>2: Brave Nev Play Fray Under W a y Today A By DIANNE M ILLER record 2,064 participant* from 556 high schools will enter competition in the University In­ terscholastic League State Meet on campus Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Headquarters for the contests will tie located in Gregory Gym. Information on registration, hous­ ing, rebates, and other m atter* may be obtained there during the following hours: Thursday from I to IO p.m .; Friday from 8 a.m. to IO p.m .; and Saturday from 8 a m. to 6 p.m. One-aet play contestants, however, will register in Hogg Auditorium. Events are scheduled in de­ speaking bate, extemporaneous poetry’ interpretation, prose read­ journalism, number sense, ing, shorthand, ready writing, one-act play, rule, slide science, and typewriting. Sport* events are golf, tennis, and track and field. The League's main purpose is to assist students in their prep­ aration for citizenship by furn­ ishing m eans for sportsmanship in competitive events of all types —literary, academ ic, and athlet­ i c -thus providing a background for problems and situations that will arise in years to come. Stu­ dents of public elementary, jun­ ior high, and high schools of Tex­ as m ay compete. The one-act play division will lead off the state m eet Thurs­ day at 4 15 p.m. in Hogg Audi­ torium, Four plays will bp pres­ ented at that tim e. At 7:30 p.m. four more plays in the B con­ test will continue. Winners will be presented their award* im­ m ediately following the perform­ ances. Other one-act play session* a rt scheduled for Friday at 4:15 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. and Saturday at 4:15 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Tickets per session are $1 for adult* and 50 cent* for student* and may be purchased in Gregory Gym, M em orial Stadium, or Hogg Aud­ itorium. F iv e conferences are compet­ ing rn the academ ic and literary event* beginning Thursday at 8 p m and continuing until noon Saturday. Results of these con­ tests will be posted at head­ quarters. The first round of golf m atches will begin at 8 a.m . Frid ay and will be followed by the second round starting a t 8 a.m . Satur­ the Austin Municipal day at Golf Course. Five conferences are included in this oomperitwxn; B, A, AA, AAA, and AA AA. Tennis play will begin at 9 a.m . Friday. AU divisions of AAA A the Penick boy* will play on C'Hirts; B boy*, all divisions (Mi Caswell Courts; and AAA and AAAA girls, all divisions on Girls Courts Track preliminaries will start at. 9 a.m . Friday and field event* will begin at 7 p.m. Friday in Memorial Stadium. Final com­ petition will begin at I p.m. Sat­ urday, also in Memorial Stadium. in­ clude the annual League B reak ­ festivities will Additional fast and State Meeting of Dele­ gates to be held at 7 .30 a rn, Friday in the Crystal Ballroom, D nskili Hotel. Tickets, available at headquarters, a r t $115 per person. A reception for delegates to the Interscholastic League P res* Conference State Convention will the Capital City he given by P res* Association Thursday from 7 30 to IO p m. in the Auditorium of the Texas Union. Convention sessions will be heid in Batts Auditorium Frid ay and and Saturday mornings, workshops will be held in room* designated in the program F ri­ day afternoon. A dinner win be held Friday at 6:30 p m, in the Main Ballroom of the Texas Un­ ion. Mary Graham, new CBA sweetheart, qratulafions from Suzie Hammond, last ) officers of CBA Council are John C ope, , vice-president; Schem e W atson, secretary t re a s u re r. nd C^r- t. New Duggan, Aguren, Praddy Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, THURSDAY, M A Y 3, 1962 First C o lle ge Daily in the South Governors Ransom Answers Queries By BARBARA TOSCH Student* are more ' ‘engaged,” more aware of what education is J all about, Chancellor H arry H. Ransom told m embers of Gambia Phi B eta sorority in a Texas To­ day and Tomorrow presentation Wednesday night. In noting change* at the Univer­ sity in his three decades here, Dr. Ransom said students had gamed more independence, self-assurance, and had a longer perspective. A false myth has grown, along with the size of the campus, that i students will “get lost” here, he • said. "A ctually, the University has i more means of helping students who ‘think’ they are lost than a I city or industry of the sam e size.” I The U niversity^ image also has I changed, " I t ’s mission, its reason­ able obligation to become a great University, is pretty wide spread, but as fa r as newly found emi- j nence, this i* a false impression i This ha* always been a good ! school.” In the question and answer per- I iod, Dr. Ransom encouraged the J oo-eds to “fire at w ill,” because “This program Is a two-way ex­ change and we need and want to get to know what students want to know, w h e r e they think we’re failing.” HOUSING RULER students Asked for a justification for the University’s “ c u s t o d i a l care” regarding ap- granted : proved housing, Dr. Ransom ob­ served that this “ custodial c a re ” has “ diminished rapidly since the w ar” and that such rules are most­ ly influenced by parents, “ So many of the requests for changes In rules students want theoretically but not p ractically,” he said, brandishing a cigarette. “If all rules were removed, the i first to fuss would be student re j> j resentatives.” “ Recruiting faculty is not just salaries, although we are failing here.” the Chancellor said in re­ sponse to another query. “ Another consideration is being able to off­ er faculty m em bers good physical to B E B facilities.” He referred ; classrooms as good “ teaching m a­ chines” and said some of the early buildings were too monumental. the Asked “If so many graduates in , English were trusted to teach most courses, why | of weren’t they trusted to grade their own students’ finals,” he said this I wag a myth. freshman than a hundred “ Some of the best teacher* are the very young, and years ago, teachers more agreed that they had been passing some students that shouldn’t have been passed. So they gave a uni­ for a measurement, form not to determine a grade. This is a common device across the coun­ try .”’ final FACULTY AMBARIES D r. Ransom said the University ! lost some faculty mem bers had just because of salary, but that I this was a small percentage. O th -* er the factors are promotion, “ promise of a million dollar lab, as in one case,” and said that “ wives are not this picture.” inconspicuous in ; Dr. Ransom expressed unaware­ ness at seniors being asked for ex­ cuses if not attending Commence­ ment after the “ required attend­ ance” rule had supposedly been I rescinded. “This is not my area any more, since I ’m now in the central administration. Personally, I never went to any commence­ ment of my own. I ’m against that kind of regulatory life but I can understand why the commence- ment committee would want to en­ courage attendance.” * Nearly t me Mos- ; lent*, slam as European extrem ­ is:.* tried desperately to provoke I civil war in a savage bid to block Algerian independence. In Algiers alone, where an earth- I shaking dockside booby-trap bomb I blast took 96 lives at one blow, a ' reported 98 persons died and 140 were w o u n d e d in terrorist at- ; tacks, making it the bloodiest sin­ gle day in the modem history of Algeria’s capital, • The blast hurled jagged pieces of : m etal and chunks of stone, and for a few moments alm ost touched off the anti-European mob repri­ sals the Secret Army seeks to pro­ voke, In Oran, a mob of screaming Europeans shot six Moslems dead while French so ld ie rs and police looked on without making a move. The extrem ists hope that wide­ touched off by spread violence the force their outrages will French army to step in, renewing the Algerian war after seven year s. But thus far the Moslems have in completely remained alm ost check. The aim of is determined the secret army, which lo upset President Charles de Gaulle’s cease-fire with the nationalists and defeat Algerian independence, apparently was two-fold; • Incite Moslems into an orgy of vengeance in which the French army would have intervene against Moslems to protect Euro­ peans. to • Keep the Moslems from getting work and worsen their desperate economic plight. A Moslem nationalist told news- j men the continued terror was m a k -1 mg it harder and harder to con­ trol the masses. “ This sort of tiling cannot go on eternally,” he said. Terrorists I 0 Algei A LG IERS I V The outlaw Euro­ pean Secret Army, slaughtering Moslems with explosives and gun­ fire, perpetrated Wednesday its worst Algerian bloodbath since the M arch 19 cease-fire ending the Algerian war. Government offi­ cials said Wednesday HO persons were killed and 147 wounded. By Th* Associated Pres* Attorney Denies Report Eichmann to Adopt Girl COLOGNE. Germany — Adolf E ich m an n * German a t t o r n e y term ed “ complete nonsense” Wed­ nesday a report from israel that to the doomed Nazi has agreed adopt a 16-year-old Canadian or­ phan girl who admires him. of “I ’ve heard some nutty things,” attorney Robert Servati- is us about the craziest I ’ve come across in a long time, ‘ told newsmen. “ But this The Tel Aviv newspaper Maariv had said Eichmann had a keel his to take care of the wife, Vera, girl. F a u b u s for Fifth Term L IT T L E ROCK — Gov. Orval F a u bu* decided Wednesday to run for an unprecedented fifth term against six Democratic oppon­ ents—one of them the man who gat e him his state jKilitical start. CC Supports Proposals WASHINGTON The US Cham­ ber of Commerce killed and then revived a resolution Wednesday giving limited support to President Kennedy’s proposals federal aid to companies and workers damaged by rising imports under the pending trade expansion pro­ gram. for N A T O Decision A s k e d ATHENS, G reece—West G er­ many served notice Wednesday it will push the Atlantic Alliance powers for a decision on making NATO a nuclear strike force de­ spite objections of some mem­ bers Shipment Ban Sought WASHINGTON—The administra­ tion asked Congress Wednesday for permanent authority to pro­ hibit shipment of strategic m ater­ ials to SinoSoviet bloc countries. Third Shot Fired In Current Series W A SH IN G T O N - U S atomic i it I lad the explosive equivalent of the size of | anywhere from one to several mil- experts stepped up their nuclear P acific Wednesday, exploding one { By contrast, in the million-ton range. the atom ic bomb in World It was the third nuclear device I War II was rated at 20,000 lewis j dropped on Hiroshima lion tons of TNT, test shots the in fired in the atmosphere since current test s e r i e s started one week ago in mas Island. the of TNT. the vicinity of Christ- ; ation Dominic now under w ay in in the 300,000- ; the P acific wero The first two test shots in Oper- Like the first two it was dropped 500.000 ton range, from an airplane. j They were set off around 6 a.m ., It produced a much bigger blast, j Christmas Island time, giving nu- clear scientists an opportunity to The joint announcement by the m easure their flash rays against however. Defense Department and the At- took place said omic Energy Commission it was “ in the low megaton yield April 25, a few days after Prear­ | dent John Kennedy ordered a res­ range.” in the terms of reference used umption of atmospheric tests after the light of the rising sun. first explosion The by atomic weaponeers this means a lapse of nearly four years. W ould W ant By Th© Associated Press Candidates for governor called for states rights and no federal domination Wednesday as the campaign rolled to­ ward Saturday’s primaries. Edwin A. Walker told a Dallas audience that he "will not be dominated from Washington.” “I will protect the people of Texas and their legislature against interference by federal meddlers and I will leave the state government in the performance of its constitutional duties,” Walker said. In Harlingen, Marshall Formby said " I am for an inde­ pendent state . . . free from Washington and national domi- its ing will unveil T h * C o l l e g e of Engineer­ space-age ; achievements, ranging from a sup­ ersonic wind to a home tunnel for future spacemen on the moon, the 53rd annual Power during | Show Thursday. Student-organized display* depic­ ting “The Advancement of the Space Age” will be cm view for in the public from 7 to IO p.m. Taylor Hall, the Engineering Lab­ oratories Building and the Chemi­ cal Engineering Building. Contestants in the University In­ terscholastic League state meet have also been invited to attend. Highlight of the show will be the P ro ject M ercury Capsule I , loaned by the National Aeronau­ tics and Space Administration, Capsule I was flight tested May 9, I960, at Wallops Island, Va,, in a demonstration of the M ercury escape system . The flight involved launching of the capsule, utilizing only the lift provided by Ignition of the escape rocket. The escape rocket is part of a 16-foot, derrick-like tower the capsule’* upper attached deck. to The University Army, Navy, and Air Force ROTO branches will join in the observance. Exhibits in and the ROTC Building will around new’ m ilitary j feature movies, equipment, student project* on ( planning and mapping bomb runs, ! an anti-submarine warfare train­ er, and an F-84F fighter. Weather: Cloudy, Warmer Low 58, High 84 Orchesis Program To Be Held Today The Orchesis M o d e r n Dance Club will hold a dance demonstra­ tion from 5 to 5:45 p m. Thursday in Studio 134 of the Women’s Gym, There will be no admission charge. Fourteen University students will in seven dances, said take part Mrs. M arcille Bradshaw, club sponsor. Included on the program will be a technique demonstration, color and ballad suites, a Negro jazz to the number, and two dances suite, a modern I spiritual | spoken word. Dancers Rehearse Five Orchesis C lu b members rehearse a N e- gro spiritual, ' W ayfarin g Stranger," for a mod* er.n dance demonstration at the W o m e n ’s Gym Thursday afternoon. The five are, left to rlghh Frankie Collier, Danny Newberry, Beverly Neal, Lynda Gayle W hite, and Lilas Shelby. There's N o Space Like Hom e Space men landing on the moon could take shelter under a structure fo rced b y an inflat- able dome and sun shield, University archsee- tural students believe. They have prepared « model of the lunar shelter for the Engineering Power Show Thursday night. Putting final touch­ es on th# exhibit are, left to right, Gene Eisen- hewer, Don Clay, and G eo rg # Smith, B \ H O Y T PU R V IS Texan Editor T O P INTEREST has under­ standably been focused on the race for governor in this spring's Democratic and Republican pri­ mary campaigns. Democratic voters will have their choice of six candidates when they go to the poll* Saturday, and the Re­ publicans will have two candi­ dates cwt their ballot. Almost everyone agrees t h a t that therp Is no possible chance of any of the Democratic can- didates winning the party's nomi­ nation without a runoff. A ONE OF T H O S E who is a strong bet to make the runoff is John B. Oonnally, who resigned a* Secretary of the N a v y to make the race. Coronally says putting T e x a s “ back on top** Is the goal he in­ tends to achieve. He wants to make the state first In educa­ tional opportunities and in­ dustrial growth. in Tins is the first political race for the 45-year-old Connally, aft­ er a career in government, busi­ ness, law, and ranching. “ I want to see Texas offer job oppor­ tunities second to none in this nation.” he says, “ and I want to see this state act in a responsive manner to meet the needs, the desires, the h o p e s and the dreams of our people." He puts prime emphasis on the interlinking relationship between education and a Texas economy g e a r e d to space-age require­ ments. First, he says, Texas in­ stitutions must attract and hold men who are pre-eminent in their fields. In turn, such men will at­ tract others of comparable capa­ bility and permit Texas to keep its own young people who are superior in their capacities. “ Education win be more close­ ly identified with the economic future than ever before because the industries of today and the TWsday, May 3, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 2 Revolution Though by no moans an exciting speaker, writer Herb­ ert: L. Matthews touched on some highly important topics In his talk at tho Texas Union Wednesday night. Matthews has been consistently involved in try ing to present his interpretation of revolution, the Cuban rev­ olution in particular, to the American people. And inter­ pretation of revolution has not been simple for Ameri­ cans. However, it Is in simplification that so many have erred, and as Matthews pointed out there is a great danger in simply blaming everything that goes wrong on commu­ nism and leaving it at that. There definitely is much more of a complex situation. Matthews repeated many of the familiar problems of Latin America—poverty, illiteracy, inflation. He believes, and with good reason, that the gap between the rich coun­ tries like the US and many of the Latin American nations is widening rattier than narrowing. ★ ★ The w riter did not abound with enthusiasm for the Alliance for Progress, and frankly it seems that few peo­ ple do these days. We earnestly hope th a t the Alliance does not lose its impetus. It is far from a cure-all, but it certainly could be of great long-run value. Unfortunately the awakening Latin Americans are thinking In term s of today and tomorrow rather than ruxt month and next year, and that is really the only way they know' how to think or can be expected to think. Lately the US has received pressure to g i v e top priority to trade stabilization. There ha* been growing sentiment for such stabilization among the la tin Ameri­ can nations which depend on one or two commodities for world economic pacts. A coffee pact has been mentioned as an example of an agreement which might put prices on a firm footing. We feel, however, that the US must hold out. We must encourage the countries to work to control their commodity productions. And it is essential that these nations diversify their own economies with additional products, expanding trade, and b etter use of their own raw’ materials. ★ ★ Such things only come with time, as Matthews in­ dicated, and the Alliance can only be an evolutionary-type revolution. Matthew’s was engaged in the difficult task of attempt­ ing to generalize about Latin America. This is extremely hard because of the remarkable variance from country to country'. Though we must differ with the writer's evaluations of Fidel Castro as an individual leader, particularly with regard to motivation, he certainly struck many notes of truth. The masse* have been stirred to revolt against their inherited misery throughout Latin America, as Matthews so correctly pointed out. And the land is truly the land of revolution, But it is not necessarily the Castro-type revolution. And Communism Is by no means the essential problem. Many of the countries are on the move and undergoing change. Their directions may be many and varied. We must strive to co-operatively move with them down the channel of freedom. What Cost Medicare? Nobody truly knows just what the cost of a Social Security financed medicare program will be. We are told that It can be financed initially by just a minor increase in the Social Security tax rate. But what they are talking about now is only the beginning. Congress hasn’t failed yet to hike Social Security benefit payments in any elec­ tion year, and, as a result of all these unscheduled benefit hikes, both the tax rate and the base upon which it has been applied, have been steadily increased. Today the basic Social Security tax rate is 3% per cent of ail wages up to $4,800 per year which amounts to a yearly tax of $150 and that is already scheduled to rise sharply In future years. if medicare is added, the Social Security tax burden on many young wage earners will exceed their regular in­ come tax burden. And, once started, medicare won’t be curtailed. Instead, it will be expanded and expanded until, in the end, it will b e c o m e an all-embracing socialized medicine setup. ______ —Fort Lauderdale News T h e DAi®f T e x a n Opinions expressed sn The Texan are those o f the Editors or of the u riser of the article and not necessarily those o f the University administration. pub?UhJ?lih AuirUn* ~eri4» V 5 e " ‘V r V - K 'ubliest ions 1 on*’ *•' is n**'*P»P«L of T h . U nthrifty of T e x ... oall> **fept Mond*J •«* Saturday and holiday V monthly In August by Texas Student o Second-cia** pottage paid at Austin. Texas e t M alled in Austin M ailed out of town p e e r e d m Aust i n’ SU B SC R IPT IOX RATKA • ........*.............................. 40 OO month t v ggSth #4Horial C< 102 The rirrtiishf n office i* J B IU (Qg 2T7V)> ’-UfilL ut AU* ’■*$, b-v teiepbsa* (GR 2-34T3. or the News Laboratory. J. B. ' r ti will be r in be h( weekend id Texas AUM will be Texas to watch for 'Hp meet the lean cham pionship Thursday night with Puce furnishing some outstanding iud iv idu.d talent. T ie v arsity pole vault will pro­ vide the spectators with three 15 foot v aulters as Bay Jus Bennett and Steve Guynes of Texas Mill do battle with Rice’s high flying jun­ ior. F red Hanson, Hanson took vic­ tories in the Texas, K ansas, and Drake R elays for a very im pres­ sive triple. Guynes, only a sopho­ more. becam e the latest entry into the elite 15 fool club last week in the D rake R elays when he scaled 15 fee* even to tie for second be­ hind Hanson. Bennett who tied for second in the Texas and K ansas Relays, has a personal best of 15’ 4 Va” and is one of the few vault­ ers in the country who can claim a victory over Hanson. Bennett defeated Hanson th roe-way in a affair in College Station e a rlie r this year. Another Rice product, big Ed Red. will be one of the featu re at- traciions along with hi* team m ate Hanson. Red won the javelin throw sn die D rake R elays and has con­ sistently been out around 230 feet Jim Smith, all year. Longhorn Charles Giesey, and Charles Jor- spear the Rice I dan will giv e Red a run for his ; money and, if right. Smith could thrower. outdo J Steer Jam es Houston and Owl | j Dave Edwards will not be in com­ petition T hursday night because ! of sore arm s, but both are expect­ ed to be read y to go die following week. Without TOU'I Bobby B ernard to breathe down his back Texas' ace hurdler Ray Cunningham will h a -, e only the clock to race against. His chief competition will come from team m ates Bob Sewell and Jam es Cooper and possibly Aggie Tom Burns. Cunningham, like Hanson the three big relay carn i­ sw'ept vals in Austin. Lawrence, and Des Moines and has a best of 13,9 this year and w as clocked in a wind aided 13.7 in the West Texas R e­ lays earlier this year. One of the most hotly contested races of the night may well come in the 880 y ard run where a sub- 1:51.0 appears to be in the m ak­ ing. AUM speedster Thad Crooks i has a best this year of 1:5! 4 is new AUM school record! and was unofficially clocked in 1:48.9 for his carry on the Aggie sprint m ed­ ley relay team In Io n a , Steer Lev j Gunter, a sophomore who has a lot of prom ise, has sped to a 1:51,0 this season and has not been re a l­ ly pressed a t the half-mile dis- [ ranee. Ha outsprinted Crook* ear- : Her this y e a r in the time of 1 :51.6. j Texas and AUM figure to split the relays with the 'Horn sprint re- j lay foursom e favored and AUM holding a split edge over Texas in the mile relay due to the absence of crack q u arterm iler Randy Cur­ sor) who is recuperating from a leg injury he suffered In Dalle * three weeks ago. Danny R oberts, giant Aggie soph­ omore who owns a shot put m ark of 5T IV * , looks like a sure bet for five points for the College Sta­ tion crew with his t e a m m a t e Charles T e m ann and Steer sopho­ more C harles Jordan battling for I he runner-up sp o t A head to head battle looms in the two-mile between Texas' J o h n -1 ny Eschle and AUM’* redheaded ' E, L. E ner. E n er clocked a 9 17.9 in a losing effort in last week's Drake Relays while E schle’s hest came the Dallas Invitational where he scored a 9:22 6 victory in Two of the finest freshm an track in Southwest Conference team s history w ill display their wrares a s the Shorthorns do battle with the AUM F:*h. Texas boasts such outstanding individuals as Preston Davis who is undefeated In his col­ legiate c a re e r at distances from th© 880 to the mile, quarter-m ilem David Winkles, C harles Barnhill, | and Ralph Miller, and speedy Da- j vid Colley who has been credited i with times of 9.6 and 20.9 for the IOO and 220. Standouts for the Tex- j as frosh in the field events ar© big Jerl Franklin jum p I in and Robert Penn in the pole vault, j Both arc form er state cham pions i and Franklin is the holder of the j A A AA record jum p with a leap of B 'S V . the high the high in AUM will bring its fabulous Ted | Nelson who has bests of 9.4, 20.5. j and 46 5 to his credit and will run J the 220 440 as well as handle legs on the Fish relay team s Thursday ! night.. Rice boasts two fine freshm en j in Warren B ratloff and hurdler Bobby May. Bratloff becam e the first freshm an in tile history of the Southwest Conference to ever clear 15 feet in the pole vault when he cleared 1 5 '2 V in a tri-m eet in Ag- gieland. May, winner of the 120 yard high hurdles the F resh ­ m an-Junior College division of the Texas Relays, has bests of 14 4 and 23.5 for the low*?, and looks like the m an to beat in both races in th© conference m e e t in fN ^ S & S U lS PLUS COMPLETE XNiSERVICE, A N D C A M E R A REPAIR. STUDTMAN Photo Service Telephone G R 6-4326 222 West 19th X*ew York . . . . Detroit .. Cleveland R*i timer# .. . ... Chicago Minnesota Kansas City l-os A n g e le t Boston . . . . V aah in aion rn . 9 9 . . to i i . . IO . IO ? . 3 h 6 7 7 8 9 to l l 0 IO 13 Oft ana# Pct .706 ,362 2 H .7*2 S S V * av? .35*1 2 si .SOO r n 478 .ITI .412 188 4 4 3 8 ' , Baltimore 6. Boston «t n n e s n ta S shirt ( t o n P04, «r#t around* I New York 4 Chn ago 3 Detroit 3 Kansas City 2 Los AnReiee st Cleveland ppd nun. Thursday's Srhrstiita Boston (Monbouquette l-2i at W*#h- Wertz Pinch Hits Fourth KANSAS CITY ft—Victor Wood­ row Wertz thinks pinch hitting is a tough life but he enjoys it. The Detroit infielder h i t his fourth straight pinch hit Tuesday night, enabling the Ti gem to dc. feat tho Kansas City Athletics, 3-2, m the 10th inning That swat cam e within one of the American League record set by Johnny Mize of the New York Yankees in 1953 and tied by Bob Hale of the Cleveland Indians in i960. "A pinch h itte r hag a helluva- tough 3ife," Wertz said Wednes­ day. "You sit around most of a ball gam e and you get the toughest part of one Maybe your club has been going good and you haven’t played for a week because you w ere not needed, lf you’re on the road you haven t had much batting practice. in ‘ Then you get called and every­ thing hinges on what you do. take "Now. last night. It was cold and dam p out there. I d been sitting around for the whole game. Then all of a sudden you’re In. You either do or you don’t " the bases loaded in the eighth and fanned Don Reynolds and forced Sam Reynolds to ground out with two on in the ninth Schmidt lost his first gam e of the y e a r against one victory', and Belcher picked up win no. nine against one loss. Belcher has won seven in conference play now. The two team s go again Thurs­ day at 2 30 with C harlie Harten- stein pitching for Texas and Kve­ tch going for TCU, A Box Score TEXAS T C I if r f rf r 0 0 r f l b ab r b bi 3 2 I 0 M Ads 2b 4 I 2 I Le# 3 b 4 0 I 0 W l i t h 3 I 2 0 B aze rf a b r h bl Beth©# u 4 A 0 0 2b P. t b s 5 I 2 0 K a s p e r 3b 4 O O O rf S k i n n e r 5 0 2 I if 3 0 I 2 dBo> 0 K n u u o n 0 0 0 0 i n I 0 Bi st ley 4 0 2 0 B r r ! to n l h Bell 4 3 0 0 0 D R : ( t i P i n c k n e y e I 0 0 0 H o l t 4 I I 0 t i 0 I 0 0 e s Rn!#* o n 0 Tri rash I L o n d o n r 5 0 0 0 ,D,ne* 3 I 2 0 B elc her 3 0 2 ti S c h m i d t p I 0 0 0 h S 'm I n o n K u e t r m p I O O O 0 0 0 0 a T e r r v M y er p 1 0 0 0 n 0 0 0 T o ta le 36 $ 9 2 SS I 1« t T o ta l# a—ix>pewM lo third for KuitM in 7th. to 2nd for Belcher in 8th. for Bell In 9th. d -ran r -struck out in 9th. e—grounded out for for Burp Holt In 9th. T m * TCI ...................... C o v e r t p p lei tee r n —4 (MKI hod 3<*~S Ro’ nolds. Pf? A - 37-10. LOB—Texas E RI Kb J 7 D Teres 27-8 TCI! 13 TCU 23 2B— L ee. B i l l e r , 3®—-Let, Burley. SB—RI thy. Schmidt i» Covert HBP—Br Myer In H r f r bb mo 8 4 4 * 3 4 7 3 9 2 6 7 2 2 0 n 2 2 3 1 0 0 1 3 1 0 0 4 1 2 (McAdams). WF— M yer. Covert Moyer Russ*.; Balk—Schmidt. T—2 38. A- VV). U SAA N M r . 4 % H a s a LIFE in s u r a n c e : ; p l a n (•presenting TW lefter ten Steward life T o Fit Y o u r Exact R e q u ire m e n ts • (amity Ria© • (state Plan ain# • A aa titties • Educational Plant a Basinets Insurance • M crtfog* Cancellations Pension Plant RAY COGBURN ISO! Lavaca G R 8 -9 3 7 9 S e w York -F o rd 3-0 > a t Chica so (Buzhardt Yl> ’N C ity (C a lla ch er D etro it (VI) a t K an sas Baltimore (Pappas 3-0) at Minnesota - R a k o * 3*1 > (Kraiirk 0-3> Only *ames scheduler! N A T IO N A L L E A H K SAR F ra n cisco St Louie . . . . Pittaburjfh «-los Angel## . .. Philadelphia . . . . Cincinnati . . . . M ilw a u k ee Houston ........ . . . . . a-Chicago New York a-Playing night game W L 5 17 13 4 T 13 ft 14 9 8 11 9 12 8 IO 17 24 4 3 PM n .765 rn .93b . ITI 450 rn 412 .190 ,176 OTIf3 r *7 13ft 11*4 Wedneedaj’# Reunite St Louis 4. Houston I San Kranetae* 3, Piu s burgh 3 Cincinnati ar New York, ppd* rain. ppd. Mil wa aker- at Phlladelpofa, rain Chicago at Lo* Angeles night Pittsburgh T hursday « Srhedalw (Me Bean 3-0 * s t Sad Milwaukee « P i e i-o» at Philadel­ Francisco (Sanford 2-2* phia (Mahaffey 2-3) N (Stmn:ors 34)) N Houlton (fluIntl 0-2* at St, Louts Only Rar e# scheduled S U N O A Y M A Y 1 3 T H la k e T m t lh • • . 1 J * # ' N AfMcw S S MOTHER’S DAY CARDS to t New Mother • W ife * Daughter • Sister • Aunt G randm other •e e o u r c o m p le te © election. Cards — * Street Floor IHI lTuS!«r i v a # t i p i Over Two Billion CbUors OI life Intoronce In ro-c* ’ 2246 G uadalupe S tre e t -r- r*nnc~~ iii1*"! ~iOc SALE FOR LADIES ONLY M a d r a s Dresses C o t t o n Prints ’ < ’ ■i Regular 24.95 16.63 Straight Skirts 12.95 to 18.95 5.00 G i r l ’s Bermudas M a d r a s and Batiks 9.95 95 5.00 L 1 V < FULL SKIRT SHIRT W A IST Regular IS.95 1263 D acron -C otto n PUU. PLEATED Regular 13.95 9.30 M attress Ticking Dresses ll.95 7.97 “We're not leaving till we find him and his overdue library books!” 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 W ONDERFUL SM OKES! A G E D MI LD, B L E N D E D M I L D NOT F I L T E R E D M I L D - T H E Y S A T I S F Y ^ ^ N IG H T TELEPHONES— H O 5 -M U , SR 1-7474 iNATlONAfvmiNESj UiJJLD ALL SALES FINAL, PLEASE! The CUifcLt, C a m p t t i L ©mberaitp &f)op 2350 GUADALUPE LONG DISTANCE AND LOCAL M O V I N G IN "P IO N EER S N A T IO N -W ID E M O V IN G '* / *»&uat| hjreeaers i e CRATING e PACKING e STORING e M O VING Fireproof Bonded W are h o u se household goods and merchandise storage Rhoades TRANSFER AND STORAGE CO. S IJ AIRPORT BLVD. S R I-5 4 B I ARTHUR R. (ART) TIEMANN— O W NER . rr, x . T h e D a il y T e x a n / l ' VV t * . —•a* t T ~ - i Thursday, M a y 3, 1962 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N Page 4 Film C r it ic D w ight Ma d ; on« of A m er­ ica*! liveliest and m ost p e n e tra t­ ing critics, will p resent public le c­ tu re s T h u rsd ay a r ! F s p a rt of th e P ro g ra m in C riticism , i'-' At 4 p.m . T hursday in E nglish B u ild in g 203. he \< ii; s p e a k on the “ The C u rren t R enascence of a y rn F ilm ,” and at ll cle­ P e a r c e H all IC v a n r e o f Ars M a-’donaid is r e g u l a r and a staff v film < ric for t sq u ire, rn for T he N ew Y orker. H e has fo rm e rly been a sm ff w rite r fo r F o rtu n e , an ed ito r of P a rt-s a n R eview , and p u b lish er and ed ito r of P olitics In 1957, M acdonald published som e of h is e a r lie r pol 'ira ! es­ says in th e book “ M em oirs of a R evolutionist ” I le h as also writ* ten “ H enry W a llace: T he M yth and the M a n /' “ T he Root is M a n ,” and “T h e F o rd F o u n d atio n .” His is “ P a ro d ie s .” an a n ­ la te s t book thology of from literary p arody C h a u ce r to B eerbohm . SAN JACINTO CAFE Now Fr## Panl-ig In th# JADE ROCH let-—naif goo# Parking r n — SP EC lA LfZSN G IN D E L IC IO U S MEXICAN AND AM ERICA N F O O D S Visit C L ’ Rainbow Dining Room O PEN 7 DAYS A WEEK I 6TH A ND SA N JA C IN T O G R 8-3984 TODAY AT INTERSTATE rot OiSCOUN TT*c*niT| r c * »r ■ mm .. . - rn S TARTS T O D A Y ! IM « 6 in li t J a Vision to Behold! $ t h t f b t . -th o u g h She was a S F f ! t U A stro n au t t h o u g h t t h (3^£&4L 5 ^ wss y- p & M O i f r o f - W S sh£ W O R LD / a C o lle g iu m F e a t u r e s B a r o q u e In s tru m e n ts By HAYDEN FREEMAN Alto and tenor sackbuts, a Nlc- olo shaw m , rec o rd e rs, and se v eral violas da g am b a w ere am ong b a ­ roque m usical in stru m en ts called for in scoring of w orks p erform ed at the D ep artm en t of M usic’s Col- the M usic . Mgiurn W i'dnesday in Building R ecital Hall. The 14 com positions, w ritten b e­ tw een 1560 and 1760, w ere selected, I p rep ared , and, in som e cases, di­ rected by Dr. A rend Koole. g u e st ; professor of m usic. With his spok­ en program notes, th e y fo rm ed - a som ew hat disjointed Illu stra ted j history of the developm ent of m u- j sic period. baroque-rococo through the U ngainliness in is said the d inosaur, and j to have the sa ck b u t responsible fashion of helped d * t cert a ally m u st be the passin g from for •he viola d a g a m b a . T he shaw m | and lent a m u seu m ' a ir to the co n cert and th e ir con­ te m p o rary progeny, th e oboe and trom bone resp e ctiv ely , pro v e th a t m odem technology has, w ays, aided th e a rts . On th e o th e r .hand. the flute-like re c o rd e r se e m s I in so m e | Designed O N LY For COLLEGE SENIO RS A M I C A S L E ’ B COLLEGE CAREER PLAN FOR COMPUTE INFORMATION CALL GR 2 -8 9 1 6 GL 3-0830 R E N E ’ R A M I R E Z a m c a b l e l i f e in s u ra n c e ta to be e n jo y ag a re n a issa n c e of popularity. Q uality of the p e rfo rm a n c e s w as m ost uneven due to the n a tu re of the m usic an d in stru m e n ts and la c k of r e h e a r s a l tim e. M ost a d m ira b le of the a f te r ­ noon's selectio n s w as a g ro u p of M onteverdi m a d rig a ls sung by D oris F a r r a r , R oyce B oyer, and W a lte r F o ste r, w ho m a d e u p for a few m in o r la p se s In th e ir Ita lia n diction w ith tim in g and in sp ire d ex q u isite p h ra sin g . O n e - A c t Contests In League A ction Begin Thursday Beginning early in the U niver­ sity Interscholastic League com ­ petition, the One-art Play Contect Starts at 4:15 p m . Thursday in Hogg Auditorium E ig h t p la y s from conference B schools w ill br- given Thursday rn two session s. After a d in n er hour. the second session will begin a ’ I 7:30 p.m . O pening th e contest T h u rsd ay a* 4:15 p m . is T ornillo High School w ith “ The No ’Count Bos “ O th er e n tries a r e H appy H i g h School i w ith “ A ria Da C apo.” Blooming: G rove w ith “ The L ittle M in iste r,” j S h ary lan d (M ission) w i t h “ The T w eh e -P o u n d Look, ” At 7:30 p .m .! the p ro g ra m vs ill include H e m p -1 ste ad w ith “ 'Die P atch w o rk Q uilt,” S a i n t Jo w ith “ The V a lia n t,” j the Shadow of j M enard w ith “ In the G len ,” a n d C o m f o r t w ith “ John D oe.” C onference A will p re se n t Its I p lay s F rid a y a t 4:15 p m . Follow'-! ing a din n er b o o - th a t night, c o n - 1 feren ee AA w ill p erfo rm a t 7:30 | p m . At fho sa m e tim es on S a t- 1 urd ay . C onference AAA and AAAA m a y be seen. Eat Mexican Food Once A Day! . EL MAT I J ' : / .« a * d $ n £ W & OuT-0F-THl$- W ofiip ! ( s h e s -from a p k * e t t h a t has 7 m o o n s ,- ail m a d e h r l o v e ! ) W alt Disney*? 5 0 4 E a s t A v® . G R 7-7023 EL TORO !60l Guadalupe G R 8-4321 EL CHARRO 912 Red River G R 8-7735 MONROE'S Mexican Food to Take H om e” G R 7-8744 Delivery Service 7 Days WON • KEITH • OIH®! ■ SAVAL Co-1-WW# / m m u m - i m 0, _ __ i m , ~y>j - T « s f a - y L C m r s o c i A C A D E M Y A W A R D W IN N E R ! BEST F O R E IG N FILM O F YEAR! i i TECHNICOLOR*z r Positively N o t For C hild ren ! N o O n e A d m itte d U n d e r 18! FEATURES Austin's MBig Four” in Authentic Mexican Food Adult* I.Od. MOC Sit. Ct. Id sn. N O W S H O W IN G ! FI \ T I RKH 11:40 -1 :13-4 :4ft 7c 19-9:43 Urn " JheSastest two hours the screen has e m seen! gar ■ .-g-j. - - -- J CQU*C M K S PKSENTSI Bdft ED**!® Pv. JOU CHOI GLENN FOSHEE REMICK J f& I P STEFAN POWERS I IBI 60RD0NS " T h o K w * A d d ' l l and M a s o n C o lo r < a r t o e n Spryer'' 9MDGM& 4 9NI0O r IBLAKE EMRBS, A n n . T S I.Od MIM 5ftc. C hild t i e 3RD G R E A T "THE PICTURE IS COLOSSAL! WEEK! A n opulent tapestry of medieval legend. Immense material managed with firmness, elegance and a sure sense of epic rhythm!” A rad rn; i A h ard W tit nor B E S ! A C T U R Academy Award Al in in r S E S I A t I RlCSS Pa*.# I,)*l Suspended plus! TONY CURTIS JANET LEIGH PER FO R M A N C ES TO D A Y AT 2 :0 0 P .M .— 7,30 P.M. T O I T H S H O W S A T I R I C ! AI L S I . A T S 7 ,< IO A M — PRICES T O D A Y — ADULTS STUDENTS CH ILDREN ............................. 1.25 ............... 90 ............................50 ADULT ENTERTAINMENT M O D E L CHARCOAL IN The shocking story of artists A models gone wild! Plus Eddie Foy Jr. Comedy Y T T T IT g tT ipYf KIDS! FREE RIDES ON I I L TOOT’ BEFORE SH O W The Picture w< Rock Hudson''Dows Day Tony Randall 'J & V H R . C o m e b a c k " & COLOR .EWE ADAMS^JACK OME• JK K KRUSCHEN L im n s ADULTS 60c CH ILD FREE Playground and F in e Food* • Fir** Show 7:39 Open 6:30 ADULTS A MATURE Y O U N G PEOPLE 4 A C A D E M Y A W A R D N O M IN A T IO N S ♦ B E S T A C T R E SS ♦ BF >T SI PFOST I.NO , r u * " ‘ u t Ai TKESS ♦ BE ST MOTION 4 REST COLOM AHT U K K SCORE D IR EC T IO N U B R NKT R U K Wd I* riuii gummer f m n Plus! Jerry Lewi*— “THE BELL B O Y ” B y F A R R Y L E E Tc m n A m usem ent* E d ito r In g m a r B e rg m a n ’s w orld is one of p erp e tu al m ist and s tr a n g e night noises. His c h a ra c te rs a r e insul­ a te d from each o th e r and from th e ir G od by a m e c h a n ic a l fate and by th e ir ow n d e s ire s, w hich they cannot alw a y s u n d ersta n d . is a so m b e r w o r l d , infre­ q u en tly p e n e tra te d by sh a fts of re e l of light, but “ T hrough a G lass D a rk ly ,” w hich opened W ednesday af the T exas, finally of fore som e B e r g m a n I choices about the kind of God his l a s t th e in It film s d ea l w ith. is It the sto ry of four people w ho a r e ta k in g a holid ay on an isolated island in the B ailie. L ike the island itself, w hich h a s a fog- in ■ horn w hich w alls the background, each of the c h a r ­ a c te rs is isolated in his own w ay, and each is cry in g for help in a q uiet, in sisten t voice. in c e ssa n tly The fa th e r, D a v i d , (G um m r B jo m stra n d i is a w rite r w h o s e books a re p o p u lar sucesses, r a th e r than triu m p h s he a rtis tic w ants them to be His son, M inus : (L a rs P a s s g a rd ) , is a lonely adole­ to r e a r h his t h e scent w ho seeks fa th e r su cceeds only in h u rtin g ! : him . D av id 's d a u g h te r, K a r i n ■Harriet A n d e r s o n ), and h er g rim husband, M artin ( M a x von Sy- dow s, a r e v ac atio n in g a f te r K a r-j I in ’* re le a se fro m a m e n tal h o s - 1 pita I, Is ill S h e through as h e r Incurably b ro th e r discovers when left alone the island w ith her. She tells on him how she w alks the w all of an a ttic room into a c h a m ­ b e r w here a group of people a re w aiting for th e a r r iv a l of a n un ­ som eone n am ed sh e explains, is God. A fter an incestuous episode w ith h e r b ro th e r, K arin goes hopelessly m ad an d has h e r frig h ten in g vision ! of God—a vision w hich is balan ced t h e f a th e r ’s closing speech, j by som eone. T his OFFICE', OPK NS 6.00 AOM I SS ION 60c LOVER C O M E B A C K l>ori# D ay R ock Hndflon, S I ARTS T IS — Pin* — DESTRY A! D IE MI RPITT S T A R T S 9:15 SOUTH AUSTIN 3900 Ho, ( on crc** Box Office Open* 6:00 Admission 60c SUMM ER AN D SM O KE I-aurene* H arvey. G erald in e P a ce STARTS 7:15 M O V I N G A ctors the nation or acrose the world, tniet your Allied man to make your move safer and vainer. V - AUSTIN FIREPROOF STORAGE & MOVING CO. 550! N. Lamar • Free estimate* • Complete serv­ ice everywhere by land, see, air • Fully equipped modern vans • Direct service to all principal cities • Expert packing and storage. Phone HO 5-5424 a g e n t Trust your.■ y / Allied Man A l l i e d ia & n S V a n L i n e s W O R L D ' S L A R OLIS T M O V E R SHOW BEAT By LARRY LEE This morning. I’m going to throw all journalistic ethics aside and set out to influence a few votes. I'm not talking about the Saturday election—in fact, I’m not even sure that an election Is involved—but one day in the not-too-distant future, the Department of Drama is going to decide on its summer musical. The field: “Where’s Charley?” “Once Upon a Mattress,” and “Ernest in Love.” My candidate: “Ernest in Love.” The recording is where I became familiar with “Ernest in Love.” Its score is by Lee Pockriss and Anne Croswell, as far as I can tell, a pair of unknowns. As far as my opinion goes, a darned good songwriting team. Their numbers “A j Wicked Man” and “Lost” would stand up against the stuff : the big-league boys are turning out, and the show’s situation songs, such as “Mr. Banbury” and “A Handbag Is Not a Proper Mother,” do—as you can tell if you’re familiar with the Wilde play—retain the spirit of the original. “Once Upon a Mattress” has been up and down the land in touring companies, even managing a water stop in Austin, under the aegis of the CEC. “Where’s Charley?” is as tired as a plate of three-dav-old spaghetti. Furthermore, both of these last-named shows are personality pieces which are linked with Carol Burnett and Ray Bolger, respectively. “Ernest" has no such identification with a single star. It was scored for a small orchestra, and its requirements for sets and dancing are slight. It looks to me like just the thing for those particular summer evenings. Are you listening? A, /; <<" 4 ' * i "• r ~ r *•;- YOUTH-LED REVIVAL LISTENING fo ying tbs voices w h ’ch command her to wait for a ter- vision ct God, Harr et A - dem on cresses her e a r to th e n this s ; e * e '*rcm T hrough a G la ss Darkly, ' the ’ ewes! Irq - Bergm an picture, w hich ope md W e d n e s d a y at the Texas thee* Last month, the film won an A c a d e m y A w a rd as best fort r t'y wa! ma- ter. la n g u a g e p ic tu re o f th e y e a r. y e O' it Movie in Review B e r g m a n 's D a rk V ie w O f th e Is o la t e d S o u l When D avid finally sp e ak s to his th a t God m a y son, he su g g e sts be found trite l o v e . A through in th e hands idea? P erh ap s. But of In g m a r B e rg m an , it is one of the m ost b eautiful and h e a rte n in g m om ents im ag in ab le. My sole com p lain t the dubbed version of the film is being show n here. T he a c t o r s have clipped, B ritish tones m o re suit­ ab le fo r a N oel C ow ard com edy o r a BEC rad io p lay this S w edish tra g e d y . T rans-T . x as m a y re tu rn the ex c ellen t su b titled v e r ­ sion- wbioh w as se en in preview s to the T exas. I hope so. h e r e th a n th a t is if? ' - *§f ^ J I cirri5 i r J e m o t i a L J:) ,aih tis! C U L 16th and Red River May 6-13 7:30 p.m. J I M M Y W A LK E R , Evangelist l l ! ! GONE 1962 CACTUS! ORDER THE n I Wednesday\ May 9 is the L A S! DA I r I ■ r I i It's easy as possible for you to order your 1962 C A C T U S . Just stop by one of these seven loca­ tions, pay the $7.00 fee, and we'll hold a copy for you. • Journalism Building 107 • Any of the four Hemphill Stores • The University C o - O p • Garner & Smith rn rn iii* I I i S y T o r n a d o S e a so n In Full S w in g B r D O N VAC* ARO Tf a to rn ad o boiled into Austin, w ould you know w hat to do? T o rn ad o es can occur anyw here In th e U nited S tates a t any tim e, b u t th e y happen m ost freq u en tly in m id w estern , so uthern, and cen ­ through tr a l s ta te s S ep te m b er. The w o rst T e x a s storm * h a v e hit in M arch, A pril, an d M ay. from M arch F ield south of St, E dw ard * U ni­ v ersity , and O ak H ill. The following ru les should be ob­ served vs!,*n a to rn ad o th re a te n s : If tim e and c irc u m sta n c e s p e r­ m it, go to a sto rm cellar, cave, o r underground excavation, w hich should have a n a ir ou tlet to eq u a l­ ise the a ir p re ssu re . These should be kept fit fo r use, and free of w ate r, gas, o r d eb ris, T he n a tio n a l av e rag e is 153 to r ­ If you a re in open country, m ove n ad o es a y e a r. In 195?, a reco rd to rn a d o 's to n u m b e r of 624 sto rm s w as re p o rt- path, If there is no tim e to esca p e, sd In th e firs t five m onths of the lie fiat in the nearest, depression, topped o th e r sta te s y e a r. T ex a s such as a ditch o r rav in e. w ith 95. a t right angles th e A m a ss of w arm , hum id a ir com ­ ing into co n tac t w ith an opposing m a s s of cool a ir provides the a t­ m o sp h e ric conditions fav o rab le to to e fo rm atio n of tornadoes. T o rn a d o es usually a p p e a r as fun­ n el-sh a p ed clouds, spinning rapidly, a n d ex ten d in g In a city o r tow n, you should seek inside sh e lte r, p re fe ra b ly in a steel rein fo rced building S tay a w a y from w indow s a t all tim es. If you a re in y o u r house, the southw est c o m e r of low est floor or b a se m e n t offers the g r e a t­ e st safety. People in brick o r stone the J f . ¥ v.^;, -T .if $ ♦ * * av* 4 a i i i m l M l J I M , m m ____ L O O K O U T, Jim m y! S an d y W in d so r cautions Jim m y Ja ck so n a g a in s t follow ing th e lead o f a freshm an w ho w alked th ro u g h a glass pane! In th e e n tra n c e th e n e w Business-Econom ics Building. O ffic ials have p la c e d strips o f mask- to ing ta p e on th e glass p an e s, a n d la b e le d th e m ” G !a i 5." Still, th e y re p o rt, a few stu d e n ts ta k e th e panels for d o o rs. P erh ap s th e glass m an u ­ fa c tu re r should b e p ro u d . O r m a y b e i t s - Photo by Key VV ndex? Field Trtps Take In Local Color in G eology 601, g en e ral * ology, folds, and fault.*, enrolled geology, w hich h a s four field trip s 1 C om m ents A ppro x im ately 1,800 stu d en ts a c t i o n s , field technology, geom orph- basin . E x cu rsio n s w ill b e m a d e to Big Bend N ational P a rk , C a rls­ bad C av ern s, D avis M ountain Vol­ canics, V an H o rn -S ierra D iablo r e ­ gion, an d o th e r regions of T ex as J u n e 4 to J u ly 14. teach in g a s s is ta n ts on stu d e n ts from ru n , TW ,day. M ay 3, 1962 THE D A ILY T E X A N Page 5 First U T President Backed as Perfect Location By J I DY WEBB D r. A shbel S m ith, the f irs t act ing U n iv ersity p re sid e n t an d firs t c h a irm a n of th e B o ard of R e g en ts, j would be astounded if he w e re to visit to d ay and ‘•ce how it d iffers fro m the p roposed 1881 version of the U n iv ersity . the c a m p u s An exhibit of S m ith ’s w ritin g s ‘ is open fro m 8 a m . to 5 p .m . ] Included M ondays through F rid a y s, an d I from 8 a m , to noon on S a tu rd a y s i . in the B a rk e r H istory G enter. J collection of the in I Sm ith’s w ritin g s is his a rtic le in the T exas J o u rn a l of E d u ca tio n of 1881 explaining his rea so n s for sup­ porting A ustin as the locatio n for the U niversity. Sm ith felt th a t it w as ‘’in d isp en ­ sab le” th a t the U n iv ersity b e ou t Of political control and pow ers of facu lty re m o v a l should be in .h e h a n d , of th e R e s e n t s .! th a t of He based his g re a te st a rg u m e n t postponed a t clim ate, an d th e ab und ance of rock m a ss food fac ilities. C onstruction fac u lty acco m m o d atio n s w as for b e tte r construction. tim e b ec au se im p o rta n t c lassro o m buiki- for th e A ustin site on th e p re se n c e ! m o re of em inent, law yers, m in iste rs, and I togs w ere needed S m ith w as a colorful perso n. He le g isla to rs at they w ere a stim ulus of healthful i helped fight th e yellow fev e r epi- a m bit ion to th e ingenious youth of d em ie in G alveston to 1839. During' th is city he b ec am e ®*a s ' M o n e tary w aste in building th e know n a s “ A shfearrel” Sm ith. the capitol, saying his s ta y in th a t . nlver-uty w a s a im of co ncern to him He opposed building d o rm s for for stu d en ts and a “ com m ons” Staffers Pl an p h y sic ia n . T e x .. history au th o rity , te a c h e r, an d dip­ lo m at w as a v o lu n te e r so ldier in the fight fo r T ex as ind epend ence. “ I t w as one of th e d ecisiv e b a t­ the w o rld ,” S m ith w rote tles of of the b a ttle of San Ja c in to . As a histo rian , he spoke Annual Picnic A w ards w ill be p resen ted u, to the T exan an d R a n g er sta ffe rs a t th e ir to a v e te ra n s asso ciatio n in 1875 on th e battle in depend en ce. H ad the M exicans w on this b attle, all the sta te s fo rm in g th e south­ w estern b o rd er of th e Union w ould » T m im y B ird : I ^ in * fm L t , ,a t e for T ex as p»l«y, . he said. cr,Hr>o> t S u nday ^ Ile d ec la re d th a t the specific lo- w ell’s C a m p C raft, cation of th e sta te Institution w as of the highest Im p o rtan c e.” E n te rta in m e n t will bo provided by G ilb e rt Shelton and his m u sical H e considered Austin an id e al lo-1 R angeroos. J cation for such an institution b e - j T hose elig ible to atten d a re ask- to rail- cd to sign up in Jo u rn alism Build- its accessibility tran sp o rta tio n , dc h ea lth y ing 107 b e fc re noon F rid a y . cause of road D r. S m ith se rv e d in v ario u s leg­ islative positions, w a s a m in iste r of sta te to F ra n c e , a n d w as m a d e a colonel in the C on fed erate A rm y before the end of th e Civil W ar. The A -M el L ite ra ry Society on cam pus w as n am ed in his honor. tow ard fro m a thundercloud. T hey u sually m ove from southw est to n o rth e a st a t a speed of 25 to 40 m iles p er the h our. T he a ir speed w ithin to rn a d o m a y be as high as 500 m p h . the e a rth houses should seek o th e r sh e lte r, j a sernp's ‘e r * W ith g ra d u a te stu d e n ts W hat a w aste of an afte rn o o n ." to “ The m ost fun I ’ve h ad in a a s th e se tripe, th e stu d e n ts o b se rv e the for- long tim e .” A fter field tu p s , stu- m a tio n s a t P ilot Nob, th e low w a- d en ts a rc quizzed Over m a te ria l te r b rid g e a t T om M iller D a m , I covered and d iscovered. M ount Bonnell, M ount B a rk e r, Lit- In te g ra te d to th e cu rricu lu m cf tie W alnut C reek (off th e D allas all geology cla sse s is the obaerva- p referab ly in a sto rm ce lla r o r the b asem e n t of a If th e re It tim e, e le c tric ity and g as lines should b e sh u t off. O pening w indow s on th e n o rth and e a st sides of the hou«e m a y help re- fra m e house. T his su m m e r, g ra d u a te stu d e n ts in G eology 378M w ill do original field in v e stig a tio n s in T ra n s-P e co s, T exas, o r M exico, T he w o rst y e a r of T ex as to m s - {*u c® S tan d in g ag a in st i n - ; highw ay I, and O nion C reek (n e a r side w a lk on low er floor of th# an office building o ffe rs som e sa fe ­ ty. a swept docs w as 1953. On M ay l l of th a t through tornado y e a r, W aco, killing 114 persons ami c a u sin g d a m a g e estim a te d a t $60 m illion. T he sa m e day, IO perso n s w ere killed w hen San Angelo w as hit. Two d a y s la te r, IT w e re killed w hen to rn ad o e s stru ck Knox City, O 'B rien, an d dud, In 192.’, a torn ad o hit A ustin and left IO persons dead. The fu n ­ n el a p p e a re d to bo heading for the h e a r t of to e city, b u t sw ung around and stru c k T ra v is H eights, P en n inside the building if In city schools, children should it b e kept is of good steel reinforced con­ struction. A uditorium s and g y m n a ­ sium s should be avoided. In r u ra l are a s, rav in es o r d itch es offer the b e st p ro tection if sto rm sh e lte rs a re not a v a ila b le . T his w ork Blufton S prings.) is tion of n a tu re . A dvanced course I m a k e co m p eten t use of the n atu re concerned w ith a t hand. C lasses of Geology 320 th# B alcones F a u lt and E scarp* th is su m m e r w ill inter p re t geologic m e n t w hich ru n so u th w est to n o r th - | s tru c tu re s, study fossils, m e a su re e a s t through th e c e n te r of T ra v is s tra tig ra p h ic sections, an I m ak e county, w ith b la ck la n d co rrela tio n s in the L lano I plift of p ra irie s to the so u th e a st and rug* c e n tra l T exas w here igneous, m et- ged hill co u n try of the e a ste rn ! am o rp h ic, and s e d im e n ta ry rocks frin g e of th e E d w a rd s P la te a u to of C retaceous to P re c a m b ria n age the n o rth w est. T he U niversity Is a r e w ell exposed, rolling in a r iv e r v alley se ttin g Person* in an a r e a under to m a - a t th e foot of th e B alcones S carp , do a le rt should keep tuned to th e ir | T he w ork donP b y ,h „ . stu d e n ts radios ro ck s, m at ion. form a- is m ostly o b se rv a tio n of m in e rals, o c c u rre n c e s of la te s t w ea th er I situ ate d irvfor* for C lasses In G eology 660 w ill study m ethods of geologic surveying re- co nnaisance, m e a su re d sr don*, an d in te rp re tatio n s o ' stra tig ra p h y th e M arathon a n d s tru c tu re of C o n v e n i e n c e . on the Drag. Mary Lou Vasquez Chosen As First APO Sweetheart R unners-up w ere M uff Singer, C arolyn Svverk, J a n e ll. H ouchins, E lizab eth D oyle, a n d Mary* E velyn M e rritt. 2013 Guadalupe t y p i n g s e r v i c e G R 2-3210 G R 2-7677 A c o m p l e t e p ro le* c lo n a l t y p in g s e r v i c e t a i lo r e d to th # s p e c i f i c n e e d * o f I D iv e r s ity s t u d e n t * a n d fa c u lty * DAILY TEXAN Cl U N I F I E D A DVERTISING RAT I-S S I R E D ADV E R TISIN G RATE X .................. ................... .. E ach W -ird H5~wurd m inim u m ) M inim um C h arge C la ssifie d D isp la y I colu m n x o n e inch o n e tim e F nch A d d itio n a l T im e IV C o n secu tiv e Issue* v w o rd s 15 w o rd s 20 w ord s ........... ........................ .................... .................................................................. .......... ....................................................................... .. (K o c o p y ch a n g e to r co n secu tiv e Issue rat ................. .. ........... ................................... 4<* 20 . II . *1 no 90 . *6 OO . 8 (X) . ll. OO es • C L J iJ M s / < KA v o l H E D A D V E R TISIN G D E A D L IN E S ................................ M onday, 3 30 ; rn. T u esd a y 3 30 t ... ........................ W ed n esd a y , 3 .in p rn. T u e sd a y T exan W ed n esd ay T exan ................. .. T h u rsd a y T exan T h u rsd a y 3:30 p m F rid a y T ex a n S u n d a y T ex a n F rid a y . 3:30 p .rn In th e ev en t o f errors m ade in an a d v ertiser mt, im m ediate n o tice m ust he g iv en as th e publish) r» are resp o n sib le for o n ly o n e in co rrect in sertion . ............... .............. C A L L G R 2 - 2 4 7 3 Lost and Found Rooms for Rent Houses for Sale W anted D IA M O N D D R O P LO ST on U. T. C am pus E ig h t d iam on d s su rro u n d ­ la rg e d iam on d . R ew ard , S E D ing on e R oom 36)3 | LOST—SPECTACLES A T V a rsity C ar­ nival. Contact Jimmy Halt GR 2-9035. . thank you. A-BAR HOTEL '.RIC S um m er ra tes: $6.25 a week-double $10.00 a w eek -sin g le a ir con d itio n ed Room and Board 2612 Guadalupe GR 6-565 in terest .v a rd. bus S P A C I O U S 3 * B B D R O a \f BLOOD DO NORS—AU ty p e s o f blood 1305 M orrow. B argain , n eeded for u sage in A u stin P ro fes- pius >tju ltv. I sig n a l donor* now accep ted . T ravis 4 V V sch o o ls, I C ounty Bi cod Bank. 3907 B R ed R lvtr. h i line. Sty cen ter. GR 2-2)43 ev en in g s, ~ ~ ............................................ i TKF N L vt M A Y FA IR H o u se W omens s. j d orm itory. 3000 P ea rl. GR 8-3042 ------------ J n eed s d ieticia n for e x c e lle n t p erm an en t bv I - position begi nni ng A u g u st lo th . L 3ST CH LNCE* O W N E R leering tow n n ext w eek. M ust sell tw o bed­ in ex c e lle n t N o rth w est air-*con­ $70 month!v pay­ loan Make otter for room h o u s e A ustin n eigh b orh ood Carpe* ditioner, m ents $1 OOO eq u ity . C L 3-8630. furr.a< 4 2 / 2 N A T IO N A L CO M PANY tim e and su m m er h elp . W h ite, K E E P S part Good pay. A u stin and o th er T e x a s chic's . A*, ply 1503 G uadalupe. R oom 203. 7 p..*n. T h u rsd ay on ly . M ary L o u Vasquez, freshm an pharm acy m ajo r, w as chosen last week as Alpha Phi Omega sweet­ h eart, She is the first sw eetheart to be selected by the University c h ap ter of the national service fraternity. H er selection w as the highlight of a spring dance given by Alpha Rho chapter of APO. S h e w as aw arded a dozen red roses, by Alpha Rho president, Chuck E is- m ann. Off,\leers APO officers w ere recently elect­ ed for the fall sem ester. They are B urke M usgrove, president; Ru­ ben Brown, first vice president; D an G ardner, second vice presi­ dent; Crozier Brown, tre a su re r; G ary Cain, recording secretary ; Dan Trevino, corresponding secre­ ta ry ; Phil Chrisco, historian; and Mike Bosler, rep o rter. M A RY LOU VASQUEZ b\JI tat Cj od O n J L T H I RAD AT 8-12 and 1-5— T ex a n * e x h ib it H u m a n i­ ties R esearch C en ter. M ain B u ild in g . 9 - 5 - -A p plication fo r stu d e n t sem in a r lr In tern a tio n a l t h i s su m m er. i .10-7- S tu d en ts for Jack B itte C apital N a tio n a l Bank Bu Id!r 5 -The Rev, B ra n d ed ; L ovely f tex tb o o k h ea rin g s, th e cu ss C enter, C h ile C enter. 9-5— E x h ib it o f art b y g ra d u a te stu ­ d en ts, R eg en ts R oom . M ain B u ild ­ ing. 9-5—D ea d lin e fo r f ilin g a p p lica tio n for a sso cia te ed ito r o f R ia ia J o u rn a lism B u ild in g 107, 5 vt M odern dan**# d em o n stra tio n O rch esis, W o m en 's Gym 134. 6 30—C actu s P ry o r S h o w to pres' p re-scenes from F ie sta F a n -A m en K T BC TV. Tit ca. 6 30-8 30—M en’* clams. G ym . s e n i o r life-sa v in g Union 202. 9 45— M usic 9 lh — In tern a tio n a l C o ffee H our, T e x a s 6 :3 0 -1 0 —P o w er S h o w , E n g in eerin g and ROTO B u ild in g s fo r b eg in n ers bv P rof. A nd rew B ro ck em a . K TB C -T V . lesso n 6 :3 0 T rack m eet f< r T e x a s. R ice, and AAM M em orial S ta d iu m . 1 0 —T o ffe e H our, If I i lei F ou n d ation . 12-1 30- In tern ation al Club luncheon. In tern a tio n a l C en ter. I— D onald S t, C lair. M idland g e o lo g ist, to speak at T e ch n ica l S essio n . G eol- o g y B u ild in g 14. I — R eg istra tio n f o r L ea g u e M eet b egin *. G regory Gym 3— S tu d y Groups C am pus A ffa irs, and : In tersch o la stic * G reat P h ilo sp h les “ Y .” 90.7 m c 3-11— K U T -I'M. (U n iv e r sity 6 3 0 Dr. J R. S m ile y to g e T e x a s T od ay and T o m o rro w ta lk . T ri-D elta h ou se, 6 :3 0 —Men's G lee D u b , Te> < U nion 401. 6 15 S w ’ n g-Ou) pre * e, so u th o f M ain B u ild in g . T errace, 7—-Tau B e ta P l tu to r in g se ssio n . T a i ­ lo r H a ll 137. 7—D r. M ilton F erg u so n to ad d ress stu ­ d en ts, B a p tist S tu d en t U nion C enter 7— Coed n ig h t. T e x a s Union B o w lin s n ew s at 5; C oed C oral a t 6:30), 4— Leo H itch, V io lin . M usic B u ild in g A lley s. R ecita l H all. 4— P rogram in C riticism : D w ig h t M ac­ to sp eak *on “ T h e C urrent in C i n e m a / ' E n g lish donald R en aseac* B u ild in g 303. 4— D r Shi-I. P al to lectu re on “ S om e th e F u n d a m en ta l C o n sid era tio n s on Fle.-tro-M agneto-G as- eq u a tio n s d> carn ies.” E n g in e e r in g L a b o ra to ry HYJ. o f 4—-K RTT-TV liste n in g an d C h em istry B u ild in g 218. “ U llo m .” in T e x a s Union B allroom to p resen t 4 —R E. K n ig h t to d iscu ss “ S tu d ies In P ertu rb a tio n T h e o r y ,” P h y s i c s B u ild in g 121, 4:15 and 7 3D--O ne-a c t T IL p it) s. H o g g A uditorium . 7 — D u p lica te B r id g e. T ex a s Union TM, 7— S p h in x . A rch itectu re B u ild in g 105. S o c­ 7 :3 0 - U n iv e r s ity A rch a eo lo g ica l ie ty , U n iv ersity *‘Y .” 7 -5 t tass in p a in tin g and sk etch in g . 7 -IO—s t u d y ro o m s op en , f ir s t flo o r of T e x a s U nion 333. E n g lish B u ild in g . 7:30-10— Inform al p a rty for II PC. T e x ­ a s Union A u d itoriu m . 7 -3 0 - In tersch o la stic L e a # u e P ress C o n feren ce rece p tio n , T e x a s U nion A uditorium . 7-flL-Dhristian S cien ce O rgan ization 2328 G uadalupe 7 : 4 5 E n g in eerin g W iv e# Club to elect o fficer s. T e x a s U n ion 305 8 :3 0 — “ S w e e t B ird of Y o u t h /' ACT P la y h o u se, F ifth and L avaca, ROOM A N D BO ARD SU M M E R SE SSIO N A IR -C O N D IT IO N E D S T AO CO -O PER A TIV E 2101 R io G rande GR 8-5013 T w o m ea ls per d ay, sev en da: * a w eek S . A. ARMS 1910 San A n ton io S u m m er R ates $45. fo r n in e w eek,s d o u b le $70 fo r n in e w eeks sin g le A ir-con d ition ed C all; GR 7-0617 GR 8-3910 Furnished Apartments _ ta k en NO W SPE C IA L R A T E S to r N ew -air-eon tilt toned, w ell-* p p o l n t e d , ii! 241995. I G IRLS ROOM O P E N for su m m er and reserv a tio n s M onthly su m m er ; rates, $20 d o u b le $25 s in g le Spacious. * O R reserv a tio n s N ear k . T and d o w n to w n area Co k- Sl rn m er or DCI. ; in g fa c ilitie s 16)9 C olorado, GR 2-0690 ------------- ------------------- fall ,, c o m p lete a n d : a cco m o d a tes 2-4. j ------------ T H E B R ID G E W A Y mer TAK ING A P P L IC A T IO N S FO R su m ­ SA N G A B R IE L A P T S . One o p en in g Im m ed iately. A ir-con d ition ed water and g a s paid Newl> ro-m odeled and d ecorated V ery $78, $88 Call GR 8-1030 or 2503 S a n Ga­ briel Apt. 2 A. la rg e $68 $50.30 fo r S u m m er T erm —d o u b le $70.00 fo r S u m m er T erm —s in g le air-co n d itio n ed d a b v p orter serv ice 2616 W ich ita 2711 H E M P H IL L PARK . T h ree b lock s d ir e c tly north of cam p us. Brand new tw in b eds, on e bedroom a p a rtm en ts, sw im m in g dan ish m odern fu rn itu re pool, S e e m anager. Apt. C or ca ll GR 6-8449, GE A3973. GL 2-6469. a r -c o n d ltlo n e d . M EN. M O DERN GARAGE a p a rtm en t. q u ie t. u tilitie s In q u ire 2055-B a n d w eek en d s, co n d itio n ed . c le a n in g S u m m er ra tes a i r carpeted paid S a b in e GR 2-J 043. P riv a te, service, p .m . 6-7 T H S “ 700'’ 700 H earn Id ea l fo r stu d en t one b ed room w a ter g a s p aid a lr-co n d itlo n ed u tility room $82.50 per m on th GR 2-4467 GR 6-8922 a p a rtm en t T w i n LO VELY, M O DERN O N E bed room beds. S ep a ra te ap a rtm en ts In. trl-p lex . A vailab le May I 2201 N orth GR 2-9293 b etw een 8:00-5:00. L a m a r . $110.00. PRO P E S S O R 'S A P A R T M E N T — SU M ­ ME. R. W ill ren t to resp o n sib le co u p le J u n e S ep tem b er. T h ree room*, r efrig ­ erated air. c o m p le te ly fu rn ish ed , on e block M e m o r i a l S tad iu m . $75.00. GR 2-7471. IO:OO a.m ,-8:00 p.m. stu d en ts U N IV E R S IT Y A PPR O V E D FO R m en fo r su m m er P l a n now from U n i­ h o u r ag. T e n m in u te walk v ersity . 2809 H em p h ill P ark. GR 8-2370. R A T E S S in g le Rrn. A $25.00 $13 50 Rm, B $27,50 $15,00 D o u b le '4 Jar, w in d ow *) (ev a p . co o ler) R E SE R V A T IO N NOW A C C E PT ED AT T H E NU EJC ES air-co n d itio n ed FO R SUM M ER TERM $30.00 m onth 's in g le ) $25.00 m o n th (d o u b ie) C on tact D onald D o u g la ss 2700 N u eces GR 7-0075 Houses for Sale H IG H L A N D PARK B E A U T Y S E V E N M IN U T E S FROM U N IV E R SIT Y * p in t k itch en * a ir co n d itio n ed * tw o la rg e b edroom s • pink til# bath * la rg e c lo se ts ga lo re # p atio carport .JHI®# rn v au lted c e ilin g s 'lin in g area • lan d scap ed y f d and fen ce • sap. dow n, $79 m onth. O w ner 2710 'I .EAN , SPA C IO U S O N E bed room I 109 W est 22nd. IOO. U tilitie s paid. i • $330 Alsu, u n fu rn ish ed tw o bedroom h o u se. W est 49th. GL 3-0918. u n nu est $70 GU 3-3863. A V A IL A B L E N O W A N D s u m m e r ! school D ue and tw o bedroom a p a rt- ; m o m s. SHO. SKM. $90. $75 L arge and ■ quiet field B in s paid. 17OS En- G arages GR 2-412 • GR 8 5916 JJP **® * S -. D ead en d str e e t near U, basem ent T. Furnished Apartments SA V E $1,000 TF purchased now. T h ree tw o bath h o m e $2 500 to ta l m o n th ly , GL 3-2505. bedroom s eq u ity , $91 FOR LUXURY LIVING the RIVER OAKS 3001 Red River St. O P E N I N G A U G U S T 1 5 th Centra! A lr-con d itlon in g S w im m in g P ool C entral TV A ntenna D a n ish M odern F u r n itu re C en tral M usic All U tilitie s P aid For further information contact Harley Clark GR 2*3914 FOR SALFI BY ow ner, F o u r Bed­ room s, den and stu d y . T w o sto ry . F o u r A ir-con d ition ed w in d o w un its. Central h ea tin g . E x c elle n t co n d itio n . F en ced -in yard , p atio. C lose to school, traits tx rtation . sh op p in g for ap p o in tm en t GL 3-0378 or Call drive by 3306 P e r r y L ane to see. $32,000 cen ter and Houses— Unfurnished PR ETT Y L IT T L E O N B bed room co t­ ta g e on W est 37th stree t F iv e m in ­ u tes north U T for o n iv $40. R ed roof, green ced a r .shakes m ahogan y p an eled tile interior, hard w ood and tile flo o rs drain board and sh o w er B ig g e s t bar­ gain In A u stin for p erm a n en t w o rk in g or stu d en t co u p le, Ba bv w elco m e. Call Mrs. H a n sen , C L 2-5232. Apartments— Unfurnished A V A IL A B L E A F T E R A P R IL 1 5 U n fu rn ish ed tw o bedroom d u p lex. C entral h eat and air. C arpeted, b u ilt-in k itch en , tile bath, carport, w asher co n n ectio n s, fen ced -in back yard. 4011 Lew i* L ane A partm ent A. $90 m o n th ly or w ill le a se bv y e a r —S B Call GR 6-1606. A fter ii p.m. GR 2-1973 CO UPLE 5-ROOM D U P L E X near S tad u im . a v a ila b le June. T ile bath sh ow er: cen tra l heat. cooled, u tilitie s paid, 2055-B Sabine, ev en in g s, w eek ­ ends GR 2-1043. Duplex— Furnished BARGAIN FO R F O U R girl*. F iv e room d u p lex . T w o dou b le bedroom s. fu rn ish ed , A ir-con d ition ed through C om p letely w ith TV. GR 6-4725. J u n e A u gust, only. Alterations ALT ER A T IO N S A N D D R E SSM A K IN G 715 W est 25th S treet. GR 6-3360, A L T E R A T IO N S D R E SSM A K IN G . RE- W EAV ING on m oth, c ig a r e tte holes. At 2 2 1 /2 , M onogram ing. L a d i e s rea so n a b le GR 2-7736 903 W est g r o ts rate# S p e c ia l S e rv ic e s R E N T - P U R C H A S E T.V s. T e le v isio n R en tal GR 2-2692 Alpha R E T O U C H E D JO B PH O TO S 24 h ou rs for P a ssp o rt . or p rin ts. L o w p rices G ilm ore. GR 2-4484. . . roofs tudio ! H O O K 'EM H O R N S N eed used fu rn itu re cai! T H E F U R N IT U R E BA R N 601 E a st 6th GR 2-1221 Printing For Sale SA IL BO A T S. N EW . U S E D . k its. H ard- . w are m d trailers. S a ilb o a t Sales. 504 W est 7th GR 6-3009. GR 8-8113. 1957 CH FAT Y 2-door h ard top N ew tires. Factory* air N in e te e n p r ie s per gallon . Cash sale M ichael C astle- m an. 1002 W est 26, GR 8-9327. H I F ID E L IT Y C O M PO NENTS, Speak­ er H 34 D 15" W 425: 2 ", tu rn ta b le tun er, pre-am pli­ S h an non . w ith cartrid ge, EM fie r , GR 2-2075 $15.00, R i c h a r d F O R SALE. TH IN -w h eel b icy cle and H ’-fl, m iltlp ie-speed record p layer. GR 6-3837. 1958 AU STIN H EA L EY . 1 0 0 4 f o u r place, over-drive, w ir e w h eels. E x cel­ len t con d ition . $1395. Cal! GR 8-0953 a fte r 5:30 p m. ISSA FOR D VICTORIA *295.00 N ew brake*, sea t covers, and b attery. Ex­ cellen t M SW steerin g , stan d ard s h i f t RAH. C all D an John­ son GR 2-4161, 5 7 p.m . MW E, tires, pow er A LL S T A T E SCOOTER. GOOD con d i­ tion, P rice reason ab le. C h arles Gee. 1420A B rack en ridge A p a r t m e n t s . GR 8-7839. B U F F E T 4 N D DUNING ta b le w ith six fin ish Call chairs. M a h o g a n y GL 3-8073 a fter 5 p.m . P rice $45 OO. I 1958 MGA COUPE, w i r e w h e e ls ! R adio, n ew carpet, good tires H as '60 MG en g in e. $1025, I recon d ition ed ; OL 58336. Typing IBM i ACCURATE B E A U T IF U L T Y P IN G — i LAW W ORK ; SPE C IA L IS T R eason able C ourteous co n scien tio u s, co n sid era te service. Call electrom atlc. I GR 8-7079 M ultU lthln ie. M im eograp h ing is X ero x ln i The### l e p e r s P rin tin g A U S-T E X D U PLIC A TO R S 400 E ast l i t h P hon e GR 6-6593 T H E S E S . REPORTS. R EA SO NA BLE. E lectro m a tie Mrs. B rady 2317 Old­ ham GR 2-4735 N E E D A TYPIST'* E '.w trom atlc. UnH vers! tv arca Call GR 8-5446. VIRGINIA C A LH O U N LEGAL TYPING SERVICE 2914 Bean na (o ff P ark P lace a: T o w n es H a il) N o ta ry P u b lic GR 8-2636 Carbon R coon IBM t Q uick C op yin g by V erila x E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IN G SERVICE. reason able. G a i l A ccurate and HO 5-5813 1 TH EM ES, LAW NO TES, o u tlin es 25c I d ou b le space GR 6-4717 MARTHA ANN ZIVLEY M B A. p rofessional tailored co m p lete A s e n iq r U n iversity board sci'-.n *e a n d d isserta tio n s an a eq u ip m en t to stu d en ts ty p in g the needs of .Special key­ la n g u a g e th e ses for en g in eerin g P h o n e: GR 2-3210 A GR 2-767? M ore C on v en ien tly L ocated At Our N ew A ddress 20131-, G U A D A L U PE E X P E R IE N C E D T Y PIN G REPO RTS. etc. Electric, Mrs. Hunter theses CL 3-3546 TYPIN G—THESIS, d isse rtatio n s low accuracy. -iq and delivery. Mr*. T u ll,.s. g u aran teed rates, neat T Y P E W R IT E R : R eports, them es, etc. Mrs. B radley, C L 3- 8848. _ ___________ SH O RT ON T Y P I N G tim e and m oney * M iss Graham GL 3*5Kb D E L A F IE L D Grammar, TYPING. s p e l l i n g 2 o T P aia. correction. HI 2-6522 T Y P IN G . TH ESES. D ISSE R T A T IO N S. Low- rates S a t.s S e a lio n gu aran teed . Mrs. Callow UL 3-5124. ...fo r Am erica n so phom ore* a n d Junior*. Birt which year I* bast ? That * up to y o u - and your advisors. Institute program s offer sop h om ores th* opportunity to broaden their background In general stu d ies and the lib­ eral arts, juniors th* opportunity to sp ecia lize am ong the liberal arts, V I E N N A Attend English or German taugh t liberal art# course-. Discover European culture at its roots by living in a V iennese h o m e. Visit nine European countries on three field study trips. Prerequisites: you must be a sophom ore or junior and have a C plus average (no language prerequisite). European Year Fee; $2,230. P A N I S Attend French-taught c la sser. Investigate Franc# and the Benelux countries en a field-study trip. Live in • Parisian hom e. Prerequisites one year of c o la g e French and a "B" avera ga. Honors r.ogram Fee: $2,475. rot! m ust be a sophomore mr junior; hey# P R K ! B U N G Attend German taught liberal arts course*. Live in a German hom e. Be introduced to W estern Ger­ many, Switzerland and Italy on two field study triers. Prerequisites: you m ust be a junior; have a C-ptus aver- Age end be proficient in German. b a s Deutsche Jahr Fee $7,125 (Each fee Includes tuition, field study, room and board, round trip ocean voyage from New Yoe*) J For fu rth er Inform ation m all coupon. n n H Institute \ \ of E uropean Studies............ V Bon J, 39 East W icker Drive, Chicago I , Illinois jh nett prwjiI pdutuhWH*} M A M K A D D R E S S CITY C m I t e a Chauk: Z O N E STATE V EAR IN S C H O O L □ VIENNA ti PARIS □ FREIBURG! F o u n d a tio n s—$1.50 pius tax L ip stick s—-$1.25 p lu s tax P o w d ers $l.5o pius tax irritants screened out 'wsjjjg FAULKNER S DRUG W E CASH CHECKS GR 2-2134 26th St G uadalupe % S H R LE FONTAINEBLEAU APTS. Summer Rates 5 8 0 3 W . 28th lipsticks and make-ups to com* “ O PEN IN G Summer 1962 Now...find new complexion magic with a pur# cosmetic... andHypo-Aiiergenic. ^ From “leen-ager* to “young-at h e a r t”. * > ALM \Y Cosmetics eta make your complexion dream come true. From » plexion creams for normal. dry or oily skins. P er- r > skin fu m e d o r U n s c e n t e d • F o r Y oung L ad ies—J r s ., Sr*., St G ra d s. • To B e U niversity A pproved • T h irteen F u rn ish ed , C a rp e te d , A A ir-conditioned Apts, • E a c h 2 B edroom —2 B ath , L iv. R m ., K itchen & Nook • V alk-In C losets, In ter-co m . S ystem , L a u n d ry F a c ilitie s • U tilities, M aid Serv. & O ffstree t P a rk in g Included • S w im m ing P ool & G u est L ounge APPLICATIONS TAKEN N O W FOR SUMMER I FALL H o u se m o th e r- M RS. L O U ISE B A R N E T T —GR 2-6480 o r P ro p rie to r—MRS. D A R R E L L N EY LA N D —GL 2-3364 For QUALITY PRINTING Call Multiprint Co. GR 2-2417 P r in tin g D u p lica tin g M ailing T h eses — D isserta tio n s — R eports J o u rn a ls — C ustom B in d in g s Pick GL 3-5124 University Bookbinders 203 East 19th S tre e t GR 2-9303 P laque# — T ro p h ies — E n gravin g Help Wanted D O RM ITO RY M ANAGER W A N T E D to m a n a g e m en s dorm itory I T H E MOONLIGHTERS -I.B M M ul- C oupl* till thing A fter 6 OO an d w eek en d s, W ife not w ork in g or par t tim e stu d en t M arguerite c© stella. GR 2-1535. 3217 w ife S ta te a g e, education, exp erien ce H am pton Road and and s : > S' a i on B ox 3.40T Univer- D ISSE R TA T IO N S, T H E SE S. BOOKS. ei#o» in, r eferences Fur ni shed a pa r t me nt salary Vt r ite rep orts New sym bol-equip ped , — " r — -------- --— d o e * . j t rem et ic. Mrs. R itch ie, I GR $'1079 Thur«d«Y. M ay I. I THE D A ILY TEXAN Pag. Roos Outlines Tests ----------- Smiley Speaks Today For Mental Illness Dr, Joseph Smiley, president of the 'd am University, will speak at the Delta Delta D elta house st 6:30 p m. Thursday The la s1 of this seek s series, Dr. Smiley s talk is part of the Texas Today and To morrow program. As an effort for com m unication between the adm inistration and the students, the program hoc had a num ber of adm inistration officials •peaking to student groups. *H e a rin g s ' B SU Subject “ Civil Liberties an d t he Tevt- hook H earings" will be the topic the Rev. Braitdoeh Lovely’s of speech Thursday at the Baptist Student I nicrti from 5 to 5:30 p.m. R ev. Lonely K the head of the Austin division of the American C ivil U b erties I Ilion. His will he the third and last speech of a aeries on CRU Liberties. Sr •Cr NATO to be Discussed Col. E. W, Austin, executive of­ ficer of Ute Army ROTO unit, will speak to Scabbard and Blade, hon­ orary m ilitary society, a t 7 p m , Thursday in ROTT Building 310. To speak on "NATO and Its R e­ lation to United States Objectives,*' Col. Austin will discuss tim back­ ground events leading to the for­ mation of NATO and the relation­ in ship between US participation NATO and basic national objec­ tives. Col. Austin, a U niversity g rad­ uate, is being assigned in Septem ­ ber to SHAPE, Suprem e H eadquar- Campus News Round-Up tem Allied Pow ers in E urope, th"* military’ force of NATO with head­ q u a r t e r in P a n s . C h J e a n to I n t e r v i e w P rofessor lad s Gap urn of the I adversity of Chile w ill begin in­ terview ing applicants for the Chil can Student Leader Sem inar F ri­ day'. He arrh od In Dustin Thursday to help in the selection of sem i­ nar participants. Interviews will continue through the early part of next week. Ar G eologist Speaks Today Don W. St Clair, Midland inde­ pendent geologist and oil producer. will speak on "Geologists Profes­ sionals or Prom oters at I p m T hursday in Geology Building 14 addressing geology faculty m em ­ bers and graduate students St. C lair has been an independ­ ent geologist and oil producer sine.; 1952 and served as a geologist for various corporations prior to that date. it Large Grant G iven to UT \ $91,30© grant to th#* Unlver televised for a In American civilization ally of Texas course THE UNIVERSITY'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway S R 8-660? Serving the University area for 11 y e a n H IS H FIDELITY AT REASONABLF PRICES" wa* announced Wednesday by the Ford Foundation. The course. Including lectures by em inent historian1* living In other parts nf the country, will be broadcast to other Texas col leges and universities over the state's m icrowave educational netw ork. W N egro Students Studied Tile Re!ic His Workers Associa­ tion is completing a detailed study of the Negro student at the Uni­ versity and his adjustm ent to Uni­ versity cam pus life. is asked the U niversity interviewed for If any Negro student has not this study, !>*•• - to contact F ran k he Wright at "Y " Thursday or Friday. The sociol­ ogists conducting The study a re anxious to have a IOO per cent sam ­ ple upon which to base their work it M o lin o to A d d re ss B o d y UNS — Dr. .Joseph F. Malina. assu ra n t professor of civil e n g r neerin g, will address the seven tf*enlh Indu strial B i Ste C on fer­ e n c e at P urdu e I it! vc ratty Thurs day. Dr, M alina will present a paper on HU research on waste stabili­ sation ponds. (Jo author of the paper Is You- set A. You Mf, graduate student from Alexandria, Egypt. A ousel also w ill attend the conference. A Joint Cabinet to Meet The final m eeting of the 1961- 62 Faeulty-Student Cabinet will be held F rid a y a t 3 p m . in Texas Union 202. Final reports from the cabinet 1 cc m m iftees will be heard, and the officers for 1962-63 will be elected All m em bers are urged to .vtend the m eeting. Those unable to a t­ the cabinet tend should com ae1 secretary or chairm an. By EM ILY LAMON The psychologist attem pts to tell what the patient is doing, estim ate what he could do if he w ere well. deride why he can t do it, and t h e n form ulate a rem edy, D r. Philip Roo* said W ednesday to a group of local psychologists. in The first step the process .■involves the use of various tests s u c h as verbal knowledge and a b stra c t thought, The tests will tell capacity and the fulfilled potential of the subject, said Dr. Roos. They will also indicate serious im pair­ ment if the person can Solve the difficult, but not easy problem s; if there a re w i d e differences be­ tween verbal and a b stract p a rts; and if he cannot com plete a g re a t per cent of the test, As related by im ­ is classified as either pairm ent funt tional with no organic brain dam age or organic with specific changes within the brain. Dr. Roos illustrated causes as functional educational poverty, dam aging re*, la lions with other people, and cha va d e r disorders when the p a - 1 tient attem pts to change the world by any method t h e tests, Dr, Roos also pointed out that Organic causes which occur either ear!;-' in life or which occur later as a loss of ability m ay also de-1 velop funtional conditions. He lllu -1 sti lted brain-dam aged persons as having think­ im paired, ab stra c t ing; rigidity rn change: visual dif­ ficulty; and an cent ra te and focus attention. Pointing out aptitude inability to con-! tests as A n n u a l U nion Banquet Set for 6:30 Tonight The Texas Union annual banque! will he held et 6:30 p.rn. T hurs­ day In the Junior Ballroom A skit review ing the events of the y e a r the Union will be given, and the gavel will exchange hands. in Among the aw ards to Ive pres- * Sited is the Unmn sp irit Award, given to the person who has done The rn os’ w ork rn the Union d u r­ ing Ttie y ea r. De taste to start with...the taste to stay with MOVING? a basis for diagnosis, D r. Roo* intelligent quotient or stated that IQ is unsatisfactory as the only value. He said that IQ lacked re ­ liability and constancy. It can be used, though, to indicate re ta rd a ­ tion in developm ent early. The use of intelligence "measures can be used in the testing of per­ sonality, especially in the m entally retarded person, said D r. Roos. that personality is one He noted of the most unexplored areas of a retarded person’s c h a ra c ter and ; can be used to exam ine the con­ flicts of the person with him self and society. Also a p a rt of the personality, the e g o determ ines how these c o n f l i c t s will be handled, he said. T ests for determ ining the per- jective sonalitv of the num erous as the n um ber of psy cho legists. They range from individual are as used the ality. DR. PHILLIP RO O S , per ★ ★ structured "pencil and pa- the unstructured "p ro ­ to tests. The m ost widely test, which the inkblot gives a full picture of the person- s< Latin A m e r i c a Y o u n g Says N e w sp a p e rm a n Asia Scholarships Offered in Summer UNS—Scholarships I m er Institute on Asia a t the Uni- teachers versify have been increased from : m aterials SIF' to $225 each, Institute officials i lessons. announced recently. for a S u m -ion curriculum planning will assist incorporating Asian in their social studies in I ta g0 "Although f unds for IO scholarships have the Am erican heri- is prim arily European and been provided by the Asia Society, j W estern, and the content of our Jap an Society, and the Asia Foun- social all studies education dation. The nine-week sum m er ses­ levels generally reflects this, th ere sion opens June 12. is no doubt that the non-Western and Asian portions of the globe are to have an expanding p a rt in the direction of world a ffa irs,” insti­ tute leaders said. Scholarship requests should he sent im m ediately to Dr. John B. Cornell, Anthropology’ D epartm ent, U niversity of Texas, Austin 12. ! O ther adm ission applications will be accepted through May 20. at Littlefield Dorm Taps 18 Advisers The South Asian countries of India, Pakistan, and Ceylon, will be em phasized in this y e a r’s insti­ tute. D irectors will be D r. Jam es i R. Roach, associate professor of governm ent and a Fulbright lec­ for tu rer in India this year, and D r. Eighteen W alter C. Neale, assistant profes- j next year a t Littlefield D orm itory’^ sot of economics who was a lee-1 tapping dinner a re Arlin Alexan- der, Cindy B rantley, Karen Byrd, tu re r in India last year. A guest lecturer will be Dr. Paul- Alice E iekenroht, Mimi Eikel, ine M ahar, M ichigan State Univer- B a rb a ra Ellis, Peggy F oran, Dixie sity anthropologist and a specialist Gaddis, Annette H ardin, on the culture of Indian villages. Also, Jeanie Hollingsworth. G ay advisers chosen raltin A m erica is like a young person, sensitive aggressive, and dem anding. H erbert L. Matthews, authority on I-atin America and author of "T he Cuban S tory," said to a group W ednesday in Texas Union auditorium . "L atin A m erica is a young com­ m unity," M atthew s "The average age in the United Slate* is 29, while there is it 21. There is m ore chance for radical ideas and attraction by pow er." said. Matthews, a m em ber of the New York Times staff, indicated also that Ratio A m erica is unbalanced .socially and economically. “ There is a sm all ruling class; it is grow ing, h sm all, although m iddle class; and the m asses, who a re poor, ignorant, and ill." is "O ur challenge to persuade and dem onstrate th a t our way is than better th e irs." Matthews stressed the need for Americans to realize that w hat Latin Ameri­ cans want is social reform ami economic developm ent, not com- { m unism , but they w ant it now, in a hurry. "T h at is why they revolt, Our way takes tim e ,'’ he added. " It is a dangerous and frighten­ ing experience,’’ M atthew s said, but he continued that the outlook is not entirely pessim istic. Although the institute is prim ar- j Nagle, Diane P r i n c e , P aula ily for high school social studies Schwippel, Suzanne Sorenson, T ra- J a n e t W ark, Susan , teachers, other persons m ay be J rey T ajan, ~ • a em m ents will be destroyed adm itted. All students will by new generations who will build j three courses: "G overnm ents and new ones, M atthew s stated. . . . v . , G uests at the dinner w ere Dean "E c o n o m -; M argaret Peck, Miss Ja n e G reer, e ideJ C astro and his followers ; ics of South A sia," and "S em inar Dean Dorothy ]>ean F C MeCofi­ „ i Politics of South Asia, take Wilson, and Liz Wood. des troy ed one and built another. ; in South Asian Studies." The sem- ne ll, and Dean Helen Flynn <*&stros profound revolution in Cuba was m ar will introduce m aterials from a n . g en eral," ha said. M atthews said the I .a tin Am er­ ican situation is r controversial topic which is full of emotion, but it is necessary that people study it calm ly. i n c l u d i n g University students | se v e r., f l.1 * ogy and sociology, philosophy and i T racey T a jan literature, geopraphy and history. from South Asia will serve as "resource per­ sons" Institute. Form al course work will be supplem ented by exhibitions of Asian fine arts, showings of films from o r about South Asian countries, and public lectures. social chairm an; Jan et W ark, se c re tsry -tre a su re r; Susan Wilson, chaplain; Peggy Fo­ ran, student relations board; B ar­ bara EHL, scholarship; Gay Na­ gle. re p o rte r; Dixie G a d d is /in tra ­ m urals the for I he Pre-Grad Center for "Post (.rad" Slacks by H.I.S. Co-op Exes Asked To Help New Units UNS — U niversity women grad­ uates who were enabled to com­ plete their education by living in low-cost co-op houses are being asked for donations which will pro­ vide for a proposed new coperalive residence. furnishings The Dean of W omen’s office, is contacting form er co-op residents for gifts w’hieh will be used to equip a perm anent, two-unit cooperative budding housing 34 coeds. College of Education specialists Research Order To Initiate 67 initiated i Sixty-seven new m em bers will be the University into chapter of Sigma Xi, graduate sci­ entific research society, M ay 8 at 6 :3G p.m . at the Villa C apri R es­ taurant. Dr. Virgil E . B arnes, University geology professor and Bureau of Economic Geology associate direc­ tor, will discuss "T ek tites” a t a 7 p.m . banquet. 2216 G uadalupe— In the Co-Op Win your letters in style! m ent Board. The new m em bers are drawn __ from the ranks of U niversity grad- The idea to seek gifts from for- uate students, graduates, and the University sciences and engineer­ ing faculties. , S h a rp e n up in trim ’ n tapered POST-GRAD SLACKS He said the United States has on L arg er private gifts for construe- its side vveaiith, know-how1, and ^ on nevv co“°P are being geography, ideals of liberty, and sought by the U niversity Develop- equality of opportunity. You’re every Inch a man In Post- Grads, America’s favorite stacks! Slim , smart and traditionally styled with belt loops and cuffs. In washable Du Pont Dacron* polyester blends; also in a slew of colorful all-cotton fabrics. Get yours at stores that know the score.,.$ 4.9 5 to $10,95* CALL MAYFLOWER FOR PROMPT SERVICE SUMMER STORAGE for STUDENTS Hi-Fi, Stereo, and Personal Effects m er co-op residents evolved sev­ eral months ego when the Univer­ sity received a check for m ore than SLOOO from an alum na who asked that her gift "b e used in any way which will contribute to the im provem ent of cooperative housing." The Dean of Women’s office de­ cided that other graduates who had experienced and benefited by co-op living might respond to plans for additional co o p units. Co-op residents keep their room- to approxi­ and-board expenses m ately $52 per month per girl by sharing household duties of cook­ ing, cleaning, and m aintenance, j E ach girl perform s an assigned task which requires about IO hours a week, In describing the need for ex­ panded coop housing, Miss D oro I thy G ebauer, consultant the Dean of Women, estim ated there are about four applicants for each co-op vacancy each sem ester. to live Jr. "G irls who tile coops have dem onstrated consistently a capacity to organize their tim e so well that m any of them excel aca- i dem ically as well as in e x tr a r u r r i- 1 cular activities," Miss Gebauer said. Chosen for full m em bership are R obert John B eyers and Exalton A. Delco Jr., zoology; Norm an Al­ vin Bostrom , nuclear physics; John Edw ard Breen, W alter Ron­ ald Drynan, R ichard Wilson F u r­ long, F ran k D. M asch J r ., and R obert Davis Turpin, civil engi­ neering; G if ton E . Dowell, m ic­ robiology; E, W. G ardner J r., bacteriology; Jam es D. Goodrich, electrochem istry; K e n n e t h Eu­ gene G ray, petroleum engineering; C a r l D avid H eather, veterinary bacteriology; Lorrin K ennam er, geography; and John K regarm an and W alter O’Connell, psychology. Also Donald A. Larson, botany; Jam es Cyril M cPherson J r ., bio­ chem istry; P rem P ra sa d Mahen- droo and Paul Taylor W rotenbery, physics; Hilton Henry Mollenhau- er, electron m icrobiology; Leo R. Swett, organic chem istry; Byron D, Tapley and Tsuan Wu Ting, en­ gineering m echanics; Joel S. Wat­ kins J r ., geophysics; John Conrad j W eastkaem per, engi- kaem per, aero-space engineering; ; and J o h n W iseman, m edical en­ tomology. aero-space New associate m e m b e r s are Zuheir Y. A land, E rvin Sewell P erry , Wilbur C harles Schoeller, I a n d N ripendra C handra Sinha, Infernal Revenue Center ^ H enemeehng. Robert Ne.! Am- tin, P a t G arner Hedgcoxe, Charles To Be Built on Freew ay Allen Ford, and J. H, Gaines, en- The she for a multi-million del- gin* * S * " “ <*“ *=»: S" T r K “" engm eering: la r Internal Revenue C enter to be com pleted by Septem ber, 1963. w as Joe M om s Bloom' « P e rim e n U l announced Tuesday by B. F ran k ; White, IRS regional com m issioner for Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, New Mexico, and A rkansas. A 15-acre tract n e a r the inter­ section of Ben White Boulevard and South Interregional Highway will he the location of the service center, which will process tax re­ turns for the five-state region. R ichard Vernor McGehee, Uel S. G anton Jr., David Evan Dunn, Jereld Edw ard McQueen, and John William Wood, geology; L a d E. B radshaw , micropaleontology; and B rother Joseph Cain, Elenor Ray Cox, and E a rle R ussell Mattox, botany. Also M arianne D auw alder and Jack Corletto Vaughn, cell bio­ logy; Thom as Thornton Doss and Suresh C handra M athur, nuclear physics; D a l e W ayne Evenison, m echanics and acoustics; F r e d Charles Fehsenfeld, physics; Ray N. Finch, Jam es W. Hall, and Ba­ bur M. K ocatas, chem ical engi­ neering; Paul F. Geiger, pharm ­ acology; Carroll R. Griffin Jr., electrical engineering; Richard D rake H art, J e rry H arvey, Jam es R. Hawker, Roy C, Long, P atricia Wells Lunneborg, and M artha S. W illiams, psychology; Thomas H, Patton, v erteb rate paleontology; and Donald R ichard R o w e and William C. Shilling, environm ental health engineering. For Free Estimate Shive Represents A C S a n d Inform ation C all G R 2-5471 Dr. William Shive, chairm an of the D epartm ent of C hem istry, represented the A m erican Chem­ ical S o c i e t y at the inauguration of Dr, Philip Hoffman as president of the I iii vc ratty of Houston Fri- d a y . Coming to Europe This Summer? If you are planning to buy or rent a c a r in Europe we suggest that you find out our low rates before finalizing. We offer the lowest prices in Europe on m any models. We a le owned and operated by form er students, Texas A&M *56. and U. of Md. Phi D elta Thcia ’61, so we know your special problem s. Some of :>ur prices, including Am erican specifications, registration & touring docum ents, delivery costs, m aps and a pat on the back; ........................ ....$ 1 0 5 0 ....................... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................... ...$1*298 ................................................................................. M orris 850 Mini-Minor VW deluxe sed an MG Midget S un b eam Alpine daily charge renting VW ................. .......................................................................... .. . . $ 1 9 9 5 $ 2.95 Contact us before doing anything ra sh ; even if you c a n ’t m ake im port yourself plan. Europe su m m er ask about our this EURA UTO NJV. D EPT. A, POSTBUS 333, ROTTERDAM, HOLLAND c /J i T-~J >7 #w'l tty H it... wtat Him • DUMONT THAO* MAUK Your H.I.S, H ead qu arters Where You'll Find Your Most Complete Selection of Colors & Sizes One o f the L arged H J S , Dealers rn This Area M I K * % I t i F / m K t 'Do Y our Shoppin g W here Y our Polloi* H a t e a Meaning* 2424 GUADALUPE J t What makes Lucky Strike the favorite regular cigarette of college smokers? Fine-tobacco iaste. The taste of a Lucky is great to start with, and it spoils you for other cigarettes. That s why Lucky smokers stay Lucky smokers. So, get the taste you’ll want to stay with. Get Lucky today. C <* J , tm Jhrodud of tjd!p/m jexdean — rjerfwuaco is our middle name Ransom Answers Queries By B A R B A R A TOSCH S tudents a re m o re “ en g a g ed ,” m o re a w a re of w h at ed u catio n Is all about, C h ancellor H a r ry H. R an so m told m e m b e rs of G am bia P h i B e ta sorority in a T ex a s T o­ d a y and T om orrow p rese n tatio n W ednesday night. In noting changes a t the Univer-1 sity in his th re e d e c a d e s h ere , D r, j R a n so m said stu d en ts h ad gained m o re independence, self-a ssu ra n ce , and h a d a longer p e rsp e c tiv e . A false m yth h a s grow n, along w ith the size of th e ca m p u s, that, stu d en ts w ill “ g e t lo st” h ere , he said. "A ctually, th e U n iv e rsity h a s m o re m e an s of helping students w ho ‘think' th e y a r e lost th a n a city o r industry of th e sa m e siz e .” T he U n iv ersity ’s im a g e also h as chan g ed . “ I t ’s m ission, its rea so n ­ a b le obligation to b eco m e a g re a t U niversity, is p re tty w ide sp read , bu t a s fa r as new ly found e m i­ nence, th is is a false im pression T his h a s alw ays been a good school." In th e question and an sw e r p e r­ iod, D r. R ansom en c o u rag ed the c o e d s to “ fire a t w ill,” b ecau se “ T his p ro g ra m Is a tw o w a y ex­ ch ange and we need an d w ant to g et to know w hat stu d e n ts w an t to know', w h e r e th in k w e ’re failin g .” they H O U S IN G R U L E S stu d en ts A sked for a ju stifica tio n for the U n iv ersity ’s “ c u s t o d i a l c a r e ” ; g ra n te d proved housing, D r. R an so m ob- j se rv ed th a t this “ cu stodial c a r e ” j h as “ dim inished ra p id ly since the | w a r ” and th a t such ru le s a re m ost- j ly influenced by p a re n ts. re g a rd in g a p ­ In ru le s “ So m a n y of th e re q u e sts few* I ch an g es stu d e n ts w an t i th e o re tic ally b u t not p ra c tic a lly ,” j I he said, b ran d ish in g a c ig a re tte . ! j “ If all ru les w e re rem o v e d , 1he j f irs t to fuss w ould be stu d e n t rep- i re se n ta tiv e s. UIL 1962: Brave New Whir! Play Fray U nder W a y Today A B y D IA N N E MTT.I.FR p a rtic ip a n ts 2,064 rec o rd from 556 high schools w ill e n te r com petition in the U n iv ersity In ­ te rsc h o la stic L eague S tate M eet on ca m p u s T h u rsd ay , F rid a y , and S atu rd ay . H e a d q u a rte rs for th e contests will tie lo cated in G reg o ry G ym . In fo rm a tio n on re g istra tio n , hous­ ing, re b a te s, and o th e r m a tte rs m a y be obtained th e re d u rin g following h o u rs : T h u rsd ay th e from I to IO p .m .; F rid a y from 8 a.m . to IO p .m .; and S atu rd ay from 8 a m. to 6 p.m . O ne-act p lay co n testan ts, how ever, will re g iste r in Hogg A uditorium . E v en ts a re scheduled in de­ b ate, extem p o ran eo u s sp eaking p o etry in te rp re tatio n , prose r e a d ­ jo u rn alism , n u m b e r sen se, ing, play, sh o rth an d , re a d y w riting, o ne-act slide n ile , scien ce, and ty p e w ritin g . Sports events a re golf, ten n is, and tra c k an d field. T he L e a g u e ’s m a in purpose is to a s sist stu d e n ts in th e ir p rep ­ a ra tio n for citizenship by fu rn ­ ishing m e a n s for sp o rtsm an sh ip in com petitiv e events of all types —lite ra ry , ac ad e m ic , and a th le t­ ic -thus providing a background for p ro b lem s and situations th a t will a ris e in y e a rs to com e. Stu­ d en ts of public elem e n ta ry , jun­ ior high, an d high schools of Tex­ a s m a y com pete. T he o n e-a ct play division will lead off th e s ta te m eet T h u rs­ d ay a t 4:35 p .m . in Hogg Audi­ to riu m . F o u r p la y s w ill be p res­ e n te d a t th a t tim e. A t 7:30 p.m . four m o re p lay s in th e B con­ te s t w ill continue. W inners will be p rese n ted im ­ m e d iately follow ing the p e rfo rm ­ an ces. th e ir a w a rd s O th er one-act p la y sessions a re scheduled fo r F rid a y a t 4:15 p.m . and 7:30 p.m . and S a tu rd a y a t 4:15 p.m . and 7:30 p.m . T ick ets p er session a re $1 for ad u lts and 50 cents for stu d en ts an d m a y be p u rch a sed in G re g o ry G ym , M em orial S tadium , o r H ogg Aud­ itorium . F iv e co n ferences a re co m p et­ ing in Hie a c a d e m ic and lite r a r y events beginning T h u rs d a y a t 8 p.m . and continuing u n til m o n S atu rd ay . R esu lts of th e se con­ te sts will be posted a t h ea d ­ q u a rte rs. The firs t round of golf m a tc h e s will begin a t 8 a .m . F rid a y and w ill be followed by th e second round sta rtin g a t 8 a rn. S a tu r­ the A ustin M unicipal d ay Golf C ourse. F ive conferences a re included In this co m p etitio n : B, A, AA, AAA, and AAAA. at T ennis play will begin a t 9 a .m . F rid a y . All divisions of AAAA boys will play on the P en!c k C o u rts; B boys, all divisions on C asw ell C ourts; and AAA and AAAA girls, all divisions on G irls C ourts. T ra c k p re lim in a rie s w ill s ta r t at 9 a.m . F rid a y and field ev e n ts will begin a t 7 p.m . F rid a y in M em orial S tadium . F in a l com ­ petition will begin a t I p .m . S at­ urd ay , also in M em orial S tadium . in ­ clude the annual L eague B re a k ­ festivities w ill A dditional fa st an d S tate M eeting of D e le ­ to be held a t 7:30 a rn. g a te s F rid a y in the C ry sta l B allroom , D risk ill H otel. T ic k ets, av a ila b le a t h e a d q u a rte rs, a re $1.15 p er person. A to the In te rsc h o la stic L eag u e P re s s C onference S ta te C onvention w ill be given by th e C a p ita l C ity P re s s A ssociation T h u rsd a y fro m 7 :30 to IO p m . in th e A uditorium of the T ex a s U nion. fo r d eleg a tes rec ep tio n Convention sessio n s w ill b e held in B a tts A uditorium F rid a y and an d S a tu rd a y m o rn in g s, w orkshops w ill be held in room s d esig n ated in th e p ro g ra m F ri­ day afternoon. A d in n e r will be held F rid a y a t 6:30 p .m . in the M ain B allroom of th e T ex as U n­ ion. T i r a■ I c D A fl|f T e: SAN “ First College D a i l y in t h e S o u th " Vol. 61 Price Five C e n ts A U S T IN , TEXAS, THURSDAY, MAY 3. 1962 Six Pages Today N o. 165 E S T W o u ld -B e Governors I Swing-Out cerem ony h o n o r i n g W a n t States Rights In Honor of Seniors Ceremony Friday | R e h e a rs a l trad itio n al t h e for 'R ec ru itin g fac u lty is not J u s t : g ra d u a tin g seniors w ill be a t 6:45 sa la rie s, although we a r e failing p m T h u rsd a y on the M ain M all. ! By The Associated Press Candidates for governor called for states rights and no J nation and free of any selfish individuals^ sa id in re- h e r e .” th e C hancellor sponse to an o th er q u ery . “ A nother consideration Is being abl© to off­ e r faculty m e m b e rs good physical fa c ilitie s.” He classro o m s as good “ te ac h in g m a ­ c h in es” and said som e of the e a rly buildings w ere too m o n u m en tal. re fe rre d to the A sked “ If so m a n y g ra d u a te s In E nglish w ere tru ste d to te a c h m ost co u rse s, why of w e re n 't they tru ste d to g ra d e th e ir ow n stu d e n ts’ fin a ls,” h e said this w as a m yth. fre sh m a n “ Som e of the b e s t te ac h er* are B E B j p an ts a re req u ested to be Swing_0 u t be held on In Gainesville, Gov. Price Daniel said “proven experience the federal domination Wednesday as the campaign rolled to- and complete independence from the lobbyists for special in- jterests, both in Washington and in Austin, are the main J Edwin A. Walker told a Dallas audience that he “will not issues in the governor’s race.” “At Austin, I have had the courage and independence to of Texas and their legislature differ with Washington every time the rights of our state T e rra c e south of the M ain Build- ward Saturday’s primaries. ing F rid a y a t 6:30 p m . P a rtic l- th e re a t 6:15, H a rrie t Schoch, presid in g o ffic e r at the Can and Town meet ing T uesday night w ill w ea r caps and gowTis, and jun- s t a t e government in the performance of its constitutional to rs w ill w e a r all w hite. Republican candidate Roy Whittenburg, campaigning I n Seguin, New Braunfels and Houston, said the main issues I am for an inde- are the election of federal judges, especially US supreme i pendent state . . . free from Washington and national domi-j court judges, and the “foolish federal policy on importing Seniors I aSainst interference by federal meddlers and I will leave the have been threatened,” Daniel said. Harlingen, Marshall Formby said be dominated from W ashington.” C ap and Gown and S ilver Spur* ; duties, Walker said. a re co-sponsors of the event. 1 wiH protect the said T he Swing-Out cerem ony F rid a y I --------------------- —---------------- -- th an a h u n d red th e v ery young, a n d y e a rs ago. f w ill be d edicated to tile la te Joe m o re (Jo d ie) T i m p s o n of D a jiaS) ag re ed th a t they h ad been p assing som e stu d en ts th a t s h o u ld s t h av e * ho » <■ r v e d on th e U n i v e r s e been p assed. So they g av e a uni- B o ard of R egents from 1957 until fo rm not to d eterm in e a g ra d e . T his is a com m on device a c ro ss the coun- te a c h e rs c , for a m e a su re m e n t, j his d eath in 1%1. final T1 , , Engineers W ill Show Space-Age Advances A sp e cia l m ovie co n cem in g tra in in g th e crew' of the P o laris n u c le a r su b m a rin e w ill lie show n in ROTC Building 310 a t 6 :15, 7 :15, and 9:15 p.m . A question and an ­ sw er period will follow each show­ ing. T he A rm y R O T C s C o nfederate D rill Squad will p erfo rm the a r e a n o rth of the ROTC Building a t 7, 7 :3Q, and 8 p.m . in S tudents In tile D e p a rtm e n ts of A ero-Space. A rc h ite ctu ra l, C hem i­ cal, C ivil E le c tric a l, an d M echan- engineering, E ngineering i c a I m e e t : D raw ing, and E ngineering M echan- to a tte n d . J ics will h av e exhibits. its unveil Th# C o l l e g e of E n g in e e r­ ing will space-ag e ach iev em en ts, ran g in g fro m a su p ­ ersonic w ind to a hom e tunnel for fu tu re sp a ce m en on the moon, during th e 53rd an n u al P o w er Show* T hu rsd ay . S tudent-organized disp lay s d ep ic­ ting “ The A dvancem ent th e S pace A ge” w ill lie on view for the public from 7 to IO p.m . in T aylor H all, th e E n g in e erin g L a b ­ o rato rie s B uilding and the C hem i­ cal E ng in eerin g B uilding. erf C ontestants in the U n iv ersity In- tersc h o la stic le a g u e s ta te have also been invited H ighlight of th e show will be the P ro je c t M ercu ry C apsule I , i loaned by the N ational A eronau­ tics and S pace A d m inistration. C apsule I w as flight te ste d M ay I 9, 1960, a t W allops Islan d , V a., j in a d em o n stratio n at the M ercury escap e sy ste m . A ero-space engin eerin g students will show a supersonic w ind tu n ­ nel, a ballistic tunnel, and o th er s tru c tu ra l dem onsta turns. engineering a rc h ite c tu ra l T he entitled “ A rc h ite ctu re display, th e A ges." w ill depict T hrough the s tru c tu ra l developm ent e a rlie s t th a tc h hut to a fu tu ristic lu n a r sh e lte r. T he la tte r is fo rm ed inflated dom e an d a sun by both co n stru cted fro m foil from W eather: Cloudy, W arm er Low 58, High 84 TTie flight involved lau n ch in g of tile capsule, utilizing only the lift provided by ignition of the escap e an rocket. D ie esca p e rocket is p a r t I shield of a 16-foot, d errick -lik e a tta c h e d deck. to w er the c a p su le ’s u p p er to 1'he U n iv ersity A rm y, N avy, and A ir F o rc e ROTC b ran c h es w ill join in the o b servance. E xh ib its in and the ROTC B uilding will around fea tu re m ovies, new m ilita ry equipm ent, * stu d e n t p ro jec ts on planning and m apping bom b ru n s, an an ti-su b m arin e w a rfa re tr a in ­ er, and an F-84F fighter. one-half a s thin as the cellophane on a c ig a re tte w ra p p er. A six- and-one-half-foot rep lica of th e Se­ a ttle W orld’s F a ir “ sp a ce n ee d le” also will be fea tu re d . C hem ical engineering stu d e n ts will show In dustrial exh ib its. T he engin eerin g draw in g d isp lay w ill include m odels used in classro o m in stru ctio n In d raw in g an d d e sc rip ­ tive geo m etry . A R oyal-M cB ee LGP-30 elec tro n ­ ic co m p u te r and a n e le c tric a l m a ­ chinery d isp lay w ill be p a r t of the e le c tric a l en g in eerin g show . M ech an ical en g in eerin g w ill be re p re se n te d by a n u c le a r re a c to r m odel, analog th e PA C E 221R co m p u ter, m e ta l sp e cim en s u n d er m icroscopes, w-elding de m ons tea- fo undry ca stin g of alu m i­ num , an a u to m a tic sc re w m ach in e and la th e, autom obile e n ­ gine, an d m e tallizin g sp ra y gun. tu r r e t i dons, D isplay* in engin eerin g m e ch a n ­ ics w ill include a v ib ra tio n m ach- in®, h igh velocity a ir gun, and g yros colies. C ivil en g in eerin g ex ­ h ib its will show re s e a rc h in the fields of h ighw ays and stru c tu re s, te stin g m a te ria ls , hyd rau lics, sa n ­ ita tio n , soil m ech an ics, an d su r­ veying. T h e P o w e r Show is being plan­ th e S tudent E ngineering is c h a ir­ ned by Council. T ony M edina m an . sugar and oil.” D o n Yarborough said in Cisco that the swing of small businessmen to his camp “has increased.” Yar­ g r e a t l y borough’s campaign manager predicted his candidate would lead others in the primary. in John C o r n elly c a m p a ig n ed H ouston, P o rt A rth u r an d B eau­ m ont. T he San A ntonio L ight p re­ dicted th a t C onnally w i l l c a r r y Smith T exa* counties by a w ide m arg in . A ttorney G en e ra l Will Wilson in D allas said T ex as needs the “ vig­ orous le ad e rsh ip of a g o v ern o r w i t h no strin g s a tta c h e d .” H e called on voters “ to m a k e a c a re ­ ful assessm en t not only of tile pub­ lic fac e th e ca n d id a tes put fo r­ w ard. but also w’ho is behind th e m i - and w hy,” Wilson said he w ill conduct th# s ta te ’s business w ithout consulting lobbyist# ’’W ashington o r A ustin i firs t.” R epublican J a c k Cox in Hous­ ton said th e G O F p rim a ry w ill m a rk the end of a one-party sta te . T uesday night h e w as honored a t a V ictoria rally . YR Members Say ‘N o’ To Red China Resolution M em bers of th e Y oung R epub­ lican Club soundly d efe ate d a r e s ­ olution to ad m it R ed China to th e U nited N ations a t th e ir m e etin g W ednesday night. A second resolution, asking th a t to film s, qualified sp e ak e rs be p rese n t speak a fte r co n tro v e rsial w as approved. I C an't Believ M a ry G raha m , new C B A sw eetheart, last g ra tu la tio n s \ o f f ic e r of C B A C o u n cil ar© John C o p e , ; v ic e -p re sid e n t; Scherrie W a ts o n , secretary tre asurer. fro m Suzie H a m m o n d , Terrorists 110 A lgei O Cd p O P I-' A o I—1 *1 re od O CB O w ►-3 Cb A P ca o s M* o s b * B co co *1 <1 H* O ca 9 r CO f * a a O O e nd con- t. N ew D uggan, A g u re n , Drailrtv ll A L G IE R S UPV-The outlaw E u r o - 1 N e a rly * ‘re Mo«- sla u g h te rin g i le m s > slain a s E u ro p e an e x tre m ­ ists trie d d e sp e ra te ly to provoke civil w a r in a sa v a g e bid to block A lgerian independence. p ean S ecret A rm v, M oslem s w ith explosives and gun­ fire, p e rp e tra te d W ednesday its w o rst A lgerian bloodbath since the In A lgiers alone, w here an earth - M arch 19 cease-fire ending the shaking dockside booby-trap bom b A lgerian w ar. G o v ern m en t offi- b la st took 96 lives a t one blow, a cials said W ednesday HO p erso n s rep o rted 98 p erso n s died and 340 | w ere w o u n d e d in te rro ris t at- j | „ ck ^ mnkinK „ ,h(, bloodiM , sin. j j j i w e re tailed a n d 14, w ounded. , •„ j B riefs... From the Wire By Th# A l l o c a t e d Press Attorney Denies Report Eichmann to Adopt Girl COIjO G N E , G e rm a n y — Adolf E ic h m a n n ’* G e rm a n a t t o r n e y te rm e d “ com plete n o n sen se” W ed­ n e sd ay a re p o rt from Isra e l th at th e doom ed N azi h a s ag re ed to a d o p t a 16-year-old C a n ad ian o r­ p h an girl w ho a d m ire s him . som e nutty th in g s .” a tto rn e y R o b ert S ervati- us about th e cra zie st I ’ve com e ac ro ss in a long tim e .” told new sm en. h e a rd “ I ’ve "B u t this of is i The Tel Aviv new sjvapcr M a ariv h a d sa id E ic h m an n had ask ed his w ife, V era, the g irl. ta k e c a re of to ★ F a u b u s for Fifth Term L IT T L E R O C K — G o v . O rs a1 F a u b u * d e c id e d W e d n ea d a y to run te r m for an u n p r e e e d e n te d a g a in s t opium : e n t* — o n e o f th e m th e m a n w h o g a v e h im hi* s t a t e (K ilitiral s ta r t. a s i s D e m o c r a tic fifth CC Supports Proposals W ASHINGTON T he US C ham - b e r of C o m m erce killed an d then rev iv e d a resolution W ednesday giving lim ite d support to P re sid en t K en n e d y 's pro p o sals fed e ra l a id and w o rk ers d a m a g e d by rising im p o rts u n d er the pending tra d e expansion p ro ­ g ra m . to co m p an ies for * * N A T O Decision As ke d A T H E N S , G r e e c e — W e st t ie r - m a n y s e r v e d nolle© W e d n e sd a y it w ill pu sh th e A tla n tic A llia n c e |K»wer» for a d e c is io n on m a k in g N A T O a n u c le a r s tr ik e f o r c e d e ­ s p it e o b je c tio n * o f s o m e m e m ­ b e r s Shipment Ban Sought W ASHINGTON—T he a d m in is tra ­ tion ask ed C ongress W ednesday for p e rm a n e n t au th o rity to pro­ hibit sh ip m en t of s tra te g ic m a te r ­ ials to Sino-Soviet bloc co untries. gle d a y in the m o d e m history of A lg eria’s c a p ita l. The b la st h u rled ja g g ed pieces of m etal and ch unks of stone, and for a few m o m e n ts alm o st touched off the an ti-E u ro p ea n m ob re p ri­ sals the S ecre t A rm y seeks to p ro ­ voke. In O ran, a m ob of scre am in g E u ro p ean s shot six M oslem s dead while F re n c h so ld iers and police looked on w ithout m aking a m ove. The e x tre m ists hope th a t w ide­ touched off by s p re a d violence th e ir die force F re n c h a rm y to ste p in, renew ing the A lgerian w a r a fte r seven y e a rs. B ut thus f a r the M oslem s h ave in o u trag e s w ill com pletely a lm o st rem a in ed check. d e te rm in e d th e se c re t a rm y , The aim of to u p se t w hich is de G au lle’s P re sid e n t C h a rles the n atio n alists cease-fire w ith and d efe at A lgerian independence, a p p a re n tly w as txvo-fold: | try.** F A C U L T Y S A L A R IE S D r. R ansom sa id tile U niversity i lost som e facu lty m e m b ers h ad ; ju s t b ecause of s a la ry , but that I this w as a sm all p e rc e n ta g e . O th­ the I “ p ro m ise of a m illion d o lla r lab, th a t j in one c a se ,” and said in a s “ w ives a r e not a re prom otion, inconspicuous fa c to rs e r j th is p ic tu re .” to # In cite M oslem s into an orgy • K eep th e M oslem s from getting w ork and w orsen econom ic plight. R ansom ex p re ssed unaw are- of vengeance in w hich th e F re n ch I ness a t seniors being ask ed for ex­ in terv en e cu ses if not atten d in g C om m enee- a rm y would h a v e a ga in st M oslem s to p ro tect E uro- ; m ent a fte r the “ re q u ire d attend- a n c e ” ru le had supposedly been pc*ans. is not m y a re a rescinded. “ T his th e ir d e s p e ra te an y m ore, since I ’m now in ihe ce n tra l a d m in istra tio n . P erso n ally , I n ev e r w ent to any co m m en ce­ m e n t of m y own. I 'm a g a in st th a t kind of re g u la to ry life but I can u n d ersta n d w hy th e co m m ence­ m e n t co m m ittee w ould w an t to en­ co u ra g e a tte n d a n c e .” A M oslem n atio n alist told new s­ m en the continued te rr o r w as m a k ­ ing it h a r d e r and h a rd e r to con­ trol the m a sses. ” 3711* so rt of thing cannot go on e te rn a lly ,” he said. Third Shot Fired In Current Series WASHINGTON tF> — US atom ic the size of ex p e rts stepped up th eir n u clea r th e in P acific W ednesday, exploding one ; in the m illion-ton range. te s t shots It w as the th ird n u clear device fired in the a tm o sp h e re since the | c u rre n t te st s e r i e s sta rte d one w eek ago in the vicinity of C h rist­ m as Island. Like the firs t tw o It w as dropped I from an a irp la n e . I ; how ever. It p roduced a m u c h bigger b la st, j D efense D e p a rtm e n t and ! om ic E n erg y Com m ission T he joint announcem ent by the the At- said it w as “ in the low m egaton yield range.” In the te rm s of referen c e used 1 by ato m ic w eap o n eers this m eans it had tile explosive equ iv alen t of an yw here from one to se v e ra l m il­ lion tons of TNT. By co n tra st, th e ato m ic bom b dropped on H iroshim a in World W ar II w as r a te d a t 20,000 tons of TNT. The first two te st shots in O per­ ation D om inic now u n d er w ay in th e P acific w ere th e 100,000- ran g e . ton 500,000 in T hey ivere set off aro u n d 6 a m ., C h ristm as Island tim e, giving nu- | c le a r scien tists an o p p o rtu n ity to I m e a su re th e ir flash ra y s against : th e light of the risin g sun. The first explosion took place A pril 25, a few d ay s a fte r P re si­ d e n t John K ennedy o rd e re d a re s­ um ption of atm o sp h e ric tests a fte r ; a lapse of nearly four y e a rs. Swing-Out outstan d in g honors stu d e n t le a d e rs and in tro d u ces new p resid e n ts of se rv ice, social, re s i­ dence and advisory, religious, a th ­ letic, stu d e n t g overnm ent and cit!- j zenship, and scholarship groups. I W inners of sev eral w om en’s s c h o l- 1 a rsh ip s w ill be announced. R e co rd ed m usic will provide a 15-minute con cert and processional m usic fo r a trad itio n al “ bluebon­ net c h a in .” T he chain, sy m b o iiz -; mg th e tra n s fe r of responsibility, j will be p assed from senior to jun - 1 ior w om en. O nce a “ for w om en only” occa- j sion, Swing-O ut re c e n t y e a rs I in h as b ro ad en ed its scope to include ; recognition of m e n ’s student groups and le ad e rs. Top honors to be p resented In­ to th e M ike F lynn A w ard clude the m o st outstanding m a le stu­ den t a n d the M a rjo rie D arilek M em orial A w ard to the m ost o u t- , stan d in g w om an student not affil­ iated w ith a sorority. Both a w a rd s I a r e given in m em ory of two late ex-stu d en ts w ho w ere p rom inent ca m p u s le a d e rs in the 1940‘s. O th er Swing-Out a w a rd s w ill in­ clu d e: th e In te rfra te rn ity Council Awa I'd to its o utstanding m e m b er; a sch o larsh ip aw a rd to the soph­ om o re w o m an w ith the highest g ra d e s in th re e se m e ste rs’ w ork, given by M o rta r B oard, senior wo­ m en'* n atio n al hono rary society; the Bill M cGill A w ard to the out­ sta n d in g m e m b e r of the T exas Cowboys, m e n ’s servil e o rg an iz a­ tion; a se rv ic e aw a rd to a second- se m e s te r fre sh m e n o r sophom ore g irl, given by Spooks, w om en’s se rv ic e g ro u p ; an aw a rd to the leading m e m b e r of the F re sh m a n C ouncil; a book aw a rd to the sen- ; ior w o m an w'ho h as m aintained the h ig h e st scholastic a v e rag e for ihree-an d -a-h aif y e a rs, given by Alpha L am b d a D elta, national hon­ f o r sc h o lastic o ra ry fre sh m a n w om en. fra te rn ity Orchesis Program To Be Held Today T he O rchesis M o d e r n D ance Club w ill hold a dance d e m o n stra ­ tion from 5 to 5.45 p m. T h ursday in Studio 134 of the W om en’s G ym . adm ission T h e re w ill tie mi ch a rg e. F o u rte e n U niversity students will in seven dan ces, said tak e p a r t M rs. M arc I lie B radshaw , club sponsor. Included on the p ro g ra m will be a technique d em o n stratio n , color an d b allad suites, a N egro jazz sp iritu a l n u m b e r, am i the , spoken w ord. two d a m e * a m odern suite, to Negroes Hit NY After Self-Exile N EW YORK i.ft — Six m ore job­ shabby, n ear-penniless Ne­ less, groes a rriv e d by bus W ednesday as vo lu n tary exiles from N ew O r­ leans. T h eir fa re s n o rth w e re paid by die W hite C itizens Council j there. One of the rid e rs said the coun­ cil's plan to rid th e South of dis­ contented N egroes w as failing. An­ o ther called it a success. The council offered to buy one w ay fa re s for any N egro w ishing to leave tile South. O riginally, two to a r ­ busloads w ere scheduled rive over th at plan W'as abandoned. la st w eekend b u t The six a rriv a ls followed a tra il blazed h ere in re c e n t d ay s by 12 o th e r New O rleans N egroes o n e couple and a fam ily of IO. The head of the fam ily , Louis Boy, 41, since has se cu red a $100 a wi ck job. The U rb a n L eag u e the T ra v e le rs Aid Society prom ised the six new est ar- housing look for w ork. they for ) riv als w hile and Dancers Five O rchesis C lu b m em bers rehearse a N e ­ g ro s p iritu a l, ' W a y fa rin g S tra n g e r.'' for a m o d ­ ern dane# demonstration a t th# W om en s G y m Thursday afternoon. The five are, left to right, Frankie Collier. Danny Newberry, Beverly Neal, Lynda G ay le V /h ite . and Lilas Shelby. There’s No Space Like Home S pace men landing on th# moon could take shelter under a structure form ed by an inflat­ a b le d o m e an d sun shield. U niversity architec­ tural students believe. They have p r e p a re d • mode! o f the lunar shelter for the Engineering Power Show Thursday night. Putting final ♦ouch­ es on the exhibit ar#, left to right, G e n e L ien - Hauer, Don Clay, and G e o r g e Smith. T W s d s y , M ay 3, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 'tween the Eight Campaign in Governor's Race Revolution Though by no mean?? an exciting speaker, writer Herb­ ert L. M atthew s touched on some highly im portant topics in his talk at the Texas t'n io n W ednesday night. Matthew* has been consistently involved in trying to present his interpretation of revolution, the Cuban rev­ olution in particular, to Ihe American people. And inter­ pretation of revolution has not been simple for Ameri­ cans. H owever, it is in simplification th a t so m any have erred, and as M atthew s pointed out th e re is a g reat danger in simply blam ing everything th a t goes w rong on com mu­ nism and leaving it a t th a t. T here definitely is much m ore of a complex situation. M atthew s repeated m any of th e fam iliar problem s of L atin A m e r i c a — poverty, illiteracy, inflation. He believes, and with good reason, th a t the gap between the rich coun­ tries like the US and m any of the L atin A m erican nations is widening ra th e r than narrow ing. ★ * The w riter did not abound w ith enthusiasm for the Alliance for Progress, and frankly it seems th a t few peo­ ple do these days. We earnestly hope th a t the Alliance does not lose its impetus. It is far from a cure-all, b ut it certainly could be of g reat long-run value. U n fo rtun ately th e aw akening L atin A m ericans are thinking in term s of today and tom orrow ra th e r th an n ex t m onth and next year, and th a t is really th e only w a y they know how to think or can be expected to think. Lately the US has received pressure to g i v e top priority to trade stabilization. There has been growing sentiment for such stabilization among the Latin Ameri­ can nations which depend on one or two commodities for world economic pacts. A coffee pact has been mentioned as an example of an agreement which might put prices on a firm footing. We feel, how ever, th a t the US m ust hold out. W e m ust encourage th e countries to w ork to control th eir com m odity productions. And it is essential th a t these nations diversify th e ir own economies w ith additional products, expanding trad e, and b e tte r use of th eir own raw m aterials. ★ ★ Such things only come w ith time, as M atthew s in­ dicated, and th e Alliance can only be an evolutionary-type revolution. Matthews w as engaged in the difficult task of attem pt­ ing to generalize about L atin Am erica. This is extrem ely hard because of th e rem ark ab le variance from country to country. Though we must differ with the writer** evaluations of Fidel Castro as an individual leader, particularly with regard to motivation, he certainly struck many note* of truth. The m&Me* have been stirred to revolt against their inherited misery throughout Latin America, as Matthew* so correctly pointed out. And the land is truly the land of revolution. But it is not necessarily the Castro-type revolution. And Communism Ls by no means the essential problem. Many of the countries are on the move and undergoing change. T h eir directions m ay be m any and varied. We m ust strive to co-operatively move w ith th em down th e channel of freedom. What Cost Medicare? Nobody truly know* just what the cost of a Social Security financed medicare program will be. We are told that it can be financed initially by ju st a minor increase in the Social Security tax rate. But what they are talking about now is only the beginning. Congress hasn't failed yet to hike Social Security benefit payments in any elec­ tion year, and, as a result of all these unscheduled benefit hikes, both the tax rate and the base upon which it has been applied, have been steadily increased. Today the basic Social Security tax rate Is 3 ^ per cent of al) wage* up to $4,800 per year which amount* to a yearly tax of $150 and that is already scheduled to rise sharply in future years. If m edicare is added, th e Social S ecurity tax burden on m any young wage earn ers will exceed th e ir reg u lar in­ come ta x burden. And, once started , m edicare w on’t be curtailed. Instead, it w ill be expanded and expanded until, in the end, it will b e c o m e an all-em bracing socialized medicine setup. — Fort Lauderdale New* T h e DAffiV T e x a n O pinions expressed in T h e T exan are those o f the E ditors or o f the uglier o f the article and not necessarily those o f the U niversity administration. •mTruwBf J S r l i i J5 v ie • *<*** Monday and Saturday and holldev « through Mel end monthly In August by T exas Student new*p«per of The University o f T exas, U ! rubllcat.ona, In** Second-claes pottage paid at Austin. Texas Mailed I. Austin ............................................. * A™ Malled out of town Delivered in Austin (three month# minimum) ......................... ***** .*1 OO month . 75c month 75c month rfrH , T5/ ,nj w v l a p p l e d by telephone (GR 2-24731 or the i m ThL office !^ j T * 1 1 (G R 2-V*I > 177 entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatc hes credited to It or not other* .se credited In this newspaper. PER M A N EN T RT A FF E D IT O R ............................... MANAGI NG ED ITO R .................... ▲ M UTANT MANAGING EDITOR.. ................ HOYT PERVIS .................JLM HYATT RICHARD VANSTEENKISTE STAFF NIGHT EDITOR . . . . . . . . . . . . .......... DESK E D IT O R ISS CE NEWS EDITOR . . . . . N ight R e p o rte r C opyreader* ............ . .................... . . .................... .......... N ight Sport* E d i t o r A ssistant Night A m usem ent* E d ito r ....... Assistants Night W ire E d ito r Night C am p u s L ife Editor .. .................... . Assistant Editorial Amu*taut ......... . F O R THIS ISSI E .................... DEBBIE HOWE IX ................................. CHARLES ESKRIDGE ....................................LOC ANN WALKER ................ Nancy Day .................. C arol G ustine, J a m e s Vowell, Bob R ussell, G a ry M ayer ............................. M ary J o H endrix ........................................... BUI U tile CJmrmayne M arsh ...................... L a rry I am, H ayden F re e m a n Ann Ariel Tom m y Foster Je a n n in e C apps ................... .*...... Anne ii Todd ........................... ..................... ......... By H O Y T P U R V IS T exan E ditor T O P focused on IN T E R E S T h as u n d e r­ the stan d ab ly been r a c e for governor in th is s p rin g 's D em o cratic and R epublican p r i­ m a ry cam p aig n s. D em o c ratic v o ters will h ave th e ir choice of six candidates w hen th e y go to the poll* S atu rd ay , an d the R e­ publicans will h a v e tw o can d i­ d ates on th e ir ballot. A lm ost everyone a g re e s t h a t th a t th e re Is no possible chan ce of any of the D e m o c ra tic c a n ­ didates w inning th e p a r ty ’* nom i­ nation w ithout a runoff. ★ ONE O F T H O S E who Is a strong b et to m a k e th e runoff is John B. Connally, who resigned as S ecretary' of the N a v y to m ake the ra c e . C onnally sa y s p u ttin g T e x a s " b a c k on to p " is th e goal he in­ tends to in ed u c a ­ m a k e tional o p p o rtu n ities an d in­ in d u stria l grow th. to achieve. H e w a n ts th e s ta te f irs t T ins is the firs t political ra c e for the 45-year-old C onnally. a f t­ e r a c a r e e r in g o v ern m e n t, bu si­ ness. law , and ra n c h in g . " I w ant job o p p o r­ to see T ex a s o ffe r this in tu n ities second n a tio n ," he say s, " a n d I w an t to see th is sta te a c t in a resp o n siv e the m a n n e r to m e e t d e sire s, the the h o p e s d re a m s of o u r p e o p le ." th e needs, and to none H e p u ts p rim e e m p h a sis on the in te rlin k in g re la tio n sh ip betw een ed u catio n a n d a T e x a s econom y g e a r e d to sp a c e -a g e re q u ire ­ m e n ts. F irs t, h e sa y s, T ex as In­ stitu tio n s m u st a t tr a c t and hold m en w ho a r e p re -e m in e n t in th e ir fields. In tu rn , such m en w ill a t­ t r a c t o th e rs of c o m p a ra b le c a p a ­ b ility am i p e rm it T e x a s to keep its own young people w ho a r e s u p e rio r in th e ir c a p a c itie s. identified w ith "E d u c a tio n w ill be m o re close­ ly th e econom ic fu tu re th a n e v e r b efo re b ecause the in d u strie s of to d a y an d the fu tu re depend on b rain p o w e r. T im e w as w hen o u r n a tu ra l re ­ sou rces w ere a ttra c tio n s in th e m ­ in d u strie s. T h e y still selves a r e , but w e c a n no lo n g er re ly solely upon th e m fo r a ttra c tin g in d u stry ." to As g o vernor, C onnally w ould c r e a te in d u stry -la b o r te a m s com ­ p risin g " th e b e s t m in d s I can fin d ." H e w ill go w ith t h e s e te a m s to seek an d o b ta in new p la n ts, la b o ra to rie s an d business fo r T exas. is C onnally sa y s h e th e only is ad v o c a tin g a c a n d id a te w ho co n stitu tio n al a m e n d m e n t lim it­ ing th e g o v ern o r to tw o consecu­ la st tw o -y ear tiv e thing T ex a s need* is o ne-m an r u le ." te rm s . "T h e H e h as pledged h im se lf also to w ork w ith a " f r e e " le g i s l a t u r e - elected w ith o u t an y b o d y ad v ice but th e p eo p le's. C onnally p ro p o se s: • A v o catio n al tra in in g a n d job p la c e m e n t p ro g ra m fo r o ld e r people. • " F u n p a r tn e rs h ip " fo r w om ­ en in his a d m in istra tio n . th e m C onnally g re w up in th e South T ex a s ran c h co u n try , a n d w orked h is w ay th ro u g h the U n iv ersity , re c e iv in g hi* la w d e g re e an d li­ cen se to p ra c tic e in 1938, H e won n u m e ro u s h o n o r s h e re , chief am o n g th e p re sid e n c y of th e student body. He w as d e a n of legal f ra te r n ity a n d elec ted hi* to F ria rs . L a st N o v e m b e r he be­ c a m e th e sixth p erso n to rec eiv e th e E x -S tu d e n ts’ A ssociation D is­ tinguished A lum nus A w ard. His w ife is th e fo rm e r Id a n e ll B rill, who in 1938 w as th e U T Sweet* h e a rt. T hough C onnally w a* a s s o c ia t­ ed w ith t h e N ew F ro n tie r as N avy S e c re ta ry h e h a s rec eiv e d co n sid erab le su p p o rt fro m T ex as co n serv ativ es, an d am o n g t h e m any new spaper* w hich h a v e e n ­ d orsed him h a v e been se v eral e x tre m e ly c o n se rv a tiv e Journals. He h a s long been asso cia te d w ith V ice-P resid en t L yndon B. Jo h n ­ son. ♦ BIDDING F O R a fou rth te rm ta Gov. P ric e D aniel w ho w an ts " to com plete m y p ro g ra m for T e x a s ." D aniel sa y s, "T h e people in te rests fighting for th e ir b est should not be denied the rig h t to re-elect a g o v e r n o r sim p­ s e r v e d ly b ec au se he tw o o r tw o y e a r te r m s ." He em phasize* th a t " it It not type length but of se rv ic e th a t c o u n ts." h a s sh o rt th re e th e the P rio r to se rv in g a* governor. D an iel had been a tto rn e y g eneral fo r six y e a rs (1947-53) and served four y e a rs aa U nited S tate s Sen­ a to r. E v en e a r lie r he h ad l>een in the T ex as H ouse, se rv in g one te rm as sp e a k e r. His college w ork w as a t B ay ­ lor w here he receiv ed a journal* ism d eg ree in 1931 an d law d e­ gree ia 1332. At Baylor ha wa* a ra tio n until the n ex t le g isla tiv e session. A g ra d u a te in g o vernm ent from N orth T ex as S tate, Cox h a s tr a v ­ and som e 400,000 m iles eled m a d e o v er 2,500 speeches on to e topic of A m ericanism since le av ­ ing to e N avy a t the end of W orld W ar LI. ★ T H E SECOND R epublican ca n ­ did ate, Roy Whittenburg, W e s t T exas ra n c h e r, p u b lish er an d oil m an, believes all fed e ra l judges, including S uprem e C ourt ju stices, should be elected by the people. the p re se n t 20 p e r ce n t drop in to u rism in T exas ca n be rem e d ied by an effective p ro g ra m to a ttr a c t to u r­ ists an d to b rin g new in d u strie s in th e sta te . H e believes th a t He w ould m ak e som e m o d ifica­ tions in the sa les ta x and believes th a t the autom obile m e rit ra tin g sy stem cau ses "to o m a n y people to suffer from the e rro rs of too few ," foreign f e e l s im p o rtin g W h itten b u rg stro n g ly about su g a r and oil. "C uba h as been a g re a t beneficiary’ of our policy and y e t it is o u r w o rst h a te r. So o u r pol­ icy h as done us no good." "W e h av e surplus food g ra in s and w h ea t. 'Hie land w here th ese su rp lu se s a r e grow n could be put info su g a r p roduction." T he 49-year-old c a n d id a te w as b o m in H utchinson County and m a in ta in s his voting a d d re ss a t F lem o n s, w here he h as been p re­ cin ct c h a irm a n . l a 1958 ha ran fo r th e S enate against R alph Y a r­ borough and polled 186,000 voles. no W hittenburg would m a k e right-to- ch a n g es w ork law s an d none in th e an­ n ex a tio n law s. the s ta te 's in JOHN CONNALLY PRICE DANIEL MARSHALL FORMBY EDWIN A. WALKER WILL WILSON DON YARBOROUGH JACK CO X ROY WHITTENBURG the n e w sp a p e r e d ito r of and y ea rb o o k . He w as aw a rd e d a d o cto r of law s d eg re e by B aylor In 1951. D aniel firs t p ra c tic e d la w in his hom e tow n of L ib e rty . D an ie l says he h a s stre sse d local " th e n eed for s ta te an d govern m en t* re s ­ th e p onsibilities th a t go along w ith rig h ts, and th e ir constitutional th e re b y fu rth e r en­ to p rev e n t cro a c h m e n t by ad v o c ates of cen­ tra liz e d fe d e ra l co n tro l." to fulfill te n u re . H e T h e g o v ern o r points to a n u m ­ b e r of ac co m p lish m en ts during in cludes e s ta b ­ his lish m e n t of the sta te s firs t com ­ p re h e n siv e w a te r p lan n in g , con­ se rv a tio n , and dev elo p m en t p ro ­ g r a m ; a paid p aro le sy ste m ; a lobby control a c t an d code of co n d u c t; for p ublic school and college te a c h ­ e r s ; a n d th e firs t sta te w id e p ro ­ g ra m fo r a ttra c tin g new in d u st­ rie s and m o re to u rists. in c re ase d sa la rie s issue D an ie l feels th a t th e m o st im ­ p o rta n t th e e n a c tm e n t is of th e 10-point law en fo rce m en t p ro g ra m he is prop o sin g and continuation of o th e rs h e h as includes stro n g e r s ta rte d . T his c rim in a l law s and code of c rim ­ inal p ro ced u re. H e w a n ts ad d i­ tio n a l cu rb s on n a rc o tic s and b a rb itu a te s . T he g o v ern o r hopes to p u t to continue his effo rts stro n g e r controls on lobbyists. • H e also w an ts to s ta m p out th e loan sh a rk ra c k e t a n d : • S et up a p aid ju v e n ile p a ro le sy ste m . • P ro h ib it obscene m ovies. • W ork a g a in st ex c e ssiv e oil im p o rts an d fe d e ra l p ric e fixing. • A dequately tax n a tu ra l g as p ip elin es. • C o rre c t sa le s ta x in equities. A fre e T E X A S M U ST b e from d o m in a tio n of W ashington o r A us­ tin cliq u es, say's M arsh all Form* by, 50-year-oid P lain v iew a tto rn ­ ey , w ho calls for less b ic k erin g fussing am ong elec ted ex­ and ec u tiv e s in A ustin an d w ould o ffe r a positive a d m in istra tio n w ith no "d illy d a lly in g ." a F o rrn b y has alw a y s su p p o rted th e D e m o c ra tic tic k e t, b u t con­ c o n se rv a tiv e sid e r# h im self th a t T exas D e m o c ra t. He sa y s n ee d s a m a n seasoned the in b u sin e ss w orld and p o in ts to his e x p e rie n c e , as a f a n n e r , d ru g ­ g ist, w eekly n e w sp a p e r e d ito r a n d p u b lish er, p ra c tic in g a tto rn ­ e y a n d c o o w n e r of fo u r ra d io sta tio n s. H e g ra d u a te d fro m T e x a s T ech in 19312 a fte r se rv in g a s e d ito r of th e T o re a d o r and w o rk in g his w ay th ro u g h . A fter e x p e rie n c e a s a d a ily n e w sp a p e r r e p o r te r an d co u n ty Judge he se rv e d w ith th e A rm y four y e a rs in W orld W ar II. H e then e a rn e d his m a s ­ te r of jo u rn a lism d eg re e a t T ex­ a s a n d la te r studied law a t Bay- an d o b ta in ed his law license. F o rm by w as ap pointed to the H ighw ay C om m ission in 1953 an d b e c a m e c h a irm a n in 1957. H e r e ­ tire d in 1959 an d w as c o n g ra tu ­ la te d by n e w sp a p e rs o v e r the s ta te fo r h aving had a sta te -w id e v iew point of ro ad th e p ro b lem s. He h as trav e led on five con­ tin e n ts and visited R u s sia w ith a g ro u p of e d ito rs If elec ted he hopes to sim p lify the ta x law s and o p e ra te T e x a s on c a sh basis w ith no d eficit a spending. in 1955. s ta te ’s H e w an ts sen sib le tra ffic law s w hich would include 70 m ile p e r h o u r speed lim its on r u r a l four- lane d ivided highw ays w ith s tric t en fo rce m en t and also the e lim in ­ ation of u n fair speed tra p s . th e n ee d He em p h asizes for "le s s ce n traliza tio n of o u r gov­ e rn m e n t in W ashington a n d th e r e tu r n of g o v ern m e n t to th e p eo­ ple of T exas " He alw, a d v o c a te s ; tape • Less red for small b u sin e ssm e n an d f a rm e rs . • L o w er ta x e s on hom es, buildings, b u sinesses. • B est schools and colleges possible. He sa y s th a t C onnally h a s s lu r­ re d T ex a s te a c h e rs by sa y in g th a t if h e w ere elected he would bring to p p ro fesso rs in. F o rm b y sa y s T e x a s a lre a d y h as som e of the best, b u t it is tr u e th a t they should be paid m o re. He the e n ro llm e n ts does not w a n t of an d w ants ev e ry o n e to h a v e an op­ p o rtu n ity to g e t an educatio n . ★ schools lim ite d s ta te F O R M E R ARMY MaJ. G en. Ed­ win A. W alker h as m a in ta in e d a b a r r a g e of a tta c k s on le a d e rs In go v ern m en t an d h a s conducted m uch of his ca m p a ig n on a n a ­ tional a n d in te rn atio n a l level. H is p latfo rm , he say s, " is the Con­ stitution of the sta te of T e x a s ." T he 52-year-old W alker re sig n ­ ed a fte r 30 y e a rs of se rv ic e w hen he w as re b u k e d an d reliev ed of his co m m an d in G e rm a n y on c h a rg es th a t he m a d e "in fla m - a to ry and d e ro g a to ry " s ta te m e n ts about p ro m in e n t A m eric an s an d trie d to influence the vote of his m en an d th e ir fam ilies. H e also drew c ritic is m for anti-G om m u- nist courses, based on Jo h n B irch Society m a te ria l, w hich he w a s providing for his m en. His c la im s about "m u zzlin g of the m ilita ry " have received w ide atten tio n . H e had com piled a d is­ tinguished re c o rd in the M ilitary a fte r g ra d u a tin g from W est P oint. H e fought in both World W ar l l and the K o rean W ar and w on nu­ m erous deco ratio n s. W alker pledges h im self " to th e d eath fo r n atio n al rig h ts, an d in­ to fight su rv iv al, s ta te s ’ dividual lib e rtie s ." H e say s m uch of hts c a m p a ig n ­ ing baa been on n atio n al issues, b ecau se "T h e govern o rsh ip is a n ational position. By the C onsti­ tution of th e s ta te and of the US all pow ers not d eleg ated to th e fed e ra l g o v ern m e n t a r e re ta in e d by th e people w ithin th e ir sov­ ereign s ta te s. 'Ih e governor is th e ex ecutive re p re se n ta tiv e of th e se pow ers re ta in e d by th e people, a t the n a tio n a l le v el." th a t T exas He b la m e s " in c o m p e te n t poli­ in W ashington an d s ta te cies " ca p ita ls for C om m unist se izu re of pow er in C uba and sa y s th e sam e is likely to happen in M ex­ ico. H e adds is a p rim e ta rg e t of Soviet a tten tio n . W alker thinks the s ta te spend* too m u ch b y having too m a n y b u reau s, com m issions, an d se p ­ a r a te acco u n ts, som e of w hich resp o n sib ilities a re w hich should be h a n d le d on th e local level, assu m in g He is a g a in st P a d re Isla n d 's being developed as a n atio n al p ark . " I am opposed to natio n al in te rfe re n c e in ow nership of sta te lands. Any oil un d er P a d re Is­ land should provide incom e for the school children of T exas. N a ­ tional ow n ersh ip would affec t the tideland r ig h ts ." in to b e prin cip les " e d u c a te d W alker sa y s young A m eric an s need the m oral and eth ical valu es and th e con stitu tio n al upon th a t of th e ir fu tu re and w hich A m erica d ep e n d ." He sa y s h e w as this "sh o rtc o m in g in the education of y o u th " w hen he estab lish ed his pro-blue train in g of troops. to o v erco m e try in g * c a n d id a te " STRONG C R ITICISM of D aniel and C onnally h as com e from A t­ torney G en e ra l HUI Wilson. He d escrib es C onnally as " th e fed­ e ra l "L yndon Jo h n so n ’* h a tc h e t m a n ." He says D aniel h a s a conflict of In terests b ecause of "e x te n siv e land hold­ to con­ in g s" an d h e is try in g tinue a hold on the sta te . and Wilson, 49, has been d istric t a t ­ torney in D allas, a judge of the T exas S u p rem e Court* and a tto r ­ ney g en e ral, in 13U! he w as voted in w inning to e "m o s t o u tsta n d in g atto rn ey g en e ral in th e U nited S ta te s” by the N ational A ssociation of A ttor­ neys G en eral. Wilson b ac k ers say th e ce le b ra ted th a t T idelands C ase for T exas schools before th e US S u p rem e C ourt, Wilson " w a s victo rio u s in w h at h as been te rm e d one of the m ost im p o rta n t le g al decisions in m od­ e m T ex as h is to ry ." Wilson p o in ts w ith p rid e to his "lo n g fight a g a in s t loan shark s, price-fixing, m e d ic a l q u a c k s , vice, ra c k e te e rin g and gam bling in se v e ra l c itie s, and for open b e a c h e s." B om and r e a r e d In D allas, Wil­ son helped p a y his w ay through college w ith old field w ork. In 1957 he g ra d u a te d from SMU and e n tered p riv a te law p rac tice . H e h as ta u g h t in th e law schools of SMU and B aylor. A sh o rt tim e a f te r re tu rn in g from W orld W ar II he wfa s elec t­ ed d istric t a tto rn e y in D allas and h a s been in public life since. tw o p e r c e n t sa les Wilson is for red u cin g the p res­ e n t to one p e r ce n t by elim inating all loopholes a n d exceptions for spe­ cial interest, ta x He say s, " I a m m o re in te re st­ ed in ed u catio n and law enforce­ m e n t th a n in an y o th e r su b jects confronting th e governor. In th e public schools, I w ould striv e to put m ore c o n te n t in the courses. T his can best b e accom plished by the putting m o re co n ten t this te a c h e rs, ca n b est be done through ou r colleges an d u n iv e rsitie s." into and, of course, Wilson p le d g es to se arch out an d appoint a s reg e n ts m en and acad e m ic ally a r e w om en w ho oriented, w ho ca n contrib u te to th e u n iv e rsity both talent and energy, and w ho a p p re c ia te the high v alues of ac ad e m ic free­ dom . "O u r p re se n t governor h as used re g e n t ap p o in tm e n t a s a rew ard for his frie n d s and supp o rters. He has not sought out people who ca n add to th e colleges and uni­ versities. If so m e of them happen to m a k e good re g e n ts, it is by the happy choice of a political lo tte ry ." W ilson sta n d s fo r: • C onstitutional revision. • P re se n t right-to-w o r k law’, recognizing l a b o r ’* barg ain in g rig h t. • S tate m e d ic a l c a re tor th e aged. • E q u ita b le T ex as le g isla tu re . re p re se n ta tio n in it YOUN G EST MAN and to e m ost liberal c a n d id a te is D o n Y a r­ b orou gh , 36-year-old H ouston a t­ torney. Two y e a r s ago he ra n for lie u te n a n t g o v ern o r and re ­ ceived m o re th a n 630,000 votes in losing to incum l>ent lien R am sey. Y arb o ro u g h ’s m o tto is to m ake fum bling T exas s t a t e lead ersh ip h a s ad rift, unab le thf de­ m an d s of a m o d e m econom y. "W e ca n fulfill th e hopes of our people for b e tte r jobs and b et­ te r education fo r th e ir children, b ut only w hen w e b re a k the b a r­ r ie r of tire d le a d e rsh ip In A us­ tin ." le ft the to m eet first. H e sa y s in " I a m r a c e b ecause th is th e re is not one s i n g l e m an am ong this crow d of candidates who is free of the ten tacles of the sa m e old A ustin lobby . . . not one single m a n who is a real D e m o c ra t." Y arborough i* a M arine Corps v e te ra n of both W orld W ar II and K orea, w ho w orked p a r t­ tim e to p ay his w ay through UT, m ajo rin g in g o v ern m e n t and his­ tory. He g ra d u a te d fron toe UT L aw School, an d in 1948 w as n a ­ in te rc o lle g ia te d e b a t e tional cham pion. H e s a y s , "'H i* re is not one r a c e o ther c a n d id a te w h o s e lieen public marked by c o m l* teat support for in this life h as th e p rinciples, institutions, tr a d i­ tio n s. and people of the D em o­ c r a tic P a r ty ." H e h as identified stro n g ly w ith the K ennedy New F ro n tie r p ro g ram . Y arborough thinks T e x a s gov­ e rn m e n t needs to " r e ly m o re on th e b ra in s of it* a c a d e m ic com ­ m u n ity and less on th e braw n of its A ustin lo b b y ists." calling for a b re a k from th e " a n ti-in te lle c t­ u a l bias of the p a s t." in tru d e d " P o litic s h as i n t o T e x a s education for too long now. T he U n iv ersity B oard of R egents should be com posed of m en pos­ se ssin g broad b ac k g ro u n d s of instead of b r o a d sc h o larsh ip back g ro u n d s in p olitics. A cad­ e m ic freedom will a lw a y s re m a in ju s t a p h ra se in T ex as as long a s com petent sc h o lars a re call­ o u sly shunted asid e on a politics- as-u su a! b a sis." H e adds, " F e a rfu l and sh o rt­ sig h ted public officials h a v e lobbyists. As a b u ckled before rec o m m en d a tio n s for r e s u l t , m uch-needed college bud g et in­ c re a s e s have been s h a rp ly sliced. T h is is not only b ad fo r students, it is b ad econom ics.” leak H e d escrib es the g e n e ra l re ta il in the s a le s tax as " th e d ik e " of T e x a s co m m erce, th ro u g h w hich m illion* of dollars a r e flow ing aw ay fro m the ch an ­ nel* of m ain s tre e t t r a d e in T e x a s. He blasted th e ta x a s the " rn o a t anti-com petitive e v e r p a sse d in T ex a s." H e said r a m m e d it w as th ro u g h the le g isla tu re and p ast th e governor by p rofessional lob­ byist* of the huge out-of-state corp o ratio n s. "T e x a n s w a n t a g o v ern o r w ho w ill sta n d up for T e x a s b u sinessm en and not c rin g e before th e p ow er of these o u t-of-state in te rests " H e w’ould co n c en tra te his "T e x ­ a s f irs t" p ro g ra m on education, in­ old-age assista n ce , p erso n a l com e, f a i r in d u strial grow th, ta x e s, and ru ra l d ev e lo p m e n t." A NOW IN T H E R epublican p ri­ m a ry , a fte r an u n su ccessfu l try in th e D em o cratic r a c e ag a in st D an iel is J a c k tw o y e a rs ago, F ox. A 39-year-old B rec k en rid g e n a tiv e , Cox polled 619,000 votes in th e 1960 contest. to An ac tiv e the T ex a s c o n se rv a tiv e in sw itch for m a n y y ea rs. Cox se rv e d th ree te rm s le g isla tu re. the R epublican H is P a r ty la st y e a r w as w idely pub­ licized. H e believes in a govern­ m e n t in d ep en d en t from fe d e ra l control, " s o th a t toe sta te c a n grow through th e fre e e n te r­ p riz e sy ste m ." He w a n ts to de­ v elop new industry and to m ake T e x a s tra d in g sta t* w ith I-atin A m erica. th e m a jo r th a t is H e feels th a t th e re c a n be a sta te im p ro v e m en t of g e n e ra l g o v ern m e n t by rem o v a l of the p o litica l p ressu re a n d b u rea u ­ c r a tic duplications. im p o rta n t Cox thinks th a t th e n ex t gov­ e rn o r h as an in b alan c in g the s ta te 's budget, but th in k s th e re Is an eq u a lly im p o r­ ta n t issue in the ro le T ex a s will the in national p o litics p la y n e x t tw o y ears. job in trem en d o u s influence on " W h a t happens h e r e w ill have the a the n a ­ th in k in g of th e re s t of tw o ro u te s we tion, T h ere a re t a k e : ' The N ew F ro n tie r ca n road ro u te o r a w hich the only route th a t ca n bring p ro g re ss to T exas an d c o n se rv a tiv e the n atio n ." is really H e w an ts T exas to develop in­ d u stria lly , and to h a v e b e tte r schools and roads b u t sa id these through th in g s c a n only co m e " p ru d u c tiv ity —o r w orking in a c lim a te of fre e d o m ." the to stay as Cox w ants right-to-w ork they are . He law s in­ th in k s ta x but e q u a lities w ould bk* to see the Ll* in up- there m ight be som e the s a le * in Firing L im N o Endorsement To the Editor! W hen I re tu rn e d to m y d esk to d a y a f te r a 17-day visit in E u­ rope, the firs t thing I saw w as im plying y o u r A pril 25 colum n th a t T he E x-S tudents’ A ssocia­ tion, the activ itie s of som e of its officers, is involved in politics on a sta te and n atio n al level. thro u g h While it I* true that som a o f the officers of the Association have been taking an active role In som e of the cam paigns, I think that it should be pointed out toot the 45 m em bers of our E xecutive Council represent varied political view s. I suspect, In fact, that rn poll of our officers and OoancU m em bers would Indicate som e support for each of the candidates for the various state and Con­ gressional race*. To m y know ledge, th e E x-S tu­ d e n ts’ A ssociation has n e v e r en­ for an y d o rsed an y ca n d id a te public office. N eith er has it used its influence unofficially for o r a g a in st an y candidate. And, by a long-standing tradition, no list of o u r m e m b e rsh ip h as e v e r been sold, loaned, o r o therw ise m a d e av a ila b le for use In any political ca m p a ig n . A* you point out, exery officer and stuff m em ber of The A ssocia­ tion has his or her own political Is unfortunate, convictions. however, that endorsement* of specific candidates by officers of The Association has been con ­ strued as an endorsem ent of Tile A ssociation itself. It Since T he A ssociation is, and alw ay* m u st be, non-partisan, toe p olitical activ itie s of it* officer* an d m e m b e rs should alw ay s be re g a rd e d a s personal and not r e ­ flectin g th e policy of th e o rg a n i­ zatio n itself. Jack R. Maguire Executive D irector Ex Students’ Association job Opportunities w ill representative Parlor from A interview prospect t\ T exas teachers In our office on Mav < Appointm ents should bs macle In Bu ton H all 209 A representative from W lnnl* WI interview prospective teachers in ot o f f i e e on May 4 Appolntmen should be made In Sutton Hall JU it Frederick I,ong o f the t ’SIA wi conduct career Informational Intr view s on Fridav, May 4, Opportun tie* ar® available in both foreign ar dom estic services Areas of sp * la! Ration include the type (rf w ars dei the various officers at well ( by t h e w riters editors broadcaster telecasters, librarians, m otion pletui personnel educational exchange c ricers anet others For further Info relation and Interview appointment contact Pea pre Hall IU* W illia m J H all. D i r e r * Student ICmple> men! R u m Official Notices R egistration for the Bummer Km 1962, will occur on Tuesday •ion June 12. Any student who has pre vioualy attended The University r T exas may receive his registratto m aterials by mail by* filling In a application which box placed in front of th# Office < the R egistrar, This must be aeeomi hshed no later than Monday. May 1 1962. la available at Terri* C. Sad! A s s i s t a n t R e g i s t r a r an Hrs (strath** n a p er ies for A Students who intend to apply ft student deferm ents for the long ae aion m ust have the University not!: tit# local draft board* of their rank-ln-ciasa lot the current session, Rouuihhs for Selective Ser ice Form Hew which certifies ti student a rank, may he at the General Information window Office of the Itcgistrar before ti the apt tog sen.ester The end of form s will he malled loc draft board the first two weeks July. to the turned Little by Little By B IL L L IT T L E A llo c la s e Sp ort* Ed ito r To Make, Break—or G iv e . . . W i t h t h e o p e n in g o f th e In t e r s c h o l a s t i c L e a g u e M e e t , w e ’r e c a u g h t in a q u a n d a r y a s to w h a t to s a y . A n d t h a t f o r u s , is s o m e t h in g . T h e y 'v e a c c o m p lis h e d s o m e t h in g , th e s e t r a c k m e n . T h e y h o ld s o m e o f t h e g r e a t e s t m a r k s e v e r r e c o r d e d b y h ig h s c h o o l a t h le t e s . N o w t h e y m u s t d e c id e , i f t h e y ’r e s e n io r s , w h e r e to g o f r o m t h e r e . M a n y w i l l h e s w a m p e d w i t h s c h o la r s h ip s — w it h s c h o o ls o f f e r i n g s w im m i n g p o o ls in s u b s t it u t io n f o r la c k o f c o e d s , a l l b ills p a id , s p e c ia l t u t o r in g , a n d a ll t h e c o n v e n ie n c e s o n e c o u ld w a n t . m a k e t h e g r a d e . B u t a t s o m e s c h o o ls y o u 'v e g o t to h a v e a lit t le m o r e to H i e U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s is o n e o f th e s e s c h o o ls . A s p e c ia l t u t o r is p r o v id e d — D a r r e l l R o y a l c a lls h im a “ B r a i n c o a c h . " H e d o e s h is b e st to h e lp th e p l a y e r s - — c h e c k s c la s s a t t e n d a n c e , h e lp s t h e m s t u d y , a n d k e e p s c h e c k ; o n t h e i r p r o g r e s s . B u t t h a t s o m e t im e s is n ’t e n o u g h . A t s o m e s c h o o ls , it c a n b e t r u t h f u l l y s a id a t h le t e s a r c I “ g i v e n " g r a d e s . H e r e r e c o r d s s p e a k f o r th e m s e lv e s . L a s t y e a r , t w o b a s k e t- j b a lle r s , c o n s id e r e d o u t s t a n d in g b y H e a d C o a c h H a r o l d ' B r a d l e y , w e n t o u t b y t h e g r a d e r o u t e . L a s t s e m e s t e r C o a c h B i b b F a l k w a s s w e a t in g th e g r a d e s o f p o s s ib ly h is o u t s t a n d ­ in g p l a y e r . H e m a d e th e m . A n o u t s t a n d in g s t a t e f o o t b a lle r — w h o w o u ld h a v e b e e n a n a s s e t to a n y s c h o o l, f a ile d to p a s s U T ’s e n t r a n c e e x a m — h e w e n t to a s c h o o l in a n o t h e r s t a t e . T h e lo g ic a l q u e s tio n w o u ld b e , d o e s t h i s h a m p e r t h e c a l i b e r o f a t h le t e t h a t t h e U n i v e r s i t y t u r n s o u t ? V a r s i t y r e c o r d s s p e a k f o r t h e m s e lv e s , b u t w h a t o f t h e f r e s h m e n ? T r e a d w e l l . O n th e f o o t b a ll s c e n e , T e x a s ’ Y e a r l i n g s lo s t t h e i r f i r s t g a m e in f o u r y e a r s t h is y e a r . T e x a s v a r s i t y , w h ic h lo s t b u t n in e p la y e r s , r a n u p a r a t h e r r e s p e c t a b le r e c o r d . A n d lis te d a m o n g th e to p s in g r a d e s w e r e a c o u p le o f g e n t le m e n b y t h e n a m e s o f P a t C u lp e p p e r a n d J o h n n y O u t w a r d l y , T e x a s b a s k e t b a ll d id n o t lo o k f a b u lo u s . B u t t h e y w e r e in t h e c o n f e r e n c e r a c e u n t i l t h e la s t, a n d f in is h e d w i t h a n 8 - 6 m a r k . T h e y p la y e d w e l l, c o n s id e r in g t h e r e w e r e o n l y t w o s e n io r s , a n d t h e r e s t s o p h o m o r e s a n d ju n io r s . A n d th e n t h e r e w e r e t h e Y e a r l i n g c a g e r s — a n u n d e f e a t e d s e a s o n , w it h a n a p p r o x im a t e a v e r a g e o f SO p o in ts p e r g a m e . A t t h e v e r y t o p o f N a t i o n a l J u n i o r C o lle g e f in is h e r s , L o n M o r r i s J C w a s o n e o f t h e v i c t i m s c r u s h e d b y t h e f r e s h m e n . M is s in g o n l y o n e b a s k e t in t h e f i r s t IO m in u t e s o f p l a y , t h e Y e a r l i n g s r a n u p a 36-14 le a d , a n d L o n M o r r i s n e v e r g o t c lo s e . lo s s e s . t h e i r lo a d . T h e t e a m s t h a t g a v e t h e m a c lo s e b a t t l e in G r e g o r y G y m , t h e f r e s h m e n m u r d e r e d on t h e i r h o m e c o u r t s . T e x a s ’ b a s e b a lle r !? a r e In t h e h e a t o f t h e S W C t it l e r a c e , a n d t h e f r e s h m e n s p o r t a r e c o r d o f e ig h t w in s a n d t w o I t ’s t h a t w a y In e v e r y s p o r t. W h e r e t h e v a r s i t y is a s h a d e w e a k , t h e f r e s h m e n a r e s t r o n g — r e a d y t o m o v e u p to c a r r y But then you might call it pride. I t t a k e s s o m e t h in g — y o u m ig h t c a l l it c o n c e it . e t c . , f o r t h a t ’s n o t e x a c t l y it. I t ’s m o r e k n o w i n g y o u ’r e g o o d , a n d d o in g y o u r d a r n d e s t to p r o v e it. A n d i t ’s s o m e t h in g e lse , to o . I t ’s a s w im m in g t e a m t h a t d o e s n ’t h a v e a c h a n c e to m a k e f o u r t h g iv in g e v e r y t h i n g t h e y ’v e g o t to w in . I t ’s a tradition that started long ago. A winning tradition and a winning attitude— the idea that you can do it— and the determination to see that i f s done. P m i CHICKEN • SHRIMP • BARB-QUE RIBS • FISH • PIZZA FREE DELIVERY !! ,m ' I ' e-m.-11 pm. 5*1.. Sun. * Hoitd«ys GR 6-6716 1601 LAVACA SIC FLICS \ It. , * 'Horns Score Early To Beat TCU 4 to 3 B y H A R V E Y U T T E R Texan Sport# E d ito r the bases loaded in the eighth and fanned Don Reynolds and forced F O R T W O R T H (Spl)-~The T exas home, stole second, and scored on Sam Reynolds to ground out with | the throw and m oved over to third on a balk. R ig b y singled Bethea Longhorns scored four runs e a rly I K a sp e r a single. and then survived three unearned T C L runs to take a 4-3 v ic to ry here Wednesday and keep w ith the Texas Aggies. p a c e ; the seventh. O nly B e lch e r, who w as rn trouble all the w ay, fin a lly w as scored on in Schm idt lost his first game of the ye a r against one victory', and the second B elch er picked up win no. nine and sixth did the Hom ed Frogs against one loss. B e lc h e r has won two on in the ninth in Senior righthander Tom B e lc h e r go down in order and they hit him scvpn conference p lay now. started and w’on for the Longhorns, Kveton although he pitched one of his w eakest games. B e lc h e r gave up w as the most effective of the three seven hits, three unearned runs, T C L pitchers. In three innings, he and walked two. H e fanned six allowed one hit. one w alk. and hitters, however. allowed Second pitcher in e ve ry other inning. Schm idt fanned three. L a r r y touched The Longhorns three eight hits. four runs, a ll earned T C U pitchers for IO hits and m ade four w alks, and struck out three two errors. T C U made one error, i pv0X Covert, w ho finished for the The Longhorns scored in the first j H om ed Frogs, gam e up one hit inning without hitting against start- in two innings, w alked four, and loser Don Schm idt. B ill struck out one M y e r allowed two er and led off w ith a w alk and j hits, w alked two, and struck out Bethea afte r P a t R ig b y bounced out. E d ' two. i n the seventh, shortstop J . VV K asp er, D ave Skinner, and Chuck Knutson w alked the Holt led off w ith a double Fredds run. Lou Brazelton forced K a s p e r (jo n e s hit a short single that sent to force in I at the plate, and Folsom B e ll flied I Holt to third. Then with to center to end the inning. clutch pitching, B e lc h e r retired nt ^ ^ The two team s go again Thurs- C h arlie Harten- J t§in p i i c h } n g J ? I , Texas and K v e * ton going for T C L . * Box Score J T X A t t t c t : ab r h bl if 3 0 1 2 rJBovfl eh r I* bt B eth ** tut 3 2 1 0 M AO* 2b 4 0 0 0 R ig bv 2b 4 I 2 1 Le e 3b 5 1 2 0 K r s per 3b 4 A 1 0 A ir t h lf 4 0 0 0 S k ln n rr cf 3 I 2 0 Baze rf 5 0 2 2 K n u u o n 0 0 0 0 4 0 2 0 B r e t o n lb B ell rf D R id * 5 0 0 0 P in ck n e y e I O O O H olt M 4 1 1 0 Th re uh rf 0 0 o 0 CB Rnlsa. 1 0 0 0 London r 3 1 2 0 5 0 0 0 .Ione* c I B elch er p 3 0 2 0 Schm id t D 1 0 0 0 : bXew I O O O K u et on o 1 0 0 0 M y e r t* I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a T e rry 0 0 0 0 3* $ 9 2 4 0 I 0 B ig le y cf 4 O O O lb SS t 1# J Total* C o v e n o T oft*)* a popped to third for R u sto n rn 7th. b—-popped to 2nd for B e lch e r in 8th. c— struck out for B e ll In 9th. d -ran for Bare In 9th, e— grounded out for Holt in 6 th. the third. W ith one out Skinner ond basem an B illy M cA d am s on third ran a double down the left field pop-ups. on a line. Knutson singled him home basem an R ig b y j Te*** but w as thrown out tryin g lo go to bounder second. Brazelton singled but B e ll w as called md on strikes to end the inning couldn’t find the handle and a run scored. and evid e n tly had ( Je r r y Le e out to second, but T C I i* J a y W a lleth d rew a w'alk and 1 3 TCU 13 E~ RJgby 2 D. ..T e x * * 77-8 TCU tot IOO WH*—4 OOO 0 SOO—S F O A — Reynolds 27*10. LO B—Texas B e lc h e r hit a single W h a t proved to be the winning Leon B a z e singled tw’o more run cam e 11 0 me in the fourth W ith runs. Bob B ig le y then forced Baze one out right. in The pitcher was thrown out tr y - ; the eighth and su rvived tw o p o l l ­ ing to go to third w hen Bethea hie T C U ra llie s to end the game, singled. Bethea w ent to second on He fanned Le e w ith twv> out and Boh M y e r relieved B e lc h e r to out at second. in 2 B—Lee, Billet'. 3B—Lee, B i Kiev. S B —Rigby, ( W , 6-1) Schmidt at Wash­ Wertz Pinch Hits Fourth K A N S A S C IT Y lip—V ic to r Wood­ row' W ertz thinks pinch hitting is a tough life but he enjoys it. rain The Detroit Infielder h i t his fourth straight pinch hit Tuesday night, enabling the Tigers to de- ir> the loth inning T h a t swat cam e w ithin one of the A m erican League record set by Jo h n n y Mize of the N ew Y o rk Yank ees in 1955 and tied by Bob H a le of the Cleveland In d ia n s in I960. “ A pinch hitter ha* a helluva- life .” W ertz said W ednes­ tough ‘‘You sit around most of a day. ball gam e and you get the toughest part of one M ayb e your club has been going good and you haven t played for a w eek because you w ere not needed, lf yo u 're on the road you h a v e n t had much batting practice. in "T h e n you get called and e v e ry ­ thing hinges on w hat you do. to & A f i b * L vi (F i f SF take ‘‘Now’, last night. It w as cold and dam p out there. I d been sitting around for the whole gam e. J Then a ll of a sudden y o u 're You either do or you don’t.” In I * J . A rn a PAT R IG B Y . . tingled Bethea horn® Texas Tracksters Prepare For Thursday's Tri-Meet The Texas Longhorns w ill make their final preparations for the de­ fense of their Southwest Confer­ n y C A R L T O N STO W E R A Texan Sports Staff ence track and field cham pionship of sore a n n i, but both are evpect- Thursday night In M e m o ria l Sta- «ed to be read y to go the following in Southwest Conference 1 dan w ill give Pued a run for his team s their w ares ( m oney and. if right. Sm ith could history w ill disp lay the R ic e spear thrower, as the Shorthorns do battle w ith 1 outdo I Steer Ja m e s Houston and O w l the A & M Fish . T exas boasts such ) D a v e E d w a rd s w ill not be in com- outstanding ind ivid uals as Preston petition Thursday night because D a v is who is undefeated in his co i­ legiate ca re er at distances from the 880 to the m ile, qua rte n-m Hers D a vid W inkles, C h arles B a rn h ill, and R a lp h M ille r, and speedy D a ­ vid C olley who has been credited w ith tim es of 9.6 and 20 9 for the IOO and 220. Standouts for the T ex ­ as frosh in die field events a r* big Je r ! F ra n k lin jum p and Robert Pen n in the pole vault j Both are form er state cham pions : and F ra n k lin is the holder of the 1 A A A A record w ith a leap of 6’5 V ‘. in the high in the high m eet w ith * w « * k dium as they host a T exas A & M and R ic e . The meet, W ithout T C U 's Bobby B e rn a rd to breathe down his back T ex as’ ace w hich w ill be composed of both a hurdler R a y Cunningham w ill have freshm an and a v a rs ity division, only the clock to race against. His w'lll get under w a y at 7:30 with the chief competition w ill come from running of the v a rs ity 440 yard re- j team m ates Bob Sew ell and Ja m e s lay. Cooper and possibly Aggie Tom B u rn s. Cunningham, like Hanson sw’ept the three big re la y c a rn i­ v a ls in Austin, la w r e n c e , and Des M oines and has a best of 13 9 this y e a r and w as clocked in a wind aided 13 7 in the W est T exas R e ­ la ys e a rlie r this year. The m eet w ill serve as a w a rm ­ up for the three team s as they a ll w ill be eyeing the conference meet to be held in W a c o the following weekend. jum p Texas and Texas A & M w ill be the team s to w atch for the meet cham pionship T hursday night w ith R ic e furnishing some outstanding individual talent. The v a rs ity pole v a u lt w ill pro- three 15 foot vau lters as B a y iu s Bennett and Steve G uynes of Texas w ill do battle w ith R ic e s high flying jun­ ior, F r e d Hanson. H a axon took v ic ­ tories in the Texas, K ansas, and D ra ke R e la y s for a v e ry im pres­ sive triple. G uynes, only a sopho more. became the latest entry into the elite 15 foot club last week in the D rake R e la y * when he scaled 15 feet even to tie for second be- I hind Hanson. Bennett, who tied for second in the T exas and Kansas i R e la y s , has a personal best of 15‘ 414“ and is one of the fe w v a u lt­ er* In the country who can claim Bennett three-w’a y in a in College Station e a rlie r I a v ic to ry o ver Hanson, , defeated Hanson a ffa ir this year. Another R ic e product, big F.d Red w ill be one of the feature at­ tractions along w ith his team m ate Hanson. Red won the ja v e lin throw in the D rake R e la y * and has con- | si stent Iv been out around 230 feet ( a ll year, J i m Sm ith, In n g h o m | C harles G iesey, and C harles Jor- A & M w ill bring Its fabulous Ted j Nelson who has bests of 9 4, 20.5 i and 46 5 to his credit and w ill run j the 220 440 as w ell as handle legs on the F is h re la y team s T hursday night. One of the most hotly contested races of the night m ay w-ell come in the 860 yard run w here a sub- 1:51.0 appears to be In the m ak­ R ic e boasts two fine freshm en ing, A & M speedster Thad Crooks in W a rren B r a doff and hurdler has a best this ye a r of 1:514 I ► » » » > » ft > > ft MOTHER’S DAY CARDS for N ew M other • W if e • Daughter * Sister • Aunt G ra n d mother ne* o u r c o m p le te **« lee Hors. C a rd s — Street Floor I U j N I V III 13I M M M M jtil - T R I S T u S f J M i v i * * S T Sfi.E c 2246 G u a d a lu p e Street > I» re I ► IL A M. Ak. Ak * Ak Ak Ak A.*.*. A A. Ak Ak A A .A- -SA Att Mi I g / i T F . FOR LADIES ONLY r n U A M A A m/Aaei—I, M a d r a s Dresses C o t t o n Prints Regular 24.95 16.63 i i Straight : 7 2.95 to 78.95 Skirts 5.00 G ir l's Bermudas M a d r a s and Batiks 9 95 to 74.95 5.00 FULL SKIRT SHIRT WAIST Regular 18.95 12.63 D acron -C otto n FULL PLEATED Regular 13.95 9.30 M attre ss Ticking Dresses 7 7.95 7.97 4 < 4 4 4 4 4 I i 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 ; I 4 i ' ' : "We’re not leaving till we find him and his overdue library books!” (J H i A i v r ! E S 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! a g e d m il d , b l e n d e d m i l d - n o t f i l t e r e d m i l d - t h e t s a t i s f y j NIGHT TELEPHONES— HO S 4914, GR 1-7474 NATIONAL VAN LINESTl T f l j j i r ... ARTHUR R. (ART) TILMANN—-OWNER ALL SALES FINAL, PLEASEI The C a m p I t t l L HmbEristtp &i)op 2350 GUADALUPE I t w o u ld b e h o a k y to g o in t o a lo n g e s s a y o n s c h o o l s p ir it , vide the spectators w ith : SHOW BEAT I • By LARRY, LEE • • a fr This morning, I ’m going to throw all journalistic ethics aside and set out to influence a few votes. I'm not talking about the Saturday election— in fact, I ’m not even sure that an election is involved— but one day in the not-too-distant future, the Department of Drama is going to decide on its summer musical. Tile field: “ W here’s C h a rle y?” “ Once Upon a Mattress," and “ Ernest in Love.” M y candidate: “ Ernest in Lo ve." The recording is where I became fam iliar with “ Ernest in Love.” Its score is by Lee Pockriss and Anne Croswell, as far as I can tell, a pair of unknowns. As far as my opinion goes, a darned good songwriting team. Their numbers “ A W icked M an” and “ Lost” would stand up against the stuff the big-league boys are turning out, and the show’s situation songs, such as “ Mr. Bunbury” and “ A Handbag Is Not a Proper Mother,” do— as you can tell if you’re fam iliar with the W ilde play— retain the spirit of the original. “ Once Upon a Mattress” has been up and down the land in touring companies, even managing a water stop in Austin, under the aegis of the C EC . “ W h ere’s C h arle y?” is as tired as a plate of three-day-old spaghetti. Furtherm ore, both of these last-named shows are personality pieces which are linked with Carol Bu rn ett and R a y Bolger, respectively. “ Ern est” has no such identification with a single star. It was scored for a small orchestra, and its requirements for sets and dancing are slight. It looks to me like just the thing for those particular summer evenings. A re you listening? M i t * * * , - "vs ps YOUTH-LED REVIVAL ^ H a r r i s Iv le m o r t a l b a n t l i l C Ii a r ch Cl j 16th and Red River May 6-13 7:30 p.m. J I M M Y W A L K E R , Evangelist CC \ Vhere J Hverybod y? ” L IS T E N IN G for ‘ he voices which command her to wait Tor a fer­ r y i n g v ’sion of G o d , H arriet Anderson Dosses her ear to the w a 1! 'n rh s scene from ’ Through a Glass Darkly," the newest Irg- mar Bergman picture, which opened W ed nesday af the Texas thea­ ter. Last month, the finn won an Academ y Aw ard as best fore’gn- language picture of the year. Movie in Review B e rg m a n 's D ark V ie w O f the Iso la te d Sou l B y L A R R Y L E E Texan Amusement* Editor In g m ar Bergm an'* world i* one of perpetual mist and strange night noises. His characters are insul­ ated from each other and from their God by a mechanical fate and by their own desires, which they cannot always understand. l a s t It is a somber w o r l d , infre­ quently penetrated by shafts of light, but in the reel of “ Through a Glass D a rk ly ,” which opened Wednesday at the Texas. B e r g m a n finally offers some choices about the kind of God his films deal with, When David finally speaks to his son, he suggests "that God m ay he found through l o v e . A trite idea? Perhaps. But in the hands of Ingm ar Bergm an, it is one of the most beautiful and heartening moments imaginable. M y sole complaint is that the dubbed version of the film is being shown here. The a c t o r s have clipped, British tones more suit­ able for a Noel Coward comedy or a B E C radio play than this Swedish tragedy. Trans-Texas m ay return the excellent subtitled ver­ sion—which was seen in previews here—to the Texas. I hope so. Thursday, M a y 3, 1962 THE DAILY TEXAN Page Film C ritic to Sp e a k Dwight Macdonald, one of Airier le a '* liveliest and most pencirat­ ing critics, will present public lec­ ture* Thursday and F ’ day as part of the Program in Criticism . At 4 p.m. Thursday in English Building 203. he will s p e a k on “ The Current Renascence of the in F ilm ,” and at 2 p m F rid a y P e arce Hall 105 on “ T h e R ele­ vance of Anarchism T o d a y " Macdonald is a free-lance w riter regular for Esquire, and a staff writer for The New film critic Yorker. He has form erly been a staff w riter for Fortune, an editor of Partisan Review , and publisher and editor of Politics. In 1957. Macdonald published some of his earlier political es­ says in the book “ M em oirs of a Revolutionist.” He has also w rit­ 'H e n r y W allace: The Myth ten and the M an .” “ The Root is M an,” and ' The Ford Foundation.” His latest book is “ Parodies,” an an­ thology of literary parody from Chaucer to Beerbohm. S A N J A C I N T O C A F E N ow : Fr#» Packing In th * J A D E R O O M le t— n e r♦ door P a rk in g i i V r i r r w SPECIALIZING IN DELICIOUS MEXICAN AND AMERICAN FOODS « - r r n Visit O ur Rainbow Dining Room OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK I6TH AND SAN JA C IN TO GR 8-3984 * y k i M A 4 4 M N y Aud a V is io n t o B e h o l d ! KO* •««*•«* ih FBI -though the. ^ s m _ she wa? a G e n e r a l SW I K the, ASTftOMWT vLss ^ • / / I I i \ thought OUT-of-TWS ihew asa WORLD/ K o ° K i C o lle g iu m F e a tu re s B aro q u e Instrum ents B y HAY O EN F R I KMAN Alto and tenor sackbuts, a Nic- olo shawm, recorders, and several viola* da gamba were among ba­ roque musical instruments called for in scoring of works performed at the Department of M usic’s Col­ legium Wednesday in the Music Building Recital Hall. The 14 compositions, written be­ tween 1560 and 1760, were selected, prepared, and, in some cases, di­ rected by Dr. Arend Koole, guest professor of music. With his spok­ en program notes, they formed a somewhat disjointed illustrated history' of the development of mu­ sic the baroque-rococo period. through ; helped do Ungainliness in is said to have the dinosaur, and it certainly must be responsible for the passing from fashion of the viola da gamba. The shawmn and the sackbut lent a museum air to the concert and their con­ temporary' progeny, the oboe and trombone respectively, prove that modem technology has. In some ways, aided the arts. On the other hand, I he flute-like recorder seems Designed O N LY For CO LLEG E SENIORS A M I C A B L E ' 9 COLLEGE CAREER PLAN FOR C O M P U T E IN F O R M A T IO N CALL GR 2-8916 G L 3-0810 R E N E ' R A M I R E Z A M IC A B L E LIFE IN SU R A N C E CCL to be enjoying a renaissance of popularity'. Quality of the performances was most uneven due to tile nature of instruments and the music ami lack of rehearsal time. Most admirable of the after­ noon'* selections was a group of Monteverdi madrigals sung by Doris Farrar, Royce Boyer, and W alter Foster, who made up for a few minor lapses in their Italian diction with inspired timing and exquisite phrasing. O n e-A ct Contests In League A ctio n Begin Thursday Beginning early' in the Univer- ; sitv Interscholastic League com- j petition, the One-art P la y Contest starts at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in Hogg Auditorium, Eig ht plays from conference B schools will be given Thursday in two sessions. After a dinner hour. , the second session w ill begin at ; 7:30 p.m. Opening the contest Thursday at 4:15 p m. is Tornillo High School with “ The No ’Count Boy.” Other entries are Happy H i g h School with “ Aria Da Capo,” Blooming Grove with “ The Little Minister,” Sharyland (Mission! w i t h “ Tile Twelve-Pound Look,” At 7:30 p.m. the program w ill include Hemp­ stead with “ The Patchwork Quilt,” S a i n t Jo with “ The Valiant,” Menard with “ In the Shadow’ of the Glen,” and C o m f o r t with “ John Doe.” Conference A w ill present its plays Friday at 4:15 p.m. Follow­ ing a dinner hour that night, con­ ference AA will perform at 7:30 p.m. At the same times on Sat­ urday, Conference A A A and AAAA m ay be seen. Eat Mexican Food Once A Day! EL M A T 504 East A v a , G R 7-7023 EL T O R O 1601 Guadalupe G R 8-4321 EL C H A R R O 912 Rad River G R 8-7735 M O N R O E 'S Mexican Food to Take H om e" G R 7-8744 w /Jf / ...awl sU OlT-of-this-W oald] (shes -fret* a pk»et t h a t has 7 m oorts— alf made -for Lovely Walt Disney!? Delivery Service 7 Days Austin's “Big Four” in Authentic M exican Food ACADEMY AW ARD NOW! OPEN 1:45 WINNER! BEST FOREIGN FILM OF YEAR! T M - I W - ( W I - S M I ( BOS 9 ® & r SMITX -TOW KWK — TA Adult* 1A0. MDC Aft*. Child .VV j T , TECHNICOLOR’ Positively Not For Children! No One Admitted Under 18! FEATURES N O W SH O W IN G ! F E A T t K K S l i : 4 ^ t : l f t - 4 ; 4 * 7 : I* - * :4 2 The fastest two hours the screen has em seen! com b mm nom s * sums e w e peooucToi O O I FE»D i f f REMKX sat;im** rn SIEFAifE POWERS/IHE 60RO0NS T W ta sa w Addf*) : “ I b e H its* tn Kprvr*” a n d Matt od Col or C a r t o o n mrMB'tt rn-nom /BUW EDUARDS, ADULTS I.OO MDC 5CV. C hiid JSr 3RD GREAT “THE PICTURE IS COLOSSAL! WEEK! Art opulent tapestry of medieval legend. Immense material managed with firmness, elegance and a sure sense of epic rhythm! — Tim#Mogoim# M riHSILNTS B I A cad «-m « A w a t ; ! VI i nner B E S I AC T >K PERFORMANCES TODAY AT 2:00 P.M.— 7.30 P.M. I O I T H SH O W SA I I K I M I AEL hi Cl*, JI* IO AM — PRICES TODAY — ADULTS ....................|.25 STUDENTS ................... 90 CHILDREN .............. 50 STARTS TODAY! FEAT.: 6:15 - 8:02 - 9:47 IM E N G L I S H OPEN 11:45 r n j i m ADULT ENTERTAINMENT * MODEL CHARCOAL IN The shocking story o f artists & models go n e wild! Pius Eddie Foy Jr. Comedy A« a d *- m y A w a r d W inn # r H E S T AC T K E S S I ' m * Lint su.iH*ndrd pius! TONY CURTIS JANET LEIGH i J i ■ ■ J i f n r A J i J - i f t i t ; CHILD FREE ADULTS 60c F I N K F O O D S ! F L A VGMOUND! N n i O B a r O pen 6:4ft lat Show 7 l l KIDS! FREE RIDES ON 'U L TOOT' BEFORE SH O W Tho P ic tu re w i t h l ^ l P . . » makes you / Rock Hudson Do w s Da y T ony Randall ’JgVERCOME BACK-' * t* cot ae .EDIE ADAMS JAO GAW JACK DUSCHEN CHILD FREE ♦ HI SI Ai THESIS l * l » j g r o u n d * n » ! F i n n F o o d * Opa* I Ye • L r#.! •'how 7:3# + H I S T At THEWS * B E S T b l P F O I S T I N G ADULTS A MATURE YOUNG PEOPLE 4 ACADEMY AW ARD NOMINATIONS urns ADULTS 60c & UHUH U lm ilU lillE M t !^ u i n u n g u m m e r < r * * (Smoke * FU T I K E M I I R F ♦ B E N IT < O I O H A B T D I K E ! L I O N 'I O I IGN Plus! Jerry Lewis— “THE BELL B O Y ” It is the story of four people j who are taking a holiday on an isolated Island in the Baltic, Like the island itself, which has a fog­ in horn which wails the background, each of the char­ acters is isolated in hi* own way, . and each is crying for help in a quiet, insistent voice. Incessantly The father, D a v i d , (Gunnar Rjom strand* is a w riter w h o * es books are popular sucesses, rather than t h e artistic triumphs he wants them to be. His son, Minus ■ H^ars Passgardi, is a lonely adole­ scent who seeks to r e a c h his in hurting father • him. David's daughter, K a r i n I (H arriet A n derson), and her grim : husband, M artin %vasT® m building the known as “ A shbarrel’ Smith, c* ing tape on the glass panes, and labeled them "G'ass." Still, they report, a few students take the panels for doors. Perhaps the g'ass manu­ facturer should be proud. O r m a y b e it s Windex? — Photo by Kev i , I,'. I J. Monday, i from U r n . lo noon on Saturdays studenU and j rn the Barker History Center. in J : University was also of concern to (brough Frid a y,, and ; Wm He opposed building dorms for "common, - for ________ ____________ ________ _ Included p , the collection of : Smith’s writings is his article in I the Texas Journal of Education of ; 1881 explaining his reasons for sup­ porting Austin as the location for the University. Staffers Plan Annual Picnic Field Trips Take In Local Color U5-P°und tv v » « T e x .. history authority, teacher, and dip­ lomat was a volunteer soldier in the fight for Texas independence. “ It was one of the decisive bat­ tles of the world.” Smith wrote of the battle of San Jacinto. for Texas As a historian, he spoke to a veterans association in 1875 on the battle independence. Had the Mexicans won this battle, all the states forming the south­ western border of the Union would be in a great state of useless palsy, basin. Excursions w ill be made to Big Bend National Park, Carls­ b a d C a v e rn s .D a v is Mountaini Vol-i c~ m mr Manos or me regents. j2 p .m . Sunday at Tommy B ird - 1 he said ~ carries, Van Horn-Sterra Diablo re-j He declared that the specific lo- w ell’s Camp Craft. Tnno 4 m T iU v S J' m H T Juno 4 to Ju ly l l . Smith felt that it was “ indispen­ sable’’ that the U niversity be out Awards wall be presented to of political control and that the Texan and Ranger staffers at their powers of faculty removal should \ annual spring picnic beginning at be in the hands of the Regents. of the highest importance, ’ I I Dr, Smith served in various leg- institution w a s; Entertainm ent w ill bo provided i i.slative positions, was a minister of by Gilbert Shelton and his musical state to France, and was made a colonel in the Confederate A rm y Ideal lo- I Rangeroos, This summer, graduate students j He considered Austin an in Geology 378M w ill do original cation field investigations in Trans-Pecos, I cause of its accessibility its Texas, or Mexico. | road transportation, for such an institution be- Those eligible to attend are ask- before the end of the C ivil W ar. to rail- ed to sign up in Journalism Build-1 The Ashbel Lite rary Society on | campus was named in his honor. healthy ing 107 before noon F rid a y. Tornado Season In Full Swing B y D O X VAC CA RO lf a tornado boiled into Austin, would you know what to do’ Tornadoes can occur anywhere in the United Slates at any time but they happen most frequentlyj in midwestern, southern, and cen­ tral states from M arch through September. The worst T e x a s storms have hit in March, April, and M ay. The national average is 13.1 tor­ nadoes a year. In 1957. a record number of 624 storms was report- In the first five months of the year. Texas topped other states with 95. A mass of warm, humid air com­ ing into contact with an opposing mass of cool air provides the at­ mospheric conditions favorable to the formation of tornadoes. Tornadoes usually appear as fun­ nel-shaped clouds, spinning rapidly, and extending toward the earth from a thundercloud. They usually move from southwest to northeast at a speed of 25 to 40 miles per hour, Tile air speed within the tornado m ay be as high as 500 m p h . The worst year of Texas torna­ does was 1953. On M ay l l of that year, a through tornado swept Waco, killing 114 persons ami causing damage estimated at $60 million. The same day, IO persons were killed when San Angelo was hit. Two days later, 17 were killed when tornadoes struck Knox City, O 'Brien, and Jud. In 1922, a tornado hit Austin and left IO persons dead. The fun­ nel appeared to be heading for the heart of the city, but swung around and struck T ravis Heights, Penn Field smith of St. E d w ard ’* U ni­ versity, and Oak H ill. The following rules should be ob­ served when a tornado threatens: If time and circumstances per- j mit, go to a storm cellar, cave, | or underground excavation, which should have an air outlet to equal­ ize the air pressure. These should be kept fit for use, and free of water, gas. or debris, ‘ rf- , If you are in open country, move at right angles to the tornado’s path. If there is no time to escape, lie flat in the nearest depression, such as a ditch or ravine. In a city or town, you should seek inside shelter, preferably In a steel reinforced building Stay aw ay from window s at all times. the If you are in your house, the southwest corner of lowest floor or basement offers the great­ est safety. People in brick or stone 1 houses should seek other shelter, preferably In a storm cellar or the If basement of a there I* time, electricity and gas lines should be shul off. Opening windows on the north and east sides of the house m ay help re­ duce damage. Standing against in­ side walls on the lower floor of i an office building offers some safe­ fram e house. ty. In city schools, children should be kept inside the building if It is of good steel reinforced con­ struction. Auditoriums and gymna­ siums should be avoided. In rural J areas, ravines or ditches offer the j best protection if storm shelters 1 are not available. P e rs o n s in an a r e a under toma- ; do alert should keep tuned to their I radios Infor- I rn at ion. latest weather for t y p i n g : e e r v i o o 2 0 1 3 Guadalupe G R 2-3210 G R 2-7677 A complete professional typing service tailored to the specific needs of University student* and faculty. C o i i v e n i e i i e e . . on the Drag. 'Mary Iou Vasquez Chosen ti*!* I #ii ■ TRHBf ■ ; ■ T M M a B H K - i s a ta.'a ifs. Alt A.. A .#*,,*% M a H H H LO O K OUT, Jimmy! Sandy Windsor cautions Jimmy Jackson against following He lead of a freshman who walked through a glass panel In th® entrance to the n e w Business-Economics Building. Officials have placed strips of mask­ Approximately 1,800 students a c t i o n s , field technology, geomorph- in Geology 601, general ology, folds, and faults, enrolled geology, which has four field trips run, ; a semester. With graduate students “ W hat a waste of an afternoon,’’ as these to “ The most fun I ’ve had in a tripe, the students observe the for- long tim e.” After field trips, stu- 1 mations at Pilot Nob, the low wa- dents are quizzed over material teaching assistants on from students Comments is concerned with covered and discovered. ter bridge at Tom M ille r Dam, Mount Bonnell, Mount Barke r, L it­ tle Walnut Creek (off the Dallas highway), and Onion Creek (near Blufton Springs.) This work Integrated to tile curriculum cf all geology classes is the observa­ tion of nature. Advanced courses make competent use of the nature at hand. Classes of Geology 320 the Balcones F au lt and E s c a r p j this summer will Interpret geologic structures, study fossils, measure ment which run southwest to north­ stratigraphic sections, and make east through the center of Travis correlations In the Llano Uplift of county, with rolling blackland prairies to the southeast and rug­ central Texas where Igneous, met­ amorphic, and sedimentary rocks ged hill country of the eastern fringe of the Edw ards Plateau to of Cretaceous to Precam brian age are well exposed. the northwest. The U niversity is situated in a rive r valley setting Classes In Geology 660 w ill study at the foot of the Balcones Scarp, methods of geologic surveying re- The w-ork done by these students connaisance, measured sections, j | is mostly observation of rocks, 1 and Interpretations of stratigraphy I I minerals, occurrences of forma-1 and structure of the Marathon As First APO Sweetheart M a ry L e u Vasquez, freshm an! Runners-up were M uff Singer, pharm acy m ajor, was chosen last Carolyn Swerk, Ja n e ll, Houchins, week as Alpha Phi Omega sweet- Elizabeth Doyle, and M ary Evelyn I heart. She is the first sweetheart < M erritt. to be selected by the University the national service j chapter of j fraternity, H e r selection wa* the highlight of a spring dance given by Alpha I Rho chapter of A PO . S h e was | awarded a dozen red roses, by Alpha Rho president, Chuck Eis- mann. Off:le e r s APO officers were recently elect- j ed for Hie fall sem ester. They are Burke Musgrove, president; Ru­ ben Brown, first vice president; j Dan Gardner, second vice presi­ treasurer; dent; Crozier Brown, Gary Cain, recording secretary; Dan Trevino, corresponding secre­ tary ; Phil Qirisco, historian; and Mike Bosler, reporter. I MARY LOU VASQUEZ 1/Uhat CjoeS O n - J I cr T H I R A D A Y 8-12 and 1-5—Texana exhibit. Human! ties Research Center, M ain Building 9-5 -Application for student seminar In ! International j t h i s summer. Chile Center. 9-5— Exhibit of art by graduate stu- j dents, Regents Room, M ain Build- : in*. 9-5 Deadline for filing application for j Journalism ; associate editor of R ia ia Building 107. 9~1h International Coffee Hour. Texas Union 202. 9 45— Music lesson for beginners bv I Prof. Andrew Brockema. KTRC -TV. 10--Coffe« Hour. H U lel Foundation. 12-t-30-International Club luncheon.! International Center, I — Donald St. Clair. M idland geologist. to speak at Technical Session. Geol­ ogy Building 14. I — Registration f o r 1-eogue Meet begins. Gregory Gym 3—Study Groups: Campus Affairs, and Interscholastic Great Phlloaphle*. “ T. 3-11— K U T - EM 90 7 mc (U niversity I _ news at 5; Coed Coral at 6.3Cm. 4 Leo Nitch. Violin. Music Building Recital H all, I- Program In C riticism : Dwight M ac­ “ T h * Current English In C I n e m a.“ lo speak «on donald Renasence Building 303. I I 4 D r Shi-I. Pa! to lecture on ‘ Some Considerations on the Fundamental Fle«'tro-Magneto-Gas- equations of dvnam ics." Engineering Laboratory IOT. ! 4- K R T T - T V listening and Q iem lstrv Building 218 * L l I lorn.” In Texas Union Ballroom to present i R E Knight to discuss “ Studies in Perturbation T heory,’’ P h y s i c s Building 121. 4:15 and 7 30- One-a e t T I L plays. Hogg Auditorium. Rf cs? GM »nt ca. and 4 SOG Students-for Capital National Bank Bi 5—The Rev, Brandoch Lov­ textbook hear the k P. I elies Center. 5:30 Modem dsn-'e demon Orcheeis, W om en's Gym 6 30—Cactus P ry o r Show- pre-scenes from Fiesta Pi K T B l'- T v. 6 30 R O T I 6 : 3 0 - I AAM | 6 30 Dr, Today house. I 6 30- Me 401. — Men's s e n i o r Gy rn. Pow er Show. Engl: Buildings ark meet for Tex ai Memorial Stad urn, J , R. Sm iley to and Tomorrow tall Club. ; 6 45— S w I n g-Out r south of M ain Bull 7—Tau Beta P i tutor lor H a ll 137. j 7-—Dr. Milton F dents. Baptist -Coed night Texas Utile Alleys. ison id en 7—Duplicate Bridge. Texas 7-—Sphinx. Architecture Bu 7:30 -U niversity Ar' hflcolr letv. U niversity ' Y .” U 7-9 Class in painting and ake Texas Union 333. 7*10—Study rooms open, first f English Building. 7 30-10— Inform al party for ILP< a* Union Audltorium. 7 30- Interscholastic L p a gut * Conference reception, Texas Auditorium. 7-#-Christian Science Organ 2328 Guadalupe 7 45 Engineering W ives ( officers. Texas Union 305 1:30— "S w eet B ird <*? Youth,* Playhouse. F ifth and Lavaca. Un b to elect A CT DAILY TEXAN C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T IS I N G R A T E S S I R E D A D V E R T IS I N G R A T E S .................... (15-word m in im um ) 4* ......... ........ ........... ........ SI 20 Ea c h W o rd Minimum Charge C lassified D isp la y I column x one inch one time .................... $] no Each Additional Tim e ..................................... ,9Q 20 Consecutive Issues $6 OO 8 word* .................................................. 15 words ............................................................. g OO 20 words .............. ............................ ............... i loo (.No copy change for consecutive issue rates) ./ L L / C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T IS I N G D E A D L I N E S Monday. 3:30 pm . Tuesday Texan .................... Wednesday Texan ............... Tuesday. 3 30 p.m. Wednesday. 3:30 p rn. Thursday Texan ................. Thursday 3 30 p m. Frid ay Texan Sunday Texan ...................... Friday. 3:30 p.m. In the event of errors made In an advertisement, immediate notice must be given as the publishers are responsible for only one incorrect insertion. CALL G R 2 - 2 4 7 3 Lost and Found Rooms tor Rent Houses fo r Sale W a n te d D IA M O N D D R O P L O S T on U. T. Campus Eight diamonds surround­ ing one large diamond. Reward. S R U Room 360 L O S T .- S PE C T A C LES A T V arsity Car­ nival, Contact Jim m y H ale G R 2-9035. thank you. A-BAR HOTEL Summer rates: 56.25 a week-double 110.00 a week-single a ir conditioned Room and Board 2612 Guadalupe G R 6-5658 ROO M A N D B O A R D S U M M E R S E S S IO N A IR - C O N D IT IO N E D S T A G C O - O P E R A T IV E 2101 Rio Grande G R 8-5043 T w o meals per day, seven days a week S.A. ARMS 393o San Antonio Summer Rates SIS. for nine weeks double 370 for nine weeks single Alr-eond it toned C all; G R 7 0617 G R 8-3940 Furnished Apartm ents taken N O W S P E C IA L R A T E S for Ncw-air-condiUoned. well-a n p o i n t e d , H I 2-0995. F O R reservations summer or fall. a n d complete accomodates 2-4. fall G I R I 25 ROOM O P E N for summer and reservations M onthly summer rates. 520 double 325 single Spacious, N ear U. T. and downtown area. Cook­ ing facilities 1609 Colorado. G R 2-0690. ; $32,000, T A K IN G A P P L IC A T IO N S F O R ■am­ mer, SA N G A B R IE L A P T S . One opening immediately. Air-conditioned, water and gas paid. N ew ly re-modeled and decorated Very ITS, Ss*. Cali G R 8-1030 or 2503 San Ga­ briel Apt. 2-A. large. 368 2711 H E M P H I L L P A R K . Three blocks directly north of campus. Brand new one bedroom apartments, tw in beds, furniture, swimming danish modern pool, air-conditioned. See manager. Apt. C or call G R 6-8449, G L 3-3973. C L 2-6469. conditioned. cleaning M EN . M O D E R N G A R A G E apartment. quiet, service, utilities Inquire 2055-B a i r carpeted, paid, Summer rate*. .Sabine 6 7 G R 2-1043. p.m. a n d weekends. Private, T H E “ 700' 700 Hearn Ideal for student one bedroom water gas paid air-conditioned u tility room ‘ 32. $82,50 per month G R 2-4467 G R 6-8922 L O V E L Y . M O D E R N O N E bedroom apartment T w i n beds. Separate apartments In tri-plex. Available May I L a m a r . GR 2-9293 between 8:00-5 00. SUO. OO. 2201 North P R O F E S S O R ’S A P A R T M E N T —-SUM­ M ER . W ill rent to responsible couple Ju n e September. Three rooms, refrlg- <• rated air. completely furnished, one block M e m o r i a l Stadium. $75.00. G R 2-7471. 10:00 a rn.-8:00 p m. C L I AN. .SPA C IO U S O N E bedroom. 909 W est 22nd. $50, Utilities paid. Also unfurnished two tvdroom house. Northwest. $70 G L 3-3863. A V A IL A B L E N O W A N D s u m m e r school One and two bedroom apart­ ments. SUO. l l OO, $90. $75 Large and quiet. Garsgt-s B ills paid. 170® En- ! field G R 2-4424 Furnished Apartm ents THE B R ID G E W A Y $50.00 for Summer Term-—double $70.00 for Summer Term —single air-conditioned daily porter aervlce 2616 W ich ita students U N IV E R S IT Y A P P R O V E D F O R men for summer P l a n now housing. Ten minute walk from Uni­ versity. 2809 Hem phill Park. G R 8-2370. R A T E S Single Double Rm. A $25 OO $13 50 ( 4 Jar. windows) (evap. cooler) Em . B $27 50 $15.00 R E S E R V A T IO N N O W A C C E P T E D A T T H E N U E C E S alr-ronditioned F O R S U M M E R T E R M $30 00 month (single) $25.00 month (double) Contact Donald Douglass 2700 Nueces G R 7-0075 Houses for Sale H IG H L A N D P A R K B E A U T Y S E V E N M IN U T E S FR O M U N IV E R S IT Y • a ir conditioned • pine kitchen two large bedroom* • large closets galore a vaulted ceilings • sep dining area >landscaped yard and fence • $350 down $79 month, Owner 2710 W est 49th. G L 3-0918. lllng* M A S O N R Y H O M E, C Y P R E S S paneling. beamed ceilings, fireplace, basement. attic. Dead end street near U. T. G R 8 5916 _____ S A V E $1,000 I F purchased now. Three bedrooms, two bath h o m e . $2 500 equity. $91 total monthly. C L 3-2505. FOR LUXURY LIVING the RIVER OAKS 3001 Red River St. OPENING AUGUST 15th Air­ lin g mtral T V Antenna Danish Modern Fu rn itu re Central Music AU U tilities Paid For further information contact Harley Clark G R 2*3914 B R IC K , S P A C I O U S 3-BEDROOM home, 1506 Morrow. Bargain, by interest plus equity. owner 4’ * % Fenced backyard, bus line. schools, community center. G R 2-1043 evenings, weekends. BLO O D D O N O R S—A ll types of blood needed for usage in Austin. Profes­ sional donors now accepted. Travis County Blood Bank. 2907 B Red River. T H E N E W M A Y F A IR House womens dorm itory 2000 Pearl. G R 6-5042, needs dietician for excellent permanent position beginning August lith . L A S T C H A N C E ! O W N E R leaving : " T Z T T T :; ;— ----- town next week. Must sell two bed- I N A T IO N AX. CO M PAN Y N E E D S part room h o u s e in excellent Northwest Austin neighborhood. Carpet air-con- i P*V.t Austin and other Texas di» toner. menu. 45•_’% 11,000 equity. G L 3-8630. STO monthly pay-; App.v 15U Guadalupe. Room 203, 7 time and summer help. W hite. Good loan Make offer Thursday only. furnace cities for FO R S A L E B Y owner. F o u r Bed­ rooms. den and study. Two story. F o u r Alr-eond I uoned window units. Central heating. Excellent condition. Feneed-ln yard, patio. Close to school, shopping center and transportation. for appointment: G L 3-0378 or I Call drive by 3306 P e r r y Lane to see, Houses— Unfurnished For Sale S A IL B O A T S . N E W . U SED , kits H ard­ ware and trailers Sailboat Sales. 504 W est 7th G R 6-3009. G R 8-8118. 1957 C H E V Y 2-door hardtop. New tires. Factory air. Nineteen miles per gallon. Cash sale Michael Castle- man. 1002 W est 26. C R 8-9327. H I F I D E L I T Y C O M PO N EN T S. Speak­ er H 34“ D 15“ W 4 2 5 V ’. turntable with cartridge, F M tuner, pre-ampli­ Shannon. fier, G R 2-2075. $15.00. R i c h a r d F O R S A L E . T H IN -wheel bicycle and Hi-fi, m iltlple-speed record player. G R 6-3837 P R E T T Y L I T T L E O N E bedroom cot­ tage on W est 37th street Five min­ utes north U T for only $40. Red roof. green cedar shakes, mahogany paneled 1 , Interior, hardwood and tile floors, tile i **nt condition. ® ;30 p.m. drain board and shower, biggest bar-j _ _ _ _ “ — gain In Austin for permanent working I O R D \ IC T O R IA $295.00. New or student couple, Babv welcome. Call ; 1953 --------- sag a p l . , --- : brakes, seat covers, and battery, E x ­ Mrs. Hansen, G L 2-5232, cellent W S W tires, power steering, standard shift, R A H . Call Dan John- f o u r place over-drive, wire wheels, Exrd- w rates datlarlcatioa guaranteed. ___ ___________ Mrs. Callow C L T 5 )2 i TH E M O O N L IG H T E R S - I B M MuU UU thing After 6 OU end weekends ,r lie CosteUo. GR 2-1535 3217 D ISSE R T A T IO N S T tU B U S . BO O K S. report* New syrnbol-eqnipped ebnv in. Ritchie, dose troiuatic Mrs. G R S-T079 pink tile bath j A L T E R A T IO N S A N D D R E S S M A K IN G patio, carport j 715 West 25th S tre e t G R 6-3360. • • • for Amtrlcmn sophomores and Junior*. But which y e a r 1$ b a tt? That'a up to you — and your a d v !*o rt. Institute programs offer sophomores the opportunity to broaden their background In general studies and the lib­ eral arts, junior* the opportunity to specialize among the liberal arts. V I I N N A Attend English „ German taught liberal arte courses Discover European culture at its roots by living In a Viennese home. Visit nine European countries on three field study trip*. Prerequisites: you m ust ba a soph om ore or ju n io r end have a C plus a ve ra g e (no la n g u a g e p re re q u is ite ). European Year Fee. $2,230, P A R I S Attend French taught classes. Investigate France a d the Benelux countries on a field study trip. Live in g Parisian home. Prerequisites von m u s t be a soph om ore ar ju nio r; have one year cif colleg e French and a " B " a ve ra g e . Honors F* ngram Fee: $ 2,4 75 . F R S i B U R O Attend German taught liberal arts course*. Live in a Carman home Bt introduced to Western Ger­ many, Switzerland and Italy on two field study Dips. Prerequisites: you m ust be a junior; have a C plus a ve r­ age and be p ro fic ie n t in G e rm e n . D is D eutsche J t h r Fee $2,125 ( t e c h fee round trip ocean voyage fro m t i c w Yore) includes tu itio n , fu id study, room and board, J Far further In fo rm a tio n m ail coupon. n j I U _ 2 r * i Now...find new complexion magic with JX a pure cosm etic... endHypo Allergenic. -Z FONTAINEBLEAU APTS. lipsticks and make ups to com* *> O P E N IN G Summer 1 9 6 2 — Summer Rates LE Q kJ >3 V V From ‘Ven-gger’* to “ young it heart” , ALWAY Cosmetic* can make your complexion dream come true. From ~ \ A J , \3 11 i t Q . / ^ pie Aion creams for normal, R dry or oily ikin*. ^er J> I • hor Young L a d ie s - J re , S ri., A Grads. • To Be University Approved I n s t i t u t c ( \ o f E ur o p e a n Studi es.............. V Box J, St ta u Meeker Drive, Chicago I , Illinois nam Brut* gNlfllf f* jjjufwz rn mn) NMP aooecs* C ITV c a i t »a t C h e c k : TONIC s t a t e VEAR IN f.CHOOt U V IEN N A (J RAHI* U f R E I 8 U R O d , Foundation*- $1 So pius tax Lipsticks $1 25 plus tax Powders irritants screened out rs—fl.wO pius tax ll.i- j p FAULKNER'S DRUG W E CASH CHECKS G R 2-2134 2 6 th & G u a d a lu p e R R R R S D s k i n f’trned or Unscented ^ # Thirteen Furnished, Carpeted, A Air-conditioned Apts. L a th 2 Bedroom—2 Bath, L iv . Km ., Kitchen & Nook W alk-In Closets, Inter-oom. System, Laundry Facilities Utilities, M aid Serv. S t Offstreet Parking Included Swimming Pool & Guest Lounge APPLIC ATIO N S TAKEN N O W FOR SUM M ER & FALL Housemother—MRS. LOUISE BARNETT—GR 2-6480 or Propnetoi - M R S . D A R R E L L N E Y L A N D —G L 2-JJb4 D O R M IT O R Y M A N A G E R W A N T E D to manage men's dorm itory Couple W ife not working or part time student Marguerite Col wife Stat** & n < \ »*dueatk>n experience Hampton Hoad and Furnished apartm ent and salary. W rite Box Stric t I Diver- kity Station. references _ TKurtdsy, M a y 3, 1962 THE D A ILY T E X A N Page 6 Roos Outlines Tests Smiley Speok S T od ay For Mental Illness a n n o u n ce d Wednesday by the By EM ILY I.AMOV Dr, Joseph Smiley, president of the Main University, va ill speak at Ihe Delta Delta Delta house et 6:30 p rn Thursday The last of this week's series, Dr. Smiley s talk is part of the Texas Today and To­ morrow program. As an effort for communication Po?ween the administration and the students, the program has had a number of administration officials speaking to student groups. Campus News Round-Up liWPiWW! tars Allied Powers in Europe, the military' force of NATO with head­ quarters in Paris. F o r d F o u n d a tio n . T ile course, Including lectures by eminent historians In log In other parts of the country, will he broadcast to other Texas col­ the leges and universities oxer educational state’s microwave network. it ★ 1H e a r i n g s ’ B S U S u b j e c t “ C h i l U b e r t i e s an d th e T e x t hook H e a r in g s ” Mill tx1 the to p ic th e R e v . B r a n d o c h L o v e l y ’s o f th e B a p t is t sp e e c h T h u r s d a y a t S tu d e n t I nion fro m 5 to 5 :30 p .m . R e v , L o * ely is the h e a d of th e th e Vine rte a n A u stin division of < ’ivll U b e r t i e s I n ion . Ills will iv* la s t s p e e c h of a th e s e r ie s on Civil U b e r t i e s . th ird an d N A T O to be Discussed Col. E . W, Austin, executive of­ ficer of the Army KO TC unit, will speak to Scabbard and Blade, hon­ orary military society, at 7 p.m. Thursday in ROTC Building 310. To speak on “ NATO and Its Ko­ la lion to United States Objectives,'* Col. Austin will discuss the back­ ground events leading to the for­ mation of NATO and the relation­ in ship between US participation NATO and basic national objec­ tives. Col. Austin, a University' grad­ uate, is being assigned in Septem­ ber to SHAPE, Supreme Headquar- P r o f e s s o r Chilean to Interview fa ils C a p o rn o f the U n i v e r s i t y o f C h ile " i l l b egin in ­ te r v ie w in g a p p l ic a n t s fo r th e Chil c a n S tu d e n t L e a d e r S e m in a r F r i ­ d a y . Ile a r r i x e d in \ u s tin T h u rsd a y t o h elp In th e s e le c tio n of s e m i ­ In te rv ie w s will n a r p a r t ic i p a n t s . tile e a rly p a rt c o n tin u e th ro u g h of n e x t w e e k . ★ G e o lo g is t S p e a k s Today I>on W. St. Clair Midland inde­ pendent geologist and oil producer, will speak on “ Geologists Profes­ sionals o r Prom oters?’' at I pm . Thursday' in Geology Building 14, addressing geology faculty' mem­ bers and graduate students. I St. Clair has been an independ- i ent geologist and oil producer since 11952 and served as a geologist for ' various corporations prior to that date, ★ L a r g e G r a n t G i v e n to UT i 'n lv e r - te le v ise d c iv ilis a tio n A $91 ,3 0 0 g r a n t to th e s h y c o u r s e in A m e r ic a n of T e x a s fo r a THE U N IV E R SIT Y ’S O N LY EXCLUSIVE R A D IO A N D HI-FI SALES A N D SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway 8-660? S e r v i n g the U ni ve rsi ty area for I 1 ye ar s " H IG H FIDELITY AT REA SO N A BLE PRICES Die psychologist attempts to tell what the patient is doing, estimate what he could do if he were well, decide why he can't do it, and formulate a remedy, Dr. t h e n Philip Roos said Wednesday to a group of local psychologists. in The first stop the process involves the use of various tests s u c h as verbal knowledge and abstract thought. The tests will tell capacity and the fulfilled potential of the subject, said Dr. Roos. They will also indicate serious impair­ ment if the person can solve the difficult, but not easy' problems: if there are w i d e differences be­ tween verbal and abstract parts; j and if he cannot complete a great | per cent of the test. As related by im­ is classified as either pairment functional with no organic brain damage or organic with specific changes within the brain. Dr. Roos causes as illustrated functional educational poverty, damaging re-J and lations with other people, ch aracter disorders when the p a -’ dent attempts to change the world ; by any method, t h e tests, Dr. Roos also pointed out that organic causes which occur either i early in life or which occur later; as a loss of ability may also de­ velop funtional conditions. He lllu-• strafed brain-damaged persons as having think­ impaired, abstract ing: rigidity in change: visual dif­ ficulty* and an inability to con-: contrate and focus attention. Pointing out aptitude tests as A n n u al U nion Banquet Set for 6:30 Tonight The Texas Union annual banquet will he held at 6:30 p.m. Thurs­ day In the Junior Ballroom. A skit, reviewing the events of the Union will be the year given, and the gavel will exchange hands. in Among the awards to lie pres­ ented is the Union Spirit Award, given to the person who has done the most work in the Union dur­ ing the year. N egro Students Studied Tile Religious Workers Assoria* lien is completing a detailed study of the Negro student at the Uni­ versity and his adjustment to Uni­ versity * c a mpus life. is asked interviewed for If any' Negro student has not this study, been to contact Frank he the University “ Y ” Wright at Thursday or Friday. The sociol­ the study are ogists conducting anxious to have a IOO per cent, sam­ ple upon which to base their work. ★ M o l i n o to A d d r e s s B o d y UNS — Dr. Joseph F . Malina, assistant professor of civil engi­ neering, will address the seven­ teenth Industrial Waste Confer­ ence at Purdue I nlvarsity Thurs day. D r. Malina will present a paper on his research on waste stabili­ zation ponds. t o author of the paper Is A’ou- sef A. Yousef, graduate student from Alexandria, Egypt. ^ ousel also w ill attend the conference. ★ Joint Cabinet to M eet Die final meeting of the 1961- 62 Faculty'-Student. Cabinet will be in Texas held Friday at 3 p m . Union 202. Final reports from the cabinet ! committees will he heard, and the t officers for 1962-63 wall be elected. AH members are urged to attend the meeting. Those unable to at­ the cabinet tend should contact secretary or chairman. a basis for diagnosis, Dr. Roos stated that intelligent quotient or the only IQ is unsatisfactory as value. He said that IQ lacked re­ liability and constancy. It can be used, though, to indicate retarda­ tion in development early. The use of intelligence measures can be used in the testing of per­ sonality, especially in the mentally retarded person, said Dr. Roos. He noted that personality is one of the most unexplored areas of a retarded person’s ch aracter and can be used to examine the con­ flicts of the person with himself and society. Also a part of the I personality, the e g o determines how these handled, he said. Asia Scholarships Offered in Summer “ Although UNS—Scholarships for a Sum- 1 on curriculum planning will assist incorporating Asian in in their social studies m er Institute on Asia at the U n i-J teachers I varsity have been increased from I materials $180 to $225 each, Institute officials lessons. ; announced recently. F unds for IO scholarships have tage the American heri- is primarily European and j been provided by the Asia Society, I Western, and the content of our studies education at all Japan Society, and the Asia Foun- social dation. The nine-week summer sos- levels generally reflects this, there js no doubt that the non-Western : **on °P ° ns June 12. Scholarship requests should he and Asian portions of the globe ate sent immediately to Dr. John B. j to have an expanding part in the Cornell, Anthropology Department, direction of world affairs,” insti- | University of Texas, Austin 12. I tute leaders said j Other admission applications will i be accepted through May 20. l l____ ______ _ Z I test, which government and a Fulbright lee- turer in India this year, and Dr. Walter C. Neale, assistant profes­ sor of economics who was a lec­ turer in India last year. A guest lecturer will be Dr Paul­ ine Mahar. Michigan Slate Univer­ sity anthropologist and a specialist on the culture of Indian villages. Taps 18 Advisers chosen Eighteen advisers for next year at Littlefield Dormitory’* tapping dinner are Arlin Alexan­ der, Cindy Brantley, Karen Byrd, Alice Eiekenroht, Mimj Eikel, Barbara Ellis, Peggy Koran, Dixie Gaddis, Annette Hardin. Although the institute is prim ar­ ily for high school social studies shier persons may be I cey Tajan, teachers, admitted All students will take Wilson, and Biz Wood. three courses: “Governments and. Guests at the dinner were Dean Politics of South Asia,” “ Econom- j M argaret Peck, Miss Jane Greer, ic* of South Asia,’’ and “ Seminar j Dean Dorothy Dean, F. C. McCon- Also, Jeanie Hollingsworth, Gay Nagle, Diane P r i n c e , Paula Schwippel, Suzanne Sorenson, Tra­ Janet Wark, Susan DR. P H ILL IP R O O S A A Die South Asian countries of I S i l l ^ 1 1 J J f \ n fndia, Pakistan, and Ceylon, will j L I T T 1 6 T I 0 I U 1 ^ 0 1 c o n f l i c t s will be very structured “ pencil and pa- j be emphasized in this y ear’s insti- the unstructured "pro- tule- Directors will be Dr. Jam es tests The most widely FL Roach, associate professor of per” to iective” I eats for determining the per- sonality of arc as numerous as the number of psy- gives a full picture of the person- chologists. They range from the ality. the individual inkblot used the is Latin A m e r ic a Young, Says N e w sp a p e rm a n . Tustin America is like a young j Governments will be destroyed person, sensitive, aggressive, and by new generations who will build demanding. Herbert L. Matthews. I new ones, Matthews stated. , j autnm tty on I. .a tin America and author of * D ie Cuban Story,” said destroyed one and built VnL i.mon auditorium. {profound and general,” he said. “ Fidel Castro and his followers Tex ^ L’n^tro s revolution . "Latin America is a young com­ “ The munity,” Matthews average^ age rn lite ^Ln bedust ate- is 29, while ihere is it 21. There is more chance for radical ideas and d calmly attraction by power.” said. topic which another, in South Asian Studies.” The s e m -! nell, and Dean Helen Flynn Matthews said the Latin Artier- °K>’ an(* sociology, philosophy and Tracey Tajan, social an situation in Cuba was mar w i l l introduce materials from j Npwly.e]rrtpd ,>m„ r, several fields, including anthropol- j are c I n d y Brantley, chairm an; chairm an; is a controversial j literature, geopraphy and history. J Janet Wark, secretary-treasurer; t University students from South j gusan Wilson, chaplain; Peggy Fo- ran, student relations board; B ar­ bara Ellis, scholarship; Gay Na­ gle, reporter; Dixie Caddis, intra­ murals. 1S necessary that people study Asia w‘^ serve as “ resource per is full of emotion, but adv,re r Matthew*, a member of the New York Times staff, indicated also that Latin America is unbalanced socially and economically. “ There is a small ruling class; although it is growing, a small middle class; and the m asses, who are poor, ignorant, and ill.” Co-op Exes Asked To Help New Units is than “ Our challenge theirs. Matthews UNS — University women grad- to persuade uates who were enabled to Cortl­ and demonstrate that our way is 5 plete their education by living in better stressed the need for Americans low-cr** rP r o d e n t . , , ^ , , , , . . . " I t is a dangerous and frighten- for gifts which will be used to equip ® _^_p , I taurant. ing experience,” Matthews said, a permanent, two-unit cooperative I but he continued that the outlook j building housing 34 coeds. ea' ir I I He said the United States has on its side wealtth, know-how. and ly, i , ; Larger private gifts for construe tion of ^ n* w C(>0P Rre ***"* lor' I geography ideals of liberty, and sought by the University Develop- ; equality of opportunity. j M „ ment Board. * J j for the Institute. Form al sons course work will lie supplemented by exhibitions of Asian fine arts, showings of films from or about South Asian countries, and public lectures. College of Education specialists Research Order To Initiate 67 Sixty-seven new members will the University be chapter of Sigma Xi, graduate sci- . initiated into .... ^ > , ^ D al ,ha „ L 2 m a ? p Dr. Virgil E. Barnes, University geology professor and Bureau of Economic Geology associate direc- . ... Tektites ,, . at a .. I i P.m ’ banquet. the taste to start with...the taste to stay with MOVING? T he Pre-G rad Center for "P o st G rad " Slacks by H L S . 22 46 Guadalupe— In the Co-Op Win your letters in style! Sharpen up in trim ’n tapered POST-GRAD SLACKS You’re every inch a man in Post- Grads, Am erica’s favorite slacks! S lim , sm art and tra d itio n a lly styled with belt loops and cuffs. In washable Du Pont Dacron* polyester blends; also in a slew of colorful all-cotton fabrics. Get yours at stores that know th * score ... $4.95 to $10.95. , .. . . . . i The new members are drawn . from the ranks of University grad- 1 he idea to seek gifts from for- j uate students, graduates, and the University sciences and engineer­ ing faculties. mer coop residents evolved sev­ eral months ago when the Univer­ sity received a check for more than $1,000 from an alumna who Bostrom, nuclear physics; * asked that her gift “ be used in I vin any way which will contribute to I John Edward Breen, Walter R on -, improvement of cooperative ald Drynan, Richard Wilson Fur- the long, Frank D. Masch J r ., and housing.” The Dean of Women’s office de- Robert Davis Turpin, civil engi­ rd ed that other graduates wtio had b a rin g ; Clifton E. Dowell, mic- Jr., experieneed and benefited bv co-op robiology; E , W. Gardner living might respond to plans for bacteriology; Jam es D. Goodrich, i electrochemistry; K e n n e t h Eu- j additional co-op units. Chosen for full membership are Robert John Beyers and Exalton A. Delco J r ., zoology; Norman Al- . cleaning, and Co-op residents keep their room- 8ene , ^ tT?*eu/ n en Sheering; to approxi-! £ a r 1 P av,d 1 cather' veterinary and-board expenses F'°]"r 'n Henna mer, mately $52 per month per girl by bacteriology, sharing household duties of cook- j S ^ a p h y ; and John kregarm an m a i n t e n a n c e . I and Walter O Connell, psychology. mg Also Donald A. Larson botany; Each girl perform* an assigned task which requires about IO hours Tames Cyril McPherson J r ., bio- chem istry; Prem Prasad Mahen- a week. ' droo and Paul Taylor Wrotenbery, .. Mollenh«L In desvnblng lh . nofd for « - microbiology: Leo R panded COK.P hous.ng M a, Dom- : thy Gebauer, _ > Ion I>ran of W omen, estim ated there are about four applicants for each 1.) l T aD anrt,.rs.uan ' j “ . I " * ; . ™ - gineering mechanics; Joel S. Wat­ coop vacancy each semester. kins Jr ., geophysics; John Conrad aerosp ace engi- havp demonstrated consistently a kaemper, aero-space engineering; capacity to organize their time so anfl j 0 h n Wlscman medical en- well that many of them excel aca- tomology demically as well as.in extraeurri- Ne\V associate m e m b e r s are (,ebauer Zuhcir y Alami Krv,in Seweli cular a ctiv ities,' Miss the c o o p s , Weastkaemper, the 0 ' * • o rv:inir 1 (.iris v ho consultant h ' ,___ . live „ „ to in „ I . , * . . P erry, Wilbur d ia rie s Schoeller, a n d Nripendra Chandra Sinha, civii engineering; Robert Neil Aus­ Internal Revenue Center tin, P at Garner Hedgcoxe, diaries To Be Built on Freeway A!lPn f o r t , and J . H. Gaines, en- . gineering mechanics; Surinder Ku- Rh£ rn fin w rin g. Morn, Bloom, experimental ,!luun, , xmald Nea| ho, , The ..te for « multimillion doh lar Internal Revenue Center to be I i ompleted by Septem ber. 1%3 w a . | announcwl T uesday by B. f rank m c h a rd Ve m o r McGehee, Gel S. U h ite IR S regional eom m iss,oner | a a m o n for Texas. Oklahoma. Louisiana, New Mexico, and Arkansas. j e rp |d jcd,va r d McQueen, and John I w illiam Wood, geology: bael K. Bradshaw, micropaleontology; and section of Ben White Boulevard Brother Joseph Cain, Lienor Ray and South Interregional Highway i a ) x and K arle Russell Mattox, will be the location of the service botany. center, which will process tax re- turns for the f*e -sta te region. A 15-acre tract near the inter­ ItovU) Kv, n jt , th e D e p a r t m e n t r e p re s e n te d le a l S o c ie ty a t th e in a u g u ra tio n of D r. P h ilip H offm an a s p re s id e n t of the I n iv e n d ty o f H ou ston F r i ­ d a y . Also Marianne DauwMder and j a r k Corletto Vaughn, cell bio­ logy; Thomas Thornton Doss and Suresh Chandra Mathur, nuclear physics; D a l e Wayne Eve risen, J* r e d of C h e m i s tr y , Charles Fehsenfeid. physics; Ray th e A m e r ic a n d i e m - N. E in« h, Jam es W. Hall, and Ba- bur M. Kocatas, chemical engi­ neering; Paul F , Geiger, pharm­ J r , acology; Carroll R. Griffin engineering; Richard electrical Drake Hart, Je rry Harvey, Jam es R. Hawker, Roy C. I^ong, Patricia Wells Butine borg, and Martha S. Williams, psychology; Thomas IL vertebrate paleontology; Patton, and Donald Richard R o w e and William C. Shilling, environmental health engineering. H r. W illia m S h iv e , c h a ir m a n of mechanics arid acoustics; CALL MAYFLOWER FOR SAFE EASY PROMPT SERVICE! SU M M ER STO R AG E for STUDENTS Hi-Fi, Stereo, an d Personal Effects and Information Call GR 2-5471 wk#- ■■f & J P w # T - msm For Free Estimate Shive Represents A C S What makes Lucky Strike the favorite regular cigarette of college sm okers? Fine-tobacco taste. The taste of a Lucky is great to start with, and it spoils you for other cigarettes. That's why Lucky smokers stay Lucky smokers. So, get the taste you'll want to stay with. Get Lucky today. jhoduct o f l/Al ella Theta ’6J, so we know your special problems. Some of registration & air price*, touring documents, delivery costs, maps and a pat on the back: including American specifications, MorriN H.M* Mini Minor VTV deluxe Medan MG Midget M u n b e a m Alpine daily c h a r g e renting V W .................................... ......... ........................................................ , , , , $ 1 0 5 0 $I‘Z9M HSM $1995 ................................................ . . . I 2.95 ...................... Contact uh b e f o r e d o i n g anything rash; e v e n if y o u can't m a k e y o u r s e l f plan. Europe thin summer ask about our import KU KA UTO N V. DEPT. A, POSTBUS 333, ROTTERDAM . I (OU AND p p o it T - j '/J (•bi t*vy M I I „**»•» fawn Y o u r H.I.S, Headquarters Where You'll Find Your Most Complete Selection c One o f the Largest U I S, D eafen in Th I Colors &, Size* is Arca