THE SUMME • « X 0 £ °0 ••T*S » ecjAjeg N 9908 *o g Vol. 62 Prico Rv# Cents Telephones in University ministrative offices will the new Centrex operating on telephone system at 9 p.m. F ri­ day , Jam es H. Colvin, business manager, has announced. At that time, telephone users in Austin and other cities will be able to call members of the fac­ ulty and staff direct, without go­ ing the University switchboard. Within few weeks S°H?eu 2,100 University telephones will begin using the system. t h r o u g h the next University extensions will be­ gin u s i n g new GReenwood I numbers. The University’s main number will be changed from GReenwood 6-8371 tn CRbon,W 4 ^ 0 ° 1-3434. The C e n t r e x installation is among the first in the nation and the first on a college campus in tho south, Colvin said. ’ ~ Tile business m a n a g e r ex­ plained the following features of the new system : 1. Off-campus callers may dial the extension number desired di­ rect, without the assistance of the PBX operator, if the extension number is known. 2. On-campus callers may dial local calls by first the number their own dialing “ 9,” t h e n they wish to reach. 3. Calls to other campus num­ bers may be reached by dialing the last four digits of the Cen­ trex number. The business manager s a i d that residents of women's dormi­ tories will have what amounts to private telephone service for the first time with the introduc­ tion Ca Centrex. Although individual service will furnished initially for n o t be men s dormitories, the system has been designed to add it at a later date. The system has been installed (See CENTREX, p.8) Battle Bella, a tough former ser- Beant m the French army, won his first major battle Thurs­ day for power rn newly independent Algeria. F0W~ :Ahmed ^ deputy premiers, Belkacem Krim and Moham- med Boudiaf, agreed to accept for the next month the lead- Political bureau in order to avert ratastro he6 , e d e U B a * ^ 1®f. ^ the triumphal arrival of Ben Bella and his lieutenants who were expected to take over temporary rule in the capital Friday. was B! nJ * ° USSef 060 Khodda> who remained aloof from the feud between his deputies, will remain a nominal head of the provisional government, but the policy-making power will rest in the political bureau. Under the truce reached Thursday, the seven-man bureau Will prepare general elections for Aug. 27 and then turn over Power to the National Council of the Algerian Revolu­ tion, the old revolutionary parliament. _ P ’0 f 6300 P301 checked, at least temporarily, the running political crisis that has brought economic chaos and plunged toe nation to the brink of anarchy only a month after win­ ning independence from France. Ben Bella’s political foes said they bowed to pressure for Algerian people have been wait- iTZrT'T tog for the fruits of their victories,” The prospects of more political arguments lay ahead be­ fore the struggle for power is finally resolved j The temporary solution fails to deal directly with the basic ! Problem of Algeria of the future-the army and its dis­ gruntled general staff. Headed by Col Houari Boumedienne, the general staff s fired by the Ben Khedda’s govemment-in-exile on the eve of independence. The officers of the 40,000 well-equipped troops who waited T^ isia, and M° " * * o while guerrillas carried * T !f,gh‘ lnslde Averia rallied behind Ben Bella and moved in after independence, be settled after the elections. ~ AIgeria 831(1 the Problem of the army would News In Brief.., From the Wire By th* Associated Press •IN AMA Discusses Diet Fats a n C A G ° — Hie American Medical Association approved Thurs- fc y ttie idea of modifying the type and amount of fat in the diet as an experimental means of treating hardening of the arteries mZ S Z E . £ * * — * ■ - The AMA S council on foods and nutrition said its report is not a * * °" - * * * ’ but directed * ° physkians ^ S u ^ u l k District Judge Rules on Tax A district judge handed down a far-reaching ruling Thura- C a to n e^ " * * ..Jo<>c* r a w Stole Comptroller Robert 8. v* ndor» h“ v« to rem it to the comptroller only thorn lu e s collected on sales of ti cents or m ore, and not a tax on total sales. - ‘ ° ta‘ - Communist Threat Seen An Argentine Communist leader has announced from M oscow th.* . Communist alliance with the Peronists ^KtaSS l^ab,,ln^ P0*ition to «*" a m T Z Cnti.fa ? ^ implement To tion. the fo liovved : the above regula­ fo llo w .ng rules vs iii be is (1) Any proprietor of an approved residence for men who takes one or more students to make a defi­ n ite and business-like arrangement with sin h student or students bv using the University housing con­ tract for men, provided bv the Of­ fice of the Dean of Student Life. These contracts m ay be for one sem ester or for the rine-m< nth term ( 2 ) A student Jiving in Universalv- approved hous.ng during fail semester mu.u also live in University- approved housing during the spring semester if he w a s not g h e n special permission to m ake other living arrangements by the Dean of Student Life. the Detailed in tained of Student Life. information may be ob­ the Dean tho Office of K. A. Siniager A M iii ta at Deaa *f St ade at I Ale US Must Beware Involvement in UN vote, Congress can express a direct opinion of whether the US should increase its involvement and dependence upon the UN The proponents of the bonds purchase view the UN as a super guardian of peace. The UN is credited with sav­ ing the nation of Greece from rule. Greece was communist saved from communist guerilla attack not because of UN action, but because of US military as­ sistance to the Greek government and the loss of Yugoslavia a# a sanctuary after Tito s break with Stalin in 1948. Of course, Korea sad the ara­ ge arc always cited aa examples of UN handiwork, but the in­ volvement Is too great to rontto- ae here, wad will ho dealt with at a later time. Hero, however, aa la the other eases, the pat­ tern Is the same. The UN has often played a useful role, but only to the extant that It ha# pro­ vided a medium for arranging a settlement which wa* other­ wise dictated by the realities of power politic#. The US must always be on guard to protect its sovereignty and military power from l i b e r a l idealists who wish to entrench the UN so deeply in our foreign policy that “important” nations .such as Chad and Mali can help form ulate our foreign decisions. P l W I I s WDONT WANNA PLAV BAU., HCH? (f ..... .... . . _ A A U .(*6U T .JlL SOMEONE ELSE, f l u ; . . C By RIC H ARD W E ST JR. Since 1945 and the genesis of the United Nations, a continued problem for US foreign policy has been to decide to what deg­ ree the world peace organization wall determine our foreign policy. In 1945 and well into the 1959’#, the western nation# and allies held a clear majority in voting matters In the General Assem­ bly. Bat because of the surge of new African and Aslan coun­ tries into the UN In recent years, the complexion has greyed so that today deal# and schemes have to be worked out by the US to prevent the passage of UN and subsequently US policy changes sa ch as recognising Red China. Definitions concerning the UN role are as different as Walt Ros- tow and Robert Welch. B arry Coldw ater says he fears that a too deep involvement m ay lead to a surrender of Am erican sov­ ereignty. He professes that with­ draw al is not the answ er and on­ ly offers th at “ we m ake sure, however, that the nature of our to ad­ com m itm ent is such as interests . . . vance American let them (UN) understand that victory over communism must come before the achievem ent of lasting peace." Walter Lippmann, now a con­ fessed “Kennedy democrat,” in his earlier and wiser days com­ mented to the effect that the UN was an organization designed for use after a settlement of World War II problem#, and until a ba­ sic settlement of some type is reached with the Soviet Un Jon, ti rat its supporter# should protect It from the strain# of tome* it cannot settle. “No good and nothing but harm can come of using the UN organs In an area for disputes that cannot be ort- Uppfnan stated. Today the college kids of the Kennedy council are calling for eventual world governm ent and control of A m erica’s m ilitary m uscle under the vague auspices of the UN. issue Congress has been given a un­ ique opportunity to explore and take a position on the role of the UN and the degree to which the US should depend upon that organization for its security. The im m ediate is a financial one. Congress has been asked to the purchase of 5100 authorize million worth of UN to help m eet financial crisis caused by the failure of some nations to pay their assessm ents the special UN operations for in tho Middle E ast and the Con­ go. t*>nds, the Proponents of the bond pur­ the battle chase have pitched on the issue that the passage or defeat m eans the very existence of tile UN. Thi# simply hi not true. Sec- rotary of State Ktrait #pecific*J- ly denied that the UN would have to pull out of the Middle Ea*t or the Congo lf Congress defeated this plan. An alternate, be traid, would undoubtedly be found. The question, therefore, is not one of voting for or against the existence of the UN or US par­ the ticipation, but rather, by THE SUMMER1 XAN Opinions expressed in The Texan are those o f the Editor, or o f the u riter of the article aud not necessarily those c f the I University administration. D u b S s h e d ^ S ^ A u S f i^ - f stu d en t a e w ip ip e r of T he U n iversity of Tex**, »« * ,h<> summpeak in a of Iarches BAPTIST Dr. Blake Smith, pastor of the University Baptist Church, 2130 Guadalupe St., will be in charge of the Lord’s Supper observance at the l l a.m. service Sunday. Lee Freeman, associate pastor, will speak on “God's Disobedi­ ent Servants” at the 7:30 p.m. worship service. A reception honoring Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Duke and their daugh­ ter, Karen, will follow the eve­ ning service. Pike Claims Court Misread, Distorted First Amendment The bishop of WASHINGTON (ll — B i s h o p Jam es A. Pike said Thursday the US Supreme Court misread and distorted the First Amendment in its June 25 school prayer decision. t h e Episcopal Diocese of California told sena­ tors that what is really needed is not another constitutional amend­ ment but a restating of the First Amendment "so that the Supreme Court will never be able to mis­ read establishment clause again.” the Bishop Pike, who also is an at­ torney admitted to practice be­ fore the Supreme Court, testified at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on proposed constitutional amendments to nullify the court’s decision. In a 6-1 ruling, the Supreme Court held that N ew York State school officials, by encouraging the daily recitation of a nonsec­ tarian prayer, had violated the F i r s t Amendment’s command that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of re­ ligion.” The court noted that this command was made applicable to New York S t a t e by the 14th Amendment. Asserting the United States al­ ways has steered a middle course between church-state union on the At St. Louis Chicago (Koonce 9-3) at Los Angeles (Drysdale 19-4) N Pittsburgh (MoBean 10-7) a t San Francisco (Mariohal 13-7) N . . . . . . .......... . . . . New York Lot Angeles Minnesota Baltimore . *1.«•*• ............. Cleveland . . . . . . . . . . Detroit . . . . . . . . . . (chicago ................. Boston Kansas C i t y .......... W ashington .......... Thursday's lim its Boston 7, Chicago 4 Kansas City 5, D etroit 4 Los Angeles 5 Cleveland 4 Minnesota 6, Baltim ore 3 Only games scheduled. F rid ay ’s Schedule Kansas City (Fischer 2-2) a t Cleve. land (Donovan 14-4) N Los Angeles (Lee S-7 o r McBride 11-3) a t Baltim ore (Pappas 9-6) N m > « Drtro“ < w il" n n&°)n . t B o ,tea m ^ YT£o<,7crnr 14 91 * Chlcw Announcing JAMES SAXTON UT great in action again Davis Cup Captain Sees Possible American Win MEXICO O T Y — “ We should win if we can hold our present form and not let the distractions throw u s,” Capt. Bob K elleher pre­ dicted T hursday as his Americans completed their heavy training for this the D avis Cup weekend in Mexico. tennis test a t The d raw will be held F riday afternoon the Chapel I tep ee Sports C enter for the best-of-5 se­ ries. Two singles m atches open the com petition Saturday. A dou­ bles m atch will be played Sunday with the final two singles Monday. K elleher’s optimism has been buoyed by the p ractice perform ­ ance of his No. I player, Chuck McKinley of St. Ann, Mo., who appeared a t the top of his gam e, and the encouraging im provem ent of ex-footballer Jon Douglas of Santa M onica, Calif. McKinley and Douglas are cer­ tain to g et the nod for the sin­ gles assignm ents, opposing two young M exicans whose games have been honed in A m erican col­ leges—R afael Osuna a t the Uni­ versity of Sou ti ie nm California and Antonio P alafox at Corpus Christi, Tex., University. UT Coed Bowling League Finishes Summer Series The U niversity of Texas Sum m er Trio composed of eight three- m em ber team s finished a seven- gam e series Wednesday. Leading the group in first place was the “ F ife’s T hree” composed of T rav­ is Zogheib, Bob Stew art, and K ar­ en Fife. Second place went to the “King P in s,” Les Hollands worth, John T ravis, and Roger White. The m ost im proved bowler of the Ion (tim wa s R ay Ransom who soar­ ed up from a 72 to 102 average. Bill P e rry was president of the sum m er league which m et Wednes­ day evenings in the Union lanes. Vice P resident for the league was Les Hollandsworth. E d Schroeter time-consuming excelled th a t of secretary-treasurer. job, O ther team s and team m em bers in o rd er of standings who partici­ pated the league w ere “The Studs,” Billy G ray, Bill P erry, and J. Satterw hite; “ Phi T aus,” Bill Winkler, George Wells, and Charley Borup; “ Smirnoff Trio,” Philip DeSilva, Terry Willis, and Ralph M cd esk ey ; “ Cherry’ P ick­ e rs ,” Ellen Stoesser, Gene Sc ha de, and Bob G erald; “ Jim D andies,” Ed Schroeter, Kay Ransom, and Jack H arry Ferguson; Mitchell, L arry D eats, and C aro­ lyn Fisher. Elvin P ippert and H ar­ ry Haiduk were substitutes. in his “ ??? ,” in it I* a pleaiure to announce th# appointment cf M au rice (M o) O lia n es en associate in th# Austin agency I f§ of th# Massachusetts Mutuel Insurance C om pan y R O BERT S. H E M M IC K , C I U . General A g e n t 504 W est 24th, Austin G R 8-4666 MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL Life Insurance Company Springfield, Mess. — Established t 8 5f HERES HOW TO USE YOUR NEW • O UTSIDE C A L L S Dial 9 for outside, then dial the telephone number. • IN C O M IN G C A L L S Callers from off-the-campus may reach you direct by dialing GR I- plus the four digits of your Centrex number. TRA N SFERR IN G C A L L S JA- Depress the button in the cradle of the telephone slowly several times. When the operator answers, ask her to transfer the call to the desired four-digit number. (O n-campus calls cannot be transferred. Han* up and re-dial the number.) • C A L L S TO O TH ER C A M P U S P H O N E S Simply dial the last four digits of the number. BE SURE L . • • • Your friends know your number* ^ . . . You know your friends1 numbers* SOUTHWESTERN BELL C A L L B Y N U M B S * I J TELEPHONE COMPANY k I I'1 lf Is * W Friday, Xugurt 3. 1962 THE SUMMER TEXAN Fag* I Collum Clicks Winning Pics B y CHARLES COLLUM Texan Staff Writer E xcitem ent! T hat’s w hat I like about working as a general a s­ signm ent photographer f o r The D allas M orning News. I n ev er know w here I ’m going w hen I a rriv e for work. I t m ight be an airplane crash, a m urder- suicide, a fire, an arriv al a t Love F ield, o r a donation of blood by a group of M arines. Such assignm ents a r e not un­ usual. As a m a tte r of fact, I had every them within a six-hour one of period, only a few weeks ago. The excitem ent ended with m y taking the pictures on all but one of the assignm ents. m a r i n e f a i n t s I had taken a picture of a M a­ rin e who fainted and fell to the floor afte r giving a pint of blood. The News ra n the picture cm the the Associated front page a n d P re ss sent it out nation-wide. I t w as widely used. ers a t the News for w hat the edi­ tors consider a job very well done. I am the only sum m er em ploye ev er to have won it. In addition I have been doing som e w riting for the News. to photography, O scar Hinojosa, a sum m er stu­ dent from the U niversity, and I recently took a five-day trio to M onterrey and Saltillo, Mexico. I took m any pictures on this trip and consider one of them , a shot of a little half-nude M exican boy and a burro, am ong the best I’ve ever taken. Assignm ents a re not alw ays milk and honey. There is one thing which, every­ day, I as a photographer hate, fear. and dread—the deadline. Assignm ents a re headaches when I am striving to take a picture and process it before the photo deadline—a deadline which com es m uch earlier than the re p o rte rs’. FIRES And then there a re the m essy W ell, M arines just don’t faint i ~ assignm ents. . after giving a pint of (Mood. Ask a n r Marine about that. The day the plctore cam e out en ^ motor hotel, the “ •?** “ **• Climbing “ v- • down- the front page, a flood of phone I " " 1**** ° f **“*” - 0<, *?'h* ,rom calla began to poor Into the c it,: fly m en * * ® finally reached the roof I desk. \ ,aIrc* dy dren«h«d. Most of the people were ex-Ma- * I bn f 00* c * j P O C C C C C I k ir L i t e x r y b b t b b lN t o H IS Typical broad smile. Charles Collum, University sophomore currently a sum- the Dallas M ornin g mer photographer tor I I .f • i A , , P hoto by B ill W in frey n . .» News tries Burnett, comedian, into a picture See C o l l u t * picture of a Mexican child and a burro, page l! fram * SUMMER TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINES Tuesday Texan................ Monday 3:00 p.m. Friday Texan............... Thursday 3:00 p.m. Call GR 2-2473 Furnished Apartments Rooms for Rent Hom es A-BAR HOTEL Sum m er rates: $6.25 a w eek-double $10.00 a w eek -sin gle air conditioned p r o f e s s o r s - f a c u l t y S T U D E N T S lik e W e w ould to h e lp y o u e s ta b ­ lish resid en cy . N ew hom es. 7 m in u te s fro m E sta b lish e d hom es a n d re n ta ls. C all fo r J im D ean t h e U n iv ersity . 2612 G uadalupe CR 6-5658 j an d A M «-ia't « . 2_6553' B u sin ess GD 2-2998 s t a n R o d * e r, I o r Tines o r M arine’s m others. They did not like the picture because they felt it m ade the m arines look ° like sissies. sank ta * P001 of ta r, , {J ’ m y ®ho€* •a®k toto a P001 AND FLOODS One woman said she was afraid K hrushchev would see the picture. As a photographer, I expect the unexpected though the unexpected on an assignm ent can be h eart­ breaking as it was on m y most un- forgetable assignm ent. EXPRESSWAY ACCIDENT The news editor called back to the photo departm ent and told m e to get out to a m ajo r accident on the Expressw ay. d u rin g the recent D allas flood, I spent half the day w a d i n g through mud and w ater up to m y knees. Assignm ents can be dangerous too. Photographers are o f t e n a t­ tacked by persons who do not w ant their pictures taken. The v ery day that I am w riting this story, I had a close shave with a “ 200- plus-pound” woman! an _ I arrived at the seen#* of 7 was sent to rn j w ! bal! which cider* ju st as an am bulance w a s ! wm« rM ed for gam bling. A td- boy owned It. His “200- leaving with an injured m an. H is ! 37-year-oJd wife cam * in a sheet. An am bulance attendant I s c a r in g at the police and photo- that the had pronounced She lay face down on the rain * ! P°b<*« w ere not going to d o s e the the PIare *“d that no one was going lay covered with pbw-pound” m o t h e r graphers, shouting both her dead. ATTRACTIVE AIR - CONDITIONED Apt*. Clean, curtains, ood les closet space, refrigerator w ith freezer, nice range. W alk to classes or tow n Cou­ ple. $69.50. GR 6-8025. H I 2-8164. AIR CONDITIONED One Bedroom . Paneled. Gas-W ater. Colorful. $74.50- 1102 W est 22nd. GR 8-8084. $79.50 GR 8-9125. PLAY BOYS N ew tw o bedroom m odern apart- m ent. H an gin g fireplace. Beam ed c e il­ ings. Terrazo floor. W ood p an e ls an d brick liv in g room. T ile bath. Built-In kitchen, dressers, and closets. Very private. Off street parking—near U ni­ versity Room for 3 or 4. 3408 W est Avenue. Open. To rent call GD 3-7943. RAVINE TERRACE. P E R F E C T baek- ground for m odern living. 2053 Sab­ ine. Share apartm ent—room s 901 W est 24th, GR. 8-5528. CR 2-7776. Q U IT LO O K IN G A V A IL A B L E F O R IM M E D IA T E OCCUPANCY GARAGE A PA R T M E N T — A ir-co n d i­ tio n e d —C o m p letely fu rn is h e d w ith tile b a th — % block to T ow nes H a ll—$75.00 the side of slick street by w recked pick-up truck .h e mg. ane w as alone except for the another photographer did. ti0nS' etC' N ea r U niversity. t HRSES. D ISSERTATIONS. PORTS. P rofessional R E - ty p in g done in m y hom e. R easonable rates. F our campus. Mrs. Bodour. bb)cks UK o-oll3. from E% £EI?IENCED TY PIN G , R EPO R T, T hesis, etc.. Electric. Mrs. H unter. ViLj o~o546. Printing S H O R T ON T Y P I N G , tim e and m o n e y ? M iss G ra h am G L 3-5725. For Q U A L IT Y P R IN T IN G Call Multiprint Co. P rin tin g GR 2-2447 D uplicating E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IN G S E R V IC E C all re a so n a b le . a n d Ac™ r a te HO 5-5813. T H E MOONLIGHTERS—I . B.M. Mul- tilithine A fter 6:00 an d weekends. 3217 M arguerite Costello. GR 2-1535 H am pton Road M ailing T H E M E S . LAW N O TES, o u tlin e s d o u b le sp a ce GR 6-4717. 25c T heses — D issertation s — R eports Jou rn als — Custom B indings U NIVERSITY BOOKBINDERS 203 East 19th S treet GR 2-9803 P la stic sp iral binding. * - - - - - - - - - -iV»*OlVlAruWIAl Alterations Virginia Calhoun Legal Typing Service Symbols GR 8-2636 2914 Beanna N o ta ry P u b lic P h otocop yin g Special Services A LTERATIO NS AND DRESSM AKING 715 W est 25th S tr e e t GR 6-3360. R E N T — PURCHASE T .V .’a T elevision Rental. GR 2-2692. Alpha Swim and Pay? GALVESTON (A—A city-county committee is considering charging motorist* admission to Galveston beaches. Galveston Mayor Theodore B. Stubbs said Wednesday a commit* tee of city, county, tourist bureau and chamber of commerce offi­ cials is determining the feasibility of a beach charge for cars. “I am convinced that so-called free beaches are likely to be dirty beaches/* he saki. Stubbs said if a charge is con­ sidered necessary, only motorists will have to pay. Pedestrians will enter free. S o m e county officials contend there is not enough money in the county budget for an all-out cam­ paign to keep the 32 miles of beaches free of trash and debris. The suggested charge, however, has met opposition f r o m local and state officials. Prothro lo Give Recital Dale Prothro will give a piano recital at 4 pm . Friday in the Music Building Recital Hall. The recital will be g i v e n in partial fulfillment of the require­ ments for the degree of bachelor of music. In the program are “Sonata in G Major** by Haydn; “Two Pre­ ludes and Fugue in D Minor and F Major** by Bach; and “Concerto in D Minor, K. 466** by Mozart. Cecile Skaggs will be at the sec­ ond piano. T O D A Y A T I N T E R S T A T E A my sot a mom DISCOUNT CARO s p u r n s : w \ m u s c m c n t Ador Chariot Laughton Still in Fair Condition Charles Laughton, 63, veteran stage and screen actor was re­ ported by officials of Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles to be somewhat improved after a recent bout with eomplieations following surgery for a collapsed vertebra. The officials said that the actor, whose most recent role was that of Senator Scab Cooley in “Ad­ vise and Content/* had had his name removed from their list of patients in poor condition and placed with those who are listed as in fair condition. ROBERT PRESTON as Professor H a ro ld Hill, whose high-pressure sales techniques extend to his personal life, sells a picture o f a rosy future to M arian, the librarian, in ' The M usic M an 1 currently showing a t the State. "Music Man" Sharp B y L Y N N E M C D O N A L D Amid the cackle and rattle of train wheels and the exuberant salesman, singing of Professor Hill’s knowledge (rf the territory, The Music Man arrives in River City. He is greeted in this almost too typical t u r n-of-the-century, Mid- Western town by the folk singing of their Iowa stubbornness. This sets the mood and enter Marian, the librarian, beautifully played by Shirley Jones. Robert Preston, our music man and trombone peddler, proceeds to follow dear Marian to her doorstep. th Inside, we next f i n d Marian with mid-V i c t o r i a n furniture, a small girl-type p i a n o stu­ dent arvt red-h e a d e d lolly mother. Upon hearing Marian re-1 late in hushed and haughty tones j “ A man with a suitcase has been! following me all over town,” re-! plies with a healthy America fun I answer that “he might be your very last chance.” Naturally this brings a case of melancholy upon Marian, prompting her to s i n g quite effectively good-night to her someone. All goes well and the plot devel­ ops in the good obi American tra­ dition; in this case, Professor Hill continues to follow Marian, Marian continues to be cool, Professor Hill peddles trombones. The townsfolk are brilliantly colorful and are taken in by the professor’s Elmer Gantry brand of salesmanship, be­ coming completely convinced that pool will destroy the youth of River City. The only salvation is, of course, a boys’ band with 76 trom ­ bones and spangled, red uniforms. There are hitches in the Hill-plan to convert the youth of River City to good, clean young men and line his pockets at the sam e time. The suspicious school board members, all of whom have disagreed with one a n o t h e r for years, are charmed by Hill into forming a barbershop quartet which occupies | itself with harmonizing instead of halting Hill. Chief obstacle to Hill's plans is the mayor, played by Paul Ford. He is most suspicious of Pro­ fessor Harold Hill and the think system of music instruction and is the one who sics the school board on Hill. fast-talking. He Harold Hill spends the majority of the movie being bright, bouncy, soon has and each and every boy enlisted in the band and parents forking over money to him like mad. But the real trouble starts when an anvil the salesman, an arch rival of music man, appears to expose Hill’s whole plan as a fraud. M ar­ ian is beside herself to discover that Hill has a girl in every town and wonders whether or not to meet him on the foot-bridge, R iv ­ e r C it y ’s to Mount Don­ nell. As this will have been her first trip in 26 years to the foot­ bridge and as she does find Hill attractive, she goes. In the final scene, we h a v e tarred and to be Harold about feathered by the good people of River City. But miracle of miracle —the think system does work and we have assorted boys clad in bedraggled u n i f o r m s painfully producing a version of “ Minuet in G.” This is done in front o f great­ ly astonished parents who immedi­ ately realize what the professor has done for River City. He has brought love and joy to them all. The final shot is another miracle in w h i c h we have the band changed by the power of faith and love into a beautifully uniformed, wonderfully on-key a n d in-step band playing ” 76 Trombones.” Producer, director Morton Da- Costa has done a magnificent job with the movie. There is never a lag in pace The film is cheerful and gay, so much so that minor too much points such as a Iowa corn are easily overlooked. tad /t^ rn A IND NOW ON THE MOTION PICTURE SCREEN! ...the story of that man* and his76 trombones and the wonderfulwonderful * tune he played on every heart in town I * Meredith V/illson'S WIW?-J-’-* / K U S I C A i a i r N O W S H O W I N G ! PKK FORMA NC KS AT 2 :« t P .M .—8:00 P.M FOURTH AND FINAL WEEK! •»*> A * "MST PICTURE" Winner at IO Aeadam jf Am om al "Saparb . . John Ba* ti a Ame r. S O Im b u Adatis C h i l d M AT. .1.25 . . . .SO .. K VK. Lower Balcony . 1 . M ____ 1.25 SO .. .Of m sm y*. .W&P: i L ist S u sp en d ed N O W S H O W I N G ! G R E A T D O U B LE FE A T U R E T H E M O S T . M A R V E L O U S M O V I E E V E R M A D E ' F R O M T H E P L A Y T H A T K E P T ‘ P L A V I N G F O R E V E R ! srwMC WIT M W JERRY LEWIS I IN HIS B I G G E S T L A F F A T H O N ! JOI UL FORD • PROOUCEDftND M B Bt MORTON DaCOSTA o Bt m u m m CWB BY EMKR HMGR9R T E C H N IR AMA* • T E C H N IC O L O R * • P R E SE N T E D BV W A R N ER B R O S . | Warner Bn* Records' SOUND TRACK ALBUM roteble now at your fworfa dealer. ■ 3 5 from CH O IC E c o r n - f e d h e a v y I boof sarved with French cola potatoes and I triad slaw. r / I H A “ SAH SACK'* Of “DKLiNQUEKT” at t:M NOW SHOWING STATE F e a ta rM l l :0#-l :S7-4 :14 w X . D . C . A la ite 1.SS .Eft C h i l l M 4 Convento*! Locations in Austin it * * * f b * JT Mr J (A w L^ YrD^A N D ,FR,END 'n one °* scenes from "Harold Lloyd s World of Comedy," which starts its run at the Texas Theater Munday. the movie is composed of films made decades ago when oyd was one of the best comedians on celluloid. Included in the mot,on picture is the most famous of the Harold Lloyd exploits, the scene rn which he hangs from the edge of a window sill of a skyscraper. THE U N M A T C H A B L E PETER SELLERS You Loved in "Only Two Can Play" and "Lolita" —- Now See Him in a Totally Different Role! Shocking! Suspenseful! Exciting! N E V E R TARRING PETER SELLERS • RICHARD TODD • ELIZABETH SELLARS “ A Mila’* Fine Art* Theatre” I ) r * s " t h e •’O n Op** I M F f tta r n : I IS S M C A P I T O L NOW! DOOM OPEN li ts Far Entire Family A HITTS Tic (HILD S5r T r a r m r FIRST SHOW 7:45 Ariette 7#e. C hild («-!2) 25c 1'ndcr ( Wit— ••LII Toot” Start* 6:45 Friday, August 3, 1962 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 7 Triple Play Scores gyrations did nothing, absolutely point* which m ight seem , on the nothing, to im prove audience con surface, lo be of a highly esoteric centration during the critical mo­ nature. On reflection enc m ents of the d ra m a ’s finish. finds, however, that by a kind of osmosis be ha* ascertained much m ore in the way of social criti­ cism than l r had a t first imagined —ami com pletely painlessly. “ This P roperty Is Condem ned” is m ore of a th eater piece than a play. Although there are two ch aracters on stage, Tennessee Williams has given m ost of the is lines sort of an em bryonic Blanche Du- Bois. to the girl, Willie, who later B y HAYDEN FREEM A N Texan Amusement* E ditor The D epartm ent of D ra m a ’s sec­ ond and the su m m er session, “ Triple P la y ,” included one error, one disputed call, and one hit. last production of 4 *r read and widely A dapting Shirley Jack so n ’s ex- : orient short story; “ The L ottery,” for the stage was an e rro r in the first place and despite good direction by J a m e s Moll and generally ade­ quate acting by* the cast, the sus­ pense and horror generated by th e tight craftsm anship of Miss Jackson's prose is diffused in the stage version. A segm ent of the play including F reda Furm an and Dick Polk cam e d o s e to the tension of the original and above average per­ form ances w ere also turned in by Alna Causey and Vicky Wither spoon. The young person who played the la tte r two s son is perhaps the leading exponent of the St. Vitus Flayed with im m ense under­ by Kaye Hood, Willie standing cam e brilliantly alive in all of her passionate paradox and path­ os. tim e. As Tom, A m ost difficult assignm ent for any actor is to do little, o r nothing, for a sustained period on stage of “This P rop­ e rty ’s ” second ch aracter, David D annenbaum was called upon to be little m ore than a foil for Wil­ lie’s monologues and he did an ex­ cellent job of it. The undisputed chef d 'oeuvre of the evening’s entertainm ent was "The Am erican Dream'* by E d­ ward Albee. Turning repeated ba ra ry 0'Amebic ai? l r a ry A m erican th eater and hts , fraying weapons Albee m akes “ J f T ^ “ “ * * S,W~ i t THE UNIVERSITY’S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 E IC O D YN A K IT G A R R A R D GLASER-STEERS b e l l M cI n t o s h J e n s e n S e r v i n g th * U n iv * r» ity A r * * f o r 12 Y e a r* EEDWAY H IG H FIDELITY A T R E A SO N A B LE PRICES' Eat Mexican Food Once A Day! “ T h ea ter of the A bsurd,” as the genre in which Albee w rites has come to tie called, shows signs of j becom ing the first avant garde the m ovem ent in the history of I stage to gain popular acceptance in the early days of its form ation. P erh ap s the best of the Ameri­ can practitioners of the form , Al­ bee has w ritten, in “ The A m erican D re a m ,” a textbook exam ple of how everyday homilies and run-of- the-m ill situations can be selected and tw isted in such a w ay as to be rap ie r sharp com m entary. The U niversity production left little lo be desired, but one wishes that D irector Moil had been able lantern to r e s i s t interpolating there. (In fact one wishes th a t lh#* entire D epartrrirnt of D ram a would deciare a com plete m oratorium on the use of the slides except when a large com m ittee of advisers vote unanim ously th at they a re abso­ lutely necessary.) All of the actors w ere laudable with prim e laurels for the play as well as the total evening going to Kaye McCullough as G randm a. She handled with perfection the old senile dam e’s rapid shifts and pointless carping to shrew d and w arm com ment. from Donna Atchison and Irvin Dun­ lap w ere fine as M ommy and Dad­ dy who live in the sterile world of the euphem ism , where the word is not only taken for the deed, but ac­ tually becom es it. P a t E vans as M rs. B arke- proved herself to be as talented a I com edienne as she is d ram atic ac­ tress and alto, which is high praise indeed. The A m erican D ream , personi­ fied by P a t Rucker as The Young Man, w as som ething of a night­ m are in w heat jeans leering im­ potently t h r o u g h Pepsodonted teeth and proclaim ing his willing­ ness to “ do anything for m oney.” role well, though apparently inw ardly cring­ ing at som e of the lines Albee has put in his mouth. R ucker handles the The idea of doing several som e­ what experim ental one act plays together is an excellent one ami would probably be wrell received an an annual custom . EL MAT 504 East Av*. G R 7-7023 EL TORO 1601 Guadalupe G R 8-4321 EL CHARRO 912 Red River G R 8-7735 MONROE'S "Mexican Food to Take Hom e" G R 7-8744 Delivery Service 7 Days Austin's “Big Four” in Authentic Mexican Food CAPITOL I Day Only SAT. Aug 4th COM P L U T E S H O W S : S T A G E S H O W S : ! * # ! : W S :««-7: J5-I0 1 H I-4 5 I :«M:BEUEvl p a ^ o the dead RETURN? do You Believe m G H O fT f I ■MIS! IIKIV K I N T H KAT ICF; BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:10 A OMISSION “Or M A N W H O SH O T LIBERTY V A L A N C E Jw*#* Stewart. John Wayne Starts 7:3* w a r o f t h e w o r l d s Gene Barry. Ann Robinson Start* H 48 S M U M 3906 S. CONGRESS IHUVE-IN THEATRE BOX OFFICE OPENS 6 : 3 9 ADMISSION 70c C A P E FEAR Gregory Peek. Robert Witch nm Folly Bergen Start* 7:3# y e l l o w m o u n t a i n T ri Barker. M a l i Powers _____ Starts 9:31 l i n i e r FM IISG V E technicolor Plus! C A R T O O N CARNIVAL Adati* 70c Child 6-12. 25c BURNET*<4 arf Ckild Fader 6 Free OPEN AT t : 4* • IST SHOW 7:45 PLAYGROUND A FINE FOODS C O M E EARLY! A V O ID THE R U SH Two Great Stars Together for the First Time IN PERSON I Q ^^MrZrHoumocD I MU yfO U SE e m ll WIK DUD \TheMtm Bl \WhoShotwk \Z ib e r ty \ s ta n c e “HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILL EXTRA: ZSTAGE Giant Twist Contest FREE PRITTS T O THE W IN N E R S SERVICE, A N D C A M E R A REPAIR. STURMAN Photo Service Telephone G R 6-4326 222 Wet# 19th P l U C I Kifbwd W id ai ark r i W 3 , Lee jr. Cobb “THE TRAP" a r c o lo b friday. August 3, 1962 THE SUMMER TEXAN P ay 8 Police Protection Promised Picketers 9 By HUEY MCNEALY The Austin Police Department assured Students for Direct Ac­ tion of protection Tuesday provid­ ed only law abiding citizens en­ in legal and peaceful ac­ gage tivities such as the picket demon­ strations in front of the Forty Ac- cres Club. This pledge of protection came after an unidentified assailant struck picketer Philip Russell, fracturing R ussell’s nose. Further incidents were reported by picketers, who said trash was Swedish Abortion Sought by Finkbine By ASSOCIATED PRESS These were the latest develop­ ments in reaction to the d r u g thalidomide, a tranquilizer blamed for causing i n f a n t deformities when taken by women in early pregnancy: f j O S ANGELES-—Scandinavian s a i d Sherri Finkbine, Airlines to seeking an abortion abroad avoid a deformed b i r t h , had booked passage to fly to Sweden with her husband. M rs. Finkbine. Phoenix, Ariz., television actress and m other of four norm al children, had taken the drug. M rs. Finkbine, alm ost t h r e e m onths pregnant, was re ­ fused an abortion in her home state. She has said there is not enough tim e for h er to seek a legal abortion elsew here in the United States. SWEDEN GRANTS ABORTIONS STOCKHOLM-—A spokesm an for Sweden’s National Board of H ealth said it has granted all abortion r e ­ quests it has received from wom­ en who had taken thalidomide. thrown from second and third floor windows of the exclusive dub Wednesday noon. Russell, the injured University student, said that his attacker stopped him and asked the aim of the demonstration. After Rus­ sell explained SDA’s purpose, the student replied, “You think they should let niggers in here?,” then struck him. “After he struck me, the man ran about half block south on Guadalupe where he fled in a waiting 1956 Chevrolet/' Rus­ sell said. in the When asked the effect of Tues­ day’s incident on the future of the protest, Boren Chertkov, SDA acting chairman, said, “ We shall continue our peaceful, non-violent typical American action tradition. However, we will not hesitate to file charges for physi­ cal assault or abusive language.” The SDA is protesting the al­ leged University involvement with the Forty Acres Club. The club caters to the faculty, ex-students, and friends of the University of Texas. The SDA maintains that the club the University under the present ar­ rangements, and this affiliation is hurting the University. is affiliated with Sheets handed out by the SDA alleged that a required graduate seminar was the Qub. scheduled at Dr. H. Malcolm Macdonald, professor of government, said “ the sem inar scheduled for F rid ay was changed to the Union five days be­ fore the pickets were started. We simply found it was not feasible. We are taking no position in the righteous controversy. m oral simple common sen se.’’ indignation, I t ’s not but are not M acdonald said the “graduate get-togethers reg u lar sem inar courses, but a re to give all graduate students a chance to m eet listen for discussion and to scholarly speakers in a social atm osphere. Centrex... (Continued from Page One) by Southwestern Ben Telephone Company at a cost of m m than 1500,000. It can be expanded to take c a r e of the University's need* for a number of years. The regular staff directory pub­ lished in the fall will contain an new Centrex numbers. This Is a partial list of some of the m m important changes. Deans: AAS: John Alton Buntine, GR 1- ' BA; John Arch White, GR I- 5335 1447 E d.: C. C. Calvert, GR 1-1744 Eng.: William Walsh Hagerty. GR 1-1166 GR 1-1655 Fine Arts: E. William Doty. Pharmacy: Henry Matthew Bur- lage, GR 1-1244 Arch.: Phillip Douglas Creer, y ' Grad.: W. Gordon Whaley, GR GR 1-1922 1-7151 Dr. Kerr to Speak EJ I | A t Aqua Festival | Dr. Walter IC. Kerr, Internation­ ally known minister, lawyer, and] youth worker from Tyler, will bel main speaker at the Austin Aqua Festival's Inter-Faith Festival, to I be brid In the Municipal Audi-j Corium at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday.! A graduate af the Untvemityl Dr. Kerr has been associate min-1 liter of the University Methodist! Church and pastor of the Central! Methodist Church, both in Austin. I He was president of the Austin | Kiwanis Chib and is now execu- I tive director of the Youth Crusade | for God and Freedom, an inter- I national organization with head- | | quarters in Tyler. Law: Page Keeton, GR 1-1221 Grad. L. S.: Robert Raymond Douglas, GR 1-3821 Grad, S. W .: Lora Lee Peder­ son, GR 1-5672 Div. of E xt.: J. R. D. Eddy, GR 1-1363 Div. of Admissions: Wm. Byron Shipp, GR 1-5321 ^Auditor: G. C. Starnes, GR 1- »<*nof Students: G. E. Barnett, GR 1-1341 Dean of Men: GR 1-5161 Dean of Women: Margaret Peck. GR 1-3763 Loans and Scholarships: John G. Steele Jr., GR 1-3815 Men’s Residence Halls: Helen Deathe, GR 1-7434 TSP: L. L. Edmonds, GR 1-5244 Student Employment Bureau: W J. Hah, GR 1-5661 GR 1-1824 Health Center: P. L. White ' Dean of Student L ife: A. Now- otny, GR 1-1341 Women’s Residence Halls: Jane Greer, GR 6-6611 13nreSident' J * R ‘ Smiley’ GR 2- Traffic and Security: A. R. Ham­ ilton, GR 1-3131 Chancellor: Harry H. Raniwm Ford Aids Studies The University has been named as one of six United States uni­ versities that will share a $1 mil­ lion grant from the Ford Founda­ tion to strengthen the nation’s re­ lationship with Latin America. A “critical deficiency” exists in the United States knowledge of Latin America, the Ford Founda­ tion’s announcement stated, and the grant is being made to in­ crease the nation’s research and training resources on contempor­ ary Latin America. The five other universities par­ ticipating in the experiment are Columbia, Harvard, California at Berkeley, California at L o s An­ geles, a n d Minnesota. Selected ! Latin American universities will also participate. The program is being directed by the Social Science Research Council, which was the recipient of the grant, and will last three years. During this p e r i o d , Hic United States universities will send 12^or more faculty members to carry o u t research projects in Latin America. An equal number of faculty members from the Latin American universities will engage in similar project* in the United States. Supervisor for the program is Dr. Schuyler C. Wallace, retired dean of Columbia’* school of in­ ternational affairs. Dr. Joe Neal, director of the University's International Office, will direct the submitting of Uni­ versity plans and projects. He says the program wUl d e f i n i t e l y “strengthen our international pro­ gram, especially as it relates to Latin America,” It is “designed to strengthen the institutional thrust of the University.” Rather than language and litera­ ture, research will be concentrated upon the social sciences. John B. Howard, director of the Found a I tion’s International Training and Research program, s a i d “ there are shortages both of outstanding social scientists and professional persons devoting major time to this region and of younger scho­ lars entering contemporary Latin American studies.” A tte n d O ur Grand Open SATURDAY, AUGUST 4 FREE GIFTS • SPECIAL GIFTS FOR OUR FIRST 300 CUSTOMERS • REGISTER FOR 20 SIFT CERTIFICATES TO BE GIVEN DURING OUR OPENING WEEK DISCOUNT PRICES # REGULAR e o u r PRICES PRICES 3.98 — 4.98 — 5.98 — 2.90 3.90 4.90 Over $1.00 per record dis- count on all multi-record set albums. I | | REBATES A SERVICE • SAVE MUSIC MART RE­ CEIPTS— 10% GOOD ON NEXT PURCHASE! • WE OFFER A SPEEDY SPECIAL ORDER SERV­ ICE. IF WE DONT HAVE YOUR CHOICE IN STOCK WE WILL ORDER PROMPTLY AT NO EXTRA CHARGE. The Music Mart 2106 GUADALUPE Next Door to Goodell-W ooten Dormitory "Records and Service Are Our Business-Our Only Business"