T h e Summer T exan Student N e w s p a p e r at The U niversity of Texas p o i. 65 Price Rye Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1965 Eight Pages Today No. 8 Viet Cong Shell : Soc Trang Base Light 2nd Attack Leaves O ne Injured to fast evacuation of SAIGON, Viet Nam — t/P - Viet Cong m ortars opened up on th e m ilitary air field at Soc Trang, IOO miles southwest of Saigon, late Thursday night, but dam age was reported slight ow­ ing the i field. | THE ATTACK cam e as United I States m ilitary authorities were ; questioning a wounded captive, I Identified as a North Vietnamese soldier, about the Viet Cong at- that wrought $5 million tack I I dam age, killed one American j and wounded two a t the Da Nang Air Base earlier the sam e day. j One American was reported wounded in the blow against Soc j Trang, but a m ilitary source to ; said he was able duty after treatm ent. There were no reports of other casualties, to return j THE SPOKESMAN s a i d one j helicopter was downed by hos­ tile fire after leaving the field, but the crewmen w ere picked up safely and the aircraft recover­ ed. The attack at Soc Trang, the southernm ost helicopter base in lasted a b o u t 30 the country, m inutes, m ilitary spokesmen said, with 20 to 25 rounds of mor- | ta r fire coming in during that period. ■ Armed helicopters replied with strikes on suspected m ortar posi­ tions. There was no ground en- K gagem ent. FDR Jr. Quits I NY Mayor Race f WASHINGTON — UPI - F ra n k ­ lin D. Roosevelt J r., withdrew I today as a possible candidate for j m ayor of New York City but left | the door open to seek the gover- ; norship next year, j “ I S H A L L not enter the New . York City p rim ary ,’' Roosevelt | Boid at a news conference. | Roosevelt said he had discussed * his decision not to run for m ayor Johnson, Sen. j with President Robert F . Kennedy, and present '! m ayor, Robert F. Wagner, all of whom “ tacitly accepted” his de- j cis ion. | ASKED ABOUT a possible race I for governor next year, Roose- j velt replied, “ T hat’s a year and ! four or five months off. I don’t think I have to worry about that now.” ( enter | Roosevelt, son of the late P re ­ sident, said his decision not to reached several days before New York’s Liberal party endorsed Republi­ can Rep. John V. Lindsay for race was the - m ayor. Exam Schedule Told Final For Summer Session the exams first Bemester of summer school are scheduled for July 15 through July 17. for Exam schedules are posted on Die ground floor of the Main Building. Registration for second semes­ ter is July 19, with classes be- Though N o Classroom Holiday, H a p p y Fourth , . . a sparkler in the darkroom, a picture of the Tower, and a ph otographer gets this unique shot. —Texan Photo*- Johnson reasons. 'Traditional American Policies Pursued by Johnson— Divine By BUD HINSON Texan Staff Writer Dr. Robert Divine said Thurs­ day that President Johnson was pursuing “ traditional American policies” of “ rashness” by his critics in r e ­ cent months. charges despite “THE CRUELEST blow must be from those who say the P resi­ is following a Coldwater dent foreign policy,” Divine said. The history professor pointed out, however, that Coldwater was presently calling for stiffer a c ­ tion such as ending the privileg­ the ed sanctuary that capital North Vietnamese of from US air Hanoi now has raids. status Dr. Divine, acting chairm an of the D epartm ent of History, spoke on “ Lyndon Johnson’s Diploma­ cy ” at the third sandwich sem i­ n ar sponsored by the Texas Un­ ion. The President’s principal goal is an honorable end to the war, short of surrender or recognition of the Communists, Dr. Divine said. the grounds the air raids which are justlied they will on halt th** the supply lines from Nor til and create* enough prob­ lems in North Viet Nam that the that Phones Ring, Girls Hunt, C u p id Laughs Phones are ringing in rooms and apartm ents over the U niver­ sity area as Cupid in the guise of a tin-hearted com puter shoots his arrows. Letters began a rriv ­ those who ing Wednesday signed to be m atched with Com­ puter ’n Cupid. for Girls are busy looking up their prospective dates while boys are the sam e just as busy doing thing. Everyone Is laughing, e s­ pecially Cupid. But a note of restrain t Is Is­ sued by com puter in the letters to the prospective daters. “We advise you to exercise the usual precautions before going out on a blind date.” No “ usual precautions” are communists will negotiate,” Dr. Divine explained. not lines have NEITHER LEVEL has b o o n successful, Divine said, for the supply been squeezed out and the communists refuse to negotiate. “ The* action fundamental only points up a American misunderstanding of the usage of air power,” he add­ ed. Tile further com m ittm ent of US ground troops into Viet Nam would only result in “ the be­ ginnings of fulfledged w arfare” Dr. Divine said. Tile professor said the best course* for the United States in Viet Nam Is to “sit tight.” The stalem ate follow will that will lessen the tension and possibly allow for negotiations on more the United term s by favorable States. “THE GREATEST m istake of the President Is being so closely identified with policy that each criticism and set-back he takes as a personal affront. foreign ^ finning July 20. “ Involved with this goal are listed. “ This sensitivity Is his great­ est w eakness,” Dr. Divine add­ ed. The University was one of 19 to be awarded Texas colleges grants from the Foundation. House Listings To Be Published S O C H C to R e q uire No D is c r im in a t io n By FORREST PREIX E An official list of off -x im pus housing will In* published b\ lh** Student Off Campus H o u s i n g John Commission O rr, commission m em ber ami Students' Association president, saki Thursday night in mid July, A statem ent of the Commission said, “ Inclusion on the list m eans th a t the owner agrees to n< <*ept any student as re g a rd ­ less of race, color, c n*od, or n i- tional origin. tenant “ THE LISI will not exclude re sid e n c e m aintained by relig­ ious groups which give prefer- iii o r e applications for No housing in women's dormitor­ ies will I m* accepted f o r the fall sem ester, th*' I nlversity I r i s ­ ing and fuss! S en ***** announ­ ced Thursday. Applications for s u iii iii f r housing arc still being accept­ ed for IxHh Mien and women. once to their own men Inn* statem ent rend. the Thirty units have indicated i desire to be on the Ii ,f, Aith mph m any m anagers have said the owner had to be corita* ted be­ fore the decisi ri < mid bo marl**. only a few units fs.n.o r.-fusod the list, Orr said. T he SOOfU hopi" improve th*1 I * and first copy, Ss* said, to * •■.ye I ..f*.T p , tho O rr pointed out. that list will not approve housing. The only requirem ent for inclusion, is non discrimination. SIM lit was formed two tm The first was a mss! for a list th at would lie readily available to any person seeking housing in­ formation, Orr said. Tile second reason for the Com­ racial formation was m ission’s discrimination, Orr continued. It would l>e to the advantage of the University community and cam pus to integrate, Orr said. In answer to a question of the to prove Commission \s ability discrimination, Orr said that the SOCHC has no facilities for this tyi>e of investigation. IT VV ILL HAVE to rely on vol­ untary information from students who have been discrim inated against. If positive evidence of discrim ­ ination exists, tin* offending unit will Ik* removed from the list, he said, O rr said T hursday’s m eeting was for public information only —not for specific commitments from bousing units. Supervisors and owners of private housing attended the meeting. University Gets Science Grant The University has received a $128,737 grant from the National John Science Foundation, Son. Tower announced Thursday. The grant was made to b*!p strengthen science programs. Issues vs. Votes W illiam Buckley's entrance into the race for m ayor of Now York id io ts up a disturbing factor in dem ocratic elec­ tio n s . Buckley, who is not a N ew York resident, is IOO per cent sure that he will lose. The conservative editor of the N ational Review says he is running simply to raise the issues and problems that m ake N ew York “seethe with frustra­ tion.” In the student elections here last spring, Gary Thiher, whose politics are at the opposite pole from B uckley’s, ran for Students’ Association president for sim ilar reasons. Like Buckley, Thiher and his hard-working supporters did not really want to win. T hey were more interested in injecting som e fresh ideas into the sluggish stream of campus politics. The disturbing factor in the cases of Thiher and Buck­ ley ideas and controversial proposals is that stim ulating rarely win votes. So political campaigns, at least political cam paigns run by people who want to win, are usually dull, unim aginative, and middle of the road. Lyndon Joh n son s campaign for the presidency w as characterized by his a t­ tem pts to be on all sides of all questions at once. In contrast to Thiher*s highly im aginative campaign for SA president, com plete with original skits and songs, John Orr, the stu- dents’ overwhelm ing choice, issued little more than bland statem ents on oft-used issues. In the eases of both Johnson and Orr, tho electorate had to wait until the candidates were in office before they started finding out what kind of presidents they were going to make. So the raising of controversial issues is left to those Idealistic, ii ually extrem ist personalities who are willing to speak what they think, regardless of the consequences. For­ tunately, their politically m asochistic actions are not alw ays in vain, for* some of their ideas catch on. Some of their proposals m ay be incorporated into tho fictions of tin4 winners. The winning politicians m ight agree wi th som e of the losers’ ideas. But fearing the loss of a broad base of support, crafty politicians usually decline to Introduce controversial proposals them selves. Of course, our form of dem ocracy has survived partially t localise elected officials m ust have this broad base of sup- jxirt. It is nearly impossible for an extrem ist to be elected to a powerful office. So th at steady ship of state keeps chug­ ging along the same middle stream , and if the stream is sluggish, it also is safe. The Algerian Coup F o r us, who a re not A lgerians, the overthrow of P resid en t Ben In spite of the brev ity of his th ree y ear rule B ella is a sa d occasion. It will take he had becom e a landm ark on the international scene. tim e to a d ju st to his absence. Ile w as the m ost vocal rep resen tativ e ©f the latest generation of Afro-Asian lead ers who, while fiercely So­ cialist in th e ir public u tte ra n c e s, .sought aid ra th e r than ideology from the Com m unist Pow ers. As the successful, if unavoidably passive, victor of the colonial w ar which, above all others, caught the im agination of the Third World, Ben Bella w as beginning to accom m odate him self to the p attern for neut ral ist lea d e rs outlined by N ehru, N asser, and N krum ah. F o r his to r na lienal reputation was fu rth e r enhanced by the huge efforts he m ad e to secu re the success of the forthcom ing Afro Asian conference. His envoys have been active in m any cap itals during the p ast few m onths. It is easv, now th at he lias been deposed, to say that he w as “ a diabolical d ic ta to r” and a “ d esp o t” with a m ark e d tendency tow ards the “ cult of personality.” Of how m any ousted ru lers is the sam e not sa id ? Now that he is out of pow er he can safely be accused of treason, c>f which he' has t>oen guilty all along, had we but known it. As they w ere well a w a r e , bark in the Sixteenth C entury: Treason doth never p ro sp e r: w h a t s the reaso n ? For if it prosper, none d a re call it treason. Tt com es us no su rp rise, therefore, to find that Bel Bella s a t ­ te m p ts to tackle the appalling problem s of reconstructing his country a fte r years of w ar should m eet with scan t recognition by his successor, Colonel lk aimed tonne. In fact Be um ediennc is just as guilty of “ treason” as Ben Bella. T heir political outlook is virtually identical, and as Ben B e lla ’s se c ­ ond-in-com m and for the {Kist two y e a rs Boum edienne is as respon­ sible as the form er P resident for the m istakes of the rec e n t past. As In so m uch riv e n t Algerian history, how ever, political affinities have ra re ly saved politicians from the effects of personal incom patibilities. D oubtless Algeria will not change m uch under B oum edienne though he has a reputation for toughness. But to soothe die feelings of the International com m unity ruffled by this latest upset, it would help if Hie A lgerians (am! the R ussians, too) would devise a m ore convenient w ay of letting us know when tbev a re tired of their rulers. —MANCI! KST KR WEEKLY GUARDIAN W ith Negro Vote Came Change By RICHARD LYNCH Texan Staff Writer g rea t play Selm a. to stories such as (E d ito r's Note: This is the last of a there-part interview with Ralph McGill, author of “ The South and the Southern,” as he talks about the (‘flanges in the South today.) TEXAN: Do you is m ore distortion of from southern side? the northern side or think th ere the news the than did MCGILL: I would say that no new spapers have ev er distorted the a condition m ore new spapers of M ississippi a t the tim e of the en tran ce of M eredith to tho U niversity. (Negro Ja m e s M eredith enrolled in the U niver­ sity of M ississippi on Sept. 30, 1962, a fte r a legal battle. A riot followed.) that reading C ertainly them gave one the opinion they w ere try in g to encourage defiance by m obs, or groups of people, if you them m obs. to call don’t w ant NOW I DON’T KNOW of any th at have dis­ northern p ap ers torted as som e of the southern press. It m ight be that you could say that the northern press has neglected the g reat progress th a t’s being m ad e in tho South, and has given situations as m uch fact But it is a hard fact of hum an n atu re that good news doesn't a t­ in terest as bad tra c t as m uch news. The th at one city m ight peacefully desegregate its schools or housing is not as m uch in which police news as riots dogs, c a ttle prods, and m ass a r ­ re sts tak e place. the attitu d es of TEX A N : Taking into considera­ tion the news, the young N egroes and the young whites, and the people who a re going to be w orking in the South this su m m er, do you think th ere m ight be a b e tte r way to ch a n ­ nel into som ething which m ight be m ore produc­ tive? this energy McG i l l : I have not agreed with all the actions of som e o r­ ganizations and I leaders, but cannot suggest an alternative. We could get rid of these o r­ ganizations if we would sim ply accept the provisions of the Civil R ights Act. Open the schools. The Negro schools have been and a re still inferior. We will desegre­ gate our schools in good faith. We will s ta rt training people for jobs. We will open job oppor­ tunities to qualified persons. We will open the ballot to qualified persons. We will put no re stric ­ tions o r obstructions in the w ay of voting. Then you could chan­ nel the energy. Too m any people a re afra id th a t if they let the Negro vote, som ething bad will happen. Are they afraid there have been too m any injustices which he m ight to c o rre c t with his vote? wish is a confession th at injustice and discrim ination and if we let them vote they will try to get even with us for w hat we have done to them . this th ere has been TO ME TEXAN: H ave you any idea why the changes have been so long in com ing? MCGILL: I think it’s because the N egro did not have the v ote. U nless you can m ake yourself felt a t the polls you a re not going to have any local influence. If you if you c a n ’t protest, c a n ’t vote, then you don’t m a tte r. In a rep ­ resen tativ e society, if you a re without the ballot, then you a re nobody. As the N egro slowly be­ gan to get the ballot, he be gan to gain m ore and m ore rights. R eapportionm ent, civil rights to federal th at apply act, a c ts funds, all these things a re bring­ ing change. And the great change is coming to the South now. v ■ T . A . Q U I N N ' S . POLEMICS Conserratiies, Moderates Battle Over Finances for rifling finance official D ie com ic-tradegy which saw a Republican N ational C om m ittee the em ploye booted desks of a in quest of se cre t contribution lists the continuing is the G.O.P. eight sad shape of m onths a fte r its w'orst election defeat in history. indicative of D ie flashiest political rac e of 1965, the New York m ayorship, sees G.O.P. contender, Rep. John repudiating Lindsay, R epublican identification, m uch to the chagrin of national G.O.P. leaders. v irtu ally M ore essential to R epublican problem s, though, is the internal dissention evident in the p ro lifera­ tion of “ m o d era te ” and “ con­ se rv a tiv e ” sp lin ter factions whose activities d rain funds badly need­ ed for prep aratio n of the 1966 cam paign. F I R S T TO F O R M w ere a bevy of m o d erate groups, such as “ R e­ publicans for P ro g re s s ,” headed by d ia r ie s Daft of Cincinatti, which will help m oderate G.O.P. candidates in the 1966 prim aries. Such splitting local groups, will likely accom ­ plish little of a positive nature, and will tie up otherw ise a v a il­ able money. activity, beside Conservatives reacted quickly the m od. ra te upsurge, The to A m erican C onservative Union w as founded with im petus from N ational Review m agazine. Sen. G oldw ater’s 1964 cam paign staff has coalesced into his newly a n ­ nounced F re e Society A ssocia­ tion, hoping for a budget of se v era l million dollars. The F re e Society plans to pub­ lish “ New F e d eralist P a p e rs ,” educational and reports. Republican periodical national ch airm an , Ray Bliss, new sletters, in tem p erate the group as costly condem ned factionalism . Bliss w as correct, though possibly in his condem nation, for the splin­ te r groups hinder G .O .P. unity as well as being costly. The R e­ publican p a rty presently needs both unity and m oney badly—as does any p a rty without W hite House control to coagulate its ef­ forts. and education CONSERVATIVES p articu la rly a re em barking on poor strateg y research since papers will not run the liberals out of W ashington, D.C., and this should be im m ediate the sole conservative goal. A pproxim ate­ ly 30 Republican House seats lost in 1964’s d isa ster a re reta in a b le in 1966 with a united Republican cam paign. Alm ost all w ere con­ serv ativ e held. Donors to conservative causes, how ever, ap p ear som ew hat dis­ interested in thoughts about 1966, to as m oney has com e slowly R epublican coffers while flood­ ing to splinter and independent conservative organizations. N evertheless, conservative mon­ ey sources should be m ad e to realize the urgency of the 1966 elections as fa r as their c a u se is concerned. A bum bling, poor­ ly financed 1966 cam paign by a * faction-ridden G.O.P. will guaram liberal tee two m ore y ears of D em ocratic dom inance as the country knows it today. in G.O .P. financial angels flutter off pursuing the butterflies of w asted effort the m istaken that education or chasing hope leftw ingers will conservatize the nation overnight, while its doc­ trin a ire purists still possess die tore dogm a-fight attitude which the p a rty a p a rt in 1964. Such is the condition of the R epublican p arty with the next election but 1 6 m onths awav. The Firing Line To the E d ito r: in a re these I was su rp rised by the a n ­ (Austin S tatesm an, nouncem ent 6-21-65) the ch em istry and that physics faculties a t the U niver­ seriously considering sity for sciences courses liberal a rts students without la­ boratory experim entation. Such courses would certainly not be they would be m ere scientific; indoctrination. The students would be train ed the words to accept of the professors and of the tex t­ books as the gospel truth — e te r­ nal and unquestionable. R ath er, le t’s keep the sciences scientific in diis scientific age. M any lib eral a rts students, upon getting a taste of the m ethod of scientific investigation, would be to a new world C aw-akened thought—th at the sciences do not condone dogm as. term s. Then, E xperim entation in lab o rato ries m ay be m essy, soiling one’s hands and clothes, and rep u g n an t to the senses, but to learn na­ tu re ’s w ays one m ust do so on h e r too, experi­ the m ental sta tu s quo in that students learn to think and the thinkers have tendency to be noncom form ist and even trouble-m akers. Is this w hat the faculties really have in m ind ra th e r than lack of labora­ tories? sciences challenge William E. Both. P. O. Box 3 IC I - t h e S um m er T exan O p i n i o n s e i p r e s s e d the a r t i c le a n d are n o t n e c e s s a r i l y in t i e T e i a n are the s e o f the E d i t o r s or c f the t h o s e o f S T A F F M a k e - u p E d i t o r — S u e J a n k o v s k y N i g h t S p o r t * E d i t c * - - D a v e W e ; r t-r Is s u e N e w s E d i t o r — B u d H i n s o n N g h t A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r — l e n t t-u O •ca* e n J, I., es- 78"’ I 2 O ” : e p t f o r he i d a y t a en* re s u m m e # . Editor— Kaye N o r t h c o t t C o p y Seat er— J . lance Dodson N a t h a n Fe n M a n a g i n g Editor— Emily Lemon N g h t Re pc ter. -V va S Sv e lte n, N i o h t W - e E d i t o r - B o b p;o c t e c k F o r r e s t P eece F e • el A s s s t a n t — C a r o yn N i c h o l s t k e w r i t e r o f U n i v e r s i t y admi ni s trat i on. I r e S u m m e r T e * « n Inc., D ra p er D, Claiver ca y and Fr day rr cm and e««m per ' ch. S use S e c o n d c ass p c stage r* d et A it Friday, July 2, 1965 THE SU M M E R TEXAN Page I vt - ' I cli M % Austin Plans Bells, Speeches For July 4 Celebrations Tho Amylin Ju ly 4 celebration w ill include a Congress Avenue march, flag raising at the Capi­ tol, and local participation in a nationwide IxH Freedom Ring” ceremony. The U niversity Registrar said no official holiday from classes would be observed. THE AUSTIN JUNIOR Cham­ ber of Commerce w ill sponsor a march up Congress Avenue to the Capitol Sunday at 8 a.m. Bob Armstrong, state represen­ tative from Travis County, w ill deliver an address commemorat­ ing Ju ly 4 after the flag raising at 9 a.m. Preceding Armstrong’s speech the Bergstrom Air Force d rill team w ill march on the Capitol grounds facing Congress Avenue. (JO \ ER N O K John Connally has proclaimed a two-minute sound­ ing of all bells and whistles in Austin ; part in tile “ I^d Fr»v*- dom R i n g” commemoration. Bergstrom A ir Force Base sirens w ill sound, also. U H IS S II W R S , Austin c i t y councilman, w ill speak in Mum* cipal Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. A fireworks display over Town Lake at 8 p rn w ill con­ clude the official festivities. Ad­ mission will be free for the pub­ lic display. All Austin public pools will lie the city at noon on Ju ly 4 as o^H*n. -Texan Photo—Johnson f UT G ets Electrom agnet for Research A 13,000-pound electrom agnet has been installed in the Physics Bu- (ding. The m agnet is to be used for research on the properties of metals a t low temperatures. The machine, which David Doan is exhibiting, will be ready for use in August. American Studies Program Is Expanded 1%6 spring semester on “ D ie Artist in American Society” as part of interdisciplinary course, “ The Individual and the Culture.” t h e A new dimension in the Am er­ ican Studies Program at the U ni­ versity w ill be initiated in Sep­ tember, Dr. W illiam Goetzmann, program director, said. “ We hope to improve the cur­ riculum in Am erican Studies by adding more courses employing the interdisciplinary method and tech the comparative culture niques characteristic o f t h e American Studies approach,” Dr. Goetzmann explained. Under the expanded program, | junior udents beginning their year and wishing to major in Am erican Studies w ill be requir­ ed to take: • Fifteen semester hours of I Am erican Studies courses, includ­ ing seminars on “ Am erica as a Civilization,” “ Am erica’s Cultur­ a l Heritage,” “ D ie American Character,” “ The Individual and the Culture” and a senior re ­ search seminar. a r t , 1 • Eighteen semester hours of advanced traditional courses or their equivalent in any if the fol­ lowing, so long as no more than 12 hours are taken in any one discipline: anthropology, English, economics, geography, government, history, philosophy, psychology and so cio lo g y . Diese courses must have a prim arily \merican content or be of such , ( hire as to supplement or pro- ' *. ide valuable background mater- al for the central subject of study and must be approved by he American Studios director. D r. Donald WeLssmann, Uni- ersity professor in the arts, will ffer a special seminar in the Tennis Lessons For University Students Classes Begin July 7 12 u— *16°° Register by Calling Bob Evans— G Q 8-6268 Equipment for Sale -‘A S W E L L T E N N IS C E N T E R 24th & Lavaca * 2 9 1 5 1*11 4»-i:i91 Record Sale a Go Go W ere $3.98 and $4.98 $4.98 and $5.98 N O W $1.98 $2.98 All of These Popular Artists Included PETE FOUNTAIN AHMAD JAMAL THELONIUS MONK TRINI LOPEZ STAN GETZ LESLIE GORE JAMES BROWN HANK WILLIAMS BILLY VAUGHN KINGSTON TRIO FERRANTE & TEICHER GERRY MULLIGAN Save *2 to$3 on every album Special Display Street Floor Plus Your Regular Dividend Friday, July 2, I9 « THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 3 Texan Rex Baxter Scores 66 To G rab W estern Open Lead CHICAGO — W — T exan R ex B a x te r, w inner of only one tour­ ney in seven y ears a s a golf pro, drove? and putted b rillian tly for five under-par 06 and a ono- a fctroke lead in (he opening round of $70,000 W estern Open Thursday. the B o x ie r, 1057 NCAA cham pion Thirty-one of the 129 pros se e k ­ as a U n iv ersity of Houston s ta r , led a b listerin g a tta ck on T am O Shan to r’s 6,686 yard , par 71 ing the $11,000 first prize, and two of nine a m a teu rs shot 70 or b etter, with six pros scoring 68 layout to finish one stroke ahead to sh a re third -place. of defending cham pion Chi Chi Rodriguez. M atso n Leads Texans A s Track Marks Fall A B IL E N E , — Tow ering R and y M atson of T e xa s AAM the way to an oth er outstanding tra c k and the sta te of T e x a s. field y ea r led in The final re le a se of the Top T e x a s T ra c k and F ield M arks, a s com piled by the Sp orts Infor­ m ation O ffice at A bilene C hris­ tian C ollege, rev eal one world, three nation al and two T e x a s record s w ert' set during 1965. throwing stan d ard , M atson w as responsible for the world the shot put 70 7 to b ecom e the first m an in history to su rp ass the 70- foot b a rrie r. I le also authored a national co lleg iate record in the discus with a m ighty throw of 201-5*4. B a y lo r U n iv ersity ’s c r a c k sp rin t m edley re la y team clocked an am azing 3:17.0 a t the D ra k e R ela y s to set a NCAA m a rk as A bilene C hristian ran a 3:18.0 a t the sam e m eet. T h e other n ation ­ al m a rk w as a 20.6 in the 220- yard dash by San Antonio W heat­ ley schoolboy Clyde Glosson, a IJS prep reco rd . G losson’s 220 also w as furlong e v e r top ran on a full turn by a T exan . the G eorge Hunt of T e x a s South­ ern U niversity ran a torrid 1 :47.7 h alfm ile fo r a sta te reco rd , the second y ear in su ccession he has in broken 1:50.0 the 880. tied R ic e the national co lle ­ giate record in the 480-yard shu t­ tle hurdle relay , clocking a 57.5. ■ ' " r n (laca& ioH i Grelle Wins in Finland Snell Finishes Filth — " H E L S IN K I, Finland — A m erican s J im G relle and Dy- rol Burleson Finished one-two, beating Olympic champion P e ­ te r Snell of New Zealand, in a 1.500 m eter ra c e of the World G am es in the Olympic Stadium finished Thursday night. Snell fifth. The c a m e two Oregonians from behind with a strong burst in the final 200 m eters to p ass p ace-setting John D avies, anoth­ e r New Zealander, in the run to the tap e. in 3:41.4 and Davies G relle w as clocked in the co m ­ p aratively slow tim e of 3:40.8 in the ta ctica l ra c e . Burleson w as in timed 3:42.4. Poland’s Witold B a ra n w as fourth in 3:43.7, and Snell, the Olympic 800 and 1,500 m e te r cham pion, fifth in 3:43.7 They w ere F ra n k W harton, J o e C am pbell, F red H aw kins, Sonny M athvin, B ill G arett and Tom m y A aron. T h irteen pros shot 69, includ­ ing B ritish Open cham pion Tony the b iggest n am e en try Lom a, in the W estern, which U S Open cham pion G ary P la y er, leading m oney-w inner J a c k N icklaus and slum ping s ta r A m ie P a lm e r all skipped. B a x te r posted his p ace-settin g 66 som e five hours before play w as com pleted on the tree-ch o k ­ ed, but fa irly ea sy T am cou rse. Bueno, Sm ith Go O n To W im bleton Finals seeded M iss T ru m an , a g a llery fa v o rite, hard ly gen erated enough e x citem en t to ru stle a program a fte r the first few m inutes. D e p e n d a b ility Other A m erican winners in­ cluded Theron Lew is of Southern U niversity in the 200-m eter d ash, 21 secon d s; Bob Segren of Los Angeles, pole vault, 16-1, and Ron W hitney of Ix>s Angeles. 400- m e te r hurdles, 52 seconds. Orioles Trim Yanks 4-3 A s Blefary Stars A g a in B A LT IM O R E—IP— Rookie Curt B le fa ry , a fo rm er Yan k ee fa rm hand, continued his heavy hit­ ting again st New Y ork , crack in g a h om er and a triple in B a lti­ m o re ’s 4-3 v icto ry over the Y an ­ kees T hursday night. B lefary, hitting again st the Y an k ees, g av e the Orioles a lead they n ever lost when lie hit his l i t h hom er with none on in inning. The shot, off the first W hitey F o rd , w as B lefary 's fifth hom er of the season against New Y ork . .375 B lefary la te r tripled and sco r­ ed another run for the O rioles a s they ended F o rd ’s six-g am e the winning stre a k and handed a c e left-hander his seventh loss again st nine victories. F o rd , who innings, w a s went only touched for seven hits and all four runs. four really pronto sen ice W IM B L E D O N , E ngland - - D efending cham pion M aria B u e ­ no out gen eraled B illie Je a n Mof- fitt and M a rg a re t Sm ith pul­ verized C hristin e Tru m an T h u rs­ d ay to m ak e both the 1965 W im ­ fin a ls ' " h e r e we bledon sin g les a r e a g a in ” a ffa irs . the M aria top from B ra z il, seed, b ea t little M iss M offitt of Long B e a c h , C alif., seeded fifth. 6-4, 5-7, 6-3. B ig M arge from A u stralia strod e im periously over even b igger C hristine T ru m an cf B rita in in 39 m inutes, 6-4, 6-0. fourth W im bledon M iss Bueno and M iss Sm ith m eet Sa tu rd a y in a rep ea t of la s t y e a r ’s w om en’s fin al, won by the eleg an t B ra z ilia n g irl. Its th e in seven y e a rs for M a ria , who won in 1959, 1960, and 1964. M iss Sm ith is a fin a list for the third straig h t y e a r. She b eat M iss M of­ fitt in 1963 but lost to M aria last I y ea r. fin a l F rid a y a pair of A u stralian , buddies, R o y E m erso n and F re d | S tolle, p lay a rep ea t of the 1964 j m en ’s fin al, w hich E m erso n won | in four se ts. Stolle also w as run- | losing to Chuck ; ner-up M cK in ley. in 1963, the j this S ta tis tic ia n s t h u m b e d record books and decided w as the first tim e in W im bledon i history fin als 1 that both singles the p re­ turned out rep e a ts of vious y e a r. B a c k in 1927-28-29 F r a n c e ’s J e a n B o ro tra and H en­ ri C ocket w aged three m en ’s fin a l b a ttle s, but the sa m e y e a rs A m e ric a 's Helen W ills b e a t three d ifferen t riv a ls for the w om en’s title. T h e b a ttle of tho Amazons b e ­ the un­ tween M iss Sm ith and r n w m Baseball Standings AMK HIC AN L E AG I E Detroit 2, Boston I B altim ore 4. New York 3 night Cleveland 7. W ashington 2, night Univ games scheduled. w ................ 44 ................ 4.5 .................... 42 ................ 42 ...................... 40 I, 27 28 29 32 31 ............... 36 39 41 . . . . . 33 Cleveland Minnesota Chicago B altim ore D etroit N ew York I .os Angeles Boston W a s h i n g t o n K ansas C ity lv t. 620 — I 6>K> 2 592 3 .>68 .563 4 480 IU 446 12 I.* 1 6 ’ ,4(\30 .395 22 45 .328 20 ............ 30 46 ............. .. 29 4.5 . . . . . . OK NATION AI, LF. AG I E NY vv York 5. Cincinnati I I a's Angeles 3 Chicago 6 Philadelphia 2. Milwaukee ? night !x>uis 7. P ittsbu rgh 6, night s t b n i\ games scheduled. W 46 43 40 39 37 39 35 .................. 35 ........... 3"* ................. *1 I ais Angeles Cincinnati San F ran cisco Philadelphia Milwaukee P ittsb u rg h Ch lea gc> St. I/»UiS Houston New Y o r k l e t . OB . * .56(5 .548 53-1 .521 .520 467 461 447 .551 . . . ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . ............. I, 32 33 33 34 34 36 40 41 42 50 3 ’ ■ 4 » *» 5 Ms 5 H 9's 1 0 * 11 lh -. tyoA zfiA 2013 Guadalupe GR 2-3210 or GR 2-7677 Where typing for students Is a full-time career T y p in g July or August Graduate-S8,400 W ork 39 weeks per year A verage income exceeds $10,000 Top Calibre O n ly W rite for details in confidence to: Texas Student Publications, Drawer D - 1 University Station Austin, Texas Inc. Ifs Dividend Turn in Turn in T oggery Slips C o - O p Slips in the Toggery Pen Counter Street Floor r n I f f S T U D E N T S O V .'N S T O ! Slips Accepted July 1 thru July J \ I Ll ii Reid**. Jut* 2. W46 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 4 Merchants React Favorably To Federal Excise Tax Repeal By JUDY BURTON Texan Staff Writer President Johnson's three-day- cld federal excise tax repeal has brought favorable reactions from D rag m erchants because of its promise to decrease “ red tape" and increase sales. its potential to THE TAX CUT, effective since the IO per June 29, eliminates cent federal charge on luxury item s such as jewelry, furs, lug­ gage, cosmetics, radios, televi­ sion sets, phonographs, records, film, musical instruments, and playing cards. R etailers a n d m anufacturers are under no legal obligation to their prices, but Drag lower m erchants plan to pass savings on to their customers. “ We are jubilant over the fact that we can give our consumers even greater value now," m an­ ager of a D rag jew elry store said. He prophesied “ a banner y ear in all phases of retail busi­ ness" as a result of the cut. The jeweler claimed advance notice of the tax repeal did not cause people to hold off buying. “ It didn’t hurt our business at all, but since the repeal, people have become even more aw are of result, business has really felt an up­ surge.” their savings. As a BESIDES REDUCING prices on all items in his existing in­ ventory, this m erchant is credit­ ing charge accounts with a IO per cent deduction on the un­ paid balance, making the tax cut custo­ retroactive m ers. charge for “ During Another Drag jeweler said he experienced a slight drop in the sale of large items shortly be­ fore the tax repeal becam e ef­ fective. six weeks, people held back on buy­ ing expensive items because they knew they could save a lot of money la ter,” he said. “ But on $2, $3, and $4 items they've been buying just the sam e." last the He believes the tax cut is “ sig­ nificant in that people will buy m ore.” C o o l Summer Delicacy . . . D a rla H ilto n enjoys watermelon at Texas Union feast. T ex.i n P h o to Summer Texan Classified A d s • V illa 52” 1307 E a st 52nd ••V illa A n ita ” 1909 A n ita O r. O n e -tw o a ir-c o n d it inned b ed ro o m u n its $65-$ 110 R e s e rv a tio n s ta k e n H I 2-0995 A IR -C O N D IT IO N E D b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n t. T h r e e b lo c k s f r o m c a m ­ T W O p u s. S u m m e r r a te s . G R 7-7079. S H O A L C R E E K A P T S . L a r g e I b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n t* . I n d iv i­ d u a l A /C . F u r n is h e d , c a rp e te d , p a tio . C o n ta c t M g r .: 1008 W . 2 5 th , A pt. C. (JR 6-2547. C O L O N IA L M A N O R 1212 W E S T 13TH O ne a n d tw o b ed ro o m s. A ir c o n d itio n e d :'fi C a rp e te d C a r p o r t •,k L a u n d r y fa c ilitie s :jc S to r a g e a r i a :k W a te r-g a s p a id * $79.50- $110 O R 2-4838, G R 8-3671 L A F IE S T A A P T S —409 II. SOTH Luxurious tw o B a th s e a c h , tw o B R , s e p a r a te b u ilt- in k itc h e n , I R D R . lo u n g e , pool. A /C , c a r p e tin g , b u ilt-in » b e sts, w a lk -in c lo s e ts, p a rk in g . A v a il­ a b le u n til Sept., I. H A W T H O R N E A P T S . 2413 L eon GR 6-9324 b u ilt-in k itc h e n , T o w n -H o u se s ty le , tw o b e d ro o m s. L E ­ p a tio . D R . M a id fu r n is h e d . A /C , c a rp e tin g , p a rk in g , access to pool. A v a ila b le u n til S e p t. I . b e a u tifu lly serv ic e , p riv a te T A R R Y T O W N g a ra g e a p a r tm e n t. A /C . $75.00. b ills p aid . P r e f e r 2 m en . G R 7-7123 aft* r five w e e k d a y s . D A R L IN G A P T S . F O R T IN Y B U D G E T S $49.50— $79.50 C lean. Q u ie t. S om e A /C M o d e rn P le n ty c lo se ts. N ice a p p lia n c e s $49.50 G a s -W tr IM -9 0 8 -F W e s t 22nd $52.50 G a s -W tr P d - 2 0 1 1 R ed R iv e r $ 5 050 G a s-W tr P d - 9 0 8 - A W e s t 22nd (So. e n tr a n c e $69.50 1908-F S p e e d w a y . $79.50 B ills r d —1801 N ile s R o a d (E n - d o w n ) . . . . _ $79 50* G a s -W tr P d 3205-D G ro o m s $79.50 4000 B u r n e t R oad O P E N F O R Y OU R IN S P E C T IO N GR 2-0952 GR 8-S935 G R 8-6881 B e a u tifu l B R IA R C L IF F M A N O R 1107 S h o a lc re e k —8 B locks UT & C a p ito l C e n tra l h e a t a n d a ir A ll b ills p aid S u m m e r r a t e s —$105— I b e d ro o m O la ss— P r iv a te P a ti o —C a b le J V S p a c io u s—Q u ie t— L u \ u r y L iv in g P le n t y P a r k i n g —S tu d e n ts W e lc o m e GR 8-8935 M g r. A p t. 105 G R 2-0952 C A V A L IE R A P T S . 307 E. 31st S U M M E R R A T E S tw o fu r n is h e d b e d ro o m B e a u tifu lly a p ts . A /C . L a r g e pool. C a b le TV. serv ice. L a u n d ry . M aid a n d O ff s t r e e t p a rk in g . A v a ila b le J u l y I a n d seco n d s u m m e r se ssio n . ja n i t o r $37.50-$G0.00 m o n th ly p e r p e rs o n A L L B IL L S P A ID re s e rv a tio n now M ake v o u i G R 2-7611 f o r fall. G R 8-3336^ b e d ro o m . 2lu6 R io G ra n d e . N E A R U N IV E R S IT Y . M o d e rn A /C 2 I b e d- ro o m 702 W . 24Va. C L 3-5314, OH 6- 3711. ro o m 3 B L O C K S C A M PU S. L a r g e o n e -b e d ­ a p a r t m e n t . A /C . O ff s t r e e t D arking. G a s-w a te r p a id . S e c / c a l l m a n ­ a g e r 710 W . 2 4th A p t. 3. G R 6-0091 a f t e r 5 :00 p . m . _______________________ I A IR -C O N D IT IO N E D , p a n e le d I b e d ­ ro o m a p a r t m e n t $74.50 2 b e d ro o m , $120 00. G a s-w a te r. 1102 W . c a rp e te d ! 22nd. G R 8-9125. I B L O C K W A L K c a m p u s. N ic e A /C e ffic ie n c y . $80 p e r m o n th . W a ­ te r -g a s p a id . L a v in d a A p ts, g o th a n d S a b in e . GR 2-8648, H I 2-8438. to ed O V E R L O O K IN G C IT Y . L A K E . S e c lu d ­ ro o m effic ie n c y . R e f r ig e r a te d A /C . u tilitie s p a id . $97.50 G R 2-1639. A fte r 6 p m w e e k d a y s . d if f e r e n t. O ne W A L K T O U N IV E R S IT Y , fu r n is h e d BLACKSTONE APARTMENTS FOR MEN & W OM EN O F F E R I N G Privacy & Sound Proofing A ir C onditioning Bills Paid All Exce lle n t Study Facilities ★ A m p le O f f S ('eer Parking ★ Com plete Kitchens ★ Private Balconies ★ M a id Service ★ 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath Apartments S U M M E R R A T ES­ $43.00 Per M onth IN ELITE E N F IE L D is F L O W E R -G A R D E N S E T T IN G im m a c u la te s m a ll c o tta g e w ith th is 2 b e d ro o m s, den, Jiving ro o m , ti le k itc h e n w ith d in e tte a re a , M o n t e r e y tile b a th , a m p le c lo s e ts, c a r p o r t w ith s to r a g e ro o m . O n la r g e , o w n e r- k e p t lo t in id e a l n e ig h b o rh o o d n e a r O’H e n ry H ig h S ch o o l a n d T a r r y to w n sh o p p in g c e n te r, d e c o ra te d in h a rm o n io u s p a s te ls , it a p p e a ls to re f in e d c o u p le w ith b a b y o r s in g le p eo p le o f g ood c h a r a c te r w h o liv e a lo n e. T a ll tr e e s , e lm s, h v e o a k s, a n d 300 a z a le a s, c re p e m y rtle * . Bandi na*, a n d ja p o n ic a s a b o u n d , m a k in g is n e a r e r G od s te n a n ts re a liz e h e a r t in a g a rd e n th a n a n y where else o n e a r t h . ” O nly $75 00 p lu s u tili­ tie s on y e a rly lease. NO D OG S. D ia l G R 2-8653 o r 111 2-3326 fo r a p p o in t­ m en t. t h a t O ne 2711-2721 H e m p h ill P a r k O ne B e d ro o m C a rp e te d P a n e le d S w im m in g Pool A ir C o n d itio n e d W a te r-G a s p a id S to r a g e S u m m e r $79.50 G R 2-5742 G R 7-1637 F a ll $89 50 GR 2-4838 B LO C K FR O M C A M P U S . r a te s A p a rtm e n t A lso fa c ilitie s. c o o k in g S p e e d w a y . G R 8-1039. S u m m e r ro o m w ith F o r w o m en . 2618 R e n t a 2692. IV . $10-15 p e r m o n th G R 2 ______ ___ F U R N IS H E D T H R E E ROOM a p a r t ­ m e n t A ir co o le d U tilitie s p a id N e a r c a p ito l; U n iv e rs ity . $50.00 AN 3-2160. , L A K E A U S T IN . tw o a ir. D o c k ; $200. b e d ro o m , N ew . tw o fu r n is h e d b a th h o m e. C e n tra l H O 5-5230. G R 7-7830. r e f r ig e r a to r , cie n c y . C ooled, IN MY H O M E . New f u r n is h e d effi b a th , e n ­ p la te . All tra n c e . fu r b ills paid, $40. A lso a t t r a c t iv e rushed p riv ileg e * b e d ro o m . K itc h e n All u tilitie s , p h o n e p a id . $-15. GR 6 9930 p r iv a te h o t ley Room s for Renf Furnished Rooms $35.00 D E L IG H T F U L B ED R O O M . P r i ­ v a te • n tr a n c e . P r iv a te b a th . R e frig ­ e r a to r . M o d ern . C lean. Q u ie t. 1906 S a n G a b rie l. G R 7-8158. G R 2-0952. $35 D E L IG H T F U L B ED R O O M I ’M v a te e n tr a n c e . P riv a te b a th . R e frig ­ e r a t o r M o d ern C le a n Q u iet 1906 S a n G a b rie l, o f t 7-8158. G R2-0952,________ Help W a n te d T u rn j o u r c a sh . C L 2-0806. s p a r e h o u rs in to e x tr a D O R M IT O R Y M A N A G E R c o u p le w a n te d S tu d e n t m e n s d o rm ito ry . m e n t p lu s s a la ry . W r ite e d u c a tio n , lio n s. D aily T e x a n , B ox D -J, s ity S ta tio n . e x p e rie n c e F u rn is h e d a n d to m a n a g e a p a r t ­ .seating a g e . j q u a l i f i e a - 1 I R iver- , For Sale J u l v 35. C e n tra l T H R E E B ED R O O M H O U S E , a v a ila b le h e a t. F e n c e d y a rd . E le c tric ra n g e . 12 m in ­ u te s a p p ra is e d . ca m p u s. F U A S m a ll d o w n p a y m e n t o r r e n t fo r $125 p e r m o n th . G L 2-1695. fro m a n d a i r 17* H IG G IN S in b o a r d w ith t r a i l e r In e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . $850. G E 3-5234. 9650 ic a lly 1955 V O L K SW A G E N S E D A N ; m e c h a n ­ e x c e lle n t, $477. 1963 V o lk s­ in te r io r , w agen* se d a n , b la c k w ith re d s e d a n w ith $1077. P o rs c h e “ C B ” S m ith M o to rs. 405 N o r th L a m a r. G R 2-4121. 1962 V o lk sw a g e n e n g in e , $1595. I960 T R IU M P H , T R 3 G ood c o n d itio n S ee a t 2003 L a to n L a n e o r C L 2-8220 a f t e r 5:30. $ 9 9 5 . ________________ ___ 1962 F O R D C O N V E R T IB L E . R a d io ­ P o w ­ h e a te r, p o w e r s te e rin g - b ra k e s e r w in d o w s, p o w e r s e a ts . G L 3-4539. M O T O R C Y C L E. 1964 N o rto n A tla s 750 cc. N e a rly new c o n d itio n (2(XX) nil ). $800. G R 7-4011. 1956 F O R D V-8. S ta n d a r d s h if t se d a n W h ite sid e w alls. E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tio n . $'275. C all GR 2-0297. W A N T T O T R A D E i c to n A /C . N e v e r fur motorcycle been o u t of c r a t e 125cc o r b ig g ie . C all G R7-8883. FO R F A L L U n u s u a lly la rg e A /C ro o m P r iv a te e n ­ tw o m e n s tu d e n ts fo r tr a n c e , W a lk in g d is ta n c e . G R 8-4228. P A N E L L I) B E D R O O M , p riv a te b a th liv in g $15. 3111 H e m p h ill P a r k . GR 6 AZC. T V , K itc h e n , d in in g , Q uil l 9190 Misc ell an eo us W a te rm e lo n g a r d e n — 1404 B a rto n Ic e cold w a te rm e lo n S p rin g s L o a d . se rv e d d a ily e x c e p t S a tu r d a y . BIA N O S T U D IO O pening M rs. D an E. H o u sto n . Sod L a st 23rd G R 7-0061 P R E V E N T H O T W E A T H E R tro u b le in s p e c tio n w ith o u t o b lig a tio n Com r a d i a t o r s e rv ic e Af L R a d ia to r p le te W ork*. 5209 A v e n u e F. G L 2-1685. E S T A T E S A L E . B ooks, oil p a in tin g s C h a rle s A rro w o o d e s ta te . 912 B razo s F rid a y . S a tu r d a y , 9-5:30 G R 8-2127. a I :RMAN T U TO R I N G by M A $3 (* p e r h o u r. G ro u p o f fo u r $ 1 0 0 . G L 2 Printing A L D R ID G E T Y P IN G S E R V IC E 3 0 4 'a E . 3 0 th S t r i c t G R 7-1696 G R 6-03$7 Furnished Houses $79 50 D A R L IN G F U R N IS H E D H OM ! 4000 B u rn e t R o ad R e c e n tly rede<<> ra te d M o d ern . C lean . Q u a t. < IR H __ ____ 8935, G R 8-68VI. $90. N E A R U N IV E R S IT Y . E u ro b e d ro o m h o u se. A /C L ovely y a rd 2hlo P e a r l, G R 2-3993, E v e re tt. G R T 6928 Typing a x ie A IR C O N D IT IO N E D FO P.D 1961 G al- l e a d e d . A ir pow *r. a u to m a tic . M ust se ll now . $'EJ5. IG L 3-2597 a f t e r 5. fo rd o r, h a rd to p . e c u tiv e E le c tric . F A S T A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G I B M I \ - E x p e rie n c e w ith thf'j-es. b rie fs, r e p o r ts . M rs, F o w le r, G L 3-8650. G u a r a n t e e d A u to Q u in a ro n — $98 24m m ESCO W E S T R O G U N -4 9 8 . 35m m I^ens fo r I 'a k - list. N ew e o n d l- ta C a m e ra 35% o ff t ion D r. R. JBL B o n to n C L 2 3658. G U IT A R A M P L IF IE R $105 2 c h a n n e ls 12” s p e a k e r D IS S E R T A T IO N S , T H E S E S . BOOK! ty p e d fu ll C o rre c tly a n d s k illfu lly tim e o n c e 1951. S y m b o l-e q u ip p e d ele c tric . M a r g a r e t Rit< h ie 1078. GR 6 7 0 7 9 N e a r E n fie ld R e a d VV r b r a to ” GR 6-2511 a f t e r 5 pm P IN G TY ile c trtc E 3-5124, G L 'I h* sos bu ty p e w rite r Mrs V IR G IN IA C A L H O U N TYPING SERVICt: , in a ll P ro fe s s io n a l w o rk in­ c lu d in g m u lt i lit b in g a n d b in d in g e n these- a n d d - e rtn t sons. 1302 L d g . w ood S y m b o ls N o ta r y field*- CIR > T H E S E S . T E R M P A P E R S fast se rvice , U L 3 HMH M r s ret o rt* . I ? id* B rie fs re p o r ts , A R T IS T IC . A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G , th e s e s, d is e r t a tu n*, ty p e w rite r . M rs. *,R > m a n u s c rip ts . A n th o n ., N o r th e a s t C it h e r * ? . 1202. IBM R F P O U T S . T H E S E S . D IS S ! I I A* IB M M rs B ra d y . 2317 O ld­ I ll .N S h a m , * IR 2 4715. E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IS T M rs H orne- >cr, 1309 ju d g e m e n t. G E 2 -TTI**, E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IN G SI Ii VICK. n e a r AI West­ re a s o n a b le , A c c u ra te d a le . 110 5 5813. T Y P IN G P erm p a p e rs i t pi « i th r G E 3-7179 th e s e s tr a E lec­ E x p e rt t i p in g . P e rs o n a liz e d fa ice T h e m e s , re p o r ts , b rief* . M ? ■ M< ntt< rn* iv (- it . •* s rv~ ie*. AI -I R ID G E T Y P IN G S E R V I< F. 304 b, I th S tr e e t ■ P. ( ICH. GR * '- * 7 a speG.C.t IV* b n ,, a1 I ap* r e x t) .i s i m i a n s **n o u r tlv« f< r *•* im * ■ m a t if * a n d iith in g e n d b in d in g . I B M » ngincM i ny la nj.; nag* D ra ftin g < v * t Mio I < < u- t he* < ? ult 4- M A R T H A ANN ZIV L E Y M I A. r j p in g , M u ltliith in g . B in d in g A c o m p le te p ro fe s s io n a l ty p in g s e r a - lee ta ilo r e d to th e n>*eds o f < D iv ersity stu d e n t* . S p e c ia l k« ’.b o a r d e q u ip m e n t fo r la n g u a g e , s< ien< ** a n d e n g in e * 'rin g th ese* a n d d is s e rta tio n * . I h o n e G R 2 3210 & G R 2-7677 2013 GI Ai 'A I.' 'B i. . P R O F I C I E N T A ND V E R Y E X P E R IE N C E D T Y P IN G S E R V IC E K O R A L L F IE L D S IBM e le c tr o 'm a tin d is tin c tiv e , rn u ra l# bv personal!?* d ty p in g a n d < o m w ien tlo u * L l G A L .v tc re ta ry . s e m in a r p a p e rs a s p e c ia lty B R IE F S , R e p o rts , te r m th e s e s , p a p e rs . X e ro x < opic-i d is s e r ta tio n s , G R 8 589-4 SH O R T O N T Y P IN G Graham . C L 3 5725 I T IM E Mins I ACC ET Y-S'T C h►ENT I RC) F ESS ION AL TYRIEIG S i R \ i c k ty p in g Quail fle d bv w id e Cum pet ent f.ir d in * rta- » \ {*» r ,< n* < Ma nu im i pi rS' Hon * *.nv( I* nt iou* h an d lin g o f e y e r y ne*d .n eiu d in g m u ltU ith in g an d photo • i.p y- mg. r . pts u>* s* *> and reports »ii M RS LAURA BC)D O U R Phone GR 8-8113 907 W 28% ( Four block* w e st gra, engine* rung. ‘Hts Greek, Call GR 2- Sy rn tx i4* 8 < i e n la n r u a g f 9617. Friday, July 2, 1965 T H E S U M M E R T E X A N P»9 « • 3 mmmmm ******** mm m Call GR 1-5244 hr Classified Ads • • - ' - 4 ..V ■ Alinit* not Ghild , . I IS ........... a:, .35 PARAMOUNT I K A T I It K S : 12:08-2:33 4:58-7:23 9:4* HELD OVER! 2nd WEEK! S?Olh C#ntury-Pox FRANK SINATRA TREVOR HOWARD VON in M is a MARK ROBSON M O O U C T I O N COLOR •fM LUU J Lim bo K id / 'Sp irit' Drama Duo Opening “ The Lim bo K id ,” Robert Downing’s dram a L a rry Alan Haynes, Je ssie Fran ces W infree, of a cowboy’s rendezvous with love, w ill open Don B rasw ell, and Ja n e Canaan. in the D ram a Bu ild in g ’s T heater Room at 8 “ B lith e S p irit” w ill star Ja n e t Slack, G iva p.m. F rid a y , followed at 8 p.m. Saturday by Noel Cow ard’s “ B lith e S p irit.’’ T IIF ] T H O repertory productions w ill run alternatin gly through next week, with “ S p irit’’ on M onday, W ednesday, F rid a y , and Tues­ day (Ju ly 3, 5, 7, 9, 13), and “ K id ” on F rid a y , Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, and M onday (Ju ly 2, 6, 8, IO, 12). Starrin g in the Gold Rush rom ance are D IR F X T O R S Ja m e s M artin Richardson, Ja c k E llis , and B a rb a ra W illiam s. ( “ K id ” ) and D r. Angus Springer ( “ S p irit” ) prom ise two excellent offerings in keeping with the general tradition of excellence in the departm ent. Tickets to the dram a are free to holders of Sum m er Entertainm ent Program passes. Other tickets are $1 a seat. Reservations m ay be made at the M usic Building boxoffice, G R 1-1444. \6uVE NEVER SEEN SUCH TWO ELEPHANTS IN EVERY GARAGE anda f t E l j P A ‘I W B H E H -■■’Eli NOW! FIRST RUN 3 Theatres W h y Did 6 0 0 Allied Prisoners Hate T h e M a n T h e y C a l l e d V o n R y a n M o r e T h a n T h e y H a t e d H i t l e r ? INI HOOUCINS RAFFAELE CARRA CO ITURRINO JOHN LFYTON-EOWARO MUI HARE W01F6ANG PREISS Produce) by S I U W W • Duetted by MANK ROSSON BRAD DEXTER-SERGIO FANTONI I SoMnptey by W E H R I MATES A JOSI PW LANDON im ••**»•* mn* M I* BMW wsnwM .tee mmn hah FREE P A R K IN G A y - ___ ;______________ ^ ...... _ — - - ............. AFTER 6 P.M. ON LOTS 7th & LAVACA STS. a m i i s i .i s MIK .tis CHH I) 50 STATE HELD OVER! 2nd GREAT WEEK "IT'S SCREEN ADVENTURE IN THE GRAND MANNER" — JOHN BUSTIN IT CARRIED m n TEARS, THEIR HOPES m n MAIMS HOHORt if north-maitin mite-andvdenne FLITS! 2nd Feature in Color: “ THE W ORLD’S MIGHTIEST MEX TO GETHER!” “HERCULES, SA M SO N and ULYSSES” FEATURES: 11:59-2:18-4:16 7:15 'J;42 CHIEF DRIVE IN I*. 31. O (M*n 7 A i r C o n d it io n e d S n a c k Z e b r a 8-11:30 H e r c u le s l i a r IO AUSTIN THEATRE B o x O ffice O p en s 1:45 Z e b ra — 2 :00-5:10-8:20 H e rc u le s — 3 :3 3 -6 :43-9:53 DELWOOD DRIVE-IN B o x O ffice O p e n s 6:39 Z e b ra —8-11:30 H e rc u le s — IO P .M . SHOPPERS M A T IN E E .50 Weekday* ’til 12:30 n WLL SAM Y M TR M PEAK OF ADKMTURE! J u te s &# Iii' own myths ) and frt^‘ spit ted subsistence; Hewitt and Ins ad herence to church doctrine and discipline. Yet with this confrontation fit i.u: comes another: the greatei gin for both Laura and Edward to into a their existences larger scheme. Concepts in both their lives are hampered by a thwarting to society crush not only singular attain ment but also a dual relationship —their great love seeking Miss Taylor doesn't q u i t e transcend the untrammeled Eau ra. There is a pretention in her characterization that shows slight Frisco Pianist To Join KHFI Music Festival jazz .San Francisco pianist Ralph Sutton completes the trio of jazz keyboard artists to per the same concert form all on Thursday, July 15. during the KH PI-EM Summer Music Festi val. A C O N C E R T which s h o u l d make all of the jazz trade publi cations nation wide, because of its uniqueness and strength, th** Thursday night bash will com bine the contrasting jazz piano styk*s of Sutton, blues specialist Art Modes from Chicago, and Texas great Red Camp from Corpus Christi. affinity dwellirig :irtist. to the envisioned e a d - Burton brings off the guilt rid- dent'd clergyman with his usual acting fint'sse. Again, it is only th«* mendacity of th** script that impends his portrayal. Th** photography of Milton Krasnet is skillful and powerful throughout the film The beauty the Monterey of Big Sui and eyiiress and pine Peninsula - trees, giant slabs of black rock, soft sand. and lonely fog a r e all grasped up. thrown to th*' screen, into and wonderfully dispersed the mew d of Laura .int! Edward ? love affair. But it is in fact, the p* w **r of the sultry coastline that shows the* weakness of the film. I ’nlik** the simplesty, rugged^** ■ — th** ac tualitv of Big Sur country, th-* reality of Edward and I.a u ra s predicamc*nt is never eniotioiml- ly sustaining. IVi haps if the film had been allowed to fly fn*e, bk** Laura's jH-t sandpit r, a more sensitive cinematic experience would have tx cun <*d DRIVE-IN T H E A T R E I ^ mn bn Ave MOX OI I IC K 01*1 N I- Kl .Vi -» Who** int; T h r u I m -sda' ZEBRA IN THE KITCHEN J a i North A And* K (HI HERCULES,' SA M SO N and ULYSSES h i l l M o r r i s A Hi* h a r d M o l d i : 4 « ii ffjfW.ffiLsaa, l i m O ffic e ( l p m 6 39 N o n Uh o w i n * : MAJOR DUNDEE K (#0 < b a r I t o n l l va t o n A K i r h a r d M a r r l a THE OUTLAWS IS C O M IN G I h r T h r e e S t o o * r * in ii ________ IU-* i n * S a n d a l DEAR HEART I -rd A i. rraldlnr I’af r (airnr- H (HI ROBIN & THE SEVEN HOODS ‘s i n a t r a A Ki n* < r«**t»y I r a n i . I* M Adults s t u d e n t * MIK t hadron I 25 I (HI BS 35 VARSITY I I ATI Kl I 35 3 I* 5 4# # 5« *» 56 She gave men a taste cl lite that made them hunger tor more! Two Mighty Armies Trampled Its Valley. 3rd GREAT WEEK : • vc.y'*- is -if:- * ’ - mc -0 WF. *:'CM A Fighting Family Challenged Them Both! Never has the epic struggle been shown with greater faith and fury ... than through the eyes and hearts of the proud Anderson^! £ ‘ W IN N ER PARENTS M A G A Z I N E FAMILY MEDAL AWARD DOUG McClure glenn Corbett patrick wayne ROSEMARY FORSYTH KATHARINE ROSS rnWbt r n . r n% % Pct PO GOC DWY *< MAYER *st f LMWA YO win ELIZABETH TAYLOR RICHARD BURTON EVA MARIE SAINT IN MARTAN RANSOHOFF S PRODUCTION 4b. G:' T r e e C o r k i r * o n O a r O w n L o t S m o k i n g I ' e r m i t t t e d O p r n 1 : 4 5 F e a t u r e * 2 -4 -6- 8-10 ‘• T h e O n l y T h e a t r e I* A u s t i n T h a t Is M o r e C o m f o r t a b l e T h a n l o u r O w n H o m e ' * OI- 5- Wet I 22ersonal attention and jiersonal freedom. Education cannot be dispensed like a commodity and intelligent students will not be treated like cogs in a giant machine. In the Dark American B.t2 bombers lowered the big stick on Viet N am again Monday. Most columnists have labeled the first B.>2 raid on Ju n e 18 a bust. F rom governm ent announce­ ments it has been impossible to tell how the Adm inistration h a s a s s e s s e d the first bom bardm ent, but it m ust consider such a show of force useful since it is being repeated. official sources called the a ttac k Monday “a spoiling mission designed to harass the enemy and disrupt his opera­ tions, facilities, communications, and m orale." Now we don’t know exactly w hat th a t means, and we doubt in dropping the bombs even it the government statem ent were com prehen­ sible. that we would have felt justified We feel harassed, disrupted, and demoralized by the lack of concrete information on American policy and actions on \ int Nam, and we ask th a t th e A dm inistration divulge m on' information this time on the objectives, success, and rationale behind these bombings. JO H N ORR’S GA VEL Join O rr’s W ar Against Apath A common m ania shared by most student bodies is apathy toward cam pus activities. This is quite understandable in light of the deluge of activities avail­ able in most American colleges. Yet during the sum m er when most activities are hibernating, one would expec t to see more in­ terest organizations which are functioning. those in In hopes of interesting some of you who are finding little to occupy your free time this sum ­ m er, I want briefly to let you know what you might expect if you joined our fight against apa­ thy. If you happened to wander into Room 323 of the Union some afternoon this sum m er you would be initially pounced upon by E r­ nie, Alice, Bill, and Dr. David (Student Off-Campus Housing Commission). They would give you a card with the name of a dorm (private) and toll you to see if you could find any Negroes living there. BUT LET’S SAY you are color blind and can ’t tell a black from a white. (You don’t know what you are m issing!) John would get you next — then you’ve really had it. You would im mediately sta rt planning Challenge, or w rit­ ing letters to B arry to see if he’ll come as a Visiting Fellow next fall. But m aybe you can’t spell — well you’re still in luck. We need you to recruit profs for work in next y e a r’s Interdisciplinary Re­ treats and Inquiry. If you don’t like profs you could gripe about them to the Grievance Commit­ tee or speak against them at Stump Speaking. After spending an afternoon in any of the above adventures, one might expect to study at night — foolish thought. At night John, Hilda, and Bill meet to discuss student ideas for the new coedu­ cational academ ic dorm. Besides community baths such suggortions libraries, rooms for profes­ as families, sors, and i their sm all rooms are being analyz I ’M SURE there is someth about your dorm you don’t Iii Besides the dorm meeting, planning meeting for a campi wide course evaluation to be h i this fall is being held and sii you don’t like profs you shoi really be in heaven there. But m aybe you don’t he 24 hours a day to give to studt governm ent activities, then sol of our less time-consuming pi gram s a re ideal for you. Y could help plan next y ear’s ti vel program , Freshm an Counc Round-up, C.E.C., Campus Che Texas-OU Dance, Public Re] tions, etc. Finally if you or have a very little tim e this sui m er but want to be a part, y^ could be an assem blym an! 4 S Therefore, you too can join I w ar against apathy f draft exemption). Simply dn by Union 323 any afternoon. (good Students Shifting to Seriousness According to New Mexico Lobo By the Associated Collegiate Press A s h i f t iii student interest from cam pus traditions and activities to more serious off-campus issues has created a polarization of uni­ versity students, says the New Mexico Ixibo. At the University of New Mexico and throughout the na­ tion there is a swing away from interest in sports, pep rallies, and cam pus initiations and toward is­ sues of concern to society such as peace, civil rights, and the fu­ ture of the United Nations. GRANTED, there are still many students whose fondest wish is to see that the university m aintains such traditions as wearing school colors before athletic events, pub­ lishing the latest pinnings in the student newspaper, and rushing for sororities. the cutest girls But, influence their thankfully, is decreasing. Conversely, debates on Viet Nam policy and federal interven­ tion in Alabama seem to have be­ come worthy of more attention than goldfish swallowing and tele­ phone booth loading. Increasing seriousness of the student body is an established fact. Students began shedding the apathy of the Silent Fifties about the time of the sit-ins which be­ cam e a catalyst for student ac vity. Civil liberties and the pro lem of m aintaining peace in nuclear e ra contributed to the i creasing politicization of unive sity students. WHAT HAS developed, then, a type of polarization. On or hand are the warmed-over big in f< school students who go fads and cam pus traditions; c the other hand are the rapid! increasing (in influence if not I size) new student leaders wh realize they are citizens not or the university but a’/ ly of of society. Hopefully, fir who view their responsibilitie m ore seriously will continue t gain influence and achievt menf. the in Little Man on the Campus By Bi bier W hy Johnny Is Bored Bv KAYE NORTHCOTT lex ail Editor Rem em ber the fun kids used to have with a homemade balsa wark! glider? A communications system m ade of two tin cans and s o m e string or one long green garden hose? like Things aren ’t done that now\ Any tight-year-old will ex­ plain, you gotta have an authen­ tic toy arm y com bat walkie talk­ ie unit and a battery powered replica of the latest supersonic jet with detachable bombs. Like everything else, toys are getting more expensive and more complex. But are they fun any­ m ore? There is m ore to playing than pushing a button or pulling a cord. WHAT IS THE fun of being m other to a Talking Chatty Baby ( “ INdl the m agic ring and I say IS different things” )? The fun was that your baby said anything you pretended she said. th a t’s Pretending, the hitch. What is left to pretend when a doll walks, wets, talks, and cries real tears? ’IYK) often, nowadays, toy m ak­ the human element forget ers when devising new gimmicks. There is nothing for the child to do, except maybe switch on a motor or wind something. Tho child does not have to use his imagination or ingenuity to devise ways to entertain him­ self. When lie is tired of televi­ sion he can resort to any num ber of store-bought diversions with the instructions written on the boxs. So tho dulled child will grow' :n- to a dull man, expecting society to provide his stimulation. THERE ARE creative and educational’’ toys on the m arket that supposedly are designed to avoid this very thing. Some are creative, but most are more packages of fit-together, pull- apart, push-the-button junk. In the educational field, there are some valuable toys. The only one that comes to mind is the m iniature chem istry set. Yet for every chem istry set there is a Quizzack, the question and an­ swer machine with a m agnetic to brain — Quizzack and get the right an­ sw er every th a t’s really educational — for any a s­ piring Uni v ie operator. “ Feed questions tim e.” Now Along with teaching children to push buttons and open boxes, teach instance, toys can today’s them something else about adult life— values. Take, for the Barbie doll series. A few years ago Mattel cam e out with a voluptuous doll named Barbie. This plastic sex pot comes with different colored wigs and w ard­ the hun­ robes costing up dreds of dollars. into THERE ALSO is the Barbie Game, the object of which is to get Bar hie to the prom. Pitfalls along tho playing board are the costs of getting B arbie’s hair done (forefit $3), buying Barbie attractive clothes so that she can attract a prospective date, etc. Barbie, of course, is just a re­ flection of the belief nowadays that a little girl does not grow up to be a m other, and most often dream s of being, like Barbie, queen of the prom rather than queen of a family. the rnoney-clothes-date- popularity ethic that is so pre­ dominant among the younger, as well as the older generations is shoddy. Barbie dolls and the like go a long way toward spreading this gospel at an early age. Still, There is much to dislike about the adult world, but it should not be m irrored in children's toys. SEEN- I ' f c r v t . A T h e S u m m er T e x a n O p . m o n s e x p r e s s e d In th e T e x a n a r e t h o s e o f t h e E d i t o r s or o f th e w ri te r o f th e a r t i c l e a n d are n o t n e c e s s a r i l y t h o s e o f the U n i v e r s i t y a d m i n i s t r a t i o n . •e S..n > ’ It tan is p ..I - J by N »as Stuck F. h ca* -s, Inc., D raw er D, U n .versify S ta t en. A ustin , Texas, d a y a• J Ft d a y rn ■••■ro d end exam pc S e c o n d c ass p; J a q e p a J a t A da>* ds. S t cr ct en r< •- s St EG for I © eru t© s*.~ mer. : the s mimer t ic e p f I ;.es- ’ • ••, Y 2 en ' " Tuesday, July 6. 1965 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 2 I I y I ’WIT* Ti s£hlog. 1^ co-zo I ir-MtlWjtcKre S T A F F M a k e - U p Edi t or R i c h a r d C o l e N o ' f Sports E a t e r . . . . Sen- Keacf E d i t o r — K a y e N ^ r t h c o t t I s sue N e w s E d i t o r ................. Dan Ri ce J. tt Amusements E d ito r .............. M a n a g i n g E d it o r — Emily La m on C o p y Editor . . . . . . . D eb b ie Do ref N e t (an Rein N t Rep.:-ter . . V a 1 a r • on t: Kt W rp Fd tor . . . Pcb Piocheck 16 Pre-Schoolers Learn UT Spanish By CAROLYN BARKLEY Texan Staff W riter To learn how to speak, sing. •Hunt. and tell stories in Span­ ish. sixteen 5- and 6-year-olds are attending the University. The pre-schoolers and 57 other Austin children are p art of the Institute, or­ Slimmer Spanish ganize! to train future Spanish teachers. Recruited from the Austin com ­ munity especially for the insti tate the children attend classes s t no charge for one hour Mon­ six day Weeks. through F riday for THE RECRUITING program was so successful that two addi­ tional classes for pre-schoolers began Monday. Since the new classes are not a part of the in­ stitute. a $10 fee is charged by the Departm ent of Romance Lan­ guages. The program, held from June 23 to Aug. 19, is the only Span­ ish institute for undergraduates In the United States. It is direct­ ed by Dr. Mildred Boyer, asso­ ciate professor of Romance lan­ guages, and is authorized by the National Defense Education Act of 1958. ‘T he University was chosen be­ cause it has a tradition of Span­ ish and a wealth of material in these fields,” said Dr. George the Ayer, associate director of Institute. THE PROGRAM operates under th** a $76,118 contract between University and the US Office of Education. The 40 future Span­ ish teachers each receive a $600 a ti [tend for the eight-week pro­ gram . “ Four show-case demonstration classes were formed to enable teachers to observe the future expert teachers,” Aver said. One demonstration class fea­ tures a bold experiment — teach­ ing > and 6-year-olds exclusively bl Spanish. is to “Tit-* purpose of the ex peri learn whether pre merit school children can learn by hear tag and speaking Spanish,” said Tomas Y barra-Frausto, foreign language specialist from Belle­ vue. Washington. IN TEACHING THEM. Ybarra speaks only Spanish. ‘ The chil think I can’t speak En dren glLsh ” he said. “ We try to m a k e them understand through ges tares, mimickrv, and analogies, told the children At the l>eginning of the course, Y barra their nam es in Spanish. One boy did not have a name with a Spanish equivalent, so Y barra arbitrarily ? Faculty . . (Continued From Page One'! “ Such a situation also would the toward breaking down lead natural barrier that exists be tween students and faculty and adm inistrators.” The com mittee further recom mended outdoor study spaces, outdoor a n d indoor recreation Spaeth, a music room, and a li­ brary. John On*, president of th e Stu that a dents' Association, said the m o r e extensive analysis of coed dorm will be published later this month. THE COED DORM will house 2,400 students and will be located south of P rather Hall where the , men < tennis courts now stand Date for completion has been scheduled for September, 1968. T exa n P h o to J oh n son Cinco, Seis, Siete • , . Tomas Ybarra teaches numbers. decided to call him Pedro. “But my nam e starts with a ‘B \ “ the boy replied. With the aid of a the boy understood the reason for his new name. teacher, in Balls, blocks, crayons, ges­ tures, stories, games, and songs the classes. Five- are used year-old Cynthia Ann Wells likes the ball best “because he (Y bar­ ra) bounces the ball while we count uno, dos, tres. . . We draw numbers in Spanish, and I teach them to my parents.” can “ I am curious to see wh.it chil­ dren age 5,” Mr*. Wells said. “ The course will prepare her for the first grade.” leal n at ALTHOUGH THE children are lively 5- and 6 year-olds, Y barra does not have a discipline prob­ lem. On Friday, one child play­ ed the “ knock, knock, w ho* th ere?” game. Instead of answ er­ there?” Y barra re ­ ing “ Who’s com prendo.” The “No plied, c hild never got to the punch line, so he gave up, Y barra said. Attending University the am azes Cynthia Ann. On her first day of class, she asked her mother, “ Mommy, are we really going to college?” Because they did not learn Spanish in grade school. Rem** and Rita Glover are attending the Spanish pre third dem oastration class. grade Mrs. Herschel D. Wells enroll­ ed Cynthia Ann in the Spanish dem onstration class because she thinks better when they are young. children learn “ I wanted my twin daughters to have enthusiasm and interest for a second instead of boredom.” A. Dee Glover said. “ I didn’t want a defeatist language, Jose Bounces His Pelota . , . th a t s b a ll to you n on -S p an ish sp eakers. attitude — which they w e r e getting by television in the Austin public schools.” Altliough Glover the foreign is apathetic language his about learn, he 8 year-old daughters does “ want them to have expen enc® with a teacher who knows how to teach. The public school Spanish Is not enough to lie any good. Now the guU Lsh.” like Sjwm- ON THE FIRST DAY, one V year old met his mother aft t class. With her T exts drawl, the Mother asked “ Did vou learn to say ’Buenas dias today? “ No Mommy.” replied the boy, “ you said it wrong ” With his new Spanish accent, the boy cor- rectly pronounced “ Buenos dias ” g U IM IM f P~ a U X t © IL ES A E l A Suits 70 2 5 ° ' a " A * low $ 2 2 . 4 6 D O N ’T LET IT CONFUSE YOU • • • You can tu rn in y o u r re g is te r re c e ip ts either Ju ly 1-7 o r A u g u s t 9-16. N o re c e ip ts will be a c c e p te d a fte r A u g u s t 16. Don t f o r g e t ! Y O U M A Y TURN I N YOUR D IV ID E N D SLIPS N O W A Safe it e r , Net I lu n | i Iv| e Ir | b | i [t It I r ( f The Distinctive Store for Men Tuesday, July 6, 1965 T H E S U M M E R T E X A N Pege 3 Recruits, Team X Vie For Title Thursday The Recruits and Team X meet at 7 p.m. Thursday on die north end of the men’s intramural field to decide the 1965 summer intra­ mural softball championship. The two teams advanced to the finals with semifinal victories Monday night. Team X defeated Delta Tau Delta IOO and the Recruits de­ feated Alpha Tau Omega by the same score. in the The Recruits b<*at Kappa Sip ma first round 9 8 and Team X defeated tile law yers 15 5. D ie Dolts and ATO iw>th drew byes rn the first round. ATX) took the title last year by defeating Sigma Chi 112. In other intram ural activity, Charles Scarborough of Delta Kappa Epsilon defeated R. E . Jackson 21 13. and 2112 to take the handball title Ira HU Iyer of Delta Tau Delta captured the table tennis cham­ pionship by defeating Je rry Shay of Tau Delta 23 21, 13-21, and 21 IO. The singles tennis champion­ ship was won bv Dan Burleson A thletic Dining Room Undergoing Chang es Longhorn athletes will jet urn at the end of the summer to a lot of new things, including a re- cause “ the Housing and Food Service is In this business and we aren’t.” modeled room. and updated dining Facelifting us now in progress on the dining room located be hind Moore Hill Hall. New offices, refrigerating equip­ cocking facilities, ment, and flooring are being installed by Hie contractor, Robert C. Grey Construction Co. Ja ck Paterson, assistant athletic director, esti­ mated the cost at $60,000. Patterson said the renovation came about as the years of use outmode! the preparation and handling facilities of the kitchen. the operation of Hie kitchen will lie turned over from tile Athletic Department to the University Housing and Food Service. In addition, took over The kitchen will no longer be managed by Mrs. Jim Blaylock. the Mrs. Blaylock management of the kitchen when her motlier, Mrs “ M a” Griffith retired. "M a ” Griffith has been “ the mother of Univer­ sity of T e x a s Athletes” for many years. J, M. The Athletic Department said that the ch an g e was made tie Twins Down Sox; Take League Lead M IN N E A P O L IS — ST. P A U L — OP — Jim Perry, recruited from the bullpen to bolster Min­ nesota^ sagging corps of start­ er's, pitched the Twins to a 2-0 Victory' over Boston Monday night, giving the American le a ­ gue leaders a sweep of a day- night doubleheader, The Twins won the day game, 6 2 arui opened a I ^ game lead over Cleveland, which lost to Chi­ cago 3 1. Tile Twins also now have won five straight. Perry, making his first start in more than a year ran his record to 5-0 with a seven hitter. Only one Red Sox runner got to third base as the lean right­ hander went the distance for tile first time in two years He had worked only 32 2 3 innings this year in 15 relief appearances. Key blew for Minnesota in the opener wits Harmon Killebrew ’s two-run single in tho sixth, pac­ ing a 41 hit attac k. A A p a r t m e n t Type lU i'd e n c t tor M e r Student* • O p e n i n g A u g . I t • U-v—. T H E IHI I P i Kit I L S P A C K ) I S M K S S P K I ! At I — I t O M t . M ) N ( I S e e Wh i t f o r a d d i t i o n a l ( ul t b a t h , e v e r * l a r g e , J 4 m a n u n i t * ; l i v i n g m o m * J m e n ; Mu i l y de*Im I oui plot*- kit* h e n . c o v e r e d p a r k i n g a r p h o n e a t KH* VV. H i . i n f o r m a t i o n . a l l f o r $50.-$55. p e r n u t o n * r n : t o k a y 2408 Leon Si. also of Delta Tau Delta who de­ feated Dave Walston of Moore- H ill Hall 7-5, 5-7, and 10-8. The championship game Thurs­ day night w ill complete the sum­ mer intram ural schedule. The Law School softball league w ill complete play next week. The Cedar Choppers and the Out­ laws are currently leading the circuit. ■ ■ * * '?*.<■ mmm w Baseball Sta n d in g s N A T IO N A L LF.AO I F C incin nati 7 Loa Angeles 4 night Houston 5. M llu a uke* 4 ni^ht Ph ilad elp h ia 3-6, P ittsb u rg h 1-2 »u I night N ew York 3 3 Chicago 2-0 tit Innings trouts 3, San Francisco 2 13 W L P c t . ................46 34 C incin nati Los Angeles ............47 35 S a n Francisco ....... 42 35 ............42 36 P h ila d e lp h ia Pittsb u rg h .......... ...41 39 ............... 38 37 MHu ankee Ixntis ................. 39 41 St. ................... 37 43 Houston Chicago ..................... 36 44 ............... 29 53 New York CUB .575 ____ .573 545 2*4 . 538 3 5)3 5 .5(17 5l4 488 7 463 9 450 IO 364 18 N A T IO N A L I . F A t . I K M innesota 6-2, Boston 2-0. A u r­ New Y o rk 7-4 D e tro it 2 5 Baltim o re 7 Kansas C ity 4 Chicago 3. Cleveland l*>s Angeles 5. W ashington 2, tw i­ tw ilig h t I, a l slit light W ashington at Lo * Angeles night G R VV ........ 48 28 M innesota ..............46 29 Cleveland C li ira go .....................44 31 ................44 34 B a ltim o re ..................... 42 34 D e tro it New' York --- 39 41 *lx>s Angeles .......... 36 4? xW ash in g to n .......... 32 48 ..................... 30 47 Boston K ansas C ity .......... 22 49 I, Pet. 632 613 P i .367 3% 5 564 ’553 6 .484 l l 462 13 40o 18 . 390 18‘4 310 23’s Austin to Host Press T h e A u s t in C h a m b e r of C o m ­ m e r c e w ill h o ld a p r e s s c o n f e r ­ e n c e a n d p a r t y a t the (G o n d o lie r a t 5:30 p .m . T h u r s d a y . H o te l P r e s s k its w ill b e d is t r ib u te d a t Chis tim e . p le s o f s o m e of th is y e a r ’s e v e n t s p a s s in g in r e v i e w b e lo w th e G o n ­ d o lie r , s u c h a s w a t e r s k i k ite f l y ­ e r s . N e w s m o il 1 a th e s t a t e h a t e b e e n in v ite d . fr o m a ll o v e r New Orleans Tells Of Dropping AFL Bid N E W O R L E A N S - lf* - S p o r t s p r o m o te r D a v e D ix o n s a id M o n ­ d a y a g ro u p h e h e a d s h a s d r o p ­ ped its e ffo r ts to s e c u r e fo r N e w O r le a n s a f r a n c h is e in th e A m e r ­ ic a n F o o t b a ll l e a g u e . D ix o n , in a s t a t e m e n t fr o m M i a m i , s a id h is g ro u p w ill c o n ­ c e n t r a t e its e f f o r t s to w a r d g a i n ­ in g a te a m in th e N a t io n a l F o o t ­ b a ll L e a g u e . H e is p r e s id e n t o f N e w O r le a n s P r o F o o t b a ll. In t . * .. J m m ■ yi A C lo u d of Dust . . . Intramural play ends Thursday. — T e x a n P h o to John>.oB Reds Use Mistakes To Take Over Lead C IN C IN N A T I — W - The Cin­ cinnati Reds, taking advantage of errors by Bob M iller and W il­ lie Davis, defeated Los Angeles 7-4 Monday night and took over the National League lead horn the Dodgers. The Reds moved tw'o percent­ age points ahead of the Dodgers, who had been in first place since M ay 4. Cincinnati snapped a 4-4 dead­ lock with three runs in the sev­ enth inning. Leo Cardenas start­ ed the rally with his third hit. a single, and Jim Maloney bunted but was safe when pitcher M ill­ er threw too late in an attempted force on Cardenas at second. Tommy Harper followed with another bunt, and this time M ill­ er fired the ball past third base, allowing Cardenas to score. Ma­ loney went to third and Harper to second on the error. Maloney scored on Pete Rose’s fly to center field, and Harper also came home when Davis threw the ball wildly to third. Tribe Throw ing Error N etsC h icogo3-1 W in CHICAGO — (/Pi — Pitcher Sam M cDowell’s throwing error in the seventh inning paved the way for Sox edged Cleveland 3-1 and Indians from first tumbled the place in the American League Monday night. The loss, coupled with Minneso­ ta’s doubleheader victory over Boston, dropped the Indians U/2 games behind the Twins. The Tribe, seeking its 20th vic­ tory in its last 24 starts, grabbed a 1-0 lead in the sixth on Pedro Gonzalez’ double, a wild pitch by starter Bruce Howard, and Vie D avalillo’s single. Astros Hick Braves In Late Inning Bunt M IL W A U K E E —m ~ J o e Gaines raced home on Walt Bond s sac­ rifice squeeze bunt in the ninth inning with the run that gave Houston a 5-4 victory over M il­ waukee Monday night. Gaines forced Joe Morgan at second after Morgan walked and moved to third as Jim Wynn sin­ gled fourth hit. B illy O'Dell replaced Bob Sadowski, f ir s t and Bond bunted base, bringing in Gaines. for his toward Meanwhile, M c D o w e l l , th# American League’s s t r i k e out leader, was buzzing along on eight strikeouts and a four hitter/ through six innings. In the seventh, B ill Skowron led off with a single, and Hon Hansen bunted. McDowell field­ ed the bunt and threw it over first baseman Chuck Hinton’s head into the right field corner. Skowron scored and Hansen pull­ ed up at third. Hansen then scor­ ed on Floyd Robinson’s single. Swim Registration Set For Saturday in Gym Registration for the s e c o n d term of summer swimming class­ es for young boys w ill he held Saturday from 8:30 a m. to 5 P rn. at the Gregory Gym Pool. The classes, which w ill be held Monday through Frid ay for six weeks, w ill be taught by Jim Mowry, a member of the men i physical education staff. Beginner, intermediate, and ad­ vanced swimming classes, and junior life saving w ill be offered, Bovs must be 52 inches tall. A $10 registration fee is charg­ ed and children must have a m edical certificate before they enter the water. Ed Barlow’, director of physical training for mon, started the p ro prom about 32 years ago. THE UNIVESITY’S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO A N D HI-FI SALES AN D SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway GR 8-6609 S e r v i n g the University A r e a for 14 Years PARKING IN REAR T h e p a r t y w ill fe a t u r e e x a m ­ two runs as the Chicago White 2 0 1 5 ( p iia d a liip e O K 6 - 4 3 9 1 "H IG H FIDELITY AT REASONABLE PRICES’ Tu+tday, Ju ly 6 , 1945 T H E S U M M E R T E X A N Page 4 JT, Tokyo College Linguists Y D $ to Hold Discussion Jegm T ranslation The Young Denu>craLs will hold a discussion on “ What Does Ro peal 14b M ean?’’ at 7:10 p.m. Tuesday in Texas Union 304. Research O n Repeal of Act 14b at the Linguistics R esearch Cen­ te r for several years, the new program will be the first attem pt to adapt Japanese to the com­ puter translation system at the University. Ray F. M arshall, professor of eco non lies, will speak for repeal, and Charles Jetty, publisher of the Travis County Citizen, will speak against. Award Winning HAIR STYLES Capital Beauty College Guadalupe at 16th Open 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. GR 2-9292 exchange of linguists to fur- cooperative research in m e­ al translation began Mon- between the University and k y o Electrical Engineering WORK in translation by puler is supported under the - Japan Cooperative Science ogram through separate grants the Linguistics R esearch Cen- to the University and * at IEC. The TEEC grant will be ministered by the Japan Soci- / for the Promotion of Science utrition Student iven Fellowship rs. Helen R. Em erson, Uni- > ity graduate student in no­ tion, has received a $400 fel- wship for 1965-66 from the Na- mal Food Brokers Association mndation in Washington, D.C. Mrs. Em erson, an adm inistra­ te dietician for 15 years, ex- to receive a m aster of cts ience degree in inc, 1966. She has a minor in e field of m anagem ent. Fellowships are granted an ­ tal ly by the NFBA Foundation students who are interested in reers in the food industry. The yards are m ade on the basis scholastic ability, character, in nutrition id financial need. Mrs. Em erson earned a bache- r of arts degree from DePauw ai versify in 1946. She entered e University in F ebruary and 'Id the Estelle B. Sharp scho- rship in home economics dur- g the spring sem ester. ii i ■■■— — ■■■ ■ and the University grant by the National Science Foundation. Bates Hof for, a m em ber of the Linguistics Research Center staff, has just arrived in Tokyo where he will be the only American working with Japanese linguists during the nine-month program . Dr. Keiji H iram atsu of TEEC and Mrs. Sae Y am ada of Rissho University in Tokyo are working in Austin on problems of design­ ing a Japanese syntax for use in the Linguistics Research Center's translation system . Scott Baird, a m ember of the ERC staff who taught English in Japan for three years, is working with the visit­ ing linguists. WHILE IN JAPAN, Hoffer will supervise collection of Japanese text and hand coding of Japanese dictionary entries in computer- usable form and serve as consult- ant on problems of English struc­ ture with the TEEC linguists w'ho a re designing an English-to-Jap- anese translation system. Dr. H iram atsu will spend his nine months a t Texas working on a linguistic analysis of Japanese as well as the problems of pro­ gram m ing his native language for the computer. Mrs. Yam ada, who worked on machine translation problems for three years a t Grenoble, France, will be concerned with problems of syntactic analysis of Japanese. THE WORK AT TEXAS will be directed by Dr. Wayne Tosh, chief of the ERC descriptive lin­ guistics group. Dr. Tosh visited Tokyo earlier this year to coor­ dinate the program between the two universities. Although work in German, R us­ sian, Chinese, Hebrew, and oth­ e r languages has boon under way to you hand woven by Italian masters, the fila, by Bandoline, softest kid skin in black and red, | 5 . 0 0 JULY CLEARANCE SALE 24o4 qaadaiw ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK DRESSES > FORMALS • SUITS • SKIRTS • BLOUSES • PANTS • SHORTS • LINGERIE • BAGS o I/, OFF A L L S W IM SU IT S V3 OFF ALL SALES FINAL STORE HOURS: 9 to 5:30 Tuesday, July 6, 1965 T H E S U M M E R T E X A N Page S ■ » ' j * Hi > T 0 M , '■ I N f S The C o Op ii your K « ed q u *rt«r* for * i« m tu p p lie i — blu» books, pencils, pent, C o lle g e O u tlin e Series, end aspirin Final Examinations Will Start July IS ■ T I IN D E X TO E X A M IN A T IO N P E R IO D NI F T 8:30: Saturday, Ju ly 17,8-11 a.m. M F 8:30-10: 'Thursday, J u ly 16,8-11 a.rn. M F 10—11:30: 'Thursday, Ju ly 15, 2-5 p.m. M F 11:30 I : Frid ay, Ju ly IC, 2-5 p.m. M K l 2:30: F rid a y, Ju ly 16,8-11 a.m. M F 2:30 4: Saturday, Ju ly 17, 2-5 p.m. Late afternoon classes: Frid ay, Ju ly IO, 7 10 p.m. I N I F O R M E X A M IN A T IO N S E. fOOla: Thursday, J u ly 15, 7-10 p.m. Gov. f 61.0a: Thur day, Ju ly 15,7-10 p.m. Gov. fdlOb: Thursday, Ju ly 15, 7-10 p.m. Check your 4 * . FINAL NEEDS: ( ) Straight A's I ) Blue Books ( ) Outlines (all subjects) ( ) Notebooks ( ) Paperbacks ( i Swim at Bartons 0 Ink ( j Ballpoints i i Pencils ( I 8 Hr. Sleep i i Erasers ( I Fountain Pen i ) Art Supplies ( I Paper Clips ( ) Will and Testament ( ) Staplers ( ) Scotch Tape ( ) Typing Paper 0 Report Covers ( ) Thesis Material ( ) One Week of Study ( I Thesis Binding ( ) Alarm Clock Most of These Can Be Found at Hemphill's Your Friendly I Book Store 109 E. 2 U t 2501 Guadalupe 2244 Guadalupe 26th & San Jacinto Custom er Parking T H U R S D A Y Ju ly 15, 7-10 p.m. (E n g lis h f601a and Government f610a and f61Ob) E . £601 a .I: Eng l. II. 201 E . fOOla.2: Eng l. II. 301 E . fOOl a.3: En g l. B. 3 E . £601a.4: Eng l. ll. 20.3 E . fOOla.5: En g l. II. 303 E . fOOla.6: En g l. B. I F . f001 a.7: Eng l. B. 206 E . f601a.8: En g l. lf. 104 E . £601a.9: E n g l. If. 204 E . fOOla.lO: Engl. lf. 208 E . f6 0 1 a.ll: En g l. lf. 308 E . f601a.12: Eng l. lf. 306 E . f601a.l3: E n g l. if. 102 E .f6 0 1 a .l4 : Eng l. lf. 210 E . £601a.l5: E n g l. lf. 103 E . f603a.l7: Engl. B . 304 Gov. fO lO a.l: B. E . If. 105 Gov. f010a.2: W . ll. 201 Gov. £610a.3: Phv. B . 203 Gov. £610a.4: H. E . If. 105 Gov. f610a.5: G. H . I Gov. f610a.6: W . H. 101 Gov. £610a.7: B . E . B. 116 Gov. f610a.8: Ph y. lf. 201 Gov. f610b.l: A . lf. 105 Gov. f610b.2: Ph y. If. 121 Gov. fG10b.3: Phy. lf. 313 F R I D A Y Ju ly 16, 8-11 a.m. (Classes meeting M - F 1-2:30) Acc. f365: B. E . B. 302 Acc. f381K: B . E . B. 304 Bib. f305: Townes Baptist Bjble C hair E. £ 3 1 4 K .3 :B.E. If. 101 E . f314K.4: lf. E . ll. 116 Ed. A. £382T.2: S. H. 304 Ed . P. f382L.2: S. TI. 203 ! Ger. £364K: Batts I L 302 His. f315K.4: G. I L I His. f363P: G. H . 109 [ L. S. f 287: M ain lf. 311 1 M. fUOl.4: Ben. I L IOC M. f305E.2: Ben. H. 8 I M a n .f372: B . E . If. I l l Mkt. f337: lf. E . If. IG Mus. £225L : Mus. If. 106 Mus. f262.1: Mus. lf. 203A Mus. f488b.l: Mus. If. 105 N .f5 1 2 K : C. P . H a ll 101 , Psy. £358: Mezes H. 314 I Spe. f 337: Engl. If. 105 Spe. f3G7.3: J . lf. 205 Spn. f312K.2: Batts II. IGI Spn. f312K.3: Batts ll. 115 Spn. f366K: B atts ll. 307 Sta. f 432.2: B . E . B. 105 F R I D A Y Ju ly 16, 2-5 p.m. (Classes meeting M - F 11:30-1) Acc. f.367:B. E . B. 205 A r t £305: A r t B. I A r t f360L: A r t B. 4 B. A . f3 6 7 P.l: If. E. B. I l l B. A. f367P.2: B . E . B. 105 Ch. f412K: C. B. 218 E . f337: B . E . B. 116 E. f 374L : Eng l. If. 203 E . £377K: B . E . lf. 101 Eco. £302.4: B . E . If. 16 ; Eco. f 303.3: B . E . B.211 Eco. f356K: B. E . B. 104 Ed. A. £384G: S. H. 304 E d .C . £370E.4.2: S. H. 203 Ed. C. f3S4P.2.31: S. H. 314 Ed. P. £376 P: B . E . B. 9 Grg. £377.1: W . H. 210 H. E . £311: H. E . If. 114 ! His. £609a: VV. H. IG I His. £338L: E . Sc. B. 115 J . f312K: J . If. 205 J . fG24a: J . If. 209 i Lat. £312.1: G. H. 200 Lat. £312.2: G. ll. 7 M. fSO lE.5 : Ben. H. 116 M. f301F.4: Ben. II. 8 I M. f 304.2: Ben. I L 201 M. £304E.2: Ben. ll. IOC M. f 325.2: Ben. H. 104 M. £326.2: Ben. ll. IG I I M. f340L: Ben. lf. 208 : M. £360L.2: Ben. H. 12 M.f360N.2: Ben. H.202 ; M. f361.2: Ben. 11.314 Mus. £354: Mus. lf. 105 Mkt. f360: B. E . lf. 313 Ph y. £360K: Phv. B. 121 I Spe. f 371: B. E . B. 108 I Spn. £325: Batts H. 110 T H I K S D A Y T H I K S D A Y Ju ly 15, 8-11 a.m. (Classes meeting M -F 8:30-10) Ju ly 15, ?-5 p.m. (Classes meeting M - F 10-11:30) Acc. f325: B. E . II. 304 Acc. f326: ll. E . II. 302 Ant. 1301 : lion. II. 115 A r t f318K: A r t ll. 4 ll. C. f322.1: B. E . ll. 205 Bib. £301.1: Church of Christ Bible Chair Bib. f304: Townes Baptist Bible Acc. £61 la.2: B. E . B. 103 and 116 Acc. £364: B. E . ll. 302 Am. S. f355: B. E . B. I l l Ant. £302: C. B . 15 ll. C. £322.2: Mezes I L 101 Bib. £301.2: Townes Baptist Bible Bib. £302: Church of C hrist Bible Chair Chair C hair B. L. f323: ll. E . B. 105 Ch. f801a: C. II. 15 Ch. fSlOb: E. Sc. B. 115 Ch. 1821b: C. B . 813 Ch. f360K: C. ll. 315 Dim. f .112K: Drm. B. 114 E . 1312L.1: Eng l. B. 203 E . 1329L: B. E . ll. 101 j E . f360M: En g l. ll. I Keo. f302.2: B. E . ll. 105 Keo. f303.1: B. K. ll. 211 Eco. f324: ll. E . ll. 16 Ed. A. f380G: S. II. 312 Ed. C. f632E: Engl. ll. 208 Ed. C. f332S.2: S. H. 203 Ed. C. f370E.3.1: S. H. 101 Ed. C. f370S.4: Engl. B. 204 Ed. C. f371.2.18: S. If. 227 E d C.f382E.4: S. H.204 Ed. lf. f 361E : Mezes If. IG I Ed. P. f 332S.3: Phy. 11.203 Ed. P . f 365.1: S. II. l l Ed. P. f376S.5: S. lf. 314 Ed. P. f3 8 2 L.l: S. H. 210 Ed. P. f 383.8: E n g l. II. SA Fin. f357.2: ll. E . ll. IIG Fin. f 374: U .K . 11.212 Fr. fGOla .I: En g l. ll. 201 F r. f601a.2: A rt ll. 8 l r. f 312 K . I: II. E . B. 113 Fr. f 312K .3: Batts ll. 104 F r. f312L: Batts H. 318 Fr. LIO IM : Batts ll. 307 Geo. fOOla: A rt II. I Geo. f360K: G. H. 5 Ger. f406.2: B atts ll. 115 Gov. £320 K : W . II 302 Grg. f305: W . ll. 201 Grg. £683K: VV. H. 210 I II. F. f305: II. F . ll. 127 ! H. E . f378K: II. E . B. 114 I His. f315L.2: A. II. 105 His. f333M: G. H . I | His. TG 151 : Phv. B. 121 ' J . f329K: J . ll. 203 Lat. f507: G. II. 7 I {Ait. f408: G. If. 200 Lin . f672a.6: B atts H . 205 Lu S. f322T: W . H. 101 U S. f340.1: M ain ll. 311 M. £301.1: C. B. 218 M. f301 I'M : C. B.319 I M. f301 F.2 : Ben. l l . 106 M. f304.1: Ben. II. 15 i M. f204F: G. ll. I l l 1 M. f310L: Ben. H. 201 I M. ff>13a: Engl. B. 103 1 M. f6 1 3 Ea.l: Ben. H. 214 M. f3 2 1 K : Ben. II. 101 M. 1325.1: B. E . B . 112 M. f 3GOK.I : Ben. ll. 8 M. f3 6 0 L.l: Ben. II. 314 M. f360M .l: En g r. L. 102 M. f361K: lien. lf, 208 M. fac.4K I : Ben. H. 102 M. f 372: lien. I L 12 M. f 375.2: Ben. H. 104 M. f678a: Ben. II. 202 Man. f334: B. F. ll. I l l Man. £381: II. E . B. 409 Mic. fbi9a: E. Sc. ll. 22: Mio. £460: ll. L. 301 Mkt. £388: B. E . ll. 103 Mus. £612a: Mus. B. 106 Mug. 1379K.5: Mus. B. 300B Mus. £4S8a.l: Mus. B. 200 O. A. £304: B. F. ll. 2 O, A. £322: B. E . B. 104 P. Ed. £390: S. lf. 304 Phi. £356: En g l. B. 301 Phv. £801 a: Phv. B. 201 Phv. £335: Phv* ll. 313 Psv. £301 Kus, £406 Spe. £373 Soc. £322: G. I L 109 Spa. £407: Batts ll. IG I Spn. fa 12K.I: Batts If. 102 Spn. £3PJK.4: Batts I L 302 Spn, £327: Batts H. HO Sta. £432.1: B. E . B. 204 Zoo. £31 OK : E. Sc. B. 333 Zoo. f4G; M: E . Sc. B . 137 Batts Aud. Mezes ll. 104 B. E . ll. 107 I Bio. fG07a: A rt B. I Bio. £360: C. B . 313 B. L . f3 6 3 :B .E . 11.410 Ch. £3OOM: C. B . 315 Drm. £3.14: Drm. B. 114 Drm. f382: Drm. ll. 103 Drw. f201: Eng r. L. 408 E . £314K.l: E . Sc. B. 333 E . f314K.2: En g l. B. 203 E. £348: W . 11.201 E .f3 6 6 K : Engl. B. 3 Eco. f 302.3: B. E . B. 101 Eco. f 303.2: B. E . B. 2 Eco. £340K: ll. E . 15.211 Ed. A . f380L: S. H. 312 1 Ed. C, £332S.3: S. H. 304 Ed. C. f370E.1.2: S. H. 203 Ed. C. f370E.3.2: S. H . 101 E d .C . £371.1.10: Drm. B. 217 Ed. H. f361S: Ph y. B. 203 E d . P. f332S.4: A r t B . 4 Ed. P. £376S.2: S. H.210 Ed. P. £380G.2: S. H.204 Ed. P. £381.1: S. 11.227 E d . P. £38711.1: E n g l. B. 8A F r. f407: Batts ll. 205 Fr. f312K.2: Batts H. 302 F r. f324L: B atts IL 110 Ger. f312K: Batts H. 115 Ger. £314K: Engl. B. 201 i Gov. f321K: B. F . B. 105 Gov. f3 6 0 L: W . I L 302 I Grg. £324: W. lf. 210 ! H. E .f3 2 2 : H. E . II. 105 j His. f315K.3: Batts Aud. I His. £321 L : G. H. I 'H is . f355N: ll. E . B. I l l 1 His. fG83K : G . II. 109 I I. B. f370: B. E . B. 104 I ti. £406: Batts ll. 101 J . f333: J . B. 205 * Let. f 311.1: G. II . 215 I Lat. f 311.2: G. H.311 I Lat. £311.3: G. lf. l l I Lin. £672a.2: En g l. II. 8B M. f 301.2: Engl. II. 303 M. £301.3: Engl. B. 30G M. £30IE.3: ll. L. 301 M. £301E.4: En g l. B. 206 M .f3 0 lF .3 : Ben. H. 115 M. £303.2: Engl. B. 105 M. £303.3: En g r. L. 102 M. £305.2: B. E . B. 113 M. £305E.l: Ben. H. 214 I M. £305E.4: J . B. 203 ! M. £310K: G. H. 313 M . £613b: G. H . 309 M. £613Ea.2: Ben. I L 106 M. £613Eb.2: Hen. H. 202 I M. f613Eb.3: Ben. H. 101 M. f322K: Ben. H. IC I M. f326.1: Ben. II. 201 M. f 331: Ben. I I . 314 , M f360K.2: C . B. 319 , M. £360M.2: Ben. IL 12 M. f360N. I: Ben. II. 8 M. £362K : Ben. H. 15 I M. £373K: Ben. II. 208 M. £375.4: Ben. ll. 102 Man. f325: B. E . ll. 401 Mic. f330: F. Sc. ll 137 Mkt. £363: B. E . B. 205 Mus. £41 la : Mus. If. 106 Mus. f269L.9: Mus. ll. 205B , P. Ed. £333: S . H. 314 I Phi. £312: E . Sc. B. 223 Phv. £415: Phy. B. 201 Phv. f3 8 lM : Thy. ll. 313 Psy. £352: Phy. B. 121 Res. f370: ll. E . ll. 104 Rus. £312K: Batts I L 104 Spe. f 319: C. B. 218 Spe. £341: B. E . B. 107 Soc. f302.2: W . II. 101 Soc. £326: B. E . B. 16 Soc. £366: G. lf. 201 Spn. f ill2L .I : Batts H. 3IS Spn. f3 l2 L.2 : Batts lf. 307 Spn. £322K: Batts H. 202 Zoo. £327: E . Sc. B. 115 The C o O p is your fie-* d q u * rt* rt for exam supp e s — blue books, pencils, pens, C o lle g e O u tlin e Series, and aspirin • M S T U P I N ! s 0 * N S T0 « f Tuerday. July 6, 1965 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 6 S A T U R D A Y J u ly 17, 8-11 a.m . (Classes meeting M -F 7-8:30) THAT WHOOP-IT-UP FUNNY WESTERN! 'S p i r i t ' . . . terization. His most dram atic and effective scene was his phy­ sical struggle with his buddy Calico, played by Burl Hash, played lights in shadowy blue wih a fiery red background il­ luminating the Mexican Eldorado saloon. Haynes’ weakest moments, ironically, were spent with his adopted trom pers, Don Braswell as Deacon Fife and his niece Vera, played by Jessie F rances Winfree, two free-wheel­ trail these talking by ing souls both determined to set the boy in the righteous ways of three reality. The agony must have had the cam pfire or in the Bright Ken­ tucky Hotel w'as equaled only by bythe ungainly thud with which these scenes resounded through the audience. Each of these three actors ex­ pressed m eritable talent for en­ livening the characters they por­ trayed. The boisterous Deacon actually held the first few minu­ tes of the play, but, as with most of the acting, his speaking was too halted or too fast, and few together flowed well elem ents J a n e honda Lee M a r v in • N a t King Cole plus! 2nd H ILA R IO U S FEATURE Glenn Ford A d v a n c e t o t h e R e a r Melvyn Douglas O pen 1:45 F e a t : 2-4-6 8-10 S m o k i n g P e r m i t t e d F r e e P a r k i n g JAMES The O n l y Theatre in A ustin in W h i c h Y ou A r e M o r e C o m f o r t a b l e Than in Y o u r H o m e E x c l u d e I> ri\e In E n g a g e m e n t 6100 U n r in t Rd. O P E N 7 P .M . H O S-SS33 C H I L D R E N F E E K H E L D O V E R ! L A S T M T K ’ r** a) BALLOU vTvT.l " T h e S h o w Clare o f A u s t i n ” 2200 H a n c o c k Dr. On** Clock W e s t of H orn et KU. L L 8-6641 3rd WEEK SHENANDOAH' DOUG MCCIURE GLENN CORBETT MIRICK WRE if f i l KATHARINE ROSS-ROSfMAFY FOOT l ■ — ■■■■ ■ A UNIVERSAL PHU URE — J u FIRST AUSTIN S H O W IN G ! . ............................. f f c W lV Ic H A L E ’S crew takes Ll •'rtf to the air and the FU N is S K y - H I B H L A R t Q , ■ ' 'if M g I r/j More Exams F R ID A Y J u ly 16, 7-10 p.m. (C la sse s m eetin g in th e late a fte rn o o n ) L. S. f363: Main B.311 Acc. f611b: B .E .B .1 6 Acc. f 329: B. E. B. 302 Ch. f453: C. B. 218 D rw . f202: E n g r. L. 410 E d . A. f388L : S. 11.304 E d . C. f 3 3 2 S .l: S. H . 210 E d . C. 1370E .1.1: S. II. 101 E d . C. f370E .2: S. H. 203 E d . P . f3 6 2 T .l: S. H. 314 E d . P . f362T .2: S. H . 314 F in . f 354: B. E. B. IIG F in . f 357.1: B .E . B. 103 G er. f406.1: B a tts H. 105 G er. f4 0 7 : B a tts H . 307 H is. 1315K.1: G. H . I H is. f3 1 5 L .l: B. E . B. 101 In s. f 358: B .E . 15. 111 M. f3 0 1 E .l: Ben. II. 208 M. f303.1: Ben. H . IOO M. f3 0 4 E .l: Ben. ll. 202 M. f6 1 3 E b .l: Ben. II. 102 M. f333K : B en, H. 314 M. f 361.1: Ben. H . 8 M. f374: Ben. II. 115 P . E d. f3 5 0 E : S .H .2 0 4 P . E d . f390: S. ll. 312 Spe. f 3 H K : B .E . B. 2 Soc. f3 0 2 .1 : B .E . B. 105 SA T U R D A Y J u ly 17, 2-5 p.m. (C la sse s m eetin g M -F 2 :3 0 -1 ) A n t. f 379.2: B a tts II. 107 A st. 1308: P h y . B. 224 E . f314K .5: E n g l. B. 203 E . 1314K.6: E n g l. B. 201 E .f3 4 2 : B .E . 15. IGI E . f364L : B. E . B. IIG E d .C . f381 J : S. II. 314 E d. P. 1380P.2: S. II. 203 E d. P. f3 8 2 K .l: S. ll. 304 E d. P. f 383.7: S .H . 101 G er. f3 2 2 : B a tts H. 105 L. S. f340.2: M ain B.311 M us. 1302L : M us. B. 105 N O W ! AT 3 THEATRES F I R S T R F N , F A M I L Y F I N ALL C O L O R fin Mf>ixlcrm ll GM net* CAN YOU IMAGINE..,, TWOElffHMlS IN EVERY GARAGE Z f i TA ‘ I k m e tr o c o io r — PLUS! 2nd FEATURE Th** W o r l d ’s M ig h t i e s t M en HERCULES, SAMSON*. ULYSSES EASTMANCOLOR CHIEF D R U K IN Open 7 P .M . Air C o n d i t io n e d S n a c k B a r IO Z e b r a 8-11:30 H e r c u l e s F R E E R I D E S O N “ LLL T O O T ’ I. A S T N I T E ! AUSTIN T H E A T R E R o * O ff ic e O p e n s 1:45 Z e b r a — LOO - 5 :1 0 - 8 : 2 0 H e r c u l e s — 3 :33 - 6 :43 - 9 :5 3 DELWOOD IIRIX E LV R o * O ffic e O p e n s 6:30 Zebra— 8 - l l :30 H e n tiles— IO P .M . L A S T M T K ! fSisi :::: * » « w Their JST^ F O R C E They've got the Enemy ...and the W ACS ready to > S U R R E N D E R ! F U a - L t NGTH \ • fE A T U R t IN • iUCHHlCOLOR; . * * • * * * * ' * .................. * * * J!.*. TIM JOE CONWAY-FLYNN STARTS TOMORROW! — — — — — 2 THEATRES C H IE F DRIVE­ IN 5601 N. L A M A R B N AC K R A K ( I P I S S 7 P M. AUSTIN THEATRE 2130 S LO. N O R K U S B O X O F I ' I L L O P K . N S I 15 PM during any part of tho play. Playwright Downing should have used his well known talents as a stage m anager to perron e the brilliant satire of Western hfe he might have turned ‘ The Limbo Kid" that might have easily competed with the movie. "Cat Ballou," which was recently brought to Austin. into, a play Tillie, the ripe and ready m a­ tron of the Kentucky Hotel, play­ is a fine ed by Jane Caiman, satirical comedy, exam ple of George Morris won a warm hand for his clever portrayal of the baggage clerk of woes and r u i n and m isery, bloody destruction of tile railroad which was a m aster that kept hi m apart from people. "I'd r a ­ ther sweep out a whorehouse," he quipped because then be d have people to talk to. imagining that allowed Joe Tompkins designed a versa­ for a tile stage smooth transition from the often jumpy plot travels of The Limbo Kid. Robert Blackman, set designer for “ Blithe Spirit," employed a largely traditional setting. The living-room was complete with bookshelves, outfitted bar (heavi­ ly used by the edgy occupants), and a bien k of wall at the elevaf- c-d entrance that housed an ill- assortm ent of paintings which no doubt indicated the couple s j>oor taste. Tht terrace, was a place for breakfast to be ea te n , spirits to hide, and the zany M adame A rcate played by B arbara WIL Hams, to park her bicycle. J a c k Kilts a s C h arles, used ex­ p ressio n s an d m a n n e rism s vet v like David Kevins, the actor, as he portrays an agonized th ugh Janet light-hearted Slack as Ruth, his second wife, is a vain, shrewish, and jealous rival cf his fii*st m ate, Elvira. husband, in The humorous story evolves around someone the Condo- m ine's house who has p ro d u c ed Elvira's spirit, which only poor Charles can see. Elvira, player! by Gi\., Richardson provide*' her cwn devilment as she secretly Lies t< send her former spouse to her spirit world. "Blithe Jam es M artin directs IT ie and Dr. Angus Limbo Kid Springer .Spiiit." The plays will be produced on alter­ nate nights through July 13 sn tire Theater Room of the D ram a Building Admission to season ti Ret holders of the Sum­ m er I nti rtainm ent Series. f r e e is Adult# MIK C h i l d ...........L 2 5 ........ 65 ...................36 PARAMOUNT F E A I I It I Sr 12 MI ‘ 41^ MT '<» 9 Ti* 7 H e ld O v e r 2 r d W e e l d ^ B 2Cth C*' lucy Ton v —nm FRANK SINATRA TREVOR HOWARD ■ v o n u y a n S ■ E X P R E S S FREE PARKING AFTER 6 P M ON LOTS STATE 7th & LAVACA STS LAST DAY! THE TRAIN WILL CARRY YOU TO THE P E A K OF ADVENTURE! F E XI I I i i «T l l 5(1 ! lh 4 CC 7 15 ’J I i ~ JULES BACKEN I'M***' BURT LANCASTER ■n JOHN FRANKENUE/MER S THE TRAIN Adult* 1 S t u d e n t s M IK ( h ild r e n FREE PARKING AFTER 6 P M. O N LOTS VARSITY 7th I L A V A C A STS 1.25 J OO .65 . 35 I I. X'l I R f S t 1 :3 5 1 :4* *. i t 7 VO ‘j 4 BARGAIN DAY A I L til S E A T * I ’ M 7 75c She gave men a taste of life that made them hunger for more! ELIZABETH TAYLOR RICHARD BURTON EVA MARE SAMI sjm * mA WF M i k WW! eetOdfY»©0&t0* a im*' n aANfOHdW x rscoucTW* R I ( O M Mf*. M H D L O R M I T I RI XI OI I V O S NO I fill Hilt VS fit hi Is SUI I* FREE PARKING AFT!* 6 P M ON LOTS ADJACENT TO THEATRE Tuesday, July 6. 1965 THE S U M M E R T EX AN Page 7 Dr. L European Dramatists Praised by Professor Symphony to Play Wednesday Night Dr. George Trautwein, a m em ­ ber of the m u s i c departm ent sum m er faculty, will conduct the Summer Symphony in an all o r ­ chestral program at 8 p m. Wed­ nesday in Recital Hall Music Building. THE 60-PIECE orchestra will play "Prelude and Fugue in D Minor” by Hantlel-Kindler, ‘‘Ru­ manian Dances” by H a r t o k, “ Night on Band Mountain” by Mussourgsky, and two selections from the Berlioz works, “ D am na­ tion of F au st,” “ Dance of the Sylphes,” and “ Rakoczy M arch.” Dr. Taurtwein, currently asso­ the Dallas ciate conductor of Symphony Orchestra, has a p ­ peared in Salzburg, the N ether­ lands, Detroit, Oberlin, Cleve­ land, and Oklahoma City. THE CONCERT Is part of the Summer E ntertainm ent S e r i es free to ticketholders. Non season ticket holders m ay purchase a d ­ mission at the door at $1 for adults, 25 cents for children. returned BV MARTHA DOWNING Assistant Amusement Editor Just from spending the spring sem ester in Europe. Dr. I» re n Winship, chairm an of the dram a departm ent, could not have been more enthusiastic about his travels and studies. “WE, MY wife and myself, tr a ­ veled in 17 European countries, excluding those behind the Iron Curtain and Turkey and P ortu ­ gal, where I studied the college level educational theatre pro­ gram s.” He found that most col­ lege level European theatre was extra-curricular, the United Kingdom and Finland had curricular program s s im ila r to the system in the United States. The US has had a college cu rri­ cular program since 1914, but that only SHOPPERS M ATINEE 5 0 c W E E K D A Y S ’TIL 12:45 Trial by Jury* Wednesday In Texas Union “ Trial by Ju ry ,” a 90 m inute film re-cnacting a complete m ur­ der trial, will be W’ednesday’* cinema classic in the Texas Un­ ion Auditorium. THE FII JVI was produced by the Austin Junior B ar Associa­ tion in cooi>eration with KLRN- TV. It is based on the trial record of a December, 1955, felony pro­ secution in a Dallas County Cri­ m inal District Court. F rank J. Maloney Jr., Univer­ sity professor of law, compiled the m aterial for the film, and Byron F. Fullerton, assistant dean of the School of Law, di­ rected it. THE PURPOSE of “ Trial by Ju ry ” is to dem onstrate in an a r ­ resting, but accurate m anner, the process of crim inal jurisprudence in Texas, illustrating the accus­ ed’s safeguards, the sta te ’s burden of proof, and other elements of crim inal pro­ cesses in the United States. constitutional The film was videotaped a t the studios of RLRN a t the Univer­ sity. There will be no charge for admission. Showings will be at 5, 6:35, 8:10, and 9:45. On Thursday Maloney will dis­ cuss the film at the Texas Un­ ion’s Sandwich sem inar, at noon in the Union Junior Ballroom. I I ORIVE •in THEATRE RE 13901 tat An. knj BOX O F F IC E O P E N 6:30 N O W SH O W IN G ZEBRA IN THE KITCHEN Ja y North A A ndy D ev in e 8:00 — P L I S — HERCULES, SA M SO N and ULYSSES Kirk Morris A ltirhard L loyd 9:40 B EG IN S W E D N E S D A Y M AJOR DUNDEE Charlton H eston A D iehard Harris 8:00 — P L U S — THE OUTLAWS IS C O M IN G T he T hree S to o g es 10:15 O R IV E * IN TH EA TRE 3900 So. Conf B o * Office Open 6:30 N ow S h o w in g : DEAR HEART Glenn Ford A Geraldine Pax© 3:00 — P L U S — ROBIN & THE SEVEN HOODS F r a n k S inatra A Binit Crosby 10:00 B E G IN S W E D N E S D A Y THE GIRL HUNTERS S k ir t e r K . t o n * S lic k e r S p i l l . . . — P L I S — NIGHTMARE IN THE SUN Urania Andre** 4k J o h n D er ek 9:45 B E G IN S S U N D A Y mIrssch COMPANY rn nun JOHN STURGES’, JAMES . STIVE MCQUEEN GARMER ATTENBOROUGH COLOR ; « N f t V I S W I SITJZ RICHARD current work, a revival from the middle ages, in Europe has all been developed within the last five years. Elizabeth I had edu­ cational in Oxford and Cambridge, but not theatre in the m odem sense. Educational thea­ to a departm ent of ter refers dram a program with training in the fields of dram a. theatre and physical DR. WINSHIP visited colleges, and attended festivals where as many as 28 plays from different countries would be performed. He noticed their program s, pur­ facilities. poses, Staging from productions in the lobby of one university to Helsinki, Finland, at the University of Finland, four million dollar where theater as large as the p arlia­ m ent building is being built. facilities ranged a subsidize THE UNIVERSITY of Finland works in collaboration with the National Theatre which is govern­ ment subsidized. Most European governments t h e i r theatres and exercise no control w hatever over the arts. “ Ridicu­ lous, not to have government as­ sistance in these areas. I t’s like asking the farm ers or oil indus­ try or education not to have government assistance,” he said. Back to d ram a: Dr. Winship educational noticed the theatre in England is more sim i­ lar to ours in the United States, that mainly because most often edu­ cational theatre in Europe is out­ side the university program . He says that we have a wonderful program here at the University, well supported by the adm inistra­ tion and the students. The thea­ ter of European schools is inade­ quate because it is extra-curricu­ lar, but the professional theaters are excellent. IN ADDITION to dram a, Dr. and Mrs. Winship saw as much art, architecture, and music as they could during their travels. He was particularly im pressed by cathedrals, where he noticed the rich tradition and historical background in their construction. It took as m any as 300 to 400 years to build most of them, with their complicated arches, rich details, and individuality. Two of the most beautiful that he com­ m ented on w ere the cathedrals in Chartres, F rance; in Welles, England, which had enormous Gothic arches. and “To make our program here m ore enriching and interesting to the students, as a result of my is Dr. Winship’s only studies,” purpose. Of the attitudes of the European people toward him, he I smiled, “They were marvelous people, courteous, cordial, inter­ ested in A m ericans; they went out of their way to help.” Young Performers To Display Talents Talented young actors, design­ ers, and stage technicians will display their skill in two produc­ tions which will end the D epart­ ment of D ram a High School Theater Workshop. On Tuesday, at 8 p.m. and on Wednesday at 2:30 p.m ., these young perform ­ ers will present productions of the C at” and “ Mad- “H arker woman on Chaillot” in the D ra­ Laboratory m a D epartm ent Theatre, west of the D ram a Building. “ Madwoman of Chaillot” by Jean Giraudoux, Hie opening play on this double-bill, is directed by B. Wayne Pevey. The prem iere the new play, perform ance of “ H arkee the Cat,” by Cleve Hau- is directed by Roy M. bold, Brown. Brown is executive di­ rector of the workshop program . for both plays are by Lynn M urray. Costume designs by Jo Conrad Tips. LIGHTING and settings Cast for “ Madwoman” fea­ tures Sara Prindle, Janis Giesec- ke, Irene Hodgson, Beth Boles, K arl Proctor, Paula Graves, Bucky Wilkinson, Philip Wagner. Je rry Rossing, and Jim Billings­ ley. Also Toni Jam es, Ricci H arris, M ari lee Sennett, Ken Skinner, Diane Hester, and Jeri Mahan. CAST FO R “ H arkee the Cat” features Lynn Malone, Leslie Blankenfield, Jay Johnson, Dave Thomason, Elida Hadgson, Jim ILedbetter, Tom Swinney, E arl Proctor, Betty G arrison, Cathy WTard, Leslie Hahn, Bride Doyle, Jim Billingsley, and Je rry Ross­ ing. No admission charge is made to the public. tv ed n e sd a y thursday june 30 A July I m onday tuesd ay ju ly 5 A < thnrton w ild e r ’* Childhood harold p in te r ’a A Slight Ache performance 8:30 p.m. 50c students $1 non-students ICHTHUS Summer Theatre Methodist Student Center M ATINEE ('Iii I ti ii f>(k’ Ntutlt-nta 75c Adult* $1 (HI — EVEN INGS A N D — SATURDAY & SU N D A Y C h ild ren f>0c Student* $1 OO A dults $1.25 THE SCREEN’S MOST EXCITING CAST IN THE YEAR’S MOST MAGNIFICENT M O V IE . . IkMtlillll: REMAN * REX HARRISON ALAIN DELON ■ GEORGE C. SCOTT JEANNE MOREAU ■ OMAR SHARIF SHIPLER MacLAINE EVERYTHING HAPPENS IN AND B I G A R T CARNEY WM IV COX JOYCE GRENFELL MOIRA LIST ER* EDMUND PURDOM s ™ * TERENCE RATTIGAN « I ; ANTHONY ASQUITH '*>«£? ANATOLE DE GRUNWALD STARTS s t a r t s T O M O R R O W ! In Panavislon’ and MetrcCOLOR W F g m a m A V S T A T E Tuesday, July 6, 1965 THE SU M M ER TEXAN Page 8 To Kill a Crow, a Symbolic Sand Trap one of a flock of metaphors in ‘'Woman in the Dunes," now at the Texas The at er . Summer Texan Classified Ads Furnished Apartm ents Furnished Apartm ents For Rent W a n t e d T y p in g Arf Exhibits Cover Wide Talent Range 4 Jk Art exhibits on current display % in the Art Building Museum range [from Yugoslavian prints to Chi­ lean and Texas artistry. ON THE FIRST floor hallway is a selection of IOO contempora­ ry prints from 26 Yugoslavian ar­ tists, shown under the sponsor­ ship of the Oregon State Univer­ sity Memorial Union. The collec­ tion includes lithographs, wood­ cuts, and wood engravings. Kelly Fearing, professor of art, has illustrated with 21 pen and ink drawings a satire by Ju an Jose Arreola, “ Confabula- rio and Other Inventions.” These are being shown in the mezza­ nine gallery with a copy of the book, published by the Universi­ ty of Texas Press. The book was translated by Dr. George D. Schaed Jr., associate professor of Romance languages. ALSO on the mezzanine are works of Guillermo Nunez, a Chilean who began his serious work six years ago. Nunez says that . . painting is a dialogue or a discussion, never a dead symbol: something moving, stirring, that g<**> and comes between the artist ami spectator, recreating in the sam e instant the pain, anguish, vio­ lence.” His paintings are often violent, sensual, impressive. The “Twenty-sixth Annual Tex­ as Painting and Sculpture Exhi­ bition in I he main floor gallery includes 55 works such as col­ lages, assemblies, metal stabiles, and oil paintings. FACULTY MEMBERS repre aented included George A. Bo­ gart, Bill Hoey, and form er stu­ dents El Blackburn, Jam es M. Colley, Otis Niles, Stephen T. Rascoe, and Jerry Seagle. The exhibit is sponsored by the Dallas and Houston museums of fine art. V " V illa 52” 1307 E a s t 52nd Villa A n i t a ” 1909 A n ita Dr. O n e-tw o a ir -c o n d i tio n e d b e d ro o m u n it s $65-$tl(> R e s e rv a tio n s t a k e n H I 2-0995 S H O A L C R E E K A P T S . L a r g e I n d iv i­ I b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t s . d u a l A /C . F u r n i s h e d , c a r p e t e d , patio. C o n t a c t M g r .: 1008 W. 25th., A pt. C. G R 6-25*17. C O L O N IA L M A NO R 1212 W E S T 13T H O ne a n d tw o bed ro o m s. sic Air c o n d it io n e d * C a r p e te d C a r p o r t :1c L a u n d r y facilities * S t o r a g e a r e a sk W a t e r - g a s paid * $79 50 $110 OR 2-4838. GR 8 3671 V LA F I E S T A A P T S -409 E. SOTH tw o BR, bu ilt-in tw o B a t h s each. L u x u r i o u s L R . DR. s e p a r a t e k itc h e n , l o u n g e , pool. A /C . c a r p e t i n g , built-in c h e sts, w a lk -i n clo sets, p a rk i n g . A vail­ a b l e u n ti l S ep t. I. H A W T H O R N E A P T S . 3413 L eo n GR 6 9324 b u ilt-in k it c h e n , tw o b e d r o o m s LR- T o w n - H o u s e s t y le p ri v a te p a tio f ) R . M a i d fu r n is h e d . A /C . c a r p e t in g , p a rk i n g , access to pool. A v a ila b le u n ti l Sept. I. b e a u ti f u l ly service, T A R R Y t o w TX g a r a g e a p a r t m e n t A U, $75.00. bills paid. P r e f e r 2 m en. CRT -7123 a f t e r five week davs, I b e d ro o m , $70. A IR -C O N D IT IO N E D g a s - w a t e r paul. 2810 P e a rl , n e a r U n i­ v e r s ity . GR 2-3993. E v e re tt GR 7-6928 D A R L IN G A P T S F O R T IN Y B U D G E T S $59. Sd $79 50 Clean. Quiet. S o m e A /C M o d e r n P le n t y clo sets. N ice a p p li a n c e s $49.50 Gas W t r P d 908-F W est 22nd $52 50 G as-W t r P d 2011 R e d R iv e r $59.50 Gas W t r P d 908-A W e st 22nd (So. e n t r a n c e $69.50 1908-F S p e e d w a y $79 50 Bills P d 1801 N iles R o ad ( E n ­ $79 50 Gas-W tx P d 3205 D G ro o m s $79.50 40*0 B u rn e t R oad O BE N G R 2-0952 I D R YOUR IN S P E C T IO N GR 8-8935 G R 8-6881 WA L K TO U N IV E R SIT Y , furnished I b e d ro o m $60 u ti li ti e s p a id TH) W. F j L GR 2-3993. E v e re tt. G R 7-6928 A p t 2 clow n 1 f ie ld ) B e a u ti f u l B R I A R C L I F F M A N O R 1107 S h o a le r e e k 8 B locks UT & C ap ito l C e n tr a l h e a t a n d a i r All bills p aid S u m m e r r a t e s —$105 I b e d ro o m G lass— P r i v a t e P a t i o - C a b le TV S p a c io u s Q u ie t - L u x u r y L ivin g P l e n t v P a r k i n g S t u d e n t s W elc o m e GR 8-8935 Mgr. Apt. 105 G R 2 0952 C A V A L IE R A P T S . 307 K. L ist S I M M E R R A T E S tw o f u r n is h e d L a r g e B e a u ti f u ll y apts. A /C l a u n d r y . M aid Off s t r e e t p a r k i n g . A v a ila b le J u l y and seco nd s u m m e r session. b e d r o o m C a b le TV. se r v ic e I j a n i t o r pool a n d $37,50-560.00 m o n t h l y per p e rs o n A L L B I L L S P A I D re s e r v a ti o n n ow M ak e voui G R 2-7611 f o r G R 8-3336 fall N E A R U N I V E R S I T Y , M o d e r n A /C 2 I bed O L 3 5314. GR 6- bed ro om , 2-106 Rio G r a n d e r o o m 702 W. 24 3711. A IR -C O N D IT IO N E D p an e le d I b e d ­ ro o m a p a r t m e n t $74 50 2 b e d ro o m c a r p e t e d . $120 tx). Gas w a t e r . 1102 W, 22nd. GR 8-9125. I B I2 JC K W A L K to c a m p u s N ice A /C efficiency . $80 p e r m o n th . W a t e r - g a s p aid L a v in d a A p ts. 2 0th a n d S ab in e. GR 2-8648, H I 2-8438 ed, d j f / e t e n t . O n e O V E R L O O K IN G C IT Y , L A K E S e c lu d ­ jnjom e l f k l e n c i R e f r i g e r a t e d A /C u ti li ti e s paid $07 50 GR 2-1639, A fte r 6 pm w e e k d a y s 2711-2721 H e m p h i l l P a r k O ne B e d r o o m C a r p e t e d P a n e le d S w i m m i n g P ool A ir C o n d itio n e d W a te r - G a s i»aid S t o r a g e S u m m e r $79 50 G R 2-5742 GR 7-1637 F a l l $89 50 GR 2 4838 B L O C K FR O M C A M P U S r a te s . A p a r t m e n t Also facilities c o o k in g S peed wav. G R 8-1039. F o r w o m e n. S u m m e r ro o m w ith 2618 2300-04 E n fie ld R o a d . A ir c o n d itio n e d , q u ie t, clean, l a r g e o n e b e d r o o m b rick a p a r t m e n t , n ic e ly f u r n i s h e d s e p a r a t e beds, if d e sire d , la r g e closet*, e x t r a r o l l-a w a y beds, c o m b i n a t i o n living d in i n g ro o m s, c a r p o r t , o n bus or 8 m i n u te s to U T in c ar. I p p e r o r low er. Id eal for U T c o u p le s N o pets P e r m a n e n t l y r e d u c e d r e n t $ 7 5 $ 8 o r less for lo n g t e r m lease. GR 2-5502 C A L L G R I -S244 F O R A C L A S S IF IE D A D Furnished A p a r t m e n t s THE BLACKSTONE APARTMENTS FOR MEN & W O M E N O F F E R I N G pTvacy & Sound Proofing Air CondiHoning All Bills Paid Exce';erC Study Facilities * Ample O f f Stree4 Parking * C om plete Kitchens * Pr va4e Balconies * M aid Service C R E A M P U F F ! 6 a u t o m a t i c lest w > ( k Mov m g w f« * 53 C hevy c o n v e r t ) bl* r a d i o n y lo n l o p valv* 3 308 jo b 1 IR HW cod (IL 2-3540 * 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath Apartments s u m m e r r a t e s — $43,00 Per Month 29 IO Red River G P 6 5 fc 3 I R ent a T V . $10 15 p* r m o n t h GR 2 2692. LAKE. A U ST IN New hath b e d ro o m , tw o f u r n is h e d tw o home C e n tr a l air D o c k . $200. HO 5*5220. G R 7-7830 IN MY H O M E a t t r a c t i v e l y f u r n i s h e d b e d r o o m K itc h e n p riv ile g e s. S h a r e liv in g - d i n i n g te l e p h o n e All bills p aid $ 15 OO G R 6-9930 te le v is io n a r e a Furnished Rooms $35 D E L I G H T F U L B ED R O O M P r i ­ v a t e e n tr a n c e . P r i v a t e bath. R e frig p r a t e r M o d ern C le a n Q uiet 1906 S a n G a b rie l. G R 7-8158. GR 2-0952. F O R F A L L . U n u s u a lly l a r g e A / C ro o m tw o m en s t u d e n t s . P r i v a t e en f o r tr a n c e . W a lk i n g d is ta n c e . GR 8-4228 AC ACIA F R A T E R N I T Y M en E x c e lle n t R o o m s for $45, s e m e s t e r A ir -C o n d itio n e d F ully C a r p e t e d P o r t e r S e rv ice 2611 R io G r a n d e GR 2-5118 IO 30-1 Or* R o o m s for Rent Call b e tw e e n or a f t e r J In F E M A L E L O O K IN G F O R r o o m m a t e G r a d u a t e s t u d e n t w o r k i n g g ir l. A /C Sw im m in g pool. $'»5. I b e d ro o m . GR 6 8648 ley H O S E S r . n o i t * . feat service G L 3-8848 Mrs B rad ­ P A P E R S T E R M M isce lla n e o u s j W a t e r m e l o n g a r d e n i S p r i n g s R oad 1404 Barter! Ice c c id w a t e r m e l o n - serv ed d a lly e x c e p t S a tu r d a y P R E V E N T H O T W E A T H E R I n s p e c t i o n w i t h o u t o b l i g a t i o n tr o u b le ( ' e m r a d i a t o r service, ACE R a d ia t o r Ltlete W o r k s . 5209 A ve nu e F. O L 2 1685 BISTATE S A L E , Books oil p a i n t i n g s , C h a r le s A rro w o o d e s t a te . 912 B razos ! F r i d a y . S a t u r d a y . 9 3 -lo G R 8-2127. G ER M A N T U T O R I N G b v M A $3 in p e r h o u r. G r o u p of four $1 on GI, 2 9850 Printing i A R T I S T I C . A C C U R A T E T Y P I N G . B r i e f s r e p o r ts , t h e s e s dis e r t a t m n * . m a n u s c r ip t s . t y p e w r i t e r Mix. A n th o n y , N o r t h e a s t U n lvers tv GR 4- 1202. IBM R E P O R I S. I U L S E S I K ’-M It i IKONS i b m M rs. B r a d y . Z U ? O id ­ ium*. G R . L IS E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T Mrs Mome­ yer, I3u9 R idgem ont, G L . Bi LUX P L R I E N C ED T Y P I N G S E R ' ICE* n e a r Allan- re a s o n a b le , A c c u ra te , dale. HO 5 5813 I V P I N G tr ic b rin p a p e r* tv p e w n t c r G L 3-7979 these* Elec­ E x p e r t ice T h e m e s ty p in g . P e r s o n a liz e d , faut t o r v- th eses. r e p o r t s briefs Mrs M o n t g o m e r y GR 2-5601 A L D R I D G E T Y P I N G SERV ICE 3 0 4 1 j E 30th S t r e e t ! GR 7 1696 G R 6 0367 W E D D I N G m< nta, I N V I T A T I O N S - a n n o u n c e - an d c a ll in g c a r d s r e p r e s e n t a t i v e S tu d e n t of N a tio n a l E n g r a v in g C o m p a n y . G R T <>892 l e t t e r h e a d s s t a ti o n e r .’. A L D R I D G E T Y P I N G SERV U K j w*4 » E A ith S tr e e t • IR 6 1696 GR 6 9167 T e c h n ic a l p ap ers a spccialtv Ck * r e x t r a w m o o Is on o u r tive* for science m atii s a n d tith i n g a n d bin d in g . E x e c u ­ e n g i n e e r i n g m x th e - nult$> l a n g u a g e . D r a f t i n g I B M $35 00 D E L I G H T F U L B E D R O O M ITi P r i v a t e bath R e frig v a t e e n tra n c e Sa b r lei G R T H 58. GR 2 <>'52 *r a t o r M odern. C lean Quiet 1906 S a n H e lp W a n t e d T u r n y o u r c a s h CIL 2-0806 s p a r e h o u r s in t o e x t r a Mi J L T I L I T H ING. MIMEOGRAPHING X e r o x i n g T h e s e P ap er* P r i n t i n g AUS T E X D U P L I C A T O R S I* last l i t h P h o n e GR 6 6593 400 D O R M IT O R Y M A N A G E R Furnished H o u s e s d o r m i t o r y c o u p le w a n t e d to m a n a g e S t u d e n t m e n s a p a r t m e n t plus salarv W r i t e s t a t i n g a g e e d u c a t io n q u a l i f i e s an d Bons Daily r e x a n Box D I Unlver sitv S ta t io n . e x p e rie n c e b u r n i s h e d N E E D T W O C O L L E G E M E N m aim * n a m e w o rk in r e t u r n to d o for a p a r t m e n t ren t C all G R 6-563:1 For Sale 15 J u iv C e n t r a l T H R E E B E D R O O M H O U S E a v a i l a b h he at 12 m in F e n c e d y a r d . E le c t r ic u tes a p p r a i s e d c a m p u s . F U A S m a ll dew n pay m e n t o r r e n t fo r $125 per m o n th . C L 2-1695 a i r rang* fro m a n d i% 2 F O R D Ct N V E R T T B L E R a d io pow c f sir* r i n g b ra k e s Pow h e a t e r e r w in d o w s , p o w e r s e a t s GU 34539 M O T O R C Y C L E , 1964 N o r t o n A tla s 75o c t . N e a rly now c o n d i t i o n (2(* ** mi t. $800 GR 74011. A IR C O N D I T I O N E D F O R D 1961 Ga fo r d o r. h a r d t o p L o a d e d Air a v ie p o w e r now . $895. O L 3-2597 a f t e r 5 R T I M u s t a u t o m a t i c sell 24mm 1SOO W E S T R O G U N $(t>* 35m m I .ens fo r E x ak -<.nde A u to Q u in a r o n $98 list. New ta C a m e r a 35% o ff lio n D r I, B o n to n G U . 3658 It. G U IT A R AM R L I I I F R $106 2 « hann*-ls s p e a k e r 12 Verbratr* Ton*. j R epo rt* , p a p e r s . X e r o x copies. GR 8-5894 S H O R T O N T Y P I N G T I M E ? Mias ».re bam, G L 3-5725. FAC I L T Y - S T U D K N T I R < 4 I .SNB'N A L T Y P I N G S E R VTG* tv n l n g Q u a lif ie d *>v w id e 1 'o u ip e t < nt ivt-r!,!* ii a n d n< * .I < * • i>y-* tic ti • eons* te n t iou* h a n d l i n g o f ev ery 'ti* Hiding m u l t i.tithing and photo Mg. t h e s e s and r e p o r t* P e rs o n (H-i an* *• Man user! pts fe r d e 40uQ B u r n e t R o a d R e c e n tly $79.50 D A R L IN G Kl R N I S H K D H O M E redeem r a t e d M od ern . Clean. Q uiet. G R S 8935 GR 8-6881 $90 N E A R U N I V E R S I T Y B u rn 2 b e d r o o m h o u s e A < l i v e l y van) 2819 Pearl. GR 2 3993. Ev e r e t t , GR 7 6928 T y p in g D I S S E R T A T I O N S T H E S E S . MOOK: C o r r e c t l y a n d s k i ll f u ll y u p< d full t i m e s in c e 1961, Sy rn bol - eq u * ppe4 e . e c t r i Bour bio* k s w . s t o f p r i g M A R T H A ANN ZIV Li TY M R A. T y p i n g . M uitU it lung, B in d in g t a i l o r e d t y p i n g serv A c o m p l e t e p r o f e s s i o n a l ice th e n e e d s of Univ* r s ity s t u d e n ts . Sp<-*ir ianguag*'. science, a n d en gi n e e ri n g tn e s e s a n d d.s e r t a t l o n s . to P h o n e GR 2 3210 A- GR 2 7677 JC 13 G U A D A L U P E F A S T K F F B IK N T E ast Kinta Black I ! ' n 4‘* 'I • i*'phone G R 6-1936. Vir S E R V K L T H E M E S R E P O R T S, L A W rn t. s. 25*. page. M rs F r a s e r . (IR 61317. VIRG IN IA C A LH O U N TYPING SERV CE in P r o f e s s i o n a l w o r k In e lu d i n g m u l t o , t n i n g a n d b in d i n g on the**-* and d is s e rt a ti o n * 13*92 Edgew *»*k1 S y m b o l* GR ^ 2636 N o t a r y fields a I T Y P I N G O N E P E N N Y p e r lin e G D 2 69< e- T Y P I N G . D is s e r ta t io n * P ie * o r '•-ai bon r i b b o n ) , Mrs. W oods 1078. I. I II. AI ll L D T Y P I N G S E R V report! exp*-n e nee U T g rad ua l* d i s s e r t a t i o n s , T h e se * I K 15 30® y e a r s P*g.- up. Ill 2-6522. P I N G W A N T E D B rie f s di ions, c o m m e n ts . E xp orter. *-d ta b l e 2 9 r a t e s lo a f t e r 6 J u a n i t a G a l l • r t a - Re*fc« ib elL P R O F I C I E N T A ND VE JtY EX P i . ft 11 NU j; d T Y P I N G SEP.1 U / R A L L F I E L D S t y p i n g an d p e r s o n a Ii/c d eons*-tent iou* IBM E le c t ro -m a ti c — d is tin c tiv e , r a t *■ t> I B R U ES, s e m i n a r p a p e r s a sp* R ep o rt* d i a l e r t a t ions. pap*-rs X ero x copies, s e c r e t a r y th* s. * IC I C f ' H .A L * rr a T el h S E S, D ISS F R T A X I GNS IB M S*-le*-trlc S v m b o c-ngin* 1 c I * ti c; e m a t h e m a t i c s P O R T S Rk> f o r r in g . nt* G ree k. C evil < ,P. FA? r AC* U R A T E T Y P I N G IBM Kx- v* ith r?s M rs F o w .e r. G L E x p e fl e n c e * u t ive E lectric these* b riefs 3 865* G u a r a n t e e d ••• Tuesday, July 6, 1965 T H E S U M M E R T E X A N Page 9 Television to Link Law School, Court television system Final adjustm ents on a closed- linking cii ult Fnivor tty law classes and five Travis County district courts are being m ade this summer. Com­ pletion is expected by September. THE TELEVISION installation in each of the five courtrooms autom atic will wide angle view cam era, slightly l a r g e r than a cigar box, m ount­ ed on the rear wall. No techni­ cians will tx* present in the court­ room. c o n s is t of an The ju d g e will have control of the on am i-off switch during the proceedings; indicator light on tho judge’s bench will show when the cam era Is o j h t- atmg. and an the Microphone's previously in use on the judge’s bench and Witness stand will be utilized, and two new microphones have lwH*n placed on the counsel tables. Chiv nor Kendall, Austin attor­ ney who serves as visiting pro­ fessor on the law school faculty, Is the project’s originator. He be­ gan studies of the plan in 1959 and has been working with W. P age Keeton, dean of the law' schools, since that time. Techni­ cal arrangem ents h a v e been the Department of handled by the de Radio Television under ruction of Noyes W. Willett, chief engineer. CRIMINAL ANI) CIVIL dis triet court cases will be televis­ ed. says Keeton. Some will be live presen ta tions, and others will tx? on video tape to perm it editing and use at specific class times. The closed-circuit trans­ missions will be used to instruct in trial practices and to perm it judicial evaluation of student procedures under the guidance of experienced lawyers. the In view of the Supreme Court televising of the ruling on Billie Sol Estes trial. Je rre S. Williams, Rex G. Baker profes­ sor of law, has m ade a study of the project at the request of Dean Keeton. W I L L I A M S SAYS the law school s proposed telecasting a p ­ pears to tx* constitutional because of its limited purpose, the unob­ trusiveness of the equipment to be used, and the stipulation that the consent of the judge, prose­ cution. and defense will be ob­ tained before any trial Is tele­ vised. “ Tile distinction must be drawn television between closed circuit for instructional purposes . . and tile general broadcasting to a large audience for news and com m ercial p u rp o ses/’ Williams pointed out. . GUMA USTHjubd MOMOGOttZH) vhammo m il k reach for the brand TO BUY RENT SELL TRADE HIRE USE The SUMMER TEXAN TV Cam era Peers at Courtroom . . . law school viewing will proceed as planned. T 'van P h o to Jo h n so n In Courtroom Dramas Television's Rights Curtailed By SAM KEACH Tex&n Staff Writer The recent United States Su­ prem e Court decision dealing with the televising of court trials has caused a great amount of discussion across the country and on the University cam pus. ON JUNE 7. the Court re- T h e s o s — H is s e r ! iii io n s 2013 G uadalupe GR 2 3210 or GR 2-7677 Experienced typists Meticulous ai tent ion to detail. Surprisingly reasonable rales. No delay- No excuses! T y p in g — I he es mats — - Printing — B inding T y p in g versed the Texas court’s convic­ tion of Billie Sol Estes for swind­ the the grounds ling on that televising of trial violated the E ste s’ right to “a fair trial un­ der the due process of law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.” At the trial, which began Oct. 22, 1962. in Tyler, only the open­ ing and closing statem ents of the state, the reading of the verdict, and its receipt by the judge were carried live with sound. the The high court’s decision said nothing about still news photog­ raphy of trial. THE CXH!RT SPLIT 5-4 on the decision, with one justice voting with the majority, but not ac­ c e p te e the m ajority position. The m ajority opinion was that the rights of the acc u s'd were violated whether or not actual prejudice against him was shown in his particular case. The justices four dissenting said that actual prejudice must he shown before it would be a violation of constitutional Ills rights. Justice Harlan voted with tho m ajority but said the decision should be limited to “notorious” crim inal cases. The four other m embers of the m ajority were Chief Justice War­ ren and Justices Clark, Douglas, and Goldberg. The dissenting justices were Stewart, Black, Brennan, and White. Je rre S. Williams. Rex G. Bak­ that in er professor of there are critical elements the case: law, says • “This was a crim inal casrt. took place • “The televising over the objections of the defend­ ant. • “This was a notorious, wide­ ly publicized case. • “The televising was a gen­ eral broadcast to a large audi­ ence for news and entertainm ent purposes and commercially spon­ sored.” Dr. Norris G. Davis, pro­ fessor of journalism and author of “Tile Press and the I .aw in Texas,” th* took exception latter, saying that “ a fallacy” in involved th at trials are carried for “ com m er­ cial put poses.” judgment the to in “ What is really involved is tho right of the people to know—not the rights of the media which help them to know,” he said. that an im-_ portant point in the decision y if the televising takes place over the objections of the defendant. Williams argues He says that sometimes the televising can put the case “ in proper perspective.” THE COURT ARGUED that the m ere presence of television cam ­ eras and equipment in the court room tends to sensationalize th* case. if in that reasoning Davis said he felt that this was it faulty were a sensational case the pres­ ence of a crowd and the state­ ments of the prosecutor would let the jury know the im portance of the case. “YOU CIT OUT PUBLICITY of trials, and the rumors are go­ ing to be a lot worse,” he said. l\f+$day, July 6, 1965 THE S U M M E R T EX A N P$9® 1^ HAMILTON'S POOL - RECREATION AT ITS BEST Sw im m ing — Picnicing — H iking H g w y 290 (South Lamar) to Oakhill — H g w y 71 past Trading Post M/2 mile* to H am ilton Pool Road. 40c per person HAMILTON'S POOL CO 4-1975 DO YOU HAVE A VACANCY FOR THE FALL SEMESTER? Let the CLASSIFIED SECTION of the NEW STUDENTS' EDITION of the Summer Texan help you... The N E W S T U D E N T S ' E D IT IO N will be m ailed to the homes of approxim ately 7,000 new stu­ dents. Y o u r m essage can go too. 7,000 potential advertising impressions for one dollar.* F R ID A Y , A U G U S T 20 Remember . . . 7,000 N E W S T U D E N T S as close as your telephone — O N E C A L L — G R 1-5244 Deadline for the N E W STUDENTS' E D IT IO N - Wednesday, August 18 at 3:30 p.m. * I colu mn x I -inch— e r e time Tuesday, July 6 , 1965 THE SU M M ER TEXAN Page ll Feast' Review Today D r. W illiam J. Handy asso- ■ talc professor r>f English will rn view and discuss E rn est H em ­ ingw ay’s ‘ A M oveable F e a s t'' a t I p m. Tuesday in Union B uild­ ing 301. the Is ’ A M oveable F east e a rlie r story of H em ingw ay’s y e a rs and contains m any ac- < ounis of his relationships with such w riters as F . Scott F itz ­ gerald. Gertrude? Stein and E zra Pound. The review is free to th * pub­ lic-. ★ En gin eer Wives to Meet The EngiIHM*r Wivers i lab will ice cream Mex ia! ai the of Mrs. H ums Epp- hold an 7:15 p.m. Thursday at home wright, 231’! Indian Trail. Wives of all engineering stu­ dents are invites!. ★ D e v e l o p m e n t ’ Talk Set D evelopm ent Sem inal -students the Austin U rban will m eet a t R enew al Agency, till VV. Sixth S t , at 2:30 p.m . W ednesday. A briefing on the problem s of city planning and developm ent will be given by Wayne Golden, ex ecu ­ tive se c re ta ry of Hie AURA. A fter the briefing, a tour will Im* conducted of a n urban renew ­ al p roject in E a s t Austin The D evelopm ent Sem inar is m ad e up of p rivately supported foreign .students chosen for th eir outstanding scholastic ability and lead ersh ip potential by the Instt- Views to Be Aired On Junior College for tho public opinion U niversity students will d is­ an I cuss igainst Ti vvis County Ju n io r College from It) lo 11:30 a m. W ednesday and T hu rs­ day in the Academ ic Cantor \udi- torium . proposed The students a re m em bers of a speech d e p a rtm e n t course on business and professional speak­ ing which has boon develope!I by Dr. Jo e A. Bailey, assist int pro­ fessor of speech. The junior college studied as an exam ple >f how lins been i ■mummify project m ay be b e tte r im explained through effective m uni ca ti on, Hailey said. M em bers of a w orkshop for junior college ad m in istrato rs, rn p ro g ress in the College of e d u ­ cation, will attend the public m eetings. Dr. Hatley uses a m an ag em en t system called “ P ro ject E v a lu a ­ tion and Review T e c h n iq u e ' Through P E R T , students w atch the progress of a larg e p roject md spot any delays. The go v ern ­ m ent first used tins system on the Polaris subm arine program . the 72 s tu ­ dents a re business m ajo rs, eco­ nom ics, sociology, education, a r ­ ch itectu re, statistics, p h arm acy , and history students also a re e n ­ rolled. The College of B usiness A dm inistration and College of ed u cation assisted Dr B ailey with his project. Although m ost of Cam pus News In Brief lute of in New York. In ternational E ducation This su m m e r’s sem in ar, one of 16 in the nation, is studying econom ic developm ent and lead ­ ership. Its objective to give outstanding students from u n d er­ to developed nations knowledge they help retu rn . their countries w hen is ★ Club Will Tour Airport The longhorn Flying Club is sponsoring a tour of the avia­ tion services at Austin Muni­ cipal Airport from 7 to 8 p.m. W<*dnosabor Fared in the Fifty-ninth Legislature. The free, public program is part of a series on the work of Legislature. ★ UT Professor in M exico D r. G eorge I. Sanchez, d ire c ­ tor of the U niversity C enter for Internation al E ducation, will p a r ­ ticip ate two education se m i­ n a rs in Mexico this sum m er. in The sem in ars will concern up­ grading the teach ing of history, geography, a n d econom ics in M exican secondary schools. ★ Dorm to Be Discussed The Student Living Accommo­ dations Committee aud John Orr, president of the Students’ Association, will m eet with ar­ chitects at a I p.m . luncheon Tuesday to discuss tile propos­ es! coeducational dormitory. -Texan Photo— Johnson Freshmen-to-Be Tour Forty Acres Several o f the 330 participants in the first session of Freshman O rientation toured the cam pus M o n d a y. The participants, housed in Kinsolving Dorm itory, are learning cam pus layout and Univer­ sity activities. (See story and picture, P age I.) Topics D iv e rs ifie d .. (Continued F rom P age One) stud ent sep aratin g avoid and faculty expression w here both have a com m on concern in the issues involved,” D r. Anthony Leeds, m em b er of the organiza­ tion, said Monday. “ ORGANIZING G It O U P S around the sta tu s of student or of faculty tends to c re a te a false opposition and an alienation of one from the other reflected in m an y a t various u n iv ersities.” com plaints recen t The organization has proposed a su m m er titled inquiry “ Texas Public E ducation for a to he M odern W orld — A dequacy, Scope, and D irections.” “ Viet N am , An In quiry” w as held on cam pus April 13, and w as attended by m ore than 1,300 p e r­ sons. The p ro g ra m lasted from 7 p.m . lo 12:30 a.m . The final perform ances Plays C losing at lchthus of “ Childhood” by Thornton W ilder and “A Slight A che” by H arold P in te r will begin a t 8:30 p.m . th e M ethodist Stu­ T uesday a t dent C en ter’s lchthus T heater, 2434 G uadalupe. Adm ission is 50 cents for students and $1 for non­ students. B D - S U im SAIS N A T U R A L SH O U L D E R C L O T H IN G S u its....... W e re 29.50 to 100.00 N O W I4 85to 7485 Sportcoats W e re 19.95 to 45.00 N O W 9 85r, 3585 Special Group of Slacks . . . . 20% off Furnishings reduced up fo 50% ds enland still on sale at • bookstores n e w sstand s steno bureau J.B. 107 # plus p e nny tax C o n g re s s at E ig h th Tuesday, July 6, 1965 THE S U M M E R T E X A N Page 12