic a l In addition, t h e C o m m u n i t y e a c h y e a r h a s a n u m b e r o f p e o ­ ple fr o m the I n t e r n a t i o n a l I n t e r n V i s i t o r s p r o g r a m . S t u d e n ts fr o m c o u n t r i e s an d Asia in E u r o p e c o m e to sp e n d a y e a r a t lh# Col­ leg e H ou se. T his y e a r the C o m ­ m u n i t y lias tw o people f r o m Hol­ land , tw o f r o m C e r m a n y a n d o ne f r o m F in la n d to guide theo lo g ica lly 'Hie C o m m u n i t y m a i n t a i n s a t r a i n e d staff of 13 l>ersons t h e p r o g r a m . All h a v e d e g r e e s In t h e o lo g y a n d a r e a p p o in te d f ro m t h e i r d e n o m ­ i n ations to s e r v e nt th e C o m m u n ­ ity 'ITiey w o rk not only w ith th e College H ouse, hut w ith o t h e r the p r o g r a m a s well. p h n s r s of O ne Year o f S tudy in M e m b e r s h ip t h e Colle ge is u s u a l ly on a o n e y e a r H o u s e b a s i s a c c o r d in g to M r. B r o c k ­ w a y . H e sa id the p r o g r a m is d e ­ s ig n e d so t h a t m o s t people will h a v e finished t h e i r s t u d y a n d will l e a v e a f t e r one y e a r . H o w ev e r. h e e x p la i n e d th a t a s m a ll , se le c t g ro u p , u s u a l ly of a b o u t ten s t u ­ to s t a y for a d e n ts , a r e a s k e d s e c o n d y e a r of d e e p e r , m o r e In­ t e n s e stu d y . for an To b eco m e a m em b er of Hie C om m u nity the C ollege aud H ouse, an Interested |M*rson m ust Interview first arra n g e with one of the sta ff m em ber* Iii order to b ecom e acquain ted nnd to find out m ore nt»out the program . Then lf he Is still In­ te re ste d , h e will fill out and sign an application f o r m , F in ally, the corp orate m inistry goes oxer th* ap p lication s mid picks nut the jienple who are to t*e invited to participate In the program . “ We h a v e no e c o n o m i c o r so­ cial h a r r i e r s . Anti th e College H o u s e h a s been i n t e g r a t e d sin c e t h e U n i v e r s i ty h a s b e e n , ” Mr. B r o c k w a y sta te d , " W e a r e p r i ­ in p e o ple w ho m a r i l y a r e a w a k e We w a n t people w h o a r e i n te r e s t e d in d e a l i n g s e r i o u s ­ ly w ith ba sic issues of life.” in te r e s te d Broad Impact Mr, B ro c k w a y s a i d t h a t i n t e r ­ e st in the College H o u s e p r o g r a m h a s be en h ig h er th is y e a r t h a n e v e r before. U n fo rt u n a t e ly , he a d d e d , tile p r o g r a m will n o t he a b le to e x p a n d too m u c h for th e s e v e ra l y e a r s b e c a u s e of n e x t lac k of facilities a n d funds. tip Th* C ollege H ouse Is th# first program of it# type In the I nl led S ta les. Ilouex cr, Mr. Brock way explain ed that th# work don# here ha* hail an Im pact far b# th# Ntixtln a rea , “ O ther yond c a m p u ses ar# picking th# id e a ,” he said, “ and although there Is no actual tie b etw een u*. we keep In clos# c o n ta ct with on# an oth er.” th e C o m m u n i t y He pointed to the C o m m u n i t y Ho use a t SMU, of the I Tty S c h o la r s at D uke, C h r i s t ia n F a i t h a n d Life C o m ­ m u n it y a t the U n i v e r s i t y of M o n ­ t a n a a n d o th e r s a s e x a m p l e s . if®*, m By L A R R Y LEE t e x a n St af f Wr i t e r A . I I-ins House, laymen past college age and Austin- area ministers are given a chance lo sample capsule versions of t h e Christian Faith and Life Community’s programs. Laos House is a Greek- pillarded mansion at 700 West Nineteenth Street. It was once the home of a pio­ neer A u s t i n resident, Dr. Goodall Wooten, and from 1002 to 1958 it was the Com­ munity’s women’s residence hall to It In tin s c a s e . “ I a n s ’ d o e s n o t r e f e r t r o u b le the F a r - E a s t sjx>t. is a G r e e k w o r d w h ic h of m e a n s “ th# whole C o d . ” a w o rd w hich is th e s o u r c e o f o u r E n glish w o r d “ l a y m a n ” p e o ple ir it l a y m e n a n d m i n i s t e r s a b o u t (.IKJ a y e a r corn# to I j ig s House fo r w e e k -n ig h t a n d w e e k e n d s e s ­ sions of w o r s h ip , stu d y a n d c o n ­ v e r s a t i o n F o u r p r o g r a m s a r e c e n t e r e d at L a o s Ho use % The P arish M inister* C ol­ loqu ies are a serie# of three day session * for w orking m inister*. S em in ars, g u e s t lec tu r er s and d isc u ssio n s of “ art fo r m s” ar# Included In th# C olloquies. ‘'A r t f o r m s , ” In t h e c a s e of the Colloquies, a r e m o v i e s : “ M ob y D i c k , ” .Shrike,” “ H e a r t of th e M a t t e r ” a n d “ An I n s p e c t o r C alls ** 'M ile a s well p r o g r a m s , F i l m s a r e u s e d in o t h e r I-aos H ouse a s p a in t i n g s , p o e m s a n d s h o rt s t o r ­ ies. T h e s e “ a r t f o r m s ” a r e not r e lig io u s a r t t r a d i t i o n a l in s e n se . P i c a s s o , F r a n z K a f k a a n d c e. c u m m i n g s all se e s e r v i c e a t L a o s Hou se th* ♦ ★ rn M i n i s t e r s w h o s e r v e c o lle g e Official Notices f u r R e g i a t r a t i o s a t t e n d e d T h * t h * H a m m e r S e s ­ s i o n . m i . wi l l nee • r » * T s c a d s * , I i . A s v s t u d e n t s he* h a s p r a - J u n e t in ti* ly «f r e g i s t r a t i o n T e x a s m a r m a t e r i a l * b y m a l l b y a n f i l l s * a p p l i c a t i o n W h i c h la s a a l l a h l # a t a t h e t h e O f f i c e *f b o t f r o n t *1 K e d a t r a r s o l T h l a m a t t b e d o n e l a t e r t h a n M o n d a y . M a y S r e e e l * # h i # I n l r e r a l t v In f i r r i s C. Smith A s s i s t a n t R e s i s t e r Th* Interfraternity and P anhtllenic Councils through their Special Fund Com m ittee have generously donated a Polaroid I-and Camera Kit for use In the Student Em ployment Bureau This equipment w ill provide addi­ tional services to th# student* u tiliz­ ing this office. Pictures for em ploy­ ment application* and data sheet* are available upon request Only a nominal pro rata fee lf required to cover the actual cost of th* film AR students ar* Invited to u»« thl* serv ice. W i l l i a m J H a l l . DI rector student All students who plan to com plete teaching assignm ents their durrng th* Ixmg Term 1961-62 fait or spring are aksed to assem ble In the t e x a s Union Auditorium April 25 s t t p m Associate P r o f e s s o r a f and In stroetlos Dr. Front!* V K nit* ( ' s r r l c s l a m Notice to ail student* from Iran The* Natl now being accepte d a t the Merit System Council. 505 B r o w n Building Minimum qualific ation s sr# law grad uatio n from an accred ited s t h e Stat* B a r of 'texas, or th r e e years of In service claims exam ining experience. rang e Is $397.5O-$507.50 per S alary mouth. tool and admission to Til* B'S Civil Service Comml.-slo# announces an exam in ation for Fuel D istribution System Mechanic. W a. for employment a t B e rg s t ro m Air t orc* Base This pf»sltlon pay s a be­ ginning sa lary of $2.08 p er h o u r Full Information and application* m a y be obtained from the Executive .Secretary, Board of I S Civil Service E xam iners Bergstrom A I r Force# Base. Texas. One of the basic goals of the Christian Faith-and-Llfe Community is to brinR to the student an awareness of what it moans to live in the 20th Century. To help achieve this goal speakers are brought to Friday night suppers to talk on various aspects of Hie problem. Here, Dr. Martin A. Kramer, assistant professor of philos­ ophy, s[>eaks to students of the College House on new philosophical concepts. Laos House Offers Four Programs For Training Lay, Ministers s t u d e n t s a r e g iv e n a n o p p o r t u n it y to s t u d y t o g e t h e r a n d c o m p a r e n o te s a t f o u r- d a y C a m p u s M inis­ t e r s S y m p o s i u m s . T h e m i n i s t e r s h e a r l e c t u r e r s f ro m th e C o m m u n i t y f a c u l t y and guest, s p e a k e r s f ro m T e x a s schools, in c lud ing D r W illiam A r r o w s m i t h , D r. J o h n S ilb e r , arni D r . Don W e i s m a n n of th e U n i v e r ­ s i t y a n d Dr. S c h u b e r t O g d e n of SM U. £ P arish I .axm en'* S em in ars ar# w eekend p rogram s for Ait* tin area church m en . T h e se s e m ­ inars, with an allied p rogram , Stu dies, th* hax* been describ ed bv a C om ­ m u n ity m in ister a s “ baain g a slg nlfteant Im pact on c h u rch es in lo ca l c o m m u n itie s.” I j v Ic T h eological S t u d e n ts at r a n g # of philosophy. f r o m t h e f a r m e r s l a y p r o g r a m s to dot to rs T h o se w ho a t t e n d tile w e e k e n d t o g e t h e r for live s tu d y g r o u p s tw o clays. T h e y h o ld d i n n e r - ta b le disc u ssio n s a n d w o r s h i p t o g e th e r in a b a s e m e n t c h a p e l . * * t h e C o m m u n i t y All l a y s t u d e n t s a r e e x p o se d to c a ta lo g s w h a t call “ T h e o lo g ic a l C o r e C ou rse L A . ” T h is is a n e x a m i n a t i o n of “ the m e a n i n g of h u m a n e x is t ­ e n c e , ” a n d s u b s e q u e n t s tu d y in­ e th ic s an d c lu d e s theology, r e a d i n g s in • In p la n n i n g V o c a tio n a l C o n f e r e n c e w h ic h will c o n c e n t r a t e on r e la ti o n s h ip b e t w e e n a n d p a r t i c u l a r v o c a t i o n s . is a se ries cf .Seminars th e the c h u r c h One* p u r p o s e u n d e r l i e s the I jios I louse e x p e r i m e n t s . “ W e 're c o n c e r n e d . ” said a C o m m u n i t y m in i s t e r , “ t h a t the social c h u r c h b e c o m e r e a l i t y in o u r t i m e n o lo n g e r a p l a c e w h e r e p e o p le r u n to hid e ” a v i t a l P A N O R A M A The Christian Faith-and-Life Communi Far-Sighted Planning of Founder Cause for G row th of Community JNJ ow t h e completing its ninth y e a r of work, the C h r i s t i a n Faith-and-Life Community w a s conceived and brought into being by the Rev. W. Jack L e w i s , former Presbyterian minis­ ter to students on The Uni­ versity of Texas campus. He continues to s e r v e as the Community’s Executive Di­ rector. His Mr. Lewis, a graduate of The University of Texas and Austin Presbyterian Theo­ logical Seminary, served a s a Navy chaplain d u r i n g World War II and then re­ turned to the campus to be- gain his work with students. th# u s u a l s t r u c t u r e of “ c a m p u s C h r i s ­ t i a n w o r k ” a n d his s e n s # of the n e e d fop r e n e w a l w ith in the whole C h u r c h , in 1951 to s t u d y a n d visit l a y t r a i n ­ ing t e n t e r s in S w it z e rl a n d , G e r ­ m a n y , G r e e c e , S c a n d i n a v i a anc! e ls e w h e r e . A s e r i e s of 12 a r t i ­ cles b y Mr. I^ewis, w r i t t e n ai t h a t t im e , r e v e a l the i d e a s w hic h b e c a m e the p r e s e n t p r o g r a m . d i s s a t is f a c t io n w i t h the a n t e c e d e n t s of to E u r o p e led h i m In Community Planned t h e s e a r t i c l e s . L e w is laid o u t th e p la n b y w h ic h t h e C o m ­ th# m u n it y w a s it y e a r s f a c e ts . T h e w a * t o d e v e l o p B a s i c a l ly , follow ing to h a v e fo u r in f ir s t of th e s e , w h i c h w a s b r o u g h t in c e p tio n of into be in g a t Ute C o m m u n i t y , is w h a t is now k no w n a s t h e C o lle g e House. Tills work w ith c o lle g e laym en wa* to b e a r esid en tia l training program for U n iv e r sity stu dents who would liv e to g e th e r In sp ec ia l in a r esid en ces and p a r ticip a te program of th e o lo g ic a l training at the sa m e tim e th ey w ere to ­ life of the tally Involved In the I d iversity and c a r r y in g full I nl- verslty a c a d e m ic load*. for T h e p h y s i c a l p a t t e r n the r e s i d e n t i a l p r o g r a m w a s m o d e le d on t h a t o p e r a t i v e a t t h e E n g lis h u n iv e r s it i e s , C a m b r i d g e a n d O x ­ ford, w h e r e a s e r i e s of r e s i d e n ­ tial, s u r r o u n d t u to r i a l the m a i n u n i v e r s i t y . c o ll e g e s T h e r e s i d e n U a l program for s tu d e n ts , w h i c h b e g a n w ith t h ir t y s e l e c te d m e n In 1952, now s e r v e s 72 m e n a n d w o m e n p lu s 5 m a r ­ ri e d c o u p le s In its f i r s t a n d se c ­ ond y e a r p r o g r a m s . T h e s t u ­ d e n ts , liv ing u n d e r c o r p o r a t e dis- t lpline, e n g a g e In a p r o g r a m of s tu d y a n d w o r s h i p f o r a perio d of o n e y e a r . A s e l e c t e d n u m b e r c o ntin ue s t u d i e s in d e p t h a n d p a r ­ t ic ip a te in th e m i n i s t r y to first- the y e a r .Senior F e llo w p r o g r a m . a s p a r t of s t u d e n t s W ork Expanded T h e s e c o n d f a c e t of L e w ! s ’ plan in v o lv e d w o r k w ith o l d e r l a y m e n a n d c l e r g y . T h is p r o ­ g r a m w a s b r o u g h t in to b e ing in 195H w h e n a p ilot g r o u p of l a y ­ m e n f r o m th e A u s tin a r e a b e g a n stu d y a t the I>aos H o u s e In the sp rin g of 1938 the pro­ gram wa* fully e sta b lish e d , with for A ustin la y m en stud tin g on T h u rs­ tw o eight week d a y nigh ts “ s e m e s te r s ’’ each year ( F a i r T h e o lo g ic a l S tu d ies), ami groups of parish c lerg y m en who com e for a se r ie s of m eetin gs In w hich th ey ra ise for seriou s discussion th# m ean in g of their lives in the parish a s w ell as study In depth c o n te m p o ra r y so cio lo ­ g y , and p sych ology. theology, in T h e B a r i s h l a y m e n ' s S e m i n a r a n d t h e P a r i s h M i n is te r 's Collo­ q u y a s well a s th e C a m p u s Min­ i s t e r ’s S y m p o s i u m w e re all in­ i t i a t e d th e 1959-60 p r o g r a m , in th# C o m m u n i t y ' s eighth y e a r . T h e P a r i s h L a y m e n 's S e m in a r s m e e t o n w e e k e n d s when l a y m e n e n g a g e in i n te n s iv e stu dy of the h a m # c u r r i c u l u m w hic h the U n i­ v e r s i t y s tu d e n t* c o n s i d e r in con­ t i n u o u s r e s i d e n c e . Idea Spreads A t h i r d a s p e c t of L e w is ’ orig- Ina! p l a n in volve d th e e x te n sio n o f to t h e C o m m u n i t y 's w o r k o t h e r c a m p u s e s a n d cities a n d towrns. T h is e x te n sio n p r o g r a m is o n l y n o w b e g in n in g to g e t u n ­ d e r w a y a s g ro u p s f ro m o t h e r c a m p u s e s b e g in to develop “ Com - m u m t i e s ” in t h e i r own situation. the ( im m u n it y H ouse S c a tter e d over th# country now sr # m an y of the## groups, such s s ai S ou thern M ethodist U n iversity. In th# n ext four y e a rs, tills extern aion work will In crease as church- em and c a m p u s groups b ecom e a w a r e of the exp erim en t which is being carried on In Austin and the their ow n life, sig n ifica n ce of It for T h e f o u r t h d e v e lo p m e n t w h i c h I w ia #nv riiorrd w as begun Very in deed, g r e w o u t of e a r l y and, th e le tte rs w hich h e w rote to i n ­ t e r e s t e d friends while he w a s in E u r o p e for the f irs t t i m e . P u b ­ in lication a m o v e m e n t su c h a s t h e C h r i s ­ t ia n F aith-and-L ife C o m m u n ity ', anil thus L ew is*s a w the n e e d for a r e g u l a r publication, is a v ita l n e c e s s i t y A m onthly journal, l a t t e r Is now p u b lish ed lo IO la y m e n , tim es during th# y e a r. Kept#rn It ber through Jun e. is sen t to interested person* in 47 s t a le s and SI foreign co u n tries. e x p a n d e d In the n e x t th r e e y e a r s t h e pul>- the C o m m u n i t y W'lll lic atiun s of n e a r l y to m o r e be Blatch the o rig in a l g o a l w h i c h L ew is h a d in m in d . T h is e x p a n ­ sion will include a p u b l i c a t i o n e sp e c ia lly for s t u d e n t s a n d w r i t - ’'n by th e m a s well a s a m o r e « o m p r e h e n s i v e j o u r n a l w h i c h will t h e g r o w i n g e d g e be a im e d a t i» of th is c o u n ­ t e p i d l y e x p a n d i n g t r y an d a ro u n d lay m o v e m e n t a s It the w o r ld . the in I h# entire program o f U»# < o m m unity ha* ex p a n d ed in th# year* sin c e Itt.vj from a » m » * group of 30 m ale stu d en ts to th# current involvem ent o f n e a r ly IOO students during any g iv en a c a ­ dem ie year* and metre than OOO non collegiate p articip an t*. in ­ I hits 700-plus p e r s o n s a r e volved y e a r l y it* p r o g r a m s in touching c o m m u n i ti e s a ll o v e r T e x a s a n d th# nation. T h e fu tu re is c o m p le te ly o p e n fo r a lm o st un lim ite d e x p a n s io n b a s e d up o n ’he e x p e rie n c e of th e p a s t a n d (he ne#d of th e w o r l d f o r s e r i o u s re fle c tio n upon the m e a n in g of h u m a n existence. Sunday, April 23, 1961 THE DAILY TEXAN Fag* I UT Student Group Lobbies at Capitol The le g isla tiv e Commission of j the Students’ Association has been ; the only true accom plish- j called the U niversity’s injunc­ ment of tion-shaken student governm ent during the past year. W hether the Commission’s work will have any effect on the Texas Legislature is yet to se seen. But commission m em bers are having the opportunity to air their views on tuition increase before legisla­ tors. The following is an interview w ith Keith A rm strong, one of the lead­ ers of the Legislative Commission, concerning the current lobbying a c ­ tivities of the group. Q. Keith, exactly w hat is the commission doing now? Q. How have you been fighting the bills? A. We have contacted personally the House leaders. We feel that they aren't im pressed by demon­ strations and petitions. We also are working through the constituents tile legislators. Currently, w-e of are planning to w rite letters to the parents of all U niversity students who arc Texas residents. This is to be financed from the E yes of Texas Fund. Last Tuesday, a group from the commission spoke to the House Appropriations Com m ittee which is currently considering the bills. Q. Have there been any recent attem pts to increase tuition? A. In 1957, tuition was raised from $25 to $50. In 1959, another attem pt was made, but it w as de­ feated. Runoff Planned In Law Elections O ak«s, Santiesteban Try to Brook He Steve Oak* and H. Tati Santies­ teban, candidate* for president of the Student B ar Association, will be in a runoff election as a result of th eir tie in the first runoff. Each candidate received 235 votes. The second runoff will be held T uesday from 9 a rn. to 2 p.m. Santiesteban, second - year law student from El Paso, is past pres­ ident of the Mid-Law Class. He re­ signed that post last fall to m n for president of the B ar Associa­ tion. A. Right now, Q. What argum ents did you use before the Appropriations Commit- tee? the commission is lobbying against two bills. House Bill 993 and KB 1014. House Bill 993, which was subm itted by R e p ­ resentative F rank M cGregor of Waco at the request of Governor Price Daniel, proposes a $50 p er tuition. House sem ester raise in Bill 1014, which was introduced by R epresentative Reed Quilliam of Lubbock, proposes a $50 per se­ m ester increase with a possible $50 It is economically basic that the reduction for a student who can State should provide for education prove his need. The bill also pro­ or that education should somehow vides for a $25 rebate for those students whose grades are higher be provided. To deny an education to an able student in a State insti- than the overall grade average in the school or departm ent in w hich j tution is wrong. All who have the the student is enrolled. A. We feel that low tuition is in­ herent in the very natu re of public education. If there is no real dif­ ference between the cost of at­ tending public and private school, there is no reason for having pub­ lic schools. j ability should be given a chance. law student, in Thursday's Oaks, from Houston, also a sec­ ond-year vacated other offices to mn in the present election. He former Law ii a School Assemblyman and past edi­ tor of the P e re g rin e , Law School yearbook. Elected runoff w ere Charles R. McClure, Bar As­ sociation vice-president; Ben T ur­ ner J r ., Honor Council chairm an; Bob Young, l^aw School Assembly­ m an; Robert E. Wade, president of the Mid-Law class; Jim m y Ivy, vice-president the M id-I^w of class; and Henry T. Brooks, Mid- Law Honor Council representative P lace 2. New Buildings Force Fences “ The campus has not been so fenced off since the early Fifties,” the Main U niversity N ew sletter of April l l reports. T here are nine buildings either being built or re­ novated and more the bulletin said. to come, The College of Business Admin­ istration, the D epartm ent of K eo -1 nomics, and the Bureau of Busi- j ness Research will be in their new ; home, the seven-story Business Ad- | ministration-Keonom irs Building, by August, 1961. Construction of this building was begun in Aug­ it ust. 1959, and cost more than fonir million dol­ lars. is expected to 1 the Loan* and Sciences office*, Scholarships Office, the Student Employm ent Bureau, and the US Post Office. Other buildings presently under construction ar® the Computation Center, due to open in May, 1962; an addition to the Chemistry' Build­ ing to be com pleted next m onth; the U niversity a warehouse for P ress; a W ater Chilling Station; and an expansion program for th* Utilities D istribution Systems. At the M arch meeting of th* Board of Regents, contracts w ere aw arded for the remodeling and air conditioning of Sutton H a l l and Taylor Hall. M a r c h , 1963, is the scheduled completion date for the new ITn- dergraduate lib r a ry and Academ­ ic Center being built on the West Mall between the Main Building and the Texas Union. Estim ated cost for the project is nearly four and a hrflf million dollars. Work was begun this month on the West Mall Office Building be­ tween the B arker Texas History C enter and the A rchitecture Build­ ing. Scheduled for completion in August, 1962, at a cost of more three-quarters of a million than dollars, the building will house the and Stenographic Bureau, A rts O ther building projects tentative­ ly approved by the Board of R e­ gents, w i t h prelim inary p l a n a either authorized or approved, are an Engineering-Science Building; an addition to G regory Gymnasi­ um : an addition to Townes H all; modernization and remodeling of W aggener H all, G arrison Hall, the Old L ibrary Building (B arker Texas H istory C enter), the Archi­ tecture Building, the Women’* G ym nasium , th e Biology labs, and the Home Econom ics Building; and the conversion of rooms in the ea st end of the E xperim ental Science Building. Campus News in Brief Complaints Heard By Grievance Group C harges of poor service a t sev- criticism s on legislative investigat- eral laundry and dry cleaning es- tablishm ents in the University are a w ere m ade by J. Gus Nixon, sopho­ m ore, to the G rievance Com m ittee of the Student Assembly T hursday night. Nixon specifically cited high p ric­ es, “ pretty lousy’’ service, unlist­ ed prices, and extra charges for quick service. He said th at clothes upon occasion are list or dam aged. The com m ittee decided to invite laundry operators to appear a t the next meeting. ing com mittees. Defending the film will be New­ m an Jackson, a m em ber of the church. The intent of the forum is to give fair hearing to both sides. Time will be allowed for questions from the floor. Views of the discus­ sants will be th e ir own and not the church's. ★ UT M ariners Get G rant O ther grievances heard w ere: Institute of M arine Science h as been given a ►Charges of noise and inefficien- $1 2 4 ,0 0 0 grant to conduct a large- scale study of pollution in Texas ►The need for a spring student Coastal w aters. Dr. Howard Odum. The U niversity’s cy in the library. directory. director, said Saturday. . . m ons food. • Lack of price notations on Com- . gra n f js from the National j Institutes of H ealth and will be ► P arking difficulties at Kinsolv- used jn a four.ye a r research aimed a t determ ining the effect o f pol­ lution in chem ical processes. • A sm elly Littlefield Fountain. ★ ing D orm itory. P aul H agle A nnual Pan-Am G rant Given G raduate Student the P an A m erican Round Table a n n u a l scholarship at the r e c e n t Pan A m erican Day observance held in the D riskill Hotel. received Hagle, who is working tow ard a m a ste r’s degree in the Latin A m er­ ican Studies Institute, will do fur­ th e r work In history under the di­ rection of Dr. Thomas F . McGann. “ P eru, Land of Vocanoes and the In ca s’’ w as the title of the talk giv­ en a t the observance by Dr. F red M. Bullard, professor of geology at the U niversity. Dr. Bullard was in P eru on a Fulbright grant in 1959 and taught geology at the Uni­ versity of Arequipa. it Faculty, Staff M embers To A ttend Convention T hree U niversity faculty a n d staff m em ber* will participate in a convention of the National Edu- cation Association’s D epartm ent of Audio-Visual Instruction Monday through Friday in Miami Beach, Fla. Dr. Ernest F. Tiemann, Visual 1 Areas w here seasonal patterns of chemical processes will be m easured include: Nueces Bay, Corpus Christi Bay, Mission River, Copano Bay. Galveston Bay, Sa­ bine Lake and L aguna M adre. ★ TSP Meets M o n d a y Consideration of changes in the Cactus m anual of the TSP H and­ book will be am ong the business on the agenda for the Board of D irectors of Texas Student Publi­ cations, Inc., at its m eeting Mon­ day at 7:30 p m in Journalism Building 305 Also up for discussion a t the meeting will be contracts for p rint­ ing the Cactus, T exas Ranger, and 1 Student D irectory for 1961-62. The Board will appoint associate editors for the C actus and the R an­ ger as well as h e a r a report from its Executive Com m ittee on the appointm ent of the Texan m anag­ ing editor. Members will also approve a budget for The Sum m er Texan. Loyd Edmonds, general m anager TSP, will report on the payroll. the working agreem ent w ith the mechanical staff, and ra te changes for 1960-61 advertising. * T " ^ Interscholastic League psychology, will begin his term as lays Final M eet Plans 1961 DAVI president. 1 Miss Virginia C. Patterson, au ­ dio-visual program m ing specialist for the Instruction Bureau, will serve as evaluating consultant for j rn session on creative crafts. Clayton W. Chance, assistan t professor of drawing, will present a paper on results of a 15-month research project concerning the use of an overhead projector and to replace black­ transp aren cies board draw ings in lecture dem on­ stration. D ie research w-as supported by a United S tates Office of Education grant. * Geologists Plan M eeting T hirteen m em bers of the Geology faculty and Bureau of Econom ic | in j Geology staff, will m eetings of the American A ssoria- I Hon of Petroleum Geologists and affiliated societies Monday through T hursday in Denver. take p a rt * G roup to Plan W orkshop Fall workshops will be planned by the Texas Joint English Com­ m ittee for School and College w-hen is m eets a t the University April 28-29. The Joint English Com mittee will also elect officers to succeed Dr. Robert A. Ij s w, professor em eritus of English, and Prentiss C. Wind­ sor of C entral High School in San Angelo, the present chairm an and co-chairm an. Final plans a re in the w-rap-up stage for the U niversity I n t e r - scholastic League state m eet here, May 4-6. High school students from all in over T e x a s will workshops and contests in the 51st annual UIL gathering. take p a rt Regional w-inners w-ill vie for state aw ards in their conference levels. Events a re scheduled for debate, declam ation, extem poran­ eous speaking, golf, journalism , n u m b e r sense, original oration, one-act reading, ready writing, science, shorthand slide rule, tennis, and track and field. poetry play, ★ Selective Service Exam Set Thursday in Union College men who turned In a p ­ plications before April 6 to take the 1961 Selective Service College Qualification Test w-ill m eet from 8:30 a rn. to noon Thursday in Tex­ as Union .340. The test will be the only one of­ fered during school year, according to Col. M orris S. Schwartz. Selective Service direc­ tor for Texas. the 1960-61 Scores made on the test are used by local boards as one guide in considering requests for deferm ent from m ilitary service to continue studies. * . A ttendance a t district workshops in the fall of 1961 reached a rec- , ord "um ber of 1,872 English teach- and era Meetings were held at F ree­ port, Kingsville, San Antonio, Odes­ sa, Denton, El Paso, H a s k e l l , D e c a t u r , Amarillo, Corsicana, Brownwood, Victoria, and Lub­ bock. Southw estern U. N am es Fleming New President Dr Durwood Fleming, pastor of in St. Luke s Methodist Church Houston, was elected president of Southwestern U niver­ sity, Georgetown recently Dr. Flem ing, 47, is a g raduate the Perkins School of SMU and of Theology. He also studied at E ast T e x a s State College and Union Theological Seminary in New York City. Dr. Flem ing succeeds Dr. Wil­ liam C. Finch, who resigned the presidency to become dean of the divinity school af V anderbilt Uni­ versity in Nashville, Tern. The new president will begin his duties this sum m er. + 'Abolition' Critical Talk P la n n e d by Witherspoon “ Operation Abolition ” s h o w n a t the April 9 public forum of the U nitarian Church, 4700 G rover, will b® criticized hy Joe Witherspoon, U niversity law professor and con­ stitutional law scholar, at the Sun­ day forum. funrtjon of Public Affair A nsw ers Given by M acCorkle . I Question* regarding th® nature th<. Ingtitut, of Public Affairs a re answ ered by Dr. Stuart A. M acCorkle, profes­ sor of governm ent and director of the current issue of Public A ffairs Comment. He explained the Institute s his­ tory, saying that it began in 1913 as the Bureau of Municipal Re­ search and Reference, and was one of the country. the first of Institute, it* kind the in in The program of the Institute is discussed under the headings of research, training, and service and informational activities Research in problems relating to governm en­ tal unit* and agencies is one of the top aims of the program , he said to “ While the activities of the In­ stitute are varied, and m ay even seem they are lie unrelated held together by a common phil­ osophy: that a great university, as both the servant and the leader of a vital dem ocracy, m ust place its brains and its f a c i l i t i e s at the the public nut of command of its it receives whose sustenance support,” he said. * UT Scientists to Study Body Chem ical Process Dr, Roger J. Williams, profes­ sor of chem istry and director of The University of Texas Clayton Foundation Biochemical Institute, and Dr. Jam es B. G ilbert, Insti­ tute research scientist, will conduct research, under a tw o y e a r grant, on the m anner in which chem ical processes in the hum an body are promoted by metal-enzyme* pro­ tein substances containing m etals legislative Mr. Witherspoon will discuss the role of investigating com m ittees and their relationship to this film He will try to deter- mine w hether this film represent* the continuing pattern of earlier , »uch a* Zinc, copper, and iron. UT Pharmacists To Visit Chicago Twelve m em ber* of the College of P harm acy faculty will partici­ pate in the annual m eeting of the American Association of Colleges of P harm acy, Sunday through Tuesday in Chicago. Dr. Henry- M. Burlage, phar­ m acy dean, will preside as Asso­ ciation president. He wall be in­ stalled as a m em ber of the Ameri­ can P harm aceutical Association Council for a three-year term and will attend m eetings of the Ameri­ can College of A pothecaries. Dr. Lee Worrell, pharm aceutical chem istry professor, will preside the section of teachers of over pharm aceutical chemistry-. Dr. F rederick V. Lofgren. pharm acy professor, will preside during a section on practical pharm acy. Presenting papers will be Drs. John Autian, associate professor of pharm acy: R obert G. Brown, associate professor of pharm acol­ ogy: F r a n k Cosgrove, assistant professor of p harm acy; J a i m e N. Delgado, assistant professor of pharm aceutical chem istry; Vernon A. Green, assistant professor of pharm acology: D r. E sth e r J a n e Hall, assistant professor of phar­ m acy adm inistration; and Dr. Wal­ lace L. Guess, assista n t professor of pharm acy. Attending an A m erican Society of Hospital P h arm ac ists m eeting will be Luther P a rk e r, pharm acy lecturer; Harold D. Powell, special instructor in p h arm acy ; and Dr. Autian. Association m em bership includes 77 accredited United State* col leges of pharm acy plus a num ber of Canadian schools. Corps Volunteers May Be Deferred Peace Corps volunteers can be deferred from the draft, according to Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, di rector of Selective Service. In an editorial in the Selective Service Bulletin, Gen. Hershey said that "the classification of reg­ istrants in the P eace Corps can be any as other registrant engaged in activi ties in the national health, safety o r interest.” handled th at of W h e n volunteers retu rn home the they could qualify after overseas service with Peace Corps, for further deferm ent. Im portant factors listed by Gen Hershey for consideration when the include volunteers return* home his age, physical condition, m arl tai status, the regulations which apply when he is released,” and w-hether or not the registrant on his return from service with the Peace Corps engages in an activity which perm its him to be deferred in the national health, safety, or in terest.” “ The registrant has been a m em ber of the P eace Corps will not prevent him from qualifying for further deferm ent,” concludede Gen. H ershey, concluded Gen. H ershey. that fact the UT Teacher Tells Of Indians in Book Written accounts left by soldiers, missionaries, and explorers who first visited m any of the Texas In­ dians tell much of T exas’ form er ; inhabitants, explains D r. W. W. New'comb J r. in “ The Indians of I Texas ” In his book. “ The Indians of T exas: From P rehistoric to Mod­ em Tim es,” recently published by The U niversity of Texas Press, Dr. Newcomb records the origins, appearances in Texas, life cycles, livelihoods, w arfares, varied cus­ toms, and beliefs of the sta te ’s original inhabitants Dr Newcomb is the director of the Texas Memorial Museum, a professor of anthropology, and has served on th® U niversity faculty for l l years. State Workshop On Nursing Ends Texas college nursing instructor* ended a tw o d ay workshop Satur­ day morning in the Texas Union with a discussion of “ Im plem enta­ tion of E valuation Techniques.” Dr. Paul H. Kelley, assistant professor of educational psycholo­ gy, led the discussion R epresen­ the workshop w e r e tatives at from 'rh* I 'm versity of T e x a s School of N ursing, H arris College of Nursing at TCU. Baylor U niver­ sity School of Nursing, and Incar­ nate Work College at San Antonio le a g u e The workshop on “ Evaluation of lo a m in g ,” sponsored by Student for Nursing, the Texas opened F riday m orning with a welcome by Jim m ie K. Rratton of F’ort Worth, steering com m ittee chairm an. Engin*«r» Allowed Um Of New LGP-30 M achine Flngineenng student* m ay sign up in the FTlecJronics Laboratory, to use the new Taylor Hall 113, I Lihrascope G eneral Purpose Com­ puter, I/JP-30. Use of the m achine is under the direction of th® Bureau of Flngine- ering Research. According to Mrs. Sylvia Goodrich, graduate student of m athem atics who works in the bureau, is to en­ available wdthout charge gineering faculty and m em bers There is a sm all charge when the m achine is used for spot)- the LGP-30 com puter student* I *or®d rwM rch. sh® Mid. U N IV E R SIT Y Back Main Floor T h at’s right, the shop th at has set the U ni­ versity men’s styles for 45 years is back In its handsome quarters on the street floor o f the University Co-Op. We think our new quarters are arranged to serve you better then ever. Of course, the Toggery service* you have grown to expect over the years are still yours. We invite all the fashion­ conscious mon in the U niversity com m unity to stop in and look over our new store. Surely you will be as proud of it as we are. Choose from these Distinctive Brands Clothing by M ichaels-Stern Furnishings by Arrow S o to o f N ew Haven College Hall Haspel A lligator Champion McGregor Albert Givens Catalina McGregor Cooper Tex-Tan Pioneer B urlington Reis of N ew Haven Mister Cravate Crosby Square Interwoven Pipet way The Key Men on Campus Selec t iTieir Wardrobe from 2210 i i ii ad a1 ii Street In the Co-Op Box Scores c f T E X A S <12) B e t h * * , ss Rigb>. 3D Skinner Braselton, H IP P S 2b K n u t s o n T h r a s h L o n d o n C a ll s v i y , p r f c l f < F im « T G A M E ) sh ......................... * .....................5 ................. * ............. . . 3 l b ........................... 5 ....................... 5 ........................... 3 ........................... 3 ......... A St* sh Total* ............... 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I T E X A S E — D r o v e r L i v e l y I 0 0 « 0 * —A P C A — R ic e 18-8. T e x a a 21-10 2P> F o x I-eft R i o 4 T e x a s 8 K n u ts o n . S B — S te p h e n s o n . 3 — P i n c k n e y M c F a r l a n d ( L ) B e lc h e r . . . 6 . . . 7 ip bb so h r c r ft 1 8 6 9 0 0 3 I H B P b v M c F a r l a n d ( H ip p s , W F M c F a r l a n d . U L y o n s and L e e . T — I 40 Thomson Rallies To Rescue Tie H O U S T O N 'ft — P e te r Thomson lost a two-stroke lead Satu rday and then sank birdie putts on tne two final holes to rescue a tie with K en V en tu ri and T om m y Bolt for the 54-hole lead in the 540,000 Hous­ ton G o lf C lassic. Thom son, the leader after 16 and 36 holes, had seen Bolt and V en ­ turi surge lead on the into the The A ustralian then 16th green sank a 15-footer on the 17th and a 4-footer on the final green for a two-over-par 72 and a 54-hole 206 V en tu ri, the C alifornian who is seeking his first championship of the ye a r, had started the birdie parade at 18 by hitting an 8-footer for a 70-70-68 208. t i l e T E X A S . . . B e th e a , ss . . . R ig b y . 3o c f • S k in n e r , r f . B r a z e I to n . . . R o sso n , r f . . . H ip p s 2b lf • K n u ts o n . . . . . l b N e w , G in n , c ........ L o n d o n , c . . . Ja c k s o n , p . . . B u r le s o n , P • T o t a ls ........ R U E (6) S te p h e n s o n 2b K r i s t i n i k 3b . . . ... ........ 0 B lu m e , ss 0 Lively. rf 1 F o x . . . 0 D r e y e r , n West, cf . . .. 5 K e rb o w , r ... M c C le lla n d , p M c F a r la n d , p D o n a ld s o n , p l b lf ( T H I HD GAMY. ) a b h r bl 3 I 0 2 4 2 I ft 4 2 2 0 3 0 0 2 0 I I I I 3 2 I 0 3 0 (I I 4 I I I 2 I I 0 I 0 <1 0 3 I I 0 0 () I S I t to I t a h bl h r 0 0 5 (I i 5 2 0 4 I I 0 .3 I I 0 5 I 2 I . 4 0 0 0 , 4 I 2 0 I . 3 ll a . I 0 0 0 . 1 0 I 2 0 I . 0 0 U ft I to 0 0 I — ft 0 I o I) 2 0 3 4 1 1 1 0 1 x — l l T o ta l* K H K T Y V A S E — B e th e a , R ig b y 2. B l u m e 2. F o x . H pp" G in n FO A Rice 24-15. T e x * * 27-13 D P B lu m e S te p h e n s o n and Fo x . Left—Rice it T exas 8 2B — Bethea Skin n e r. F a rla n d 3B S k in n e r H R —-Hipps B lu m e . S K« rbo.v, S F B ra s e lto n K ris tin k K e rb o w , Ja c k s o n M c ­ L iv e ly . S B — R lg t n , Ip . . 2 2/3 .............. 3 . . . . . . . 2 1/3 M cC lellan d < L) M c F a r la n d Donaldson x Bu rle so n Ja c k s o n • W I . . 5 ..................A v Faced I batter In 6th H B P by M ('in la n d ( H i p p i e bv M e. ( S k i n n e r ) . W F M c C lellan d F a r la n d Mi Fa rla n d 2 P R —-Kerbow. U—Smith a n d L e e . T 2 56. A — 1.750. h r a r bb an 6 7 3 3 I 1 7 5 3 I 7 4 (I 2 4 I I 3 I 4 3 1 I 0 I Andrews' Nelson Sets New Mark O D E S S A ifl — Ted Nelson of An­ drew® broke the national scholastic record for the quarter-m ile S a tu r­ d ay as he ran the even t in a reg­ ional high school tra c k and field m eet in 46 5 seconds. It bettered the record of 46 6 set by' D avid M ills of I^akeuood H igh School of Ohio in 1958. Nelson also ran the 220-yard dash in 20 6 seconds, w hich wag only a tenth of a second o ve r the national record. Despite Nelson s heroics, An­ drew s finished second in the re g ­ ional meet w hich w as won by Sn y­ der with 97 points. A nd rew s had 82 and D um as 8], A nd rew s is defend­ ing State G a s s A A A cham pion Andrew s holds the national nchol- astic records for the m ile re la y and 410-yard re la y W'ith 3:15.2 and 415 but failed S a tu rd a y to better its m arks. The first ru n n er drop­ per the baton in the 440-yard re la y and Andrew s vvas e lim in ated from the race. D um as won it in 42 I. Nelson did not run on the An­ drew s mtlp re la y team w h ich won with a tim e of 3 22 2. Nelson’® qu arter w as m ade run­ ning around tw'o cu rves. T here was no favoring wind and all conditions for a record u’erc met. The record of M ills vvas set running around only one curve. THE UNIVERSITY’S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 Serving the University area for IO years B E D W A Y •'HIGH FIDELITY AT REASONABLE PRICES' Longhorns Capture Rice Series S T R E T C H I N G O U T h s strid e in a tte m p t to bes* the throw *o first it R ic e s B o o b y liv e ly . Bu* ’ e*as first basem an Lew Brazel^cn had a** easy putout in the fe s t qam e of S a tu rd a y s d oub e - e a o e ' in which Tom Be che'' p itch ed a o re - h irte '. Live y was a fo o t­ ball star for the O w it in the fall. Belcher's One-Hitter Highlights Triumphs B y C H A R U K A M IT H M a n a g in g F.dltoP A s p a r k li n g g e m w a s d e liv e r e d b y t h * s e c o n d h a l f o f T e x a s ’ o n r - t w o p it c h in g p u n c h S a t u r d a y s e n d in g t h * R i c e O w l s b a c k to H o u s t o n a t h r e e - tim e lo s e r. T o m B e l r h e r , a s t u b b y r i g h t h a n d e r , f ir e d a o n e - h it s h u t ­ o u t as th e S o u t h w e s t C o n f e r e n c e p a c e - s e tte r s s w e p t a d o u b le ­ h e a d e r f r o m R i c e w i t h 8-0 a n d 11-6 v i c t o r i e s . B e l c h e r h a s h a d t r o u b le f i n d in g h im s e lf t h is s e a s o n a f t e r a s t a r t l i n g l y s u c c e s s f u l s o p h o m o r e c a m p a ig n . P . 'ching th** seven-inning opener ♦ com pletely he allo w ed o n ly a fin k * double A ® h- th* n a rk : Field visitors with * wicked assortment of cu rve halls vanquished Th* Longhorn* overpowered th* Owls In th* scrnnd contest, ll a, to sweep the three game series and win their n th game this sen turn without * loss. T esas won the I- A, behind first game F rid a y , th* alout hurling of Bobby C alla w ay. B e lc h e r’* In Coarb Bibb F a lk * one two plan. Chil HI pp* slapped out four hits ln< hiding two double* and * triple In the F rid a y victory. counterpart Hipp* did not let down Saturday, j in Junior Tho d rive pounding out three hit* in fix at­ tempts including a four-hase shot onto the Centerfield eliff the traveled last game about 400 feet. B e lrh e r, a from Okla Homa C ity, O b i*., w a* tho player of tho day w ith blo barling gem. Ho blew down the laot IS Rice batter* without a man reaching bane to gain hie third victory of the year. In tho seventh Inning. with 1,780 fan* roaring with ever* pitch, B e lc h e r otrnck oat the aide. lofted a d rive R ic o * only hit ag ain *! B elcher ca mo in the oecond inning C atcher J im Fo x the ha** of tho Centerfield cliff D ove Skinner pedaled backw ards, but misjudged tho bell as It fell »rant feet ow ay from him. to in n in g . h o w e v e r, i n ^ lo n g h o rn ® c h a se d se rries six ru n * the c o ffin cm O w l to n ail d ow n • ’a r t e r and lo s e r W e ld o n M c F a r ­ lan d . tin) in tro u b le (he six-run M f F a r la r id , w h o la te r w a s r e lie d on fo r r e lie f d u ty a f te r p itc h in g the e n tire first g a m e , ra n into c o n ­ trol fifth 'H ie fa st- b allin g rig h th a n d e r h it a b a t t e r b efo re g iv in g up fo u r s tra ig h t b ases cm b a lls A p a ir of Singles b y B i l l B e th e a and P a t R ig b y clo sed o ut the s c o rin g M c F a r la n d , w h o h ad w on fo u r loss p re v io u s ly , g a m * * without, a a llo w e d nine w a lk * W'hiie s trik in g out th re e H is t e a m m a te s c o m m it ­ ted tw o e r ro rs T e x a s ’ o n ly e x tra base b lo w c a m e on a d o u b le fro m C h u c k K n u ts o n in tho s e v e n th In ­ ning In to e t e r n it y R i * * w a tc h e d th e ir o n ly In n in g of m a rg in p as* In tho second in n in g o f the la s t g a m e . A fte r p ushing a c ro s s o n e ru n In fra m e . R ic e p i t c h e r the firs t W a y n e M c C le lla n d g ro o ve d a p itc h w h ic h H ipps b laste d on top of the c liff B e fo re M c C le lla n d co u ld re tire tho side, the I /m g h o rn s had scored t w lr * m o re . B e th e a d id th * honors w ith a two-run d o ub le T e r r y re c e iv e d Ja c k s o n , w’h o 1 c red it fo r the v ic t o r y , la s te d fiv e innings b efo re being re lie v e d b y I ‘a v id B u rle s o n . B u rle s o n fin ish ed th* mop-up job, g iv in g up o n e ru n and th re e h its in fo ur in n in g s. Be lch er w alked three and struck cr it four OO the lon g h orn s played nrorleoo afield Texao lad 2-6 moot of th* game i T h e lo n g h o rn s u n lea sh e d a IO ­ M I A ttack a g a in st M c C le lla n d , the lo s e r; M c F a r la n d , w h o re tu rn e d In n in g s a r t e r p itch in g fo r th ro * Kelly Leads Field In 'M ural Prelims I box. Records w ere ne*rad in several j events, taut nrmo fell In tho Intro* j m u ral track prelim In eriee at M e­ m orial Stadium F r id a y afternoon John K e lly of P h i Sigm a K appa was the outstanding Individual per­ form er of the afternoon aa he led tho qualifier* In both the IOO- and 220-yard dashes H a was clocked at 9 9 In the IOO and 21 I In th* 220 Ha was just off the century record of 9 8 and th* 220 m ark of 21 4. W alter W h ite of N a v y threw the a h o t a raapectshie 43 feet, 3 \ Inches to in that event. He w a* only a little m ore than a foot off G eorge B lan ch 's 44-5V4 racord. lead qualifiers T. W. B a ile y of Sigm a Ph i E p ­ silon and Jo h n P a tto n of Sigm a A'pha Epailon set the pace In the 120-yard low hurdle* with 13 2 clockings. Phi G a m m a D elta and S A E w ere tup re la y q u alifiers, w ith the P h i G am * leading In the 440 w ith 45 I , and S A E In the WO with I 35 3 T hree high Jum per* cleared 6-1, Lone Star Teams To Be Featured P H I L A D E L P H I A a«h F r a t e r n i t y - B o h ion Y a r d J o h n n y G e n u n g . M ose* R o g e r *• F r a n k H tx G r e e n H e n r y D a v is J e r r y D # n l i n f e r J o h n K e lly I B a r l y ( l a b — t . a r r v T e e l, T h o m a s P a t r ic k B e n Zmck R o b in s o n B o r e n k in s H a r v a r d A v e r s M o n te J a m a s ( ia n d v F r e e m a n A n d r e w s C le o I-ae J e n In d e p e n d e n t S te v e S a ilin g , R a v la in ( /Hiper Ty r. M a lla r d . T o m m y F ie ld , Y r a t e r n l t y .Jo h n J o h n H u d s b e th , D e n n is Y a r l e v Ja m e s I t * - Y a r d D ash K e l l y , H I * G r e e n T e r r O M c C u ls to n Ja m In d e p e n d e n t R o b e rt K in g M ik e c o llin s W i l s o n D lrk s in - son Y r a n c is D o m in g u e a C h a r le s H e lm , A lla n S t e r n M itc h e ll A tle e S te v e R o llin s , ( la b — A lla n S t a n b u r g B e n R o r e n C a r lt o n A n d e rs o n W i l l i a m P a r m a , J i m S a n d e r s Jo h n K le k a r , R o d n e y Cul- w e ll R o b e r t W r i g h t R a I a » G a m m a D e lta P h i S ig m a K a p p a K a p p a S ig m a S ig m a P h i K p s llo n P h i S ig m a A lp h a E p a llo n . P h i D e lt a T h e ta . F r a ’ e r n l t r 440-Yard ( tu b — A ir k o re a . N a v y , A r m y , K a p p a A lp h a P s i M O - T a rd A lp h a E p s ilo n K a p p a S ig m a I.a m n ia D e lta R e la y F r a t e r n i t y S ig m a S i g m a P h i E p s ilo n P h i P h i S ig m a K a p p a P i e D e lta T h e ta ( la b — K a p p a A lp h a Pat, A ir F o r c e A r m ) P F M C lu b N a n T h e ie rn e F r a l e r n i t b h u t P a t O v a r le * N ew ton G e o rg e B la n c h W i l l i a m M c ln n ls S t a n le y Y 'a u lk n e r . W i A n d e r son la m In d e p e n d e n t— T e r r v t e e R a r n e v P r a m «*»con. M ax M a r ro s k o ' T o d d G e n tr J o h n H a a s e ( la b — W a l t e r W h i t e KA P a d g e tt R l-'h W a lls m lt h M o n t e L e e F r if s c h D o rm - Charles P * el V’ es C le m e n t D a v id N o rm a n d M i c h a e l D e H a r t . Jo h n n ie H e n ry H ig h J un* p • I r a t e r n t t y W a r r e n H a r t R o b e r t D o w d VV ay ne S la u g h t e r foe D e l- o re n ro , T o m H u n k le v , Jo h n C ook In d e p e n d e n t: S d tla g e P h i l t ’lrh Ii I n r t o E a r l M at- Park- r L o e f f i r r C l B b — Tx)u:s S p rad d in W a l t e r G a ' lr* ' W i l l i a m I-am b J a c k B o n n e r D o r m — T o m A n d rrx o n P a u l B e r r y , J o h n H a n n u m ( S a t i e s 7 p m V*. P r a t h a LL Symbolic lasting remin(Icr THE CLIMAX OF YOUR FORMAL EDUCATION Wkaravar man in your prounion gather, in (Ka laboratory, in (he factory, at th# con(#r#nc# t#bl# Of in the field each m#n t col'**# " " I qs.ns for h m (h# yam# , «t recognition of his educational g ,#li- ficstioni that your ring wins for you. O ar th# yaars as your ra«ard* bacon®# graatar, faw iantim#ntel roflactions will b# anioyad by you mor* than your thought* ^ fra’*r- not and ecadamic colloq# Pas and frlondships. Your ring is your constant comrada to ran®md you of th**# mamorias. Join yO'jf r a**r*#tas th# n#* on ovar In waarmg your eoHaga ring, th# anviod badga of your educational aehievamant. " No money down six months to pay S T U D M ACCOUNTS INVITED • 2236 GUADALUPE • M M NM M M M ilM H H M M W M M H M M M M M M H M H eM M H i ' l o n g h o r n . the opener; and B ill Donaldson. Texas scored In e very Inning but the first and the seventh. the The most d ra m a tic p lay of th* day o ccurred when Bethea drove home the tw o tic-breaking runs in th* second inning Chuck Knutson was on second base and Gordon Gm n w as on first B e th e l * poke w'cnt past th* left fielder and K n u t­ son and G uin took off Knutson scored with lift!* difficu lty. Ginn upon approaching third base, r* from reive d John Pin ck n e y, third base coarb Gm n wheeled around the bag and circler! fa r out of the has* runner's path Pin ck n e y, not want- in th* w a y of G inn s the flying heels, line M ean w h ile Pmn G re y e r, th Owl left. fielder, had retrieved th hall ami th rew home Ginn, Pin ck n ey, th* g o a h ea d signal retreated down the | um pire, and R ice catch er R a n d y Kerh ow arriver! at the plate at ap­ proxim ately th* same time. The hall got through Gm n slid across, and P in ck n e y heat a hasty pa’h hark to the th in ! base coaching [ ing to get the hall, The 15-mlnute ha®*!* which fol- I lowed brought the w rath of B ic e r>ell M organ and Third- Coach Barnett Paces Baylor Victory D A 1.1 JV S B o h B a r n e t t lim ­ ited S o u th e rn M eth o d ist to f i v e single® and d ro v e tw o r u n s h im s e lf S a t u r d a y as B a y lo r gain ed a !* I v ic t o r y in So u th w est C o n fe re n c e b a se b a ll. in It w a s B a y l o r ’s six th triu m p h in eig h t g a m e s and kept the R e a r s in the hot on th* t r a il of T e x a s It w a s the n in th c o n fe re n ce r a r e . then Inning®, B u r n e t t arni .Ex* M i ll e r h u rle d on f a ir l y e q u a l te rm s fo r the first six in the se ve n th , w ith B a y l o r o w n in g a 2-1 edge, the S M G h u r le r b le w s k y high runs w e re sco red a® M i l ­ Seven Iv n jg T h o m p so n w e r e ler, then b atted fro m the i*>x b e fo re S M I * . . . . . . . th ird h u r le r, Don M u rd o c k , got , , t h i n g * u n ) , o r c o n t r o l ’ ' _ w a s B a r n e tt hi* fifth p itc h in g triu m p h a g a in s t no defeats re g is te rin g R o n n ie G o o d w in h atted ru n s, sc o re d and s ta rte d double p la y fo r B a y lo r , the tw o tw ic e , stole a base o n ly g a m e * in 'Mural Schedule S i l l I M A I I I I m®* A - K a p p a P * i w N A\> cr. R n h r r G < la w K A p m - D e lta Chi \». T » (i D elta Phi ( ,,-tn m a D c I I n P h i Fp allon , R o b e r t * v» Mrs v- -•na A lp ha l l V M n I I UVV A ii I 4 YA p m —4 ‘link P V I T h e t * P r i l h f r M a r lin and B ir i and Anderson, v# B<* -I. P is a # VV tjclc* ii Jordon and Beta Su m rod M erchants, 4 |A B lo c k e r man |t rn ’ • ■! n r ) I aud T, e P a E e vs. H o f cr and Parm a. New- RnammnwmMi iwutmtititm'i’f1) «WWNMW1| PRMMMIMCniMaHlWIMi^id) IHI < * J * waiiwmMniMMik and r r n f n r n n in of w rifht*. • (•mn* *l)ln*. and precl- n ti * mntisls ttnn pi \ Iti'*dnlnd din w ork ti lib all InHnrtnt prncise- !v n *t ti r a e k I n tfn r S rn-ruatlng Yuliy guarantcad, with a told hardnass of o v a r 70ft Hrlnall Fs*»a«t dattvary Industry f n r tb# la ll ♦ Base m an R ic h a rd K ris tin ik on P la te e m p ire Rob Sm ith. K ris tin ik , for his antics, alm ost got thrown out of the game and received the vehem ence of the partisan Ivwg- hom s crowd the rem ain d er of the sun-filled afternoon. Texas now possesses a 7 0 con­ ference record and R ic e is 4 5. The fjonghnm* vs ill play B roo ke A rm y M edical Center In a return match In S«n Antonin Tuesday. To va* won an e a rlie r contest, 114. F O R T W O R T H ft T exss AArM And Texas C h ristian split a double header S a tu rd a y w hich s a w the two tennis bMttle for o ver six hours. The Aggies won the first gam e 16-3. T em bounced hack m the short nightcap for an 16-17 vic to ry, A total of SO tm se hit* w ere aprisved In the two games, Includ Ing l l home rim*. T exas A A M got a stout seven-in- nlng stint by soph Kd Sin g ley in the opener, and a seven-run ra lly in the eighth helped sew up the lopsided 1H-3 verd ict. The Aggies rapped out 22 hits, four each by left field er Byro n B a rb e r and second B a se m a n T e r r y Cobb. B a rb e r, Cobb, J a c k Sin gley, R a y H all and C lifford D avis also hit home run* in the first game. In the seven-inning second gam e, T C I ' overcam e a 14 7 lead to push across six runs in the last of the sixth for the 18 17 trium ph A fter outfielder C liff Ju s tic e * three-run hom er fled the gam e at 16-16, n wnlk and a double by B u d d y lies set the stage for Ken A n d e rvm * w inning 2-run double. Inning Texas A A M htt 12 run* In the *eennd to chase starter G ra y M ills, 17 men (low ii to the plate, with the big blow* being home runs by B a rb e r, B ill P ic k e tt aud flail. T C C won F r id a y ’s opener, 11-10, Pender Decisions Stubborn Basilio B O S T O N - A rtfu l J’ a ti I Pen der retained his version of the w o r l d m iddlew eight title Sa tu r­ day night, using his rapier-like left hand a* a double-edged wrap- on for a unanim ous 15-round de­ cision o ver stubborn C a rm e n B a ­ silic). The 3<>-> par-old B r o o k l i n e M ass , chm apion weighed 160, one pound m ore than the challenger. Pen d er tw ice floored the vrter- in fo rm er m iddle and w e l t e r - w eight king B a s ilio took an right count when h am m ered off his feet by P e n d e r’s sm ashing left in the lit h P a u l used the le ft honk to send B a s ilio to the can vas again in tite 15th. B a s ilio e a rlie r had claim ed he had not been knocked dow-n in 76 previous pro IO fights other title contests including oHinter-punching Pen der, fighting his usual w a it­ ing g a m e against a hard-hitting foe, had to w ithstand some Basilic) bomb* in the e a r ly stages before e a r n in g out his prefight battle plan. R eferee I.'Id le B rad iev s c n r e d 116-115 for P en d er on the 10-point “ m u st’’ scoring system in M a ss a ­ chusetts w hile Jonghorris pow­ ered th eir w a y past the T e x a s T ech tennis squad 6-0 at P e n ic k C ourts Satu rd ay. in the doubles w h e re U n te rseh er and W hite dropped the first set to Allison and G o ttsch all, 6-4. Rut the Texas aces for 6-2. 6-3 wins. Tech used the unusual combination of its first and fourth men as a doubles team . ra llie d Heath to 17-1 l e a E U e-leading 'H o rn s th eir Southwest C o n fer­ in blanking T he ju m p ed ence record the visitin g Red Raiders. had a and K a m r a t h rugged time in the first set with Chrane and R onald D am ro n , but B oth M a c W hite and Neil Un- after trailing 5-2, put on a big terseh er. the Orange s num ber one com eback to take a 9-7 wan. The second set went to K a m r a th and and tw o men, w ere able to shake Heath. 6-4. off take easy v ic ­ tories in the match. in ju rie s and W h ite , the classy junior f r o m C orpus C h risti, started slow ly but then flashed past Tech's top m an, D a r y l A llison, 6-4, 6-2. Sophom ore U n te rse h e r put down J im A us­ tin w ith no trouble, taking the first pet 6-3. then piling up a 6-1 win. Ja c k K a m ra th and Jo h n H eath each had a r o u g h pet. hut won in two straight. K a m ­ rath, p laying the number t h r e e spot, won o ver Dan Chrane K a m ­ ra th first set 6-3, hut w as extended to a 10-8 w in in the second took the H eath polished off Jon G o tsch a ll 6-1 in the opener, but was pushed to ta k e a 7-5 second set vic to ry . T he onlv set that was lost w as Zimmer Stars In Cub Victory P H I L A D E L P H I A i.Tt — Don Z im ­ m e r s two-run homer in the l i t h inning ga\e Hie Chicago C u b s the a 6-4 v ic to ry Satu rday o ver P h ila d e lp h ia Ph illies Next action for the ’H orns is a non-conference m atch w ith E a s t Texas State here on T uesday. Next weekend the Longhorns vis it S M U and T C L’.___________________ _ Homers Bolster Baltimore Cause B A L T I M O R E (JU- The B a ltim o re Orioles beat the N e w Y o rk Y a n ­ kees in home runs Sa tu rd a y, hut had to settle for one vic to ry and a tie in a rain-shortened day-night double-header. The Orioles won the d ay game 5-3 on a two-run h om er by Gus Triandos in the eighth inning. An­ other Ja c k ie two-run h om er bv Brandt tied the n ig h tcap 5-5 in the seventh rain ended the contest w ith the Orioles at hat. just before inning The second gam e, delayed 51 minutes by rain at the start and called after a 32-minute w a it in the seventh, goes into the books as a tie game and w ill have to he replayed in its e n tire ty . The per­ formances by the p la ye rs w ill br form er A sh bu rn , a ter R ic h ie Ashburn w ith his first flfth of thp h v’n hin bV th* 0 r i* j Senators Sa tu rd a y, h o m er of the year. opened the inning with a single off re lie fe r D ic k F a rre ll, and the last of three P h ila d e lp h ia p itch ers Don Piston got the vie- O riole starter H a l B ro w n ton,’. oles, enabled B a ltim o re to over- ■ V ersalles, who had gone 0-for-5 P h il. had rorrie * 5* I N * w Y o rk lead manu- ; m the nip-and-turk contest, hla«-t- factured by B ill Skow ron s grand | Pd a line d rive to renter off relief p itc h e r D a v e S is le r and catch er E a r l R a t t e y sco red H ip w anning run. the N A T I B U A T S B L M I T 8 C h i c a g o a P h i i a d e i phi * 4 M ilw a u k e e . __ PutshuiKh. postponed u-irn l l i n n i n g * — Yankees out of a loser *1*™ homer in the fourth inning T h p Yankees scored one m n off in the third on singles by E lsto n Howard Cletis B o yer and P>obhy R ic h a rd ­ son. Brow n departed in the fourth when N ew Y o rk loaded the bases. reliefer Wes into the Skowron sliced Slock s first pitch high right field bleachers B altim ore w hich had scored one m n in the first on tw o singles and a double by Triand os. picked up two mere in the fifth on solo hom- ens bv Bran dt and J im G entile off {^ \ WK Yankee starter in J i m Coates. the first game five-gam e New York loss snapped a winning streak and dropped first-place the Ram os tie lf^]P FYetroif T igers Haiti- losing three-gam e The a more ended streak. Richardson Tops Australian Star IP D A L L A S the w orld s No. whipped the in H am R ic h a rd ­ son of D allas heat N eale E ra s e r of A ustralia, I am ateur, in the sem ifin als of the D allas In vitatio n al Tennis Tourna­ ment Saturday. Richardson I F ra se r, speiled No tournament 8-6, 6-4 to reach the finals against B ern ard Bart/en . D a lla s D a v i s Cupper. Bartzen defeated Ron Hoim berg of Bro o k lyn . 9-7, 8-6. A u s tra lia * R-xi L a v e r and Luis A yala of Chile advanced to the doubles final w ith an 8-6 6-4 v ic ­ tory over M artin M ulligan of Aus­ tralia and W a rre n Ja c q u e s of L a ­ m ar Tech College The other doubles sem ifinal was halted by darkness w ith R oy E m ­ erson and F r a s e r holding a one- set advantage o ve r Bartzen and Richardson T h e y won 6-4. The second set was tied 12-12 T he gam e had been tied 4-all in the sixth. Standings . N A T I O N A L I 1 4 1 - 1 F VV x— C in c in n a ti .......... 5 ............... 5 P it t s b u r g h S a n P r e net * c o 5 S i L o u is ................... 5 ..................... 5 ('h ie s go x — L o s A n g e le s ....... 6 M ilw a u k e e ............... 2 J ’h ila- le lp liia ............. 2 x — N ig h t game L P c t 4 4 4 4 4 5 3 7 f. R 536 — 556 — *>56 — "56 — 556 — .">45 — 4-"J 222 3 ra n . S t p o n 'd rain Lo rn * at S-n Fra n cisco , p ost­ C in c in n a ti at l-o» Angeles n ig h t. S I N U A ) S *.( I I F ISI I F C in c in n a ti ( t u r k e y 2-0) a t C o t A n geies (C ra ig 1-0 c isc o (Jo n e s 1-0 S t L o u is i B ro g ilo 1-1) at S a n F r a n c h ic a g o son O-l i ai and M a n a ffo ” 0-1 - ~ (E lls w o r t h 0-0 and A n d e r ­ [ ’n ,lade phis (S u lliv a n 0-1 M ilw a u k e e (S p an n 0-11 a t P itts b u rg n ( L a w 0-2' AMERM AN J K A L IL I, Pct G B VV I ........................ 5 D e tro it 2 M in n e s o ta .................. 6 N e w Y o r k .................. 5 J 4 .................. 4 C le v e la n d 3 P o s to n ......................... 3 C h ic a g o ...................... 3 4 K a n s a s C it y ............... 2 3 ............... 3 5 W a s h in g to n ....................... 2 5 B a lt im o r e L o s A n g eles ............... I 5 803 750 .714 .SOO 2 5 0 0 2 .42U .400 2* j STS . 280 3 , 167 4 I S A T I H U A V A R I > M T K B o sto n 7 C h i ago 6 K a n s a s - | ■ Cleveland I M in n e so ta 5 W ash in g to n 4 l l in n .eg * lf) In rungs B a ltim o re 5-5 N ew Y o rk, 3-5 < sec­ ond gam e raile d rn seventh, r a m ). I.o s A n g e le s at D e tr o it, ram N | N K A ) A S C H L I M I I I ms Angeles 1 Mi B rid e 0-1 a id K l ne 0-01 at D e tro it i Bru ce (FO and B u n n in g 0-1 t 2 N e w Y o rk (M c D e v ltt O-Oi at B a l t i ­ m o re ( I s l r a d , < 0-11 B o sto n M in te r 1-0 end M u ffe tt 0 I ) at C h ic a g o (S h a w (VO and P ie r r e o-] i 2 W a s h in g to n (D onovan 0-2- at Mlnne- ao’ a ( K r a l h k (VOi O f v (W a lk e r O-l i Ole s el * r d i i ■> Re (VO i at K a n s a s have you tried the new COIN OPERATED DRY CLEANER? DRY CLEAN 8 LBS. OF CLOTHES FOR ESQUIRE CLEANERS $ ^ 0 0 OPEN 7 A.M. to 9 P.M. 5244 BURNET ROAD G L 2-7117 EICO ANNOUNCING EICO the opening of a N F M IK ) IT T O I ( { S K I , ! ELECTRONIC SHOP Featu rin g : • L im T uner h its and '■speakers • Com plete C onst ruction F acilities • Expert on D u ty to f lit e Any Ald G L T T H I HF> T F O B L E S H — B t I I D V O t R OTA N SCOTT-G ARRISON 1*07 ban Ja c in to f»R * I*** SAN JACINTO CAFE SP E C IA L IZ IN G IN D ELIC IO U S M E X IC A N AN D A M E R IC A N F O O D S R E G U L A R L U N C H E S EVERY DAY AT R E A SO N A BLE PR IC ES Visit Our Rainbow Dining Room O PEN 7 D AYS A W E E K B a H ey had opened the T w in s' half of the 10th with a single and w ent to second on a balk bv rig h t­ hander R u d y Hernandez the third of four pitchers who followed sta rt­ er B enn ie D aniels Third baseman B illy G a rd n e r sacrificed R attey to third and Reno Rertoia who had been purposely passed, to second Pin ch h itte r Dan Dnbhek walked. ,be delivered. thpn d a l l e s Rookie left-hander B ill T in s , who relieved Tw ins starter Ped ro in the ninth, got the vic- * °r y H ernandez was the loser ^ 0 field er J im I^ m on s single Green's Home Run Ends Wild Game in the Bumpkin Green s C H IC A G O P leadoff hom er lit h broke up a w ild , six-homer game S a tu r­ d ay and gave the Boston Fled Sox a 7-6 v ic to ry over the Chicago W h ite Sox. The gam e got woolly in a ninth inning w h ich produced five Boston runs as P e te Runnels and G a r y G e ig e r each belted two-run hom ­ ers for a 6-4 Red Sox lead and J . C. Mart-n W hite Sox slam m ed a two-run homer to tie it at 6-6. rookie B o s to n s explosive ninth n u lli­ fied a 4-i Chn ago lead built on Sherm L o lla r s three-run hom er in the fourth and Al Smith s solo ho­ m er in the sixth. The w in n e r w as Ted W ills, fourth R ed Sox pitcher, who entered the gam e in the ninth The loser w as T u rk Lo w n third W hite Sox h u rler, who started the 10th C h icag o starter F la n k B au m an n appeared headed for his se- ond v ic to ry against one defeat on a four-hitter until the ninth. Then he from the mound bv w as shelled R un n els' two-run homer G r e e n s double and R ip Repulski s single, scoring G reen . (Terry Sta le y whiffed the next batter but was tagged for a two- run h om er by G e ig e r which put Boston ahead 6 1 In the bottom of the ninth the th d Boston pitcher M ike F o r ­ m e r s , w alked the leadoff C hicago batt* ; Then rook e M artin stroked his hom er to Le it. in The Sox almost had the victo ry stowed a w n y the ninth later when N e . e Fox who banged fo . hits. singled to - enter with men on *e< ond and fits) But pinch ninne Floyd R o b i n s o n cart-w heeled co inding third and wa* nailed at the plate I I ► I a ► ► » CHARTER BUSES fund'Cored Air St-iii-en-. Ar- R estro om Aboard KERRVILLE BUS CO., IHC G R 8-9361 Goodyear Shot Shop • Ii» « d S(-ex* Raps r • Mod • PH l-Ju tpl* §*♦ 8 Ksyi Dup cstsd Wk • You W jie k 405 W . 23rd Straaf I HOUR CLEANING I DAY LAUNDRY LONGHORN CLEANERS G R 6 I M ? 2 M i G o a d s I ups AUSTIN'S BIG FOUR IN AUTHENTIC M EXICAN FOOD “ The Horne of The Crispy Tacos' 504 EAST AVE. G R 7-7023 EL M A T EL TORO “Austin's Original Mexican Restaurant" 16 A G U A D A LU P E G R 8-4321 912 RED RIVE® G R 8 7735 EL CHARRO “Big Stocks, Mexican Style MONROE'S 1 M e x i c a n Food to Go" 16 yrs. E*per c-sm.e I6TH AND SAN JA C IN T O G R 8-3984 500 EAST AVE G R 7 8744 French Culture Free: Morot-Sir W orld Soot Nation By Bardot, Sagan Actress F ra n c o is * B rig itte Harriot And novelist Sayan have caused the w orld to reg ard F ra n c e frivolou* nation, Edou ard no a Morot-Sir, rep resen ta tive of Fren ch universities to the United Staten, said recently. v e ry Speaking at a serious m atter. lectu re at B en e­ dict Ha!!, M r M orot-Sir explained that to a F re n c h m a n , freedom ta a The French dem and not only political f r e e dom but cu ltu ra l freedom alae, ha said “ L ib e r ty is linked to In­ dividual Independence,” M r. Morot- Sir added. “ W e are still accused of a lack T o a certain de­ of civic, sense gree. live by is tru e that we it the old sayin g 'fn the end nothing m atters v e ry m u c h ,’ ” he said. M r M orot-Sir said the c ritic a l spirit of th#* Is desirable f rench but it can bo m istak en for s k e p ­ F re n c h m e n refuse to ac­ ticism cept their ideas w ithout m aking own decisions, he said, noting this gives them in telle ctu al liberty, “ Fre n c h m e n m ust guard against tieing dom inated by their em o­ tions.” hr- said. Th#* Fren ch try to be logical hut th#»y obey only when they s e e a c le a r reason for obedience, he said. Auditions Scheduled For ACT’s ‘R a in ’ Today R eadings fo r “ B a in . ” the Aus­ tin f ’ivic T h e a te r ’s first sum m er production, w ill he held Sunday at 1 "WI p rn , M o n d a y at 7 30 p m , I and T u esd ay by appointm ent only at tile A C T P la yh o u se , 301 W e s t Fifth Street. M ale actors are e sp ecially need­ ed, said M iss J a n C ourtney, who will direct h er own adaptation of W. Som erset M a u g h a m ’s s h o r t story. German Play Local Success Bv TONY P FA N N K t CHE T his y e a r's production by the D ep artm en t of G erm an ic L a n ­ guages w as a com edy by August von Kotzebue. “ D ie Deutschen K le in s ta e d te r,” roughly, the “ G e r­ m an C ou n try T o w n .” Though a p lay of no p a rticu la r distinction, its w ild ly over-acted production w as thoroughly delightful. the h istory of the The p lay takes place on the night before a v e ry im portant d ay in town of K r a e h w in k e l; on the next day the (Ju tta m ayo r s daughter Sabine H au bold) w ill announce her en­ gagem ent, and a notorious lady thief, who has stolen a skinny cow nine ye a r* e arlier, w ill fin al­ ly be punished It has taken nine years to settle a jurisd iction dispute, during w hich the c rim in a l has waited in prison, but the dispute is settled now', and fortunately the crim in al is still alive. Sabine s engagem ent poses a bit of a problem . W hile she was in B e rlin she m et and .secretly becam e engaged to a young man, K a r l O lm ers (M ik e D y m o n d ) , ho w ever her f a m i l y has de­ that she s h o u l d m a r­ cree ry an in im portant young man K ra e h w in k e l, Sperling, the local poet, who in cidentally has a most im pressive title, a prerequisite to m a rria g e in K raeh w in kel. B u t just as Sabine is about to give up hope and m a rry Sperling ( “ first m arriag e, then love,” ad­ vises her grandm other, i a strang­ er, an en voy from the State M in­ ister, a rriv e s in town. It is none than K a r l O lm ers. Aha? other The P*ot thickens. The m ayor s fam ily, as w e ll a* the townspeople, are also im m ed ­ iately disappointed in the visito r, because he has no m anners. He doesn’t call the grandm other by her correct title. F r a u Untersteue- reinnehm erin! 1 A ssistant - collec- tor-of-revenues w if e ); he w o n t rin ’t h u n g ry; he eat when he hasn t a title; he is, in short, a barbarian . F in a lly the en tire fa m ­ ily tells him off. The problem this sm all to WTI is hard to m eet someone in priva te without get- ting a bad reputation. It is Sp er­ ling. who still doesn t know' that he has been spurned as a bride­ groom, who unw ittingly m akes the suggestion which the lo v e rs fol­ low. They w ill meet at night in front of the m ayor s door. that in is it T h e ir meeting is com plicated by the night, w atch m an 's report that the lady cow' thief has escaped. The m ayor, his brother, and Sp er­ ling come down in th eir sleeping gowns to see w hat can be done about the disaster. The lo vers are discovered. But, as you know, everyth in g comes out a ll right. This only gen era lly am using little p lay becomes, in the hands of the G erm an students under the direction of W . F . M ich ae l, a v e ry funny, totally enjoyable produc­ tion. Special credit should go to scene - stealing the priggishness of Sp erlin g ( J i m W e st), and to the a d m ira b ly pom pous authority of the m a yo r I Ed- B u t it w a s Dr. w ard C o w an ). M ic h a e l’s production, and, it fol­ lows, it w as his success. im pressive, T h e D a i l y T e x a n Amusements Sunday, April 23, 1961 T H E O A IL Y T E X A N Pag* 6 SO M E Y A N Q U I SOLDIERS be hold the power of the Mexican army, in the Varsity Theater s ' 'A ^m o." The winner of the belt sound produc­ tion Academy Award will remain in Austin for a limited return showing. Stars are John Wayne, Richard Widmarit, and Laurence Harvey, as Crockett, Bowie, and Travis. Poetry Like Business Anthology Shows Romantic Flare A N TH OI/M .V O F AM ERICAN J ’O F.T R Y , Hook !»«>. Edited by I bull I.. Heard. Published by Royal Publishing Co. 119 pages. II, illu strate the prevailing p o e t i c thought, style, and most frequent­ in ly used 1960. form s of expression RT. 75. Po e try like business has trends “ Anthology of A m erican P o e try ,” which is published annually, has brought together a large group of little known contem porary poets to The from titles range “ To A C h ig ger” by M a ry C. G allo p to it A ll” by G yn ith “ The Fn d of H olland Shaw. And few of the w riters have an y reputation at all, most show a definite talent in the sym m etry of words. though They are m ostly gentle verses, which one seldom sees in the cu r­ rent heat generation. T h ey ex­ hibit a love for life ra th e r than a rejection and project into the read­ er the m em ory of c a lm e r, breeze tickled days as a youth. — N A T G IB S O N . i p i M N M N m M a n y of the p>erns are light and some nonsensical re v e lry The m a jo rity, though show a constant sense of rom anticism . T h ey drift in them e from childishness to uni­ v e rs a lity on the sam e page. T he book is an excellent show­ case of cu rren t poetic thought and as the ja c k e t states, “ W e are not p a rtic u la rly interested in the m erit of a single poem, hut in the m erit of all the poems in the group.” The anthology c arries through this theme with m an y varied , but all m odem , types of poetry from blank verse to heroic couplets. None of the poems In the an­ thology possess the chanting qu al­ ity of G insburg, but several pro- | duce the beauty of an A. F . House m an sorrow or the faw of Ogden Nash. BESSES®! N o w Ha* .“UMH G u a d a l u p e O R A 0302 D A N C I N G C A B A R E T R O O M In t h e N e w Tonight: Jerry Dunagan Trio S E G LE FRY Dine at A Lot of Blues This By R E E STRANC.E I floor at the high ornamented ceil- I board letters strewn haphazardly form unintel­ o ver the surface, ligible expressions. green woman reclining on a mg. Paintings of tarted shapes, lovable guf- highly polished table. I he face of subjects and styes carelessly lean- ! t man staring haughtily from the mg against the high hacked chairs. This is an art exhibit before it is. A hig multi-colored painting Is lying on its side against a table. The picture of a faded bouquet lying next to an old photograph in an open d ra w e r leans against a red and blue painting of a play­ ground scene. P edal Your P addle BOAT RENTALS Suddenly the room Is invaded by a scu rryin g force equipped with ladder, screws, yard stick s Even In the a c tiv ity that follows, however, a kind of silence prevails. Muffled voices converse. " IDill that be too blue?" “Eieryhody’s painting blat! these days. There must he some Conferences between th# » r tls ti their assista n ts arw present and held to consider positions fo r each w ork of art. Decisions m ad e, th# placem ent begins. The a rtis tic die* ord er of the room d isap p ears aa each o b ject assu m es It* position. C urious students w an d er In. look a t rn On Austin’s New Town Lake One corner of the regal room 1s significance SE R V IN G D ELIC ATE C A N T O N E SE A N D C H IN E S E FO O D Canoes Pedal Boats W e Prepare Food to Go Closed Monday* 223 Congre** A v e . G R 8-7641 Directly Across from Armstrong Johnson's T aj Shou Room B e t w e e n C o n g re s s a n d S o u th F i r s t S t r e e t B r id g e * O P E N A F T E R N O O N S & E V E N IN G S dom inated by a shadowy landscape rooks. A dark oil of trees and full of arches, circles, painting squares and triangles sends out its sh arp colors to m om en tarily catch yo u r eye. The janitor, paintbrush rn hand. JU A N S A t T i KA S Th e a t r e s ] MKE MINE MINK THOMAS — C A P I T O L Recommended o n l y to thole who want to Laugh — Laugh — Laugh — Laugh — Laugh — Laugh — O N THE D R A G floor* Op#* I I t i V VI ■ Kr»tn»« J —4 — • S-10 LlLLUBJg S N A IR B S R OPK NS ft SS FK K K Pl.A Y*.ROI NO! Al I T I to KS ORK AT* KRO T*.MT BAI R KOR I (ll R Y NJO * Mi NT JOHN WAYNE DEAN MARTIN RICHY NEESON Vt 310 BRAVO OS ***1 I MUM DICKINSON WMH BRENHAM | N U S B0ND[ TlCHNtCOlO»* : ____ I _ .SMU N. I A M AK —HO & I .It S M M !< ■'ANDY GRIFFITH^ / MYRON McCormick *. ■« 5 ’ M E R V Y N L e r o y ___ A D I I T H MW — ( H I L D K R Y K K I R S T D R I V K IN S H O W I N G B O X O Y Y I ! ST. O P K N S « Aft I I R v T S l l OVA S T A R T S 7 Aft M G M . GEORGE SANDERS BARBARA SHELLEY, M V iIX a G e OF D plus! IN C O L O R A L A N LADD "T h e B a d la n d e rs " * i m ud", probablyar" ' ‘nl1- ,err,rn.I . t and saunter out. touches up smudges on the broad what , , , left by an enthusiastic obserter of reclin in g the pres tous exhibit. Smiling con- I cr)rne tagiously, the grey hatred janitor ^rPf.n wom an, torsos done in rose tells you the history of the screens, m arble and stoneware, and several usually unnoticed when adorned cera m ic vases. with paintings tells how the dtf I The “nameless" creations receive ferent sized screens ii ere originally identifying labels. As the elderly made to fit in specific spots rn the janitor carefully applies a lari daub m ystpriou, , tands fh# for * ^ ^ ,f,w tong, stately room. °f P*,nt finks off a lone piece of dust " a sign announcing the A half-finished word is spelled Art Department Exhibition Pro- out on a desk, w hile other card- gram is pushed into place. DELWOOD 3931 E o s t A * <. n u ' A It M I S S I O N IMC • OPY'. N ft P M SEPA R A T E TABLES l . i m i . t f r —• K l* * H»> w o rth B u r t ■Start# 7: IS — P IO * — M A N O F THE W EST C la ry C o o p e r — J u l i e C o n d o n SOUTH AUSTIN I (MIO S O I T H I O N * . B Y S S A D M I S S I O N MI, a O P Y N S P M JU N G L E C AT VV A I T D I S N Y. V ’* T R I Y. I I Y Y A D V Y N T ! K F S t a r t * 7: IS — F lu *— THE N IG H T FIG H TERS R o b e r t M itr h u in S ta r t# H YO T ile work is done The afternoon is gone Tile im pressive w orks of art aw alt tom orrow and the open­ ing of the exhibit. If you w ant to see the com pleted the R egents' exhibit, drop by Room . M ain Buildin g 212. T he F a c ­ u lty Art continua Ex h ib it w ill through M a y 15. H ours a re 8 a rn. to 5 p rn M onday through F rid a y , IO a rn. to 2 p rn. S a tu rd a y and 2 to 5 p.m . Sunday. Concert Set for Today K a th e rin e B ran fie ld and W illia m D ru c k e n m ille r w ill he presented Su n day afternoon concert w ith the U n iv e rs ity Sym p h o n y O r­ chestra. in a Tho concert w ill he conducted by A lexan der Von K r e is le r at 4 p m. in the M ain B a llro o m of tha T exas Union. Eat Mexican Food Once A Day! f/ l£ L TDjPjScv^AC^ Dftliclout plum p and m a d ly , C h ick en p re p a re d and tend*r-gro«*n the • ic iu tiv e C h ic k e n D e lig h t m etho d le r v e d in end d e liv e re d to yo u r d o o r p ip in g hot m inute* a fte r you call. GR 6-6216 O PEN — EVERY DAY 11:00 A.M . 1608 L A V A C A CONN CAPERS" Featuring Popular Dot Recording A rtist, AL B0LLINGT0N Keyboard Soldier of Fortune” Mr Bollington w ill p la y Y O U R differen t Cann O rg a n s ta r your listening pleasure. In clud ed an •Ka pro gram w ill be (be n e w *9 9 * Conn C aprice the m usical " P o p ta ie fa re , pro m ising am l o t h " evening o f m usical fun fp r e v e ry ­ one NO ADMISSION CHARGE FREE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT HEMPHILLS NO. 2— 2501 GUADALUPE S H O W W IL L BE April 26 at 8 p.m. IN THE Municipal Auditorium \ B r o u g h t ta you through the courtesy of Your Conn Organ Dealer FRED P. SAVAGE EL MAT 504 East Ave. G R 7-7023 EL TORO 1601 Guadalupa G R 8-4321 EL CHARRO "M exican Food to Take H o m e" MONROE'S G R 7-8744 912 Red River G R 8-7735 Delivery Service 7 Days 3939 Balcones Drive S tu d io S h o w r o o m PH G I 3 5604 A u s t i n , T a x e s Austin $ “Big Four” in Authentic Mexican Food StihJuOLUXydfL- a*A ^JXaaj q et'ccl AIP-IHA W6KTS •KMG TeMfifflUfc* THURSDAY! PARAMOUNT T O D A Y A T i N r t K S T A T t P a r a m o u n t N O W !. F R A T I K T H A T ft ft.V ft OO 9 S t T H E Y * F L I P R Tt» Absent-minded Plofes'or M.cWURfiAV - OLSON ■ W fflN - KIRK P R K r n A I M I T H I OO I H U . I> K K Pi OOO M I I C , W k FEATU RES: 12— 4— 8 P.M. Held Over 3rd Big Week! SALUTING THE CIVIL WAR CENTENNIAL! Th* M is t s hee never knewn e love story to eons p e r e with this I MWO 0 SELZNIClCS / KMCAsri pncarin / $rrm* at a* out txitn mmotAi nm tv TK GONE WITH THE WIND CLARK GABLE - VIVIEN LEIGH LESLIE HOWARD - IM deHMAND ' b P R I C K * i i h I A K O a m i I * r im .i» i t a f>... ss* h fo k irlg ftrS fl NOW! r r . A T I R F A ! I .ie. « so. * ne ..IT WILL BE REMEMBERED FOREVER! THC _ j O H R W m / B O U W W t o U N / U M E M X M O TET FR A N K E NOTCX R i f / UMM O K I N . AVALON B M O M N / O R I M U S / A AM UNAM I M M _ T E C H N IC O LO R * HIM IT H snit I M il ll »Ar IV I * III! ll IT K K K O KOI M i CO M ING SOON! W IN N E R O F 16 IN T ER N A T IO N A L A W A R D S ! Featuring Star* of the Internationally Famed BALLET DE L’ETOILE— PARIS A u s r i im ACADEMY A W A R D W IN N ER ELIZABETH TA YLO R "BEST AC TRESS O F THE Y EA R " MOO tot DWTN »urt* .m n ELIZABETH TAYLOR LAURANCE HARVEY EDDIE FISHER rn re UN O HAMA I x BUTTERFIELD O / > tWn«| CINA MtftftHl Cm* ria Slop* v(,R'roiO R "S*- FEATU RES TODAY: 2:00—4:00— 6:00— 8:00— 10:00 W U Qoe, On J / , ere 'p ea king o f (^ L u rch e s the 8:40 and 10:55 a.m . services at F irs t Methodist Church, 1200 L a v a ca . ★ ★ " T h e L iving C h rist and tho D is­ co u ra g ed " will be the topic of Dr. Ideals P . S p e a k e r’s serm on in the F irs t English Lutheran Church, T h irtieth S tre e t and Whitis Avenue, a t the 10:30 a .m . service. ★ ★ T h e R e v . E d w ard V. lx>ng will p r e a c h on the C h u rc h ? " a t the 8 and 10.45 a.m . services a t St. M artin's Lutheran Church, 606 W est Fifteenth Street. "W ho Owns ★ # ★ T h e D a i l y T e x a n Campus Life Sunday, April 23. 1961 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 7 College Queen Contest Sets May 20 Deadline The 1961 N ational C ollege Queen its annual Contest ‘the natio n ’s m o st at­ quest fo r tra ctiv e and m ost in telligent col­ is conducting l)e selected on a basis of a ttra c ­ tiveness, ch arm , personality , sch o l­ astic cam pus a c tiv itie s , and com m unity serv ice. record , P ersons wishing to e n te r m u st apply before M ay 20. E n try blan ks m ay be obtained th e N a­ tional College Queen A ssociation , Suite 1606, P aram ou nt B uild ing, 1501 B roadw ay, New Y ork 36, N .Y . from m e n t" is "M a n 's M orals and God s Ju d g ­ the topic of D r. W illiam ; G ib b le 's serm on for the 10:50 a m. s erv ice at the University Christian Church, 2007 U niversity Avenue. lege g ir l." A trip to New Y o rk , television ap p earan ces, a sports c a r, and $5,000 worth of other prizes aw ait the g irl who is chosen. She will "D e liv e ra n c e from F e a r ’’ will be D r. B la k e Sm ith's su b ject a t the l l a .m . serv ice Sunday s t the University Baptist Church, 2130 Guadalupe. This is a continuation of the serie s of serm ons w hich the pastor is preaching on "T h e T r i­ umph of the S p irit." L ee F r e e ­ m an, asso cia te pastor, will p reach on the su b je c t, "O n the H um anity of G o d ." ★ ★ T he R ev . Jo h n C. Tow ery will preach on " T h e G athered C om ­ m u n ity" at the l l a .m . worship serv ice of T he Congregational Church. 408 W. Tw enty-third S tre e t. ★ ★ The R e v . Ja m e s W. M organ w ill speak a t l l a .m . the 8:30 and warship serv ices at the University Methodist Church, 2409 Guadalupe. is "W ith Sin gle­ His serm on title ness of H e a rt." ★ it D r. M arv in S. Vance will p reach on "A Word for the W e a ry " a t •CO*OP*CO*OP*CO*OP*CO*OI LEARN more EARN more This fink's been ea+in' my magazines again! Dr. Gates To Speak Monday D r. David M. G atos of the Na- tional B ureau of Standards will speak to the A m erican C hem ical Society at 8 p.m. Monday in Chem­ istry Building 15. His topic will be "H ig h Altitude S p ectro sco p y from B a llo o n s." He will also show slides and a movie and d escribe experim ents m easur­ ing the concentration of m inor constituents of the atm osphere. Sunday 10 — D r. D e w itt C. Red dick to speak to Newman Club at Hon­ ors D ay p rogram on "M akin g the Most of Y o u r se lf," St. Aus­ tin 's Auditorium. 11 — N ewman Club to h ear Dan Ix>ve of K T B C -T V , St. A ustin’s Auditorium. 1:30 — B rid g e T ournam ent. T e x a s Uuion C l u b Cham pionship of Fo u r, Union Ju n io r B allroom , $1.50 en tran ce fee. 2-5 — F a cu lty a rt exh ibit open to public, R egen ts R oom , M a i n Building. N O W O P E N American Heritage Book Store O P E N IN G SPECIALS R eg. P ric e S |»ci»l W E D E M E Y E R R E P O R T S ! by Gen. A. C. W edem eyer . . . . $ 6 00 A D V IS E AND CO N SEN T, by Allen D rury ................................. 5 75 T H E N A K ED CO M M UN IST, by W . Cleon Skousen .............. 4 95 T H E P E O P L E S P O T T A G E , by G aret G a rrett ....................... 3 00 A N TH EM , by Avn Rynd ....................................................................... 3.00 IN S ID E T H E S T A T E D E P A R T M E N T , by B rytp n B arro n . . 2 00 COM M UN IST A M ER IC A — M U ST IT B E ? by H arg is .............. 1.00 ............................1.25 T H E Y A LT A B E T R A Y A L , by F e lix W lttm e r K E Y N E S AT H A R V A R D ......................................................................... 2 00 T H E L I F E O F JO H N B IR C H ............................................................ $3.65 4 75 3.75 2 25 2 25 I 50 .60 I.OO I 65 I OO TAPE R E C O R D E R S A N D TAPES W O L L E N S A K , M odel T-1500. re g u la rly priced at $199.50 Spe< tai a t $170.00 . . 229 50 Special at 190 00 W O L L E N A SK , S te re o 4 tra ck , re g u la r price ................ 204.50 Sp ecial a t 165.00 W E B C O R R o y allte re g u larly priced a t ST E E LM A N T ra n sisto r C om pact re g u la r p rice 199 50 Sp ecial a t 150.00 3 25 M YLAR BASE R ecording tap e (IRIX)') re g u lar p rice $6 50 Sp ecial a t 2 75 P la s tic B as# R eco rd in g tap e (1800 ) reg u lar p rice 4.95 Sp ecial a t American Heritage Bookstore (S p ecialisin g In books about o ar A m erica and C h ristian H eritage) 618 Lamar Bvd. G R 6-1488 H O U R S : 8:30 T O 5:00 W E E K D A Y S O P E N T H U R S D A Y 'TIL 9 P-M. Life-Saving To Be Taught In M en's G ym Courses in life-saving will sta rt Monday a t G rego ry G ym p o o l , Dorothy Lundell of the R ed Cross said. A w a ter-safety in stru cto r cou rse is scheduled to begin in M ay. them to be sen io r O ver IOO students a re enrolled in P . FL 213 taking te sts w hich will life ­ qualify guards. T he city-w ide lifesavin g course will be held for m en only from 6:30 to 9 :30 p.m . M onday through F rid a y , April 28. C lasses a re sponsored by the U niversity, j City R ecreatio n D ep artm en t, and T rav is County R ed Cross. The 30-hour w a ter-sa fety in stru c- i to r's course will be held w eek- days, M ay 1-5 and M ay 8-12, dur- the sa m e hours a t G regory j ing Gym pool. "E n ro lle e s in life-saving should , be strong sw im m ers, and t h o s e taking the in stru cto r’s cou rse m ust ; have passed a R ed Cross life-sav ­ la st th ree ing course within the ! y e a r s ," M iss Lundell said. I No ch arg e will be m ade fo r tra in ­ E n ro llees m ust have Red textbooks on w ater sa fety j and sw im m ing. T e x ts will be on j sale the first night of e a ch course ing. Cross a t 75 cen ts each . S im ila r cou rses for women a re . b e i n g scheduled for N orthwest Pool. inform ation on dates of these cou rses, con tact the Red Cross a t G R 8-1601. F o r m ore Sabean Elected to O ffice Sandra Sabean. returning sw eet­ heart of the College of B u sin ess A dm inistration, was elected m em ­ ber-at-large of the CHA council W ednesday night a t the C ouncil's j m eeting. 2 .30 —- H illel Student Council to e le c t o ffice rs, H illel Foundation. 3-5 — New exhibit by R o b e r t W a t s o n , a rtist, Ney M useum ; also Monday a t 10-12 and 3-5. 3-5 — E xh ib it by W om en's A rchi­ te ctu ra l League, L aguna G loria, i 4 — M ovie offered by P i D e l t a P hi, " F o u r B a g s F u ll," T e x a s Union Auditorium. 6:30 — D r. R aph ael L ev y to speak " S e c u la r in the Middle a t Supper Forum on U ses of Hebrew A g e s ," H illel Foundation. 7 — Union movie, " T h e T end er ! 7 :30 T r a p ," T e x a s Union Auditorium. Second session of B rid g e T ournam ent, Union Ju n io r B a ll­ room . 8 — D epartm ent of D ra m a p re ­ " M a c b e th ," Hogg Audi­ sents torium . M ond ay 8-5 — F a cu lty a rt on exh ibit, R e ­ gents Room , M ain Building. IO — Jew ish cu rren t even ts to be discussed by E . H. Saulson, H il­ lel Foundation. 1-5 — T ick ets on sale fo r W ednes­ day night O rchesis p rog ram , W om en’s Gym 101. 2 — G radu ate L eg isla tiv e Council, Old L ib ra ry Building 107. 6:30-9:30 — Red Cross training session for m en, G rego ry Gym . 6:30-10:30 — N e w m a n L ib ra ry open. 7-10 — Study room s open on first floor of E nglish Building. 8 — "M a c b e th ." under the d irec­ Iden P a y n e , Hogg tion of B . Auditorium. regional m eeting of 8 — D r. David M. G a te s to ad­ the dress A m erican C hem ical So ciety on " I I i g h Altitude Spectroscop y from B a llo o n s," C h em istry Build ­ ing 15. STRATFORD ARMS A p p r o v e d H o u sin g for G irls. Block o f Stadium . R e se rva­ tions N o w A c c e p t e d for Sum m e r and Fall. L a rg e m odern S u ite 1;, for 2, 3, 4 girls; each with kitchenette a - d bath. Bills Paid. Rates $35 to $45 per girl. Resident Hostess 601 East 23'/2 St. G R 7-9373 D A IL Y T E X A N C^(aS3lilied Is ( I AS S I P I E D A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S ............................. 4c F-if h W ord < 15-word m inim um ) C lassified D isplay I colum n x one inch o n * tim * E a c h Additional T im * 20 co nsecu tive T im es 8 wot (Is 15 word* 2o words .................................................................................. $6 OO .................................................................................. B ito ...................................................................................l l OO (N o copy chan ge fo r consecu tive Issue ra tes.) ................................................. .. ............................. $1 no .90 C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G D E A D L IN E S Tuesd ay T exan .................................. Monday, 3 30 p.m. W ednesday T e x a n ................................Tu esd ay, 3 :3 0 p.m. ......................... W ednesday, 3:3n p.m. T h u rsd ay T ex a n .................................. T hu rsd ay, 3 30 p.m . F rid ay T ex an Sunday T ex an ...................................... F rid ay . 3 :3 0 p.m. In the event of e rro rs m ade In an advertisem en t, im m ediate n o tice m ust be given as th e p u blish ers are responsible fo r only one Inco rrect In sertio n . CA LL J O H N N Y G R 2-2473 Furnished Apartments Help W anted Lost and Found Miscellaneous 915 W E S T f i s t E ffic ie n c y P arkin g, foam beds, private en ­ single. a ir cooled tran ce. u tilities paid. $70 0 0 dou bt* G R 8-9125 $ 6 o 0 0 F I V E ROOMS, T W O bedroom s TV - furnished. ty p ew riter. W ell $75.00 m onthly W a te r paid G R 2-8831. radio, 2017 B RUD RU O re bed a ir r o o m cond itioned apartm en t. P riced from $55.00 w ithou t u tilities S e * ap artm en t m anag er. 2013 B Red R iver o r Call GR 2-4868 R A V IN E T E R R A C E SU M M E R rates Air eondltloned H uge closets T e r ­ race Sundeck 2053 Sab in e. GR 8-5528, GR 2-7776. I C O O L ACCO M O DA TES Flvi blocks west U niversity. JOO OO. House­ room. P riv a te bath. $35.00. keeping V acant Ju n e I 91 i E S Q U IR E A P A R T M E N T S fo r Upper C lassm en Only 2802 W hltls (N e ar Cam pus) M ake Su m m er and Kail R eservation s Now New nicely furnished a ir cond i­ tioned ap artm en ts Each unit with tw o bedrooms, b ath , and kitch en ­ ette. Accom odates four men Sum m er rates. P ark in g , p o rt­ er service. th re e or C L 3-3235 BA RBA IN . M A Y -R E P T E M B E R Two bedroom ap artm en t. A ir eondltloned fu rn itu re. Pan ellin g C arpeting. New G as-w ater G R 1-9125 N IC E A P A R T M E N T FOP. couple for sin gle gentlem an Bu s line new r e ­ home. f a s h i o n e d old frig e ra to r O L 3-2506. VANT Y O U R D IS S E R T A T IO N or T h esis typed C onsult th * larg e list In ty p ists ad v ertising com petent rh* D ally T exan C lassified Ads Rooms for Rent Royal Co-Op 1916 Speedw ay lr Conditioned Stu d y Room and m ing Room I t * B lo ck Cam pus Sum m er Session Room *, or Room nn^l Boar a GR 2-9655 N C A RM S Room s Now A vailable fo r Sum m er T erm '61 I » n g T e rm 1961-62 per Classm en. G raduate*. I .aw Stu d en t* 306 E ast 30th GR 7-0501 W anted Two young men w ith sm all cars for part tim e d elivery on w eek­ ends. M ust know U niversity area. Call In person Chicken D eligh t 16od L av aca Room and Board P I K A P P A A LPH A W ill be open fo r sum m er session Room s fo r men $75 OO C o -E d u catio n al Board 5110 B r e a k fa st Optional A ir Conditioned T V Room GR 6 -4 0 1 9 o r GR 6-6227 If you w an t to buy. sell, o r ren t. use T H E D A IL Y T E X A N C L A S S IF IE D ADS. C all Jo h n n y . GR 2-2473 between 8 OO and 3 30 daily Rooms for Rent L O S T P O ST W ednesday V E R S ALOG Slid e R ule Lab E n g in eerin g in B u ild in g Rew ard. Hopkins H I 2-0808 O W N E R S O F S A IL boart) o r persona Interested in rarin g c r e w i n g or rru isln g Call G R 2-5932 fo r m em b er­ ship Inform ation. A ustin S a ilin g Club. Special Services R E N T - PU RC H A SE T V s. Alpha T elevisio n R ental. G R 2-2692 M O T H E R ’S DAY P O R T R A IT S Chad w ick Studio. GR 7-5903. W anted BLO O D D ON ORS— All ty p e* of blood needed for usage In A u s tla P ro fes­ T rav is sional donors now accepted County Blood Bank 2907B Red R iver A L T E R A T IO N S AND D R E SSM A K IN G . 715 W est 25th S tre e t G R 6-3360 Alterations For Sale 1957 FO R D FA IR LA N D 500 A ir con ­ ditioned. Fordom ntlc. RA: 11, $*15.00. G R 7-4000. Typing ACCU RA TE T Y P IN G . R EA SO N A B L E . E le c trom atlc. N ear U n iversity. Mrs. A lbright. O L 3-2941. gu aran teed D IS SE R T A T IO N 'S. T H E S E S . R E ­ p rofession ally, P O R T S (I R M ). P erson al com p etently sa tisfa ctio n , q u ality service. R easo n ­ able ra te* Fiv e blocks cam pus. Mrs. Bodour. G R 8-8113. typed F A S T A C C U R A TE T Y P IN G Elect ro ­ rate* Call M rs. reaso n ab le m atlc, G illespie a fte r 5 :30 p m. C L 2-6287 C A L L O R COM E by w ith you r typing Legs) exp erien ce V irg in ia Calhoun. G R 8-2636. 1803 N ueces. T H E S E S . D IS S E R T A T IO N S . R E P O R T S by exp erien ced, electro n .a tle ty p ist, g r a d u a t e . M rs. Goodwin. I BA G R 2-2029. Close to cam pus . T R IU M P H T R 3 E X C E L L E N T co n d i­ tion. All extras Hard top. overdrive. ra d io /h e a te r. w ire w heels, new $1,650. Call P ete Low ry, G R 8-5641. tires, rH JT H X N G A N D P R IN T IN G . T H E S E S A N D D IS S E R T A T IO N S specialty. A z t e c P rin tin g Com pany. 17 )6 San Ja c in to . G R 2-5820 rev ! A! . - GI N H E A L E Y S p rite E x ­ cellen t condition. R easo n ab ly priced 16*>4 B B rack en rid g e A partm en ts. C all the**-* C L 3-3546. E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IN G R E P O R T S . etc. E le c tric . M rs. H unter. 20 G irls Su m m er T erm ■ i l l Air conditioned, sw im m ing pool, parking l o t T w o m eals 2610 R io G rand * G R 6-9621 W IL L IA M K. H A LL D o rm ito ry fo r Men Now Accepting R eservation s t o r th e Su m m er T erm A ir Conditioned J vo Man R o o m -—$50 Sin g le Room — $40 Call Mrs W hitm an R esid ent M anager G R 8-3512 DOU W est 22nd S tre e t T H E W A R R E N H O U SE and 1906 San Antonio. I t i block csm - pus C om pletely a ir conditioned. $22.S0-$30 OO. D ouble or sin gle, G R 7-7342 JTON P O R T A It I. E T Y P E ­ W R IT E R Good cond ition R easo n ­ a b ly priced R iley Felp s. G R 2-0476. S M A L L SA IL BO AT GR 8-7024 a fte r 5:00. fo r sale. Call U N B E L IE V A B L E B A R G A IN S ' M U F ­ sk irt* F L E R S $4 95 - $ 6 95: hubcaps sp llt- m anlfold s m irrors accessories*. T ex a s Auto. 1114 E ast 1st duals 5 1 1 9 5 ; lak e* plug*, 1955 R E D PLY M O U T H C on vertib le. P ow er steerin g, b rak es A utom atic T i g h t , Quiet. tran sm issio n w*w. $785 G R 6-2659. O L 2-6553. 1960 VOLVO PV 544*# E x ce lle n t con ­ d ition $1595 o r trad e fo r o ld er car. M ust sell GR 7-1695 an ytim e. C L EA N '59 O L D S D v n am ir '88. T udor. Ja n e ts k y , Clean e x tra s $1595 J . I. UN 3-3727 o r UN 3-3110. G eorgetow n. 1957 F O R D w ith overdrive lard sh ift Padded dash. new p ain t, excellen t tire* Putti clean B a r ­ gain 1107 C laire A v e nu e G R 8-3039 $745. hp. S ta rte r, gen erato r, BO A T. 15' COMMANDO M ercu ry 70- co n v ertib le top radio, speedom eter, tw o tan ks, tilt tr a ile r. In terio r 'iphoistered akia. rope, p reservers $1 425 G L 2-6212 L A T E 1950 V E S P A S c o o te r P e rfe c t cond ition Tw o c y cle engine. AH a c ­ cesso ries $225 OO. G L 3696*4. E N G L ISH B IC Y C L E T ll R E E sp*- gear, ex cellen t condition $35 OO jf $ 1 0 9 s p e e d s . tw o fan. window G R 2-3330 R E A L B U Y Brand new R o y s! p o rtab le ty pe­ w riter lit $60 on under re ta il coat Also new G E window fan $79.00 Sell fo r $35 0 0 ( ra t C L 3 8783 tro m atic. R ep o rts, E X P E R IE N C E D . C O M P E T E N T . E lse- th ese*, d isse rta­ tions AH types G rad u ate/u n d erg rad ­ uate C lose to cam pus. M rs. D eB u tts. G R 8-3298 T Y P IN G T R O U B L E S ’ W H Y not tro u ­ ble u s’ Ed I type. G R 6-4967. G R 2-4404. T Y P IN G IN MY hom e I B M E le ctric. Call Mrs M organ C L 3-0354. E X P E R T A C C U R A T E T Y P IN G T hem es. T h ese* M anuscript* P.ea te n a b le HO 5 5813 double space G R 6-4717. HW I es. 25 D IS S E R T A T IO N S . T H E S E S T Y P E D in m y hom e A ccurate. G L 2-1582. D IS S E R T A T IO N S . E T C E L E C T R O M A- T IC (S y m b o ls). M rs R itchie. Clos# In. G R 6-7079 Ing problem s, c a ll R W Holley a fte r 5 30 a t G R 6-3018. M u ltilith m ats specialty. IBM . • • - A C C U RA TE B E A U T IF U L T Y P IN G — IBM ele< tro m a tic. LAW W O R K S P E ­ C IA L IS T R easo n a b le Courteous, con ­ scien tio u s. co n sid erate service. C a l l G R 8-7079. D E L A F I E L D T Y P IN G S E R V IC E T h eses M lm eograohing. P hotocopies M ultlU thlng. HI 2-6522. • B M .. H up tflith ln g A fter 6 OO and weekends 3217 M arguerite C ostello. G R 2-1535. iam plon Road A R E F U L L Y TIO N S, T H E S E S . M ultlU thlng D O N E D IS S E R T A ­ 900 W. 31st. G R 2-944 4 M A RTH A AVN S IV L E Y N K A A com p lete p rofessional ty p ing ir r v . Ice tailo red to th e needs of I Diver­ sity stu d ent* S p e c i a l keyboard science. equipm ent lan g u age a n d en g in eerin g theses and d;s- se rta tlo n * fo r P hon e G R 2-3210 Mora Conveniently lo c a te d At O ar New Addrest 30139, G U A D A L U PE P O R T S , E n g lish 317 B U S IN E S S A D M IN IST R A T IO N R E ­ term papers. Com plete service The**-* d issertatio n *, ty p ew riter. M cIIvaln s E le ctro m a tlc HO 5-0981 D IS S E R T A T IO N S , P O R T S Expe-rirv ad E iectro m aflc. M rs, B rad y. G R 2-4715 T H U S E S . R E ­ Rea»r gosh sakes, my copy of the April Ranger, I’ll have his ears. Got that, broad, you got that good7 Okay. W here’s your ropy of Ladies Home Journal? I'm hungry.’’ Price: H u s o s s Ranger O u t W e d n e sd a y N o t O u t Sunday or Friday "Sanger On Sale at 24th and Whitis, Geology Building, Main Mall, Speedway at Waggener, Union Mall, Bookstores and Newsstands Sunday, 'April 23, 1961 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 8 -’n c J L u c u b a r t o n o ^ e s ia n S rjCadt ZJi i m p B y A N N C I . A K K K “ W ear these costumes with pride. T h ey are the finest you will find anywhere.” These are the words of J. P a t Ringle, ex-student and Broadw ay star, spok­ en to a group of students. He was speaking of the priceless collection of period costumes designed by Miss Lucy Barton. When the curtain rises Monday night and “ Macbeth” comes to life, Miss Barton will bring to a close l l year* of devotion to the University. She will r e t i r e . As she sat before the long table in the Costume Workshop, quiet now with its rack of completed cos­ tumes, Miss Barton explained simply, “ Macbeth and D id y Macbeth are the starting point; the other char­ acters revolve about them. In many productions there is a focal point, a place of interest on which the other costumes focus. The color of the costumes may be the is particularly true in Macbeth.” focal point. T h i s “ Macbeth and L a d y Macbeth are as one in the play and the colors of their costumes form a simple pla- tette,” she said. M acbeth’s costumes, Miss Barton ex­ plained, move from dark to brown, to purple with murder of Duncan, and finally blaze brilliantly in red with the murder of Banfuo. Silk rustles as Miss Barton lightly fingers L ad y Mac­ beth’s blood-red gown. Calm and as elegant as the cos­ tumes, Miss Barton moved absorbedly explaining the details of each. The Renaissance Madxdh costumes represent a lifetime of research. In Europe Miss Barton .studied etchings on the tombs about the graves of nobility, paintings, and illustrations in old books. “ Miss Barton has the unbelievable care about de­ tail which marks an artist,” student B arb ara Word said. “ H er costumes have the quality of dramatizing the character and being authentic. She has great grasp and understanding of each period. F o r the new edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, Miss Barton wrote an article, “ Costume Design— His­ torical.” “ She is the only costume designer who has been asked to revise the subject material of the Britannica — scholarship of the highest possible order,” said Dr. IxDren F. Winship, Dram a Department chairman. “ In the actual use and making of costumes she has won every national award that is possible for a wom­ an,” he said. In 1957 Miss Barton received the South­ west Conference Aw ard of Merit. The Eaves Award, the costume design Oscar, was given to her by The American Educational Theater Association in 1960. Miss Barton has costumed 13 Shakespearean plays and all other drama department productions since her arrival at the University in 1947 from the Uni­ versity of Arizona. Inutile professional world she has been costume de­ signer for many pageants and for the Shakespearean productions of the “ (Hobe Theater” at the Chicago W orld F a ir in 1931. This was the Ix'ginning of a re­ vived interest of modern times in the plays of Shakes­ peare. Upon her retirement Miss Bai ton plans to continue lecturing, although she does not plan to costume an­ other major production. “ It is impossible to replace her. People like that are priceless,” said Dr. Winship. She leaves behind her a store of thousands of cos­ tumes cached safely away, above the biochemists, on the fifth floor of the Experimental Science Building. "IT S A L M O S T LIK E someone's bari dream,” explains Miss Bar­ ton, describing the witches' costume which is made from gray gauze. Macbeth Topic Of Cranfdl Talk Dr. Tom Cranfill, professor of Shakespeare, will discuss “ Macbeth” .at I p.m. Wednesday in the Union Auditorium. D r. C ranfills presentation of background and interpretations of the play is in conjunction with the Drama Department’s product ion April 21-29 and May I at 8 p.m. in Hogg Memorial Auditor­ ium. The Union Speakers Committee is sqjonsoring Dr. C ranfills lecture. The public is invited and there is no admission charge. T H IS C O S T U M E of M acbeth wearing drab brown is as he first appears in the play. The original M acbeth tartan colors th* plain costume of the Scottish nobel. Campus Life Feature Page T H E S C O T T IS H S O L D IE R : ays an outfit de. gned from plaid M a c >'v j f or i c -n m aters ■ v. both production. SKETCHES BY LUCY BARTON L U C Y BA R T O N , eminent Shakespearean designer, supervises the i r a! M acbeth costume fitting c f Rip Tern, well-known a tor. This is the finished creation designed f rem the above preliminary ske’ c f M a .b e th . A BLO O D -RED G O W N v. - -*e * • e ~ Lad / M r . beth. Th , i: a n example c-f hew M to bring cut the personalty c f the different characters. s c araster of , Barton u s e s colors