Waterloo w a s Never Like This! 28-7 By BILL U T IL E Texan Sport* Editor DALLAS (Spl.)—Napoleon might have expected Waterloo ^Caesar could have had an inkling of things to come In the Senate—but the Oklahoma Sooners and the nation’* football millions sure as heck were not expecting this. Unbelievable Texas, rated as much as 6 point underdogs against the might of Oklahoma, the nation’s number one football team, massacred the Big Red 28-7 before a stuffed Cotton Bowl here Saturday. “Oklahoma is number erne . . . Texas is number t w o . . bubbled a potted Olde at the Friday night party. “Wait ’til tomorrow” was the equally soused reply. The next thing both guys remembered, Harold Philipp bulled five yards on the first play from scrimmage. And then quarterback Duke Carlisle—playing in all- American fashion, rolled around tackle and 14 yards later he was tackled. It was a first down and it was also “Katy bar the door." The Duke went for 15 yards two plays later, and the Texans were moving from the Big Red 33. TaQback Tommy Ford put together 15 yards in two carries, and the ball was on the Okie 18. Seven plays later—on an indescribably vital fourth down play from the OU I, Carlisle slipped into the endzone. Tony Crosby converted, and Texas, which has described as “un­ able to move against Oklahoma,” had a 7-0 lead with 8:06 left in the first quarter. Haunting words—“field position” and “control of the ball”—pinged above the roar of the thousands in the ears of the Sooners as they ran seven plays from scrimmage the first quarter. It was an Oklahoman who said the Sooner success would lie in their ability to hold on to the football. But as that great philosopher Bud Wilkinson sail, “one cannot score, save one has the ball . . .” So Texas gave up the ball. Punter Bobby Crouch, a sub for the injured Ernie Koy, saw his first attempt take a reddish bounce and wind up on the Texas 42, good for only 17 yards. Spurred by the break, Oklahoma quickly gained 8 yards, but with third and two from the 34, Pete Lammons ar­ rested a Bobby Page bullet and was on his way to glory before he was tripped by fallen Sooner Bill Hill at Okla­ homa’s 45. The “immobile” Steers shoved to the Big Red 2 before Carlisle was dropped for a six yard loss on fourth down. Oklahoma moved again, this time to the 32, but an in­ tentional grounding penalty on third down pushed the Soon­ ers to the 20—from whence Joe Don Looney kicked to Tony King at the Texas 45. King romped back to the Okie 37, and a 15 yard personal foul penalty advanced the 'Horns to the 22. Ford cracked off tackle for eight, Carlisle kept for two, and then Ford, looking more like a diesel, drove the final 12 yards over the east side of the field, mutating an un­ fortunate Okie at the goal line. Crosby kicked, it was 14-0. Desperation passing netted a 20 yarder for the Sooners on the last play of the first half—salvaging 77 total yards gained. It was also the Big Red’s third first down of the game. Texas had l l first downs and 144 yards gained. “This is the way we looked the first half against Clem­ son,” said a Sooner sports writer. And Oklahoma came back to humble Clemson 31-12. “Would the second half be better?” (See OKIES. Page 4) weather: cloudy to fair low 64, high 90 T h e Da il y °0 Student Newspaper at The University of Texas JoUr N page 6: freeman on symphony Vol t i Pries Rv« Cants AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1963 Eight Pages Today No. 43 Top Riesman Interest BJgDP°'!Cg Said to Be Students A t t e !Riot Fans Welcome Horns Pre-Game Dance For Both School* Loud But Orderly DALLAS (Spl) — The crowds on downtown Dallas streets Friday night were the biggest in recent years and “ about as as rough as it ever was,” Charles Batchelor, Dallas assistant police chief, said. By I a.m. Saturday, a total of 168 arrests had been made, mostly for disorderly conduct. Furniture, pillow feathers, and bottles were thrown from downtown hotel win­ dows. Broken glass lined Com­ merce Street curb-deep by 3 a m. j One hundred seventy-five police­ men were assigned to the Com-1 mere*-Aka rd Intersection. By contrast, the Texas-OU dance at Dallas Memorial Auditorium was described as “ enthusiastic but orderly,” with a record crowd of 16,000. Last year’s attendance was near 13,500. Only one person, a non-student, was arrested there. In the Friday night fracas, one policeman w'as sent to a hospital with fractured ribs and another: was hit on the back of the head ! with a bottle. Joe Henry Woemer, 32, of Irving, i and his wife Connie, 27, were stabbed by an unidentified man in { Fair Park Friday night. Union Looking For UT Talent The Union Talent Committee will hold auditions Tuesday, Wednes­ day, and Thursday from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. In the Union Auditorium. The committee is compiling a file of University talented students to aid local and out-of-town organ­ izations in finding acts for shows throughout the year. Students a rt an important aca­ demie interest of David Riesman, Harvard University social sciences professor and author of “The Lone­ ly Crowd.'' “l i t love# to talk with att- dealt tad wants lo aet lota of d m , " Dr. Robert L Meatgom- ary, —aseitas prof eater af Enc- Riesman, whose visit is being sponsored by the Texas Union Speaker* Committee and the Pro­ gram ta Criticism, will discuss “ Protest and Pressure Groups in Foreign Policy" Monday at 4 p.m. In the Texas Union Main Ball­ room. Dr. Montgomery believes that •'The Lonely Crowd,’* which de­ picts American national character, has had an “ enormous im pact’* CROWDED ATMOSPHERE “It has become part of the at­ mosphere wa breathe, from cock­ tail partita to more serious af­ fairs,’* Dr. Montgomery stated. sr dtraetod* tov* earn* toto dally ■■eelwallia. And EM beek rep- raised# toe Bret la a aerie* Ie clem lee the American mass ae ; opposed Ie values of toe Nine­ teenth Century.** Dr. Montgomery described Ries­ man as “ an open, objective think­ er’’ who is friendly, not austere. interests are broad is stated by Dr. Montgom- j ery and Dr. Gideon Sjoberg, asso­ ciate professor of sociology. That Riesman’s Dr. Sjoberg divides the author’s interests into four main areas: na­ tional character, higher education, interviewing, ami current major I problems such as peace and war. j All have been discussed in his books and articles. “Identity Is the primary reason why ’The Lonely Crowd’ has had such an impact,’’ Dr. Sjoberg said. “ Even though some of Ries­ man’s categories are loose, they j provide a mechanism by which the mass can Identify itself in modern society.1* Dr. Sjoberg also explained that “The Lonely Owed” waa a “ major ■unwise. It had little advertising and became a best-seller. It is one of the moat widely used books in the social sciences,’’ he stated. A aeon* et bun curtly la th# curly 1930’s la erne reason w h y “The Lonely Crowd” has enjoyed impact, according to such an Dr. Robert Divine, professor of history. The Insecurity was doe, in part, to the cold war, he ex­ plained. “Although the nation had achi­ eved world power, the population waa insecure and wanted to know why,’* Dr. Divine said. “The book provided an answer, the concept of an ’other-directed’ society.’* MOOD PIECE Dr. Divine stated that he is neu­ tral toward "The Lonely Crowd.” "To me it is an historical docu­ ment of the early ’50’s that reveals a national mood,” he commented. Beside* "The Lonely Crowd,” Riesman has written “ Fares In the Crowd,” “Thorsteln Veblen: A Critical Interpretation,” “In- (lividHallam Reconsidered,” and “Constraint and Variety In Amer­ ican Education. ’ Originally a lawyer, Riesman joined the social sciences staff at the University of Chicago in 1946. In 1958 he became Henry Ford II Professor of Social Sciences at Harvard. What's in a Name? By LAURA BURNS Editor The trouble with toe nam* "Har­ ry's Pines” is, allegedly, that it is undignified. TIM trsahle with 'T ad erg rad- wats Library and Academic Cen­ ter** Is that, art fee toe Mg type at hmm hut atom . It ta tee wide to t* ne roes EM eetanme Mf this newspaper. Th* name “ Harry’s Place” was first printed In a Texan story by Richard Cole, managing editor, in toe New Students* Edition, publish­ ed In August and sent to all in­ coming students. The name was suggested humorously by BUI Mc- Reynolds, now editorial manager of toe Texan, who was concerned by the aforementioned headline problem. ANNOUNCEMENT HAD A.C. McReynokb asked Cole early lait summer to suggest an abbre­ viation for toe Undergraduate Ll. News in Brief Compiled From AP Report* US, REDS COLLABORATE ON DISARMAMENT RESOLUTIONS. Th* Soviet Union and to# United States were reported working together Saturday on two disarmament resolutions for the UN General Assembly. One would appeal to nations putting satellites toto orbit not to station nuclear weapons aboard. The other would encourage further negotiations in the Ganevs disarmament com­ mittee, now recessed for assembly debate. The 17-member com­ mittee is reportedly drafting a resolution favoring general and complete disarmament and another favoring a ban on under­ ground nuclear tests. JUNIOR COLLEGE ENROLMENT UP. The Texaa Educa­ tion Agency Mid Salniday that junior college enrellHteat ta Toss* increased l l per cent this fall to rn total of IM E . San Antonio College had the largest earoUmeat, 8,IM, aa laereaM et I t per cent. TWO AMERICANS RETURNED IN PRISONER EXCHANGE. A legally dead priest and a young scholar, Russian prisoners, came home Saturday in a swap for two accused Soviet spies. The Rev. Walter M. Ciszek, 58, Shenandoah, Pa., and Marvin W. Makinen, 24, Ashburnham, Mass., were flown to Idlewild Airport Hie priest m s serving a Roman Catholic mission to Poland when he disappeared to IMO. Makinen, a former Fulbright scholar, had attended toe Free University of West Berlin before he was ar­ retted on a tour ct Hungary, Czechoslovakia and the Ukraine to 1900. The United States returned Russians Ivan Egorov, a former UN official, and his wife, Aleksandra. WASHINGTON TERMS BLOCKADE ‘MISUNDERSTAND­ ING.* The Kennedy Administration Saturday blamed the Berlin bwmp Administration sen ryes said Em Incident waa touched off by lew-level Soviet officers at Em checkpoint aa Em las-mile highway from Went Germany across Otatalotata E ast Ger­ many to Wast Berlin. tttMW Ital ttMi GOLDWATER REFUSES DERATE WITH ROCKEFELLER. San. Barrer Coldwater said “no” Saturday night to Gov. Nelson Rocke­ feller’s challenge to debate Republican principles. Ha said that the New York governor should jota him. to challenging Demo­ crats to debate toe issues that face the nation. brary and Academic Center. He said he had seen none on any Offi­ cial University material. (The fall Final Announcement of Courses lists it merely as A. C.) Mc Reynolds first suggested the Initials UAC, for Undergrade*to Academic O ater, “or It could be Harry’s Undergraduate Academ­ ic Center, after Chancellor (Har­ ry) Ransom. You know how In­ terested he Is In toe library. Then it could be HUAC,” he said, Jokingly. “ It’s the Undergraduate Library too. not just Academic Center,” said Cole. UNDEBCENTER? “ You could call it the Undercen­ ter,” suggested Texan Editor Dave McNeely. “ That leaves out the library, too,” replied Cole. “Oh, I give up,” said McRey- nolds, “ Why don’t you just call it Harry’s Place and forget about trying to get everything in.” Cole was so pleased with the suggestion that he asked McRey- nolds not to let students in the journalism editing laboratory use the nickname until after publica­ tion of the New Students’ Edition. A Bomber of persons are un­ happy with the nickname, hat It baa gained wide currency. Teach­ ers ase It ta totting their clessee where books are, and a sign la Batts Hall Informs freshman stu­ dents ta French, German, Spanish classes that they hear language tape* ta Harry’* Place. The nickname is not the only erne received. Campus cynics talked about “Ran- som’s Folly” while the building was under construction. And sug­ gestion has been made that the building be called “Versailles” be­ cause of its fountains and roof gar­ dens. the building has RANSOM IS MUM Chancellor Ransom has never volunteered comment on toe name to Em Texan, and he was to Dallas Friday when Em Texan tried to contact him. A University building cannot be named after a living person, so the nickname is Em only way Harry’s place could ba appreciatively nam­ ed fog hlm1 HOO K ’EM SIGNS almost as far away as they could see greeted Longhorn team members Sat­ urday night as they left their plane at Memorial Airport. Here are t few of the 7 to-10,000 fans who strained at the fence. — T e x a n P h o to — Fu qua Dad Award Forms Due Faculty m em bers and honorary, service, and social organizations may make nominations for recipi­ ents of the Outstanding Boy and Girl Awards given by the Dads’ Association to the Committee of Award. Deadline for nominations is Oct. 23. Students must be juniors or seniors with a B average or bet­ ter. Criteria used in selection are service to the University, includ­ ing breadth or range of activities, leadership in areas of activities, and high moral character. Plaques will be awarded to the winners by the Dad s Association at its meeting Nov. 9. Committee of Award consists of Dr. Arthur M. Cory, professor of English; Amo Nowotny, dean of students; Miss M argaret Peck, dean of women; Mrs. Shirley Per­ ry, program director of the Tex­ as Union; and Dr. Lorrin Henna - mer, associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. Manning’s Planning Tax-Free Country The best government for a coun­ try is one without taxation, and regulation of morals and business, says W. L. Manning of New Braun­ fels. He wants to sta rt a new country —the Republic of Free Land—fit- | ting these specifications. Manning says he has spent several years and $125,000 doing research on his proposal. He will explain his plans at 7 the University in p.m. Monday “ Y” meeting room. The public | is invited, “ I know it sounds like I ’m a ; nut,” said Manning in an Associ­ ated Press interview, “ but I want to live in a country with totally free enterprise and complete per­ sonal freedom.” He wants to locate his free land in the Guiana highlands of South | America. He is negotiating with j the neighboring countries of Brazil, Venezuela, French Guiana, Dutch Guiana, and British Guiana, taxes will be outlawed, j Since Manning says that public revenue the natural will be 1 resources and service charge on money. Esperanto will be the official language. taken from from a UT-Hog Draw ing Begins Students are expected to break this week the record of 175 tickets i drawn for an out-of-town Texas- Arkansas game, according to Al I Lundstedt, assistant business man­ ager of athletics. Drawing will be from 9 a.m. to ; noon and I to 4 pm . Monday I through Wednesday. Tickets are $1 : with Blanket Tax receipts. Tile game wall be played Saturday in Little Rock. THE DRAG W AS QUIET. It looked more like a Sunday afternoon than five minutes after the Longhorns had beaten the number one team in the natipn. But the quiet didn’t last long. Dozens of arm­ chair quarterbacks poured out of the Union, reliving Texas' 28-7 victory. And on the Drag the cars were beginning to arrive— horns blowing, orange and white streamers flying from radio antennas, people yelling and waving "hook ’cm.” One convertible boasted on its front windshield, "UT N a I.” People on the sidewalk were happy too. They greeted each other with wide grins and "Isn’t this wonderful?” One woman confessed she didn t watch the game. “But I kept up with the score,” she said, "and I know we won.” There could be no doubt about it Saturday night when the Tower glowed orange. —Texaa Fhoto—Fuqua Hook ' Greet 'em By RODNEY DAVIS D ay Editor An estimated 7,500 Austin­ ites rolled o u t the orange carpet in the form of a “T” for a victorious football team Saturday night at R o b e r t Mueller Airport. “ Austin was very proud of the Longhorns today,” Mayor Lester Palmer told Coach Jim Pittman, one of the f i r s t off the team 's .special plane. BROUGHT IT BACK P i t t m a n , who explained that Coach Darrell Royal had stopped to watch Arkansas off in Waco told Palmer, “ We play Baylor, just had to bring this one back to you.” The loyal Longhorn fans, co m ­ posed alm ost entirely of persona too young and too old to attend the trip to D allas—and som e who couldn't, had an enthusiasm all their own. Singing the “ Eyes” without the help of the University band, and yelling without Texas cheerleaders, the crowd did the “whisper yell” while team members loaded on a bus which would t a k e them t o Memorial Stadium. Enterprising salesmen peddled freshly-printed stickers w h i c h read, “ Longhorns No. I .” Other the group younger members of held welcome signs and eagerly clutched autograph pads. CAR BLOCKADE Once the team was on die bus, Austin police found that their trou­ bles begun. Traffic was stacked up from the landing strip to Airport Boulevard. had F inally, after m inutes of at­ tem pts to clear a path for the players, the large Greyhound bus and its t h r e e-man m otorcycle escort c u t across the airport lawn and past the bumper-to* bumper traffic jam . “ It s the biggest crowd I ve ever seen at something like this,” one Austin police remarked, “ but I m glad to see ’em come out.” US Soldier Defects, Say East German Officials BERLIN (#» — Communist East Germany said Saturday an Ameri­ can Negro soldier has crossed the | frontier and asked for political asylum. He is the third alleged defector the US Army reported by last from East G e r m a n authorities week. The official East German news agency ADN identified the soldier as Heinrich Jam es Newton and said he was assigned to an en­ gineer unit at Karlsruhe, West Germany. It did not give his home address. ADN quoted him as saying he wanted to get away from steady chicaneries which he declared Ne­ the groes w'ere subjected US Army and settle down “to sup­ port the Negroes’ fight for libera­ tion” from East Germany. to in US Army officials had no im­ mediate comment. Frilay, ADN reported Em defec­ tion of a US Army medical spe­ cialist, Sp.6 Conrad Yumang. US Army headquarters at He!- lelberg sail Yumang, 42, Philip- pine-born naturalized American, is listed as absent without leave from the Fifth General Hospital al Stuttgart. j—-a - i i ------- A Red Trap Strangles East Asia BANGKOK, T h a i l a n d W - Young Narong fell into a Com­ munist trap. Six peddlers, on foot, plodded into Z e little Thai village near Z e b o r d e r w iz Laos. They opened their le a Z e r cases and displayed the villagers to a d rn I r e—trinkets, cloth, medicines. the contents for Then Zey proceeded not to sell their wares, but to give them away. Narong was delighted. He accepted Z e cloth and medicine eagerly for his children and his young wife, Daeng. Then he lis­ tened to Z e strangers. The strangers from across the Mekong River told Narong he was not really a Thai at all. He was a Lao, they said, and owed nothing to the bad king and the bad government^in Bangkok who were tools of the Americans and wanted to enslave all Z e people. Narong, by Z e standards of peasants In the rest of Asia, was well off. He had his own plot of land and grew rice for his family and to scil for a lit­ tle Income. His children ran about stark naked, but Z a t was normal In s u c h a hospitable climate. Like most of his neighbors, Na- rong knew next to nothing of the outside world or even of bustling r f ough for him. Narong was a devout Budd­ hist, like all his neighbors. He But Narong h a d his worries from time to time. There might be a sudden crop failure. r e t r o s p e c t : a review of Hie w eek Omnibus Education Bill Survives Senate Test IU it* Tuesday when -I \ Ii W E S T B R O O K The administration's omnibus education bill passed first the m a jo r Senate by an 80-4 roll call vote sent to the House a bill authoriz­ ing S3 2 billion for vocational edu­ c tio n , college loans, and impact­ ed areas While all three pro­ g r a m s have been in existence for the vocationa pro­ so m e gram represents a new depart­ ure thinking In this area. In Washington time, The bill authorizes $1.5 billion dollars over the next five years, Including $945 million in grants to states. The President in his original request had asked for $16 million this year and ‘'nec­ essary funds” thereafter; how- In his June 19 address ever, the rights he upped on civil figure to the level that the Sen­ ate approved on Tuesday. The In previous action has House these voted $630 million. Both figures are the estimated $55 million currently being spent by the federal gov­ ernment in th 1* area. in addition to fields Training for specific skills In less-than professional Is usually divided Into vocational and technical sectors. The VO* r a t i o n a l curriculums are thought of as being at die sec- ondary les*el, while the techni­ cal are post-high school. It is often difficult to pinpoint the into funds being directed the vocational-technical field be­ cause. aside from the secondary schools and colleges, type administered of Is edur’?Vion through Itinerant teachers, col­ lege extension, apprentice and re­ taining programs, adult educa­ tion programs, and, in a few areas, special vocational-techni­ cal schools. this Federal grants in moat of these areas have increased in recent years, especially under the Na­ tional Defense M utation Act and the Manpower Development and Retraining Act. The bill passed by the Senate does not include technical edu­ cation though the President in­ cluded it as part of his original request, asking for $20 million. The omnibus bill, introduced for the Administration by Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore) and Rep. Adam C. Powell (D-NY), separated the technical pro­ vocational and grams. While the bill's sponsors had hoped to push it to passage in its original form, i* was divided in both houses into its component to parts. The sections relating technical education are due to come to the floor later this year. It is not surprising that vo­ cational education was part of the first Senate action on the President'* education program. It has long had broad support from both parties and from the right and left alike. Most con­ servative prominent* see it as an alternative to public works and welfare spending, while lib­ erals hope it will contribute to raising social and economic levels, especially among minor­ ities. However, in spite of these fac­ tors, vocational education has re­ mained in many ways the step­ child of the education effort. Some of the cause* are political; others are related to educational structures across the nation. Vocational - technical education has been even more involved with the civil right* controversy than education as a whole. This is exemplified by the fact that the President made his sharply in­ creased request for funds a* part of his June civil right* message. The fact tend to be concentrated In those eco­ nomic groups that would benefit most from this program. that Negroes is While thia bring* to vocational- technical education support It might not have had, it alto tends the enthusiasm of to quench many legislators who favor it in principle, but fear to support too that haa been strongly a bill the widely publicized as “for Negroes.” to seemed for Negroes In addition, it leaves voca­ tional measure* open the e v e r - present discrimination attempts w-ere rider. While made In both houses to attach rights riders, most pro-civil legislators to agree the Administration view with important, it was more that especially and other minorities, to get the bill through Congress with maxi­ mum haste and minimum cuts. An even more serious problem exists in most state capitals. Faced with budget squeezes and broad public demand for more and better academic education, state governments have most found little incentive to devote scarce rosourses to an area that is little understood by the public and surrounded with much less glamor. Vocational education is popu­ larly regarded as something for those who can’t make the grade in the college-preparatory curricu­ lums, and, thus, inevitably, for somebody else’* children. Fur­ therm o re, there are few cham­ bers of commerce, in- dustrial-attraction agencies, which understand the close relationship between economic growth and skilled manpower. state Aside from the political prob­ lems, however, there are difficul­ ties arising from the nature of the educational structure in moat states. The lack of understanding among business and labor lead­ ers about the role of vocational education in economic prosperity the creation of has presented machinery that would enable vo­ cational administrators to work closely with state employment and industrial agencies. tragic produced This factor plus poor planning has failures in some states and left state of­ ficials and the public generally with a bad impression of the whole vocational area. However, a problem that Is not only more serious but more difficult to resolve Is the sep­ aration of the vocational pro­ gram from the general educa­ tional effort. Those In charge of state education agencies and those administering public col­ lege# and schools have usually from academie been drawn ranks. Given their backgrounds and trends of public opinion, it Is only natural that they tend to concentrate their energies and requests for funds In the academic area, giving the vocational sector the leftovers. the prevailing The President in his message accompanying the original omni­ bus bill, said that . . voca­ tional and technical education is not separate from general edu­ cation.” Many of those advocat­ ing integration of the two areas point out that vocation curricu­ lums are essential in drop-out reclamation programs now be­ ing studied across the country. emphasize Furthermore, that separation leave vocational education as a ‘ fail- ure-symbol” for students who are being pounded with propaganda urging them to go to college and as a favorite budget-cutting spot for legislators. tends they to In spite of these and many other problems, the evidence is that a vocational and technical education is going to be a secure and significant part of the edu­ cational structure around the na­ tion in the near future. Most of their proponents have realized they are not a panacea, because many unskilled people cannot be taught useful new' skills. On the other side of the issue, many of those who have ignored these fields for years are now beginning to understand their im­ portance and the role they have to play in economic growth and social advancement. funds, rather Since the new program provides than matching grants-in-aid, it is reasonable to assume that whatever compro­ mise program comes from Con­ gress this year will produce great­ activity ly arms* the nation. accelerated state Sunday, October 13, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 < PRESIDENT K E N N E D Y signs a document in the Treaty Room of the White House, formally ratifying the nuclear test ban treaty, Prom left to right are Sen. John Pas tore, D R I . ; W. A verill H arri- man, asst, secretary of state; Sen. f. W . Fulbright, D-Ark.; Secre­ tary o f Stale Dean Rusk; Sen. George Aiken, R VI.; Sen. Hubert Humphrey, D-Minn,; GOF Senate Leader Everett Dirksett; W i l ­ liam C. Foster, head o f Arms Control and Disarmament Agency! Sen. Howard Cannon. D N e t : and Sen. Leverett Salton stall, R A U ss. rn “f a r Bad Machinery, Indinerence Cause Russian Crop failures »H""\ • *| J J / -w r 9 C C By PRESTON GROVER KRASNODAR, Kuban, U S S R. manager of the farm, what he mon, but all upper level jobs are Intended to do with surplus labor (A PI-W hile Prem ier Khruahchev when jnechaniMtion beEen In ap. held by men, stand idle Somehow the farm ers didn t get around to repelling them, or they couldn't cat a p a r. farmnng shortcomings province, a group of correspond- «nt* went 10 one °* hl* K™*1 farm s work. lot of machinery, a The farm, in the Kuban River They KFt * salary in cash and for the f e w Valley of the north Caucasus, is called the Kuban. This is rich livestock each is allowed to keep. land and the Kuban is a good During the busy season rn spring, summer and fail they work IO farm by Soviet standards. It has ^ood an<* relatively hours a day or more. market. Nearly half the cows in the Soviet I nlon are on these little farms. g*| a ,, fanners Prem ier khrttahthev Is truing lo work harder on toe collectives, and By Soviet standards this farm give up their little tracts. The was well mechanised. It has 77 plan Isn’t making much bend- units ranging from seeders amt harvesting machinery to corn for cutters lifting sugar beets Into wagons. good workers there is a paid holiday on The Black Sea at a rest home owned by the farm. Wages range upward from <0 to old and disabled workers gel a and pickup forks way. climate. But ZI* farm would hank* rupt an American community. Tho place swarms w iz work- **"*• It takes so many of them to run th* farm that no American operator could finance It. The layout of 32,000 acre* employs 80 rubles a month—officially $77 to $88. Ibis is for ordinary field 2,400 men and women. workers. Machine drivers get 120 rubies a month. W o r k e r * get an additional -5 per cent of their pay in food or animal feed. The mass of labor used on So- appalls American farms viet farm ers visiting here. When I asked Ivan Siderenko, jcmn T Women get the same pay as h a t joined the Pathet Lao. He was taugh how to used weapons, how to raid, how' to kill. l i t comes back to his home regularly to tend the crop. He knows now' he has made a mis- take, but it is too late. Others tried to turn back and found their their homes livestock killed or burned. Narong was snugly In the net. The Communists had another re- em it. p..—., -.mumm, — ».u.... - mi.i—.■—< , A f t A tilt? } * C a m t i u s e s Pravda reported Aug. 7: “Oe many farms In Bashkiria and Kuibyshev m d other oh last* between the Velga and the lr* sis heaps of grain* are walt­ lag to be cleaned and moved lo elevators. Rome of It has a1- ready rotted.” Problem’ No trucks r jc^, ]n gfea. tho correspondent saw stacks of un­ shelled com lying In the yards of elevators, partly covered by ean- va#, the rest open to rain. Ears -rn T \ p n r f n Clt I I l C J ' l U & i l L U X T f o r I IfPQ O tl I iharCXPS U L V y l t ' J ' U l l X ^ V • Discrimination in fraternities • T " ' • • • • n CX • Integration Is not solely At Z e University of Oregon, a problem of this University or of the S o u t h , in other colleges Across Z e country, it is a prob- lem colleges and college students ara facing. dus from the dining hall* one day last week. The exodus was touch- the women said. when cd off, "raw ” chicken for which we had to walt 30 minutes” was Z e evening before. Also a t Baylor, toe director, “ planning some type of activities through which we even- tually hope to integrate the fra- temities and sororities.” IFC and Panhellenlc presidents at Florida said that academics, th# Golden ra Z e r than integration, is Z eir Negro student who was the first m ajor concern and Z a t Negro Wave Band will at last be golden for Z e first time in more Z sn nt his race in four years to 30 y®ar*- New th rough fraternity rush has charg* and 8T**n uni- formB hav* ***" bought to *** ed Z a t “r a z e r evident discrim- lnstion” exists in the fraternity the old aU-graen one*. system Zero. He says that at a number of houses he visited he was told Z a t Z e chapters feared possible recriminations from Z eir UCLA gorontu. national groups; a t others, that ,h . chapter, were etrald of whet C her fraternities - end eorori. ties — would say. coeducaUons ar* slow catchin* up with Tnjv thp* in the city had no tomatoes t0 geu, Fresh vegetables am limited in the state stores lam e­ ly to cabbage and carrots. Che­ tributton is disorganized, chev himself Part of tho problem, ss Khrush- that admits, Yat *vw*y day * * ****** **' mMiy big *Ut* aod c00**p*llv« farm manager* just don t saem to care. Western delegations vis- lung the farms -they are allowed to visit only a few find the farm worker, c a r .'e v e , lea,. Port grain is being wasted. In the virgin lands, those Dakota- like steppes where the czar used to exile troublesome characters, grain Is rotting on lh . ground. is F a n n e r, there complete t h e y don’t have enough machinery, but thousands of harvesting machines Thi. ie . fecal of C om m una life on the farm that hasn’t been solved yet. IT f?’ *? * * *>- rill*lT'! ** ***' bidden IJT the Oregon le te rfr.- tarnal Council. Tho IFC pres!- t a t held fraternities w e r e doubtful aa to the Negro'* In- tenttona, tearing Hint be might bo rn "plant" for tho National Association for the Advance m eat of Colored People and might not m o o re * he ta te r-!- ad In Ktaf*#nwi..g part of Z e fra* tensity system. At z e university of Florid*, Z e NAACP is. according to Z e director of Z e youZ and college _______ MBWM! fit 'I rf is MBsiiMi o n r i r v n o r a v t v ? B A ? fv RALLY of h i p o tanager J in Plaquemine, La., at the free- dom Rock Baptist Church. The group of teenagers dispersed after the police used tear gas. Police also used tear gas when a Negro demonstration oc* curred at the city's white high school. i t d a / hibit rlnuse. on discrimination In c, mpu^ , mU„ e d or. there*h a a 'b w n IT. Mgaa&Wi«3«lll>IW'i Sou Zw es ta rn In Memphis S L T A.!i£ L ~ ! » « “ trying to keep a studentfrom being elected SMC (equivalent «* <“« “ '"•> » ' “ * * ™ * w a * a f t e r * d t o t r l c convention at which Z e student s r * PIKA law* wWcl* *Uow 1111 fraternity to discriminate be- cause of race, creed, color, or religion. The student has slfu-» been ex wiled from his frater ^ “ v* * A ^ T £ ^ T a S £ j ^ £ signed. Diagonal stripes of ix» Hunbi. U gh. Bine n ~ b o rd a r* by white and sat against n deep Woo bnekground. * * Colleges of agriculture and vet- erinary medicine for a new Ni* serian Univemity will be eatab- lished by Kansas State University ct*ff members under a 83,860,233 ** z e KSU coRtract board of regents. Sr ★ Tickets feu* a Campus Crusade . . . , m t w n THE DAILY TEXAN T F ■ n r rn rn* > v . . . ‘F lV tl C o f l « g « D a ily ii} t h * S o u f t l ’ * ---- — ■ 2^ r tJ ^ '" n e « » e ^ - of”Tl»_ UBl»#iito'af, TexiiTi# published daily except Monday and Saturday and holiday period*. Septet*- . °>SS«*lrM7>r p o stag e paid at A ustin, T e x s a _________________________________________ stcacRITTlON rates s g jjg Delivered in Austin (tares months minimum) K S S ................. 79c month PERMANENT STAFF , W Y EIMTOB .......................................................... . _ . for Christ retreat at Arizona State MANAGING EDITOR............................................ University are being sold at e ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR................................. LAURA BURNS building on campus known as the ......... - Devil s Den. STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE NIGHT EDITOR.......................................................... CAROLYN COKER A new eight-story women's dor- DAY EDITOR........ ..................................................... RODNEY DAVIS A A M DA VC MCNEELY RICHARD COLE OZer issues are no lefts burn- tog. It depends on Z e campus as to what Z e issue is. At Bay- mitory will be ready to open at DESK EDITOR tor, i f s food. A number of com- Rice University by fall of 1865. Night Sports E d itor plaints by coeds had been made about food in women’s dining The college, as Rice dormitories Night Amusements E ditor are known, is financed by the Night Feature Editor halls, culminating in a mass exo- Brown Foundation* Retrospect E ditor....................................... *.......... .............. ................................GLORIA HO W K .............................Minerva Gonzales ................................... Bob Dupont Diane Halyard Sharon Shelton « Wherever You G o * « . 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ROOK O F KINK PRINTS B v Carl ZI gross er W ith oxer 6(to Com­ prehensive work covering hlstorv print-maker*. famous techniques c o l l e c t o r s data. etc. on woodcut* techings, engravings etc Pub at ONLY $1 95 $7.50 than The Capital of SI MR D A ' Is ' RH H -MOND Bv it*) Stanley Kim me More rare picture* the Confederacy from Je fferso n Davis ar rival to the end of the w a r ; the d r a m a t i c events and colorful c h a r ­ ac ters high and low depicted. Orig ONLY $2.98 Pub. a t $1 30 52 T H E CIVIL ll IR . A Pictorial Profile. By .loan W. Bls.. A com­ plete chronological and g e o g r a p h ­ ical pictorial historv of the Civil W a r told in 365 pictures of battles. gener als and political figures Size 8 a x JI J I Orig. P u b at $10.00 ONLY $4 95 I H I CIV IU WAR. A SS. AKTER P r o f i l e o f A m e r i c a f r o m P m t o n a l to 19041 Bv J o h n S. Bia; A 181.5 lively pictorial historv of the diffi­ cult d a \ s of the Re construction P e r ­ iod. the the opening of the West, f the Arts and C ui- developm en t industry and ture. the labor movement the W a r w ith Spam and the em ergence of Hie US as a world power. Orig. Pub. at $12.00 ONLY $4 95 The 2 volume set. complete. Orig B o t h f o r $8.95 Pub. a t $22 OO the gro w th of 41 T H E H O U S E B E A U T IF U L ( ON TEM PORARY T KEAN I K l OI AMERICAN HOMES. Bv Jo s ep h Ba rry. W itn 150 true-to-life f u l l color photos 32 excellent e x am p les of c o n te m p o r a ry American a r c h i­ tecture. Pub. ar $12.95 ONLY $5.95 47 A PIC TO R IA L HISTORY OF B l K LESQI E, By B e rn a r d So bel. t e x t and a wealth of pic­ Lively tures! the h isto ry of b u r ­ this lesque fro m the 1860's to Minsky- - strip p ers, minstrel m en and th e at $5 95 g reat comics. Orig, P u b ONLY $3 98 is the P ic to ria l 43 GOLDEN W IN G S: H isto ry «f I S M arine Corp* in the Air. 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Over 300 Ulus . 36 in color covering Com plete book of cats every aspect fro m ancient tim es to t h e fa n ta sy and fo l k ­ the present lore facts and figure* P u b at $10 00 ON UY 12.98 fancies fad* .nd 67 AFICIONADO! The Pictorial Enc yclopedia «f the f i e s t a dc Toro* of sp a in . By Vincent J R Kehoe W i t h 460 action-packed p h oto grap hs and 18 detailed diagr am * O n e ONLY $3.95 Pub, a t $12 50 63 T H E J O I N O F FIS HING Bv E m m ett C o v e n T h e noted fishing evpert presents a guide to all t> pes of fishing, and tells a host of j o y ­ ous anecdote* a nd stories. P u b at l l 49 $4 95 ONLY ,ilus 1MN.S HOGS DOGS. 0 0 4 .8 hi fiver 300 full color A h andsom e p icture survey t h e ir of m or e historv. folklore t r a i n in g and show in g Pub. at $10.00 th a n 130 breed*, 32 pages r e a r in g in ONLY 93.98 Exciting Books you’ll want to Read — outstanding titles & values E ng rav in g s St AMERICAN SCIEN C E AND IN' T EN T IO N . A P ie t* rial H isto ry . 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D riggs rep ro d u c tio n s In full co lo r of the fam ous p ain tin g s of W illiam Henr> Ja ck so n . F irs t hand accounts of the tra p p e rs , h u n ters, fighter* and e x ­ plorer* of th e A m erican W est Orig ONLY $3.95 T ub. a t SIO OO SS. COM POSERS ON M IN IC : F rom P a le s t ra in I# C opland. Ed. by Sam M o rg en stern A co m p reh en siv e a n ­ th o lo g y of w ritin g s bv com posers o n th * a r t o f m usic. P u b . at $7.50 ONLY IS.49 $4 CHRISTM AS IN T H E GOOD OLD DAYS Bd. by D aniel J Foley A h andsom ely illu stra te d V ictorian alb u m full of sto ries and poem s by: C lem ent C. Moore. D ickens. VV. I r ­ v ing Longfellow'. A lcott, E ugene F ield , O. H enry an d m a n y o th e rs ONLY $3.95 P u b . a t $6 95 37. T H E GIN G ER BR EA D AGE: A View of V ictoria* Am erica Bv J o h n Maas.*. The unique q uality of in private American ar c h ite c tu re a nd public depicted rn more than IOO h an ds om e photos. 75 drawings, p a i n i n g * A r are engraving*. 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Put), at ONLY SI .98 $4 75 54 MANTE KS 4»U PHOTOGRAPHY. bv Beaumont & Nancy New­ Kd hall More th an 150 superb photo­ gr ap hs chosen their value as for works of ar: with biographies, c r i t ­ ical a n a l ' se* of masters Orig Pub ONLY f4.t$ a t $12AO 47. T H E ANTIQUES BOOK. F.d bv the S ta ff of Alice W in ch ester & A n tiq u es M agazine P ro fu se ly illu­ s t r a t e d . O u tsta n d in g a u t h o r i ta ti v e ar ticles f u rn i t u r e . glass, silver, pewter, arc h ite c tu re . p rin ts an d o th e r collecting in t e r ­ ests. O rig. P u b at $6 OO ONLY $3.49 “cram les, on lh * Magic of 5$ GHOSTS ALONI. T H E MIS­ S IS S IP P I. th e Did House* of Louisiana. Bv Clarence IOO s u pe rb J o h n Lau ghlin With p ho tog rap h s A vivid history in wor ds and pictures of a gracious way of IO 3/4 x 12%. O rig Pub . at $12.54) ONLY $5.96 life. Size 65 Ogden Nash T H E I ll RIST M AI THAT ALMOST W ASN'T . Plus. w ith 40 draw ! igs IO in color Cap­ tivated story mixed with the viva­ fo r which cious v ariety of verse Pu b O gden Nash a t ONLY $1.9# $3.00 fam ous is collection 48 N E W ORUE A NS. By S t u a r t M of 150 h an d ­ L ynn A some ph otographs th e ch arm of the A rchitecture. C o u rt­ y a rd s and Patios, Iro n w o rk C em eteries. Orig. P u b . st. $7.50 dep ictin g a n d ONLY $2.98 $6. T H E H I MOR OF HT MOH By Kvan Ksar The art science a n d historv of cornedy with a treasu ry thesau rus of wit. jokes anecdotes of jo cu lar terms, etc. O rig P u b at ONLY l l .98 $4 95 66 C O M PLE TE W O R K S O F S H A K E SPE A R E . Ai! p l* '* complete and u nabrid ged th e so nnets and poems Over I OOO p a g ­ t v pr cloth bound es with gold sta m p in g P u b a t $6.25 clear dark th e ad ONLY 12.49 PLUS YOUR REGULAR DIVIDEND Sunday, October 13, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Peg* S COME BROWSE THROUGH THE ENTIRE COLLECTION Special Display—Street Floor Elite Teams Struck By Victory Famine By The Associated Presa Tommy Ford drove the second- ranked Longhorns of Texas to a smashing 21-7 victory over top- rated Oklahoma Saturday, cli­ maxing a day of upsets in which the mighty of college football lit­ erally were kicked around. In the same Cotton Bowl where Southern Methodist started the weekend of form reversals by benching fourth-ranked Navy to­ s t Friday night, Ford scored one touchdown on n 12-yard r n and picked up TI yards on the ground as Texas brought Its unblemished record Ie 4-S. Texas, fifth-ranked Wisconsin* a 38-20 conqueror of Purdue — and idle sixth-ranked Pittsburgh and lOth-rated Mississippi were the only members of the Top Ten elite to escape unscratched. And Ohio State, No. 8, had to settle for a 20-20 tie with Illinois on a 49-yard field goal by Dick Van Raaphorst in the final two min­ utes. Field goals also played n key role In three upset*. Bey Lyle kicked n 42-yarder lo get Florida started on the way to a It-* His­ tory over third-ranked Alabama, Notre Dame edged aeventh-mtcd Southern California 17*14 oa Keo Ivan’s SS-yardsr la the final quar­ ter and Army got a to-yarder from Dick Heydt that provided LENZO'! PIZZA COMER r T L ,,7 S ? J ANO GET OWE FREE! Call te sick a a —OL H U I Frt.-Sat. till I a,ai. Luaar O t4th St. Ope* Daily 4 a ax. tilt Ii p.ax. the margin of victory In a lt-T decision ever ninth-ranked Pews important In other games, Northwestern’s T o m m y Gun Myers fired two touchdown passes in the final quarter for a 15-8 tri­ umph over Northwestern in the national television geme, Duke end California played to e 22-21 tie in e big intersectional battle end Michigan and Michigan State played to a 7-7 tie a t Ann Arbof before 101,450 — the largest crowd of die season. T H I TOP TWH 1. Oklahoma, lost to Texas, 28-7. 2. Texas, beat Oklahoma, 21-7. 3. Alabama, lost to Florida, 104. 4. Navy, lost to SMU, 32-28 (Fri­ day night). 5. Wisconsin, te a t Purdue, 38-30. 8. Pittsburg, idle this week. 7. Southern California, Notre Dame, 17*14. lost to 8. Ohio State, tied Illinois, 30-20. 9. Penn State, lost to Army. 10*7. IO, Mississippi, idle this week. Individual Monthly Parking Spaces $ 1 Per * I Week PHONE HO 5-6363 THS UNIVERSITY’S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER 2010 S p e e d w a y GR M 6 0 f Sorvlng tho Unfvorsity Ama for 73 Years "H IGH FIDELITY AT REASONABLE PRICES” The Difference Between Just a Haircut and Excellent Grooming GARLAND'S F U ! TOF SHOP 201 E. I t * GR 74417 Tommy Ford gaining part of his 77 yards rushing; Jackie Cowan and assorted Okies converge. T-Bird Thunders Through —Texan Photo—Gossett Southwest Conference Roundup Bears Assassinate Hogs down tho lone opposition to send j Mills la from the six. Swift Jim Fauver notched the third on a scamper, four-yard halfback Marvin Chi pm an sped 60 yards over his right end fear the fourth and Dan Jones wrapped It up with a 43-yard return of an in­ tercepted pass. ★ OWLS-INDIANS HOUSTON (JA-Larry Dice and Dale Callahan, a pair of soph­ omores, led a 10-point Rice uni­ versity surge in the final four min­ utes Saturday night as the Owls broke up a battle of fumbles and took a 23-13 victory over Stanford. A 22-yard field goal by Rice cli­ maxed a 52-yard drive and broke a 13-13 tie but Callahan provided the clincher seconds later by in­ tercepting a Stanford pass and racing 45 yards untouched for a touchdown. The Texans had teen favored by from two to three touchdowns but the Californians had turned two hun blee and a 40-yard pane interference penalty Into a touch­ down and two field goals by Brad­ en Beck to take a IS * halftime lead. The Owls pounced on a Stanford fumble at the Indian 48, however, early in the third period and Wal­ ter McReynolds passed 30 yards to John Sylvester three plays later to tie the score. The 13-13 deadlock appeared safe until the Owls, with power pro­ vided by Paul Piper, cut loose with the late 52-yard drive that set up Rice’s 22-yard three pointer. Callihan’s interception of the pass thrown by Dick Berg came on the first play after the kickoff. Stanford then took to the air and drove 85 yards to the Rice five before another this one by George Parry, a senior, preserved the IO-point Owl victory. of the season. interception, dr AGCIES-OOUGARA COLLEGE STATION (AP) — Texas ABM took fall advantage of mistake* Saturday Bight to heat the Ualverelty of Houston, 23 13 in a battle of wlalcse teams. Quarterback Jim Keller of Ter­ rell, scored two Aggie touchdowns as his team m ates shook the foot­ ball away from the Cougars or in­ tercepted passes. Jack Skog passed for b o t h of; Houston's touchdowns, one for 48 yards and the other for seven as he gained 194 yards in the air. The Aggies capitalised oa Joe Rafter's fumble early In the filet j period to stave off a touchdown j and stait a scoring march. Rafter took a pass from Skog I to the Aggie seven but lost it in the end zone where Dan Mcllhany pounced on it touchback. From the 20 the Aggies used 15 plays before Keller went up the middle for one yard and the first score. for a Champ Liston Asks Fight DENVER (AP) — Heavyweight boxing champion Sonny Liston wants to have a championship fight late this year In Denver with either Henry Cooper or B r i a n London, his press secretary said Saturday. Milt Winner, Denver promoter, auld the ehampkMN urged him lo arrange tim match. Be said Lis­ ten told him he was going to start rend wark a l • a. rn. Ami. day and begin training Thurs­ day. Willner, who also serves as Lis­ ton’s secretary, said he would of­ fer a percentage of the gate, a guarantee and expenses to either of the British fighters. The promoter said the title fight would be beld in the Denver Coli­ seum sometime between Thanks­ giving and Christmas. The Coli­ seum seats 10,500 persons. Austin's New**! • Largest • Swankier HAIR STYLING CENTER Capitol lcaatjr Collect I Afb * G uadalupe GR 2-9291 GR 2-9292 Okies Trampled... 'Continued from P sf* I) Three play* after Crosby kicked off, th a t question was answ ered. Pag? nilled out on an option play, but T exas’ All-America tack­ le Scott Appleton caught up with him. The OU back tried to pitch nut, but threw behind Lance Rent- rel, and Appleton recovered the fumble on the Sooner IS. to Phil H a m s Six plays later, with fourth and goal from the 3. Carlisle pitched Philipp b a rk the way with a wicked cleared the wingback wisked block, and bv t h i r d the touchdown. Ten minutes rem ained when Crosby toed his 15th straight TAT. for Texas flag TENSE MOMENT Then Texas suffered a lapse that planted hopes in the hearts of the Sooners and an unnamed fear in Texas. Eating yardage both on the ground and in the air, Big Red chopped from it* own 38 to the Texas I, where fourth string quar­ terback John Hammond sneaked over. It waa 21 7 after George Jar- ' bumi’s Uck. and 8:19 remained t i till third quarter. Then, just as Texas settled beck j a little, Ford fumbled on the UT j 30 and Larry Vermillion seized It for the Okies. But Texas was ready to roll up the streets and call It a night. Tommy Nobis felled Hammond for a yard loss. and then fullback Jim j G risham gained three to the 29. A change of directions marked the end of the third stanza, and Texas was 15 minutes away from becoming the top team in the na­ tion, if it could hold the Sooners. first play, Appleton crushed Hammond for a seven yard loss—and Looney s punt all but ended the last hope of a nosy hopeless cause. the On ONE MORE OHAN CE The Soon el's would get one last chance. With fourth and IO from the Texas 43, Wilkinson's men last ditch drive at right pulled a tackle, but G n sh m a could get I only six yards, and Texas " a s 1 to cram it down their throats. Marvin Kristynlk replaced C ar­ lisle, and had the Ixmghorn* on the Big Red ll before a penalty wiped out a six yard gain and pm bed Team* te a k ta A a SS. Th* second string quarterback moved to the 14 in two plays, and amid shouts for Oro*by (to kick a field goal) he shot a pass to the waiting arm s of George Sauer in the end zone for the last Texas score. Here entered Crosby, who kicked his 16th extra point- The scoreboard at the south end c t the stadium showed 51 seconds left. three minutes the Sooner fans had begun streaming from the Cotton Boud. They were stunned, broken, maddened. With left, But the crowning blow had to come from the famous last words of a Sooner back who gained four yards In the game. It was Looney who said Texas couldn't move the ball. And it was I gooney who said Scott Appleton was good, but hadn't met the | “Big Red Yet.” For the record. Appleton played 34lj minutes, made three unassist­ ed tackles and 15 assisted — re­ covered a crucial fumble — and seemed to be watching especially for Texas-ex I gooney. ★ ★ Oklahoma TEXAS Texas—Carlisle ............ 0 (I 7 ft— 7 .................. 7 7 7 7—SS I run (Crosby Complete Typewriter Service Sales — Rentals — Repairs C A LL GR 7-6719 FOR FREE PICKUP OR DELIVERY ^ 3 a m p u s c o r n ier aas, MOUiei STUMM .4IW.IK4 > y PH O TO G RAPH IC SUPPLIES EXPERT C A M E R A REPAIR Hallmark Cards and Plans-A -Party Shop Studtman Photo Service 222 WEST I9TH GR 6-4326 m m m m . MON.-TUES.-WED. ONLY 3301 Interregional FRIED CHICKEN M A N DON’T W A ST E TIME TRYIN G TO HIDE THOSE CRA VY SPOTS! kick> kick) Texas-- F o r d 12 run (Crosby Texas Harris 3 pass from Car­ lisle (Crosby kick) Oklahoma—H a rn m o n d 3 run (Jarm an kick* Texas Sauer 14 pass from Kris- tynik (Crosby kick) Attendance—75,504. Grid Playoff Plan Proposed SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) — A national NCAA football champion determined on post-season elimi­ nation games in each of the coun­ try’s eight districts was proposed Saturday by Ed Moose Krause, Notre Dame athletic director. "We have NCAA champion- ships lit basketball and baseball among others, sa why not one In football?” Krause told The As­ sociated Press. “I would like to see s rating poll taken in each of the eight NCAA districts.” he said. “At the and of the regular season, the No. I teams of the districts would have a round of elimination games. ‘There would ba four such con­ tacts die first weekend after the close of tile regular sea eon. Then there woald ba two games t h e next weekend. Then woald come the NCAA championship g a m e between die t w o survivors. I am s o t s a satisfactory system af pairing district champions could be worked out. Came at a dance OKI. A, S ITT 63 4-io ! 0 V33.0 I 50 F irst Down* Rushing yardage Paw ing yardage Passes Pastes Intercepted by Punts Fumbles Lost Yardage Penalised TEXAS 16 239 14 1-3 3 5-30 6 I SO RENT Wsaliljtg Hackle** .............. fS-W Vseven Cleaners ................... SS.9S per month while they last Long’s Vacuum Cleaner C o. 2111 S. Congree* HI S-SM2 HANDMADE BOOTS Squaw Boots and Moccasins Expert Shoe, Luggage Repair University Boot Shop 413 W. 24th St. Dr. Louis E. Buck VETERINARIAN N e Extra Fee For House N ight Call G R 2-5879 Goodyear Shoo Shop * Exsert She* Repair * M odem Equipment * Keys Duplicated While You W atch * She* Dyeing 405 W . 23rd STREET WACO (ZP)—The g r e a t rifle arm of Don T rull shot holes in powerful A rkansas Saturday night a n d B aylor beat the P orkers f r o m the Ozarks 14-10. It was a vicious blow to Arkan­ sas, rated at the start of the sea­ son as riding alongside the Uni­ versity of Texas as top contender for the Southwest Conference title. Some had placed Arkansas No. I above Texas. Baylor thus vaulted into the j position of a major threat in the conference with its critical vic­ tory. Trull, greatest one-year pass in Southwest Conference gainer history showed he still has it. He held no fears about passing from deep In his own territory. I once hurling from his own nine to 1 Elkina for 43 yards. Arkansas first scored on a field goal by Tom McKnelly, Baylor went ahead with a touchdown and { conversion, Arkansas took the lead I on a one-yard run by Charles Daniel, and then the Beam went ahead to stay. The ioM made Arkansas l l In ! the conference and 2-2 for the 1 season. It wa* Baylor’s first con- ; fcrence game and left the Bears 2-1 for this fall. . Trull'■ passing won for Baylor I but It was a running gam# strong- ; er than last year that kept Ar- I kansas from concentrating on Trull | alone. This left Trull with plenty of time to throw most of the time, although he proved a slick man­ euverer away from an occasional reddog defense. The play that felled Arkansas came third quarter on a 17-yard pass to El­ kins straight over the middle. the high-scoring in ★ FROGS RAIDER* L U B B O C K (AP) — Tommy Crutcher spurred Texas Chris­ tian’s fumbling Frogs to a SS S victory over Texas Tech ta a bungling Southwest Conference fiasco Saturday night. The aggressive 210-pound senior set up two touchdowns, scored one himself and threw the key block sprung quarterback Gray that Mills loose on another. He added a 34-yard romp to lay the groundwork for the Amt Frog m arker and streaked 53 yards with a Mills’ aerial to open the door for the second. Five time# the Frog* fumbled away the ball, several times la their own end of the field, but the Red Raiders’ sputtering of­ fense could never muster a touchdown thrust. The victory hiked the Frogs’ conference record to 1-1 and kept their title hopes alive. The Joes, Tech's second in conference play I against one victory, erased them from the race. The Frogs punched across tor two touchdowns in the first quar­ ter, added another In the third and then a couple more in the finale. Crutcher scored the original on a 11-yard barat and then eat CALL SA N JACINTO CLEANERS & LAUNDRY they'll pick up that suit, clean it beautifully and deliver it back In time for tho Arkansas gamel CALL GR 2-3166 Near tbs Campus af 16th & San Jacinto H A I R C U T S $1i5 J J f 'A $1i5 BARBER SHOP OPEN MON. thru SAT. 6 0 7 t i l 2 9tit MO ALM. JUST OFF eUADALUFf PLENTY OP PARKINS 4 larkers ta Serve Yeti M O PM. *® Sunday, October ll, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 Monday Eye Opener NEW LONG SLEEVE S P O R T S H I R T S J Monday Only WHIT!, HUK, TAN, PEWTER ANO ASST. STRIPES BUTTON-DOWN STYLE FORM FITTING REGULAR O S ft M S See? Ne springs. Volkswagens Hove torsion bors instead of springs. They run horizontally between the w heels This it how they work. Toke a 3-foot steel ruler. Hold one end in each hand and twist. le t one end go. It bounces right bock to shape, without going boing, boing, boing The same thing happens when you drive • VW over a bump. You sit and wait for th# next bouncy only it never comes. The Volkswagen has separate torsion bors OO oil 4 wheels. So tach wheal (aals its own separate wary over the rood (and spends more time bt touch with Hie roodl. You get a firm, soRd ride, with exceptionally accurate control. Torsion bors alone aren't unique. N or is 4-vA tel independent suspension. But the combination of both systems Is ae* You eon count oH Ae loden* that hove It t o •Tamely rora. a n t finger. M M 'S WEAR 2332 Guadalupe "C B " SM IT H M O T O R S 405 North Leaner • GR 2-412! Authorized Dealer h r Volkswagen end Pancho t o Oklahoma I' B f B1CBABP BOLDT Tesaa Sports Staff Even When Dust Settles, Orange-Red Don't Mix Horns Use Mortar and Pestle ■ l l Texas By FRANK DENTON Assistant Sports Editor to toe Oklahoma two before being stopped by the only real strong defensive effort mad* by Okla­ homa. Texas modo 144 yards oa toe ground in toe first half to o n l y 43 for Oklahoma. In the third period Oklahoma came to life for a 82-yard touch­ down march with John Hammond, the third 'Oklahoma quarterback for the day, passing for 28 and running for 18 ami making the score with a three-yard smash. Carlisle got the f i r s t Texas touchdown with a one-yard smash, DALLAS (AP) — Tommy Ford Md Doko Ouftolo lo* o thunder- o w T o n * ground ftHftek S h o t knocked down Nm w ttoo’o No. I team—Oklahoma*—**-7. Texas, rated No. 2 and seeking tho top spot, smothered Oklahoma the first half while running up a 14-0 load, and then mort than matched the rallying Sooners In the second half. A crowd of 75,504—the 18th straight sellout for this ancient in­ tersectional game—saw Texas at its best with “three yards and a cloud of dust" football. Tho precision Longhorns, func­ tioning like a well-oiled machine, Jaot plain groan* Ike kearlded Oklahoma lino Into bits. Ford, tho guy who likes to run over people, ran over a lot of them Saturday as he ripped through the big Sooner line for 77 yards. Carlisle, who ran about as much although h a v i n g to handle the quarterback duties, too, ripped out 62 yards. It was a rough game and Okla­ homa personal fouls had the Soon­ ers in trouble repeatedly. It led to a Texas touchdown in the first period. Oklahoma hod tho ball for only six plays la too first period and juot I* la too ooeoad and too Sooners never got past midfield under their own power the entire first half. Once, when Texas put in Bob Crouch, the trackman who sat in for the injured punter Ernie Roy, got off a 17-yard boot, Oklahoma got into Texas territory; but Pete intercepted a Bobby Lam mons Page pass and Texas rolled down DALLAS (S p l)—’There was no Joy in the Oklahoma treating room, for the nation’s No. I team had been soundly trounced by No. 2 Texas. Bill Carlyle, OU center, end Rick McCurdy, quarterback Ronnie Fletcher, and others bit their Ups and tsars welled bt their eyes as they entered the dressing room. Halfback Joe Don Looney gritted his teeth as he entered the dressing room. The tears weren’t showing, but he had fought to keep them away. Other persons associated with the Sooners tried not to show their emotions—they tried hard—but tears gushed out. Indeed you can go only down when you are number I, but it is still hard to fall off the pinnacle. When you lose seldom, it’s even harder to take the loss. Oklahoma had just fallen. Reporters were first kept out of the room, waiting be­ tween the players' area and a cyclone fence. Beyond the fence, the Longhorn band marched in front of the Texas dressing room and played “The Eyes of Texas." Grinning faces above bare chests stuck around the comer of the Texas' players area. The door to the OU room was locked and no noise could be heard. After a short wait, the press was invited in. No tears were showing now, only solemn actions of undress and showers hissing next door. Coach Bud Wilkinson was first asked if there was a single turning point in the game, or a big play. He said, “No, they Just beat us very badly, In every point of the game." He smiled politely and said, “Texas played very weU." Other reporters approached and asked about a turn­ ing point a similar reply came from Wilkinson in each case —then he said, “none, except the opening kickoff." WUldnson smiled again, but his blue eyes did not twinkle as they had before the game. In fact, they seemed a little red as he said, “Texas just had more speed, vim, and quick­ ness. OU had played USC In Los Angeles' HO degree heat, but Wilkinson said there was no heat factor Saturday, “There never is." He said Oklahoma “had played well In comparison . . ." H e did not say In what comparison. Halfback Lance Ren tee! .who was the Sooners’ number 2 rusher in the game, said, “we were overconfident. We put on a poorer show than I expected—we just weren’t really ready. “Wa really stomped them that second half, except for Kit end there." Rented talked quietly to this reporter and a reporter from The Dally Oklahoman, OU student paper. “No, we didn’t have any trick plays for this game—just the basic stuff. “Looney and I thought we would beat Texas. We just weren’t ready for them." He continued almost as though no one was around, “We hadn’t practiced well—the layofl may have had something to do with it." He shrugged hit shoulders. Guard Ed McQuarters said Southern Cal and Texas both had good team*. 'Texas Just whipped us, that’s all there to to It." Looney, who was quoted before the game saying Texas couldn’t move the ball against Oklahoma, was more angry than unhappy after coming from the shower, 'T hey Just kicked the - - - - out of us, that's all." The one time Texas intramural B-tea rn player continued, T don’t know what they were doing, we just weren’t ready. We were too cocky." Bobby Page, on# of the Sooner quarterbacks said, ‘Texas came ready to play and we didn’t. It seemed like every­ thing they did was right and e v e r y t h i n g we did was wrong" The dressing r o o m was nearly empty. The Oklahoma players walked slowly out where tearful coeds waited for them. A few parents were also outside waiting. T w o OU students walked out the exit as the last of the players went though the gate, ‘T just can’t graduate now" one said, “Not a f t e r losing four straight." W e ll do most anything to support the Longhorns Ford ran for 12 yarda to rack up the second, Carlisle’s awing pass to Phil Harris for three y a r d s made the third. Texas scored Ho final In toe fourth period on a 14-yard pass from Marvin Kristy aik to George Saner, son of the former Baylor coach, as toe Longhorns finished ap with their reserves. Texas was beating Oklahoma for DALLAS (Spl.)—Texas ruled the day, the Longhorn* played a royal game of football, and jubilation reigned over all as a tired, but satisfied entourage of ’Horns reviewed their humbling of the “Number I ” Oklahoma Sooners. “We just played real well,” beamed D arrell Royal. “We started quick and stayed at it. But I didn’t start feeling safe until we had the ball in their end of the field and the score was 21-7. It was our most consistent play this season." toe sixth straight year The game played in 90 degree Royal singled out quarterback Duke Carlisle and tackle Scott Appleton for special praise in the sweetest victory of them all. “Duke executed in fine sty le . He played exceptional tem peratures, was the 58th in the ball. And I ’ve said all along that Appleton is a great one. long and colorful series. Texas j j j e js fantastic on defense and a good offensive blocker.” was winning the 36th game against 20 for Oklahoma. There have been . . j have ever been. They had a great team. Appleton himself believed “We were as ready as we * , r Texas* a la . w a, mlling on un- ! S o o n e r J o e D on ^ ° n e V' w h ° th ,in k TeXaS W0Uld defeated t h r o u g h four g a m e s - ; be able to move against them, earned only a passing re­ heating Tulane 21-0, Texas Tech mark from the 240-pound Appleton. “He is a good man, but 49-7 and Oklahoma State 34-7 pre- \ve didn’t give him any breathing room.” The former Texas viousiy. Oklahoma, which had , sfu(jent gained only four yards in the game. baston Oamson and Southern Cal- Even Carlisle was surprised at the margin of victory, the defending national ifomia. champion, to gain its No. I rating. I I didn’t expect a three touchdown lead, he said. T h e la n k quarterback was almost a Sooner himself. “I almost signed was losing its first. I with Oklahoma, but my decision was between them and j Texas." Some critic* wondered how Oklahoma got its high spot. Hom­ er Norton, former Texan AAM coach who is an analyst for The Houston Post, said he was rating Texas’ yards, was happy witll the Longhorns’ show ing. “ I thought we were a lot better ball club today. We were just it toe “poorest Oklahoma team" ready for them. I’m proud to say not a man on this team he had ever seen. Okies. The seniors have a perfect slate against h h Tailback Tommy Ford, who carried 21 times for 77 of to , outstanding football because “ the boys want that No. I spot. They o u tran g ed , outdrove and 1 he said, “There were some great holes out there. outhustied Oklahoma.’’ Defensive end Knox Nunnallv illustrated the determina- rolled up 239 tion of the entire Texas squad, “We wanted this more than Norton also said Texas was play- h a s jo s^ . . . . . . The Longhorns „ T h . 1 “ h ® d ® . f yards on the ground and only 14 any We’ve played." in the air. Oklahoma Now that they are No. I, are the Longhorns going to 127 rushing but got 63 passing. , . , However, Texas intercepted thre^ let UP? 1 don * llke to think of ever letting up, a contented of the Sooner passes. | Royal said. . . . . . „ .... , "nly , A M eeting o f M inds . . . D uke Carlisle corralled by Butch Metcalf, Carl McAdams, and Okies unknown. —Texan Photo—Gossett Guide to GOOD EA TIN G in and around A U S T I N The N E W FAMOUS IN AUSTIN FOK M O M THAN 14 YEARS FOK FOH STEAKS U. S. Chalet Heavy Aged Newbern Reef. . . Tender, Delict#**. . . Properly Freya red! W a A ba Feature FISH and POULTRY aad Regular Lunches and Evening Dinner* Reasonably Priced IpmM fey Mr. m4 Mn. I L tee* el Hen* WeysMs tee, leer t* ive*. Haunt 11.00 AAA. la 0:30 FAA. 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Available far 1,000 ★ Vila Capri Charcoal Broiled Steaks EAT IN CO O L COMFORT AUSTIN’S NEWEST & FINEST GR 6-6921 RELAX IN A TRUE DINING ATMOSPHERE Victor has an ideal location. A distinc­ tive atmosphere with a variety of good food. Ample free parking in the front or rear of the restaurant. SPECIALIZING IN ALL KINDS OF ITALIAN FOOD, STEAKS, AND FRIED CHICKEN Victors Italian Village 2910 Guadalupe GR 6-1600 ^ I f a i n o co ffe e coom DELUXE DINNER! a l l d a y SATURDAY & SUNDAY W E F E A T U R E CHICKEN DELUXE DINNERS 95 Wo Also Servo a Varied DELUXE DINNER Monday Thru Friday After 5 p.m. for 95c A Relish Trey Precedes Your Dinner C O M P L I M E N T S OF THE MANAGEMENT FAMOUS FOR SEAFOOD— French Fried Shrimp SRectally Excellent Food A t Reasonable Prices RIES (AKEO IN OUR O W N KITCHEN • W E MAKE SU PERI DRESSING TRY OUR O C f Luncheon Men.—Tri. SERVIN®. 6:30. A.M.— P:00. P.M. 2300 Interregional GR 6-5455 604 Guadalupe! m m a m w m m a m m m m m m m w w m Sundty, October IS , I M S THE DAILY TEXAN Fo r * B Drama's Opener to Spotlight Stage Design “ Summer end Smoke,” Tennes­ see William*' classic will initiate th# Dram a Department * season Oct. 23 at Hogg Auditorium. Pre­ sentations such as this are planned to develop not only the talent o? the director and actors but to pro­ vide expression for setting, cos­ tum e and lighting designers. Basic theatre design is an to understanding of the theatre art and knowledge of the p l a y and the playwright s conception in order to arcate ch a racter and mood. Mem­ bers of the department ar# work- ing on various techniques to bring to the stage Williams’ play and Williams’ characters as he reveals them. Y e a r s of a sterile existence make Alma, the heroine of “ Sum­ m er and Sm oke," a figure in a dream world. John Rothgeb, as­ sistant professor of D ram a, has the charac­ to m irro r attem pted te r's insecurity in the setting with an o \e ra ll feeling of the unreal. Lines of the setting illustrate the TIME IS RUNNING OUT FOR THE RUNNING MAN... personality qualities of Alma, and Dr. John, the smalltown r a k e . John's office will be sharp with angular lines, coming to a harsh point contrasted by the sloped floor of Alma’s house w h i c h reveals softness and warmth. Harsh, rec­ tangular windows will be used in John's office to contract with Al­ m a’s Gothic window of spiritual quality. is a l s o Characterization ex­ pressed in costume designs. Alma wear warm tones ranging f r o m dusty rose to terra cotta—a pro­ gression from her shadowy soft­ ness to earthy warmth which re­ presents h e r admission of her emotional needs. In the opening scenes, Alma’s costumes are designed In v e r y soft, short cursed lines such as scallops. These lines progress to the longer curve which is shaped more to th# body and Is m o rt re­ vealing and decisive. In contrast, the costume design­ er, Paul Reinhardt, assistant pro­ fessor of dram a, with the help of Pat Buard, has planned Rosa’s costumes in colors of Icy brilli­ ance, blue a n d blue-green. Her costumes are much more fitted to emphasize the earthiness and phy­ sical quality of her personality. Dr. John's suits are emblematic of the two sides of his character. He wears ice blue symbolizing his irresponsibility, a desire to rebel, and to live life to the fullest. The white he w e a r s represents his basic drive to follow his father as a responsible doctor. When he is with Alma, his clothes are fresh and immacualte. When he is with Rosa, however, he is rumpled and unkempt, symbolizing his betrayal of the best in himself. In lighting the production, David Nancarrow, assistant professor of drama, w o r k s with the color schemes used by the setting and costume designers to reinforce the mood of the play. One aspect of the lighting for “ Summer and Smoke” is the em­ phasis of the main characters to make them seem larger than life. Through the use of side angles, overheard and back lighting, Alma will seem to be haloed with light. 'i'he Fine Arts Box Office is tak­ ing reservations for the production of “ Summer and S m o k e.” The sale of s e a s o n tickets for the dram a s e a s o n will continue through ttie last performance of Williams play. For reservations or additional in­ formation, call or go by die Fine Arts Box Office in Hogg Auditor­ ium, GR 1-1444 or GR 1-7444. ND FASCINATING WEEK! Biggest Turn-Awey Crowd* B ince "L-SH A PED R O O M " S 2 T^e Ray Fliegel or Fliogol O rchestra to Play "a makes an encore appearance pf the 1963 Austin Symphony Jewel Ball Oct. 25 in Municipal Auditorium. Fliegel is a former concertmas­ ter and soloist of the H o u s t o n Symphony Orchestra. Since m ak­ ing his first appearance with the Symphony at 15, v« Has worked with a number of name bands in major hotels and on tours. Fliegel's orchestra will play from 8:30 p m . to I a.m. Mrs. A. H. Dickinson Jr. is Jewel Bali chairman. Clo s FAST FOODS 407 W a it 24th •/j Block W a it of Drag Pizza— Spaghetti Mexican Food Sandw iches For Fait University Area Delivery Call G R 2-0049 C O LU H B U P C n iR E S l putouts* OARIX REED I------- PBODX) IOU LUCENCE IEI UM____ WINEY REMICK BINES THE RUNNING MAN ' _..J0HH MORTIER Famed director Carol Reed focuses on naked fear' tart* Im SWI ■# fcwwk CAROL REED* PANMSIOK*- MMR*** COLM WARNING I CATCH " THE RUNNING MAN".. .FROM THE BEGINNING! STARTS THURSDAY PARAM OUNT A New Screen Experience! More Fascinat­ ing Geniu* Then Fellini'* "LA DOLCE VITA." ^PREVIEW ■tonight! ONLY! Coma between 5:56 end 7:34 end see the meek plus •'STOLEN HOURS" T O D A Y AT I N T E R S T A T E shzatrwunt NOW SHOWING! F E A T I KKR: 11: SS - « :* • 6 IO - S OO ATHN rot A n o m DISCOUNT CABO 55 DAYS THAT STUNNED THE WORLD! THE L "Sex is not 4 forbidden u ord!" SHAPED ROOM " O N THE D R A G " Special Return Engagement STARTS WEDNESDAY! jk LJsms) © T U L L . In All Her Natural Glory in the Picture tor the Man Who * Seen Evtrythinf! © M E I L , B A R Eand. i '&=: Studded with STUNNING SUNTANNED STARLETS: SEETHES! ALL! SEE ALL OF THEM! Captivating in TELL-TALE COLOR! rM lN rc lF N* O w U nder l l lr * . A d m itted —No C hild Ticket* Sold F irs t A ustin S how ing OPRN 1:45 t M f M M S S t S S S S S M S S M _ j, T m W U — — — ADULTS 75c. T ER N DISCOUNT Mc C H IL D F B R * a f T ■ i f I m I m M _ F IR S T SHOW 7 P M. l . I M M * F R R R RIDEX ON " L IL TOOT” P l All Color Show! Disney’* Best •we‘.wren oakjac mmm item raw nu** wrwsa# MUMS HMEIkSU* JCQGBfflH* 1*0*1101 -DMMHHH •J R P H T J P YORDAN-BERfiARC GORDOH "TW CHOLXS RAY * ? S W I E BRONSTON n m i TM SiftK !EDfKNJA IfGHNlSQlQir ammi iu d (RER ADULTS IOO MDC .OO CUILTY I i After, H ere It IsI WHIMKYMT1 KAfnBKAWI HAYIET BURL DOROTHY DEBORAH msm m m * PLUS “LEGEND OF LOBO’’— W alt Dim* m u -r u g ____________________ A RIOTOUS NEW FUN TEAM ! ! IN A N O T H E R G R EA T C O M E D Y IN TMK JO Y O U S V EIN OK ' T i m T e n c h e l M ink • P ill# w T n lh ," " L e v e r Com e B ack ' e nd Teen D U ruunt Cnrd CH IL D ER S ONDER I* FREE OPK!* * :l» — F IR S T SHOW 7 P M . .M Adult* .7* Of it Ml/, ^ S m C O i o ^ m d Gregory Peck Robt. Mitchum 'Cape Fear' COMING! “HOOTENANT HOOT" NOW SHOWING! FK.AT I HLS: ? OO - 3:5* - I :M ( S N KAR 7 :i4> SLW B . ' - ” h c o k A „ BARBACAN FILMS I SMMU I hayward! COLOR »• DC LUXE m ih m tm unint ut im Symphonic Band Cancels Show The University Symphonic Band Concert scheduled for Sunday in the Texas Union Ballroom, has been cancelled. fI ■ | It has been replaced as the first of the student organizations con­ certs by a presentation of die Uni­ versity Symphony Orchestra on Sunday, Oct. 20. Alexander von Kreisler will conduct and Emmett Vokes, guest associate professor of music, will be soloist. Vokes will solo in the Beethoven Concerto for Orchestra and Piano No. 4 in G Major. The concert is scheduled tor 4 p.m. in the Texas Union Ballroom. Admission is free. Singers in Demand For Spring Opera Local performers and students, including those not registered in the College of Fine Arts, are asked to audition for roles in the spring production of Opera Workshop. Tentative plans have been made for the production cf J o h a n n Strauss’ “ Die Flederm aus" to be staged in Hogg Auditorium on Ap- j ril 2, 4, and S. Tha repertoire of j the Opera Workshop, chosen in re-! rapacities, the group's gard ranged last year from “ Sour An­ gelica” and "Gianni Schicchi” to “Tosca,” both Puccini operas. to Those interested in participating are asked to arrange for auditions with James Pease, Music Build­ ing 101-A, between 9:30-10 a rn. Monday-Saturday. Santo Domingo, capital of the Dominican Republic, has a wealth! of colonial m onum ents-the first J Christian church, cathedral, and pontifically established university j of th# New World. The restored' fortress-manslon of Columbus's! son, Diego, stands vigil over toe harbor. OPEN BO W UNG 3 5 BOWLING CENTER H H 1409 6 ij.tj.h jp . ■ ■ Stage Whispers By HAYDEN FREEMAN SAN ANTONIO (Spl.)—Opera did not com# by th# * adjective “grand” easily. Just as Aristotle found that, In order to be Important, drama had to be of “a certain magnitude,” so composers have found that, in order to construct a musical drama worthy of the title “grand opera ” problems must be of real importance, characters must be a little bit more than human, and treatment must be on a superhuman scale. ‘SU SA N N A ’ FOUND PROSAIC Carlisle Floyd’s opera “Susanna,” which opened th# twenty-fifth anniversary of the San Antonio Symphony Sat- urday night, fulfills none of these conditions. It is a flaccid attack on a low level on nonimportant problems. Nowhere In concept, execution, music, or diction does it approach any­ thing over the extremely mundane, the unbearably prosaic. The artists concerned are certainly above reproach con­ sidering the material with which they had to work. Certainly Picasso can fingerpaint. Certainly Nijinsky could schottische. COULDN’T G O THROUGH WITH IT In any respect, it would take nerves of steel to put any part of this treated In any way on the Broadway stage. To designate it “opera” and present it on a distinguished stage staggers belief. I can truthfully say that, as a reviewer, I have faithfully stayed to the end of every other production upon which I have reported. I lasted through about 40 min­ utes of this, and consider myself a martyr. The important thing with a symphony concert, which is what this ostensibly was, Is, how did they sound? Th# ! orchestra was fine, perhaps a bit embarrassed as to the dis­ aster In which they had been asked to participate, but doing their job admirably, nevertheless. The idea of presenting a full-scale operatic production is a good and generous one, certain to be appreciated by San Antonio concert-goers. But the idea that Just any opera la more acceptable than a really competent orchestral pro­ gram or the really inspired selection of a soloist is certainly a fallacious one. . . . A N D THE FLAG W ASN’T STILL THERE It has always been a pleasant custom of the San An­ tonio Symphony to open the season with the N a t i o n a l Anthem. It Is regrettable that this year this traditional fea­ ture was omitted. Dutch Art Exhibit On Month Showing i is open to the public. The collection of abstract can* assembled by I vases has been W.J.H B Sandberg, former direc­ tor of the Municipal Museum of Amsterdam at the request of the : Netherlands Ministry of Educa­ tion. Arts and Sciences. It is be- i ing circulated in this country by the Smithsonian Institution Travel­ ing Exhibition Service, Artists to be represented include G enii Benner, Hers van Robe rn en, Pieter Defesche, Jef Diederen, Roe lo! Franked, Get La taster, Lucebtrt Jan Sierhuis, Pierre van Soest. Jan Stekelenburg, and Jaap Wagemaker. M ah arajas Pay Taxes On Channel 9 M onday “ Maharajas Must Pay Taxes.” a erne hour documentary on the so­ cial regrouping* and sociological changes in India will be broadcast Monday at 8 p m. on Channel t. Saville Davis, editorial page edi. tor of “The Christian Science Moni­ tor ' will present commentary as the cameras sweep from India'* atom reactor in Trombay, t o mod­ em factories, schools and cities. “ Holland: The New Genera­ tion," sn exhibit of 54 works of l l contemporary Dutch painters. wiH be shown Oct. 15 through Nov. 13 in the mezzanine gallery of the Art Building and Museum. Exhibit hours are IO a rn Mon­ day through Friday and I a.rn to I p m. on Saturday and 2 p m to I p.m. on Sunday. The show Delwood DRIVE IHI THEATRE a# tnt Ha BOX O F F IL L O PEN S USS ADMISSION 7IS­ HIDA UNDER 13 F R E E “ CAN-CAN Ak frie r M n L t l a * i F. t i M ir a . T S # rim — •‘Wild in th# Country" KOI* F re*ley A H or* U * i e , • 3S MOX O F F IC E O U M S SS ADMISSION Tie ELDS UNDER IS F E E S “THRILL OF IT ALL" D eri* D ay A D a n G a ra e r, T:SS “ It Staffed in N aples" Se a k ia L e re* A C lark G akie. I S S ADULTS r o e MDC .50 ( H IL D .35 HELD OVER! SNI) BIO VI KUK! F R A T I R U S : I -VO-4 :35-* OOO SS I UU luUIDN'T ask fob friendlier ■females or a FUNNIER PICTURE I SPECIAL STUDENT SEASON TICKET OFFE NOW for as little as 62W per concert, students may attend all eight of the AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA’S outstanding concerts. < j a e K LEMMON b e l ie W I L D E R ’S TKCHMCOLOM* MNAVISION* an***# mw w*»i aa—* SHIRLEY IMacL&INE Lmna CONCERT CALENDAR October 28 All Orchestra November 18 Leonard Pennario—-Pianist m m j u December 2 AU Orchestra January 6 AU Orchestra January 20 Gianna D’Angelo—Coloratura Soprano ADUL TS MAT. .75 KV K .SHI S EN IO R MDC .4* No Children o r J u n i o r MDC Ticket* S o ld February IO AU Orchestra ■PP* STARTS TODAY! F R A T I R R S: 3 :« M :U -T / J / February 24 Elaine Skorodin—Violinist March 23 Ezra Rachlin—Pianist-Conductor REGULAR SEASON TICKET PRICES STUDENT SEASON TICKET PRICES $10.00 $12.00 $18.00 $25.00 ALL SEATS RESERVED GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW rn GORDON MacRXE • m GRAHAME • SISLEY KUS • RU EISON WOHL G&M0- [DWL ALBEIT lAJttS MWW • KIO SM I joo eiMtur* »<;>» ottf am Sunday, October 13, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag# 6 ; * - . ^ m v - „ ; "Invitations are extended to all students to meet with the Supper Club st 6 p.m. Friday st the Luth­ eran Student Center, 2200 San An­ tonio St.," according to the Rev. Gustav Kopka. He added that vespers are held each Wednesday night at 9 p.m., and participate. all students are invited to it ★ The Rev. John C. Towery will speak on the topic, "The Sinning Saints" at the l l a.m. worship service of the Congregational Church of Austin of The United Church of Christ at 408 W. Twenty- third St. The student group will meet in the church for supper and a discussion at 6:30 p.m. ★ ★ G. Don Boh]eke, campus mini­ ster at the University Christian Church, will preach at the 10:50 a.m. worship service Sunday In place of William T. rabble, min­ ister, who will be attending the International Convention ~>f Chris­ tian Churches in Miami. Dr. Slate To Speak Dr. Joseph E. Slate, assistant professor of English, will speak at the first program in the YMCA- YWCA film series Monday night in th* Texas Union Auditorium. Dr. Slate’s talk and a discussion will follow the showing of two movies: "A Time out of War,” pro­ duced and directed by Terry and Dennis Sanders; and "Night and Fog," directed by Alain Resnais. His speech will be concerned with “ Night and Fog." An exhibit on the movie, pre­ pared by Dr. Slate, is now on dis­ play in the English Building. More than 80 persons have bought tickets for the six-week series of films, chairman Terry Weldon said. A booth for buying j tickets will be located in front of Sommers’ Drug Store on the Drag just before showtime at 7 :30 p.m. Monday. No tickets for individual programs will be sold. Speaking o f (^ h u r d le : "God Chooses a Man" will be the sermon topic of Dr. Blake Smith, pastor of the University Baptist Church, st the l l a m. service. At 8 p.m. Sunday, a student group will discuss the racial issue with regard to establishing a city commission on civil rights. it it Dr. Roy R. Craig Jr., Univer­ sity assistant professor of engi­ neering mechanics, who spent the summer in Nigeria, will speak at the Unitarian Public Forum at IO a.m. Sunday. The speaker will illustrate his he remarks by showing made while in Nigeria. slides oeS ere • • a d a r IO—Dr. Rev R. C r s lf J r . to Unitarian Church on Croaaroads—Africa. 4,00 Grover. at. •Operation U —Newman Club, St. Auatin s Audl- 1-e^Frcnch Legation open. Kyat Sev enth ann San M arcos, allo Monday. 3—Alpha Phi Omega. Texas Union Ballroom, 2 -M u sic m ajor* litten to Eighteenth Century Music. Music Bullate . . .. B e s n o w in g of contemporary art from the Ted Weiner Collection, Laguna Gloria _ , _ 1 4 —Exhibit of painting by B.J-O. Nordfeldt. Huntington Gallery, Art Museum; 104 Monday. . . Sub Yung Yang measures one of 2,000 as Gilbert Cantu, Dr. Robert Belander watch. RACES IN THI HOUSE SPARROW? —Texan Photo—D r*ady Sparrows on the Grass, Alas, Not Always Birds of Feather By MANNE HALYARD AasMaet Feature Editor A house sparrow in Death Val­ ley la physically different from a house sparrow In San Francisco, though both are evolved from a common stock Introduced into this country only HO years ago. Or. Behert K. Reteiwtor. mw* c h is profaner et rook** at Ute University; mad Or. Richard F. Tull st im. et the Museum of Nat­ urel (datary at the University of Keaau*, have reached a halfway mark Ie a tsrajraer alody ©f goo graph!* variation «f »*«**# spar- raws hi Narih America. They are attempting to measure rate* of evolution In characteristics of aha, color, and pattern. S E L E C T E D FOR HISTORY The house sparrow or English ___ 9-5 Monday. sparrow—was selected for study because of its history. 3 4 —Exhibit of Southwestern Advertis­ ing Art, Mezzanine Gallery, Art Mu- . seum . 104 Monday. 3-5—Texas Memorial Museum open, The bird was Introduced in 1852 in New York from England and Germany. It dispersed westward from New York and is now found through­ out the North American continent and in Bermuda and Jamaica. "The birds differ so much from place to place, they could be called races," Dr. Slander said, Texas sparrows are slightly smal­ ler than Kansas's, but are larg­ er than those from California. The Texas birds are paler than Los Angeles birds but are not so pale as those from Death Valley. NEIGHBORING MROS UNLIKE The amount of geographic varia­ tion shown by North American One example of a difference house sparrows was surprising, Dr. within a small area was found in Selander said. “ We expected to J Louisiana. Specimens from Zach- find some regional differences." he ary, 23 miles north of Baton Rouge, explained, "but they were greater show development of a yellow than we had anticipated." "wash" not shown in birds from Texas Un Baton Rouge. Zachary is in the I g ^ S t^ r ig h ffte V discussed bv ,tu- Baptist Student feulld- pine-hardwood forest area and Baton Rouge is at the edge of the Louisiana prairie. 2;30—Interested persons may meet Dr. J a . Wilson on Geology Parking I Jot to go on tour of Vertebrate Paleontology Lab a t Balcones Cen- 6 .30*-United student Fellowship. Cong­ regations! Church. 4(>2 W. Twenty- third 7—Movie. University Presbyterian Church, g — Disciples Student Fellowship. Uni­ 3.11—kUT-FM. 90.7 mc: and Monday. 3-5—Elisabet Ney Museum open. 304 J W. Morgan to speak to Canterbury Association, G r e g g a .10-10 pm . KLRN-TV. Channel *. SM—Reservation* versity Christian Church. 4«nt group tog. 405 Vi Vmt Twenty second. E. Forty-fourth. a —Westminster * The Hostler, Fellowship. 6:30—Dr Student Monday ,, _ . Far instance, they found that sparrow* in Death Valley are relatively small, pale, and have large, white amas. Sparrows la Aan Francisco are large, dark, and have only email white arena In their phtmmage. AusUn'i Oldest Home Ouned Jeu clem $ 21 0 Extended Terma Available JOE KOEN & SON sine* m s. -.........— Jew elers "Where Ansflalfes Shop With Confidence” I M I. Sib Conveniently locoted Just Off »H* Avenue Dr. Balander and Dr. John­ ston have visited more than 20 areas In Europe and North Amor- lea lo collect sparrow* for their rearer ch. The place* Include Stuttgart, Germany; O x f o r d , England; Las Cinco*, N.M.; Bermuda: Acapulco; and Cana­ da. To determine the appearance of the original stock of sparrows and the differences in today s Ameri­ can sparrow, birds from England and Germany had to be secured for com peris on. ITINERARIES SET On a bird-collecting trip this month Dr. Johnston will travel to Seattle, Wash ; Alberta, Canada; Ithaca, NY. ; the Kansas plains; and perhaps Florida. Dr. Selander will go to Hawaii, the San Francisco Bay area, and Salt Lake City. Gilbert Cantu, a research assistant, will collect in Veracruz, Mexico City, and Ma- zatlan, Mexico. As la prevIou* tripe, a roller Hon of tee bird* will be the ob­ jective la each area. To date al­ most 2,•*# bird* have been *e- carnd. Dr. Selander explained why so many were n e c e s s a r y . "If the differences among popu­ lations of the Urds ar* small, we need large samples to detect them. We also segregate the birds ac­ cording to sex and to age." HUNTING IN OCTOBER The birds have to be obtained in October, immediately after their annual molt "It takes one or two days In each place to collect birds with Jap­ anese nets," Dr. Selander said. The actual preparation of a speci­ m en tm* study takes only 20 min­ utes* Smoke, "Sum m er and Hogg Auditorium box of- for SM2*and 1-4 -Tickets for the Ar kanas* game. Gregory Gymnasium. 10-12 and 2-4- Filing Bu siness A dm inistration Businets-Ecnnom tcs Building 200. 10-9 p rn.—Arts and C rafts Center open. for College of election, Texas Union 333. 3—Study Group; Student Problems, 4—Speakers Committee presents David lecture. Main lr, public Rickman Ballroom of Texas Union 4—Varsity Band, Music Building 200. 7 —Photojnraphy class, Texas Union . « 4-6- Exhibit of Fren h documents, To­ MS bin Room. Batts Hall. ; 7-10—Study rooms open on first floor of Busineas-Econnmlcs Building i 7—C lasses begin in What Jew s Believe and Intermediate Hebrew, Hillel Foundation 7:30—Film, "Tim # out of W ar.” Uni­ versity *'Y.” 7;30_W . L. Manning to explain "Re- pubiiko de Libers Lando." Y. 1 :3t>—-Classes begin In Overviewlng Jew ish History and Introduction to Hebrew. Hillel Foundation. 3—Crusade for Christ leadership train­ ing class. Texas Union 325. e P i ■ I ' « • • * -4 - \ I w The Exclusive * STAR-LOK CONSTRUCTION O N THE OFFICIAL UT RING See It ef AR Hemphill Stores * Pal. Tending T T ^ B ^ S r i i P T s Fin is h e d ■ ffi/flSM 'K ' FoLP^TALTERATiq Ns S * P B Y CLEA NI Si G- -*Tuxedo R e n t a ls l a u n d r y RIO GRAMP6 G R 7 -O S O C • A '2 1 0 4 G U A D A L U P E ........... .GR 2 - 3 4 * 0 * ■*■310 1 S P E E D W A Y .............. GR 7 -0 « € E * 704 CONGRESS — 2234 GUADALUPE — ON THE DRAG I I N o w dont forget.... its The Sorority Photographic Schedule CACTUSn Pictures are to be made in the Cactus Studio Journalism Building, Room 107 Stud lo H o u rs: 8:30-12:30 :30-4:30 All Appointments Must Be M ad e Through the Sorority SC H E D U L E A L P H A C H I O M E G A ..W ednesday, Oct. 16 Thru -esday, O rt. 2? A L P H A D ELT A Pl ....W e d n e sd ay, Oct. 16 Thru Tuesday, Oct. 22 A L P H A E P SILO N PHI ..W ednesday, Oct. 16 Thru Monday, Oct. 21 A L P H A G A M M A D ELT A .Wednesday, Oct. 16 Thru Monday, Oct. 21 A L P H A K A P P A A L P H A ..Thursday, O ctober I 7 Thru Friday, Oct. 18 A L P H A O M IC R O N Pl ..Thursday, O ctober 17 Thru Monday, Oct. 21 A L P H A PHI ...............Thursday, O ctober 17 Thru Tuesday, Oct. 22 A L P H A XI D E L T A Thursday, O ctob er 17 Thru Monday, Oct. 21 C H I O M E G A ................ Monday, O ctober 21 Thru Friday. Oct. 25 D ELT A D E LT A D ELTA ....M o n d a y, O ctober 21 Thru Friday, Oct. 25 DELTA G A M M A ........Tuesday, O ctober 22 Thru Monday, Oct. 28 DELTA PHI EPSILON . .Tuesday, October 22 Thru Thursday, Oct. 24 D ELT A Z E T A Wednesday, O ctob er 23 Thru Monday, Oct. 28 G A M M A PHI BETA . .Wednesday, October 23 Thru Monday, Oct. 28 K A PP A A L P H A T H E T A Wednesday. O ctober 23 Thru Monday, Oct. 28 KA PPA KA PP A G A M M A Friday, October 25 Thru Wednesday, Oct. 30 PHI M U .................. Monday, October 28 Thru Wednesday, Oct. 30 Pl BETA P H I .............. Monday, October 28 Thru Thursday, Oct. 31 S IG M A DELTA T A U ZETA TAU A L P H A Monday, October 28 Thru Thursday, Oct. 3 1 Tuesday, October 29 Thru Thursday. Oct. 31 Sunday. October 13, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN W H EN LAW S T U D E N T John H. Marks, 2203 Sabine, Apt. E, a graduate of Oklahoma University, returns from Dallas, he ll find this "consolation” on his door. The signs and U T in beer bottles were arranged by friends. Texan Photo—Fuqua The University Students' Link With Old Mexico The serene atmosphere of Old Mexico and superb Mexican Food combine to make the Big Four the perfect place to dine. AUTHENTIC MEXICAN F O O D EL CHARRO Delivery Service 912 Rad River GR 8-7735 EL MAT Home of the Original ‘‘Crispy Tacos" EL TORO A Touch of Old Seville 1601 Guadalupe GR 8-4321 MONROE'S Mexican Food to Go SOO East Ava. GR 7-8744 TCHE to Weigh Grad Revisions University officials will request approval of changes in some grad­ uate programs at t h e quarterly meeting of the Texas Commission on Higer Education Monday, Vice­ chancellor F. Lanier Cox said. A doctorate of music arts in ap­ plied m u s i c , composition, and music education and a Joint doc­ torate of psychology to be admin­ istered by the University and the Southwestern Medical School at Dallas will be proposed. NEW SCHOOLS PROPOSED T h e formation of a separate graduate school of business ad­ ministration and approval for a school of communications also will be requested, Cox said. Final approval Is anticipated for a bio-medical sciences de­ gree to be given by the Univer­ sity bi cooperation with tile Uni­ versity Dental Branch and the M. D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute at Houston. Adoption of a $258,088 Commis­ sion budget Is expected at t h e meeting. Dr. A. B. Martin, ex­ ecutive director of t h e Govem- nor’s Committee on Education Be­ yond the High School, will give a brief report of the activities of t h i s committee. Recommenda­ tions on the role and scope of An­ gelo State and Pan American Col­ leges will also be considered. MONET CONSIDERED The Commission will discuss die procedure for development of re­ commendations on legislative ap­ propriations for the next biennium. The legislative appropriation to the Main University for 1963-65 is $32,147,054, approximately one- eighth of all appropriations to 20 state-owned colleges and uni­ versities In Texas. The Fifty-eighth State Legisla­ ture approved an increase of $69 million in funds for higher educa­ tion for 1963-65. This was IO per cent more than that given to all other state agencies. IGC Names 9 Officers Six committee chairmen and two coordinators for the B l i n d Students Reading Program were announced Monday at the Inter- Cooperative Council meeting by Tom Hutcheson, president. The chairmen are Laura Has sos, expansion; Everard Davenport, or­ ientation; Maxine Gomeau, publi­ city; John McRae, Coop Week; Virgie Klein, intramurals; Sherri Tate, social. The two coordinators are Penny Powell and .Toe Kuyken­ dall. Classes in School of Law Elect Officers Class officers for tile School of Law were elected Friday. A run­ off for the first year class honor council representative will be held between J i m m y Phillips Jr. and John A. Hall. Other first y e a r officers are Scott Caven, president; John M. C o m p e r e , vice-president; and Steve Johnson, secretary. Mid-law officers are W a r r e n Zimmerman, president; Dave Lar­ son, vice-president; Barbara Ann Hazen, secretary; Frank Deramus, honor council representative, place one; and David Redford, honor council representative, place two. Senior law officers are M. Dale Harvill, president; J a m e s Dun­ away, v i e e-president; M. Earl Rutledge, secretary; Dan Webster, honor c o u n c i l representative, place one; Jerry Bain, honor coun­ cil representative, place two; and Milton Stewart, honor council re­ presentative, place three. Fritz Alan Korth is honor coun­ cil chairman. ★ Wilson to Conduct Tour Dr. J . A. Wilson will conduct a tour of the Vertebrate Paleou- Archaeology Film To Be Shown Here A new archaeological color film, "Ancient World: Egypt," will be shown for the first time In this area at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Room 21 of the Undergraduate Library and Academic Center (Harry’s Place). The film, being sponsored by tile Central Texas S o c i e t y of the Archaeological Institute of Amer­ ica, traces the story of Egypt from the prehistoric period to the Ptole­ maic. It presents the beginning of monumental art at Sakkara in the newly discovered funerary temple and step pyramid. Photographed ara the pyramids, the Sphinx at Giza, the creations of the great pharaohs, the treas­ ures of the tomb of Tutankhamen, and samples of early Egyptian art. Filming was done in Egypt and in American museums. tology Laboratory a t fen Balcon­ es Research Center a t S p.m. Sunday. l a t e r a a l e i persons should meet at S:M p.m . In the Geology parking tot. Transporta­ tion will be provided from the lot to tile center. ★ French Exhibit Shown On display through Tuesday In Batts Hall is an exhibit on the French press, cosponsored by the Alliance Francaise and the Depart­ ment of Romance Languages. The exhibit deals not only with the press in France, but also the French-language press in 47 other countries. It includes hundreds of documents, newspapers, and maga­ zines, and fills display cases in tile basement and on the first and sec­ ond floors of Batts. The main dis­ play is in the Tobin Room. The e x h i b i t was introduced Thursday night when Yves Rodri­ gues, consul-general of France to Houston, spoke to the Austin chap­ ter of the Alliance Francaise on "Today’s French Press.” ★ Candidate Seminar Set A sem inar for Student Assem ­ bly candidates win be beld a t 4 p.m . Tuesday ta Texas Union 821. "Candidates ara requested to obtain a a Activities Handbook and read the election codes con­ tained therein,” Crosier Brown, Election Commission chairman, said. * Jewish Study Planned Classes in Jewish history, beliefs, and language, offered by Hillel Foundation, begin Monday evening and will continue for six weeks. Campus News Round-Up Scheduled from 7 to 8:30 p.m. are two classes: The Jewish belief, instructed by Rabbi Sheldon LU- ker, director of the foundation, and intermediate Hebrew, taught by Michael Reiter, a graduate student from Israel. Other classes, scheduled from 8:30 to IO p.m. are overview of Jewish history, instructed Iv Leon Lebowitz, University professor of law, and introduction to Hebrew, taught by Rabbi Lilker. Those wishing to register in the noncredit courses may contact the Hillel Foundation at 2106 San An­ tonio. ★ C/C to Meet Monday The Campus Interracial Com­ m ittee will hold tis regular busi­ ness meeting at 7 p.m . Monday in the University “ Y .” William J . Spearm an, chair­ man of the O C , urges nil pros­ pective members to attend. * Psych Wives W ill Moat The Psychology Wives Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the home of Mrs. Tassa Bishop, 2001 South Lamar. Any persons who qualify are wel­ come to come and Join the club, she said. A Candidate Runs Alone In a story on page S of Friday’s Texan listing persons who filed for Homer Tho rn berry’s vacant congressional seat, (me of the WELCOME STUDENTS Cotton Nauert Barber Shop Child’s Haircut $1.25 • Men’s $1.50 Flat Top $1.75 I50S LAVACA Opsn Tues. Thru Sat. — 7:00 a.m- to 6 p.m. TOM NELSON "Rat Top Specialist" COTTON NAUERT candklatoo. Frank MeGehee af D anes, w e* Malad ae a BepuhH- can. McGehee Is nam ing a s an Independent candidate. ★ Na al Misnamed O ’Neal William O. Neal, in a Texan story Tuesday stating that he had been selected grand chancellor In the School of Law was incorrectly listed a s William O’Neal. it Pearre, Shoptaw: Error Charles Morgan re arm HL candidate for engineering assem ­ blyman, WM incorrectly listed aa Charles Morgan HI tai UM Friday edition of tim Texan. Also, Oynthta Lee Shoptaw was emitted f r o m tile Mat of can­ didates for education assembly- Novi Officers Elected Miss Jennie S. Wilmot has been elected president of the Austin Re­ tired Teachers ’ Association. Other new officers include Miss M in is Dell Barrow, drat fica. president; Miss Aram L. Maxwell, second vice-president; Miss Mattie Sharp Brewer, recotdtog secre­ tary; Miss Maude C artiest, cor­ responding secretary; Miss Hope Yager, treasurer; Miss Gladys Matthews, a s s i s t a n t treasurer; Mrs. Lilly V. Lane, treasurer cf special fund; and Dr. I. I. Nelson, parliamentarian. ★ Co-op Names Officers FMD officer* f a r Shangri-La Gamp are F stay Bum s, eeorffian- tor; Carole P ipe, recording sec­ retary; M argaret Agnew, cor­ responding secretary; S h e r a n Duecker, Bito Blgley, and Kathy ■nightman, house council; Mil­ dred Hart, reporter; Carol Burt, historian; C tadj Luckey, a n d Aaa Whiting, Inter-Oa-ep Council representatives; A n n Whiting, schotostlc chairman Bonnie Otto, social chairm an; Judy Jack son a n i Donna Bleeds, fire m an uals. Now Available in austin ev« y dayi Late Edition of the Fort Worth Ster-Telegnun! COMPLETE LATE NEWS * SPORTS BEST SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE COVERAGE —Available si terne Bewaste** Or f:M p.m. - OB VUU CSU Yaar Dealer If. K CAB NEST — After FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM “STUDENTS, CAPITOL LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING CO. WELCOMES YOU” AS CASH— O R CHARGE ACCOUNT CUSTOMERS Apply at Our University Stations in Your Ntiqhborhoocl toe CrodRt: No. 2 at 2915 Duval; No. 3 at 3100 Guedelupe; No. S at 24th A San Antonio; No. 4 at 1304 Wast Lynn ONE DAY SERVICE TO STUDENTS AT 30th and Duval, 24th and San Antonio THE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SLATES (15-word m in im u m )........................4c 11.20 Each Word Minimum Charge............................... Classified Display I column x one Inch on* time........................81,00 Each Additional Time...................... 90 20 Consecutive Issues S words............... I OO SOO 1$ words............................... 20 words....................................................................ll.OO (No copy change for consecutive Issue rates) ( C la s s if ie d s d d s CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINES Tuesday Texan.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Monday. 3:30 p a Wednesday Texan..................... ...Tuesday. J SO pm. Thursday Texan..................... Wednesday. 3 30 p m. Friday Texan................................Thursdaj. 3:30 p.m. Sunday Texan .................... Friday. 3.30 p m. In the event of errors made In an advertisement. Immediate notice must be given as the publishers toe© reef insertion. are responsible for only on Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments Houses for Sole Typing 504 East Ave. GR 7-7023 OPEN EVERY DAY Who's Who? The OFFICIAL STUDENT DIRECTORY (On Sale Monday, Oct. 21) Will Contain: * Name * Address * Phone Number * Classification * Home Town * School * Fraternity * Sorority * Marital Status Published By: TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Sold By: ALPHA DELTA SIG M A (Advertising Fraternity) . . . 0/ A ll University Students Sunday, October 13, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 8 UNIVERSITY BROADCASTS R L B N -T V , Channel • M o n d a y R SO—Test Pattern 9 OO—Active Spanlih 9 15—Three Seasons 9:48—Primary Spanish 10:07—American Heritage 10:30—Red Cross 11:00—Nigh Noon 12:00— Big Picture 12:30—Discovery 1 :00—Primary Spanish I JO—Active Spanish 1 42—World Geography 2:10—Science 4 2 30—“ Un Rallo In Mochero'’ 4:15—The Children's Hour 5 OO—What's New: “ Tl-Jean Gees VV c s t 5 30—“ Biology In the Life of Man” 6:00—"Balance. Symetry, and Aa- ymetry 6 45—Theater 30 7:15—Sundown Edition: News 7 30—Dr. Posln’e Giants 8 00—Maharajas Must Pay Texas 9:00—On Hearing Music: The Works of Roger Sessions 9:30—Strictly Business UNIFORM CENTER Professional Wear For Man and Woman DOCTORS RECEPTIONISTS DENTISTS BEAUTICIANS NURSES RESTAURANTS HOSPITALS INSTITUTIONS I M W . 5th St. G R 2-6891 s . curltty Systems LARGE UPSTAIRS THREE room ap­ artment. Private entrance, modern kitrhen-bath. Near University. Adults. $75 00. Available November 9th. GL 2-9131, GR 2-3858 LAKE AUSTIN Wonderfully quiet and private, close- in. Two bedrooms and two baths, woodbumlng fireplace, baJconle*. boat- docks. $195 OO monthly on lease. Adults only. GR 8-6691, after 5 .00 GR 2-6579 MANOR VILLA Two bedroom furnished 899.80 to 8139.90 Water and gas paid, central air and heat, TV antenna and FM music. We have 55’ swimming pool, barbecue pa­ tios, laundry facilities, disposals. Priv­ ate club membership. 2401 Manor Road GR 7-10*1 Secretarial Service GR 2-3196 LONGVIEW APARTMENTS 240* Longview Furnished on* bedroom for 2 or 3. Vacant starting October I. Piped FM, central TV, laundrette, kitchenette, pool. For information, GL 3-8838 or GR &3S57 after 7:00 p.m. • Thesis • Dissertations • Themes • Term Reports 202 Western Rep. Bldg. STUDENTS. . . WE ACCEPT ALL MAJOR OIL CO. CREDIT CARDS! 0 20 Locations to Serve You • Friendly Expert Service Station Attendants H A N CO CK SERVICE STATIONS "At th# Sign el th* Rooster" UT'S FIRST UNIVERSITY APPROVED APARTMENTS FOR MEN THE HAWTHORNE 3413 LEON NOW OPEN — All new furnished ap­ artments have carpeting, builtin appli­ ance*, privacy, Individual desk*, priv­ ate patios, Janitorial service . . • $45 per month See Mrs. Shirley Hite. Res. Mgr., A pt JOI. or CALL GR 7-9324 LAKE AUSTIN HOME Ju st completed — plush — two bed­ rooms — central heat-olr —- wood burn­ ing fireplace — dock — trees. GR 7-7*30 NEAR UNIVERSITY. REFRIGERAT­ ED air, panel walls, separate bed­ room, tile bath. *79.50 gas-water paid. GR 8-6135. VILLA FONTANA 1951 Sabine One bedroom—elegantly furnished. Largo heated pool. Two blocks from Memorial Stadium. Special rates for lease. Manager—GR 2-1774. Owner—-GL 3-5090 Rooms for Rent FURNISHED BEDROOM. CARPETED. Private entrance and bath with tub and shower. Kitchen privileges, 706 West Elizabeth. HI 2-4821. MALE. PRIVATE ENTRANCE. Cooler. Share bath, phone, refrigerator with one student. Four blocks west of cam­ pus. 715 West 22% $40 00. NICE CLEAN quiet bedroom*. 2017-G Red River, also 1908-H Speed­ way. Private entrance, private bath. Refrigerator and hotplate lf desired. Open. GL 2-5*19. GR 2-0952. Room end Board THE BOWEN HOUSE 3001 W hi tis GOOD FOOD FAMILY STYLE A-C ROOM AND BOARD private home on Town Lake, boatdoc*. fish­ ing. dally maid service, carport. 875.00 I per month. After 7:00 p.m. GR 2-1639.1 For Rent GARAGE AND CARPORT. Block from campus. GR 8-1039. WHY CARRY DIRTY clothes out for washing. Wash the convenient way. Rent a washer from CENTRAL TEX­ AS APPLIANCES, sales, service, and rental 904 Lamar. GR 6-2to& housing, THREE BLOCKS CAMPUS. Approved large carpeted, air condi­ tioned roam for two boys. New furn­ ishings. tile bath, utilities paid, maid service, linens furnished and laundered. Krigldaire and area for light food. 706 West 21st. Bookbinding Theses — Dissertations — Reports Journals —• Curiam Bindings UNIVERSITY BOOKBINDERS 303 East 19th Street One block of campus GR 3-9*03 FAMILY HOME Perfect for professor ca’ graduate stu­ dent who doesn't want large yard. Masonry, three bedrooms with 1500 square feet floor space, domed living room celling, fireplace with bookcases each side, dining room, oak floors could be mads real show plato by artistic couple, Enfield area. 110.95a. Coll Jim Walls GR 6-6M7, Nights, weekends GR 7-5253. Rinser sad Shack­ elford. For Sale TYPEWRITER 1958 ROYAL. Heavy condition. duly modei, excellent m.OO cash. lit 4-2211 1989 CORVETTE. 283. two top*, black. Call GR 2 - 6 7 0 0 . ___ 1954 OLDSMOBILE. EXCELLENT con­ dition. new tire* $445.00. GR 7-1861 after 5:30 weekdays, alt day Saturday and Sunday. 1963 MONZA SPYDER less than 5,000 miles for Equipped 12,200.00. Reaaon-car repossessed leas than four month* old. For informa­ tion call GL 36631, ext. 230. Credit Union office. Car located at HOO West 49th. 1963 IMPALA SUPER Sports. Four- speed 409. Low mileage, clean. Call HI 2-2094 or GR 6-6831 63 LAMB RETTA SCOOTER, one own- er. 2800 miles. CU Liens band Trans­ ceiver. Sonar Model-G. If Interested, call GR 3-6766. 1962 AUSTIN HEALEY 3000 M.K. II AM-FM. twin side view mirrors, seat belts, luggage I •ack. $2,300.00. GR 6- 9624. 1958 PORSCHE SUPER sunroof coupe. New paint. Becker radio. Seatbelts, headrest*, good condition, service rec­ ord. *1800.00. GL 3-3184. DAZOR FLOURESCFNT DESK light. Monroe electric calculator and Mon­ roe hand calculator. GR 3 98IM. IBM ELECTRIC, TYPEWRITER. Re­ cently overhauled and reconditioned. Jim Muellar, GR 8-7237 evenings. CHEAP TRANSPORTATION. 1995 tu­ dor Plymouth. RAH. very clean. Good condition. GR *-1553 or GL 3- 8613. Alterations HRS. NORWOOD'S UNWDUUT* Al- terationa shop moved to SOI West 30th. Men and women’s alterations. Tailoring. Packard's custom made shirts 84 50 up ALTERATIONS, DRESSMAKING. RE­ WEAVING on moth. dtsMrito boles: TIM. Special Services •WL* “ **• 66 Motorola port' RENT a f f S r S m S S o p S J S H C T B daUnU^terM H S*M sr. Johnnies TV personally FOUR BLOCKS CAMPUS. Expertly. t y p e d manuscripts— books, dissertations, report* theses (IBM Mrs, Bodour. GR $8113 T H E S E S . DISSERTATIONS. R E PORTS. IBM Seiectric, Symbols for engineering science mathematics, language accent*. Greek. Cali GR 3- 9617. ACCURATE TYPING WORK. Pick op and delivery. HI 4-1865. VIRGINIA CALHOUN LEGAL TYPING SERVICE Professional typing, all fields. Sym­ bols, Photo Copy. Notary We are now located at our mw addrest. NEW ADDRESS 1301 Edgewood GR *1636 MARTHA ANN SIVLEY M B A A complete professional typing serv­ ice tailored to th# needs of Univers­ ity students. Special keyboard equip­ ment for language, science, and engi­ neering theses and dissertation*. * Phons GR 2-3210 A GR 2-76TI 3013 GUADALUPE EXPERIENCED TYPING SER VICK reasonable, near Atlao- Accurate, dal*. HO 3-5813 THEBES. REPORTS. REASONABLE. Electrons tic Mrs. Brady. 2317 014- barn. GR 2-4715 THE MOONLIGHTERS—IBM, Mul- tillthing After 6:00 and weekends. Marguerite Costello CL 2-9130. 1906- A West 33rd ONAL TYPING LEGAL toto Lots Kinsey HI 4-2311. DELAFIELD TYPING pace. spelling correction. HI SOB Grammar, 2-6522. Help Wanted FURNITURE SALESMAN WANTED Experience absolutely essential. Part­ time work. Store hours—96 30 week­ days, 16 p.m. Sunday. *300.00 guarantor, but should make more Shepaid RO Y A L FURNITURE C O . SERVICE STATION SUPERVISOR C en * to mal* parson between ages to­ ll,' ’ ffigh school grainntd .arith eaten- Man serries * ♦teuton anm ia lits cs* quired. Rater? approximately *5,500. OO per yew* to etart, promotion pearly. Oar furnished. Apply to penoa atop. Miscellaneous DALLAS MORNING NEWS. Early morning carrier delivery to home or dormitory while In Austin. GR 6-5822. Lost end Found LOST AT MUNICIPAL Auditorium. Wednesday. Black cover for 35mm camera. Reward offered. CSR 2-1238. Typing “S. e a n u r Ew aur GR 7-0094. BARTENDER. PART-TIME, over 7L Se* Mr. Overton daily after 3:06 p.rn,, T ie Thvern. lath and Lamar.