Now Its the Voters' Turn To Be Heard Johnson Receives J o y o u s Welcome TEXAN Shivers Booms Dick In lith Hour Effort First Co liege Daily In the South LYNDON B. JOHNSON HENRY CABOT LODGE RICHARD M. NIXON Auction of Pledges Aids Chest' Drive UT Faculty Urged To Study System Faculty rn em h e n should study c lo s e ] v the complex system of Uni­ versity adm inistration end should he more attentive to the role of f a c u l t y com mittees In institutional government. Dr H arry Ransom. University president., said Monday. Discussing a national report of The diffI-' dt role of the medical reporter is becoming an asse* to the p-r^x th o u g h the increasing d e m a n d for m e d i c a l news by the people, a s s e r t e d Miss Helen Bul* is Mom "g News r od* I, k, I ' ' t h e discu-unn e ; and its opportune Gripe Group Hears Librarian Request Tom Brewer, gradu ate student complained about the C a m p u s Chest Jim enez was appointed chairm an of a sub­ committee to investigate the dis­ tribution of these funds. allocations I.ms that A »uggestion the Reserve Reading R oom he kept open an extra hour Monriay-Fnday will be m a de to Alexander Moffit, Univer­ sity librarian by his a s s o c ia te , Fred Folmer. Speaking b e f o r e the Grievance Com mittee T hursday evening, Mr F olm er said he airn will suggest that the Reserve R e a d i n g Room be kept open from 2 to IO p m . on Sundays. The library now close* at in p rn Monday-Friday and st 5 p m on Sunday. Students h a v e complained about the clos.ng hours, as manx would like to study there on Sun­ day night A previously reported grievance suggested that the University Com­ mons ha* inadequate facilities for food hot Another com­ keeping tables plaint has been v e r e not being cleared f a s t enough. A report indicated that the re s­ ta u ra n t now has food w arm e rs and that an effott is being made to hire more w orkers. that the Co - chairm an Julius Glickman also read a resolution stating that the G rievance Com m itter would m ake a thorough study of the stu­ dent parking problem. . £ , ,n. . j ^ W e d n e s d a y T he D a ily T e x ­ an b e c o m e s tw o -fa c ed . The N o v e m b e r 9 edition of The T e x a n will h a v e two front p a g e s. One of t h e s e will I he dev oted entirely to the * I e le ctio n , w Ii I I e the other H will c o v e r c a m p u s h a p p e n ­ ings. In addition to the la test n a tional and st a te Vssoclat- ed P r e s s ele ction stor ies, the sp ec ia l front p a g e will h a v e e x c l u s i v e T e x a n re* ports from loca l h e a d q u a r ­ t e r s of both the D e m o c r a t Ic and the Republican par ties ele ctio n Other p e r so n a litie s in the T e x a n lim e lig h t : Shellev H erm an, who vx ill he c o m m e n t i n g on the e l e c ­ tion from his show ; Ton- don Joh n son , who will he In ter view e d bv a T e x a n re porter In his DrlsklH lin tel suite on ele ctio n n D b t : and l Yniv ers tty who w III he r ep orted on as fh ev sit *”,ued to TV s e t s Union and d o r m 'to ries . s tu d e n ts in the H ^ # I f § I I I i I Shelley Smokes and Jokes the show * regularly running until IO 15 p.rn t would have to be cut IO minutes for curfew there added this was another ulcer, although n a t detect ed by an entertained audience. One will find som ew here in the duration of an evening with Be-- m a n that one p a rtic u la r occasion that has happened to everybody, j e t never mentioned toy anybody the moment when w e have all been aw kward Whether it he the time w e try' to rem ove a black spot in our milk without anyone detecting the purpose of our effort or w hether it he a moment we a r e driving at the wheel of a c a r trying to fish a cigaret ash front between our legs, it is a relief to finally hear someone mention th a t it h as also happened to them. B e rm an is flanked by a singing the Cum berland T h r e e task of group which has the d ffteult i lAee BURMAN, Page 4) ’Round th Gavel Uv HOV T IM R \ IS T o * . e > f u lly s e r v e t h e .stu den t b o d y , t h e a c t i o n brid p l a n * of t h e S t u d e n t s A s o c i a t . o n m u s t he c o n ­ t r o v e r s i a l is n o unimpressed with a1! our freedom and democracy, we will doubtless chalk it up to the thought that o th e r nations have been sadly misled by communist propaganda. A convenient blind spot will h ive kept most of us from seeing th a t the “g lo ry ” of Election Day, I SA is tarn ish e d today. In our patriotic zeal to get out the vote, most of us will have forgotten that not all the c i t i z e n s who don t go to the polls are underage, u n d e c i d e d , or apathetic. Some of th e m — tho u sa n d s—d o n ’t vote because they c a n ’t. P e rh ap s all the g r a n d f a th e r clauses arc gone from in m any p a rts of Southern state constitutions. But th e South, the N egro vo ter is no closer to the polls th a n he would be if the clauses were still in existence. All the infractions of the franchise aren't, on the law' books. T here a re economic as Well as legal pres­ sures. And in some p a rts they a re used, effectively, today, to close the voting booths to all who are not as white as th e y a re free and 21. The only encouraging thing about the w hole situ a ­ tion is that some people aren’t satisfied with things as they are. In particular, the students of the nation, at many college and university cam puses, will be d em ­ onstrating today in protest against the d isenfranchise­ ment of their fellow citizens. Here is Austin, students from the U niversity “ Y ” wall be a t the polk to h a n d out rem inders th at not all American citizens are assured of their right to vote. Tile “Y” literature fu rth e r urges voters to insist th a t their representatives work for civil rights laws and for the removal of the poll tax. We hope such reminders as these m ay help remove this American blind spot. For we think it is worth remembering (and ch an g­ ing) that the political chains of tho disenfranchised lend a hollow' note to our boasts that this is indeed, the land of the free. Coins for Quality As our somewhat grubby fellow' occupant of the Journalism Building, H airy (he do cuss and he do chew and he goes with girls who do) points o u t— sure students w ant o th e r good students to come to th e University. But w hy do present teasips have to pay for r e ­ c ruitm ent of future Phi Beta K appas? And, more particularly, w h y a re th ey asked to pay via the C a m ­ pus Chest drive? At first, even the Campus Chest steering com ­ m ittee didn’t know. T h a t’s why the proposal to make Operation Brainpower a recipient from the funds drive w as voted down the first time. W hen all the inform ation was In, however, steering com m ittee m em bers w e re convinced. T he persuasive facts w ere these: The cost of Operation Brainpower, a recruitment program designed to attract top flight Texas students to the University instead of to another college, is not assum ed entirely by the student body. Student money, from one source or another, goes only to finance the trips of student recruiters, not those of traveling fac­ ulty members, administrators, or exes. Originally student governm ent h ad appropriated the SGOC needed to cover these costs from its budget Then it was discovered that, legislative requirem ents pro­ hibited the apportionm ent of funds from blanket taxes and sim ilar fees for recruitm ent purposes. So it w as a question of providing Campus Chest funds or not having student Operation Brainpower at all that came before (he steering com mittee. In view of the choice, we think the com m ittee’s decision was the only one possible. And let H a iry r a n t as he will. T h e D a i w T ex a n T u e s d a y , N o v . 8 , I 9 6 0 Page 2 O p in ion s expressed in T h e Texan are those of the Editors cr of the writer o f the article caid not n e c e tftrtl\ tho m o r e stud ents on in 1965 th an a r e h ere a t c a m p u s p r e s e n t im plication of the is latest en ro llm en t projection m a d e by the U niv ersity a d m in is tratio n . the The first issue of the M ain Uni­ v e rs ity N e w sle tte r state s 22.OCK) stu d en ts a r e exp ected in 1965 " u n ­ d e r p re s e n t adm issio ns policies ’’ Tills en r o llm en t prediction Is one for se ttin g up of the the "Ten Y e a r P la n . ’* Also, IfHvV fa c ts used Is the y e a r the Influx o f the so- r a ile d p o s t w a r bab le* will hit Its peak. T his 22,000 figure v a r i e s consid­ e r a b l y from th e r e g i s t r a r ’s office e s t i m a t e m a d e in 1957 w hich f o r e ­ c a s t a total e n ro llm e n t of 25,818 for 1964-65 an d 25.079 for 1965-66. T h e d iffere n c e is a lm o st 4.000 the ex p la n a tio n of stu d e n ts And this v a r i a n c e m a y he a clue to the fu tu re philosophy of the U ni­ th e versity'; w h e th e r in s tru c t to Superior Professional Teaching Basis of Educational Excellence EMucation a n d th e p ra c t ic e of e d u c a tin g a lw a y s involves conflict­ ing ideas. J u s t w h a t con stitu tes a n e d u c a ­ tion is a m a t t e r of conjecture. To living as s o m e well as in thinking - an ed ucation is the atta in in g of a d ip lo m a o r a college de gre e. i m m a t u r e the in that rea lize O thers the m e r e holding of a d ip lo m a or d e g r e e s ig n if ie s only that one h a s spent s o m e tim e and m a in ta in e d s o m e s t a n d a r d s— good, low. or m e d i o c r e — in s o m e s c h o o l ; or, lf recent pub­ licity Is c o r r e c t, he has sp en t the fee to gain the no m ina l required e q u iv a len t. In co n sid erin g the h aste concepts of a n edu catio n, IT . W. E . D ra k e , p ro fe sso r of h isto ry and philosophy of ed u catio n , defined and exp lain ed his id eas of the e d u c a tiv e process. H is th ink in g is h a r e d on 22 y e a r s of college te a c h in g in such institu­ tions as the U n iversities of N orth C aro lin a , Illinois. Missouri, T exas, and P e n n sy lv a n ia State. D u rin g this period, his te a c h in g e x p e rie n c e h a s s u p p o rte d the c o a u t h o r s h i p of six hooks an d the a u th o rsh ip of " T h e A m e ric a n School in T r a n s i ­ t s . " H i v i n g factual In form ation does not n ecessa rily m a k e one a t e a c h ­ e r ; he m u s t a lso h a v e the ability to com m u n icate that Information, Dr. D r a k e s a y s . An educated per son m u s t h a v e a background of b a s ic k n o w le d g e . But of equal I m ­ p o r ta n c e . if he Is to he a te a c h e r , he m ust h a v e the ability to g iv e that r e a l i ty a nd k n o w l e d g e to o t h e r s. In other words, he m u s t be a s a l e s m a n with an e x e e ll e n t product, l f he la c k s the s a l e s m a n - s h in the to c o n v in c e o thers of w or th of his product, the s u c c e s s of that product Is d im inish ed . to It on In p a s sin g Im p orta n ce " I t is c le a r from an a n a ly s is of re c e n t A m e ric a n ed u c atio n al h is­ to r y th a t th e public as well a s the t e a c h e r s in all the te a c h in g a r e a s — u niv ersities, c o l l e g e s , high schools, a n d e l e m e n ta r y schools - h a s suffered from th e lack of su­ p e rio r professional te a c h in g . A p r o ­ fession, by definition, m ust of ne­ cess ity p- ssesse« a body of know l­ edg e p ec u lia r to itself, a b a sic phil­ osophy, and a set of skills," s ta te d Dr. D rake. ★ ★ " W e h a d little of this kind of a profession today', hut in A m e ric a the reaso n for o u r d eficiency is b y trad itio n a l to no m e a n s due tr a d e -tra in in g ten den c ie s of schools and colleges of education, though H rs lim itation of such schools m u s t be re c o g n iz e d .'’ the S p ec ializ a tion te n d e n c i e s , polit! ral c o n tr o ls , and the " p a u p er iz in g level at w h ic h our sc h o o ls h a v e Ivern f i n a n c e d ” a rc a m o n g the c a u s e s of failu re. B e c a u s e of th e se failure*, " w e h a v e driven m en a w a y fr om te a ch in g , m a d e t e a c h ­ ing the mo-1 u n stab le profession In A m e r i c a , and d e pr ived the t e a c h e r of a s e n s e of personal worth and p r o f e ssio n a l v a lu e . . . AA *» require s i x y e a r s of c o ll e g e Instruction to pr odu ce a v e te r in a r ia n to work on a sick pig and only four v e a r s of to produce an c o ll e g e Instruction A g r a d e to work on a c h i l d ’s m ind. " D u r i n g th e p a s t c e n tu r y we h a v e developed, a t the fro n tie r level, the potentialities of te ac h ing . a W h e th e r o r not such a potentiality to he actu a lized depends upon is the A m e ric a n people . upon the A m e ric a n people rea lly w h at w a n t of for w h a t th e i r schools: th e y really w a n t, th ey will ho w ill­ ing to p a y , " concluded Dr. D rake. sound profession of le a s t at t e a c h e r . . m a s s e s o r put m u c h g l o a t e r e m ­ phasis on a c a d e m ic ex cellence, In the final a n a ly s is the tw o c a n ­ not go h md-in-hand. M e d io c rity in stu d en ts will n e v e r le ad to a “ U n i­ v e rs ity of the first clas s ” the to apply The a d m in is tr a tio n w o u ld rather w a lt the "firvt c l a s s ” cliche only w h e n I n iv e r s it y r e a c h e s this s ta tu s, hut the p h ra se is so c o m m o n that It will be o v e r ­ used, p ro ba b ly for y e a r s to c o m e . im ­ T ry in g p r e s s : on is a right, not a privilege, m a k e s it rough for th e a d m i n is tra t io n to sell q u a lity h ig h e r e d u c atio n to m a n y T e x a s citizens, ★ to fight a gro w in g th a t h ig h e r ed u c a tio n * is tho role r f the U n iv e r­ sity? P e r h a p s the U n iv e rs ity will he ab le to pro v id e an edu ca tio n for both the C stu d e n t an d the a c a d e m ­ ically ex c ellen t student. What But the U n iv e r s it y un der its past p h ilo sop h y h a s an oblig ation to the people of T e x a s to p r o vid e higher is e d u c a tio n for the m a s s e s . This the sta te d policy of the U n iv e r s it y . E n ro llm e n t is e x p e c te d to m u s h ­ the nation w ithin the ro om o v e r n ex t five y e a r s T h e U n iv ers ity now e x p e c ts only 3.000 m o re stu ­ de nts in 1965 th an a r e now re g i s ­ tered. Til is is not h a n d lin g m uch of the explosion of college-age peo­ ple H ow ever, so m e people th ink th a t the po ssible ad m issio n of th e Uni­ v e rs ity of Houston a s a fully state- su p p o rte d school an d the e x p ecte d grow th of A rlington S tate College, tak e a s a fo u r-v e a r college, will so m e of the e n ro llm e n t p r e s s u r e off the M ain U n iv e rs ity , E n r o ll m e n t e s tim a te * obviously v a r y . V ice-ch an cello r L. D. Has- kew w a s quoted re c e n tly a s esti­ m a t i n g e n ro llm e n t a t 24,CKX) in 1964. an d a s sa y in g it m a y r e a c h 30.000 by 1970. W ith e n ro llm e n t figu res in col­ leges e x p e c te d to s p r o c k e t in th e next five y e a r s it is logical to a s ­ s u m e th a t th e U n iv e rs ity will join in this jum p. This would lead one to believe the orig inal 1957 p redictio n of 25,818 for 1965 is realistic, in that e n ro llm e n t p re d ic tio n s since 1957 hav e been fairly well realized. •it it T e x a n * will a s s u m e p e r h a p s that if the e n r o llm e n t prediction* h a v e been s l a s h e d , and the. n u m b e r of e n r o ll e e s i n c r e a s e aero** the co u n tr y , s o m e stu d e n ts w ill he e li m i n a te d from the F o r t y Acres m e r r y go -’round before they e v en g e t aboa rd. is e x p e c t e d to IT 5 UNUSUAL TO 56E ONE TMI5 TIME OF VEAR UN LE55 OF COURSE HE PIEH) UP FROM B R A Z IL .JIL BET T H A T £ ITI THE1/ DO THAT V THIS 15 NO sometimes vol)! butterfly/... KN0tt),..TK£V FiV I TMiS IS A UP FROM BRAZIL, I PTTAX0 CHIP! \ r ^ i s r AND THE ii JELL. ILL 3 E i 5 0 IT 151 I LOON DER HOU) A POTATO CHIP GOTALlTME (MV UP HERE FROM BRAZIL? Official Notices the Stud* at* e n r o lle d in T h e U n iv e r s it y o f F e x a s w h o a t t e n d e d a n o m e r e n - l e g e or u n i v e r s i t y during; I960 if s u m m e r s e s s i o n h a v e been n o t i f i e d t h e i r s u m m e r r ec or d has been r ec e iv e d b y th e R e g is t r a r s O ff ic e A m s t u d e n t w h o a t t e n d e d a n o t h e r c o l l e g e d u r in g t h e past s u m m e r a nd w h o ha* no t r e c e i v e d a c r e d o n o t ic e s h o u l d eat] s t th e R e g i s t r a r s O ff ic e . M ain B u ild in g . R o o m I , S e c t i o n 6. for f u r t h e r In st ru c­ tion s. • T h e ov a ! fx t n g e x a m i n a t i o n for th e d o c t o r of p h ilo s o p h y d e g r e e rn E n g l u h w il l be g iv e n In tvm parts I A A la r g e blue n e e d e d B e f o r e t w o - h o u r xvi tt e n e x a m i n a t i o n in K n glls h w il l be off e r e d b v th e C o m ­ m i t t e e on G r a d u a t e S t u d i e s In I- r e l i s h p . m . . F r id a y . N o v e m ­ B u i l d i n g 110 bon g and pen be r 18 t h e e x a m i n a ­ w i l l be tio n s t u d e n t s m u st t r a n s c r ip t o f c o u r s e s and g r a d e s a nd an A u s tin a d d r e s s In E n g l i s h B u ild in g 106 S a m ­ ple c o p ie s o f th e q u e s t i o n s and a n s w e r s fron m e g r a d u a t e m a v be o b t a i n e d a d v is o r i. n e i i s h B u i l d i n g 230 E n g l i s h o f f ic e Crow th * D e p a r t m e n t o f I t M M or leave * reach fe e s must tim d a t e o f th e II T h e g r a d u a t e recor d e x a m i n a t i o n a p t i t u d e te st w i n be g iv e n at 8 45 a rn. S a t u r d a y , N o v e m b e r 19. All a p ­ p li c a t io n s and th * E d u c a t io n a l T e s t i n g S e r v ic e o f f ic e In P r i n c e t o n N ew J e r s e y , n o t late r t h e n 15 d a v s b e fo r e A p p l ic a t io n b l a n k s ar e av a ila b le In E n g l i s h B u i l d i n g 106 a n d in th e T e s t ­ i n g a nd C o u n s e l i n g C e n te r V H a ll IOT. N o s t u d e n t w il l be a d m i t t e d to c a n ­ didac y th e d oc to r o f p h ilo s o p h y d e g r e e In E n g l i s h u n ti l a c o p y of b s s c o r e s In th e g r a d u a l recor d e x a m n- a t lo n a p t it u d e <• vrd bv th e c h a ir m a n o f 'h e C o m m 't e e on G r a d u a t e S t u d ie s Dr. E. C. M o s i e r , E n g l i s h B u i l d i n g 216. text cst- h e r r test for J a n e P a g a n in i * Ans ACD STAINO Nfc NOT I O FOLL fsLULLP UNDU5 & NWJSPftP&ii. I last S a tu r d a y few w o rd s about Well, o l’ H airy has been asked to say a the C a m p u s Chest. He had a date with . B a r b a r a . h e r co-ordination T o s c h . he ad , into the R a n g e r office and in fo rm e d H a iry th at this w a s a differe n t C a m p u s Chest. just c a m e publicity . su m , figuring She h a s also in fo rm e d H a iry that th e C a m p u s C h est needs $10,000 is a p re tty stu ­ this y e a r w hich pendous the U n iv e rs ity h as not r e a c h e d its q u o ta since H a ir y m e t a friendly Austin cop (1857 6 Now $10,000 is the p ric e of 40,000 can s of beer, five F alco ns, 58 g o v e r n m e n t quiz­ zes, o r four E n g lish profs. th a t t h a t would h a v e It is also the p rice of IO c h a ri­ f o l d to le ast go back t r a n s la ­ to m a k e ties co m p le te ly o r a t to th e Y iddish tion of "M e in K a m p f " e n d s m eet. selling H a iry R a n g e r is noted for sp end ­ ing his h a rd e a r n e d loot, mostly g a th e r e d fro m coeds on d a r k c a m ­ pus c o rn ers, on booze, c igars, o r w o m e n. H o w ev er, once a y e a r six-packs to he cu ts down a d a y in o r d e r to give a few yen the C a m p u s Chest. You a re to p r o b a b l y y ou rself w hy H a i r y would m a k e such a s a c r i­ fice. asking two Actually, IF* a v e r y selfish mn- f iv e . He hate* to be Approached e v e r y day for P e n n ie s for Profs, for D isp la c e d D e a n s , D i m e * F r a n c s for F a lle n F e m i n i n e s , or P e s o s for P e r v e r te d Poles. This C arnous Chest (arr Is hist a once- a y e a r tap, so H air y can g iv e in the w o lv e s N o v e m b e r and ke e p and D r a g m e r c h a n ts a w a y from w o r th y c a u s e s for the following 11 m o n th s. Blind And wmrthy c a u se s th e y are even cynical H a irv R a n g e r w i l l a d m it. C e re b ra l Pals''' R e ta rd e d and C hildre n M ental H ea lth a re only a few of th e m , and H airv r a n see t h a t they a re d e se rv in g of his h a rd e a r n e d rubles. ★ Students, th e m ! r e a d e r s Now H a ir y would ro t he fair to his If (all 42 of he did not n re s e n t h ;s h o n e s t opinion of C a m p u s Chest. As he said is a w o rth v c a u s e and th e r e should hp no tr ou ble In h it­ ting up the s tu d e n t body for all $1 0 OOO. it H ow ever, th e r e a re a few a r ea s t h a t get th e i r cut o' this n ir which H a irv feels do n't d e se r v e it. Not that they a r e n 't good g roups e tc ., etc ; but stu den ts a t The U n iv e r­ sity of T e x a s get stuck e v e ry tim e they tu rn around. The price of stu dent d ir e c t o r ie s went up a quarter, there are m a ­ triculation fe es, s e r v i c e fee*, p a r k ­ ing s tic k e rs , in su ra n ce plans, and a thousand other th in gs that a r e too n u m er ou s to m e n t i o n . T h e prevailing is this: "The stu d e n ts can s p a r e a quarter. What'* a q u a rte r ? H u h ? ” H airy feels that the stu d en t body is boing d ra w n an d q u a r t e r e d to th ey got a quarter, death hut stu­ th at d o e sn ’t m a k e dent w ant to p a r t w ith it. fe elin g around h ere Sure the tired of p ay in g S tudents a re pigeons for e v e r y g im m ic k in the book an d H a i r y the is L eg isla tu re the A d­ m in is tra tio n in football tickets, and the Austin F a g a n s in the 92 per cent income b ra c k e t. in spittoons, to keep F o rtu n a te ly , th e C a m p u s Chest into this c a te g o ry — p a r t . O p era tio n doesn t fall for B ra in p o w e r is one th a t does. the m o s t H air y is In full a g r e e m e n t with O peration B r a in p o w e r , It’* a good idea , etc., e t c . ; hut so Is free lo v e and nickel b e e r, ? o ’cloc k lock- nuts, and de c en t profs. S h o u l d all of t h e s e bp su b sid iz e d b v th e student body? AAliere will the list e nd? The O B cut w a s initially s t ru c k o ut by the c o m m it te e on Som e- thing-Or-Other, hut C a m e ro n H ig h ­ to w er got the g a n g to re-cons Ider and put it h a c k in. Sure U n iv e r ­ sity stu d e n ts w a n t good h I g h- scho olers the F o r t y r o m e A cres, hut too m u c h to a sk t h e m to foot the hill. it s to to from g iv in g out T h e World U n iv e r s i t y S e r v ic e , Sp onsored Stu dents, and the In- ternattonat C o m m i s s io n h a n d l e e v e r y t h i n g te xt hooks In South Africa to sponsor- lo g a mnek United N a tion s A s­ s e m b l y on the e a m p u * . ’I n e s s sure, Hut a g a in are good things the stu d e n t b o d y should not be a sk e d to p ay for it. ★ H a ir y will give Sr to C a rn p ti * C hest, and will not use the s t a t e ­ m en t " I d on 't a g re e w ith lf so I 'm not going to give a c e n t” as an excu se But he only w i s h e s th e y wmuld ta k e on yet an o th e r a r e a : a F u n d fo r U n iv e rs ity of T e x a s Students Who A re S up po rt­ ing So M a n y C h arities T h ey Need One to Su pp ort T hem . | - r - j —r I I he tiring Line T • • • t Mostly O a t ( e ) s To the Editor: fro m I w ant herew ith to re g i s te r m y d is se n t given S tephen B. O ates' l e t te r to the edi­ tor, in the N o v e m b e r 4 is sue of the T e xan . the p ra is e AA hat, M r. Oat*, w as your pur* po>e? Y our “ l i t e r a r y ” le tte r w a s a childish b urlesqu e. It w a s naive, pointless, a n d v erb o se. It w a s an insult to the in telligence of those w ho re a d the Kit ing Line. ★ ★ You h a v e g uts a s well as gall. M r. O ats. To criticize openly, and in su ch a ridiculous m a n n e r , two of o u r finest o rg a n iz a tio n s — the S pooks a n d th e C ow b oy s- indeed r e q u i r e s c o u ra g e . I s u g g e s t that in the future you in private (I) e m u l a t e F a u lk n e r ive pro­ r a ther than In p u b lic ; (2) (8) found rather p r a c t i c e y o u r w r itin g in English c o m p o sit io n c o u r s e s rather than In the T e x a n . than p a r o d ic ; Baerv D a t e s T e a r e d Hall 216 Social IDs To the E d ito r : re a d I the a rtic le , " T h e J a b ­ bers, o c k " by C h a n d le r D av idso n c o n c e rn in g G w en J o r d a n s e v ic ­ tion fro m the N ight H awk r e s t a u r ­ a n t w ith g r e a t interest. AAhile the c o n c e p t of producing I D * in Austin c o n c e r n i n g the pu r­ c h a s e of in to x ica n ts is not new, the i d e a of ID 's for proof of U n iv e r ­ s i t y affiliation before o n e c a n p u r ­ c h a s e l ea s t, to food q u ite r ev o lu tio n a r y . sa y the is ★ Sr A p p a re n tly th e m a n a g e r of the N ig h t H aw k t a k e s one of the fol­ low ing view s on the m a t t e r : ( l l N egroes (u n le ss U n ive rsity s tu d e n ts) a r e second c la s s citizens a n d should not be allowed to e a t in his r e s t a u r a n t . A ch eck of a tax will N e g ro stu d en t s b la n k e t qu ick ly disclose w h e th e r that p e r ­ to dine with o th er cu s­ son to m e r s , inci­ d e n t . ” th u s avoiding is fit " a n 1 2> All citizens a r e second class u n le ss th ey a r e o r h a v e been Uni- v e r s ity stud ents, a n d a quick check of a p e rs o n 's b la n k e t tax will also av oid an y " i n c id e n t s ." All b lan k e t t a x e s should be c h eck ed , only it's j u s t m o r e fun to check N egro es' b la n k e t t a x e s first. N o w w hile the U niversity doe* of f e r a v a r ie t y of cou rses, I have apparently o v e r lo o k e d the course w h ic h t e a c h e s one how tc c o n d u ct h i m s e l f in a public r estau ra n t and fail to find a c o n n e c tio n betw een blanket ta x es and m anner*. Both v iew s strik e m e as curious, but being of e x tr e m e l y high status (being white, a U n iv e rs ity student, a n d possessin g a b la n k e t t a x i , I won t c o n c e rn m y s e lf w ith the m a t­ te r fu r th e r. Kan F le t c h e r 2303 Rio G ran d e Acting on Orders To the E ditor: Mr. D avidson in his T uesday, N o v e m b e r I " J a b b e r w o c k " g a v e us an e x c e llen t job of ethical re p o rtin g . In his efforts to get the view s of those involved in the N ight Hawk a d is c rim in a tio n a g a in s t one of our s tu d e n ts (who h a p p e n e d to be col­ into th a t g r e a t cry o re d i, he ra n of c r i m e s trials, "I w as only c a r r y i n g out or­ d e r s ." th e N u r e m b e r g w a r ★ ★ In this c a s e a c l a s s m a t e o f our* w a s thrown out of a N ig h t H aw k r e s ta u r a n t she had no b e c a u s e b lan k e t tax. She w a s identified a* a student by one of her p r ofessor* and by a stu dent friend. T he m a n a g e r , we a r e told, stated th a t serv ing colored stu d e n ts w a s an and he w as a c c o m m o d a ti o n only a c tin g on o rders. ( o n sid er ln g It s e e m s to m e th a t a m a n a g e r w ho can t a c c e p t the word of ident­ ification of a facu lty m e m b e r and a student, m u s t c o n sid e r serving a n y stud ent an a cc o m o d atio n . the histor ical inef* f e c tl v e n c s s of r easo n to i n flu e n c e m e n who are " A ctin g on O r d e r ” a w a y from any atr o city, I s u g g e s t that you and I, a c tin g on our own, c a n the o n e s w h o g i v e the orders through p o c k e tb o ok s. im p r e s s Harold Huff 1103F B r a c k e n r id g e Apts. Job Opportunities for g r a d u a t in g inter vie w F ride ' i n v e s t m e n t C o m p a n y , t h r o u g h o u t T e x a s and S o u t h w e s t e r n w th lo c a tio n s th e S o u t h w e s t w ill s e n i o r ! N o v e m b e r fin an c e m a n ­ in t e r e st e d J a n u a r y a g e m e n t gra d u a t e* w ith m a l m liber al art* c r bu si n e- * mav m a k e a p p o in t m e n t * in th- Student. E m p l o y m e n t B u r e a u . P e a r c e Hall 106 ll rn c o n s u m e r as « c a re er Anv in • T h e U p jo h n C o m p a n y w il l in t e r v ie w g r a d u a t e s on c a m p u s o n W e d n e s d a y . N o v e m b e r 9 Poa itinna o pe n ar e for c a n i n g on d r u g g i s t ! a nd h o s ­ s ale s p it a ls In e s t a b lis h e d te rrito r le a w h i c h r eq u ir e s s o m e tr a v e lin g . T h e y ar e in­ te r es te d p r im a r il y sc ie n c e m a lo r a and Pharr; vex g r a d u a t e s or t h o s e w ho have for P r o ­ wled L e - a t mn w o u ld he a n y w h e r e n T e x a s A p p o i n t m e n t s max be m a d e in tn* S t u d e n t E m plo y OMA t B u r e a u . P a a r c a H a l l 106. r e q u ir e m e n t * fu lf il le d in wrw, 'wmmmm*. wmmmmmm That “ 9-14” score above is not, mortal Stadium on that, frigid, 31- the I/jnghom s built up a 9-0 halftime lead as might be assumed, a paid poll-! degree day of Novem ber 14 U ra l ad\ertisement by Abe M artin, head football coach at Texas Chris- I tian U niversity. Tt is simply a reminder of the The Frogs cam e back to score In the third quarter to make it 9-7, Ivonghorns game that prevented the 1959 Tex- but the Orange hung on. as their first unbeaten season since 1920. completing I Then disaster thruck! from So What if he can fly, I'm still the ugliest man H unch Eat Mexican Food Once A Day! H a rry Moreland, a 165-pound snaggle-toothed halfback, slipped through the right side, ran over a head-on tackle by Mike Cotten flashed across the field and down the west sideline as Rene Ram irez chased him into the end zone. The play covered 56 yards With that touchdown Texas' first unde­ in 39 years vent feated season floating through the i r e and s n o w that in mounds around the lay playing field, Texas w ill meet the Frogs Amon C a rte r Stadium W orth Saturd ay at 2 p rn The Longhorns have not defeated T C U in Cowtown since 1954. 'Mural Scores ( la*« A C a rtu * T e r r a l e .91 Texas R a n E rr* A c o m a R a id e rs Rlom- I n to u i-hnOles 21 A lp h a IO A lp;, i T a u O m ega 12; R a t D i c e r s 28 D a rk Mf eses 16 i fo rfe it I, W M S k v lln e r * 2. S c h o rn 0 W ild c a t * 25 C h ic k e n s 2 I -areito 40. D S F 6 R o g e r ' R a id e r* 21. W a r r e n 18. B lo c k e r 41 q ulst l l E p s ilo n P h i 21 20, D e lt a T a u D e lta 14 Chi P h i D e lt a T h e ta 15 P K a ; ; • Alpha I S , S ig m a A lp h a E p s ilo n S ig m a P h i Epsilon 12 S ig m a A lp ha Mu 40 P h i K a p p a TM 20. T a u D e lta P h i 5 Phi Kappa S ig m a << M u l l e t Missiles 33 \ n -■ h n r Hankers 2 0 l ’hi 2 .. Geese 21. P h i Caps I EL MAT 504 East Ave. GR 7-7023 in in Fort EL TORO 1601 Guadalupe GR 8-4321 EL CHARRO "Mexican Food to Take Home" GR 7-8744 MONROE'S 912 Red River GR 8-7735 Delivery Service 7 Days Austin's “Big Four” in Authentic Mexican Food H O U Y P A S T O R . His five-week Vegas show with father Tony went 6 months! Happy G uy in Misty, Bewitched, more. STI465 □ M A V I S R I V E R S . New Samoan einger-discovery all critics are raving over At Sundown.Home, Spring Is Here, others. STI408 D M A R K M U R P H Y . A cu te b e at and song senses mark swinging M urphy in Honeysuckle Rose, scat But Not for Me, etc. S T I 453 I J E A N N E B L A C K . Songs just a b it sad by great new talent w ho’s just a hit sen rational here In her own first album. ST1513 □ T H E E L IG IB L E S . A w in n ir.g combination of fresh-blended voices in Hors High the Moon, Dearly Belov cd, IO more. S T I 411 □ D W A Y N E H I C K M A N . I'm <* Lover, Not a Fighter, he admits. M any lovesongs of barefoot boy w ith tongue in cheek. ST14LI LISTEN TO SOMEBODY T h e D a il y T e x a n Sports Tuesday, Nov. 8, I960 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 ’Tween the Horns By HOYT PURVIS Associate Sport* Editor A b e G row s 'Em Big The talker was a disgruntled Baylor fan, who had just seen his Cotton Bowl fever disappear with a dose of Orange aspirin. After five rosy Saturdays the Baptists were forced to settle down and start talking about common things like presidential elections and the next concert in Waco Hall. But somehow the con versa-* frog since M a r k th* wildest Hon gets around to T C U and T w a in ’s ‘‘Celebrated J u m p i n g Texas. A fter all these are the Frog of C alaveras County.” Of two villains who did the Golden course a sad plight befell t h a t Be a rs in And this week the ’Horns Frog, and Texas is making sim ilar and Frogs meet at Amon C arter plans for this one. just grows Stadium . Mention T C U to a Green and front Abe M a rtin ’s beef-trust ’em big. Up is led by Bob L illy , one of the South- Gold pom-pom w axer and you'll a ll­ start hearing about “ t h a t dad- west Conference’s gummed guy must be seven feet A m erica possibilities. a tall, and even if you tackle him misnamed, 6-5, 248-pounder, doesn't inferior when he I he ll fall for three y a r d s !” feel the ! T C U leading L illy , least Of course the man they refer to pals around with Gibbs. ion “ S o n n y ” than T C I’ (225>, Lynn Morrison The Baptist mumbled something Aubrey Llnne They just don’t come much big- is 6-7, 225-pound G u y G ibbs’ the terrifying T C U quarter- ger Besides L illy , back who reached his lon gaw aited Frog up-fronters include R a y Pin- (225t, peak in the B a y lo r game. (235 b A rrie Mar- Rbout guys named Saxton, Lee. tin_ (220>, and Bobby Plum m er Lucas, and Cotton, but he couldn't forget this Gibhs. This vitaminized string-bean casts a real shadow. is called tile host tackle in T C U history’. He supposedly in picking up a illustrious sports ca r and when Abe M artin ©more. w'ho h a d an high school career, missed line- last says “ He s sim ply the hest geason because he lost the battle man I ’ve ever coached; if he has of the books. B u t as a well-ripened a flaw , we don't know it.” That sophomore he's going great towering G raham so ph - can do a solo means a lot. T h e (235). L illy Against B a y lo r Cobbs led T C U W ith all of ibis potter in front rushers with 39 yards and hit seven of him even an average operator ___ l l passes for 55 more. And would probably do a good job. but of the that was In a game where yardage j Gibbs cam e rather hard. He m ay be I ordinary category. is by no means in Lee Leads Tough UT Defense just about as t o u g h Texas, 5-3, but only nine points 8 -0 , can still make a tre­ from mendous season of it with wins Texas' defense, with the excep­ tion of a couple of slight lapses, has been as anyone's. The B a y lo r to a 38-yard rushing net, In praising although B a y lo r quarterbacks flung the student role in firing up the th * ball 40 times, twice as m any team for the B a y lo r game. We d Uke to go on record a? favoring as against T C U . ’Horns h e l d over T C U and the Aggies. R o yal was sincere Monte I/ce Is furthering his rep- the red candle as a tradition re- line- served for Ba ylo r, since it seems utation as one of the best backers in the country. Lee just highly effective the doesn’t get moved out of plays. Bears. B a ylo r has gone against And when the H ale Center ace Texas nine times u’ith a h i g h puts his shoulder Into the enemy national ranking, and five of those em ca rriers they go down hard. ’Horns have put I times the jinxing in The Texa* ends, w’ho were out- down. ONE OF 16 Dasses the Baylor Bears co m p let­ ed Satu rd ay sticks in the paws of End Je r r y M oore (86) in third period action. Texas Bo o ­ by G urw itz (24) comes up to make the tackle. Bay'or fou~d ‘he rsnqe on 16 of 40 aerials and n ee m e backfired when Bear quarterbacks were thrown for losses. —Fhoto by Collum Horn Line Play Lauded D a rre ll R o yal leaned back in his swivel chair Monday and tw irle d exact) U n ive rsity students attended m ajor casualty. He M ore than 5.000 the gam e in W aco. The previous bruise, a back (5,300 to be 1 against the Bears, w as the only “ He has a deep in ju ry,” R oyal “ Nothing showed in the X- Sophomore fullback R a y Poage, rays. The doctor is keeping him in the in firm a ry (Student Health ; high had been 3,700 in 1959 two minutes said. who played only ----- ----------- --------- I Center) today.” h „ ______ was all smiles. He lauded the Longhorn defen­ its line and secondary for sive great work against a heralded B a y lo r passing game. He said the rushing of the linemen, who kept their hands high in Hie a ir all afternoon, “ knocked down five or six passes.” Ronnie Stanley and Bobby P ly , a f t e r failing behind six points in the threw 40 passes. second period, thrown for Nine times they were losses while trying ceiver. Only 16 were complete. B a y lo r ’s to find a re­ “ I “ They did a good job on that,” Royal said though S h i r a (Assistant Coach C harley) had it set up real good. I though we had a fa irly good pass defense, al­ though they got a lot of yardage They got a hot hand there in the last seven m inutes.” R o yal gave his charges Mon­ “ I kinda wanted to give “ How­ look at the going out day off. 'em a day off,” he said. ever, w e're going to film. W e 're just not Then he turned hack to Texas' 12-7 victory in Waco. “ The real thrill in that g a m e was that if they hit another pas* last drive was Their f • m 0m m * #» AM i f f / f / \ fit§!/% tw illI US JlliV U U IU FO O T BA LL C ia * * A 7 p m S ig m a N u vs D e lta D e lt a ; K a p p a A lp h a P s i vs. N a v y H p .m .— K a p p * 8 i g m a vs D e lta K a p p a E p s ilo n T h e le m e vs. A I A ; R a t D ig g e rs vs. S lo m q u is t. Cia** B 5 p .m .— D e I t a K a p p a E p s ilo n vs D e lta T a u D e lt a ; P h i D e lta T h e ta vs A cacia M u lle t 5 p rn.— L i t t l e Red vs P u r p le P a s ­ sion. E a g le s 7 p m .— P h i D e l t a P h i L a w Sch oo l TEN N IS SIN G LES ( las* A 4 3ft p m — Jo n e s vs B r ig g s . S tep h e n so n vs nasa H I S O p m — B r o w n vs h i l l ) S I N G L E S P a v n e or B e ld e l. 'T inker, In tra m u ra l G o lfe rs w h o ha ve not p laved th e ir second ro un d should re ­ to port the M u n ic ip a l G o lf C o u rse from I 45 to 2 14 fo r assig n m en ts to foursom es B A S K E T B A L L ( I a va A 7 p m — D e 't a K a p p a E p s ilo n r* K a p p a A lp h a C h i A lp h a vs Varsity; N e w n a n vs. O a k G ro v e 7 3 fi— phi Gamma Delta vs sigma C a n t e r b u r y vs. B S L : S ta g vs C hi T o ne x 12— I.s rrh d a C h i A lp h a vs B e ta F E M A ra b S t u ­ T h e ta P l . N a v e vs dents vs K a p p a A lp h a Psi 8:14 -Phi Kappa Theta vs Phi S e -na K a p p a T v ;n P in e s vs P r.c e P h i Kappa Tau vs Delta I psllon. 9: TI— K a p p a S ig m a vs A ir F o rc e T h e le m e vs D e lta vs. A lp h a P h i A lpha 8 cm * Nu P h i S ig m a < l».s B 7 7 p m — T a u D e lta P h i vs P h i K a p p a 7 38—Slsrma Chi vs Poage, Ja c k Collins, and Johnny Treadw ell are doubtful participants in Fort ; against Texas Christian Worth Saturday. Neither Collins nor Treadw ell saw action against Baylo r. About the upcoming Frogs (who beat Ba ylo r, 14-7, e a rlie r), R o yal said, “ They don't pass as much as Baylo r, but Gibbs (quarter­ back Sonny, 6-7 , 2301, is a solid running threat. It s a tossup ball I thought they'd he fav- game. Lesai ored because of having that off | we^k and catching us at hom e." Texas is tied for third p I r c e in the Southwest Conference with a 3-2 (5-3 overa ll) record. l C O t O P * C O « O P * C O * O P « O I I u n I i V EIR b i It Iy I I I O s h l j I J i m ? o . o ?. s h o w s y o u I j h o w to p la y S a n t a ! fo r this ( N o t e : to h a v e Idea u h s nn In the p a st It ha* been c u s t o m a r y for Texan sp orts col their p ic tu r es u m ntxts run with their columna. How­ e v e r w h en I b e c a m e a r egu lar T e x a n c o lu m n ist din ged . R e a s o n : M anaging E d i­ tor Don M y er s said “ I inst don’t it to our h a v e the heart to do l o y a l T e x a n r e a d e r s . ’’ ti I I h that r e c o m m e n d a tio n I earnestly thev won solicit your v ote for C a m p u s a fjnP nne C h est U g ly M an, as the only can­ d id a te w h o doesn't hax e to re- sort to m a k e u p , etc., to be ugly .) field Saturday. standing earlier, turned in a su­ perb effort Veter on senior L a r r y Cooper had a great day and sophomore Tom m y Lucas proved himself a like ly all-star candidate of the future. The Texas linemen were especially effective st keeping their hands in the quar­ terback's face Quarterback Flobby P ly said the Texas and T C U lines would be hard to compare He pointed out that T C U was certainly bigger hut that nobody hits quicker than Tex­ as in Coach D arrell R o ya l used lese the B a y lo r game manpower than on previous occasions, hut the number one team, sparked by co-captains Lee and Dickie .Tone* and the “ de ices” led by fireball center D avid K ristyn ik were both great. Stanley passed tho B ears 37 yards to the Longhorn 29 before sophomore end T o m m y Lucas saved the game with a f o u r t h down tackle of T, „ dip Bu ll all-Am erica Ron- Tau Sigma Sports Notice “ Spirit and support has h e e n *;I2—Alpha Tau Omega E n tr ie s fo r In t r a m u r a l Sot cr w he take n o n lv at a m e e tin g of Managers on Tuesday at 4 r> rn the T ro p h y R o om of G re g o ry G \m . In tai. 'te a m coach S l i d . “ I t ’* very tnstrumen- Kapna Epsilon 9 :24—A I p h a ' G a m m a Delta Opportunities Lot Griwwtk O O • •o o o • o o • o 1 1 •o • r> o G IV E T H E FOUNTAIN J I PE N T H A T LOADS O U LIKE A RIF LE! • I t ’* S h e a r e r s car- * O tridge fountain pen. • R e fills cle a n ly and ^ q u ic k ly w ith drop-in ^ Shift cartridges. • P r e c i s i o n g r o u n d , Q w r a p - a r o u n d p o i n t 9 writes freely and easily. O TS The pen aUn^. $5.00. q Matching pen and pen- O Cli set. $8 75. C h aicc of • colors. • 2 O n * of th * com p te** Un* ? ct quality p#r>» from ^ □ T H E S E V E N T E E N S . Brilliant young pros in 1 2 swing classics like Sing Sing Sing, Cherokee and Little Bro tm Jug. ST1424 b r i g h t n e w t a l e n t TOO GOOD TO M IS S c JOHN N Y UKULELE. Haw aiian tike genius and rhythm. Black end W hite Rag, Wedding Song*, Third Man Theme, etc. STI425 i f Bill HIRMAN S M M T its BANO D ick W illia m s L O V E I S N O T H IN- B U T B L U E S WITH M C K NI A B SH V USI r n a n c y W I L S O N . Something w onderful happens to you as this new slur ( “ a real find," — ST1440 High Fidelity) sings. f D IC K W IL L IA M S . D ic k puts his heart and voice i-’o I <" e Me Leave Mc It r •' '■ You, 12 bluesy songs. S I .330 C B IL L HOLMAN, ‘'O re of the happiest albums of the year,*- aavs azTtc: tic Leonard Fcx* her; top W. Coast musicians. S I 1464 a tittie trnvefin’ murk..... » *mt v*t af na <•-*** 1 **•*»*< »• Susan Barrett /3k r a r e r ? ONI «W f «rre » w ... 9 tr «rt U r is Jk SHEAFFER^ % □ T A K S H I N D O . S t e a m i n g sukiyaki of old Eastern, modem Western instruments. String of Pearl*, swing favorites. S T I 153 □ S U S A N B A R R E T T . Susan swings thru the U S in record time via Georgia o n My Mind, Manhattan, stopovers. ST1412 □ S U E R A N E Y . S i lt s ST voice flow s as ram on a w p a n e . W r a p Y o u r Tro k oth low Your Trove’'.* fit impossible,etc. ST±L*$ ...IN A GROWING COMPANY C apable young men and women have extra opportm ity in a growing com pany solving a glow ing arca. D in in g the past tw elve years, Texas F.leetric S o x ice ( nnp.im- bas increased its power generating capability to more than nine times that of 1947, has constructed mote I an 1100 miles of high voltage transmission lines at d 7- 0 miles of distribution lines, along w ith related substation and other facilities, more than doubled the nun ber of employees, and serves more than tw ice as many customers. And the com pany is continuing to build its organization as it plans and constructs new electric transmission and distribution facilities to serve cur rapidly developing area. N e w career opportunities are opening for q u ali­ fied men. W a i t e r P a y n e , University of Toras ‘39, is superintendent of production of Texas Electric Sen ice Company, supervising the operation of the company's electric £( ucrating stations. > Mr. W a lte r Payne and other representatives of Texas Electric Service Com pany will interview senors. W ed n esd ay and Thursday NOVEMBER 9 -IO Electrical and M echanical Engineers A* rnppo ntmpnt tom bp arranged through your O* T E X A S ELECTRIC SERVICE C O M P A N Y 2246 Guadalupe S*reet O u • C O W f C O f i O N C O t O P l Ail album* in stereo and regular L i’^«akpssfi&S Soc roflnr$ihomfi> £ Cartel Ako**, lo* f R O L L E Y P O L L E Y . Antidote to tranquilizer*. Bongos, congas, trap’- w tmh more W ild mono. near cataclysmic stereo. STI454 □ C A T H I E T A Y L O R . Beguiling and crystal-clear voice of gifted rmd-teener; calypso sea songs, STI443 folk tunes, ail kinds. \ H u sh Puppies BREATH!* RRUSHfD PIGSKIN Bf WOLVERINE 16 yrs. Experience on Sam e C orner I6TH AND SAN JA C IN T O Texas-Ex to Return For Festival Concert T H E D A D E Y T E X A N Amusemen T u e s d a y , Nov. 8, I960 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 Love, Laughter Mix In Beaux Stratagem BERM A N S H O W By KAHEN LEWI* A sso ciate A m u sem en ts E d ito r Two dashing young men ride into Lichfield, Kngland, on the late stage and fmd amorous adventures with a beautiful heiress, a discotv Innkeeper s terged wife, end an daughter. Such Is the situation In George Farq u h ar * comedy, “ The Beaux Stratagem ” The play. written in is a transition f>etwe*n the 1707, Restoration period and the Rom an­ tic rra . combining the best humor of each. It “ The Beaux Stratagem ” I i the D rsm a Department s o fferin g In the nineteenth annual Fine A rt* Fe stival is a far cry f r o m “ H ecuba” which was the produc­ tion for the Festival of 1959 “ He­ Is one of F.uripides’ moat cuba ’ “ The moving Beaux Stratag em ” Is a ro llick in g English comedy. Oddly enough, B a rb a ra La s a w , w'ho played the distraught H e c u b a . Is cast in “ The as a weirdly Beaux Strut g em " and w itty woman of affairs tragedies while She portrays the discontented Mrs Sullen, and her adult and sophisticated affair with Archer, is one of played by John Hales i the basic themes of the comedy. Their love affair is sharply con­ trasted with the youthful romance of Alm w eii fit ibert P a lm e r I and the beautiful Dotinda, played by M ary Jar* Cherry. Farquhar ha* created lr T h e Beaux Stratag em ” a fat Inn-keep- er whose Ii f e-substance seem* to he ale. This role ii filler! by Bob Phares, and his daughter the sm oroui C herry, ii placer! by G in ­ ger Wright, who was a member of the chorus in “ Hecuba P a t F.vans, who gave us Bloody M a ry in the summer production of “ South P a c i f i c ” plays the part of a busy gentlewoman who goes about curing all her neighbor s his She goes under the apt name of I,ad y Bountiful. This group of widely diverse characters Is mixed with a liberal sprinkling of love plots, spicy dia­ logue. robbers and w e a l t h y Frenchm en to product a gaiety in true tradition of British the comedy. I* headed by FT "T h e Beaux Stratagem ” com­ pany Francis Hodge who Is directing the show'. Hodge directed "T he I^ark.’ ' Six in Search of an Au­ Characters thor.” and “ Flowering P e a c h ” He was guest director at the Colo­ rado Shakespearean Festival this summer, and was director of the Shaw “ Comedy T rio ” of two sum­ mers ago. The settings are the. work of John Rothgeb Line drawings are used, giving the set, as one m em ­ rem arked, “ a ber of the cast SAN JACINTO CAFE SPEC IA LIZIN G IN DELICIO US M EXIC AN AND A M ER IC A N FOODS REG U LA R LUN CH ES EVERY DAY AT REASO NABLE PRICES Visit Our Rainbow Dining Room OPEN 7 DAYS A W E EK THE UNIVERSITY'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 Serving the University area for IO years H IG H FIDELITY AT REASON/.BLE PRICES S T \ R T S T O M O R R O W A C T IO N PAC K E I ) H IT S 1st A l S H N S H O W IN G i - r n n - n -MAIM o f f I I / SCHEIL-ROBERTSON Mitocu. .ii J // Extra! UP-TO-MINUTE ELECTION RETURNS announced from our stage for those attending Trans-Texas Theaters tonight! TEXAS N O W S H O W IN G OPEN 5:45 D ISN E Y ’S N EW EST AND MOST EXCITING TRI E I J F E ADV E N T IR E ! TONIGHT AT 8! PLUS REG. FEATURE ^ j^ \ T h * . . f t A M K ' _ ^ ^ Sport loafer that'* perfect for campus w ear. Light 12 ounces per shoe. Bouncy crepe sole, steel shank support. Resists dirt, repels w ater. Brushing cleans, restores leather. Sizes and widths to fit anybody. Verno Blomquist 617 C O N G RESS Harley Clark TODAY AT INTERSTATE tm* rot a MOV** DISCOUNT CASO PARAMOUNT N O W ! F I R S T SHOW NOW, F E A R POSSESSED H E R . . . AS I Q V E O N C E HADI : /G eneral COLUMBIA Rams ROXAS i amt *mnoi * t P O S I T I V T L T N O O N E W I L L BK. A D M I T T E D D L R I NO T H E L A S T S T z M I M I FN F E A T ! H L S : 12 2 1 6 8 1ft FEATURES: 11:30 - 2:01 4:34 - 7:05 - 9:36 OnctM B, VINCENT 4 DONEHUE - T E C H N I C O L O R * I * ' «■" •'* fcoduort &y OORE SOWRY. b«*i w >», am «. W A R N E R B R O S . V A R S IT Y S T A R T S TOD U ! S h o w T im * * * : 2 UMI— 4:30 “ :00— 9 :3 0 'JO a jn n k A S( TEN CE FICTION THRILLER! mowio (Doctor! S O R O * ADULTS 60c 25e C H ILD T h * fu n n ie s t S h o w o f th o T o k ! Miss W erm ine, who T w elve years ago a girl, Bette Je a n Werm ine, attended the U n i­ versity and next Sunday she w ill return. This time, though, it won t be as a student hut as the star of the opening concert of the Nine­ teenth Annual Fine Arts Fe stival. is now known as Mm e. Botte Bjoerling, has come a long w ay since her days at Texas. Notable among her achievements are a series of ap- pearanees at Sweden’s f a m e d Royal Opera in Stockholm, and an European tour w ith her husband. Goes ta the R o y a l O nera’s B.joerling, leading lyric tenor. MEtSP- 'dNWt’ ’ 'Sjfc-Pjf 'T Wmmf- Budding Author! Notebook Editors Need Your Talent H E L P ! A last frantic and desperate cry came from Texan Notebook edi­ tors as they watched hopefully for manuscripts from the talented w riters that must he “ some­ w here” on campus. These talented w riters are urged to contribute short short stories of from 1,000 to 1,800 words or less. O r perhaps these future P u lit­ zer Prize authors would be willing to part with an essay or article on any subject In the fine arts. Up to 3.OCK) words worth. F rid a y Is the deadline for these w riters to reserve a byline in the Decem ber issue of the Notebook Ray Campi Faces Success With Disc R a y Cam pi, Austin singer-song- w rite r now working out of Lob An­ geles. faces the possibility of a top-pop song with his latest re­ lease for Colpix Records L a s t week his disc, “ H ere s W h at You W anna H e a r” b a c k e d with “ French F r ie s ,” was named “ P ick H it of the W e ek ” by v irtu a lly all the West Coast radto stations and received good review s by the trade magazines. The popularity of the record led to a sudden demand for the young singer's appearance on television and at record hops. DELW OOD 3931 Cost Avenue A D M IS S IO N «i0c • O P E N 6 P M D obbin R e y n o ld s .!<>hn Sax o n THIS HAPPY FEELING S t a r t * 7:15 — F lu * — NOOSE FOR A GUNMAN H a r r y C a r r y . J r . S t a r t * 9:0« r n .. J a i , . PA SSEN G ERS Peg g y Cummins and N a o ’a G r a y appear *o be Interested n someth cg else at ti ® moment, but d o n t you be eve it! A ll "hey real’ / c a re about is f t a t i d between them— "he r captain, Jo h n G regson. Greg--''.'' is fac'ng *ue trenbdon “ om captain c f a freig hter to that of a super-duper luxury i mer, and women hxe these are only two of the many problems ha meets wh e mar na tha cha-qe. The e and many other h a r'Ous'y riba d c a p e s may be observed "e w English at com edy now playing at the Texas Theater. ' The C a p *a ’" s T a r e the Protective Pouch Keeps Tobacco the pack- Ouf comes The PqdcM The Aftonbladet critic In Stock­ holm once wrote of Mime. B.ioer- llng, “ A great and magnificient voice of golden beauty.” The New Yo rk Times said, “ Critics and audience were spell­ bound by her perform ance.’’ In 1957, after her husbands death. Mme, Bjoerling returned to the United States where she is currently making her first Ameri- can-Canadian c incert tour. The Departm ent of Music will present this ex-student in H o g g Auditorium Sunday at 4 p.m. Ad­ mission is free, and the public is invited. : i The program will Include two ; classic arias from “ Ju liu s C ea sar" i by Handel and " L ’O lim piade” by Cima rosa, Norwegian and Swed- : ish art songs, a group of English songs, and several other selections Film Classics to Screen Japanses Tale of Valor “ Dni Chushingura (A M atter of V a lo r L ” a Japanese movie with English subtitles, w ill be 8 h o w n at 2, 5. and 8 p m . in Batts Audi­ torium Novem ber 16. This is one of a series of film classics and there w ill he no ad­ mission charge The movie depicts the r i g h t - eous wrath over blind submission to tyranny in a long-awaited ex­ plosion of rebellion. ' Sooner or la f ir Your Favoritt Tobacco! This protective a l u m i n u m foil p o u c h keep* famous, mild Sir Walter Raleigh 44% fresher th a n o ld -fash io n ed tin cans. T h e s tu rd y pouch is triple laminated. Carries flat. Sir Walter Raleigh is choice K entucky b u rle y - extra aged! Tty i t S M E L L S G R A N D - P A C K S R I G H T ! S M O K E S S W E E T - C A N T B I T E ! ••ow* * wnxiAwrow To*Acoe ho*tot*new r n * wa* * o r o r * L m r n* toaaooo r n u t s 'W f t N O W S H O W IN G FIRST S H O W 6 P.M bing crosby fabian TUESDAY WELD-NICOLE MAUREY E L E C T I O N T E N S I O N S G O T Y O C ? R E L A X A T A (.O O O M O I I E W E ’L L A N NO C M E I P T O M I N I T E R E T U R N S ! s n a c k B A R O P E N S 6 Oft • C H I L D F R E E A L L C O L O R P R O G R A M “ Portrait in Black” L a n a T u r n e r • S a n d ra D ee “ ' 1>lus~ ' “ WILD AND THE INNOCENT” A J o A N M C 1 D R C T SAYONARA ■ | M A R L O N B R A N D O -r.»- BATTLE CRY I V A N H E F L I N • A L D O R A T SOUTHAUSTIN 400fl S O C O N G R E S S A D M I S S IO N 50e • O P E N S fi P M PEYTON PLACE L a n a T a m e r S t a r t s 7:15 and 9:1ft f VK, AAC two heads are better than one Especially when one happens to be a delectable girl-type head. Lovely heads are alw ays attracted to male heads that use ‘V aseline’ Hair Tonic — made special ly for men who use water w ith their hair tonic. V aseline’ Hair Tonic’s 100% pure groom ­ ing oil replaces oil that water removes. In the bottle and on your hair the difference is cl earl y th e r e ! Just a little does a lot! /TX QtfiSP X ir s C if A U ,r * VASELINE Church G ives R a n c h R e t r e a t S e t 4 C ontracts For C e n te r -p. h y R e U g LOLLS ( j T O U p S i- ■ -n, T h e D a i l y T e x a n Cam pus Li Ie Tuesday, Nov. 8, I960 TH E D A ILY T E X A N ^ 9 ^ Homecoming Celebration W ill Highlight W e ek en d “ The Golden Anniv ersay of T C C in F'ort W orth” celebration and Homecomrng w ill highlight the day of the Te„\as-TOV game Satur­ t h i s y e a r day. Homecoming honors the Class of 1940. Among the activities w ill he a ceremony opening the r e i g n of T C U 's “ H o ire coming Queen” at the campus Frid ay night. Reservations, lim ited to 120 stu­ dents, w era due by Novem ber 7. J Applications m ay be made to the various student religious groups, reservations will be and final turned in to the E cu m e n ica l Coun­ cil. the President of F:cumejiical Council is Surrended H i l l . The R ev. Lee Freem an of the U n ive r­ sity Baptist Church is advisor. Ram ble Brig gs is chairm an of the retreats committee. 2338 Guadalupe at our Chenaras Shoe Salon only Contracts were awarded Frid a y . . . . . for construction of the new Luther- Fp hruan Festival of Faith to he held >" Preparat,r,n tor the L a y m a n'. in thp Austin Coun cil of an Student ('enter which w ill be churches and the U niversity Ecu- built at 2200 San Antonio, accord- menical Council are cosponsoring ing to the R ev. W C. Ahlrich. a retreat Novem ber 18-20 at the chairm an of the board ot the Luth- 11 Butt Singing I i , Ila r a n c h eran Student Foundation. , In Leakey, , T h e m e of . . . . r e tr e a t w i ll he Groundbreaking ceremonies for „ Th(. R e v ita ,jzation of th, ,.n it y " |aced upon ,h, the , the J52.000 structure w ill be held E at the building site at 4 p m. Sun­ day, Nov. 20, R ev. Ahlrieh said. Architects for the new building are F’ehr and Granger. •e rem* ana v,ranger. The general contract went to the Law son. the Rev h ls ,„ w j, student s role as a laym an in his own church in relation to the lay movement in the world. Speakers inrlude B iU for thp meetinR w ll, John T u m ville, Ilm a r d f . B (m J r L „ nn, rd Hoi- l w a y Andy Rlainp and D r . D a . B J . Building C o n n a t io n : clee- m e a l contract to Dean D. Johnson; heating and to Young and P r a t t : and plumbing to P . G. Sosa and Sons. air-conditioning Department Head McKetta Travels In Three States Dr. John J . M cK etta, chairm an of the Departm ent of Chem ical Fm- ginering, lectured and attended I meetings in M ichigan, Indiana, and In addition to lecturing in M ichi­ gan, D r. M cK e tta atended the Tri- Slate C ollege B oard of R egents meeting at Angola, Ind He attended the ^meeting of the national board of directors of the A m erican Institute of Chem ical E n giners in N ew Yo rk City. Essay Prize to Be tl' I CVS C 4) I U U c a v i n g s Savings Bond D O N Q prize offered Paine Foundation in an essay con­ test on Thomas Paine. The pssay must he a minimum of 3.000 words long, and entries must he sent to The T h o m a s Paint* Foundation, 370 W est Thirty- fifth Street, New Yo rk I, before Ja n u a ry 20 vid Stilt. Groups parti* ip,ating in the e\ ent will be the Westm inster Student Fellowship W esley Foundation, University Baptists, D is c ip le s Stu­ dent Fellowship. United Student Fellowship. Canterbury Club, L u ­ theran Student Association. Y M C A , Y W C A , and the Student Christian Association of the Huston-Tillot- son Foundation. i Q C U l t y W o i T I G n . Wornen faculty and staff mem- " « V ° in the Texas Union. oothoi' at rv/v\n cor* 1 n TTI \\ gether at noon or I p m. W ednes­ day F'ood sh ould be picked up in the reg­ ular cafeteria line and then taken to located on the southwest side of the cafe­ teria. No reservation ! are neces­ sary. the Longhorn Room, Staff members who wish to in­ vi?e n m em ber of Interna- tional Teacher Development Pro- Alpha Delta Pi's Hold Fall Retreat Alpha Delta P i sorority held a fall retreat at Pioneer Town near A MOO savings bond is the fin st Kram should cal! the office of by The T h o m a s the Dean of Women. N ew Y o rk recently. I O D i l l © l o C j 6 t h © r Second and third prizes of and $2a w ill also be awarded. ,, ... * ' . $50 'Wn ^eiicv. c af „ r rt»v af The retreat began Saturday Br­ Knee* i ternoon with games ana norse- i Paine was an Am erican political and religious w riter of the l i t e ' ^ J " ^ n ight Bob Breihan of L ig h tee nth Cen urv^_ ,)>p W esley Foundation spoke to NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR FAST SERVICE T H E S E F IV E F IN A L IS T S vvere chosen Sunday to c o m p e d in H e Newm an C lu b sweetheart I. to r., C arolyn ejection. They a re standing Short, Phyllis Kazen, N a n c y Schlagel. S e a e d I. to r. a re A v e ry Sinclair a r d Sara Tuck w in re r will be p re s e ^ e d at the Sw eetheart Fo r- in the Colonial mat, Saturday, N ovem b er 19, Room c f the Federated W o m e n s Club. Rosalie Oakes To Speak H ere M iss Rosalie Yaden Oaks, rep­ resenting the Foreign Division of the National Board of the Y W C A In the Union of South A frica, will visit the U n ive rsity Y M C A and Y W C A Novem ber 22-30. Before joining the Foreign D i­ vision staff, Miss Oakes was ex­ ecutive director of the Y W C A at the U n iversity for four vears. in education The Y W C A program is m ainly devoted to in South in­ A frica form al domestic crafts. Courses in sanitation and nutrition, preparation for m ar­ riage and fa m ily life are offered to youth and adults. Development of is the factor emphasized in this program. leaders W U Q oe5 O n O rere Tuesday H illel Foundation. 7-7 General Flection hours. 8:30-12:30 and 1:30-4:30 - Cactus pictures for juniors, and f i r s t - year and second-year law stu­ dents, Journalism Building 5. 9-4 M arine officer interviewing to discuss commission interested men stu­ t e a m plans with dents. Texas Union. 9-12 and 1-4:30 — D raw ing for T C U 3-5 game tickets, Gregory G ym . F a c u lty art exhibit, Music i 9-5 9-5 Building Loggia. S h o w i n g of Norwegian prints, Texas Union G alle ry. 9-11 — Scholarship benefit snack sale. Home Econom ics Building. Professor Leon Lebowitz to speak on P lato at Coffee Hour, IO I — G ilb ert King and G e r a l d Paulson to speak at Technical Session, Geology Building 14. 2-5 ■ G rievance Committee to re­ ceive complaints, Texas Union 321. 3-5 Paintings by G erald H a rve y Jones, T F W C G a llery. 2313 San G abriel. 4 Texas F'rne Arts Associa­ tion’s F’all Mem bership E x h ib i­ tion, Laguna G loria. Professor Thomas M cG ann to speak at Ju n io r Forum on “ Con­ tem porary in US-Latin Issues Am erican Relations,” T e x a s Union 304-305. 4:15 Catholic inquiry c l a s s , N ew m an Classrooms, 2016 G uad­ alupe. Apple-polishing p arty for Illustrated lecture on job op­ portunities by Procter & G a m ­ ble J u n i o r representatives, Ballroom of Texas Union. :30 speech students, Texas Union Sta r Room. -9 30 - FYee class stalls in r e r ­ an.;! s. Arts and Crafts Center, Texas Union 333. ! ing. - Texan Notebook staff meet­ Journalism Bu l ding 302. Shriley Berm an show w i t h general e le c tio n returns. M unici­ pal Auditorium. I GUARANTEED Every Keepsake diamond is protected against loss from the setting for a full year by the Keepsake Certificate . . . which also permanently reg­ isters your ring and assures lifetime exchange privilege. BELFAST *350.00 Alto $450 and 750 Wedding Ring $125 00 OAKLAND Wedding Ring JU S OO 450.00 the group, and the pledges enter- tained with skits. The retreat ended with a w or­ ship service Sunday morning. Sigma Delta Tau Elects Officers F a ll semester officers of Sigma Delta Tau sorority are C l a i r e Schlosberg. president; Ju d y Peine first vice-president; Alene Ross, second vice-president; K a te Bari* ash, recording secre ta ry; Be tsy Perlm an, corrdepending secre ta ry; treasurer; B a r ­ Shirley Racusin, bara Haas, historian; and B a rb a ­ ra D a ily, house m anager. Goodyear Shoe Shop # Expert Shoe Repair # Modern Equipment # Key* D e d icated W hit# You W a tch 405 W . 23rd S tre et I HOUR CLEANING I DAY LAUNDRY LONGHORN CLEANERS ( . R S -ST 25.38 Guadalupe G E T Y O U R m )E IC O » K I T S AMPLIFIER-TUNERS AT ( S P E E D W A Y YOUR HI-FI CENTER 2010 S p e e d w a y G R 8-6609 WEST AUSTIN PHARMACY 1012 W , 6 th 1 0 r c Discount on Rx to Students for 2 1 Lr, Pre n f ' t i o n S e n ie* C A L L GR 2-5477 Green Pastures ugracious 'luther* j ‘ >*11p h e f t '< C I cer'mer.'al fiat ',fr*# L,nc‘t-eon Ev*ry Day 11; 30-2 CO D ansr 5 30-10 OO Sa t u r d a y a n d Su n d a y ©ny for reiervatiom , call: HI 2-2343 8! I W . L iv e O ak 8 b o ck s w eft ot Austin Theatar th# A L L A N D A L E V IL L A G E distitttffl jrnln Laundry Service Open 7 a m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday A U S T I N ’S O N L Y K E E P S A K E P l . I M O S D JI M L U R 510 West 19th Street DAILY TEXAN C, (aSiihiccl C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T IS IN G BA T E S .................... Each W ord 115-word m inim um ) Classified Display I column v one inch one tim e Ka rh Additional Tim e 20 Con.ecutlve Issue* * words 15 we rd* 20 words .......... .............................................................. ............................................................................. , , vt . Vi * * * *.................. \ (N o copy change for consecutive Issue rates ) ...................................... ................ $1 OO 4e n . A S S I F T F D A D V E R T I S IN O D F A M .T N T * Tuesday Texan ......................... Monday 3 30 p ti Weanesoav Texan .................... Tuesday 3:80 pm . Thursday Texan .................... Wednesday .3 3 p m ......... Thursdav 3 3 pm. F rid a y Texan Fundi % Texan F rid a v. .3 ,31 p m In th.* event of errors made tn an advertisem ent. Im m ediate notice must be given as the pub sher* are responsible for only Ona incorrect insertion. .......... CALL JOHNNY GR 2-2473 Rooms tor Rent R O O M S F O R B O Y S Close to campus Singles Double. A m o l e park inc rat^s New c e n t a u r House. Dou G R 6-8891. For Rent Lost and Found Typing for parties S P A C IO U S D E S S A U H A L L . Free lo n lv a signed guarantee of a num lo u r choice of en a Christm as E D 5-9355 room house w ith 535 hert ;.*rtatnment parts ’ Call Mrs K o trl* a gnnd four Also hath ut til ties paid Plan n in g For Sale l o s t : Gold link chain charm bracelet. F r i ­ day. October 28 E ig h t charm s Includ­ ing a black transparent stone w ith a carved deer inside a go d ring. Please call Valentine M cK a y . G R 2-276? 2552 NUECES H a* Room for One Vian New A ir Conditioned Men s Dorm M aid Service N ear Campus G R 7 1902 Free Park.n g 435 OO per month G R 8-0370 r»_,-ur, Apartm ents SM A I J . A P A R T M E N T S . TIA O blocks campus U tilities paid $45 00 Dei m o n th G R 8-7704 29f0 Speed wa N E A. R U N I V E R S I T Y L O V EL Y two b e d r o o m d u ple x C ouple Vian boys apart rn* rn Hr va*, kip en-bath. c h is paid U K 6-')»44 1 >1- (•■■■■"___ . Furnished Apartm ents U N I V E R S I T Y . M C * F R N I-El-IL I E N ­ l o a m bed o ff stre e t n a rk in g *65 00 single, 170 Od C Y U tilitie s p a i d d o u b le G R 8-9125 bi<» Kl w c s t rn: ip u L A R C K T U P .U K R W M IP . r f * nt f se • o m fo rtab le . clean A lso h o u se k n rin g room . Reason­ able C L J 4 u s _____ Duplex— Furnished On, bedrxnn C L E A N A T T H A t’T D ' argo < S w im m in g —J cou p le Lo. ated on new cit-* ! R Ed g ecliff C R 6-33fo> f u r n i s h e d . Ideal for Sos-is ishing b e a l.ne .Re $65 00. 1402 L I K E N E W . G I U L I E T T I a e r o b ia n Actual value $375 Wilt take $206. VV rite M e l W e in b e rg e r. 217 C o lle g e B lv d . S a n A n to n io A N T IQ U E 1831 C H E V R O L E T Perfect co n d itio n $250 ( all C L 3-1040 1948 P L Y M O U T H F O ’ R d oor sedan Ex e llen ! tran>i»ort.'!tinn fo r s t u d e r ' b a t t e r s good tires. $50.00. N e w C R 9-4850 cost ski boat G E T T I N G M A R R I E D . M U S T sell low Excellent co n d itio n . 14’ hull w ith fib e r glass bottom, b u ilt ­ in -IS H P t r a ile r < o m plete rig lo. kerx an d sp eed o m eter .ash G R 7-2876 Jo h n s o n *495.00 (offi.-et. ’ tit ski 1958 C O R V E T T E 270 Engine fo u r speed tra n sm issio n po* t ra c tio n R a ­ d io and heater. 25 000 mites. One own- c- 42 500 C L 3-8044 Busines* O pportunities m a tu re \ o u n e E X C E L L E N T O P P O R T U N I T Y F O R tn a re w a rd in g c a re e r Reply g iv in g sh ex exp erien ce. Box 7804. U n iversity S ta ­ tion. itmn tnterested W a n te d B L O O D D O N O R S— AH type* of blood needed for usiwte rn Austin Prof.-s slonai donor* now accepted Travis County Blood B a n k 2!>Ub Red R ive r G R 8-6437 O N E OR York . its i S3-1 nu ex. I- Hi arrive Ne N o v e ni b c ( .R 8 i.!6'2 or ve in:! Leave rW O S T U D E N T S to New Private plane i u s 'in Nov other ork sam e dav return ) or 30th. G R 7-3184, L O S T G L A S S E S O N O c t o b e r 28 Bro w n plastic flam e* w ith gold trim R e w a rd ' Call C R 7-4857 Special Services R E N T - P U R C H A S E T V * Alpha Television Rental G R 2-269* P R I N T E D S T A T IO N E R Y name a n d address 8 * x ii sheets 25 for 85c, 50 for 8 »• No 6 25 for 5o for 85c Choice of black or 65. orange ink Ever piece printed' Po st­ paid Check cash or money order. *•* envelopes S T U D E N T P R I N T S H O P P f I BOX 7062 Houston 8, Texas CO M BO T R A N D ’ H I R E the “ College C ro u p ' Made Up of U n iv e rs ity stu dents C ill Chuck .tone* G R 2-2863 Alterations M E N S E X P E R T A L T E R A T I O N S don* r e a s o n a b ly Qui ck s er vic e , Se e Mr* Jacobson t Men s W ear 2332 Arnold Guadalupe A L T E R A T IO N S A N D D R E S S M A K IN G . 715 V'. est 25th Street G R 6-3360 Typing DISSE R TA T IO N S. ETC (S ym b ote). Mrs. TIC in. GR 6-7*179 ELEC T R O *! A- Ritchie. Close LAW NOTES T H EM ES, outlines. 25c page i .R 6-471? T H E S E S D IS S E R T A T IO N S B O O K S t r o rn a t I c Mrs .Petmeckv : : < G L 3-2212. fusional N e ! s o C R 2-115 T H I . : P. iR i;r[ B B 2*429 RT A meed i-av e v * S H O R T O N T Y P IN G , time and m o r r « : < ms V ss I ^ t me ne p i n theme* outlines notes Graham . C L 3 v:..' r in M A R T H A A N N Z IV L E Y M B A A complete professional typing serv­ ice tailored to the needs of I n er- tee* ooh rd s lty science, e q u i p m e n t and I - M R ED G . 21)2 Guadalupe D I S S E R T A T IO N S R I PO R TS p rofession al!•- an-l ■ -ct - n' Iv tv ped Kxperien- ed cie trie I P ' ' c a m p u * Mrs from F ou r block* Bodour G R 8-8113 T H t s i s T Y P I N G P R O B L E M S ' Call R V H o lle y G R 6-3018 after 5 OO Mutt - lith mats a speciality New I B M Electric, Guaranteed accuracy Ha md Service D E L A F I E L D T Y P I N G S E R V K T - < T h e se * M i m e o g r a p h i n g Ph oto, M u l t l l i t h l n g H I 2-65- . E X P E R I E N C E D t r o m a t . c Report*, ( O M P I I ENT thebes f ■ <1:*ser!a- tions. A 11 types Graduaf* uate Close to campus M - De R u e* G R 8-329.8 r f . gr a c c e R A I e s l u m : ' . • i ■ perienced Reasonable New ele<’tr*»- i " "t- 1 " mat i to I n iversitv Mss A.bright c l , Manus, rtpts * *; ■' a *' 1 . *4 R E P O R T S D I S S E R TA I’ lON A bk Roberta Mrs B W est 13th G R 7-7554 T . I S I S L D I r 15 Y E A R S E X P E R I FN ! E D tv ; st ave ab le n ig ht or d a v . VV I c a ll for and del iv < r w o rk N e a t a u ra l. and r . . so n a b le rate s and n e e d e d C R 6 4859 P a tro n a g e ab b r coin ted I B M T Y P I N G . E L E C T R U M A T U !. These*. Dissert tion* Repot •* P-■ Accurate Reasonab e Mrs P e a r l GF. 8 5123 2013 Capezios Classic Skimmer ■first time ever • black caw • black suede • black patent • tan, red, green calf 6.90 fully fashioned by Bernard Altmann Yuetdsf, Ww. 8, TTO THE P T itT TCTAM ~ Fag* g Students Study U T Sophomore Leaves Today Smoking Rule Adviser System For CBS Committee Meeting H e,,,a*, , leaves T uesday nigh* fo r J u d y Schley**r. sophom ore Plan Churches, w h i'h represent* Pro- p ro b le m o f the c o m m itte e is a1! the T I m a ’o r c r e a tiv ity of ©tit­ denorm nations, an a d v is o ry c o m m itte e m e e tin g in some p ro g i ens for CBS, It la eh- standing yo u th w o rke rs, They tr y too good; to m ake the p ro g ra m s g.bie to ha e -cats fin some of the P rin ce to n . New Jerse y, and w ill th a t is, the y overshoot the so-called ad' iso ry ro o p a rtic u la rly re tu rn Sunday. ta rg e t au dience so that s where fo r the religiou s p ro gra m s, I com e In. -rh f cr said, " T h * basic in g e n u ity and *p o n *o r* te n a n t M iss tm e- ‘Education Climate’ Interviews Today In Students doing Interested som ething about tha t election-w orn problem of academ ic advising ca r gain a place on the team the' w ill th!* and o th e r ques­ w re s tle w ith tions of ed uca tion al clim a te this week. in serving on In te rv ie w s fo r g tu d e n 'r in te re st e*i the educations; c lim a te co m m itte e of student g o v­ e rn m e n t w ill be held Tuesday throu gh T h u rsria v fro m 2 to 4 p m Students m a y a p r y fo r c o m m .” en m e m b e rsh ip In Texas Union 319 and 329 ro m m itie e A t p r e s e n t , is the com posed p r im a r ily o f rep rese nta­ tive s from each of the U n iv e rs ity i scho la stic honoraries. C o-chairm en o f the gro up are Beth R obertson and Ronnie E rs t rn an. The c o m m iPee is now stud ying the U n iv e rs ity .* «> tem of d e p a rt­ m e n ta l advising and co m p a rin g it to the system s of o th e r college? and u n ive rsitie s of com p ara ble size and stature . 2 F u llb r ig h t Scholars To Speak T o d a y at “ Y ” L i a Ne i va and M arion L im a , stu­ dents the fro m B ra z il atte n d in g U n iv e rs ity on F u ib rig h ! s c h o la r­ ships w ill address the L a tin A m e r­ ica n A ffa irs C o m m itte e o f the U n i­ " Y ” a u d ito riu m the v e rs ity fro m 4 to 5 p m . Tuesday. in The students, who plan to teach E ng lish w ill answ er questions a ft­ e rw a rd s. C o lum b ia B ro a d ca stin g System has a d viso ry com m ittee ? fo r a ll its te le visio n p ro g ra m s w h ich re v ie w advise w rite rs kinescope and suggest p ro g ra m s fo r the c o m ­ ing ye a r ^ince the N a tio n a l C ouncil film s of Thomas McGann To Speak Today T he Junior Forum o f the In te r ­ national S tudies P ro g ra m w i l l meet at 4 p .rn Tuesday in U n io n B u ild in g 304-306 D r. T hom as M K ia n n a asor ate p ro fe sso r o f h is to ry , w ill ?j>e;iK on ‘ C o n te m p o ra ry t nu cd States L a t i n A m e ric a n Re i- tio n x ." Issues rn Th*. M cC a nn re c e n tly attended the th ir d In te rn a tio n a l Congress of H is to ria n s held in Buenos A ires, A rg e n tin a . He was a N a?a! atta he in L a tin A m e ric a d u rin g M m Id W a r TI B e­ fo re coming in to the U niv* sity tau ght «' M ar. a rd d i ­ 195k, he v e rs ity and served w ith the D e­ p a rtm e n t of State. He is the author of "A rg e n t na the US and In te r-A m e ric a n the Ss stem , 1800 1914, ' wh < n no s be­ ing fo r p u b lic a tio n i n t o Spanish in A .ge ntina tra n s la te d J U D Y S C H L E Y E R SHIVERS... 11 icky D ic k j th a t audient e w ith his co m m e n t ro u tin e has as the us b a ok a blast at Lyn do n Johnson s the Senator s the hands of a P a l- tre a ts ent a* la * R e pu blican d e m o n stra tio n , th .’ I i are p a rt of ’ Such about, Hp also b ro u g h t h e a r t y jibes at Johnson laughs w ith IT in J im W ells C ourtly, m uch-dis- oussed m the 1948 th*' w ike o f Senate election. fo r Box Go' ern o r Sh vers was in tro du ced by E w in g W e rle in J r . U n iv e rs ity fro m Houston. W e r­ !*iw student lein sounded a few hot w ords on w hat he ca lled * K e n n e d y’* m an- aged A m e ric a " and the I ic m o rra t- ic n o m in ee’s y o u n g e r b r o t h e r B obby. "W e voting A m e rica n s are asking not fo r the prom ise of s e r u r ity ." "W e w ant an assurance he s a d M a rin © O ffic e rs B e g in UT O r a t o r s Place 2 n d In te rv ie w s Here T o d a y A M arine Corps o ffic e r selection fro m San A n fonio san 11 v is it I n J u n i o r D e b a t e D i v i s i o n The U n iv e rs ity of I - v t Ora tm . team the cam p is Tuesday throu gh F r i- c a l A s s o c ia tio n * J e rry G ibson and from H a rry W alsh cam e h o m e day to in te rv * w men and wom en Texas C h ris tia n U n iv e rs ity '* col- inter* ted in ea rn in g com m issions lege debate as M a rin e o ffice rs. a tro p h y fo r p la cin g second In the ju n io r d iv is io n of debate to u rn a m e n t c a rry in g state m eets located Headed by C aptain J- C C lick In the th» team w ill be to 4 p m Texas U n io n fro m I a m d a ily . Students and recent, g ra d ­ u a l s w ill be In te rvie w e d and se­ lection te st* w ill be a d m in iste re d M a rk K id d and R andy E llio tt m a d e in Senior the a e m ifin a l* d iv is io n dehatp, but w e re e lim in a t­ ed bv O klahom a State A m e ric a n politi< ti scene are usua iv e xa gg erate d tic a l e ffe c t," the T h e y fo r p o li­ CHARTER BUSES F oo tb a ll G a m e * — R e t r e a t * — Picnic* — etc. A i r - c o n d i t i o n e d — A i r Ri de Rest R o o m s E q u i p p e d Kerrville Bus Company, Inc. Phone GR 8-9361 “ F r i e n d l y S e r v i c e " Cigarets Allowed N ow in Girls' Rooms A d v is e r* of S cottish Rh® D o rm ­ ito ry o ffic ia lly announced in w ing m eetings M on da y n ig h t the no sm oking n ile had been revoked by the g o ve rn in g B oa rd of D ire c ­ the g irls of SRD m ay tors. and sm oke In th e ir room s. tha t is Th s the firs t " I 'm supposed to put m y s e lf in the situ a tio n of a high school youth on a Sunday m o rn in g a p e r the the S a tu rd a y n ig h t before who hap- pens to tu rn on the TV' bec;. JS«» he d o rm ito ry was occu pied In Septem- ber, 1922. th a t the residents o f SRD has no thin g b e tte r to do, ’ she con­ Pave bepn allow ed in tinu ed . th e ir room s. No sm oking w ill he The c o m m itto rs do not "p ro v id e allow ed in tho ma n (w ish we had any pat an sw e r th * s ta irw a y . liv in g room o r on some i, but we are satisfie d if we the Sm oking w ill be fo re * a youth to search and m aybe prov ide a l i t t l e d ire c tio n and reas- g ir ls ’ room s, th e ir sm o kin g lounges, surance tho?e agonizing ’ seeking years and th * re cre a tio n room . The sm oking is not alone in the halls, tim e s i n c e to sm oke tha t he lim ite d to in ihe ad . ivo ry c o m m itte e T ile CBS p ro g ra m fo r w hir h Judy is is on 'T » ) k U p and L i e ’ w h ich won the S ylva n ia a w a rd fo r tw o years and was one o f fou r re p re se n ta tive p ro g ra m s w hich CBS sent to M os­ cow lounges w ill be a v a ila b le to g irls as usual d u rin g *he day and u n til 8 p m , a c c o rd ­ ing to M rs M aude B a lla rd , head reside nt counselor F rom 8 p m . u n til 7 a rn the sm oking ounge* w ill be used as quiet areas fo r study. D o rm ito ry to be c a re fu l so tha t residents w e re ca u ­ they "L o o k I p and L iv e " Is tx i-spon­ represenf- sored by org a n iza tio n s mg Jew ish ant fa ith s T his m eeting is concern- When ed on ly ■* rh m ent. tioned ( 'a m o u r and P ro te st- m ay re ta in th is p riv ile g e . firs t the P rote sta nt seg. occupied, no sm o k in g was p e rm it- firs t the m a in re c re a tio n roo m and ted S m oking was p e rm itte d in la te r in the lounge*. the d o rm ito ry w as a strong free e m n o m j Ha noted th it R o bin K ennedy was quoted a* "d is tu rb e d about the p o litic s o f young Texans ’ d u r­ ing a recent t r ip in to the state. "T h e politic s ot voting Texans are not the p o litic s o f the Kennedy b o y s ," W erle in the cro w d , w h ich la rge n u m b e r r of U n iv e rs ity students. iv ie d a told Austin A rtist’s W orks TFWC Exhibit Feature A one-m an a rt e x h ib it fe a tu rin g the w o rk of G e ra ld H a rv e y Jones is on d is p la y at the Texan F e d e ra ­ tio n of W o m en’s th ro u g h N o ve m b e r 30. (dubs M r. Jones, a lo ca l m an, spe cia l­ in w e ste rn scenes end Texas His p a in tin g s also the B ra d fo rd A rt ize s landscape? m a y be seen at ■ G a lle ry . JOHNSON... (C ontinued F ro m Page I ) ou r m id st. And you ll be at the polls to m o rro w - a sm a ll m in o rity " that » w h a t L a te r an ira te little m id dle -ag ed D e m o c ra tic la d y v e rb a lly w h ittle d down one of the R epu blican s tu ­ dents as she trie d to s trip h im of N ixon buttons T h a t was the o n ly sign of even near-v lolence In th * p a 'k e d C ry s ta l B a llro o m ICC Plans Paper, for Service A co-op n e w sle tte r w a * discussed _ _ by m em b ers o f the In te r O O p e r - 1 w here "A u s tin to B o s to n " was shot, Johnson also told the. naNon th a t the A m e ric a n s are re a d y to la y aside fhp div ision* of the I860 s the challenges of Hie to m e e t I960 s. "T e n weeks ago we w e nt fro m In th is, his to w e lco m e the ca m p a ig n . A u stin to Boston to begin o u r c a m ­ fin a l p a ig n ," he said speech o f "O ne hundred thousand lined the streets to w elcom e us, the grandson of tw o C onfederates into New E ng la nd. "O ne week la te r. T exas w e l­ com ed J a ck K ennedy. The gi p a l­ est the S outhw est has seen — before o r since — cam e out to cheer th is grandson of poor { n % h im m ig ra n ts fm m Boston crow ds s tiv e C ouncil at the re g u la r m eet- ing M ondav n ig h t. News fro m the we w ould win ^ aNr, be lie ved ever since th a t (C ontin la d F ro m Page I ) of know ing that we shall liv e In " W H U T 'S A TEXAS RANGER? O h yeh, t h a y t m a g a t e e n . N a b . I don' r e a d it. C a n ' t evert r e a d nuthin, m a t t e r o f fa c t . Don make no d iffe rm in t*. tho', t h a y t m a g a i e e n ' t t a - b o o rou nd here a n y w a y *. Yeh , it u *e t w o r d * with m o re than foah le tte r* , kind o f show-offy, b ig -city , like. Stinkin' j m a h t guys. Use a high class b ra n d of humah t h e f t hahd to unnerstand. Alw ays liked ' why d the chicken cross the ro a d, ' myself. I think they * a c o p y o f it back t h e a y u h in the john, though, if fen you wanna look smaht and pu t on a p p e a ra n c e s . AGGIE ISSUE OUT WEDNESDAY on campus YOU MAY RECEIVE A LIFE-SIZED, AUTOGRAPHED PORTRAIT OF DRiTrQoD UNLESS YOU ACT NOW! Hurry! Rush out now and buy a pack of Luckies! Smoke them quickly! Send the empty pack to Dr. Frood. lf you do it now—Frood guarantees not to send you this photo. rm-wmrm — "— e r e : 1 w *»w og—t I’we moMf**■*■ co-op* w ill be given to the ICC h isto ria n s on the fir s t and fifte e n th of each m on th . Is S enator R a lp h Y a rb o ro u g h h e lp in g the ICC to secure B ra ille the L ib r a ry o f C on­ hooks fro m gress fo r the Y M C A . A reco rd p la y e r and re co rd s have been o r ­ dered the b lin d students fo r Joh nn y C ra w fo rd , p re sid e n t, an­ nounced that ih e C h ristm a s dancp w ll he held D e cem b er 3 at the r>elvvood C a fe te ria A C h ris tm a s p a rty fo r c h ild re n and d e cora tions the H e a lth Center w ere also fo r discussed ICC Week w-as te n ta tiv e ly «et fo r M a r c h 12-19. Joh nn y C ra w fo rd fo r the ne xt m ee ting announced N o vem b er 21 a1 R o yal Co-Op. H A N D M A D E B O O T S Aonaw And T«n» I am* R o o t s T X P F R T S H O U R * C A I R R # v » M a d # H h l U Y o u \ V » i t U N I V E R S I T Y B O O T S H O P SI I DI V I S t h r u F r i . T h# Re c e lt e C o m p i e t§ C ir en e f o b F R E E W I T H 1« f , \ i i on n r r, ** R A ti " n r l a i r '■Jan .1 a r I n t « B. C. R O G E R S O p h t h a l m i c D iip e n s e r Within • *i > y w a . i n q d e a r a o f t a r a m r us ISO! G ad. GR 7-1422 Watches Need the tops in repairs Work Den* in Our O '*" S h o p ! FREE ESTIMATES The crushing p re s s u re of 2,000,000 psi A * th e G e n e r a l M o t o r s R e s e a rc h L a b o r a t o r ie s th e 6 0 0 t o n t e t r a h e d r a l a n v i l p r e s s d u p lic a t e s p r e s s u re s w h ic h e x is t 2 0 0 m ile s b e n e a th th e e a r th 's s u r f a c e T h e p u r ­ p lis h to s t u d y th e c o m b in e d e ffe c t o f u lt r a h . g h p r e s s u r e a n d t e m p e r a t u r e o n t. e p h y s ic a l a n d c h e m ic a l p r o p e r tie s o f k n o w n m a t e r ia ls w i t h a n e y e t o w a r d I m p r o v i n g t h e ir p r o p e r tie s o r e v e n c r e a t in g n e w m a t e r ia ls . W h a t h a p p e n s t o s o l i d s a t p r e s s u r e s o f 2 . 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 p s i a n d 7 , 0 0 0 d e g r e e s I ? G e n e r a l M o t o r s h a s t h e r e s e a r c h f a c i l i t i e s r e q u i r e d t o a n s w e r t h e s e q u e s t i o n s . I n a d d i t i o n , G M o f f e r s e x p e r i e n c e a n d d i v e r s i f i c a t i o n t o p r o ­ v i d e t h e y o u n g s c i e n t i s t a n d e n g i n e e r w i t h u n l i m i t e d o p p o r t u n i t y . A u t o m o t i v e r e s e a r c h , p r o d u c t i o n e n g i n e e r i n g a n d m a n u f a c t u r i n g , e l e c ­ t r o n i c s a n d a s t r o n a u t i c s a r e J u s t a f e w o f t h e m a n y t e c h n i c a l a r e a s o f f e r e d . Y o u w i l l b e g i v e n e v e r y o p p o r t u n i t y t o c o n c e n t r a t e o n o n e , o r i f y o u r i n t e r e s t s a r e v a r i e d y o u m a y m o v e i n t o o t h e r d i v i s i o n s . Y o u ’ll b e i n a p o s i t i o n t o t a c k l e b i g j o b s a t G M b e c a u s e t h i s i s w h e r e i m p o r t a n t t h i n g s a r e b e i n g d o n e . I t ’s t h e o p p o r t u n i t y o f a l i f e t i m e a n d i t o f f e r s a l i f e t i m e o f o p p o r t u n i t y . G e n e r a l M o t o r s a l s o h a s a p r o g r a m w h i c h p r o v i d e s f i n a n c i a l a i d f o r p o s t g r a d u a t e a n d u n d e r g r a d u a t e s t u d i e s . F o r m o r e c o m p l e t e i n f o r m a ­ t i o n c h e c k w i t h y o u r c o l l e g e P l a c e m e n t O f f i c e r , o r w r i t e t o G e n e r a l M o t o r s S a l a r i e d P e r s o n n e l S t a f f , D e t r o i t 2, M i c h i g a n . GENERAL MOTORS * - lh**, field* 'or mm holding Barhator'a. Mas!*-'* and O w V i rino-aas; Mechanical, GM po* 1 * -o« a i ( , I " InduV'ttl I ’-nor (I sod Ceramic En ^ C o*y ia> ^ — Jv (^ ax £ o u our m iddle nam& THIS IS NO IDLE THREAT! Dr. Frood p ortraits will be m ailed at random beginning N ovem ber 1 5 . Only students who send us em pty Lucky packs will be safe! TAKE NO C H A N C ES ! M ail those em pty packs today. Send them , with your nam e and address, to Dr. Frood, Box 2 9 9 0 , Grand C entral Station, New York 1 7, New York. Now It s the Voters' Turn To Be Heard Shivers Booms Dick In lith Hour Effort The DAlgjf TE: Johnson Receives Joyous Welcome XAN --------------------------------------------* s_---------- ------------------------------------- B t J E R R Y C O N N Lyndon B. Johnson was sm iling and picking confetti out of Governor Price Daniel’s hair while a bulging Driskill Hotel waited for the final words of his vice-presidential campaign. tired It was a roaring hom ecom ing made hic bv Texans for their big T exas Democrat. He mounted the rostrum in a roar of c h e e r * and str e a m e rs from the crowd and smiled aw ay the in his face. He still looked the happy 'hom ey’ and exuberant political fox. Kennedy Keeps Running Scared He spoke mostly t h a n k * for previous support and a s k e d for election day votes “ so that Texans eau enjoy w h a t they deserve.'' tinges * ‘‘First Co lie ge Daily In the So u th " Vol. 60 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, I960 Six Pages Today No. 62 Dick, Jack Near End of Road; Its All Up to Voters Today B y G L E N C A S T L E B I R O Former Governor Allan Shivers brought the presidential campaign trail to a thunderous clim ax in Austin Monday night, after demanding that an alleged national em ergency be avoided by NOT electing the Democratic prophets of gloom. In a statewide televised rally In Q ty Coliseum, Shiver* ; told a 3,500-strong p a rtisa n throng in g o o d that America will he hands if the people elect Richard i Nixon Tuesday. Telethon Ends Dick's Campaign Preceding to be President, .I o h n s n n , Senator Richard Russell of Georgia got the crowd w a rm e d up with “ If Dick Nixon w ere it would be the g rea test tragedy that ever befell From this country.’’ the the short speech mezzanine. Johnson pushed through tile cheering mob for the nationally televised “ Austin to Boston” view ­ ing with presidential candidate John Kennedy. in The em cee requested the crowd to keep down in front of the c a m ­ eras. give good hearty Texas a p ­ plause, “ but please,” he pleaded. “ don't ring the cow bells.’’ In his brief “ Austin to Boston’’ message. Johnson referred to his years the past as a sort of political protege of Franklin D. Roosevelt. in “ From him I learned to identify greatness.’’ he told the n a t i o n , “ that sam e greatness In John F. K ennedy.” that is But the hoopla of the h o rn e- coming rally c a m e while hundreds waited outside the hotel for J o h n ­ son to arriv e and as hundreds m o re milled through the hotel. A b and from Huston-Tillotson C o l l e g e played some fast jazz, klieg lights flashed through the sky colliding with from Allan S h iv ers’ Nixon rally, and the fast talking announcer joked-down an Interru p ­ ting group of Republicans. those About 35 Republicans from The University of Texas hoisted som e Cl Nlxon-T,odge signs on the crowd edges. D uring moments of lax Democrat yelling, the “ We w ant Nixon’’ b e c a m e a little too o b tr u ­ the announcer stepped sive and in. “ Couldn’t Allan Shivers h o l d you out t h e r e ? " he joshed about the Republican rally. “ We d o n ’t blame you for coming here " The D emocrats later r e ­ roared. He ' small minority In ferred to the J O H N F. KENNEDY LYNDON B. J O H N S O N Auction of Pledges Aids Chest' Drive “ Whollgim mefoumotfivejustfour fourfourgoingoncegoingtwicpFOUR nowlet’stryforfivefive . . .’’ Th* Pi Phi pledge class to Sig­ m a Alpha Epsilon fraternity for $50. One thousand and fifty dollars worth of m e rc han dise went once, twice, and w as sold Monday noon at the Campus Chest auction. Bob Brochstein and Jerry H er­ ring cajoled the crowd into bid­ ding their lunch money and rainy- dav savings for fraternity and so­ campus rority beauties, footballs. autographed Chancellor Ir>gan Wilson's rpd sus­ penders and G overnor Price D an­ iel's favorite silk necktie classes, pledge Some of u*p bargains of the The Zeta Tau Alpha pledge class to Kappa Alpha fra ternity for $91. instrumental group to Phi Sigma Delta fra ter­ nity for $35. The Holidays, an The Delta Delta Delta p l e d g e to Phi G a m m a Delta fra­ class ternity for $100. The Phi G a m m a Delta pledge class to Chi O m eg a sorority for $125. The K a p p a K appa G a m m a to Sigma Fhi Epsi­ pledge class lon fraternity for $75. The Kappa Alpha pledge class for to Zeta Tau Alpha sorority $ 100 . The Alpha T a u Omega pledge class to Kappa K appa G a m m a sorority for $25. Sigma Alpha Epsilon p l e d g e class to Kappa Alpha Theta soro­ rity for $50. The Sigma O il pledge class to Kappa Kappa G a m m a sorority for $89 The Chi Omega pledgp class to Phi Kappa Psi fra tern ity for $45. The Kappa Alpha Theta pledge class to Phi G a m m a Delta f ra te r­ nity for $60. Til** Sigma Phi Epsilon fra ter­ nity to Kappa K ap pa G am m a *o- sority for $40. Tile Phi K appa Psi pledge c l a s s to Alpha Chi O m ega sorority for $25. The Alpha Epsilon Phi pledge class to Sigma Alpha Mu fra ter­ nity for $15. Tile Delta Tau Delta p l e d g e class to Alpha Chi O m ega sorority for $r»n Novelty items s o l d thusly: An autographed football from the 1960 Oklahoma football game for $8 50. An autographed football f r o m the 1960 Baylor g a m e for $13 An autographed album by Tile Brothers Four for $5 A copy of “ P rofiles in Courage " the author, Ja ck autographed by Kennedy, for *0 of copy A “ Challenges We Face,' autographed bv the author Richard Nixon, for t i A «et of I zag a n Wilson's r e d SU*- for 50 and u n dershirt ponders cents. ( S e e ‘J O H N S O N , P a g e «) da v included: Gripe Group Hears Librarian Request A *ugg*stion that the R eserve ! Reading Room be kept open an extra hour Monday-Friday will he m a d e to Alexander Moffit, Univer- *ity librarian by his associate, F re d Folmer. Speaking before the G r i e v a n t Committee T hursday evening Mr Folmer said he a h o will suggest that d i e Rpsprvp Reading Room be kept open from 2 to 10 p rn. on Sundays. T h e lib ra ry now rinse* at IO p m Monday-Friday and at 5 p m on Sunday. Students have complained about the closing hours, as m any would like to study thorp on Sun­ day night A previously reported griev a n ce suggested that the University C o m ­ mons has inadequate facilities for keeping food hot Another c o m ­ tables plaint has been were not being cleared fast enough. A report indicated that the i r s tam ant now has food w a r m e r s and that an effort is being made to hire more woi kers. that the Co - c h a irm a n Julius G lirknia n also read a resolution stating that the G rievance Committee would make a thorough study of the s tu ­ dent parking problem. V | "■ '■ ■ W e d n e a i i a v T h e D a i l y T e x ­ a n b e c o m e s t w o f a c e d . Th** No s e m b e r a e d i t i on o f T h e t w o T e x a n wi l l h a v e f r o n t t h e s e wi l l p a g e s . O n e of t h e h e d e v o t e d e n t i r e l y t o e l e e t i o n . w Ii l l e t h e o t h e r wi l l c o v e r c a m p u s h a p | » c n i n g s . to t h e I n a d d i t i o n l a t e s t n a t i o n a l a n d s t a t e A s s o c l a t e d P r e s s e l e c t i o n s t o r i e s , t h e s p e c i a l f r o n t p a g e wi l l r e ­ h a v e e x c l u s i v e T e x a n l ocal h e a d q u a r - p o r t s f r o m tni l h t e r n of th*’ D e m o c r a t ­ i c a n d t h e R e p u b l i c a n p a r t i e s . e l e c t i o n O t h e r p e r s o n a l i t i e s in t h e T e x a n l i m e l i g h t : S h e l l e y B e r m a n , w h o w i l l h e c o m m e n t i n g on t ile d e r f r o m h i s s h o w ; t h i n I , yn d o n J o h n s o n , w h o w i l l h e I n t e r s l o w e d l i t a T e x a n r e p o r t e r In h i s D r l s M H H o t e l s u i t e o n e l e c t i o n n l e h t ; a m t I ' w t v e r s l t v a h o wi l l h e r e n n r t e d on a s t*»e» t h e s h r l f l e i l t o T V t-rf* In I n l o n a n d d o r m ' t o r l e s . s t u d e n t s MMB— - s . , . - JU- . Tom Brewer, graduate student, complained about the C a m p u s Chest Jim enez was appointed chairm an of a sub­ committee to investigate the d is­ tribution of these funds. allocations Luis Holland Warns About Indecision Most A m erican college men do not have the courage to face prob­ lems and solve them themselves, .lark Holland told a group of f r a ­ ternity men Monday night. Speaking to m em bers of T h e t a Xi said fraternity, Mr. Holland that too m a n y college men a r t in a rro rd a n re with the wishes of others. "They h a v e n ’t the intestinal for­ their own d e r i ­ titude to m a k e sions," he said. Mr. Holland feel said through with that m a n y times a college m an will do som e­ thing he does not is right, if hut he will go rather than he criticized and rid i­ culed by his “ buddies." th a t this indecision of He said college men for thinking in not themselves h as its effects in la te r life. “ I have m et many c o l l e g e seniors that realize too late they are not heading down road they really w a n t," the former dean of men said. the He v;od \ t t t college men m ust realize now' that they have a re- sponsihihty to them'-elves and they must determ in e what kind of a person they a r e and want to he “ You must learn to analyze the surrounding y o u I circum stances in c e r ta in situations,” he when said “ Decision comes only when one decides which circumstances are important anti which are un­ important " Mr Holland said. TCU Ticket Dr aw in g To Continue Today Sale- and tit ket draw ing for S a t­ urday s TUT’ gam e vs ill continue Tuesday 9 a rn noon and 1-4 30 p in and Wednesday, 9 a rn -noon and 1-4 p rn. Drawing began Monday for 3 OOO tickets and 200 d a te blanket tax t i c k e t s 'Hie for r e g u la r prices of SI blanket tax tickets a n d ' I for d ate and s t u d e n t w de blanket tax lick et* will be charged. WASHINGTON (JA- John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon fought to the hitter end Monday, never letting up a minute In their furious battle for the presidency. Both Republican Nixon and Democrat Kennedy acted as though the politicians' term for taking nothing they w ere running se ared a t all for granted. If Kennedy had the edge this election eve, as most pollster* and professional guessers figured, he didn't show it He was c a m p a ig n ­ ing h ard in, of all places, his native New* England, And Nixon, the first candidate ever to c a rry hi* cam paign into e v e r y state, outdid himself in vigorous effort A four-hour stint of answering questions on television from D e­ tro it w as just one item for the Vice-President. There w as also a late-hour appearance on TV with President Eisenhower, one m ore ap p e al to keep the White House in Republican hands. Kennedy, already with a major address arrang e d at historic F a n n e d Hall In Boston, took another half-hour of air time to reply to Nixon's Detroit this grueling cam paign, so tough that newsmen had to cover it by platoons, will be history*— h istory with a last ch a p te r written by an estim ated 67 million voter*, a record. telethon. Tuesday T hey will choose between two of the youngest men aver to run for president; Nixon is 47 and Kennedy is 43. If the voters choose on the basis of personalities -and adm ittedly th e cam paign issues have never stirred a trem endous am ount of inte rest—there wall he differences aplenty to consider. Aside from their com parative youth and the fact that both w ere naval officers in World W ar IT, the two men are as far a p a r t as their home towms-— Boston, Mass , for Kennedy, and Whittler, Calif., for Nixon. Kennedy is the son of a multimillionaire form er A m bassador Joseph P. Kennedy. He is a Harvard g radua te who won a P ulitzer P riz e for his hook. “ Profiles In Courage.” Mrs. Kennedy, the form er Jacqueline T,e* Bouvier, was an In­ quiring photographer for a Washington new spaper when Kennedy m et her. They have a young daughter, and are expecting another child. Nixon is the son of a grocer, and attended Whittier College tn California before getting a law degree at Duke University in North Carolina. As a congressm an he won fame in the investigation of Alger His*, who w as la le r convicted for passing government secret* to a Soviet spy ring. Mrs. Nixon, christened Thelma Ryan hut always railed Pat. wa* teaching school when they met They have two daughters, Tricia, 14. and Julie, 12. In addition to electing a president and vice-president T uesday, the voters will elect 34 senators, 437 m e m b ers of the House of R epre­ sentative* and 27 governors. The Senate I* now split 66-34 In favor of the D emocrats and the House has a D em ocratic edge of 283-154 No one expect* the Re­ publicans to win control of the Senate and few accord them any chance to do more than reduce the D em ocratic m ajority in the House If there was one big Issue In the cam paign, tt was th* one rf A m erica's place in the world, a world upset by Soviet and Chines* communism. Kennedy contended the Republicans, United State* prestige has slipped and he wants to “ get Amerlra moving ag a in ." Nixon maintained that the rmintry was progressing soundly, and that under would go steadily on with him in the White House Side issues included such old perennials as w hat to do ahout farm surpluses neither man struck fire with his proposals and how to finance medical care for the aged Nixon favored a national­ i s t * . mr! program to help those who couldn't ca re for them selves; Kennedy* favored tying medical carp to the Social Security system. News Media Offer Election Coverage The midnight oil will burn long past 12 across the ca m p u s tonight as television tubes and listen to their radios for the presidential election returns students peer into The Texas Union will break its closing rule tonight in order that students wishing to sec lr e- v ision coverage may watch in the main lounge the listen Gals around the cam pus ma; their h ea rts’ l o o k and content in the d o r m s hut the guys must depart for home at ll p m sh a rp to Most of the radio state us u ll c a r r y complete coverage begin­ ning around 6 30 p rn. KNOW will returns over the c a r ry national ARC network with John Daly ac t­ ing as m oderator. KTBC will take the returns to completion over the CBS network, both on radio and TVL Walter Cronkite and Edward R Murrow will head the CBS re porters HUET will c a r ry Mutual network coverage until 2 a m , along with local returns Voting begins today at 7 a rn., the polls closing at 7 p m with Students m ay look on their poll- tax receipts for the num ber of the precinct in which they are to vote They’ can locate the polls by call­ ing the off me of the County Clerk 'G R 7-6188). The rally, f i n a l item on th* a ge nda of the cam paign for Rich­ ard Nixon and Henry Cabot Lodge* brought together all th r e e group* backing the Republican ticket In T ex a s: Texans-for-Nixon, D em o­ c r a ts for Nixon, and the official R epublican P a r ty of Texas. Shivers, patriarch of T exas con­ servatives. spared no adjective* in a fiery* attack on John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, an old fo* of the former governor. “ I shudder to think of this a m ­ bitious young C aesar try in g to lead us through his wooly New F ro n ­ tie r ," Shivers said. “ H e and Lyn­ don Johnson could not p ass any im p orta nt last Congress, even though they had a c le a r two-to o n e D e m o c r a tic m a ­ jo rity ." legislation th e in "D o you call thl* le ad e rsh ip ?” h e asked. In his talk Shivers pointed out w h a t he called the “ carefu lly nur­ tu red im age of J o h n K en ne dy" which he said has not been clearly se p a ra te d “ from the r e a l K ennedy the a rro g an t and ru th le ss young Boston millionaire w hose political philosophy cannot be defined, prin­ cipally because he h a s none.” In He cited Kennedy** f a r m vote r ec o rd as a d isc re p a n c y th* D em oc ratic prom ises. “ On 27 m a ­ jor f a r m votes in 1953-58, Kennedy voted with Benson all 27 tim e s.” he said. “ Yet he now gays that Benson ha* ruined A m eric an f a r m ­ er* and somehow it I* all Nix­ on ’* fault.” T he three-te rm govern or blasted K ennedy for sta te m en ts concerning the Chinese offshore Islands and j an apology for US U-2 flights over Russia. He th* Democrat!* stand on “ aiding th* overthrow of Castro In Cuba.” assailed “ You can call It a H a r ry T ru­ m an police action o r anything else, but w hatever you call la w a r ," he told the cheering crowd. Governor Shivers, who wa* In­ terrupted by applause 27 t i m e * In his half-hour speech, won th* (fie* T R I V E R S . P a g e *> It, It HENRY C A BO T LO DGE R IC H A R D M. N IX O N I ----------------------------- Many Gifts Await Ugly Man Winner A date with Nancy Thompson. I ' University sw eetheart, a w a l t * the winner of the Ugly Man con­ test, which s ta rts today and will j last through Thursday. Th* 16 contestants are also vying for nearly $125 worth of m e rc h a n ­ dise donated by Austin m erchants. The first-place winner will get, besides his all-expense paid date 1 with Miss Thompson, a brief case I from H em phill’*, $ 6 - 1 0 w orth of free dinners at Irving *, a sw eater from Ja c k Morton s, and a large rotating trophy from the Univer­ sity Co-Op. the T errible T w osom e” with M ark B erm ann posing as a Siamese twin, Peyton Townsend of the Sil­ ver Spurs, and Hoyt Purvis. Phi K appa T a u 's “ The P lagia rist.’’ The balloting wai l take p l a c e , starting Tuesday, on the U n i o n Mall, and votes w i l l coat five cent* a ballot All proceeds go to C a m ­ pus Chest In an effort to h e l p the ca m pu s ch a rity drive rea ch its goal of $10,000. Ugly Man conli st committee co­ chairmen are Ronnie Steinhart and Bob Naas. O ther m em bers of the com mittee a re D a v i d Magrill. Tom Ewell. Dudley Rugeley, and Don Rutherford. The rotating trophy used In the last Ugly Man contest tin 1957) was kept by Phi Sigma Delta af­ ter the f ra te r n ity ’s entrant won the title of “ Ugly M a n ’ three years In a row. The second-place winner In the contest will get an identification from Zale’*, $10 worth bracelet of records from the House of Rec­ ords. a check from Texas Sta’e Bank, a shirt from Scarbrough’*, $5 in men s clothing from Mer­ ritt, Schaefer, and Brown, and a trophy donated by CAS Sporting Goods. The third-place winner w ITI get a shirt from Jerry* Norwood s. a pen and pencil set from Dan « and a trophy donated by CAS Sporting Goods Dudley Rugeley. cha irm an tn change of prizes for th* c o n t e s t , said he expect* m ore donations from Austin m e rc h an ts this week The 16 candidates entered in the A PO-sponsorei charity drive are Sigma Nu'* Tom “ Cro-Magnon" Crosby, T ejas Club's L B Jones. Phi K appa S igm a's “ Ai ‘.^carfare’ Capone" Barton, Acacia * T ravis "Hullahallooknnpck" C r a w f o r d (the dirty Aggie*, Delta T au Del­ t a ’* Charlie “ Thp H un ch" Ward. APO * traditional E lm er T. Zilch, and Sigma Phi Epsilon * J o h n “ Tile Iveper" P a lm e r. Also, Delta Chi s “ Revo" Bill Pridgen, C am pus Guild's Manny Independent" “ The Abominable Carter, the R a n g er s t a ff s Byron “ Mad B o m b er" Black, D elta Up­ silo ns yet-unnam ed entry. Phi Sig­ ma Delta s J e r r y Katz. Beta Theta Pi s Tom “ Abominable S now m an” , Underwood, T au Delta Phi * “ Jack UT Faculty Urged To Study System Faculty m e m h e r t should smdy closely the complex system of Uni­ versity adm inistration and should be more attentive to the role of faculty committee* In institutional government Dr H arry Ransom, University pre*ident. said Monday. Discussing a national report of Medical News Gaining Ground The difficult role of the medical reporter is becoming an asset to increasing the pres* through the demand for medical new* bv the people, asserted Miss Helen Bul­ lock. I is Morning News m e d ­ ical reporter. She chared t h e discus ion of medical writing and its opportuni­ ties with Roy J Cates, Travis County Medical Society executive secretary. Monday at the Public Affairs Reporting Convocation As to the reporting of medical r e u s . Miss Ballock and science sa id, medics latino.' quickly simply, man. -luch of th* work of w rite r is p u r e frat Her formula is to jt into Die subject, pit* and get it over to the expanded ei Mr. C a t e * rks on pub Bullock's rem a1 new s by t m and for medi from a public opinion survey for the National Assoeiat Science Writers and New University which stated thi fifth* of the pee read all the mod news, and one-thr medical items. it a ted that peo ­ ple interviewed cal and science d read all non- Mr. Cates also co nented on s val in s the ethical viewpoint of th a* contrasted with the new of die medical reporter mg “ Doctors a r e individuals ami in my opinion a r e the last re m a in ­ ing group of people who hold the individual freedom most right of high.” Although the ethics of the doctor may cause misunderstanding Mr. Cates explained, much im prove­ ment has been m ade in com muni­ cations between physician and r e ­ porter. I tee a use of th* poor doctor im ­ age held by some people who be­ them arrogant and money- lieve that hungry. Mr. Cate* believe* the doctor* need the press to help the American Association of UnW versify Professors with the faculty, he said that many time* the fao- ulty forgets It* committees and th* committees never m e e t Member* of the University Chap­ te r of AAUP voted to refer th* national report on “ Faculty P ar­ ticipation in College and University to a committee. A dministration" The committee will prepare a tentative chapter recommendation on the national report The chap­ te r wull vote on the recom m enda­ tion a t it* D ecember meeting. Two staff m e m b ers of the nation­ al AAUP organization nill be in Austin Decem ber 6 and 7 a* part of a nation-wide m e m b ersh ip drive, it w as announced. Representatives of AAUP chap­ ters in San Antonio and in college* and universities of Cen*ra! Texa* will attend a dinner meeting to he sfKvrsored at th a t tim e by’ the University Chapter. Prospective members will be invited to attend, l>r Clarence E. Ayres said at the $1,200 Collected During Dimes Day An rd Moi cst Dit cCa lei’ Day c dur total of $1 260 wa* the Cam- c^rdmg TO in* Olsen, and C be d> said. des p me* for th* IVlta Pi pledge R< Gulf Chest dt Alpha Silver S sor a ca I L ti po Guadf x p e e l e d to Until all cd, no an* de of fra­ mers, Mu­ tations for ta pledge* Campti* nd th* will spon* Thursday, rvice. 2817 W a r Cannon Announces K A 's ‘Miss C C ’ Contest M ss Campus Chest voting will - begin Wednesday with a bang from the Kappa Alpha O r d e r * Civil War Cannon, Only a dime to nominate a girl for the KA spon­ sored contest according to J o h n Patton, publicity co-chairman for is n ec essary i correct tom * oI the** impi*s*ion*, j th* event. Shelley Smokes and Jokes Bv BILL HAMPTON Little did A lexander G raham Bell realize that actually he w as inventing a tool for man to m ake a fool of him self, and a gimmick to make people laugh .Shelley B e rm a n , however, recog­ nized the full possibilities of the telephone and lias employed them in a series of monologues whose end is nothing hut sheer mirth. result After eight n g a r e l s , a brief in­ two and a half termission, and hours of en te rta ininent, Monday night patrons at Municipal Audi­ torium left with a thorough w o rk ­ out of their laugh muscles is Tuesday night s perform ance already sold out with the only pos­ sibility of obtaining tickets being at the Municipal Auditorium door before perform an ce. These tickets would be av a ilab le from season take tr ket holders who did not their tickets for this perform ance, i Ther* will b« no ticket* available at the UEC box offu e in th Building Actually a shorter perfr would have been m o le en as tim e seemed to w e a r the end of the first hall dragged, a deluge of e< gulfed the theater. hic, * towards arui as it ighing en- tell ally heard But this weary h e a r t fi irs to hear: what it has waited yea ie audience an entertainer th ping noticed that the coughing is lie to Mr. Ber­ onstage. All hats off t line, “ I see m a n ! With a simple I a few of you are troubled with tu­ berculosis," he brought a gale of laughter and stopped the irritating coughs. The whole s u n ess and pleasan­ try ahout Shelley B e rm an in per­ son funny is not especially his lines, wherein lie hi* profitable records, but hi* ability to point out those tragically em b arra ssin g mo­ m ents as though he has experienc­ ed is *imp> laughing with them himself and themselves P erhaps the next m ale to dis­ cover his zipper undone in public will not break into hilarious con­ vulsions, but if he has heard Ber­ man that tell of the experience, poison must smile with some en­ thusiasm at the ridiculousness of Ins predicament Their* was a relieving amount of new humor to B erm an fellow­ e d , standards the Bet man w ere received with almost equal applause. There were even new twists to some of the old favorites, “ The Morning After the > s> h a 4 Night B e f o r e , ” " I s Mommy Thoro,” and “ Hello, Shirley. This is Mo ” j e t low people would reahz# that the smooth delivery and behind t h e r e is in ap p a ren t calmness, B erm an a traditional showman '* panic for precision. A small flick­ ering in the spotlight w as enough to cause an ev tdent nervousness learning that th* audient* at onstage, and when the show (regularly running until IO 45 p m.) would have to be rut IO minutes for curfew there added another ulcer, although th s was n o t detected by an entertained audience. One will find somew here in the duration of an evening with B er­ m an that one p articu la r occasion that has happened to everybody, yet never mentioned by anybody the m om ent when we have all been awkward Whether it iv* tile tim e we try to rem ove a black spit in our milk without anyone detecting the purpose of our effort or whether it be a m om ent we a r e driving at the wheel of a c a r trying to fish a cigaret ash from between our legs, it is a relief to finally hear someone mention that it ha* also hapjiened to them. Borm an is flanked by a singing the Cum berland T h r e e task ©I group which has the difficult i&r* BERMAN, Tag* 4) Election Day Blind Spot Boforo t h e w orld today, A m e ric a u n fu rls its oldest glory. With the vote aft our symbol, we Americans will point with pride to our democratic, representati\e form of government. There will he much talk about freedom and our heritage today. And, no doubt, some politician will quote the old phrase of “equality under law ” in talking about the citizen and the bollot box. Then, e v e ry o n e will sit b a c k a n d relax, well-satisfied t h a t th e r e s t of the world is duly im pressed Or if, perch an c e, t h e world seems u n im pressed w ith all o u r freedom a n d dem o cracy , we will doubtless c h a lk it up to th e t h o u g h t th a t o t h e r n a tio n s have b ee n sadly misled b y co m m u n ist p ro p a g a n d a . A c o n v e n ie n t blind spot will have kept m ost of us from see in g t h a t th e “ g lo r y ” of Election D ay, I SA is t a r n i s h e d to d a y . In our patriotic zeal to get out the vote, most of us will have forgotten that not all the citizens who don t go to the polls are underage, undecided, or apathetic. d o n ’t vote b ecause th ey Some of t h e m — th o u s a n d s c a n ’t. P e r h a p s all t h e g r a n d f a t h e r clauses arc go n e from S o u th e rn s t a t e c o n s titu tio n s. But in m a n y p a r ts of th e S outh , t h e N e g ro v o t e r is no closer to th e polls th a n he w ou ld be if th e cla u s e s w e re still in ex istence. All th e in fra c tio n s of th e fra n c h is e a r e n ’t on the law hooks. T h e r e a r e ec o n o m ic a s well as leg al p re s­ sures. A n d in som e p a r ts t h e y a r e used, effectively, today, to close th e voting b o o th s to a1! w h o a r c not as w h ite a s th e y a r e free a n d 21. The only encouraging thing about the w h ole situa­ tion is that s o m e people a ren ’t satisfied w ith things as they are. In particular, the students of the nation, at many college and university c a m p u s e s , will be d em ­ onstrating today in protest against the d isenfran ch ise­ ment of their fellow' citizens. H e re is Austin, s tu d e n ts fro m the U n iv e r s ity “ Y ” will be a t t h e polls to h a n d o u t re m in d e rs t h a t not all A m erican citizens a re ass u re d of th e ir rig h t to vote. Tile “ Y ” lite ra tu re f u r t h e r u rg e s v o te rs to insist t h a t t h e i r rep resen ta tiv e s w o r k for civil r i g h t s law s a n d fo r t h e removal of th e pod tax . We ho pe such rem in ders as these m ay h elp rem ov e this A m e ric a n blind spot. For we think it is worth remembering (and ch an g­ i n g ) that the political chains of the disenfranchised lend a hollow note to our boasts that this Is indeed, the land of the free. Coins for Quality As o u r so m ew h a t g r u b b y fellow o c c u p an t of the (he do cuss a n d h e do J o u rn a lis m Building, H a ir y chew a n d he goes w ith g irls w ho do) p o in ts o u t — sure s tu d e n ts w a n t o t h e r good s tu d e n ts to r o m e to th e U niv ersity . B u t w h y do present tea s ip s h av e to p a y fo r r e ­ c r u itm e n t of fu tu re P hi B e ta K a p p as? A nd, m ore p a r tic u la rly , u ’h y a r e t h e y a s k e d to pay via th e C a m ­ pus C h e st d riv e ? At first, even the Campus Chest steering com ­ mittee didn’t know. T h a t’s w h y the proposal to make Operation Brainpower a recipient from the funds drive was voted down the first time. W h e n all th e in fo rm a tio n w a s in, ho w e v er, steering c o m m itte e m e m b e r s w'ere convinced. T h e p e r s u a s iv e facts w e re these: The cost of Operation Brainpower, a recruitment program designed to attract top flight T exas students to the University Instead of to another college, is not assumed entirely by the student body. Student money, from one source or another, goes only to finance the trips of student recruiters, not those of traveling fac­ ulty m em bers, administrators, or exes. O rig in a lly stu d en t g o v e rn m e n t had a p p r o p ria te d the $600 n ee d e d to cover these costs from its b u d g e t. Then it w a s discovered that, legislative r e q u ir e m e n ts pro­ hibited t h e a p p o rtio n m e n t of fu nds from b la n k e t tax es an d s im ila r fees for r e c r u itm e n t purposes. So it w as a question of providing Campus Chest funds or not having student Operation Brainpower at all that cam e before the steering com mitter. In view of th e choice, we th ink th e c o m m itte e ’s decision w a s th e only one possible. And let H a ir y r a n t as ho will. T h e D A i® f T e x a n T uesday, N o v . 8, I960 Page 2 O p i n i o n r e x p r e s s e d in T h e T e x a n are t ho ie o f t he Ed i t o r s or o f t he t i n t e r o f t he a r t ' d r a n d not necessarily tho3, or s t 102. T h e • 107. B ula tto n o f f i c e J. B is J (G R 2-27 111 D eli ve re d Malled Mailed o u t of tow n lr A In A u s tin n s i b m x i r n o s it t i i s (t h r e e m o n t h s m i n i m u m ) 75'* "north . SI OO month . . . 75#’ mon th P E R M A N E N T S I M P S T A F F F O R N I G H T E D I T O R ............................ ................................. D E R K E D I T O R Acting I s s u e News E d i t o r ......... N ig h t Reporter* ......................... ..................... .................................... C o p y r e a d e r s Night S p o r t s E d i t o r Night Amusements E d i t o r A s s i s t a n t N ig h t W ire E d i t o r N ig h t C u m PU-. Life E d ito r L d ) t o n a l A u s l a u t .............. .. ................................................. . . . , . . . . T H I S ISSI E E D HO RN ............................................. ..................... S A K * B l R R O l G U S .................................... C a r o l y n C o k e r i . . W illia m Witliff, P r a n k L a n d , G e n n y M c N a m a r a K e n L d m i s t o n , B a r b a r a T o sc h ........................ C h a r l i e S m i th ................................. Su e B ir k e l ........................................ K a r e n L ew is .................................... J a n e P a g a n i n i ......................... N e lla S k in n e r ................ Sam lunch Jr. ’Round th ( ravel IU H O T T P l I U IS T o v r < e " folly s e r v e t h e s t u d e n t b o d y , t h e n o tio n n n d p l a n s of t h e S t u d e n t s ' A s s o c i a t i o n m u s t b e c o n ­ is n o c o n t r o ­ t h e r e t r o v e r s i a l . v e r s y , r e s u l t s n n d w i t h a p a t h y , t h e r e c a n b e n o a c c o m ­ p l i s h m e n t a p a t h y If In the s i t u a t i o n ( o m m i t t e e the "Undent* a* a n y T h e G r i e v a n c e C o m m i t t e e p r o b ­ ab ly In In a p o s i t i o n to d o aa m u c h for s t u d e n t g r o u p . < u r r e n t l y t h e h o t K a n e b e ­ fo re t e l e ­ t h e p h on e t h e w o m e n # d o r m i t o r i e s . T h e r e him t»een m u c h talk o v e r t h e s e w i r e * , pass l# n a t o hut i n c r c a s o In t e l e p h o n e c o n v e n i e n c e ( o f w h i c h Is p r a c t i c a l l y n o n e now >, t h e r e t h e r e r a n t la* a d i s p a s s i o n a t e e f ­ fort, is to he a n lf t h e r e In to Tile t e l e p h o n e q u e s t i o n h a s b e e n k i c k e d a r o u n d b r i e f l y In t h e G r i e v ­ a n c e g r o u p , a n d n o w C a m p u s S u r ­ v e y b s a n n o u n c e d p l a n s t a k e u p th e c a u s e . T h e s u r v e y o r s p l a n to c h e c k a n u m h e r of s o u r c e s , a s w ell os s e e w h a t c a n he d o n e S u r v e y s h a v e a w a y of w i n d i n g u p w i t h a lot o f s t a t i s t i c s , but. a s m a n y a r o a c h tell you, s t a t i s t i c s d o n ' t w i n r a n fo o tb all g a m e s . i n t e r e s t , s t u d e n t to H o w e v e r , if the c o m m i t t e e , w h i c h h a s good a i m s , c a n c o m e u p w i t h s o m e t h i n g solid, the d r i v e is on. T i l e S o u t h w e s t e r n B e l l T e l e p h o n e C o m p a n y h a s s o m e s u r v e y I n f o r ­ m a t i o n of l l s o w n . w h i c h It s u p ­ p o s e d l y Is s a v i n g to w h i s p e r In t h e e a r s o f D r. H a r r y R a n s o m . T i l e r e s u l t s o f t h is s t u d y , w h i c h c o n ­ c e r n * t h e e n t i r e c a r n o u s t e l e p h e n e p r o b l e m , c o u l d p r o v i d e an i m p e t u s f o r a c t i o n . for. Y et G r i e v a n c e C o m m i t t e e m e m b e r s w a n t to h e a r t h e c o m p l a i n t s o f th e s t u d e n t s : t h a t is w h a t t h e c o m m i t ­ t e e e x i s t s t h e c o m p l a i n t is h e a r d a n d t h a t ' s all. T h e c o m m i t t e e h a s t o s h o w s o m e its d r i v e th e e a s e of s u c h a s o w n a c t i o n th e u n p o p u l a r food b e i n g s e r v e d in t h e w o m e n ' s d o r m s . s o m e t i m e s , i n s t i g a t i n g to o o f t e n a p a t h y S t u d e n t Is p a r t i c u l a r l y a p p a r e n t In the fie ld o f f o r e i g n a f ­ f a i r s a n d I n t e r e s t In t h e w o r l d s i t ­ s t u d e n t s u a t i o n , O f c o u r s e m a n y w e r e f i r e d up a b o u t t h e e x p e r t e d v i s i t b y R u s s i a n s t u d e n t s , h u t t h a t f a r c e t u r n e d o u t t h a n t h e C a m p u s M a d B o m b e r . to Im* a b i g g e r T h r o u g h t h e I n t e r n a t i o n a l C o m ­ to he m i s s i o n s t u d e n t s a r e g o in g a f f o r d e d a n o p p o r t u n i t y to g e t a f l a v o r of i n te r n a t i o n a l life, a n d do f o r fellow s t u d e n t s . a good d e e d is I n t e r n a t i o n a l C o m m i s s i o n T h e a r r a n g i n g f o r f o re i g n s t u d e n t s to s p e n d t h e T h a n k s g i v i n g H o l i d a y s w i t h A m e r i c a n f a m i l ie s S t u d e n t* w h o w o u ld to e n ­ t e r t a i n f o r e i g n g u e ts d u r i n g th e S h e r r y h o l i d a y s B e n n . c h a i r m a n of t h e H o s p it a li t y C o m m i t t e e at C a rn til e r s 221, o r S a m J o h n s o n at G R M il Tv A n o t h e r a l t e r n a t i v e I n t e r ­ n a t i o n a l C e n t e r b e f o r e N o v e m b e r 15, to v isit sh o u ld c o n t a c t like th e is r e c e n t l y I niv#*r*-|fv A n o t h e r st u d e n t c o m m i t t e e , the V a t I n n a I S tu d e n t A s s o c i a t i o n ( N f t \ ) , Is ab o u t to g et Its p r o g r a m lost h a s s t a r t e d . N S I a n o t h e r o n e of Its l a r g e s t u n i v e r s i ­ t i e s , C o l o r a d o o n e of t h e a s s o c i a t i o n ' s o r i g i n a l m e m b e r s . reveal NSA C h a i r m a n B a n g L r h - e r m n n s a y s his c o m m i t t e e is “ b e ­ g i n n i n g a c t i v e p r o g r a m s w i t h th e F r e s h m a n C n u n r i l C o m m i t t e e If t h e s e p e o p le a r e a c t i v e w o r k e r s a s th e y shou ld m a k e g ood f r e s h m e n m a t e r i a l t h e y b e ­ for NSA w h e n c o m e u p p e r c l a s s m e n ’’ B 2 2 a » J B / oleo, l o x \ / HERE! A Bio V E L L O N , \ m u k m 1. J S c i . ITS UNUSUAL TO SEE ONE THIS TIME OF VEAR UNLESS OF COUPLE ME FLEii) UP FROM BRAZIL.JU SCHMATZ IT! 7 r -J & THEADO THAT V THi-5 6 N0 > $ 0 M £T lM g & fl U BUTTERFLY k.V0U),..TMtV FiV j TM6 IS A UP FROM BRAZIL, I POTATO CHlP! AND they.. u r n , ILL K l SO IT I Si I LOON DER HOD A POTATO CHIP EOT ALL THE DAV UP HERE FROM BRAZIL? E D I T O R ................................................... M A N A G I N G E D I T O R ..................... . J O E l f KM A N V . . . . D O N MA I RS ■ - i c J ’Round and ’round she goes . . . FRo S C H I I ' I O Y e a r P l a n ’ J965: W ar Babies, Bv E D ST W T S O n l y 3.000 m o r e s t u d e n t s on in 10G5 t h a n a r e h e r e a t c a m p u s p r e s e n t t h e is l a t e s t e n r o l l m e n t p r o j e c t i o n m a d e by t h e U n i v e r s i t y a d m i n i s t r a t i o n . i m p l i c a t i o n of t h e T h e f i r s t is«ne of t h e M a i n U n i ­ v e r s i t y N e w s l e t t e r 22 OOO s t u d e n t s a r e e x p e c t e d in 1065 “ u n ­ d e r p r e s e n t a d m i s s i o n s p o lic ie s ’’ s t a t e s T h i s e n r o l l m e n t p r e d i c t i o n Is o n e f o r s e t t i n g up o f t h e “ T e n Y e a r P l a n . ” A l s o , 11X4-5 f a c t * u s e d t h e t h e t h e j e a r in flu x o f t h e s o ­ Is c a l l e d p o s t w a r b a b l e * w i l l hit Its p e a k . T h is 22,000 f i g u r e v a r i e s c o n s i d ­ e r a b l y f r o m t h e r e g i s t r a r ’s o f f i c e e s t i m a t e m a d e in 1957 w h i c h f o r e ­ c a s t a t o t a l e n r o l l m e n t of 25,818 fop 1964-65 a n d 25,079 for 1965-66 T h e d i f f e r e n c e s t u d e n t s . A n d th is v a r i a n c e m a y be a c lu e th e f u t u r e p h i lo s o p h y of v e r s i t y ; w h e t h e r is a l m o s t 4,000 t h e e x p l a n a t i o n of t o t h e U n i ­ t h e i n s t r u c t to Superior Professional Teaching Basis of Educational Excellence E d u c a t i o n a n d t h e p r a c t i c e of e d u c a t i n g a l w a y s i n v o lv e s c o n f l i c t ­ ing i d e a s . J u s t w h a t c o n s t i t u t e s a n e d u c a ­ tion is a m a t t e r of c o n j e c t u r e . T o liv in g a s s o m e i m m a t u r e t h e in w e ll a s in th in k i n g - a n e d u c a t i o n is t h e a t t a i n i n g of a d i p l o m a o r a c o ll e g e d e g r e e t h a t r e a l i z e O t h e r s t h e m e r e h o l d i n g o f a d i p l o m a o r d e g r e e s i g n i f i e s o n l y t h a t o n e h a s s p e n t t i m e a n d m a i n t a i n e d s o m e s o m e s t a n d a r d s — g o o d , l o w , o r m e d i o c r e — In s o m e s c h o o l ; o r, lf r e c e n t p u b ­ l i c i t y ts c o r r e c t , h e h a s s p e n t th e f e e to g a i n t h e n o m i n a l r e q u i r e d e q u i v a l e n t . In c o n s i d e r i n g the b a s i c c o n c e p t s of a n e d u c a t i o n , I>r. W E . D r a k e , p r o f e s s o r of h i s t o r y a n d p h i lo s o p h y of e d u c a t i o n , d e f in e d a n d e x p l a i n e d his i d e a s o f t h e e d u c a t i v e p r o c e s s . H is t h i n k i n g is b a s e d on 32 y e a r s of c o l l e g e t e a c h i n g in s u c h i n s t i t u ­ t io n s a s t h e U n i v e r s i t i e s c f N o r t h C a r o l i n a , Illinois, M i s s o u r i, T e x a s , a n d P e n n s y l v a n i a S t a t e D u r i n g t h i s p e r i o d , h is t e a c h i n g e x p e r i e n c e h a s s u p p o r t e d t h e c o a u t h o r s h i p of t h e a u t h o r s h i p of s i x b o o k s a n d “ T h e A m e r i c a n School in T r a n s i ­ ts n ’' H i v i n g f a c t u a l I n f o r m a t i o n d o e s n ot n e c e s s a r i l y m a k e #>ne a l e a c h ­ e r ; h e m u s t a l s o h a v e t h e a b i l i t y t o c o m m u n i c a t e th a t I n f o r m a t i o n , D r . D r a k e so y * . An e d u c a t e d p er so n m u s t h a v e a b a c k g r o u n d o f b a s i c k n e w l e d g e . Rut of e q u a l I m ­ p o r t a n c e . lf he I* to be a t e a c h e r , h e m u s t h a v e t h e a b i l i t y to g i v e th a t r e a l l t v to k n o w l e d g e o t h e r s . In o t h e r w o r d s , h e m u s t b e a s a l e s m a n w ith an e x c e l l e n t l f h e l a c k s the s a l e s m a n ­ p r o d u c t , s h i p t h e c o n v i n c e to w o r t h o f h i s p r o d u c t , t h e s u c r e s * o f t h a t p r o d u c t Is d i m i n i s h e d . In p a s s i n g I m p o r t a n c e o t h e r s a n d on o f to It “ I t is c l e a r f r o m a n a n a l y s i s o f r e c e n t A m e r i c a n e d u c a t i o n a l h i s ­ t o r y t h a t t h e p u b lic a s w e ll a s t h e t e a c h e r s in all t h e t e a c h i n g a r r a s — u n i v e r s i t i e s , c o l l e g e s , h i g h sc h o o ls, a n d e l e m e n t a r y s c h o o l s - h a s s u f f e r e d f r o m t h e l a c k of s u ­ p e r i o r p r o f e s s i o n a l t e a c h i n g . A p r o ­ fe ssio n , b y d e fin itio n , m u s t of n e ­ c e s s i t y p s s c s s e s a b o d y of k n o w l ­ e d g e p e c u l i a r to itself, a b a s i c p h i l ­ o s o p h y . n n d a s e t of s k i l l s , " s t a t e d D r . D r a k e ★ ★ “ W e h a d lit t le of this k in d of n p r o f e s s i o n t o d a y , h u t in A m e r i c a t h e r e a s o n f o r o u r d e f ic ie n c y is b y t r a d i t i o n a l to no m e a n s d u e t r a d e - t r a i n i n g t e n d e n c i e s of s c h o o l s a n d c o l l e g e s of e d u c a t i o n , t h o u g h t h is l i m i t a t i o n o f s u c h sc h o o ls m u s t he r e c o g n i z e d . ' ' th e S p e c i a l i z a t i o n t e n d e n c i e s , polit! c a l c o n t r o l s , a n d the “ p a u p e r i z i n g l e v e l a t w h i c h ou r s c h o o l * h a v e b e e n t h e f i n a n c e d ’* ar#* a rn o n g c a u s e s o f f a i l u r e . B e c a u s e o f t h e s e “ w e h a v e d r i v e n m e n f a i l u r e s , a w a y f r o m t e a c h i n g , m a d e t e a c h ­ in g the m o s t u n s t a b l e p r o f e s s i o n In A m e r i c a , a n d d e p r i v e d t h e t e a c h e r o f a s e n s e o f p e r s o n a l w o r t h nnd p r o f e s s i o n a l v a l u e . . . W e r e q u i r e s i x y e a r s o f c o l l e g e i n s t r u c t i o n to p r o d u c e a v e t e r i n a r i a n to w o r k on a s i c k p i g a n d o n ly f o u r v e a r s of to p r o d u c e an c o l l e g e I n s t r u c t i o n A g r a d e a c h i l d ' * m i n d , “ D u r i n g t h e p a s t c e n t u r y w e the h a v e d e v e l o p e d , a t t h e p o t e n t i a l i t i e s of f r o n t i e r level, a t e a c h i n g . W h e t h e r o r not s u c h a p o t e n t i a l i t y to h e a c t u a l i z e d d e p e n d s u p o n is t h e A m e r i c a n p e o p le . u p o n t h e A m e r i c a n pe o p le r e a l l y w h a t w a n t of fo r w h a t t h e i r sc h o o ls: t h e y r e a l l y w a n t , th e y will he w i l l ­ in g to p a y , " c o n c l u d e d D r. D r a k e . s o u n d p r o f e s s i o n of to w o r k o n l e a s t a t t e a c h e r . . m a s s e s o r pu t m u c h g r e a t e r e m ­ p h a s i s on a c a d e m i c e x c e l l e n c e . In th e final a n a l y s i s t h e t w o c a n ­ not go h a n d - i n - h a n d . M e d i o c r i t y in s t u d e n t s will n e v e r l e a d to a “ U n i ­ v e r s i t y of t h e f i r s t c l a s s . " the to a p p l y T h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n w o u l d r a t h e r tile “ f i r s t c l a s s ’’ w a l t c l i c h e univ w h e n I n i v e r s i t y r e a c h e s t h i s s t a t u s , hut th e p h r a s e is s o c o m m o n t h a t It w i l l b e o v e r ­ u s e d , p r o b a b l y for y e a r s t o c o m e . i m ­ to T r y i n g is p r e s s i o n t h a t h i g h e r e d u c a t i o n a r i g h t, n o t a p ri v il e g e , m a k e s it r o u g h f o r t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n to sell q u a l i t y h i g h e r e d u c a t i o n to m a n y T e x a s c it i z e n s . it fig h t a g r o w i n g it is W h a t t h e ro le cf t h e U n i v e r ­ s i t y ’’ P e r h a p s t h e U n i v e r s i t y will h e a b le to p r o v i d e an e d u c a t i o n f o r both t h e C s t u d e n t an d th e a c a d e m ­ ica lly e x c e l l e n t st u d e n t. B u t tin* U n i v e r s i t y u n d e r its p a s t p h i l o s o p h y h a s a n o b l i g a t i o n t o tile p e o p l e o f T e x a s to p r o v i d e h i g h e r e d u c a t i o n i s t h e s t a t e d p o l i c y o f the U n i v e r s i t y . fur t h e m a s s e s . T h i s E n r o l l m e n t is e x p e c t e d to m u s h ­ t h e n a tio n w i t h i n t h e r o o m o v e r five y e a r s T h e U n i v e r s i t y n e x t n o w e x p e c t s o n l y 3.000 m o r e s t u ­ d e n t s in 1965 t h a n a r e n ow r e g i s ­ t e r e d . T h is is not h a n d l i n g m u c h of the e x p lo s io n of c o ll e g e - a g e p e o ­ ple H o w e v e r , s o m e people t h in k t h a t t h e p o s s ib l e a d m i s s i o n of t h e U n i ­ v e r s i t y of H o u s to n a s a fully s t a t e - s u p p o r t e d sc ho ol a n d the e x p e c t e d g r o w t h of A r l i n g to n S t a t e C o l le g e , t a k e f o u r - v e a r c ollege, will a s a s o m e o f t h e e n r o l l m e n t p r e s s u r e off t h e M a i n U n i v e r s i t y . E n r o l l m e n t e s t i m a t e s o b v i o u s l y v a r y . V i c e - c h a n c e l l o r L. D. H a s - k e w w a s q u o t e d r e c e n t l y a s e s t i ­ m a t i n g e n r o l l m e n t a t 24,000 in 1964, a n d a s s a y i n g it m a y r e a c h 30,000 b y 1970. fi g u re s W ith e n r o l l m e n t in c o l ­ le g e s e x p e c t e d to s k y r o c k e t in t h e n e x t five y e a r s it is lo g ic a l t o a s ­ s u m e t h a t t h e U n i v e r s i t y will jo in in this j u m p . t o b e l i e v e ' l e a d on e n o s w o u l d th e o r i g i n a l o f 1937 25,818 f o r 1965 is r e a l is t ic , in that, e n r o l l m e n t p r e d i c t i o n s s i n c e 1957 h a v e b e e n f a i r l y well r e a l i z e d . ” p r e d i c t i o n it ★ T e x a n s w i l l a s s u m e p e r h a p s t h a t if t h e e n r o l l m e n t p r e d i c t i o n s h a v e b e e n s l a s h e d , a n d t h e n u m b e r c f e n r o l l e e s to I n c r e a s e a c r o s s t h e c o u n t r y , s o m e s t u d e n t s w i l l he e l i m i n a t e d f r o m t h e F o r t y A cre s m e r r y g o 'ro u n d b e f o r e t h e y e v e n g e t a b o a r d . I m e x p e c t e d Official Notices th e S t u d e n t * e n r o ll e d in T h e U n i v e r s i t y of i e x a s w ho a t t e n d e d a n o t h e r c o l ­ i960 l e g e or u n i v e r s i t y d u r i n g s u m m e r s e s s i o n hav e be en n o t if ie d if t h e i r s um m # r recor d ha* been r e c e iv e d by th#* R e g i s t r a r s O ff ic e A ny s t u d e n t w h o a t t e n d e d a n o t h e r c o l l e g e d u r in g t h e Pa st flax no t s u m m e r and w h o r e c e iv e d a c r e d i t no tic e s h o u ld call at th e R e g i s t r a r * O ff ic e, M ain B u ild in g , for f u r t h e r In st ru c­ R o o m I, S e c t i o n 6 tion s. • T h # q u a l i f y i n g e x a m i n a t i o n the d o c t o r o f p h ilo s o p h y d e g r e e in E n g lis h w ill be g iv e n In t w o parts for a i s I A tw o - h o u r w r itte n e x a m i n a t i o n In K n g l ls h w ill be o ff e r e d by th e C o m ­ m i t t e e o n G r a d u a t e S t u d ie s in e n g l i s h B uil d in g 110. 2 p rn . JI r ldav . N o v e m ­ la r ge blue book and pen be r th e e x a m i n a ­ w ill be ne e de d B e f o r e tio n s t u d e n t s mu st tr a n s c r ip t o f c o u r s e * and grade-, an d an A u s ti n a d d r e s s in E n g li s h B u ild in g IOO S a m ­ ple c o p i e s o f th e qu e s tio n * a nd a n s w e r * t h * g r a d u a l s m a v he o b t a i n e d a d v i s o r E n g li s h tbs Departm ent of B u i l d i n g .SO or E n g l i s h o f f i c e D r M M Crow le ave a from reach th e d a t e o f th e It T h e g r a d u a t e recor d e x a m i n a t i o n text wilt be g iv e n at H 45 a p t i t u d e .Saturday, N o v e m b e r 19 All a p ­ a rn p li ca t io n * and th# fees mu st E d u c a t i o n a l T e s t i n g S e r v ic e o f f ic e In P r i n c e t o n New J e r s e y , no t la te r th a n tent 15 (lav* b e fo r e in A p p l i c a t i o n b l a n k * ar e a v a ila b le E n g l i s h B u ild in g lob and In th e T e s t ­ i n g a nd C o u n s e l i n g C e n te r V Hall IOU N o s t u d e n t will be a d m i t t e d to c a n ­ d id a c y th e d oc to r o f p h ilo s o p h y d e g r e e In E n g lis h un til a r o p y of r » s c o r e s In t Ii** g r a d u a l rec or d c u m n- ••em r n rived te.-t na- a t l o n a p t i t u d e bv tile c h a ir m a n of th e ('"•mr"' ‘ tee on G r a d u a t e S t u d ie s Dr. E. C, M#*sn#G E n g l i s h B u i l d i n g 216. fo r SF* 4$^ rn t& M lN D W k UCH I O FOLL fc&UfcP UN DLR & a b o u t l a s t S a t u r d a y Well, o l ’ H a i r y h a s b e e n a s k e d th e f e w w o r d s t o s a y a C a m p u s C h e s t . He h a d a d a t e w i t h . h e r . B a r b a r a c o - o rd i n a ti o n T o s c h , h e a d , into t h e R a n g e r office a n d i n f o r m e d H a i r y t h a t t h is w a s a d i f f e r e n t C a m p u s C h e s t j u s t c a m e p u b l i c i t y . s u m , fig u r in g She h a s a l s o i n f o r m e d H a i r y t h a t t h e C a m p u s C h e s t n e e d s $10,000 is a p r e t t y s t u ­ th is y e a r w h i c h p e n d o u s th e U n i v e r s i t y h a s no t r e a c h e d its q u o t a s i n c e H a i r y m e t a f r i e n d l y A u s tin c o p (1857). Now $10,000 is t h e p r i c e of 40.000 c a n s of b e e r , five F a l c o n s , 58 g o v e r n m e n t quiz- t e s . o r f o u r E n g l i s h p ro f s t h a t t h a t w o u l d h a v e It is a l s o t h e p r i c e of IO c h a r i ­ f o l d l e a s t g o h a c k t r a n s l a ­ to m a k e t i e s c o m p l e t e l y o r a t t o t h e Y id d is h tio n of “ M e i n K a m p f " e n d s m e e t , s e l li n g to H a i r y R a n g e r is noted fo r s p e n d ­ in g his h a r d e a r n e d loot, m o s t l y g a t h e r e d f r o m c o e d s on d a r k c a m ­ p u s c o r n e r s , on booze, c i g a r s , o r w o m e n . H o w e v e r , on c e a y e a r h e c u ts d o w n s i x - p a c k s to a d a y in o r d e r to give a f e w y e n th e C a m p u s C hest. Y ou a r e t o p r o b a b l y y o u r s e l f w h y H a i r y w o u l d m a k e s u c h a s a c r i ­ fice. a s k i n g two A c t u a l l y , It'* a v e r y s e l f i s h m o ­ t i v e . H e h a t e s to be a p p r o a c h e d e v e r y day* f o r P r o f s , fo r P e n n i e s fo r D i s p l a c e d D e a n s , D i m e * f o r F a l l e n F e m i n i n e s , or F r a n c s f o r P e r v e r t e d P o l e s . T h i s P e s o s C a r n o u s C h e s t 'arr Is Ju st a o n c e - a y e a r t a p , s o f a i r y r a n g i v e In t h e w o l v e s N o v e m b e r a n d k e e p f r o m a n d D r a g m e r e h a r t s a w a y w o r t h y c a u s e s for the f o l l o w i n g 12 m o n t h s . c a u s e s t h e y And w o r t h y a r e . e v e n c y n i c a l H a i r v R a n g e r w i l l a d m i t . C e r e b r a l P a l s v R e t a r d e d C h i ld r e n a n d M e n t a l H e a l t h a r e on ly a f e w of t h e m , a n d H a i r y c an se e t h e y a r e d e s e r v i n g of h is h a r d e a r n e d r u b l e s . S tu d e n ts , R lin d t h a t ★ ★ t h e m ) r e a d e r s N o w H a i r y w ould not he f a i r to h i s lf (all 42 of he did n o t n re « e n t b ' s h o n e s t op inio n of C a m p u s C h e st. As h e a w o r t h y c a u s e a n d sa id , t h e r e s h o u l d he no t r o u b l e in h i t ­ t in g u p t h e s t u d e n t b o d y f o r all $10 OOO. is it H o w e v e r , t h e r e a r e a few* a r e a s t h a t ge t t h e i r c u t of th is n ie w h i c h it. N o t H a i r v f e e ls d o n 't d e s e r v e t h a t t h e y a r e n t go o d g r o u p s e t c . , e tc ; hut s t u d e n t s a t T h e U n i v e r ­ sity of T e x a s g e t s t u c k e v e r y t i m * t h e y t u r n a r o u n d . T h e p r i c e of s t u d e n t d i r e c t o r i e s w e n t up a q u a r t e r , t h e r e a r e m a ­ t r i c u l a ti o n f e e s . s e r v i c e f e e s , p e k ­ i n s u r a n c e p l a n s , a n d in g s t i c k e r s , a t h o u s a n d o t h e r t h in g * t h a t a r a to o n u m e r o u s to m e n t i o n . T h * f e e l i n g a r o u n d h e r e p r e v a i l i n g la “ T h e s t u d e n t s c a n s p a r e a t h i s : q u a r t e r . W h at s a rju a rter? H u h ? ” H a i r y fe els t h a t t h e s t u d e n t b o d y to t h e y got a q u a r t e r , s t u ­ is bo ing d r a w n a n d q u a r t e r e d d e a t h h u t t h a t d o e s n ’t m a k e d e n t w a n t to p a r t w ith it. S t u d e n ts a r e p ig e o n s f o r e v e r y g i m m i c k in t h e book a n d H a i r y t h e is L e g i s l a t u r e t h e A d ­ m i n i s t r a t i o n in footb all t i c k e t s , a n d th e 92 p e r t h e A u stin F a g a n s c e n t i n c o m e b r a c k e t . t ir e d of p a y i n g in s p itto o n s , to k e e p S u r e t h e in F o r t u n a t e l y , t h e C a m p u s C h e s t i n to t h is c a t e g o r y — O p e r a t i o n d o e s n 't fall f o r B r a i n p o w e r is o n e t h a t do e s. the m o s t p a r t . H a i r y Is In full a g r e e m e n t w i t h O p e r a t i o n B r a i n p o w e r , It’* a g o o d Id ea , e t c . , e t c . ; b u t s o Is f r e e l o v e a nd n i c k e l b e e r , ? o ’c l o c k l o c k ­ o u t s , nnd d e c e n t p r o f s . S h o n l d all o f t h e s e b e s u b s i d i z e d b y t h e s t u d e n t b o d y ? W h e r e w ill t h * l i s t e n d ? T h e O B c u t w a s in it i a l l y s t r u c k o u t b v t h e c o m m i t t e e on S o m e - th in g - O r - O t h e r , h u t C a m e r o n H i g h ­ t o w e r g o t t h e g a n g to r e - c o n s i d e r a n d p u t it h a c k in. S u r e U n i v e r ­ s i t y s t u d e n t s w a n t good h i g h- t h e F o r t y s c h o o l e r s r o m e to a s k A c r e s , b u t t h e m to foo t t h e hill. to too m u c h i f s to t h e f r o m g i v i n g ou t T h e W o r l d U n i v e r s i t y S e r v i c e , S p o n s o r e d S t u d e n t s , a n d I n ­ t e r n a t i o n a l C o m m i s s i o n h a n d l e t e x t e v e r y t h i n g b o o k s In S o u th A f r i c a to s p o n s o r ­ in g a m o c k U n i t e d N a t i o n * A s ­ s e m b l y on t h e c a m p u s , i n e * * t h i n g s , s u r e , hut a g a i n a r e g o o d t h e s h o u l d n o t b e a s k e d t o p a y fo r it. s t u d e n t b o d y ir H a i r y will g iv e ir to C a m p u * C h e st, a n d will no t u s e t h e s t a t e ­ m e n t “ I d o n ’t a g r e e w i t h It so I ’m n o t g o i n g to g ive a c e n t " a s a n e x c u s e B u t he on ly w i s h e s t h e y w o u ld t a k e on y e t a n o t h e r a r e a : a F u n d bar U n i v e r s i t y of T e x a s S t u d e n t s W ho A r e S u p p o r t ­ in g So M a n v C h -"rides T h e y N e e d O n e to S u p p o r t T h e m . The Firing Line M ostly O at(c)s T o t h e E d i t o r : f r o m I w a n t h e r e w i t h to r e g i s t e r m y d i s s e n t g i v e n S t e p h e n B. O a t e s ' l e t t e r to t h e e d i ­ tor, in t h e N o v e m b e r 4 is s u e of t h e T e x a n . the p r a i s e W h a t, M r . O a t s , w a * y o u r p u r ­ p o s e ? Y o u r “ L it e r a r y " l e t t e r w a s a c h ild is h b u r l e s q u e . It w a s n a iv e , p o in tle s s , a n d v e rb o s e . It w a s a n t h o s e i n s u lt w h o r e a d t h e F l u n g L ine . in te l li g e n c e of t h e to ★ * Y o u h a v e g u t s a s w e ll a s g a ll, M r . O a t s . T o c rit i c i z e o p e n l y , a n d tw o in s u c h a r i d ic u l o u s m a n n e r , the of o u r f i n e s t o r g a n i z a t i o n s — Sp \ l p h a S i g m a S i g m a A lp ha M u 40. P h i K a p p a Ps i 25. '22 M i s s ile s XI A n c h o r H a n k e r s 20, G e e s e 21. P h i C a p s I M u l l e t EL M A T 504 East Ave. G R 7-7023 EL T O R O 1601 Guadalupe G R 8-4321 EL C H A R R O "M exican Food to Take H o m e " G R 7-8744 M O N R O E 'S 912 Red River G R 8-7735 Delivery Service 7 Days Austin's “B ig Four” in Authentic M exican Food ONE OF 16 Dashes th e Baylor Bears comp! ed S a t u r d a y sticks M o o r e (86) by G u r w i tz t h e p aw s o f_ E n d J e r r y in th ird p e r i o d a c ti o n . Texas' Bob- (24) c o m e s u p t o make th e tac k le. in Baylor fo u n d the range on I 6 o f 4 0 aerials a n d n’ne more backf.red when Bear q u a r te rb a c k s were thrown for losses. —rhoto by Collum Horn Line Play Lauded More t h a n 5,000 (5,300 to he ! a g a in s t D a r r e l l R o y a l leaned b a c k in his swivel c h a i r Monday an d s w ir le d to w ard the bevy of w r it e r s . He was all sm ile s. in la u d e d line a n d se c o n d a ry the L onghorn d e fe n ­ He its fo r sive g re a t w o rk a h e r a l d e d against B ay lo r p a s s in g game. He sa id the ru shing of th e linemen, w ho kept their h a n d s high the a i r all a ftern oo n, “ knocked down five o r six B a y lo r's R on nie S tanley a n d Bobby Ply, a f t e r failing b e h in d six points the th re w 40 p a s s e s . second period , they w ere th r o w n for Nine t i m e s losses w hile r e ­ trying ceiver. O n ly 16 w ere c o m p le te to find a p a s s e s . ” in s a i d “ T h e y d id a good job on t h a t , ” though S h i r e “ I Royal (A ssistan t C oach C h arley ) h a d it set u p r e a l good. I though n e had a fa i r ly good pass d efense, a l­ though th e y got a lot of y a r d a g e T hey got a hot hand th e r e In the last s e v e n m i n u te s .” to T e x a s ' R o yal g a v e his c h a rg e s M on­ “ I kinda w an ted to give “ How- the lust not going out day off 'em a d a y off,” he said. ev er, w e ’r e going to look at film. W e ’r e on the field ” T h en he 12-7 v ic t o r y “ T he re a l turned h a rk in Waco. thrill in th a t g a m e w as t h a t if they hit a n o th e r pass they won last d riv e w a s a fine o n e ” S ta n le y to the B e a r s 37 y a rd s the Longhorn 29 before s o p h o m o re end T o m m y L u r e s saved the g a m e with a f o u r t h down t a c k l e of all-A m erica Ron- nip Bull passed T heir “ S pirit an d support hex b e e p th e UT ex c e lle n t all y e a r r o a c h said . “ It's \ cry i n s t r u m e n ­ t a l .” long ’’ e x a ct) U n i v e r s ity students a tte n d e d the g a m e in Waco. The p revious high h ad be en 3,700 in 1950. S ophom ore fullback Ray P oag e, two m in u te s who p la y e d only Mural Schedule F O O T B A L L C la a s A 7 p m S i g m a N u vs D e l t a T a u D e l t a : K a p p a A l p h a Psi vs. N a v y S p . n e — K a p p a S i g m a " D e lta K a p p a E p s i l o n T h e l e m e vs A I A ; R a t D i g g e r s vs. B i o m q u i s t . ( I n t o B ft p m — D e l t a K a p p a E p s i l o n vs D e l t a T a u D e l t a ; Pill D e l t a T h e t a vs Acacia M u l l e t ft p rn.—L i t t l e Red vs P u r p l e P a s ­ 7 p rn. — P h i I) e I t a P h i vs L e g a l L a w S c h o o l sion. E a g le s T E N N I S S I N G L E R ( las* A 4 3ft p m — t o n e s vs B r i g g s . S t e p h e n s o n \ s B el del . P a v ti e o r C l a s s K < RO p m ( ’' o w n vs T i n k e r . S I N G L E S ( . O I I I n t r a m u r a l G o l f e r s t h e i r s e c o n d " h o h a v e n o t r e ­ t h e M u n i c i p a l G o lf C o u r s e to t o 2 14 f o r a s s i g n m e n t s r o u n d s h o u l d p la c e d port from I 45 f o u r s o m e s to B A S K E T B A L L < la ss A 7 p m — D e l t a K a p p a E p s i l o n vs K a p p a A l p h a C h i A lp h a vs V a r s i t y ; N e w m a n vs. d a k G r o v e 7 36— P h i G a m m a D e lta vs S i g m a C a n t e r b u r y \* BSL’ : S t a g Chi T e i a s X 12— L a m b d a Chi A lp ha vs Bet T h e t a P l . N s v v vs P L M A r a b S t u ­ d e n t s vs K a p p a A lp ha Us1 K I S - P h i K a p p a T h e t a vs P h i S e K a p p a T w i n P i n e s vs P r i c e ; P h i ma K a p p a T a u s s D e lt a I p s llo n 9:2 4 — K a p p a S i g n a vs h o n e T h e l e m e vs A i r D e l t a vs. A l p h a P h i A lpha S c m a N u P h i S i g m a 7 n rn —T a u D e l t a P h i s s P h i K a p p a < lass B T a u SI lima 7 3ft— S i g m a Ch! vs P h i K a p p a 8:1 2 — A l p h a T a u O w g a va D e lt a X 4ft— P h i K a p p a Ps i vs De ’ a Ta a De! t a K a p p a E p s i l o n 9 J I — A I p h i ) I G a m m a D e l t a F p s l l o p Pl va P h i a the B e a r s , w as th e only “ He h a s a d e e p m a j o r c a s u a l ty . bruise, in j u r y ,” R o y a l b a r k said. “ N othing show ed in th e X- rays. T he d o c to r is kee ping h im in (S tud ent H e a lth C en ter) t o d a y .” i n f i r m a r y the P oag e, J a c k Collins, an d J o h n n y T readw ell a r e doubtful p a r t ic i p a n ts against. T e x a s C h ris tia n in F o r t Worth S a tu r d a y . N e ith e r Collins nor T re a d w e ll sa w action a g a in s t Baylor. About th e u p c o m in g F r o g s (w ho j h eat B ay lo r, 14-7. e a r l ie r ! . R oy al said, “ T h e y don t pass as m u c h ( q u a r te r - ; as B a ylo r, but Gibbs is a solid I hack Sonny, 6-7 . 230), It s a to s su p ball f a v ­ th a t off ! g a m e . ored h e e a u s e of h av in g week and c a tc h in g us at h o m e . ” ru n ning threat.. th e y ’d he th ought I Texa* is tied for th ird p l a c e in the Southw est C o nference w ith a 3-2 (5-3 o v e ra ll) record. t C O * O P * C O * O P * C O * O P « a. o • o o • CL o I H t s I USM NI I OWN Slant Al • / U . ©shows you! how to play Santa! for n GUY PASTOR. His five-week Vegas show* with father T o n y w ent 6 months! Happy G u y in Musty, B ew itch ed , more. ST1465 C MAVIS RIVERS.N ew S am oan sin g e r -d isc o v er y all critics ar® r a v in g over. A t Sund o w n . H om e, S p rin g Is H ere, others. ST1408 D MARK MURPHY. A cu te b e a t a n d song senses m a r k swingin* M u r p h y in H o n eysu ckle R o se , scat B u t Not for M e, etc. STI453 L J E A N N E B L A C K . Songs ju st a bit sad b y great new ta len t w h o ’s ju st a hit sensational h ere In her o w n first album . ST1513 □ THE ELIGIBLES. A w in n in g c o m b in a tio n o f fr esh -b le n d e d v o ice s in H ow High the M oon, D early B elo ved , IO more. STI411 □ D W A Y N E H I C K M A N . I ' m a L over, Not a F ighter, he adm its. M any lovesongs of barefoot b o y w ith tongue in cheek. S T I 4 l l o o ■o • o o • o • a o • o •o • o o • o •a • o o • o • n o • o U • o o • o TS o o • o *TJ • o o GIVE THE FOUNTAIN PEN T H A T L O A D S LIKE A RIFLE! • 11’» S h e a ff e r * car* fridge fountain pen. • R efill* c le a n ly a n d q u i c k l y w ith d r o p - i n S h ip cartridges. • P r e c t n o n - g r o u n d , w r a p - a r o u n d p o i n t writes frrelv and easily. T h e pen alone, S ' OO. I M atching pen and p en ­ cil aet, Si 75. Ch colors. Ona of th* couplet* line of quality pant (rom S H E A F F E R ^ ! B R I G H T NE W T AL E N T T O O GO OD T O M I S S . D ic k W i ll ia m s L O V E I S N O T H I N ’ B U T B L U E S WI rn JACK MARKUM ) Mi st' □ J O H N N Y UKULEL E. Hawai.ar* tik e g en iu s and rhythm . B 'a ch an d W hite Rag, W e d d in g Song+ T h i r d M a n T h e m e , etc. ST142S BHI HOLMANS GREAT BIS BAND sawufij* □ THE SEVEN T U N S . Brilliant y o u ng pro s in 12 iv. mg dassies like Sing Sing Sing, C herokee and L ittle B ro w n Jug. ST1424 /• somethin}* lb wonderful J I *■> Nancy l f . , Wilsoii ♦<** oicheslra conducted by BILLY MAV t; N A N C Y W I L S O N . S o m e th in g w o n d e r f u l h a p p en s to y o u as th is n e w s t a r ( “a real fin d ,’’ — S T I4 4 0 H ig h F i d e l i t y ) sin gs. C D I C K W I L L I A M S . D his h e a rt and voice i Me o r L eave Me I (. You, 12 hi ut >y s a gs. C B I L L H O L M A N . h a p p ie st a 'O n e of th e j Httfe travels’ music... S u s a n B a r r e t t .si rn* □ T A K s h i n o o . S t e a m i n g ru k i' ..kl of old Ka tern, m odern W estern instrum ents. S trin g o f P earls, sw ina favorites. S T I 433 r n C S U S A N B A R R I T T . S u sa n sw ings th r u th e U S in re c o rd time via Georgia on M y M nd. M anhattan, stojxjvers. STI 412 □ s u i RANEY. S u e • smoott* voice flow* as rain on a w in d o w p a r e. Wrap Y our 7>ou! V* i* D ream s,Im possible,etc. ST I Oppoftiuniiifil ffiti Gtiowlh ...IN A GROWING COMPANY C a p a b l e you n g m e n a n d w o m e n have extra o p p o rtu n ity in a grow ing c o m p a n y spin mg a g ro w in g a r r i . D u rin g t h e past tw elve y ears , T e x a s E lectric S erv ic e ( mip.m to mom h a s in creased its p o w e r g e n e ra tin g capab ility t h a n nine times th a t of 1947, has construe te d mom I an I UK) miles of high v o lt a g e transmission lines and 2800 m ile s of d is trib u tio n lines, alon g w ith r e la te d substation the n u m b e r a n d o th e r facilities, m o r e o f em p lo yees, a n d serves m ore tw ic e as m any cu sto m e r* . th an d o u b l e d th a n A n d the c o m p a n y fs c o n ti n u in g to b u ild its organization as it plans a n d c o n s t r u c ts n e w electric transom s' on and to s e i s e o ur r a p i d l y developing d is tr i b u ti o n facilities a re a . N ew c a ree r o p p o r t u n it ie s are o p e n i n g (or q u a li­ fied m en. W a i t e r P a y n f , U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s ’39, is s u p e r i n t e n d e n t o f p r o d u c t i o n o f T c x a ~ t l e e t r i o S e n d e e C o m p a n y , s n p e r i is t a g t h e c o m p a n y ' s e l e c t r i c t h e o j i c r a t i o n o f g, a e r a t i n g s t a t i o n s . V a d er Payn® a n d o th e r r e p r e se n ta tiv e s of T exas Electric S ervice C o m p a n y will interview seniors. W e d n e s d a y a n d Thursday NOVEMBER 9 -IO E l e c t r i c a l a n d M e c h a n i c a l E n g in e e r * An a p con ba orramgtd your Pl*em*#* Q4 (» I E X A S E L E CT RI C S E R V I C E C O M P A N Y 2 2 4 6 G u a d a l u p e S t r e e t O U • C ( H O P « C O t O P « € O t O P l A i l r n A l o w a u d r e g u l a r a n i l p r s i t f . S l o c m n n r fr h fti^ fia t Cap** Ako**, tat* I R O L L E Y P O L L E Y . Antidote to t r a n q u i l i z e r s . Bongos, congas, tr a p s , rn t/rH mer*' W ild mono, re.ir-catacivsrm c st4ireo. ST I 154 □ C A T H I E T A Y L O R . B eg u ilin g and crystal-clear vioice of gifted mid-teener; calypso, sea songs, STI 4 43 folk tunes, all kind*. \ Love, Laughter M ix In 'Beaux Stratagem' T h e D a i e v T e x a n Amusements Tuesday, Nov. 8, I960 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 BERMAN SHOW . 7. (Continued F ro m P a c e 1) Im ita tin g the founder of a c erta in typ e of e n tertain m en t. is The C u m b e rla n d T hree the K in g sto n T rio a ll o v e r ag ain : T h e gam e type of songs; tho s a m e h u m o r ; the sam e instrum ents; ju s t the sam e. B u t fortunately o r u n fo rtu n ately, depending on the mood y o u r'r e in th ey are e q u a lly as good as the Kingston Trio. It is a Forget the T rio has played A us­ tin or that the T r io broke the r e ­ juvenation of folk m usic, and you can e n j o y w ith exuberance the talents of The C u m b e rla n d Three. little em b arrassin g at one point when the group breaks into “ M olly Bee.” but they soon take the entire edge off things by sufficient sim ply s a y i n g w ith hum or that the like Kingston Trio. they sound B y K A R E N L E W I S A s t e r ia l* A m u s e m e n t* E d ito r T w o dashing young men ride into L ich fie ld , K n g lan d , on the late stag e and find am orou s adventures w ith a beautiful h eiress, a discon­ tented w ife, and an Inn-keeper s d au g h ter. S u c h is the situation in George F a r q u h a r ’s com edy, “ T h e Beaux Stra ta g e m ” The p la y , w ritten in 1707, is a transition between the R e sto ra tio n period and the Rom an­ tic ora, com bining the best humor of each. “ T h e Beau x S t r a t a g e m ” is th* D r a m a D epartm ent * offering in th e nineteenth annua] F in e A rts F e s t iv a l. It is a fa r c r y f r o m “ H e c u b a ” which w as the produc­ “ H e­ tion for the F e s tiv a l o f 1959. is one of E u r ip id e s ’ moat c u b a ” m o vin g “ The tragedies B e a u x Stra ta g e m ” is a rollicking E n g lis h com edy. O d d ly enough, B a r b a r a I.asater, w h o played the d istrau g h t H ecuba, is ca st in “ The B e a u x Strn tg em ” as a weirdly and w itty wom an of a ffa ir* w h ile She po rtrays Sullen the discontented M r s and h e r adult and sophisticated a ffa ir w ith A rcher p la y e d by John H a le s Is one of the basic themes of the comedy. T h e ir is sh a rp ly con­ tra s te d w ith the yo u th fu l romance of A im w e ]] (R o b e rt P a lm e r ) and the beautiful D o rin d a , played by love a ffa ir M a r y J a n * C herry. F a r q u h a r has created In “ The B e a u x S tra ta g e m ” a fat inn-keep- e r w hose life-substancp seem s to be ale. This role is filled by Bob the p h a s e s , am o ro u s C h erry, is p laced by G in ­ g er W rig h t, who was a m em b er of the ch o ru s in “ Hecuba and his d au g hter, in P a t E v a n s , who gave us Bloody the su m m er production M a r y of “ .South P a cific ” p la ys the part of a busy gentlewom an who goes about cu rin g all her neighbor s Ills .Sh* goes under th* apt nam e of I j i d y Bountiful. T h is group of w id e ly diverse c h a ra c te rs is mixed wdth a liberal s p rin k lin g of love plots, sp icy dia­ logue, robbers and w e a l t h y F re n c h m e n to produce a gaiety tru e tradition of B ritish th * in co m ed y. Is headed by D r “ T h e Beaux S tra ta g e m ” com ­ p a n y F ra n c is H odge, who is d irectin g th * show. H odge directed “ The I j i r k , " “ Six C h a ra c te rs in Search of an Au­ th o r ,” and “ Flo w erin g P * a e h.” H e w a s guest director at the Colo­ ra d o Shakespearean F e s t iv a l this s u m m e r, and was d ire c to r of the S h a w “ Com edy T r io ” of tw o sum ­ m e rs ago T h e settings are th e w o rk of Jo h n Rothgeb. L in e d ra w in g s are used, giving the set, as one m em ­ “ a b e r of re m a rk e d , the cast SA N JA C IN T O C A F E SPECIALIZING IN DELICIOUS MEXICAN AND AMERICAN FOODS REGULAR LUNCHES EVERY DAY AT REASONABLE PRICES Visit Our Rainbow Dining Room OPEN 7 DAYS A W EEK 16 yrs. E/perience on Same Corner I6TH AND SAN JACINTO GR 8-3984 THE U N IV E R SIT Y ’S O N LY EXCLUSIVE R A D IO AND HI-FI SALES A N D SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 Ser vi ng t h e U ni v er s it y a r e a for I O y e a r s B E D W A Y HIG H FID ELITY AT R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E S " S T A U T S T O M O R R O W A I T IO N PAC K E O H I T S ’ 1st A I S T I.N S H O W IN G I F t J I M Y MHM— j I I I O f f .M A I M Schell Robertson f Alf HOI M it c h e l l VAN JOHNSON . , E nem y v % K M > " T N I E x t r a ! UP-TO-MINUTE ELECTIO N RETURNS announced from our stage for those attending Trans-Texas Theaters tonight! TEXAS "O n Th* N O W S H O W IN G O P EN 5:45 V 7 m iy ie n f i ^ n iS N F . Y ’S N K W F S T A N H M O S T E N D IT IN G T R I P. K I F F A D V E N T U R E ! ^ TO N IG H T AT 8! PLU S REG. FEATURE: AT Is com ic T h * s trip atm o sph ere.” th em * ta a chess board, and the b ack d ro p im p re ssio n istic an chess b o ard affair. T h is b a c k s up the th e m * of the play itse lf, w h ich is m o ve a fte r move, a c h e c k m a te here there am ong the characters. ch e ck m a te and a lined T he c o lo rs of the set a re b ril­ liant. the whole p roscenium being in w hite in v iv id turquoise with lin e draw ings on e ith e r side. C o stu m e s , designed b y the per- enial L u c y Barton , re fle c t the c h a r­ ac te rs an d the bright g a ie ty of the p la y . The gentlem en a r e a r­ in gorgeous c o l o r s and ra ye d fla s h y fashions. T o m m y Tune, who p la y * a f o p ­ pish F r e n c h count p u rsu in g M rs. is decked out in a flash- Su llen , ; ing m ix tu r e of blue, g reen , and In d icative of the high- tu rq u o ise i ly e la b o ra te dress of the period the red, high heels on a r * the m e n ’* shoes. M rs . Su llen w ear* one costum e of b la c k , gold and a ric h , royal I blue. T h e dresses of the fem ale c h a r a c t e r s are full at th e h i p s w ith t in y w aistlines. T h e sleeves are b o u ffan t and the n e c k lin e s fra n k ly plunging long. and i tigh t ting g o w n s I la c y h an d k erch iefs and B r il li a n t blues, cerises, p i n k s , and g re e n s flash across the stage, w h ile th e young ladies flir t with fit­ L a d y B o u n t if u l’* ! v o lu m in o u s to th re a te n skirts 1 sw eep props and people o ff stage! “ T h e B e a u x S tra ta g e m " o p e n s in L a b o r a to r y T h ea ter F r id a y , to run S a tu rd a y , and from M ond ay, through N o v e m b e r N o v e m b e r 14 19. T ir k e t s are SI for ad u lts and 75 c e n ts R e s e r v a ­ for students tion* should be made In ad van ce I b v c a llin g the M usic B u ild in g Box O ffic e . Texas-Ex to F o r Festival M is s W erm in e, w h o T w e lv e years ago a g irl. Retie Jean W e rm in e , attended the U n i­ v e r s it y and next Su n d a y she w ill re tu rn . T his time, though, it won't be as a student but as th e star of th e opening concert of the N in e­ teen th A n n u a l Fine A rts F e s tiv a l. now know n as Alme. B e tte B jo e rlin g , has c o m e a long w a y s in ce her d a y s a t T exas. Notable am o n g her a c h ie v e m e n ts are a s e rie s of ap­ f a m e d p e a ra n c e s at Sw eden's R o y a l O p e ra in Stockh olm , and an E u r o p e a n tour with h e r husband. R o y a l the is : G o e s ta O p e ra s B jo erlin g . leading ly ric ten o r. Budding Author! Notebook Editors Need Your Talent HELP! A la s t frantic and d e sp e ra te cry c a m e from Texan N o tebo ok edi­ tors as th ey watched h o p e fu lly for m a n u s c rip ts from the talented w r it e r * that must he “ some­ w h e re ' on campus T h e s e talented w rite rs a re urged to co n trib u te short sh o rt stories fro m 1,000 to 1,800 w o rds or of less. O r perhaps these fu tu re P u lit­ zer P r iz e authors w ould be w illing to p a r t w ith an e ss a y o r article on a n y subject In the fin e a rts . Up to 3,000 words worth. F r i d a y I* the d ead lin e fo r these w r it e r s to reserve a b y lin e In the D e c e m b e r issue of the Notebook m m m m tKm m m w m 'm - Ray Campi Faces Success With Disc I R a y C am p i, A ustin singer-song- , w r it e r now working out of I em An­ g eles. faces th* p o s s ib ility of a top-pop song with his latest re­ le a s e fo r Cnlpix R e c o r d s L a s t w e e k his disc, “ H e re s W h a t You W a n n a H e a r” b a c k e d with “ F r e n c h F r ie s ,” w as n a m e d " P ic k Hit o f th# W e e k ” by v ir t u a lly all th * W e s t Coast ra d io statio n s and re c e iv e d good re v ie w s b y the trade m a g a z in e s , T ile popularity of the re c o rd led to a sudden dem and fo r the young s in g e r 's appearance on television a n d at record hops. DELWOOD 3931 Cost Avenue A D M I S S I O N •>«<• • O P E N Ii I* M THIS H A P P Y FEELING D e b b i e Rrvnold* J o h n S a x o * St a r t * 7: 1 5 — P h i* — NOOSE FO R A G U N M A N H a r ry t a r r y . St a r t * 9:AO J P. SOUTH AUSTIN moo so CONOR F S S A D M I S S IO N 50r • D P ) N s 8 P M PEYTON PLA C E La n a T u r n e r S ta rts 7:15 an d I I * PASSENGERS Peg g y C u m m in s and N a d :a G ra y a o o e a r to ba in te re s te d 'n something e'se at th e m o m en t, but don r y o u b e eve it! A il th e y really c a ' * a b o id is se a te d b e tw e e n them— the r J o h n G reg son . G r e g s o n is facing th e c a p tfl'n , from captain c f a fre ghder to that tran sitio n of a super-duper luxury Ii ner, and women like these are only two of the many problems he meets whi.e making the change. There and many o l her hilariously ribald capers may be observed the new English a t comedy now playing at the exas T h eater. The Captain's Tab'e. SIR WALTER RALEIGH Protective Pouch Keeps Tobacco M f Mm M U 7 f . : J.-f -s-'A.v - 'i. §f» No spills whin you ■fill- Jutf di p ini FRESH ER! Texas Art Shown In Laguna Exhibit The T e x a s F in e A rts A s s o c ia ­ tion's a n n u a l F a ll M em b ersh ip Kx- I hibition, one of the state's m a jo r art sh ow s, w e n t on view S u n d a y at Laguna G l o r ia A rt G a lle ry . The e x h ib itio n includes w o rk in all m e d ia o ils, w atercolors, d r a w ­ ings, s c u lp tu re , etc. done b y the top p a in te rs and sculptors o f T e x ­ as, w ho a r e competing for SLIG O in prize m o n ey. The ex h ib itio n w ill re m a in at La g u n a G lo r ia through D e c e m b e r IO. Return Concert The A fto n b la d P t critic In S t o c k ­ holm o n c e w ro te of M m e. B jo e r ­ ling, “ A g re a t and m a g n ific e n t voice of golden beauty.” T ile N e w sa id , “ C ritic s an d audience w e re sp e ll­ bound b y h e r p erfo rm an ce.’’ Yo rk T im es In 1937, a fte r her h u sb a n d 's death, M m e . B joerlin g re tu rn e d to the U n it e d States w here sh e is c u rre n tly m a k in g her first A m e n - can - C an ad ian concert tour. The D e p a rtm e n t of M u s ic w ill present th is ex-student in H o g g A u d ito riu m Sunday at 4 p m , A d ­ m ission Is free, and the p u b lic is invited. In clu d e The p ro g ra m w ill tw o classic a r ia s from " Ju liu s C e a s a r ' by H a n d e l and “ L 'O lim p ia d e ” by j C im a ro s a , Norw egian and S w e d ­ ish a rt songs, a group of E n g lis h songs, a n d se veral other se le c tio n s Film Classics to Screen Ja p a n s e s Tale of V a lo r “ D n i C h u sh in g ura (A M a t t e r of V a lo r ) ,” a Jap an ese m o vie w ith E n g lis h subtitles, will be s h o w n at 2, 5. and 8 p m. in B a tts A u d i­ torium N o v e m b e r 16. T h is is one of a series of film cla s sics an d there wall b# no ad ­ m ission c h a rg e The m o v ie depicts the r i g h t - in in a long-awaited ex ­ eous w r a t h o ve r hlind su b m iss to t y r a n n y plosion of rebellion. 5oon*r d r la t ir Your Favorite "Tobacco^ This protective aluminum foil pouch keepe famous, mild Sir Walter Raleigh 44% fresher th a n old -fash ion ed tin cans. T h e stu rd y pouch is triple laminated. Carries flat. Sir Walter Raleigh Is choice Kentucky b u rley- extra aged! Tty it. S M E L L S G R A N D — P A C K S R I G H T ! S M O K E S S W E E T - C A N T B I T E I WM u i i ) or Qc»Lin ai to*ao«o m ar**** two heads are better than one Especially when one happens to be a delectable girl-type head, l i v e l y heads are alw ays attracted to male heads th a t use ‘Vaseline’ Hair T onic — made specially for men who use w ater w ith their hair tonic. ‘Vaseline’ H air Tonic's 100% pure groom ­ ing oil replaces oil that water removes. In the bottle and on your hair the difference is clearly th e r e ! Ju st a little does a lot! fT X ctsA * J J! i r s cima* , r * VASELINE %Mll.l*» •» ar (nutMW•> **«» a Mi* H u s h P u p p ie s ' BRLATHIN BRUSHY PIGSKIN Bf WOLVERINE M c n 'i from 9.95 Sp o rt lo a fe r that'* p e rfe ct for cam pus w e a r . Ligh t 12 ounces per shoe. Bouncy crepe sole, steel shank support. Resists dirt, repels w a te r. B ru sh in g cleans, restores leather. Sizes an d w id th s to fit a n y b o d y . Verno Blomquist 617 C O N G RESS H arley Clark T O D A Y AT IN T E R S T A T E w rit roe a movii DISCOUNT CASO PARAMOUNT N O W I SHOW 12:00 NOW, FEAR POSSESSED H E R . . . AS IQ V C ONCE HADI k ■ DORIS DAY - REX HARRISON J A fu /n ig k t P O S I T I V E L Y NO O N E W i l l , B E A D M I T I E l l III KI NO T H E I, AHT 3 7 ’ * M I M I I S F E A T I HI s ; 12 M R H IO J a ce. S T A T E BW I P O T T O N ' FEA TU RES: I 1:30 - 2:01 4:34 - 7:05 - 9:36 PwrtMB, vv:r.M i lunch r • T f C M N , C O L O R * L * ■*» M * * * * * 6, O C H SCHAUT, E W , w ~ W A R N E R MRO* 8 R O S V A R SIT Y S T A R T S T O D A Y ! Show T im * * : 2 :(mi— 4:30 7 :0O— 9 : 3 0 9:50 rl> iW o - £ (SK I J A IM A N Woodward I D J I L U A S C I E N C E F IC T IO N T U R I I . L E R ! ’ E st A D U L T S 60c 25c C H IL D TW * funnier* Abow » f th * Y n * r! if ' j s m I u #t y T 5 o o e en, r °* ll/*f M & k ) l f ) I WOMAN! ® urn kTaoSW IN C O L I bing crosby fabian TUESDAY w eld. NICOLE MAUREY C N O W S H O W IN G FIRST S H O W 6 P.M. l in e u p to .r a m * * ? K L E I P I O N T E N S I O N S O O T T O L * H I L A X A T A G O U ID M O V IE W E ’ L L A N S O I N I L I P T O M I N I T K It K T ! II N s I S N A l K B A K O P K N S « OO C H I L D F R E E I A L L C O L O R P K O ! . R A M “ Portrait in Black’’ Lun a T u r n e r • S a n d ra ID*-* “ W ILD A N D THE IN N O C E N T ’’ A l D IK M I H P R T J O A N N E O K I IN C O L O R “ S A Y O N A R A " M A R L O N B K A N 1)0 — Pl ii a— “ BATTLE C R Y ” V A N H E F L I N • A L D O R A T Y < T h e D a il y T e x a n 4 a i i i pus Lite Tuesday, Nov. 8, I960 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 5 Homecoming Celebration W ill Highlight W eeken d ‘'The Golden Anniversay of TC H honors the Class of 1940. the I'niver- in Fo rt W orth" celebration and Cee Freem an of is advisor. Homecoming will highlight the day *>ty Baptist Church la m b ie Briggs is ch airm an of the of the Te.xas-TCU game, Satur- day. Homecoming t h i s y e a r retreats committee. Among the activities w ill he a ceremony opening the r e i g n of T C U ’s -Homecoming Q ueen" at the campus Frid ay night. 4 Contracts For C e n te r Ranch. Retreat Set By Religious Groups In preparation for the Laym an's Contracts were awarded Frid ay for construction of the new Luther- F e stiv a l of Faith to be held Fe b ru a ry, the Austin Council of an Student (e n te r which will he Churches and the U n ive rsity Ecu- built at 2200 San Antonio, accord- rnenical Council are cn-sponsorinc ing to the R ev. VV. C. Ahlrich, chairm an of the board of the Luth­ a retreat November 18-20 at ll. E . Butt Singing Hills r a n c h in Leakey. eran Student Foundation. j oil. Reservations, lim ited to 120 stu- in dents, were due by N ovem ber 7. Applications may be made to the various student religious groups, the an^ final reservations will tie turned in to the Ecu m e n ica l Q uin­ Theme of the retreat will he President of the are frehr and G ranger. Groundbreaking ceremonies for the $52,000 structure w ill be held at the building site at 4 p.m. Sun­ day, Nov. 20, R ev. Ahlrich said. -The Revitalization of the L a ity .” Council i* Surrended H i l l . Em phasis will he placed upon the student s I-,,if', „ .. b v m n n in his own church in relation to the lav Architects for the new building movpment in the world S p e a k e r s . . . . , , include Full t 5 m Lawson, the Rev John Turnvi Ie, Howard E. Butt J r ., Leonard Hol­ loway, Andy Blam e, and Dr. D a ­ vid Stitt. . The general contract went to the I ^ ‘ B J . Building Corporation; elec­ trical contract to Dean D. Johnson; heating and to Young and P ra tt: and plumbing to P . G. Sosa and Sons. | for tho meeting w ill air-conditioning . ^ . . , n , . , , Ecum enical The D epartm ent H ead M c K e tta Travels In Three States Fellowship W esley Groups participating in the event I w ill be the W estm inster Student Foundation, , U niversity Baptists. Disciples Stu­ dent Fellowship, United Student Fellowship, Canterbury Club, L u ­ theran Student Association. Y M C A , Y W C A , and the Student Christian the Huston-Tillot- Association of son Foundation. 2338 Guadalupe at our Chenards Shoe Salon only T H E S E F IV E F IN A L IS T S were^chosen Sunday in the New m an C lub sweetheart to c o m p e d election. They are standing I. to r., C arolyn Short, Phyllis Kazen, N a n c y Schlegel. Seated I. to r, fl'-e A v e ry Sinclair and Sara Tucker. The w inrer will be presented at the Sw eetheart Fo r­ m a1, Saturd ay, N ovem ber 19, in the Colonial Room of the Federated W o m e n 's Club. Rosalie Oakes To Speak H ere M iss Rosalie Vaden Oaks, rep- Tuesday I Hillel Foundation, It Jit a t (joeA O n O Je re resenting the Foreign D ivision of 7-7 General Election hours. the N ational Board of the Y W C A 8:30-12:30 and 1.30-4:30 - Cactus pictures for juniors, and f i r s t - ye a r and second-year la w stu dents, Journalism Building 5. 9-4 — M arine officer interviewing in the Union of South A frica, w ill the U n ive rsity Y M C A and visit Y W C A Novem ber 22-30. -j Before joining the Foreign D i­ vision staff, Miss Oakes was ex­ ecutive director of the Y W C A at the U n ive rsity for four years. t e a m plans with dents. Texas Union. interested men stu­ 9-12 and 1-4 .30 - Drawing for T C U education game tickets, Gregory G ym . The Y W C A program is m ainly devoted to in South in­ A frica form al domestic crafts. Courses in sanitation and for mar- nutrition, preparation riage and fam ily life are offered 9-11 — Scholarship benefit snack to youth and adults. sale, Home Economics Building. Developm ent of - F a c u lty art exhibit, M usic prints, Texas Union G alle ry. S h o w i n g of N orwegian Building Loggia. 9-5 9-5 in IO is the factor emphasized in this program. leaders speak on Plato at Coffee Hour, Professor Leon Lebowitz to 4:15 I — G ilb ert K ing and G e r a l d Dr. John J . M cK e tta , chairman Paulson to speak at T echnical Df the Department of Chemical En- Session, Geology Building 14. 1 ginering. 2-5 — G rie van ce Committee to re- meetings in M ichigan, Indiana, and lectured and attended F a c i l i t y W o m e n ceive complaints, Texas Union 321. to discuss commission 3 .3 _ Paintings by Gerald H a rv e y N ew York recently. In addition to lecturing in Michi- Jones. T F W C Galleiw F 2313 San Ran- Dr. M cK e tta Blended the Tri- I State College Board of Regents Gabriel. , . 3-5 — Texas Fin e Arts Associa- ; meeting at Angola, Ind. lio n s F a ll Mem bership E x h ib i­ tion, Laguna G loria. national board of directors of the Professor Thomas M cG ann to Am erican Institute of Chemical En- 4 speak at Ju n io r Forum on ‘‘Con- giners in New Y o rk City, in U S-Latin tem porary Am erican R ela tio n s," T e x a s Union 304-305. Essay Prize to Be Issues — _ l l . attended the meeUtw nt the sh iu M h(, pitkod up , - Catholic inquiry c l a s s , N ewm an Classrooms, 2016 G u ad ­ alupe, 5 - Illustrated lecture on job op­ portunities by Procter & G a m ­ ble J u n i o r representatives, Ballroom of Texas Union. 5:30 Apple-polishing p arty for $100 Savings Bond A $100 savings bond is the first gram should call prize offered by The T h o m a s Paine Foundation in an essay con­ test on Thomas Paine. Union of 3.000 words The essay must he a minimum long, and entries speech students, Texas Star Room. 7-9:30 must he sent to The T h o m a s Free class stal ls in cer- Pain^ Foundation, 370 IL est Fhirty- fifth Street, N ew Yo rk I, before amies, Arts and Crafts Center, Texas Union 333. Ja n u a ry 20. - Texan Notebook staff meet- Second and third prizes of $50 ing. Jo u rn alism R u i’ding 302. and $25 w ill also he awarded. - Shelley B erm an show, w i t h Paine was an Am erican political 7 8 general election returns. M u n ici­ pal Auditorium. Eighteenth Century. I and religious w rite r of the l a t e NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR FAST SERVICE ^ g e n u i n e r e g i s t e r Inch one tim # E a c h A d d itio n a l T im e 20 C o n se c u tive Issues 8 words 15 w o rd s 30 w ords ...................................................... ** 90 ....................................................................... R 99 l l OO ..................................................................... ......................................... .......................... H O O 90 ...................... 4<* iN o co p y ch an g e fo r co n se cu tive Issue ratee ) C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G D E A D L I N E * ............................ M o n day a .to p m T u e s d a y t e x a n W eom -saav T e x a n ...................... T u e sd a y 3 30 p rn. T h u rs d a y T e x a n ...................... W e d n e s d a y 3 30 p m .............................. T h u rs d a y .1.1 p m . F r i d a y T e x a n S u n d a y T e x a n F r id a y . 3 30 p rn In the event o f e rro rs m ade Im m e d ia te no tice m u st he g l i m ss the pub a r e resp on sible fo r o n ly one In c o rre c t in se rtio n . in sn a d ve rtis e m e n t, ih e r t .................... CALL JOHNNY GR 2-2473 Rooms for Rent For Rent Lost and Found Typing R O O M S F O R B O Y S Close to cam pus S in g le s D o u b le A m p l e p arkin g ra te * N ew C e n t a u r House L o w G R a 5*01. THE 2502 N U i e i S H a s Room fo r O ne M a n N ew A ir C o nd itio ned M en s D o rm M a id S e n lee F r e e P a r k in g N e a r C am PUB $•' R *r m onth G R 7 19**2 G R 8-0370 Apartm ents S M A L L A P A R T M E N T S T V C ) h i c k s $3 >< 0 per U tilitie s paid ca m p u s m o n th G R 8-7701 '2900 S p e e d w a y . N E A R U N I V E R S I T Y . L O V E L Y two ( o uple A lso h o '» Prive t* kit-ben-bath. B ills b edroom duplex a p a rtm e n t paid G R 6 -H 4 1 G I. 3 " :- 3 Furnished Apartm ents U N I V E R S I T Y . M O S R N E F F I C I E N ­ F o a m bed off s tre e t p a rk in g p a i d $63 OO Sin g le. »7u OO C Y U t ilit ie s d o u b le G R 8-9125 L A R G E T H R E E R O O M a p a rtm e n t five h i c k s w e s t ch rn pu ■> C o m fo rts ole. Olean. A lso ho usekeeping room , it' c o n ­ a b le C L 2-448* Duple*— Furnished C L E A N A T T R A U ITS ! K • fr-h.iu * 1 *hr t ( J R 6-3365 fo r p arties S P A C I O U S D E S S A U H A L I., F ree (o n lv a signed g u a ran te e of a num so u r ch o ic e o f en C h ris tm a s E D 5-0355 room house w ith b e r) le rta ln m e n * p a r t y ? C a ll M rs A lso hath a good u tilitie s paid $33 a K o t r la P la n n in g four For Sale L I K E N E W . G I U L I E T T I A ctu a l valu e $375 W i l l a e r o b ia n ta k e $2of l i n t # M el W e in b e rg e r. 217 C o lleg e B lv d S a n A n to n io A N T I Q U E 1531 C H E V R O D K T P e rfe c t c o n d itio n $250 C a ll G E 3-1040 UMH P L Y M O U T H F O U R d o o r sedan E x c e lle n t tranM>ortatlnn fo r student $50.00. b a t t e r y , good tire s N ew G R fi-4850 cost ski boat G E T T I N G M A R R I E D . M U S T sell low E x c e lle n t co n d itio n 14' h u ll w ith fib e r glass b otto m , b u ilt ­ 25 in sk i i o m p lete H P . (o ffic e ) rig I c k e r * and sp e ed o m e te r lash G R 7-2876 Jo h n s o n $105 00 t r a ile r t ilt 1058 C O R V E T T E fo ur speed tran sm issio n p o s ttra c tlo n Ra d in and hea te r 25 000 m ile s O n e o w n ­ e r $ 2 V V I G E 3 8044 E n g in e 270 Busines$ O pportunities E X C E L L E N T O P P O R IT 'N' I T V in te re ste d m a tu re voting m an re'* a rd mg ca re e r Rep!* g iv in g e x p e rien ce , Box 7864 U n iv e rs ity tlo n Y o r W a n te d B L O O D D O N O R S — A ll ty p e * o f blood needed for usage in A u s tin P r o fee slo n ai donor* now acce p te d T ra v is C o u n ty Blo o d B a n k 2907U R ed R iv e r G R 8 6457 O N E O R T W O Y o rk C ity or AT) no cai J IO a r r iv e 5 N o v a mb t ,R 8-4262 Yorl ist in N o ve m b e r re tu rn one d a ■ c .R 7-3184, 0 th. L O S T ! Gold lin k c h a in ch arm b race le t. F r i ­ day. O c to b e r 28 E ig h t ch arm s In c lu d ­ ing a M a ck tra n s p a re n t stone w it h a carved d eer in sid e a gold rin g P le a s e ra il V a le n t in e M c K a y , G R 2-2787 I .D S T G L A S S E S O N O c t o b e r 28 B r o w n p la s tic fram e* w ith gold trim R e w a r d ' C a ll G R 7-4857 Special Services R E N I P l r v S A lp h a T e le v is io n R e n ta l G R 2 2692 P R I N T E D S T A T I O N E R Y nam e a n d address M y x i i s h e d s 25 fo r 55c. 50 \ envelope* for 80c N o 6 25 fo r Wk fo r 85c C hoice of b lack or o ran ge ink E v e r y piece p r in t e d ' Post- paid C h eck r>pr * * K M T So* ht R E P O R T S D I S S E R I A PIO N R o b e rta R M rs 'A na • r T U E S ! 15 ■* I W e st 13th G R 7-7554 15 Y E A R S E X P E R I E N C E D O r M ava, «t»le night or dav VI .i eall for ani d e liv e r w o rk N e a t a u ia tc and n sonable rat** and needed G R 6 485?) Patn-nage appreviatc * IE M T Y P I N G K L K i T R o M A : It Theses. D ta s c rtn tlo "* R e to rt* Ut< Pe a * n a b * Mr* P e a r l G R 8512 fee* Iona I Ac* u ra te N e l s o n G R 2-1151 2953 T If E S E S R I P O R I S b v ext,, n e n re d eleo-.vma’ D I S S ) R T A ’ IO N S (T U D E N to Nev L A W N O T E S T H E M E S o u tlin e s 2 V Page G R 8-4717 T H E S E S D I S S E R T A T I O N S t / I S M } r ° m * 1 1 c M r * B O O K S r e t m eek y LA To Dine Togeth er to _ * _ lunch invited in the Texas Union. Women faculty and staff m erc­ to­ ers are a f gether at noon or I p m Wednes- Food day in the reg- a la r cafeteria line and then taken to located I/mghorn Room , on the southwest side of the cafe­ teria. No reservations are neces­ sary. the Staff members who wish to in­ vite a member of the Interna­ tiona! Teacher Development Pro- the office of the Dean of Women. A lpha D elta Pi's H o ld Fall R e tre a t Alpha Delta P i sorority held a fall retreat at Pio n e e r Town near Wimberley. JJT The retreat hegan Saturday af- ternoon with game.s and hors - ia r * riding. Saturday night Boh Breihan of tlvo W esley Foundation spoke to the group, and the pledges enter­ tained with skits. The retreat ended with a wor­ ship service Sunday morning. Sigma D elta Tau Elects O ffic e rs F a ll semester officers of Sigma Delta Tau sorority are C l a i r e Schlosberg. president; Ju d y Peine first vice-president: Alene Ross, second vice-president; K ale Bad ash, recording se cre ta ry; Betsy Perlm an, eorrseponding secretary; Shirley Racusin, treasurer; B a r ­ bara Haas, historian; and B a rb a ­ ra Daily, house m anager. Goodyear Shoe Shop # E ip « rt Skoe R e p a ir # M o d ern Eq u ip m e n t # Keys D u p 'ic a te d W F '# You W a t c h 405 W . 23rd Street I HOUR CLEANING I DAY LAUNDRY LONGHORN CLEANERS 2538 G u a d a lu p e G R 6 3847 AMPLIFIER-TUNERS A T ( § F e e d \ v a y YOUR HI-FI CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 W EST AUSTIN PHARMACY 1 0 1 2 W . 6 th 1 0 r o D i s c o u n t o n R t t o S t u d e n t ! for 21 hr. Pre t e n p in s * S m u t C A L L G R 2-5477 Green Pastures " ^ r A C t o w w u t h e r i ,j.’ice . p f f g h 4 ( n u t t i e r , 'a ! fia t L.n ck e o A E v e ry Dey 11 30-2 OO DIaa.r s 30 IO OO S A H I D A Y A N O S U N D A Y artly for rc»ervation», call: HI 2-2343 SI I w. LIV. Oil 8 blocks west of t*# A ustin Theeter Capezios Classic Skimmer ■first time ever • black calf • black suede • tan, red, green calf 6.90 • black patent fully fashioned by Bernard Alfmann UT Sophomore Leaves Today Smoking^ Rule For CBS Committee Meeting p d e n o m i n a t i o n s , r e p r e s e n t s P r o ­ C h u r c h e s w h h h s p o n s o r s te s t a n t s o m e p r o g r a m s fo r CBS, it is e li­ gible to ha e s c a ts on s o m e of the a d v i s o r y c o m m i t t e e s p a r t i c u l a r l y fo r th e r e li g i o u s p r o g r a m s M i s s S c h lev e r -aid , “ T h * basic * S W a f , f h *. I , W M ~ T H I D TtTA M ~ Pay. 8 Students Study Adviser System •Education C lim ate' In terv ie w * Today In S t u d e n t s ricing I n t e r e s t e d s o m e t h i n g s h o u t that e le c t i o n - w o rn p r o b l e m of A cadem ic a d v i s i n g c an g a i n a p l a c e on the t e a m t h a t will this a n d o t h e r q u e s ­ w r e s t l e w i t h t i o n s of e d u c a ti o n a l c l i m a t e this w e e k . in s e r v i n g on I n t e r v i e w 's for s t u d e n t s i n t e r e s t • d th e e d u c a t i o n a l c l i m a t e c o m m i t t e e of student, go v­ e r n m e n t will held T u e s d a y be t h r o u g h T h u rs d a v f ro m 2 to 4 p rn S t u d e n t s m a y a p p ly fo r r o m m d tee m e m b e r s h i p In T e x a s U n io n 31!) s n d 321, At p r e s e n t , c o m m i t t e e is the c o m p o s e d p r i m a r i l y of r e p r e s e n t a ­ t i v e s f r o m e a c h of the f ’n i v e r s i t y a s c h n ?a s n c h o n o r a rr e s . ( ' o - e h a i r m e n of t h e g r o u p a r e B e th R o b e r t son a n d R o n n i e K a s t m a n . T h e c o m m i t t e e is n o w s t u d y i n g t h e U n i v e r s i t y .* s y s t e m of d e p a r t ­ m e n t a l a d v is in g an d c o m p a r i n g it to th e s y s t e m s of o t h e r c o lle g e s a n d u n i v e r s i t i e s of c o m p a r a b l e size a n d s t a t u r e . 2 F u lib r ig h t Scholars To Sp eak T o d a y a t “ Y ” R ia N e i v a an d M a rion L i m a . stu the ' r o m Brazil a t t e n d i n g d e n t s s c h o l a r ­ U n i v e r s i t y on F u l b r i g h t s h i p s , will a d d r e s s the Tjstin A m e r ­ i c a n A f f a ir s C o m m i t t e e of t h e U n i ­ v e r s i t y a u d i t o r i u m f r o m 4 to 5 p rn T u e s d a y . " Y ” th e in T h e s t u d e n ts , w h o p l a n to t e a c h F n g l i s h will a n s w e r q u e s t i o n s a f t ­ e r w a r d s . J u d y S c h l e y e r . s o p h o m o r e P l a n PI m a j o r , l e a v e s T u e s d a y n i g h t for a n a d v i s o r y c o m m i t t e e m e e t i n g in P r i n c e t o n . N e w J e r s e y , a n d will r e t u r n S u n d a y , C o l u m b i a B r o a d c a s t i n g S y s t e m h a s a d v i s o r y c o m m i t t e e s for all its t e l e v is io n p r o g r a m s w h i c h r e v ie w k i n e s c o p e f ilm s, a d v i s e w r i t e r s , a n d s u g g e s t p r o g r a m s fo r t h e c o m ­ ing y e a r . Sinc e t h e N a tio n a l C o u n c il of Thomas McGann To Speak Today T h e J u n i o r F o r u m of th e I n t e r ­ n a t i o n a l S t u d i e s P r o g r a m w i l l m e e t a t 4 p m T u e s d a y in Union B u i ld i n g 304-30f> D r . T h o m a s M c C a n n assoc late p r o f e s s o r of h i s t o r y will s p e a k on “ C o n t e m p o r a r y rn Knifed S t a t e s L a l i n A m e r i c a n R e l a ­ t i o n s . ' ’ Iss u e s I V M c G a n n r e c e n t l y a tt e n d e d t h e t h i r d I n t e r n a t i o n a l C o n g r e s s of H i s t o r i a n s held in B u e n o s Aires, A r g e n t i n a . H e w a s a N a v a l a t t a c h e in I JI tin A m e r i c a d u r i n g W orld W a r II B e ­ fo re c o m i n g in t a u g h t ai H a r v a r d Uni­ 1958, v e r s i t y a n d s e r v e d w ith t h e D e ­ p a r t m e n t of State. th e U n i v e r s i t y tx* to H e th e au th o r of “ A r g e n tin a is t h e U S a n d I n t e r - A m e r i c a n the S y s t e m , 1800-1914,'’ w h ic h n o w b e ­ in g for p u b l i c a t i o n i n t o S p a n i s h in A r g e n tin a t r a n s l a t e d M a r i n e O fficers B e g in I n t e r v ie w s Here T o d a y A M a r i n e C orps o f f i c e r s e le c tio n t e a m f r o m Pan A n ton io wall visit t h e c a m p u s T u e s d a y t h r o u g h F r i ­ d a y to i n te r v i e w m e n a n d w o m e n in e a r n i n g c o m m i s s i o n s i n t e r e s t e d a s M a r i n e officers l o c a t e d H e a d e d by C a p ta i n J C Click the In t h e r e a m will be to 4 p m T e x a s U n io n from 9 a rn r e c e n t g r a d ­ d a i l y . S t u d e n ts a n d u a t e s will he i n t e r v i e w e d a n d s e ­ l e c t io n t e s t s will b e a d m i n i s t e r e d UT O r a t o r s Place 2 n d In J u n i o r Debat e Division T h e U n i v e r s i t y of T e x a s G r a t o n c a l A s s o c i a t i o n ii J e r r y G ib s o n and H a r r y W a l s h c a m e h o m e fr o m T e x a s C h r i s t i a n U n i v e r s i t y s co! le g e d e b a t e t o u r n a m e n t c a r r y i n g a t r o p h y f o r p l a c i n g s e c o n d In the j u n i o r d i v is io n of d e b a t e M a c k K id d a n d R a n d y Klliott m a d e in Senior t h e s e m i f i n a l s d i v is io n d e b a t e , bu t w e r e e l i m i n a t ­ ed bv O k l a h o m a S t a t e CHARTER BUSES F o o tb a ll G a rn e t — R e tre a t* — P icn ic! — etc. A i r - c o n d i t i o n e d — A i r Ride Rest Rooms E q u i p p e d Kerrville Bus Company, Inc. Phone GR 8-9361 “ F r ie n d ly Se rvi ce" Cigarets A llo w ed N o w in G irls’ Rooms A d v is e r s of S c o t t i s h R i te D o r m ­ ito r y o ffic ia lly a n n o u n c e d In w in g the m e e t i n g s M o n d a y night, n o - s m o k m g n i l e h a d b e e n r e v o k e d b y the g o v e r n i n g B o a r d of D i r e c ­ to r s th e g i r l s of SR D m a y s m o k e In t h e i r r o o m * th a t a n d in Th,* Is to sm o k e t h e f i r s t t i m e since t h e h a lls, o r o n the d o r m i t o r y w a s o c c u p i e d in S e p t e m ­ b e r, 1922, t h a t t h e r e s i d e n t s of S R D h a v e be en a l l o w e d In t h e i r room * N o s m o k i n g will be in the m a i n allo w e d t h e s t a ir w a y . living ro o m S m o k i n g will b e th e g i r l s ' ro o m s, t h e i r s m o k i n g lo u n g es, a n d the r e c r e a t i o n r o o m . s m o k i n g l o u n g e s will be a v a i l a b l e to g i r l s a s u s u a l d u r i n g th e d a y a n d u n til 8 p rn., a c c o r d ­ ing to M rs M a u d e B a l l a r d , h e a d r e s i d e n t c o u n s e l o r l i m i te d T h e to F r o m 8 p m . u n til T a m t h e l o u n g e s will be u s e d a s s m o k i n g q u i e t a r e a s f o r s t u d y . D o r m i t o r y t io n e d m a y r e t a i n t h is p r i v i l e g e . to be c a r e f u l so t h a t r e s i d e n t s w e r e c a u ­ th e y W hen th e d o r m i t o r y w a s first o c c u p i e d , no s m o k i n g w a s p e r m i t - te d S m o k i n g w a s p e r m i t t e d first in th e m a i n r e c r e a t i o n r o o m a n d l a t e r in t h e l o u n g e s . Austin Artist's Works TFWC Exhibit Feature A o n e - m a n a r t e x h i b i t f e a t u r i n g t h e w o r k of G e r a l d H a r v e y J o n e s I is on d i s p l a y a t t h e T e x a s F e d e r a ­ t h r o u g h tio n of W o m e n s C l u b s N o v e m l t e r 30. Mr. J o n e s , a l o c a l m a n , s p e c i a l ­ in w e s t e r n s c e n e s and T e x a s a ls o t h e B r a d f o r d A rt izes l a n d s c a p e s m a y be s e e n a t p a in tin g * H i s »G a l l e r y . 1 w h e r e “ A u s ti n to B o s t o n " w a s sh o t, J o h n s o n a l s o to ld th# n a ti o n t h a t to l a y a s i d e th e d i v i s i o n s of the 1880 a the A m e r i c a n s a r e r e a d y t h e c h a l l e n g e s of tile to m e a t 1960 ■. t h e c a m p a i g n , t o w e l c o m e “ T e n w e e k s a g o w e w e n t f r o m A u stin to B o s t o n t o b e g in o u r c a m ­ this, his final p a i g n , ” he s a i d In s p e e c h of “ One h u n d r e d t h o u s a n d lin e d the s t r e e t s to w e l c o m e u s , th e g r a n d s o n of t w o C o n f e d e r a t e s in to N e w K n g l a n d . “ One w e e k l a t e r , T e x a s w e l ­ c o m e d J a c k K e n n e d y . The g r e a t ­ e s t h a s s e e n — b e f o r e o r s i n c e — c a m e out to c h e e r t h i s g r a n d s o n of p o o r I r i s h i m m i g r a n t s f r o m Boston. “ I h a v e b e l i e v e d e v e r sin c e t h a t S o u t h w e s t c r o w d s t h e w e would w in ” ( C o n t i n u e d F r o m P a g e I ) of k n ow ing t h a t w e shall liv e in J U D Y S C H LE Y ER SHIVERS... a u d i e n c e w i t h his c o m m e n t t h a t th e “ T r i c k y D i c k y r o u t i n e h a s a s u s b a s e t h e r e s e n t m e n t of t h e a n ti- a n t j -c o m m u n ists ." to a d e a d Dick N i x o n b r o u g h t t h e feliow- tr u v e l i n g c r o w d s t o p an d e m b a r r a s s e d P r e s i d e n t H a r r y Red H e r r i n g ” T ru m an in t h e p r o ­ “ F o r t h is h e h a s f e s s r e c e i v e d s l a n d e r a n d v e n o m , r \ e n from s o m e w h o sh o u ld h a v e b e e n g iv in g h i m t h e i r g r a t i t u d e . " he s a i d . l i a r y in his a p p e a r a n c e S h i v e r s took a b l a s t at L y n d o n J o h n s o n ' s s t a t e m e n t s S e n a t o r ' s the h a n d s o f a Dal- t r e a t m e n t a t a b o u t th e ; las R e p u b l i c a n d e m o n s t r a t i o n . “ S u c h t h i n g s a r e part, of the A m e r i c a n p o litic a l s c e n e . T h e y a r e u s u a l l y e x a g g e r a t e d f o r p oli­ tical e f f e c t , ” He a l s o b r o u g h t h e a r t y l a u g h s iibcs at J o h n s o n fo r Box 13 J i m W ells C o u n ty , m u c h - d i s ­ t h e 1948 with in c u s s e d S e n a t e clee lion. the w a k e of in G o v e r n o r S h iv e rs w a s intrr>duced tty F w m g W e rle in J r . U n i v e r s i t y law s t u d e n t fro m H o u s to n W er- lein s o u n d e d a few hot w o r d s on w h a t h e c a l l e d “ K e n n e d y s m e n ­ a c e d A m e r i c a an d th e D e m o c r a t ­ ic n o m i n e e s y o u n g e r b r o t h e r B o b b y . “ We y o u n g A m e r i c a n s a r e a s k i n g t h e p r o m is e of s e c u r i t y , ” “ We w a n t a n a s s u r a n c e not fop he s a i d c r e a t i v i t y p r o b l e m of t h e c o m m i t t e e is all the in g e n u ity a n d of o u t ­ s t a n d i n g y o u t h w o r k e r s T h e y t r y to m a k e too g o o d : t h e p r o g r a m s th a t is, t h e y o v e r s h o o t th e so -c a lle d t h a t s w h e r e t a r g e t a u d i e n c e I c o m e in. s o “ I m s u p p o s e d to p u t m y s e l f in th e s i t u a t i o n of a h ig h school y o u t h the on a S u n d a y m o r n i n g S a t u r d a y n i g h t b e f o r e w ho h a p ­ pen* to t u r n o n th e TV' b e c a u s e h e h a s n o th in g t a t t e r to do, ’ sh e c o n ­ tin u e d . a p e r a n s w e r t h a t h e T h e c o m m i t t e e s d o not “ p r o v i d e a n y p a t (w ish w e h a d s o m e ! ! , b u t w e a r e s a tis f ie d lf w e fo r c e a y o u t h to s e a r c h a nd m a y b e p ro v i d e a little d i r e c t i o n a n d r e a s ­ ta not a lo n e s u r a n c e in s e e k in g y e a r s ' ” th o se a g o n iz i n g T h e C B S p r o g r a m for w h ic h J u d y is is on " L o o k Up a n d L h e ' w h ic h w on th e S y l v a n ia a w a r d for twfo y e a r s a n d w a s o n e of fo u r r e p r e s e n t a t i v e p r o g r a m s w h i c h CBS se n t to M o s ­ cow the a d v i s o r y c o m m i t t e e " l o o k U p a n d L i v e ” Is tri-s p o n - sored by o r g a n i z a t i o n s r e p r e s e n t ­ ing J e w i s h , C a th o l i c an d P r o t e s t ­ a n t f a iths T h i s m e e t i n g is c o n c e r n ­ ed only w ith th e P r o t e s t a n t s a g . m e n t . a st r o n g , free e n n n m j He noted th it B o b b y K e n n e d y w a s q u o t e d a s “ d i s t u r b e d a b o u t the p o litics of y o u n g T e x a n s ’ d u r ­ ing a r e c e n t t r i p in to the s t a t e . " T h e politic s ot yo u n g T e x a n s a r e not th e po litics of the K e n n e d y ' W e r le in boys c r o w d , l a r g e n u m b e r in* h id ed w hic h of U n i v e r s i ty s t u d e n t s told a the JOHNSON... (C o n t in u e d F r o m P a g e I) o u r m i d s t t h a t s w h a t A nd you ll t>e at th e polls t o m o r r o w - a s m a ll m i n o r i t y '' L a t e r a n i r a t e little m i d d l e - a g e d D e m o c r a t i c l a d y v e r b a l l y w h i t t l e d dow n on e of t h e R e p u b l i c a n s t u ­ d e n ts a s sh e t r i e d to s t r i p h i m of Nixon b u tton* T h a t w a s th e o n l y sign of e v e n n e a r - v i o le n c e In the p a c k e d C r y s t a l B a l l r o o m ICC Plans Paper, Service for A no-op n e w s l e t t e r w a s d i s c u s s e d by m e m b e r s of t h e I n t e r C o - O p e r ­ a t i v e C o u n c il a t th e r e g u l a r m e e t ­ t h e ing M o n d a y n ig h t. N e w s f r o m ICC t h e co-ops will b e g iv e n to h i s t o r i a n s on t h e fi r s t a n d f i f te e n t h of e a c h m o n t h . S e n a t o r R a l p h Y a r b o r o u g h I h e lp in g t h e IC C hooks g r a s s f r o m fo r Is to s e c u r e B r a i l l e t h e L i b r a r y o f Con r e c o r d t h e YM CA. A p l a y e r a n d r e c o r d s h a v e b e e n or- d a r e d t h e h lin d s t u d e n ts for J o h n n y C r a w f o r d p r e s i d e n t , an- j t h e C h r i s t m a s d a n c e n o u n r e d t h a t th e will be h e ld D e c e m b e r 3 a t Delwood C a f e t e r i a A Clit s t m a s p a r t y for c h i l d r e n a n d d e c o r a t i o n s for t h e H e a l t h C e n t e r w e r e a l s o d i s c u s s e d ICC W ee k w a * t e n t a t i v e l y se t for 12-19. J o h n n y C r a w f o r d fo r M a r c h a n n o u n c e d t h e n e x t m e e t i n g N o v e m b e r 21 at R o y a l Co-Op. H A N D M A D E B O O TS Aonaw And Ton? 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I t ' s t h e o p p o r t u n i t y o f a l i f e t i m e a n d i t o f f e r s a l i f e t i m e o f o p p o r t u n i t y . G e n e r a l M o t o r s a l s o h a s a p r o g r a m w h i c h p r o v i d e s f i n a n c i a l a l d f o r p o s t g r a d u a t e a n d u n d e r g r a d u a t e s t u d i e s . F o r m o r e c o m p l e t e I n f o r m a ­ t i o n c h e c k w i t h y o u r c o l l e g e P l a c e m e n t O f f i c e r , o r w r i t e t o G e n e r a l M o t o r s S a l a r i e d P e r s o n n e l S t a f f , D e t r o i t 2, M i c h i g a n . GENERAL MOTORS O M p r y to * n o * » a .af a >n t h a t * r # da •<* rn un holding Ba 'Hdt or 'a, M i.M nr' l and Do M nr 'a d * o - * * v Mar. ban ira I, I ’-dos'' »I ( * • 8 ‘.am*** AdmmiaUatton and R attan Fiatda. tie . 40 . g,ra • Cnamiau* to g .',**,09 Macnantca a nd C o , a m i c Eng • M a i h a m * * . - ^ ( -an- • • P h/a ca a , M a tt anring a , . - , I a