Weather: Partly Cloudy Low 52, High 70 T h e D a il y T e x a n Student N e w sp a p e r at The University of Texas Page 5: Defensive Football Vol. 64 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 Ten Pages Today No. 65 Ex-Prof Charges Rights’ Infringed By JAMES VOWELL Texan Managing Editor letter A form er associate pro­ fessor of sociology charges in a to The Daily Texan th a t he left the Uni­ versity a fte r a severe repri­ mand which violated the spirit of academic freedom. Dr. Reece McGee was the author of a controversial a r ­ ticle in the Dec. 21, 1963, issue of The N ation m aga­ zine. He is now an associate sociology a t professor of M acalester College in St. Paul, Minn. DR. MCGEE SAID the re p ri­ m and by his departm ental ch a ir­ m an was so severe and so de­ m eaning th a t he could not a c ­ cept it with self-respect. He said he recognized, however, that the c ircum stances w ere a violation of the rules the sp irit but not of academ ic freedom. D r. McGee’s charges were di­ rected at D r. Leonard Broom, an Ashbel Smith professor of soci­ ology and departm ent chairm an. He is now on leave for a y ear of research at the National Aus­ tra lia n U niversity at C anberra. receiving Dr. McGee’s le tte r Oct. I, the Texan w rote Dr. Broom Oct. 3, seeking expla­ nation of the charges. No reply h as been received. A fter IN THE NATION STORY, “ Roots of Agony,” McGee says five T exas attitudes m ade m ore likely the assassination of P re si­ dent Kennedy in this state. D r. McGee sent his letter a fte r reading an article in the Sept. 27 Texan which quoted the acting chairm an of the sociology d e p a rt­ m ent as saying McGee had not quit in reg ard to pressures fol­ lowing the publication of the N a­ tion article. D r. Ivan Belknap, the acting chairm an, also said th at McGee had received a higher salary at M acalester, and that McGee p re­ ferred teaching in a private in­ stitution ra th e r than a state in­ stitution. Dr. Belknap refrained, in early October, from m aking a s ta te ­ m ent about McGee’s letter. He was not available for com m ent Thursday night. The body of M cGee's le tte r: “ I resigned from the U niver­ sity because I w as severely re p ­ rim anded by m y chairm an, P ro ­ fessor Broom, for having w ritten the controversial Nation article. I w as not fired and the g u aran ­ tees of m y tenure w ere em pha­ sized. “ The reprim and, however, was so severe, so personal, and in m any respects (in m y opinion! that I could not so dem eaning, avoid concluding it violated the spirit of academ ic freedom and could not, it with self-respect. “ Contributing therefore, accept to m y decision feel w ere reports th at certain adm ini­ stra to rs of the University w ere reacting the controversy by to im pugning m y c h a ra c ­ publicly te r, m otivations, and professional credentials. I do not know what m otivated Professor Broom’s ac ­ tion. I do not apologize for the Nation article, do not it needs apology, and, in the sam e circum stances of outrage and te rro r, would w rite it again.” MCGEE CONTINUES, “ M y c u rren t salary a t M acalester Col­ lege is only a little higher than it would have been had I stayed a t the U niversity and I did not receive an advance in rank as a consequence of the move. I do not recall ever having expressed a preference for teaching in a institution since I have private never done so and would have to had no experience on which I base such a preference, but m ay have speculated about it in conversation. “ It is apparent that the spirit of academ ic fredom is m ore pro­ foundly observed in m y present institution, a private location, than it was at the U niversity of Texas. I do not believe, however, that the circum stances loading to m y resignation from Texas could be proven to have violated the RULES of freedom th e re .” academ ic In Tile Nation, McGee wrote, “ Texas is still a harsh and vio­ lent land, in clim ate and in cul­ tu re not so fa r rem oved from the savage wilderness It was on­ ly 130 years ago when the e a r­ it aw ay ly “ T exans” w rested from the dominion of Mexico and the perhaps g reater authority of the Comanche. “ A HUNDRED YEARS ago the im m igrants wrote home th at Texas was hell on women and dogs. It still is. . . .” in their unique McGee said President Kennedy assassinated could have been anyw here but that he believed it could only happen in Texas be­ cause of five elem ents either pe­ culiar to the state at this tim e in­ or peculiar tensity here. These a re : . . . (I) the absolutist nature of local thought: the institutionaliza­ tion of personalized violence; (3) the proliferation of firearm s and the habit of carrying them ; (4) the political respectability of the radical R ight; and (5) the non­ existence, publicly, of a radical Left. (2) After the article was published flowed Dec. 21, 1963, criticism for a short while, then abated. A month later. Life m agazine ex ­ cerpted M cGee's statem ents on carrying firearm s. L I F E QUOTED McGEE as saying, “ About half the boys and perhaps a third of the girls have weapons with them at the Uni­ versity. N orm ally about 25 p e r cent of in m y the gun-owners to carrying pis­ classes adm it tols.” McGee said he was m isquoted and that he w rote th at 25 p er cent of the students adm itted to keeping, not carrying firearm s. The professor said he gathered Inform ation over several year* by questioning m em bers of his figures th at and classes, w ere “ rough guesses.” the Student's Condition Poor After Shooting A 21-year-old University coed is in critical condition at B rack­ enridge Hospital from a gunshot wound suffered Thursday after­ noon. At I a.m . F riday, her condi­ tion rem ained critical. The a rt student from Midland w as found about 3 p.m . slum ped in the closet of her bedroom in the private hom e in which she lived n e a r the University area. She is believed to have been alone at the tim e of the shooting. She underw ent im m ediate su r­ gery a t B rackenridge from the .32 caliber gunshot wound in the right side of her head. THE OWNER of the house the girl. The owner, an found told police she elderly woman, returned home about 2 p.m . and invited a student who lived next door over for lunch. After lunch she started house­ hold cleaning duties and heard a m oan from the closet. She open­ ed the closet door and found the young w om an’s body in a sitting position. The owner called the student from next door who called police. A woman student who lived in in the house an upstairs room next to the one where the shoot­ ing occurred told police she heard a loud noise about 1:45 p.m . She said she thought it w as a filing cabinet failing in the room next to hers. POLICE BELIEVE this noise to have been the shot. The shreds of a toy stuffed tig­ e r w ere scattered in the living and bedroom s of the house and a broken w rist watch and plaster paris doll w ere found in the bed­ room , according to the police re ­ port. Lf. B ert Gerding, crim inal in­ vestigation division, said a piece of plain white paper with ab­ stra c t poetry type scribblings w as found in the bedroom. The woman had recently be­ com e engaged. She is a m em ber of a sorority but is inactive and has been a form er dorm itory adviser. Her parents and a sister a re enroute to Austin. Faculty Discusses Frankl By JEAN EISING ER Texan Staff Writer Viktor F rankl, existential psy­ choanalyst and author of “ M an’s Search ’ for M eaning,'' wrote, “ Man is a being whose m ain con­ cern consists of fulfilling a m ean­ ing and actualizing a value.” to m em bers discussed and noon as a preface visit A panel of faculty and staff the concept its author T hursday a fte r­ to F rankl s the U niversity Sunday. Dr. D em etrios PapageorgLs, a s­ sistant professor of psychology, described F rankl as “ an exis­ who tentialist looks for m eaning as a m ajor force.” psychoanalyst a t m a n 's striving FRANKL RESEMBLES Freud, P apageorgis said, in acknowledg­ ing the psychopathic conditions in m an as a result of conflicts of values. “ He (F rankl) advises people to do w hat they fe a r,” the pro­ fessor said. “ F e a r of failure of­ ten leads to failure, just as the that a person will blush fe a r causes him to blush.” F ran k L. W right, executive se c re ta ry of the University “ Y ,” the said of F ra n k l’s view of natu re of m an, “ If you don't question a person’s concept of m an, there is often nothing else to question.” He said although the conditions described by F rankl while in a Nazi concentration cam p seem ed com pletely without freedom, they showed his concept of freedom. "T his is not freedom from con­ ditions,” W right said, “ but free­ dom to take a stand toward those conditions.” F R A N K L BELIEVES MAN m ust have a future, W right said, and is fond of a quotation from N ietzsche: “ He who has a Why to life can b e a r most any How.” “ For F rankl, this m eaning has to be very m uch a p a rt of ev­ eryday life. He believes the m an who sets out to find such m ean ­ ing will be fru stra te d ,” W right said. He said F ra n k l felt the three w ays to discover the m eaning of life w ere by doing a deed, by experiencing a value relationship such as love, and by suffering. DR. Vi ILLI AM (O DY WILSON, associate professor of education­ al psychology, discussed existen- tia' anxiety and the “ courage to b e ” with which Frankl and his companions w ere faced the concentration camp. in in things He said, “ People in the cam ps looked for their own lives that m ade them better off than others. A crum b of bread m ore or a beating less—such re l­ ative appreciation gave them the courage to be. to him “ THE TYPICAL REACTION of a person having no control over w hat happens is apathy—giving up.” Wilson said. “ This m ay be relevant in situa­ tions such as that of the Negro in M ississippi and of chronically poverty-stricken people.” The Rev. G erhard Linz, E pis­ copal chaplain, gave reasons why he felt Christians should be con­ cerned with the book w ritten by F rankl, a Jew . “ Modern Christian theologians aie using thoughts of existential scholars,” Linz said. “ The Idea of life's m eaning is unique to the individual.” Psychiatrist s Lecture To Parallel Book s Topic Dr. Viktor F rankl, A ustrian psychiatrist, will lecture at 7:30 p.m . Sunday in the Texas Union Main Ballroom. “ M an’s Search for M eaning,” F ran k l’s speech topic, is also the title of a book he wrote describ­ ing his experiences in a concen­ tration cam p. Frank] is professor of neurolo­ gy and psychiatry at the Univer­ sity of Vienna m edical school, head of the neurological d e p a rt­ m ent of Vienna’s Poliklinik Hos­ pital, and president of the Aus­ trian Medical Society of Psycho­ therapy. The lecture, co-sponsored by the T exas Union Speakers Com­ m ittee and the University Roil- gious Council, is open to the pub­ lic. Seven Men and Lone Girl Tapped for Law Chancellors left to right) John L. Murchison, Thomas L. Healey, Larry L. Schoenbrun, and Scherry A. Perkins. N am ed to society are, standing (left to right) W illiam R. Creasey, Larry O . Littleton, Stephen A . W akefield, W illiam Terry Bray and (sitting, —Texan Photo— Draddy Honor Society Taps Eight New Members who w'as a m em ber of Beta The­ ta P i social fraternity. He is an Associate E ditor of the Texas Law Review and am em ber of Phi D elta Phi. A Phi B eta K appa a t the Un­ iversity, Creasey, a new Chancel - lor-at L arge, is an Associate E d ­ itor of the Texas Review and a m em ber of Phi D elta Phi. Regents to Hold Meet in Waco The U niversity Board of R egents will hold w hat Dr. H arry Ransom , chancellor, term ed a ‘c h a t fest” in Waco Saturday. The m eeting is a closed round­ table discussion of m edical d e ­ velopm ent affairs, and considera­ tion of the agenda for the Dec. l l Austin m eeting. Ransom said not all the R e­ gents w ere expected to attend. He said th at w henever the R e ­ gents w ere assem bled a t an o- vent such m eetings usually took place. E ight students w ere tapped for m e m b e r s h i p in Chancellors Thursday. They are Thom as L. Healey, G rand C hancellor; L arry L. Schoenbrun, Vice-Chancellor; John L. Murchison, C lerk; Scher­ ry A. Perkins, K eeper of the Per- egrinus; William T erry Bray, Ste­ phen A. Vrakefield, L arry 0 . Lit­ tleton, and William R. Creasey, Chancellors-at-Large. The Chancellors, an honor so­ ciety unique to the School of Law, w as form ed in 1912. Since that tim e, only 650 m em bers have been elected. The cerem ony for initiating the new Chancellors is se c re t and is perform ed after m em bers of the society dressed in robes tap new Chancellors in their classroom s. to lim ited t h o s e ELECTION’ TO the chancellors is l a w students whose consistent scho­ larship, personality, and achieve­ m ent have shown diem most like­ ly to becom e a cred it to their profession. Healey, a native of Beeville, is a form er naval aviator. The new G rand Chancellor is an Associate 4,500 'Horns To See BU Tilt 4.500 A pproxim ately student tickets w ere sold for the Baylor gam e before sales ended Wed­ nesday, said Bob Rochs, assis­ ta n t business m an ag er of athle­ tics. He said 10.168 tickets were sold in Austin. F our hundred student tickets w ere returned to Baylor. Tickets for the TCU gam e will go on sale Monday m orning, he said. There a re 200 date tickets available for the gam e in Fort Worth. ★ EIGHT TICKETS REMAIN for the bus chartered by the Stud- dents' Association for the Baylor gam e. The bus will depart at 10:30 a.m . S aturday and return a t 7 p.m . the sam e day. The round-trip tickets, costing $2.25, m ay be purchased a t H ar­ wood T ravel Service, 2428 G uada­ lupe, GR8-9343. ★ THE BAYLOR STI DENT Con­ inform al gress will sponsor an reception in Waco Saturday from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m . University students, parents, and faculty m em bers are invited to attend after die Texas-Baylor gam e. E ditor of the Texas Law Review, a m em ber of Phi D elta Phi legal fraternity, and a m em ber of Phi K appa Phi honor society. The new Vice-Chancellor, Scho­ enbrun, is from Tyler. As an un­ derg rad u ate he w as a m em ber of Phi Sigma D elta, Silver Spurs, and F ria rs. Now a quizm aster, an A rticle E ditor for the Texas Law' Review, and a m em ber of Phi D elta Phi, Schoenbrun is the recipient of an O utstanding Mid­ law aw ard. MURCHISON, NEW CLERK, w as graduated with honors from the U niversity. He was the Texas Cowboys and D elta Tau Delta fraternity. Now Com m ent E ditor of the Texas Law Review’, he has served as an Associate Ju stice of the Student Court. in The new K eeper of the P e re ­ grines is only woman elected to Chancellors this sem ester. Miss Perkins was graduated with high­ est honors from E a st Texas State College. She is a quizm aster and an Associate E ditor of the Texas Law Review'. a B ray, new' Chancellor-at- large, is an Austin native who was graduated from M assachu­ setts Institute of Technology. A form er quizm aster, he is the re ­ cipient of the Sayre Foundation R esearch Award for 1964-65. A FORT WORTH NATIVE, W akefield w as graduated from the U niversity in 1962. President of Sigma Phi Epsilon social fra ­ undergraduate, ternity Wakefield, a new' Chancellor-at- L arge, is now a quizm aster. an as Littleton, another new Chanccl- is a D allas native lor-at-Large, University Plans JFK Memorial A m em orial service for the la te John F. Kennedy will be conducted by the University at 4 p.m. Nov. 22 on the Main Mall. The principal speaker will be announced la te r by Chan­ cellor H arry H. Ransom . Chimes played by Lee Koh­ lenberg will open and close the service, and poem s by R obert F ro st, Kennedy’s fa­ vorite poet, will be read. The Longhorn Singers also will be on the program . iji. S i - i .ii LBJ, H H H Confer By a Texan Staff Writer H ubert H um phrey’s visit to President Lyndon Jo h n ­ son’s ranch was spent conferring over the world situation and the new vice-president’s role. The President and H um phrey discussed the vice-presi­ dent’s chairm anship of the space council, and the economic condition of the United States, particularly the trade su r­ plus. A report of the executives’ conference was delivered bv Malcolm Kilduff, a press secretary, a t an early morning briefing. in­ The President called several cabinet members, cluding Secretary of Defense Robert M cNamara and Sec­ retary of State Dean Rusk. Ile also talked with newly elected Senators Robert Kennedy, New York; Joe Montoya, New Mexico; and Ross Bass, Tennessee. Johnson and Governor John Connally, visiting at the ranch, discussed federal-state relations. Connally is chair­ man of the Southern Association Governors Conference. Visitors are expected a t the ranch, but Kilduff said a schedule and names had not been outlined. The President has no immediate plans to leave, Kilduff said. The President and H um phrey talked with members of the Economic Advisory Council in W ashington by tele­ phone. Cambodia Defies US PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—CP)—Anti-American sen­ tim ent is running full tilt in this Southeast Asian country. I t appears only a m atter of time before the 33-man em­ bassy staff will be forced to leave. In anticipation of a violent anti-American dem onstra­ tion, the embassy recently sent 34 dependent wives and children to Bangkok, Thailand, as a precautionary meas­ ure. There is strong feeling th a t one more serious incident along the border w ith South Viet Nam would lead Cam­ bodia to break completely with the United States. The driving force behind anti-Americanism here is Cambodia’s chief of state, Prince Norodom Sihanouk. The prince, who is 42, lashes a t United States policy a t every opportunity. His rem arks are expanded upon by th e predom inantly pro-Communist press in this capital city. Sihanouk has declared th a t if another serious aggres­ sion occurs against the Cambodian border he will break relations with the United States, then recognize N orth Viet N am and the Viet Cong operating in South Viet Nam. He also promised retaliation. Mariner 3 Flight Fails CAPE KENNEDY, Fla.-—UP)—'The M ariner 3 space­ craft was rocketed Thursday tow ard Mars, but a combina­ tion of problems apparently ruined the United States’ first effort to probe the red planet. Tracking data was fuzzy, but it indicated th a t the sec­ ond stage of the Atlas-Agena D booster rocket shut down four seconds prem aturely when it reignited its engine a second time to shove M ariner 3 into space. The four-second deficiency m ight be enough to pre­ vent the spacecraft from streaking across 350 million miles of space in 8 1/!* m onths as intended. The craft was equipped with a cam era and scientific instrum ents to probe M artian secrets as it passed within 8,600 miles of the planet on the ta rg e t date of July 17. In addition, M ariner 3 failed to perform two critical functions: — Four solar panels designed to draw power from the sun did not fold as planned. W ithout the panels in position, the spacecraft batteries would die within a few days. —The craft did not align itself properly with the sun after it separated from the rocket, indicating a failure in the control system. W ithout proper orientation, the solar pan­ els cannot draw sun power and communications antennae are not pointed properly. Em ergency measures were taken to try to correct the apparent troubles. Barrientos Claims Presidency LAPAZ, Bolivia—tR—Air Force Gen. Rene B arrientos took over the presidency of Bolivia on T hursday night a fte r a bloody two-day uprising that overthrew the 12-year regim e of Victor Paz Estenssoro. B arrientos, vice-president under Paz, em erged as the apparent strong m an of the new governm ent a fte r brief political in-fighting th at initially produced a co-presidency. He told a cheering crowd from a balcony of the national palace th a t Gen. Alfredo Obando Candia, e a rlie r named as co-leader, “ has decided to co-operate in the re-establishm ent of transquility in the country.” The fast-shifting power play in the new regim e cam e after the arm y appeared to have gained firm control of the capital following a night of rioting. The Rejection The overwhelming win of President Lyndon Johnson indicates a definite rejection of Senator B arry Goldwater’s conservative philosophy. IT WAS NOT SO MI CH a rejection of the Republican P arty , as it was a rejection of Goldwaterism. Senator Cold­ w ater offered simple solutions to some of the most complex problems with which man has ever had to cope. These so­ lutions w ere what the people wanted to hear, but knew th a t lr* real life they were too easy to believe to place tru st in. The longer the campaign went on. the more evident it became th a t Senator Coldwater was not the type for the immensely powerful job of President. Senator Coldwater to have around. He is honest and sincere. He refuses to compromise his principles in the face of strong public opinion. interesting man is an Everybody likes a person who speaks of the individual's right to assert his own beliefs and personality. But a person who puts these things first instead of thinking and acting in the best interests of the nation and world is not the man for the office. THK AMERICAN* VOTERS shoved th eir realization of this at the polls Tuesday. If Lyndon Johnson had bee?! running against another Republican, he would probably not have won by such a landslide, and the GOP would have had more ground on which to rebuild its party. THIS SEVERE DEFEAT which was felt on local, state, and national levels, d e m a n ds that the GOP be firm ly re­ shaped so that it is not identified as a voice of the past. . The Casualty The candidacy of Senator B arry Coldwater never re­ ceived approval from Kenneth Keating of New York. DI RING THE K EPI B U C AN convention m any voices spoke against Coldwater. Dire predictions were made about the disasters which would* occur if he received the nom ina­ tion. Keating was one of the few who publicly held to this the the convention. Others quieted behind belief a fte r facade of p arty unity. SOME COULD INTERPRET K eating’s action as sm art politics. No doubt it was to some extent, since he is from a liberal state and to have supported Coldw ater would have been political suicide. AFTER IT YEARS in the House and six in the Senate, however, K eating compiled a respected liberal record, and was recognized as one of the most enlightened men to c a rn ' the conservative label. Idealistically we prefer to think th at Keating was put­ ting principle above politics. Political casualties a re acceptable when the bad guy loses, but they h u rt when the good ones do too. Problems of Automation B ark in the old days, universities used to arrange students’ class schedules through the wearisome process of doing it by hand. But in this new society, scheduling has been simplified—a com­ puter does it all. Ah. computers, nice, clean, quick computers. However, as has tween pointed out time after time, computers are —in the end—only human. The latest and perhaps most symbolic ex­ ample occurred this fall at the University of California at Berkeley. It seem** a few practical jokers got hold of an IBM key punch and initiated a process which led to som*» rather dubious people being enrolled in classes One student enrolled in a chem istry class, listed under **V” was Vote Yes on Proposition 15. In a Freshman English claus, one student was listed as “ English 1A is No Good.” Also thrown into various classes were a few obscenities Now, the Berkeley campus contains well over 20.000 students, and it’s a little hard to get to know that many people personally. Bu* somehow, within this mass of humanity, the student would appreciate a t least having the university know that hr s there—even if ifs only because of a punched card. This is no longer the case at Berkeley. An inquiring reporter for the student newspaper, the Daily Cali­ fornian, noticed that there was a Hyde Park listed as being enrolled in a sophomore French class. She asked the registrar’s office if any sue** person did exist. The office said yes, he was a freshman in arts and sciences. At least th at’s what they thought—they couldn't be sure. —COLORADO DAIEY Takes A Heap O ' Living Every so often a motion picture censorship rase comes up in court and proves all over again how futile film censorship is. Last month die first film obscenity trial in Georgia wound up with 9 of 12 jurors refusing to agr co that “ The Balcony” showed “a shameful and morbid interest in sex .” The film is from a play by Jean Gone*, and most people find it difficult to follow a t ail. But once again the crusaders for a uniform code of m orality have found that they can’t dogmatize to an intelligent citizenry. The zeal of these censorship addicts reminds one of the story of the lady who congratulated Noah Webster for not having any foul words in his dictionary’* “ M adam ,” he replied, “you’ve been looking for them . . .” -MINNESOTA DAILY ,-Firing line-, Parking Spaca Protest To the Editor: I am a disabled graduate stu­ dent who m ust rely solely on wheelchair and c a r for transpor­ tation to and from campus and mobility on campus. I ; I J the fact My only grievance against the University, a really fine institu­ tion, is the wide-spread use by obviously non-handicapped per- sons of spaces pouted for the ex- elusive use of disabled students. I cannot protest that these violators go scot-free be­ cause the present system of au- -| tomobile registration makes en­ forcement of parking regulations impossible. There is no sticker available from the Parking and Traffic Office by which cars of disabled students might be dis­ tinguished from those of the non- handicapped. I - This illogical situation could ea­ sily be corrected by the Universi­ ty's utilization of special disa- bled-student automobile stickers and or the assignment of spe­ cific parking spaces to specific automobiles. On October 19th, my car was posted with a m ajor parking vi­ olation ticket by one Officer Muinnink. I won't debate whe­ ther my violation (parking in a pedestrian crosswalk because all the disabled parking spaces were is more or less serious taken) than the violation of disabled parking space, but I do protest strongly the injustice of the si­ tuation. Therefore, until the University sees fit to put into operation a more reasonable system of park­ ing regulations. I refuse to pay for my violation to which I em compelled by the present system. A law without justice is not a law to be obeyed. CU: The Chancellor The Dean of Student lif e Chief Traffic and Security Offi­ cer (E ditor s Note: \n authority a t the Traffic and Security Di­ vision said Thursday that there Is no differentiation m ade on w hat kind of disabilities per­ m its a re issued on. Many p e r­ to sons who a re not confined wheel chairs a re disabled in other ways, and have perm its, the authority said ) Civil Ri ghts Bill Factor Any consideration of a “ repu­ diation of conservatism ” by We The People having been reflect­ ed by Lyndon's Landslide seems to me .slightly naive to say the least. Johnson went into the election with a block of 19 million votes due apparently the solitary fact that Sen. Goldwater voted against the 1964 Civil Rights Bill and allowed himself to be slant­ ed into a segregationist. to It is beyond a doubt true that he picked up a large number of votes for the sam e reason. But that 19 million, or even half m any? Johnson s governing authority has been rendered him by a coa­ lition of minorities (labor. Negro, true liberal, gullible). I don’t think the sum of these can be duped Into forming under one flag called Liberalism and claiming destruction of capable political opposition. Repudiation isn t the word; it’s identification. Conservatism isn t the pending m ajority yet, but neither is socialism or freedom dem ocrary. Conservation is just the greatest and most genuine minority. We don’t need the Democratic one to reconstruct the Republican paradox but tear in­ down stead. This .seems to me the only way to let an individual run for political office and retain some kind of effective representative. Goldw-ater made a fine a t­ tempt. Let’s not construe it false­ ly* Jimmy C hudklgh tiO.I Rio Grande - - - - - - - - - - - - - Guest Editorial- - - - - - - - - - - - - To the E ditor: -s- O ut of Battered Republican Ranks W ill Perhaps Come N ew Set of Leaders By JOHN BARBOUR WASHINGTON — (ZP) — In the wake of Son. B arry Goidwater’s stunning d e f e a t , the battered ran k s of Republicans yielded a new set of heroes today7. Each walked his own careful campaign path and each won a personal victory against g r e a t odds. From the GGP 1968. th eir ranks could come for standard bearer IN MICHIGAN, Gov. George Romney bucked the Democratic tide to win another term . He had accepted his p a rty ’s choice of Coldwater, but withheld endorse­ ment. In California, form er Hollywood movie star G e o r g e M u r p h y stepped lightly over form er presi­ dential press secretary P ierre Sal­ inger to win a US Senate seat. Murphy backed Coldwater but reserved the right to differ with him on such issues as civil rights, to be photo­ and once refused graphed with Coldwater. to paign, on a Coldwater visit Maryland, the Arizonan warmly endorsed Beall, and Beall recipro­ cated. Beall lost his Senate seat to the bid of Joseph T idings. BY CONTRAST, the Republi­ can fallen included some notable Coldwater supporters. In Illinois, Charles IL Percy, a young Eisenhower Republican and considered a shining light in the party, failed in a bid for the gov­ ernorship against incumbent Dem­ ocrat Otto K em er. Percy said he had made 83 for Goldwater’s candi­ speeches dacy. Even in Goldwater’s h o m e state, Arizona, Republican Rich­ ard Kleindienst, strong Coldw ater supporter and friend, failed in his bid for the governorship, beaten by Democrat Sam Goddard. In M aryland, incumbent Sen. J. Glenn Beall had put off Coldw ater endorsem ent—but late in the cam ­ IN TEXAS, Congressmen Bruce Alger and Ed Forem an, leading conservatives and Coldwater sup­ porters, failed for re-election be­ fore Democratic challenges. Even Republicans lukewarm to C oldw ater or opposed to him had to face the anti-Goldwater, pro- Johnson tide. In New York, veteran Sen. Ken­ neth B. Keating, who refused to support Coldwater, failed before the challenge of Robert F. Ken­ nedy, b ro ther of the late presi­ dent. In Pennsylvania, Republican stalw art Hugh Scott, a reluctant supporter of his p arty ’! ticket, who proclaimed “I ’m my own m an,” won a close re-election to the Sen­ ate. In Hawaii, Republican Sen. H ir­ am Fong kept Goldwater out of his campaign and won re-election. The inventory of fallen Repub­ licans grew longer in the congres­ sional side. ON THE OPPOSITE side of the ledger, in the Deep South where Goldwater won his only m ajor vic­ tories, his name worked a kind of magic th at made political history. In Alabama, five Dem ocrats fell to Republican challengers for seats in Congress. In eastern Georgia, another Democrat fell. There was still another Democratic upset— in Mississippi. In all but the Mis­ the Republicans sissippi victory, were strongly announced for Cold­ water. In the Senate, two strong Gold­ w ater supporters won — form er Arizona Gov. Paul Fannin and N ebraska’s incumbent Roman L. H ruska. One Teacher ■ Got ’ to a Student (Editor’s note: This is the in a th roe-part series second on Frederick Douglass Junior High in the Harlem section of New York City. It is the re­ sult of five months of visiting teachers, students, with parents, and principal. T ie first part ran in Thursday’s Texan.) its By AVERY GIEST Most of the teachers at F re­ Junior High derick Douglass School in Harlem have never heard of Richard Smith because he appears so normal. He tra ­ vels 23 blocks every day to school, attends classes quietly, does his w’ork and goes home as soon as school ends. ASK RICHARD’S eighth grade social studies teacher about him. teacher pauses a moment The and muses. “ Smith, oh yes, I can’t rem em ber exactly how he is doing. Let me look it up.” The teacher says Richard is an average student and explains. “ He knows his m aterial general­ ly but he's one of those who's not willing to participate in class. He just sits there." This year Richard Is the second most academically talent- in sd section In his school. Last year he was in a normal group, because he has normal reading, mathematics, and IQ score* for a Douglass boy. Next year Richard will pro­ bably drop back a few sections because of his mediocer perfor­ mance—he failed mathem atics for one thing. His fierce drive to succeed, stimulated by one so­ cial studies teacher, has ebbed in a sea of mediocer teachers and neighborhood and pressures. home His is a father cook, his mother, a part-tim e domestic. He has two younger brothers and a younger sister. He plays the clarinet in the school band and would the like High School of Music and Art. to attend At first, Richard did not like his seventh grade social studies teacher. “ He was too tough." he recalls. “ When we tried to get In trou­ ble, he'd m ake us stay in after school. He'd line us up in the back of the room and swat us with a paddle. His motto was ail for one and one for all.” But, then, later on, his feel­ ings changed, “ We became good friends,” he remem bers. Every- time I did my work, he would give me a compliment. He said If I ever got below 80, he would consider failing me. “HE W A S G I M ) I ) because he made us study even if it meant using the paddle. He wanted us to study and get ahead so we d be extra good in life, He want­ ed us to be perfect.” In to demand teachers have gotten contrast, Richard says. “ Other teachers want order and hard .study from their students it. but are scared Some in trouble with parents before for paddling and are afraid to touch the kids.” Richard emphasizes, that most Dou glass however, teachers seem teaching fairly well. to be One of the teachers he dislikes is Miss Waterweil. ‘ She just says ‘keep quiet, keep quiet, keep quiet.’ “ She never gets the class in order or does anything with u*. She doesn't know the class too well. She doesn't even know the names of all the class.” the boys in RICHARD I M I E S N O T parti­ cularly care whether he has a white or a Negro teacher. “They all try to get us to learn," hr says. “ Som e of the colored teachers I D E A N R I N D Y ' S Gotterdammerung An A ppeal From a Islew to the O ld W higs (N’ote: As a Republican, I have decided to spend two or three articles discovering what I am and what I ought to be in the wake of an electoral disaster. These are my opinions, not ne<'e*sarily those of my party.) I was 18 years old before I dis­ covered that God was not a Re­ publican. I still think he leans that way, though Democrats are irredeemably perhaps n o t so wicked as I once supposed. MY ORIGINS—Lutheran, p ro te s ­ tant, middle class, conservative, southern—have snared me in a web of delicate prejudice from which I shall probably never es­ cape, though m y entire life be spent propounding rationales ever finer and more subtle . . . all to justify what I sense and feel. My rationales seem at least as good as those of my oppon­ ents; yet this knowledge haunts me—that, considering my ances­ try and circum stance, it would have been as easy to predict my future course as to plot the tra ­ jectory’ of a well-aimed bullet. is Feeling fertilizer of the thought, and, to a greater or less­ er degree, we are all victims of emotional bias. Different nations and ages, I think, develop a spirit of their own, which, combined with phy­ sical and economic factors, gives them a certain inclination, a mood, a special sensitivity. No politician—indeed, no man —can escape the tem per of his time. This age has been moving in one direction, and the Repub­ lican Party, at least in this past election, has been moving in an­ other. NOW, CONSERVATISM—be it luke­ m oderate or reactionary, warm or strong, E astern or Western, financial or agrarian, elitist or equalitarian—is the life­ blood of our party. While Repub­ lican tories often say no to pro­ posals for change, Republican progressives sometimes say a modest yes, but usually with re ­ luctance. Liberals are fond of the word “revolutionize;” the progressive prefers “ modify;" the conserva­ tive approves of ' prudent cor­ rection.” But the Republican tem per has become fragmented. For a long time the party has not understood what it is. It has wallowed in am ­ biguity-unable to become more democratic than the Democrats, and incapable of defining a mod- em , vision. No political body should para­ lyze itself with dogma or stifle itself with rigid doctrine; but if it cannot create some m otivat­ ing force, some common soul with which to unite its different ele­ ments, then it will die. The events of thus November constitute not an election, but a political apocalypse in which the earth opened up and swallowed the Republican Party. A certain kind of conservatism was assassinated by the elector­ ate, and we who supported it must accept the consequences. THE AGE Is passing by; it car­ ries a different sort of philoso­ phical baggage. In a world mili­ tantly m aterialist, in which the traditional cultural and moral bonds grow’ ever weaker, a world that to atomize men, a world whose special attention is reserved the future rather than the past, a world dedicated to innovation, a world of m ass democracy, we have become a minority- tends for Times have changed, and w e have become those most ironic of all political creatures—conser­ vative rebels. are quite strict—which is good— but so are almost as many white teachers. But the Negro teachers know more about the problems of the students. Most whites don't know the truth.” the Douglass is a “ junior high where everybody plays around," Richard said. “This is because of neighborhood wherp everybody plays around. It is be­ cause of what the girls will be doing (prostitution), the spitting, the beating up people, the rob­ beries. The boys try to im itate this. “ The main problem of the kids their parents.” Richard ex­ is in plains. “ When trouble, the parents don’t give a hoot. So the kids don't c a r e either. the kids get “ Just a few are trying here for every hundred students. T ie whites try harder—they do hard­ er. They don't care how they look. The kids here look neat but they don’t know nothing.” RICHARD ALSO COMPLAINS about the history books. “ The books here don’t give you a good background on the Negro. They just barely say what we were doing for hundreds of years.” He has mixed feelings about school integration. “ It doesn't make any difference whether I go to an integrated or segregat­ ed school. I can learn as much in one place as another by work­ ing hard. T ie kids here just want to play around. They just to get away from home w’ant by g o i n g school. to an integrated He admits there are no advan­ tages to attending an all-Negro school. “ You w ont get around to know other people. When you will get a job, you will feel you won’t want to be with anyone but your owm race. according “ It's pretty nice here In H ar­ to Richard. lem ,” “They say Brooklyn is a nice place. But everything happens there. Now it is peaceful here. You can usually walk up and down the block without getting in trouble. You might find men fighting a lot but von won t get messed up yourself.” ABOUT HLS HOME life, Rich­ ard say’s, ‘I can function better at school than at home. My p ar­ time. ents yell at me all Whenever something happens at home, I get worried and don't do well in school, especially this year. I failed my final math test because of that.” the Is Since Richard the oldest child and his parents work, he must often watch his brothers and sisters. The result, “ I don't time for play. When I get no finish my homework is something at home that must be done.” there Once a teacher gave Richard a questionnaire about what hap­ pens at home Because of his foar, “ I put down false every­ true. There thing I knew was were questions like 'Do you have enough attention at home? ‘Do you hate your parents.’ ” " t k PWP AftMSod AiMfcH x m W!F£ I * \ I His s o n .............. - m s s n i p e r s sophisticated conservative L i t t l e Man on the Campus By Bibier T h e Da il y T e x a n Th* D *i*y Texan, a student new spaper et Th* University et Te.et, it p u blished deity except M e n d e r end Sa tu rd ay and in h o lid a y period*, Se p te m be r through M a y and m onthly Inc., Drawer D Uni- A u g u s t b y Tete* Stu den t Publications, v a n it y Station, Austin, Texas 78712. Se c o n d -e la ti p otta ge p a id at A ustin, Texas. N e w s con tribu tio n s wilt ba ac ce p te d by telephone { G R I-S 2 4 4 ) or at the e ditorial office, J L I 103 or at th * news In q u iries concerning delivery should la b o ra to ry , J . I. 102. ( G R b a m a d * in J .!. 107 and advertising, J.8. I i i 1-8227.} ASSOCIATED PRESS WIRE SERVICE Th* A sso ciate d Press is exclusively entitled to th* usa tor rep u blication el ell news dispatches credited to it or not item s of otherwise credited spontaneous origin p u blished herein. Sigh * I of publication of a 1* other matter herein also reserved. in this new spaper, end local O n e S e m i t e r < f * 11 o r • p n n g ) TW n h « ' m a t t e r * ( ( a l l a n d s p r i n g ; D eliv ered by carrier ( w i t h i n A u s t i n a r e a (rum 13th t o 88 th a n d J e f f e r s o n to I n t e r r e p i o n a J H i g h w a y D e l i v e r e d bv m a il w i t h i n T r a v i s C o u n t y D e l i v e r e d b v m a i l o u t s i d e T r a v i s C o u n t y b u t w i t h i n I.'. 8 . l l . S t 4 TS 8 M I F TS see * TS PERMANENT STAFF C H A R M A Y N E M A R S H EDITOR M A N A G I N G EDITOR . . . . . . . JAMES VOWELL N E W S EDITOR .................... DOTTIE LILLARD SPORTS E D IT O R ....................... PAUL BURKA A M U S E M E N T S E D IT O R ............ J IM SE Y M O U R EDITO RIAL PAG E EDITOR: M A R Y A L IC E EVA N S FEATURE E D IT O R ...................... G A Y N A G L E T h e opin ion* ax pretend In the editorial r o l u m n are those of the ed itor. All ed itorial* u n its * s ig n ed are w r i t ­ ten by the editor. Any op in io ns exp r e s se d in T h e Tinily T e x a n ere not n eces sa rily th o s e of The U n iv ers ity o f T e x as a d m i n i ­ stratio n or Board of R e g e n t s STAFF f o r THIS ISSUE I -,ue News E d it o r ................... Doff ie L • Ile* r Hf Make-Up E d ito r ............................ Jerry Greer .................. Copy Editor Carolyn Nichols Wire E d ito r Paul Burka Night Sports Editor Night Amusemints Editor . . . . M ary Jan® Gorham Editorial Assistant .................... Sue Jankovsky Copyreaders ............. Pat Saenz, Gerry Stoller, William Towrey Jr. ......... Annie Brown F r i d a y , N e v a m h e r 4 , 1 9 6 4 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N P a g e 2 UT Credit Union Hits New High Over $2 Million In Assot* Reported The University Federal Credit Union located In W a g e n e r Hall 16, has more than $2 million in as­ sets, according to the financial re ­ port for the period ending Oct. 31. 1 Mrs. Mollie Kilgore, m anager 'an d assistant treasurer, m ade the announcement Thursday. The cre­ dit Union is a savings and loan bank “ with a heart,” she said. assets in at $2,017,458.05. Membership the credit union is 3.858. The faculty and staff are eligible for m em ber­ ship. report listed The The credit union has grown ra ­ pidly in the last few years, Mrs. Kilgore said. It was founded in 1936 and reached assets of $1 mil­ lion in 1961. UFCA shares all profits with members. The savings rate of in­ terest for the last period was 5 per cent, Mrs. Kilgore noted. Dr. E. P. Conkle, professor of dram a, pushed the assets over the $2 million m ark with a deposit on Oct. 30. UT Ranks High In Federal Bids According With $15.9 million, the Universi­ ty has moved into the front rank of I institutions working with federal agencies and research contracts. to a recent report, j “The Federal Government and | Higher Education,” the University is in seventeenth place among the IOO colleges and universities with major shares of government con­ tracts. Johns Hopkins is the only other the South or in Southwest ranking in the top 20. Institute Further evidence of the Univer­ sity’s rising stature Is contained in a report released by Chancellor H arry Ransom. The report reveals that ainee last year the number of individual federal contracts and grants at the Main University in Austin has risen from 310 to 360. The number of faculty members in federal reseach pro­ engaged grams has increased from 275 to 311. There are 2.136 persons employ­ ed as a result of federal research contracts. Vote H e a r in g Set Friday A preliminary hearing by Hie Election Commission to deter­ mine what rharges have been made against Le#* Hartman, Stu­ dent Assembly candidate, will be held at 5 p.m. Friday In Texas Union 344. Hartman has been accused of violating the election code by ^ginning his campaign more than a week before elections. A Singer for C o f f e e H o u s e and W h ite House • • • C arol G eorge, junior Plan ll major, is one of UT s folksingers, Texan P hoto Gossett University Folksinger Tapes LBJ Program By Linda Reneaa Assistant Feature Editor i Pryor, she says, that she got the job doing background music for Tall, dark-haired Carol George the Johnson TV show. The show sang her way to the LBJ ranch in was taped in New \o rk last week. „ the background October and did CAROL COMES from a singing music for the TV program—“LBJ, family. Her grandmother was a contralto and her parents sang in An Unposed Profile.” operettas. Her 15-year-old sister j(ngs )n „ roffoe house ln __ . . T h . JOywr-old f o l k s i e r ta junior Plan IT m ajor at the Uni­ long, straight versity. With her Before coming to the University, Mack hair, she gftng blues and popular songs like Joan B ael or Carolyn Hester but Carol {n an m Paso coffeehouse. She doe* not like to be compared to ^ ^ featured soloist in the A other singers, E l Paso. looks . ^ "I try not to tting anyone e l * * has bnPn q u i r e d In threo South- style or songs, Carol said. She wpst: p 0jjj Festivals in her home- accomplishes individuality' through b„ choir, of m ater.,, and her own ^ tmvn of E1 Pas0. ^ ^ ^ A biographical sketch of Presi- in an El Paso coffeehouse. She dent Lyndon Johnson and the story Cap- of his heritage is the subject of {X,lla Chlor at the University and thf> National Educational Televis- ^ An L 1 Profile” to be show* again at 6 ^ p)ay p.m. Friday on HD RN-TV, channel for which she does not have time. She plans to go to New York next summer and says she will prob­ ably cut an album then. Johnson Profile Subject of Film arrangem ent a song guitar "to overcome my ta- IN A m i * . Carol sing* at the hibltiona when staging by myself Ichthua Coffeehouse. The Id and does many Spanish songs. She Is ^ had her own show at the Delta before it closed. The singer credits plan II program will allow. Cantua Pryor with getting her m any jobs, including singing at the LBJ ranch. taking as much Spanish as S INGINO DOESN’T bv Mort silversteln at of S25yK)0. the film will last , * .ri„ entitled "At Issue." This series has concentrated on dif- I N T E R- ferent areas of life such as police ^ „ part the FERR with her studies—she main- power and urban housing, The music concentrates on songs tains a 2.0 or better grade point average, but says she has to bud- of the land and most of the back- |n one song are the lyrics get her time extrem ely closely. Only Sha met Pryor last year and he took an Interest in her singing career. It was indirectly through Carol has had offers to make actually sung, President Johnson has not yet record albums, but has them down because they involve seen the film that will be broadcast personal appearances and publicity nationally. turned WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER ll is the UST DAY (or FRATERNITIES to select their proofs for the 1965 Cactus 4 I 4 i 4 i How to sell yourself into a good job Send for free booklet Maurice Warnock of Armstrong C ork, started as a salesman after college graduation and sold his way to the top. During the past five years, 45% of the men chosen as chief exec­ utive officers for companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange have come up from prior success­ ful experience as territorial sales­ men. Here a r e a few o f t h e t h o u s a n d s o f p r e s i d e n t s sa h o s t a r t e d t h e i r c are ers as s a l e s m e n : Ray Fppert, President Burroughs Corporation JLeskis Gruber, President P, I.oriltard Company Frank R. Armour, Jr., Pres. Ii. J. Heinz < ompany Roy J . Sund, President American Can Company Courtland S. Gross, Pres. Lockheed Aircraft Corporation J. Ward Keener, President B. F. G oodrich Company A new booklet, published bv a n o n p r o f i t educational founda­ tion, fells how the chief executive officers of many largecorporations got their start. Regular price 25^. Sent free to college students. Just send this ad with your name and address and the fact- filled, 24-page booklet, “Oppor­ tunities in Selling,"will be mailed to you without cost or obligation. Address; Council on Opportuni­ ties, 550 fifth Avenue, New York Lf-11-2 17, N .Y a Business Report Unfair By SHEILA STEWART Dr. John A. White, Dean of the College of Business Administra­ tion, stated Thursday that the re­ cent report criticizing the business schools of America made by the j Committee for Economic Develop­ ment is unfair judgment because of the generalities made in the re­ port. He feels that analysis of work in any college is worthwhile b u t; the CED report should have done independent research. “The GED | report reflects the old studies of the Gordon-Pierson report made in the late 1950’s through the Ford and Carnegie research foundations and does not take into considera­ tion that many educational chang es have taken place since then,” j Dr. White said. T H I S COMMITTEE REPORT ended a two-year study by a 24- man subcommittee of the economic research organization. The report criticizes the fact that although one out of five men In college today are enrolled in busi­ ness administration they are not getting the proper liberal arts edu­ cation to prepare them for 200,000 top managem ent positions. The committee urged the na­ tion’s 600 colleges and universities that offer general business pro­ gram s to evaluate, overhaul, and update the various courses. In the report thp committee cited six criti­ cisms of business schools that were raised in the late 1950's that still remain to be fully overcome by most schools. that says DR. C, T, ( LARK. associate pro­ fessor of business statistics, how­ large business ever, firms and corporations do not hire Arts and .Sciences graduates hut people with a Business Adminis­ tration background and degree. The six criticisms of business schools made were that academic standards were too low, business schools attracted too few of the the curriculum re ­ top students, quired too many specialized cours­ es. the methods of teaching weren’t well conceived, the quality of the faculty was too low, and research was weak. DR. WHITE, however, *ays that the University started two years before the Gordon-Pierson report was issued in the late 1950's to overhaul completely the curricu­ lum of the College of Business Ad­ ministration. “ We’re not. ashamed of what we have done in the past,” Dr. White says. In 1960, a survey was taken on the 50th anniversary of the busi­ ness school’s existence, and it showed that 40.6 per cent of the past graduates were in leadership positions in business. !';y y r',,(y"“T T ' 'W “The development of management is essential to our goal of great growth” At th« 19S4 stockholders’ m eeting, Arjay Miller, President of Ford Motor Company, em phasized tho Com pany's far-sighted recruitment program and IU accen t on daveloplng managem ent talent: “ One aspect of our planning Is crucial to the success of everything else we do. It engages the best thoughts and efforts of our whole management team, from top to bottom, throughout the world. I am speaking of the development of management Tho Immediate future of our Company depends heavily upon the abdtooe of the people who are now key members of our management team. “In the longer run, our future depends on what we are doing at the present time to attract and develop the people who will be making the major decisions 10 to 20 years from now. We are developing management competence In depth In order to attack th* problems that will confront a company of great grow th-and great growth (both In profits and sales) is exactly the goal we have established for Ford Motor Company. "We are continuing to emphasize recruiting. Last spring, 180 of oaf management people devoted part of their time to recruiting outstanding graduates from colleges and universities throughout the U.S. Last year, these efforts resulted in our hiring over 1,000 graduates, 220 more than the year before. "W e are seeking and we are finding young men—and young womans too—with brains and backbone—people who have the ability and the desire to make room tor themselves at the top. We give our ^ trainees challenging assignm ents with as much responsibility as they can carry. We promote them as fast as they are ready. Thoso who are interested In easy security soon drop o u t Those who have what we want stay with us, and move up quickly to Increased r e s p o n s i b i l i t y and the pay that goes with It 3 hanks t o the quality of the people we are recruiting and developing, I ara firmly convinced that our outlook Is most promising. 407 W. 23rd St. Koen Photography A* qual opportunity mptoyft] M O T O R C O M P A N Y Un kmencan Road, Dearborn, Mich ga* I Ilk A A , Friday, November A, 1964 THE D A ILY TEXAN A P191 Si Pitcher and Catchers for TCU Wogs . quarterback P. D. Shabay of Graham and and* Steve Jamail and G ordon Nee*. Yearlings End Home Schedule helped eliminate H arkins’ team in the sem i-finals, 7-6, and then led G arland to the AAAA sta te title. WEAVER WON tho rem atch, too, as ho broke for 80 yards and a touchdown in the fourth quar­ ter to defeat the Shorthorns, 7-3. SMU school is another SWC whose freshman team has hut one loss, as the Ponies bowed to A rkansas. in The TCU game will be the seventeenth the UT-TCtJ freshm an rivalry, which began TT. Texas ha* an 11-5-1 lead, and had won five .................... losing 10-7 last roar. ’ T HE L O N G H O R N F L Y I N G CLUB OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS CONGRATULATES • For Soloing: Curio* Av a ! 0 -2 9 For Com pleting the Private Pilot * License: Roderick L M arq u e ** f . Hit! B a rb ara McKee**** Jo b * 10-20 10-22 10-21 UT— Bear Games Are W ild Affairs If precedent Is any guide, S atu rd ay ’s UT-Baylor game will be a wild one. T here have been only five shutouts in 54 meetings be­ tween the two schools. Eleven of the last 16 games between the two team s have been decided by fo u rth -q u arter scores, and some of the others could have been reversed with last period touchdowns. s p a*— H . — ^ ■ n b N 'fiT L S p r e i * « L j Ti*# step# for y*«**f m e* . L S W IN O IN ’ S W E A T E R S SPECTATOR . . . Free swinging action cardigan with modified bell sleeves and button side vents. Handsom e colors of Gold, Moss, N atural, and Light Blue, knit of links stitch Wool $16.95 IOO fc AWARD . . . Cable panels knit into this winning cardigan th a t has special details on cuffs and bottom. New shades of Camel, Red, Moss Wool and M ohair $18.95 Verne Bfomqurst 617 C ongress H arley Clark Ton of the last 12 gam es between the Longhorns and Bears have been decided by a touchdown or the underdogs have less. And played prominent this roles series, which has three times seen Baylor knock Texas out of SWC titles with 7-7 ties. in Texas has THE LATEST of these cam e In just 1957, when Darrell Royal missed a co-championship in his first year at the University. Bay­ lor has paid dearly, however, as the Bears have yet to heat Royal. Some desperately aching losses have come in the succeeding years, particularly 1960. when the Bears lost a shot at a co-championship by losing 12-7 to underdog Texas, and 1963. when Baylor could have had it all to themselves. times spoiled four perfect conference records of Bay­ lor, with perhaps the most drama­ tic occasion being 1963, when Bay­ lor was unbeaten and unbeatable, third in the nation; 21-20 wras the final, and the B ears never re­ covered. | THOSE WERE the truly wild years the riv alry —Texas had the y e a r before—but won 35-33 things have calm ed down consider­ ably. D efense was the key to last y e a r’s 7-0 victory, as T exas ac­ the seemingly-impofi- co m p lish ed sible by shutting out Don Trull. in P erhaps tire biggest upset of all cam e in 1941, when hapless Baylor met w hat m ay have been the greatest of all Texas team s, and sprung a 7-7 upset tie against the i N um ber One team in the nation, a team which had been featured in a Life M agazine cover story only a week before. MORE THAN 40.000 a re expect­ ed to watch the offensive duel in I 50,000-seat Baylor Stadium , leads the all-tim e series j Texas ; 38-11-4, and to extend is favored I its lead. But It will have to stop B aylor's pro-type offense to do so. I T erry Southall and Roger Mike ! M arshall will be throwing to l a w ­ rence Elkins, but T exas will have : veteran defenders Tony King and I Joe Dixon, plus soph safety G ary linebackers i Moore and returning Tom m y Nobis and T im m y Doon* invasion, ; to guard against a e ria l The Texas Yearlings close out their brief 1964 home schedule Friday afternoon against TCU in a 2 p.m. game at Memorial Stadium. Both teams have 2-1 rec­ ords, but the Texas fresh­ men will rate a slight favor­ ite’s role against the Wogs. Texas has a 10-7 victory- over Baylor and a 29-0 shutout against Rice on the win side balanced against a 7-3 upset by SM I’, while TCI/ has defeated North Texas S t a t e and Texas loss A&M. Tile sole TCU was to Baylor, 13-6. Not since 1940 has the fresh­ man defense been so stingy for the Shorthorns. In that season, the seven points In their first three games; this season the opposition has be<>n able to collect but 13. frosh yielded only Versatile Greg Lott will at tempt to regain the form he exhi­ bited against Rice s Owlets two weeks ago, when he rushed for 176 yards. Lott has proved to be the best Texas offensive weapon, and ap pears in every statistical category for the Yearlings. three of THE LUBBOCK tailback has averaged almost nine yards per try on the ground with 25 car­ ries for 222 yards. He has punt­ ed once for 59 yards, has scor­ the five Yearling ed touchdowns, has hit two passes In three tries, has caught one pass for 14 yards and a touch­ down, and has done Just about everything that could be expect­ ed of someone who started out the year as a wingback and de fensive halfback. Pat Harkins will play quarter­ back once again for the Yearl­ ings, w-ho will be without one of their top offensive threats onep again. Linus Baer, the outstand­ ing back from San Antonio Lee underwent a knee operation last week and is out for the season. All-stater Danny Bigbie from New London is also out for the year. Harkins, himself an aH-ftarter from Amarillo, met an old school­ boy rival last week in Dallas in Garland’s fullback all-state Ralph Weaver. The big fullback Everybody Goes To G A R LA N D 'S Hi-Performance Engineering THE PIT STOP Foreign C a r Service A nut!# MG I.e t ua A ston M arten t'ohra Ja g u a r F errari M anarati A l t * R o m e * T r iu m p h C ee per Datsun A C. ID into! 19th & G u ad a lu p e (Behind The Pizza Hut) Irn self-iisKiirance . . . . . . at die p arti’, at the game in famous Blazer M o d e l R-P s in finest all woo! flanne l, o f f e r s a u t h e n t i c n a tu ra l s h o u ld e r styling, l a p p e d scams, h o o k e d cent er ven t a n d a distinctive choice o f colors. Available in r e g u ­ lars, shorts, lo ngs a n d e x tr a 39.95 longs. navy blue orange maroon R-P’s U T Seal Bu tto ns g o perfectly with a blazer. A sk for them when you g e t yours. wmSmBrnmUmm rn 6, eynolds p e n lan d EIG H T H & CO NG RESS A p ts . 2202, 2204 Enfield Rd. Students! W e Love You! fu r p ro v in g 'IhanW y o n (hr M id n ig h t e r to been one o f y o u M ld n lg b te re . that la yo u r fav o rite pl ax* th a t we have fu ll and could not m a k e every­ live. W e are s o rry to na Now! W e Have a Vacancy Alae- Get on th e w a itin g Hat now fur I th e I('eh. t a m . Friday, November 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 These are big stripes. Bold stripes. The kind you'll never get lost wit?! In a crowd. This is Arrow Cum Laude: a bold new breed of sport shirt that asserts itself, but always in good taste. Has long swooping collar points and a tapered body line to match. Made to your exact sleeve length, like a d ress shirt. In red and gray, or red and black com binations. Pure, soft, “Sanforized” labeled cotton. AH for a timid price of -ARROW- $ 5 .0 0 . A bold new breed of shirt for a bold new breed of guy. D i g , b o l e ;A R R O W - D efinitely not for a shrinking v io le t . , . but made especially for your kind of a guy. ARROW Cum Laude in bold, big stripes is the sport shirt that fits like a d re ss shirt. W e know you’ll like our selection of color com binations in red and gray or red and black —but choose your own bold combina­ tions from our com plete color range. *5.00 Secret of Success: Texas Defensive Concepts The roar Is never as loud, and the can- non doesn't boom , but w hen the opposi­ tion quarterback goes face dow n Into the w elcom ing green, Texas is w inning foot­ ball gam es. The excitement isn't as great, and the glory isn't the same; the offense has the all-Americans, but the defense has the winners. A football in the air is a w eapon regardless of ifs origin: a punt may be as valuable as a pass. on defense than on offense. With the bell you can score by running, passing, or kicking. Without it you can score by recov­ ering a fumble, by blocking a punt, by running back a kick, by intercepting a pass, or by a safety." Defensive football Is a ga m e of desire, of pursuit, of speed. It requires getting to the ball carrier, finding him , fighting him, and finishing him . It requires teamwork a nd individual effort, agility and pow er, know ledge and instinct. A famous football coach once re­ Touchdowns lead to points. But tackles marked, “There are more w ays of scoring lead to touchdowns. Longhorn Defensemen Key on Ground Games r n m m m m m es lee IM**! ^ In Theory . . . rn-' Sketch by VoweU The basic 6-2-2-1 Texas defense shuffles offensive positions und, and winds up with tackles playing guard, gu ards play* ing linebacker, and quarterbacks on the bench. D otted line* are tones of pass defense responsibility. aro let that man get behind you.- If he goes all the way down the field, then the deep men follow him. Although this type of pass defense provides heavy cov­ erage against the long bomb—only one touchdown pass has been completed against Texas this year—it does leave the defense vulnerable to the short pass. In fact, the better than 50 per cent passing average passed up by Texas’ op­ ponents consists mainly of short passes. YET THE ENDS and the linebackers do provide effec­ tive pass defense against the short pass. For example, the four pass interceptions in the SMU game were all by ends or linebackers. There are four zones other than those which concern the deep men. Each linebacker is in a zone which overlaps the zones including the defensive ends. Primarily the linebackers cover the hook or look-in pass, when the receiver goes out and then cuts in over the center. The ends cover more to the sidelines, protecting against the short down-and-out patterns, and the pass into the flat. Throughout a football game the defense will show a variety of formations and reactions to any given play. BI T THE DEFENSIVE ACTION is consistently pur­ suit and tackle. There are any number of ways which this can be accomplished. But the purpose is to stop the man with the ball. Thus far this year Texas has done that with such ef­ fectiveness that they are tops in the SWC In defense and ranked among the nation’s top ten. And it is because of the performance of the defense that Texas has a 6-1 record. The offense has been far from magnificent and were it not for the defense, well, who know**. By RICHARD LYNCH Assistant Sports Editor An integral part of any winning football team ’s phi­ losophy is defense. Texas Is no exception to this rule. The keystone to Texas’ winning ways this season has been the tremendous play of its defense. Basically Texas lines up in a 6-2-2-1 formation. Varia­ tions of this formation depend on the offensive alignment of the other team, the field positions of the teams, or spec­ ulation by the bench as to what play the offense might run next. TWO FORMS OF DEFENSE develop from subdividing overall defense. These are pass defense and running, or rushing defense. Being in a conference which stresses rushing offense, it is only natural that Texas should stress rushing defense. By lining up in the very basic 6-2-2-1 or such varia­ tions as overshifting one notch to the left if the offense has lined up in a wing slot with a flanker to the left, Texas keys strongly on the running play. THE TWO DEFENSIVE TACKLES, the strong side and the wide side tackles in Darrell Royal's flip-flop of­ fense, line up on either side of the offensive center, giving Texas tw’o strong, solid men to stop the power-up-the- middle plays. Opposite the offensive ends, the defensive guards line up. These are the weak side guard and center on offense. This provides Texas with lighter, more agile players who can go with the play and move outside to help contain the powder sweeps and quarterback options. The weak and strong side ends primarily provide pro­ tection against outside plays and also play a key part in defensing against the short pass. THE LINEBACKERS are exactly what their name indicates: they back up the line. When a play goes up the middle, the move in to help stop the ball carrier. When it goes outside, they move outside. When a man runs a pass pattern toto their territory, they cover him. The linebacking positions, possibly the most demanding on any football team, are held down by the offensive fullback and the strong side guard. The two defensive halfbacks and safety, the offensive tailback, wingback and quarterback, are the three main characters in Texas’ pass play defense. THE PIHLOSOPHY OF TEXAS coaches on pass de­ fense, says line coach Charlie Shira is, “Give them the short one. But protect against the long bomb.” This is exactly the way Texas has been playing, and even playing Baylor, the conference leader in passing, has not altered this at all. The pass defense area Is essentially divided into three basic zones. A line is drawn from one halfback across the field, and then two lines are drawn, dividing the first line Into thirds. THE SAFETY is responsible for covering all persons who come into the middle zone. Tho two halfbacks cover the remaining two zones. Texas coaches instruct the defensive deep men, “Don’t A Texas Tech ball carrier Is crunched In 1963 gam e by pursuing Longhorns as assistance com es from left flank. Seven Longhorns are in the vicinity of the ball carrier, who is being dum ped for a loss. . . . In Practice -Ttxan Photo— Draddy Necessity of Depth: Injury Cycle Strikes Assorted Ailments Keep Players Sidelined _ ^ . „ . . By BILL HALSTEAD Associate Sports Editor _ Texas’ football team, usually Invincible both on the field and in injury departm ent, has run into a snag this year. the The snag is minor In the won- lost column, but the injury side of the ledger looks like the UT phone directory’. their several IO IMPORTANT AT LEAST Longhorns and lesser lights have visited the domain this trainer Frank Medina of fall, and limps, sprains, and other wounds have caused a major re-shuffling of lineups. this Medina, an old hand at sort of thing, doesn t worry too much about the sudden rash of ailm ents that have befallen a nor­ mally healthy bunch of athletes. “ It has been my experience that these things run in cycles,” said the short, stocky veteran of 33 years of trainer work. “ If you take a look at the newspapers, you will see that the pro teams in­ have had a run on minor juries. many college teams have, and It s just one of those things that happen from time to time.” IS THERE a major reason for the unusual number of injuriesT “ No, I don’t think so,” replied Medina. techniques have not changed—if anything, they have improved.” “Coaching Some of the player* currently marching in the bandage bri­ gade include wingback Phil Har­ ris, defensive end Knox Nun- nally, linebacker Timmy Doerr. quarterback Jim Hudson, end Sandy Sands, tailback Jim Helms, and tackles John Elliott and Bi­ ron Talbert. This Is just a partial list of those who have been hampered at one time or another during the year, but Medina believes the reason so much they are mention has been made of Hie injury situation at Texas. *THE THING I S ” Medina noted, “so many of the boys are key players. That is the reason we notice their injuries m ore.” in “This fall. we had several out two-a-day drills— quickly, Hudson, George Sauer, d e n Un­ derwood, Dan Mauldin—boom, boom. Just like th a t “ Actually, so many at once was a reason to be concerned, but in this business, you can't push the panic-button—you ex­ pect a few problems each year.” WHAT CAUSED the troubles? Pulled pre-sea- muscles son seemed to be the foremost ail­ ment, which gave rise the idea that maybe those hurt were not in shape. to Medina saw things In a differ­ ent light. “ I think, judging from the way the injuries occurred, it wasn't being out of shape—it too hard was actually working in many cases. “A couple of the injuries hap­ pened when the boys were work­ ing out on their own at home and just carried over into drills here," MEDINA ADDED, “We even had one who Injured a knee in ordinary warmup drills— drills which are designed to eliminate knee injuries, I think it was a ease of the boys not realizing their own strength, as the say­ ing goes. They just worked too hard too soon.” Essential for W inning Defense The most prominent Injuries have been the most re cen t-h ip pointers, to Harris and Talbert, and knee Injuries to Nunnally and Doerr. Talbert w’as able to play in the SMU game one week after his wound against Rice, and Nunnal­ ly has been able to go off and on while wrapped tightly in tape, Harris, on the other hand, may and may not see action against Baylor, two weeks after his in­ jury and Doerr is just now ready for duty after laying out three Saturdays. “Well, WHY TUE DIFFERENCE In recovery periods? the main thing is the degree of pain (Talbert) was involved. Biron able to play a week after he got his hip pointer. Phil (H am s) just couldn't do anything for a while after his.” The term “hippomter” has caused much puzzlement a mom: scribes alike. Most fans and know is some sort of it that bruise, but few know more than that. One of is Medi­ na, an expert rn his field. “ It is really what we call a contusion,” he explained “ It is a deep bruise, and it is usually 24-36 hours be­ fore we can began to treat it.” f e w those - ONE CONFUSING 1*01 NI just how such a bruise can be so painful. Medina cleared that area up, too. “ It takes a tremen­ dous blow to cause such pain. Often, the player can be hurt Just coughing or taking a deep breath after getting a pointer. Treatm ent—rapid treatm ent— is the next step after such a mis­ hap occurs. Medina re aes on the team physician for consultation, then begins work following the doctor's assessment of in­ jury. the “ We wait those 24-36 hours, de­ pending on the seventy,” Medi­ na *aid “Then we start sui “Then we start such na said treatments as the whirlpool bath, the diathermy machine, a little ultra sound treatment, and usual­ ly some hot packs and pressure bandages.” Rnoe injuries, often mysterious and hard to cure, offer the vet­ eran UT trainer his biggest chal­ lenge. “We want to get the boy back on the field as quickly as we can, but not before he is in top shape. ’ And here Medina paused to pay tribute to the coaching staff. “I in can never be praise of the coaches—they do not and will not play a boy who is not able-bodied.” too generous RI T BACK to the knee Injuries “ When they’re able, we start them on concentrated walking exercise. They may walk with weights attached to their legs, do isometric exercises, as the in­ jury Indicates. “ The old axiom You have to crawl before you can walk, and walk before you can run applies in these cases. We try to bring the boy along slowly to prevent recurrence of the injury. “ And to this end,” Medina add­ ed. “ the athletes are very good about treatment. They wmrk hard on the exercise s.nce they are eager to get back and play.” MEDINA VIEWS this season s crop of injured players more as a nuisance than as a concrete problem, “Mainly, it has meant a ha of shuffling to fill gaps for a game or it really hurts more when you re on top. two. Of course, “ Percentage-wise, though, may­ be it w as bound to catch up with u s .” But with modern medicine and Frank Medina and his staff a- round. injuries have been treat­ ed quickly and efficiently, and several players presumed down aud out have come back to haunt foes a scant seven days after suffering m ajor wounds office hours are 9 a.m .—4 p.m. Friday, November 6, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Peg* 5 By DON COX Texan Sports Staff Ask Darrell Royal and he will tell you there are three main aspects to a football gam e: of­ fense. defense, and kicking. And while nearly everyone, even a few Aggies, will agree wholeheartedly with the importance of offense and defense, some fans fail to see why kicking should be regarded with suet) high esteem. Such people shouldn’t try to rub elbows with Jess Neely. THIS YEAR’S Rice Texas tilt gave perhaps one of the best examples of the effectiveness of a good kicking game. Mention of the October clash still causes misty eyes on the Owl campus, fo r although Rice was victorious in offense and de­ fense, they lost the kicking battle, to say nothing of the game. While Ernie Roy boomed a total of nine punts and quick kicks for a spectacular 48.3 m ark, Rice thumped eight punts downfield for a feeble 28-yard average. David Conway also helped the Long­ horn cause somewhat with his two field goals, but that branches into a different phase of kicking. And so. the Rice game alone could be suffi­ cient in leading one to believe that the Longhorns hold a daily ritual every day in honor of their kicking game. “WE SPEND about one-fourth of our practice time on kicking.” said Royal. “ That includes the whole kicking gam e: punting, kickoffs, quick kicks, coverage, and so on.” Coverage is one of the most demanding phases It requires a near-perfect effort on of football. the part of every player on the field. thing “ The hardest to guard against when punting or kicking off. is a low kick,’' observed Royal. “ Low kicks are hard to defend because it s hard for the linemen to get downfield quickly enough.” It would appear then, that the secret of good kick coverage would consist of simply getting downfield with all available speed. BUT COVERAGE is a tricky business and a major error is also committed if the whole team rushes downfield too quickly. “ We always have a couple of players lag be­ hind the rest as sort of a safety valve," continue! the Longhorn mentor. Such a m easure helps guard against the chance of a ball carrier faking out one player and racing home free to paydirt. “ The key to a good punt or kickoff coverage Is the team having confidence that It can be done. And also that everyone gives an all-out effort.” moved on to Bellville High, where he was tile lead­ ing punter for three years. Roy is now known in college gridiron circles as the fellow with the dynamite leg. Sporting a 40.0 m ark, the husky senior is only 0.7 of a yard away from the SWC lead. BUT NO MATTER how’ sharp a team’s cov­ erage may be, if it still lacks a punter of at least mediocre ability, its overall kicking game is about as valuable to them as a “ Barry For President’ button. Fortunately, Texas has been blessed with one of the nation’s punters in Ernie Roy. It is rumored that Roy was born with a football in his crib. There may be some truth to that. The Boll Ville senior says, “ I’ve been kicking footballs ever since I can remem ber. My dad got me started pretty early.” “ Back in grade school, I rem em ber we used to play a game called setback. You’d kick the hail as far as you could, and if the fellow at the other end of the field caught it, he d move up two steps.” FEW PEOPLE ever moved up on young Roy. From champion of grade school, Big E ra later “ A GOOD I T M depends on the amount of snap you get out of your leg, especially from the knee on down,” explained Roy. “The greatest difficulty in punting is keeping your toe down and dropping the ball straight. I imagine 90 per cent of all bad kicks are caused by not dropping die bal! straight down. You get a lot of kicks off the side of your foot that way.” As reflected by his average. Ernie has had little trouble cooperating with gravity tills year. Form er Army coach Colonel E arl Blaik, calls Roy the “ best punter in the nation, college or pro.” lf the outcome of Saturday’s game with Bay­ lor is as dependent upon the kicking aspect as the Rice game was, then Texas should breathe fairly easy during practice this week. Tile Waco school doesn’t have a punter listed among the top eight in the conference. r A Guide to GOOD EATING and Around Austin A T ou ch o f the W e st . . . Real Old Fashioned Pit Bar-B-Q ................................. 1.25 BAR-B-Q SLICED BEEF .......... ....................................... 1.25 BAR-B-Q HOT SAUSAGE 1.25 BAR-B-Q CHICKEN ......................................................... 1.25 BAR-B-Q SPARE RIBS .................. .................................. 1.25 BAR-B-Q HAM ............. All orders served with plenty of our own hot potato salad, pinto beans, pieties, onions, cole slaw, sn eel relish and homemade . . . . bread Free seconds on even th mg but the meat j IRA'S Buckboard Restaurant 5420 Airport Blvd. G I 2-7733 HITCHIN* POST 6 Oz. Filet $1.19 PIZZA KITCHEN With PIZZAS To-Go or Delivered GR 8-8827 GR 6-4301 Owned end Operated by Buzzy Buck IOU N. LAMAR *20* N* LAMAR A L A M O Restaurant and Coffee Room INTERNATIONALLY KNOW N S e rv in g The F in e st Families In Central Texas Over 19 Years A L L D A Y SATURDAY & SUNDAY WE FEATURE _ CHICKEN DINNERS 95c Deluxe S outher Fred Optic*na! Small Shrimp Cocktail and Baked Potato at No Extra Cost V a r ie d Deluxe Dinner M o n d a y thru Friday Serving — • BREAKFAST • LU N C H • DELUXE DINNER 6:30 A.M — 9 P.M. DAILY GR 6-5455 • TAKE • HOME • ORDERS 604 Guadalupe I FOR PERFECT EATING! Country Cousin SPECIALIZING IN Cousin Burgers Fried Chicken Bar-B-Q Ribs J LOCATIONS DELIVERY SERVICE AVAILABLE D I N E TH I S WEEKEND at CHRISTIE'S SEA FOOD RESTAURANT OVERLOOKING BEAUTIFUL LAKE AUSTIN PLBMTY OF FREE PARKING AND ATMOSPHERE O N TOW N LAKE GR 8-1625 h ’ GROTTO 2607 Guadalupe (On th© Drag) "Behind the Wetertetr ★ Party room for groups ★ Large parking area across from Kinsolving ★ Quick Ready-fo-Serve luncheons “ Get back to class on time” ★ This week's special: Chopped Sirloin Steak— $1.19 cole slaw, french fries and drink Tidejr, November 6g 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 IT'S NEW TO ® L C h iC O ESPECIALLY FOR LONGHORNS! The Longhorn Room DINE IN LUXURY AND ENJOY THE BEST MEXICAN FOOD AROUND EL C H IC O _______ HANCOCK CENTER Is RESTAURANTS VISIT THE S A V A R I N RESTAURANT in the beautiful Municipal Airport STEAKS SEA FOOD e Hour*: 6:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. • MEXICAN FOOD * Highest Quality Fair Prices * Liberal Portions IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN AUSTIN P , IC C ^ L D IL L Y ^ y a A te .’u a Dally 6:30 A.M. 8:30 P.M. 801 CONGRESS EAT OUT C T E Kl I C I t! ■ Lucky Five? FEATURED A re You O ne of Today s TODAY e e e For enjoyable dining , . . ,,,, ■ , ~ ... f e t e s ' [ I f YOUR Name is H ere You W in SUO In “Eating E A T OL T O F T E N highlights the best in places to eat in and around Austin. I oday’s issue features a story and photograph o f one o f these outstand­ ing firms — selected in alphabetical order. T h e names o f five students selected at random from the 1964-65 Student D irectory are listed below and each is entitled to $2.50 in eating privileges at this featured eating place. If your name is printed here come by J.B . 107 and receive an authorization slip which entitles you to the $2.50 in eating privileges at the featured spot. Carolyn Elise R ogers Carobeth Reed R o b ert Clint Smith Paul Burdett Ragsdale N an cy Carole R u e ffe r ^ hmm* I I lot* **■» % J* S I—&A U S T IN ’S F IN E S T ITALIAN RESTAURANT ,4ltalian Food Is Our On ly Business” LUNCH FROM l l TILL 1:45 DINNER FROM 5 TILL 9:45 FRI. 4 SAT. DINNER 5 TILL 10:45 Closed on Monday Truly, Ira F . Collins, owner of the Buckboard Restaurant, can say his establishment is accented by a “ touch o f the old W est." Tile western decor is maintained from the authentic pioneer buck­ board in front to wagon wheel chandeliers and numerous branding irons and tools o f Southwest settlers inside. W hile it is true that the atmosphere is that of a bigone era, the service is speedy and up-to-date. University students appreciate this ‘ get- to-dass-on-time" efficiency. T he specialty of the house is. o f course, real western barbecue for Texas-size appetites. Collins* 36 years in the restaurant business insures barbecue beet, pork, sauage, ham, and chicken at its very best. Ira's Buckboard Restaurant also features seafood, especially Hill Country catfish served every day. Collins rounds out the menu with choice heavy beef steaks. is A huge banquet-dancing hall located upstairs and rims the length of the building. Private parties from 75— IOO persons may re­ s e r v e the room, which is equipped with a piano and private entrance. Catering and delivery are additional Buckboard services. Collins says he can easily handle from 30 to 3,000 persons at a time. Further information may be obtained by calling G L 2-7733. _ Ira’s Buckboard Restaurant is located at 3420 Airport Blvd. (just look for the western wagon out fro n t). Hours are from 6 am . to l l p.m. Now O ffering Evening Variety* To Fit The P eat* & The Pocket. H o t Roast Sirloin of Choice Beef Open Face - Grevy Au-Nat^ra! Chicken Fried Steak Country Gravy Mama Hana Gourmet Filet of Ocean Perch Tartar Sauce I.OO 1-00 AO Salad A French Fria* 1701 SAN J A C IN T O GR 7-4325 O n ly a Few M inutes From Anywhere And W e ll W o r th It Austin's Foremost Steak House STEAK 'N ’ STEIN I W L NA P I' Sites ------------------ P s i — ' '■■'.r » r w r '> T C ; . . y — * ■ 1 1 1 r*. I chicken SHACK OPEN FOR BREAKFAST And Until 12 p.m. Daily OPEN FRIDAYS"A N D SATURDAYS 'TIL 2 2606 GUADALUPE LAMAR AT NO RTH LOOP 2 LO C A TIO N S Open 7 D a p a week 1 1:00 to 2:15 and 4 :3 0 to 8 OO One Block West of Burnet Rd. and 53rd St. RESTA!) RANT 3501 LAMAR OPEN 'TIL I I 2233 N o r th L oop Blvd. Don't Cook Tonight Call T m h D j >2Cv& u+ l^ e fa x in a T I rue int n y 3303 N, LAMAR PH. GL 2-2317 15c Open Cloee l l * -» - l l pm . HAMBURGERS Home of th e W orld s G reatest 15C H a m b u r g I FREE DELIVERY C A LI GR 6-6216 l l a .rn .-I p .m .; S I I p.m . W e e k d a y * l l a .m .-11 p .m . S at., Sun. A H o lid a y * 1608 LAVACA CHICKEN • SHRIMP • BAR-B-QUE RIBS • FISH • PIZZA _ _ Into Aph Iera Victor has an ideal location, A distinctive atmosphere with a variety of good food. A m p le free pa rking in the front or rear of the restaurant. SPECIALIZING IN ALL KINDS OF ITALIAN FOOD, STEAKS, AND FRIED CHICKEN W H E N IT C O M E S TO P IZ Z A Com© to th© F a it D.lp.sry R O M E IN N S9rvic® GR 6-6111 STOP BY OUR UNIQUE SADDLE TAP BAR FERRARI PIZZA Sen mg: fresh Pizza —ALSO— Sausage and Meatball 5andwichef Orders to Take Out GL 2-3771 Weekday* 11 a.m. 'til 11 p.m. I a.m. Frl. & Sat. 11 a.m. 'Hi Uiclor’d Utahan VIL age 34th & Lamar I 2910 Guadalupe GR 6-1600 For Mexican Food A t I t s Very Best I t S e jC a d a b a n a Austin's Newest M exican Restaurant F e a tu rin g M e x ic a r DYr-es of A ll Types and O ur Own Specialty, STEAK A ’ LA MEX1CANA SUNDAY SPECIAL I FULL ORDER OF [BEEF TACOS A Q I . _ L Z > < — Private Parties Invited — 3701 AIRPO RT BLVD. STR AIG H T o u t m a n o r r d . t o a i r p o r t b l v d . BREADED VEAL CUTLET — with --- MASHED POTATOES • CREAM GRAVY FRENCH FRIES • C O LE S LA W • O N IO N RINGS BUTTERED BUN —-P L U S - • COFFEE OR ICED TEA While You're There, Go Upstairs and Visit With Your Friends at the Orange Bull Lounge 27th 6 Guadalupe Plenty o f free Parking Midshipmen to Honor Sweethearts W ith Ball Saturday The N aval ROTO Sw eetheart Ball Saturday will honor sw eet­ h earts who w ere elected this week by m idshipm en. The dance will be held at B erg­ strom AFB Officers Club from 7 to 12 m idnight for m idship­ p.m . m en and th eir dates. in F inalists the NROTC sweet h e a rt com petition a re Gay Caffoy. C laire Collins, N ancy E asley, B a r­ b a ra G rant, Pam ela H arker, B a r­ b a ra Hobbs, M ary Jo Lynch, Oliv­ ia Oliver, G ayle Patterson, Linda R eneau, G ortrhen W illiams, and Carol Sue W right. Present m em bers of the NROTC sw eetheart are Sharon c o u r t D uecker, Carol Holzapfol, M ar­ gery Kengla, and M ary Ann Wye- off. *Yf to Hold Culture Trip A to trip the Witte Memorial M useum and McNay Art Institute in San Antonio will be sponsored Sunday by the Out of Town Cul­ tu ral E vents C om m ute of the Uni­ versity “ Y .” Students will leave by autom o­ bile Sunday m orning and will r e ­ turn the sam e night. Additional inform ation on the (Tip is available at the “ Y ,” 2200 Guadalupe. ★ Omicron N u Initiates 3 I psi Ion chapter of Om icron Nu, home economics honor so­ ciety, three new m e n d e rs, Irene Ruske, Pat­ ti Fairbend, and h a y Howard. recently initialed ♦ K ap p a Psi’s to Convene L uther R. P ark er, se cretary of the Texas P h arm aceu tical Associ­ ation. will address the Province VII Kappa Psi Convention a t 7 p m. F riday in the Villa Capri. The U niversity chap ter of Kappa ; Psi pharm aceutical fratern ity will j host the conv ention. Business m eetings will be held ‘ Saturday in the Academ ic Center auditorium . P a rk e r is a form er assistan t to the dean of the U niversity School of Pharm acy. ★ Home Ec Has W orkshop the Texas R epresentatives of Money Mart Austin Texas Coin Club See, Buy, Sell, or Trade Coins CRYSTAL BALLROOM, DRISKILL HOTEL N OV. 7-8 Home Econom ics College chapters are holding a workshop a t the University. About 200 coeds from 30 colleges and universities a re attending the workshop th at is stressing em p h a­ of sis on women. leadership qualities Dr. Henry Bowman, professor of sociology and authority on m a r­ riage and fam ily life, will be the lead sp eak er at 9 a.m . F riday in the Union Auditorium. His topic will be “ Modern W oman—Lost or Found?” The workshop will end with an address by Julia H unter, president of the association, at 9:15 a.m . Saturday in the Commodore P e rry Hotel. Dr. A. T. Young to Speak Dr. Andrew T. Young of Har­ vard College Observatory will speak at a colloquium on “Some Problems Connected With the I RV Photometric System .” The meeting, to he sponsored by the D epartm ent of Astronomy, will Im* h e l d at in Physics Building 121. 4 p.m. Friday Job Information Free G raduating seniors m ay pick up a free copy of the new edition of “ College Placem ent Annual, 1965” at the placem ent office, West Mall Office Building 201. The hook lists occupational inform ation on m ore m m w m m m Campus News in Brief M mm m m m m m m m m m m m m m tm m that 1.800 corporate and govern­ m ent em ployers. ★ Renewal Will Be Aired Leon Whitney, administrative assistant with the Austin Urban Renewal Agency, will discuss urban renewal and related Issues with the “Other Austin” group at 3 p.m. Friday at the University “ Y.” the Members of study-work project group will have an oppor­ to visit urban renewal tunity acres of Austin at 4 p.m. after Whitney s talk, Sam Parker, co­ chairman of group, an­ nounced. the Sin gin g Auditions Slated The D epartm ent of Music will be host to the Southwest Regional Auditions of the N ational Associa­ tion of T eachers of Singing Sun­ day through Tuesday. The conference auditions will be held in the Union Building, Recital Hall, and Hogg Audi­ torium. and New Pledges Initiated Scabbard and Kinde, national honorary m ilitary fraternity, has initiated 13 new m em ­ recently bers. Naval ROTC initiates are L arry Billa, William Docekal, R obert H attan, Jam es John Hitchcock, R einauer, and Jesse Thompson. New Air Force ROTC m em bers are Thomas B rightm an, Michael Bullard, L am ar Lawson, Ross Lynch, and Gerry' Soldier. Army ROTC initiate is Jam es Mitchell. Professors Begin Drive The University chapter of the American Association of Univer­ sity Professors has started a fall membership drive at the Un­ iversity by sending to the facility. letters lh*. John J. Biesele, professor is president of the of zoology, U niversity chapter. Nine W in Certificates Nine University' law and business adm inistration .students have been aw arded certificates for their p a r­ ticipation in the recent fall trust V IS IT THE W IG SHOP Sat. IO a.m.— 9 p.m . Sunday I I a.m.— 6 p.m. FREE A D M I S S I O N t a t ( j o e s sem in ar of the Republic National B ank of Dallas. ships to a work camp In Santia- < go, Chile. The law students are Arthur H. B ayern, Paul Youngdaie J r., Bry­ ant L. Manning, and Robert Mc Kenzie. Business adm inistration students who participated w ere Joseph F. Fojtasek, Robert R G ilbert III. K l­ ick N. Malcdon Jr.. Michael Asa Stone, and Ronald G. Bellamy. *Yr to Give Scholarships International scholarships val­ ued a t $670 are tieing offered by the YMCA to students for use in special projects in foreign coun­ tries next sum m er. Six available scholarships in­ clude an exchange visit to the Soviet Union, a I^itin-Am eriean sem inar a work for women, cam p in Japan, and two scholar­ Any University student may apply for the scholarships. Se­ lection will he made prior to Dec. I by a committee of the YMCA and YWCA board of Di­ rectors. The value of the scholar­ ships is from IO to 15 per cent of the total cost of the summer abroad. Application forms and further information concerning projects anti scholarships mav be ob­ tained from Frank Wright, “ Y ” executive secretary, at 2200 gua- dalupe. Band Tries for Parade Grog Lipscomb, president of the Students’ Association, received a recently letter from Washington concerning playing in next Jan u ary . the Longhorn Band s inaugural P arade the Dale Miller, director of the P re ­ inaugural Committee 1965, wrote that each state is allowed a m arch­ ing unit in the parade, and that the selection of this unit is usually m ade by the state chairm an of the victorious pally. UT Staff Gives to UF Fund cam paign The United the 85 per cent m ark reached Nov. % with a total of $32,SOO in donations from 2310 faculty ami staff m em bers. Goal for tho drive has been set at $39,000. Arno N’owotny. new adminis­ trative adviser, heads the cam ­ paign the University com­ munity. for KWIK WASH C O IN LAU NDRIES C O IN DRY C LE A N IN G M M - lOc - 25c DRY W A S H - I5c C oin-O p Dry Cleaning Too! J LOCATIONS 19T H & R ED R IV E R AND 3105 G U A D A L U P E 8 LBS. $1.50 Friday “ T s n L a n d s c a p e s;" r n lo n T e x a s S p e e c h B u lld - x G a lle r y 102. ,V—S in g - S o n g e n tr ie s , in g 102. :30-4 .'VO—C o n tr ib u tio n s to R ia ta , J o u r ­ n a lis m B u ild in g 107 pmKrams 30-10 C h a n n e l 9. 5 - E n lr i <• S p e e c h b u n d in g IQI, to A ss;!# S ig n C o n te s t. p m . - K L R N - T V C u ltu r a l I ven t* C o m m itte e , ' V ’ 1-5 a n d -1. an d D r a m * T h e a t e r D u r in g th e R e s to r a tio n e n d 18th O n - flo o r t r " S ta r k L ib r a r y , o f M a in B u ild in g . fo u r t h 0 - H o m e E c o n o m ic s C o lin g W o r k s h o p . T e x a s U n io n A u d ito r iu m . 9 -3 R e n ta ls e x h ib it io n . L a g u n a G lo r ­ ia a n d 1 0 5 S a t u r d a y . - V " s a le . H orn# 9-3— C o ffe e , S n a r k O n B u ild in g 129. E c o n o m ic s 9-5 R e s is t re H on fo r P e r s u a s iv e S p e a k ­ in g C o n te s t, S p e e c h B u ild in g 309 10- C o f f e e H o u r w ith d is c u s s io n , H ill- e l F o u n d a tio n 10-6— P e n -a n d -in k d r a w in g s J o h n G u e r in , p a in t in g s b v J a c k T w o r k o v ; S o u t h w e s t e r n A d v e r t is in g A rt, A r t M u se u m , 10-12 an d .3-5 T m I ta t Iona I a r t e x h ib it , bv N e y M u s e u m ; S a t u r d a y . M O K U T -F M 90 7 m c 3 P la y D is c u s s io n G r o u p . "Y ’* 4 T e a to H o m e E c o n o m ­ ie s C o lle g e W o r k s h o p . H o m e E c o n ­ o m ic s B u ild in g p a tio . fo r v is ito r s 3 E le c t io n C o m m is s io n . T e x a s U n io n 334. 4 7. a n d 9 3 0 M o v ie, ’’G ig o t ,’* T e x a s U n io n A u d ito r iu m . 1 A n d r e w T on Y o u n g ' S o m e P r o b le m s C o n n e c te d w i t h th e P h o to m e tr ic S y s t e m ," P h y s i c s B u ild ­ in g r n . L B J P r o f ile ," U n p o s e d s p e a k an d t o 7 K L U N -T V , C h a n n e l 9 7 R a lly b e g in s o n S o u th M al! 7-9 C o R e c r e a tio n . W o m e n 's G ym . 7 L u th e r P a r k r P h i V illa C ap ri t o a d d r e s s K a p p * 7 .3 0 R e g u la r s e r v ic e s , H ilie l F o u n d * - f ion 7 kl-—R e g is t r a t io n S o u th T e x a s N e w m a n P r o v in c e F a ll L e a d e r s h ip D a y . C a th o lic S tu d e n t C e n te r , fo r 7 30 — T A C T s t a t e m e e t in g . 8-12— D a n c in g in T e x a s I m o n . and S a t u r d a y . Y " th e C h u c k W a g o n , in it ia t io n , T o b in R o o m , 8 P l D e lta B a tts H a ll. 8 .3 0 — A u s t in C iv ic T h e a t e r p r e s e n t s " fr m a L a D o u c e .* ’ P la y h o u s e . W e s t F ifth a n d L a v a c a ; an d S a tu r d a y 9-11 — le k th u s C o ffe e H o u s e , M e th o d is t S t u d e n t C e n te r a n d S a t u r d a y . S a t u r d a y 8 30 .S ab b a th s e r v ic e s , H ilie l F o u n d a ­ tio n 9 —T A C T s t a l e m e e t in g 9 - - N e w m a n l e a d e r s h i p D a y , C a th o lic " Y .” S t u d e n t C e n te r . 10-9 - M o n d a v M art. C r e s t a l B a llr o o m . D risk ill H o te l Baylor g a m e IO 30 B u s le a v e * T e x a s U n io n fo r 2 -Baj tor gam# broadcast, KTBC-ra- ‘ G ig o t ,’* T e x a s d io . 7 a n d 9 30 M o v lt, U n io n A u d ito r iu m . 7-—R O T C C lub 8- PH—N e w m a n C lu b d a n c e , C a th o lic S t u d e n t C e n te r . -V • . T H E S A F E W A Y to stay alert without harmful stimulants N o D o z ™ keep s y o u m e n ta lly a l e r t w ith th e sam e safe re ­ fre sh e r fo u n d in coffee. Y et N o D o z Ls fa ste r, h a n d ie r, m ore reliab le. A b so lu te ly n o t h a b it­ form ing. N e x t tim e m o n o to n y m a k e s y o u feel d ro w sy w hile stu d y in g , w o rk in g or d riv in g . do as m illions do . . . p erk up w i t h s a f e , e f f e c tiv e N o D o z K e e p A lert T a b le ts. Anvthti fine sroituct et Creve Laboratorial. JUNIORS! H01P ON TO YOUK UHT! Because Wednesday, Novem ber ll is the D E A D L IN E for M aking Your Class Picture Appointment for the 1965 CACTUS Fee 1.00 Come By Journalism Building 107 To Make Your Appointment O f f i c e H ours: 8:30- 12:30 1:30-4:30 (w eekd ays) W i g s and Hairpieces Custom Designed by M A N U E L H A L L In Beautiful ^ d r a m Across from W y a tt s Cafeteria TEL. G L 2 - 4 7 I6 Come See Us— And Save! FULLY AIR CONDITIONED! No. i_ lam ar plaza center N o 2 - AIRPORT a t N O . L O O P N o . 3 —-1804 BRIARCLIFF N o 4— 7 0 4 7th N o 6— 2 209 S. C O N G R E S S N o 9 — 1702 K O E N IG I N . N - s i r * m X. I i 3105 G U A D A L U P E No. S 704 W E S T 24T H No. IO I9 T H & R ED R IV ER N o . * 1302 W. LYNN THE D A IL Y T E X A N CLASSIFIED A D S Furnished Apartm ents Furnished Apartments Sewing Typing M A L E R O O M M A T E S W A N T E D , f or T H R E E B L I X .K S VV KS . o f ■ o n e b e d r o o m o r t w o b e d r o o m lu x u r y F u r n is h e d o n e b e d r o o m a p a r tm e n t a p a r tm e n t. 3 o u r G R 7-1064. s h a r e a r o u n d $5o OO, 160 t’.iils porn «. 1 •••- a *•• t —. L yn ch * HI_ 2-6438 o r C L 3-19x5 c a i E V E N IN G , C O C K T A IL S C O A T S 2* c la s s d r e ss e s. W e d ­ pi tx:# d r e s s e s d in g s a s p e c ia l t y G R 8-3069. B a ll, B e r g s t r o m O ffic e r s 271 l T 2721 H E M P H I L L P A R K W a lk U N IQ U E 2 B E D R O O M to U n iv e r s it y . O n e b e d r o o m c a r p e t in g , p a n e lin g , p o o l, s t o r a g e , t e r - g a s p a id . G R 2-5746— GR 2-48 38 3-2120. a,<-, N e w fu r n is h in g s V w a - n e ig h b o r h o o d * 2503 B r id a l AN G R 8-3937 ---- — — *-------------------------------------- ~ a p a r t m e n t QU ii o p e n . SltWJv*. l a t h D R E S S M A K IN G A M ) A L T E R A T I O N S P h o n e GR d e liv e r y . P ic k -u p an d 6 1793. A fte r 6 pm . T H E M E S R E P O R T S . I VA no;--* 25# r u ser G B p a g e M S R ti BOK I S T H E S E S . D I S S E R T A T I O N S R E ­ IBM S e if.-arte S y m b o ls fo r s c t tn e e e n g in e e r in g , m a t h e m a tic s . iid g u a g * a c c e n t s G r e ek C all GR 3k 9617 D E L A F IE L D G ra m m a r, T Y P I N G s p o ilin g 2»c p a s* . c o r r e c tio n . H I R O C K C R E S T A P A R T M I E I S T09 V e s t 26th . C A P I T A L D R A F T IN G S E R V IC E , 1403 T h e s is d r a ft in g g r a p h s L ava. i. G R 2-8901 le tt e r in g , c h a r ts 2-6522 nit* h a n k a l a n d m ap * SH O R T ON T Y P IN G G rah am G L 3-5725 T IM E T M a s v • / o a e l t f L O N G V IE W A P A R T M E N T S 2406 L o n g v ie w F u r n is h e d o n * b e d r o o m c a r p e te d tr a l heat.— c o e l in * G ood c e n ­ lo c a tio n , p a r k in g S w im m in g p o o l. GR 8-1769, E f f ic ie n c y fr o m a p a r tm e n t. T h r e e c a m p u s W a ll- to -w a ll h e a te d , b lo c k s eat l u t ­ s w i m ­ a tr -e o n d ttin n in g . in g , m in g p o ol. M a s h e r * a n d d o m s , $ S V m o n th . J u n e . irm n th h a s # $75 fo r i n i l Drafting W a n te d C a [ e n c la Friday 7 5 la t t e n w y o d . h o u se . h o u se 3-12 - S i g m a A lp h a c h a p te r h o u se 3-12— P h i K a p p a c h a p t e r h o u se E p s ilo n m a tch . T a u s « m l-fo r m a l, 8-12— S ig m a C hi c a s u a l, c h a p t e r h o u se E p s ilo n . c h a p te r $-12—S ig m a P h i i h o u se 9-12— T h e ta X I c a su a l, c h a p t e r h o u s e 8 1 2 -K a p p a P s i d a n c e V illa C apri 8-12 Y o u n g D e m o c r a t* o n -u a l, S u en - g e r r u n d e H a ll. Saturday 8-7 K a p p a P si p a r ’ -. V illa 8-19— B e ta T h e ta Cl c a s u a l, f nprh c h a p te r 8-12 - P h i K a p p a P s i c a su a l, c h a p te r 8-1 2 h i K a p p a S ig m a c a s u a l, c h a p te r 8 - 1 2 - P ill K a p p a T h e ta c a s u a l, c h a p ­ 8 -t2 Pi K a p p * A lp h a c a s u a l, c h a p t e r 8-12 S ig m a P h i E p s ilo n c a s u a l, c h a p ­ h o u se h o u se h o u se . te r h o u f* . h o u se te r h o u s e 8-12 T a u K a p p a E p s ilo n c a s u a l, rh a p - I te r 8-12 T heta XI c a s u a l, c h a p t e r h o u se Sa hi rein y - S u m in i L a m b d a C hi A lp h a h o u s e p a r ty , N ew B r a u n fe ls . Sunday 2 4 D e lt a P h i E p s ilo n c a s u a l, c h a p te r H ouse 7 V M I A lp h a XI D e lta c a s u a l, c h a p to r h o u s e , 7 30-10 30 S ig m a N u h a s rid * I < J* Y-v ■ :% **. ’n - CHARTERED EXC U RSIO N BUSES • Parties • Field Trips • Retreats Buses available with rest rooms aboard, turn around seats and card tab'os for your enjoyment while traveling. All buses air conditioned. Kerrville Bus Co. G R 8-9361 2006 E A S T 4T H 1519 W E S T 13T H d in in g a r ea B e d r o o m , a m p le c lo s e ts , H o s e liv in g g r o c e r y , b u s. c a r p o r t , a c. W a le r paid G R 8-9363— G R 7-9317, A lso u n fu r n is h e d w a s h a tc r ia , c le a n e r s G IR U S . L A R G E A P A R T M E N T . B rl- liv in g r o o m ^ -K it* f u r n u a e d . N e a r v&tft r o o m . Sh a r I* $35. U t ilit ie s c h e m e v e r y t h in g . G R 8-5528 C O N T E M P O R A R Y E F F I C I E N C Y C A P R I T E R R A C E A P T S . K it c h e n e t te , P L A C K , s tu d io b e d s vs a lls a e, E IR ! g la s s w a o p e n s to in d iv id u a l p a tio b e a m e d eel; in g All h ills paid $85 (st. 2511 P e a r l G R 2 4 2 3 8 a fte r 5 30 H O 5-0694. p a n ele d SO! I VVh lt ls b e d r o o m a p t. J u s t vficatf a rid ca r- m o d er n W o o d M IC e e e l. i»led. All R e- ; (■ant p u s KH­ fo r I d UC cd pc ne! I n g 'lic h e n h ills to rate•#. M[an a * e r —I , R 7- ir>13 * OO p rn a. II c# SP a ft e r I ul Iv p !"i U N I V E R S I T Y A R E A . L O V E L Y p a n a ile d o n e b e d r o o m A ir -c o n d itio n e d W a lk in g d is ta n c e U n iv e r s it y $80, I OQ3 W 23rd G R 7-1673. E l, R A B IN O A P T S . 2400 B a b in * GR 7-7179 N e w lu x u r y a p a r tm e n t fr o m la w sc h o o l an d a ta d lu m 2 b e d ro o m * in c lu d e d 2 b a th * $22f> OO E v e r v t h in g I b lo c k R A V I N E T E R R A C E A /C . P a ne I r a y h e a t F I R E P L A C E M u ch d e s k b o o k s p a c e H u g e c lo s e t* U tilitle * f u r ­ n is h e d G R 8 5528 ' V IL L A 52". 1311 K. 52nd b e d r o o m u n it, n e w , a c, f i l l ) L a r g e ob. tw o w a - to r g a* paid . • V I L L A A N IT A " . D r iv e Q u tet, o n e o r 1906-1907 An 'a tw o b e d r o o m , g a s $65 OO—$75.OO, w a te r , a c, u n ite p a id . H I 2-0995. M A N O R V IL L A E x tr a s in c lu d e : 2 b e d r o o m lu x u r y a p a r tm e n ts $108 u p iw t m m in g p o o l. EM m u s ic & T V a n te n n a a .va te m c o n te n t- n 2401 c o r a n M an ii Rd <--» nuinau 139— G R 7-1064 Rd e a c h a p a r tm e n t. M o d e rn f u r n is h in g - G R d is p o s a l SO ft 3101. 3110 D U V A ! Ivors i t x . $'15-00. 4516 T " o ex einin g # Thr<>« b lo c k s i U n - i s h o p p e ng tin e be d r o o m s Sc .0". bed reKW) — GL For Sale U T IC A —C B. U N I T S S o n y a nd N o r e lc o tap® r e c o r d e r s . S c o tc h r e c o r d in g ta p e , T e x a s E le c t r o n ic S u p p ly , 105 E 43rd L L 3-6627 In. 1963 C H E V R O L E T d e e r tig h t G "od c o n d it io n . $295 00. Cult 4 15 B rn . G R e-4166 P a t e a f t e r 5 30 p m , C L 2 9145 8 OO a rn. J - d o - r M E R C E D E S B E N Z 220S 983 OO. T o p m e c h a n ic a l fo u r d o o r c o n d it on. N e w c u tch . • re*, b a tte r .'- G R 2 6 6 5 ' G IB S O N 33 5 -T D . N e w E L E C T R IC G U I T A R ES h u m - b u c k in g p ic k u p s , h a r d s h e ll c a s e . M a k e o ffe r . G R c o n d it io n D ub .8 ING R O L E X . I BK G O L D w a tc h C h a n c e to c o s t . S e c R e c s B ro.- — 2238 G u a d a lu p e b u y b rio iw w a tc h m a k e r s 1965 C H E V R O L E T S , B U IC K S , O ld s- m o b ile s C o it piu> $100 00, GR 7-5539- B J . H a th c o x O R D E A Y O U R V O L K S W A G E N d; r e e l I y fr o m G e r m a n y a t a s u b s ta p : nj s a x t n g 2715 ( G uadalupe, G R 2-7152 U n iv e r s it y M o to rs, U N B E L I E V A B L E B A R G A IN S * FL O O R s h if t s $14 9 5 . S m it e m u f f l e r * h u b c a p s s k ir ts l i l t E a s t 1st. m a g n e s iu m , D u a l- x -h a u s ts a c c e s s o r ie s , T e x a s A u to , t a c h o m e t e r s w h e e l w ir e T A N G L E W O O D E A S T Lot For Sale A il N e w L u x u r y A p a r tm e n t* O n e b e d r o o m HOT b e d r o o m s , $124 5*J T h e s e a r e t o $ 1 2 4 .5 0 - T w o t r u h A u s t in 's F in e st B a r g a in * in L u x u r io u s a p a r tm e n t L iv in g . W e h a v e a ll th e b e s t e x t r a s ’ I 26"I M a n o r R d . G R 7-1064. E. S p a c io u s F O R S A L d e, e x t r a di e x t r a w , tig c , s t a t u s , 19th P r e s fa c u it y nu im b e r o r fa h e r s a t t e n d in g U m v e r : e r , H O 5 -9 U 0 . e fo r m e m - O w n - Furnished Apartments Furnished Apartments MORE FOR >OUR M ONEY ON EVERY COUNT l a r g e r u t ' a n d d r a p e * , O N L Y 4 nnit« In F»«n A rm s In e l i t e F .s ftc ld «n lo t a f f o r d in g fa r m o r e ar e n tier t e n a n t , ineloxcd, c o v e r e d c a r p o r t s , r o o m f o r h e a v e n !) t r a l e s g a r d e n , r o un tle v * t r e e # — npen s p u e v fo r q u ie t , u n c r o w d e d liv in g in c o n tr a s t to b e e - h i v r, m u l t i p l e u nit p a r t i h o u se s. ( l i U w a i a d e c o r , lu x u rv t u r i n - h m g * t u r q u o i s e K r o e h l e r d i v a n , co ffe e and sid e i n clu d e g o ld ta b l e s w ith h u g e Ax t e e la m p s , m o r n i n g glory c h a . r , I ;t sh io n - P l a t e m i r r o r , J a p a n e s e d l p h t i e of fl o ra l scene, n e w F r i g i d a l r e w i t h ( r e e l e r c o m p a r t m e n t , $ f o r c o o l i n g ; p a n e l r a y hr.it. V a c a n c y ! in l o x u r y clar* b u t p o p u l a r l y p r i c e d f o r u n iv $81.50 p lu s I b e d r o o m u n i t f o r h o u r i m o o n u t i l i t i e s ; co u p le s c r a v i n g p r i v a c y . Adult* o n ly . NO DO G S . G r a d u a t e s t u d e n t # l i k e liv ing here. R e n t fre e to Nov. IS. D ia l GR J-#643 o r H I ? 3328. r e f r i * e r a t e d - a i r a n il# r e f i n e d p e r s o n . lease or t a r r i e r t i n g l e , Id eal lea* f o r b o a ts b o o k s tr a d in g a u t o m o b ile s N O W B U Y I N G A N D T R A D IN G — T y p e ­ w r it e r s , g o lf c lu b s , r a d io s , gu n *, fir e ­ p lu g * s ta m p - S c u b a gu ar, a n t iq u e s , fa r m e q u ip m e n t b in o c u ­ e le c t r ic r a z o r s , in s tr u m e n t* la r s m a g a z in e * m u s ic a l ir t s u p p lie s , fu r n itu r e , a p p lia n c e s , and g o o d * w a tc h e s , h o u s e h o ld •- t e le v is io n s , m o t o r s c o o t e r s , q u ip m e n t e n g in e e r in g s u p p lie s t a i "-re­ c o r d e r s . d ia m o n d s , b ab y c y c lo s m e n s a n d r e c o r d s , c o in s c o x 's. $8 99 a m o n th A nd to r * $6 I** a m o n th A a ro n h u n tG # p h o n o g r a p h s t a m p c o lle c t io n s m ilk t e le v is io n s r e f r ig t r a lo u ­ rs m e r c h a n d is e , 803 R ed R iv e r . N o ­ to o ls W # a ls o r e n t e q u ip m e n t, fu r n itu r e c a m e r a s c lo t h e s f is h in g s t e r e o s n e a k [’aw n g o o d t a r y P u b lic O p e n S a t u r d a y til 7 p m W A N T E D P A I N T I N G I N S I D E o r ou t- r e fe r e n c e * R e e s o n a b h ( h ie d j. d e U • F r e d M o w rv a; C L 2-0095 Help W a n te d inn*' d S P O R T S E N T H U S I A S T , 19-23 E x p e r in g e n e r a ) c o n d it io n in g and s p o r ts , M u tt b a i e g o o d ph > - s e v e r a l s q u e an d an a b ilit y to m e e t p e o p le M u st bo a v a ila b le fo r an e x p e a s e p aid tr ip to V a il. c o lo r a d o d u r in g C h r a t ­ ua# v a c a tim t. W r it e d o n o t c a ll H e r ­ b e r t M o s e l* ) l^ in g iiev * A p t. 301 2 5 2 ° CYN E D S lin en m o n e y in s p a r e t.rn e E a s v from d o r m or a p a r tm e n t h o u se r e s id e n t s lin e T e r r if ic bu* n e s s C all G R 7-4485 o r \ n re p o st w r ite B o x 8178, A u s tin 12. e x c lu s iv e c Q c m c tlc s H ouses for Sale IN V HSTM LNT h o u s e g a r a g e a p t A p p r a is e d fo r #15.751' n g d o ,v n. $12 000. H y d e P a r k . 3 ROOM fo r a n i seei­ $1000 A U S T IN b e d r o o m I G 3 N O R T H b a th s O w n e r w oulcl b e a t c o n s .d e r tr a d in g fo r s m a ll h o m e $4 *> d o w n , a p p r o x im a t e ly $98 per m o n th C n tra l 69G5 T W I N C R U S T 3 b a th Ira! m e n t# o f $103 per m o n th . b u .lt -m r a n g e $500 d o w n , h ea t b e d r o o m . I G 60x175 to t. c en a s s u m e p a y ­ 5 BLO CK S TO U n iv ersity 4 tied room . 2 b a th h o m e F lo o r s t o r y a n d h a lf fu r n a c e , d o u b le g a r a g e . $13,950 S T A R R E A L T Y CO. — G L 2-6837 Lost and Found L O S T —H O R N R IM M E D g la s s e s near Crim p u s G R 7-0348 Y O U N G M A L K A F F E C T I O N A T E cat T ig e r m a r k in g s C h a r c o a l grey C ol­ la r N e a r I n fv e r a ltv C o m m o n s. O w n e r c a l l O R 7-79! > e v e n rig* V>»^V>^AfVVVW3Ai#lV\AevVVVVVVVVVVV«>ACSVV^ Business Opportunity W AN T E D — W O R K LNG M an or w o m a n w ith $2 ut Kl PA R I' N E TI to in ­ P r o fit ' e a r . S e * M ar­ bu sin e*.' in p u b . s lu n g v e s t p o t e n tia l $48,000 fir s t t in . 8o3 R e d R iv e r . Alterations rn a 's E X P E R T A L T E R A T IO N S D O N E on R e a so n a b ly p r ic e d a t H e n r y J a c o b s o n * M en s Vt e a r. 2332 G u a d a lu p e c lo th in g C O M P E T E N T and H IG H L Y E X P E R I E N C E D S E 'R E T A R I A L and T Y P I N G S E R IV C E -u ra te u p ng o n IBM D is tin c t.v a a .'tar na per* • F i e - tr rn te m * r ep o rt* - p e e .it* pap ers P e r so n a I;/.ad e o n s t e n u o u s s e r ­ vice. X r o* c o p ie s . C lo s e In. • Lr c fs *< n L e -..-nut ohs G R 8-5894 R E P O R I S T H ES I £ D IS S E R T A* IBM Mrs- B r a d y . -3 1 7 O ld­ iT O N S h am G R 2-47! j TYPING N O TE S. TH EM ES gpneraU R eason s ti e Mr* W oods. HD 5 -i1 ~8. MAT [N E E R I N G N ew . s p e c ia l p u rp o se e q u ip m e n t ani d u p lic a tin g s e r v ic e s O p e n u n til IO OO -o m p iett IBM P " A L D R ID G E T Y P IN G S E R V IC E 304 GR 7-1696 E a st 3Pth S tr e e t GR 8-9387 A R T IS T IC ACC! R A T E T Y P I N G a p a g e M in o r c o r r e c tio n # w r ite r M rs A n th o n y . N o rth s is t vers!tv u.R 2-8192 75c IB M t y p e ­ I n i- M A R T H A AN N Z U LEY MBA t y p s n f sere* \ c o m p le t e p r o fe s sio n a i n e U iio r v d - n . v o tty s tu d e n t* S p *-'.ai ae*- Hoard >qu ij* tier, e a n d er.gl­ m en t fo r ue* r in k th e s e s an-! d is e rta tlo n # ta o O' d . o f la n g u a g e in P n o n e GR 2-721') & GR 2-767T 2013 G U A D A L U P E E X P E R IE N C E D TYPLN . ca sc nab; e. A c c u r a te d ale H O 5 5 v l3 Asian- M RS A L B R I G i: f w t per* REASONABLY, A I •our p a- A T E L Y . GR 7-0094 E X P E R T T Y P IN G K SS NAST S E R V IGR. s le g a l b rief*, te r m pap ers r s M o n tg o m e r y . T h e se s , GR 2-5604 At C U R A T E T Y P I N G M cD o n a ld H I 2-01 T Y P IN G N O T E S T Ai n i t :c a 'c u r a te v t ' pew I IBM 2616 rec! ,o n s M adge H o r to n 6 ’.788 : ■ v Mrs. 'E M E S . g e n e r a !, lin g . M n o r e e r ­ ie r 1.V a p a g e 9 . i G r a n d e G R YFLNG BY F O R M E R t wi t h B B A in s e c r c t a r - e le c t r ic . 1M Ex cc u t, v t s tu d ie s la! U L 3-8630 . . . ig h tfu L y . T H E S E S E R FA T It R T S . R E - c o i r e e le d , f u ll- r. ne o p e r a to r o f s y m b o l- e q u ip p e d e le c ­ trum * tic. M rs. R itc h ie , c io -c -iti. u l t 6-71 '79 pvd bv e x p e r le m 'e d V IR G I N I A C A L H O l M T Y P I N G S E R V IC E S Y M B O L S and prm U 'copv for o n e d a y se r v ic * . GR 8-2698. a l l K i e l I - N o ta r y ■'ba-ge e . • •• 1301 E d g e w o o d . N o R E P O R T S T IO N S . T H E S E S D I S S E R T A ­ te r m p a p ers A c c u r a te , r e a ­ t y p in g Mn*. C o l­ s o n a b le lin s. 3405 T o m G reen G R 2-4907, d is t in c t iv e CALL GR 1-5244 TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD Friday, November 6, 1964 THE D A ILY TEXAN Page 7 University Fine Arts . Slate Annual Music, Opera, . Money's History Manfovani, a Delight F On klrn-tv By LINDA RENEAU Texan Staff Writer M antovani provided an “En­ chanted E vening” for his capaci­ ty audience T hursday night. The conductor's m agic violins carried the evening from the open­ ing them e of “ Big C ountry’' to the third encore num ber, “ Some E n ­ chanted E vening.” in the conductor or In his music. As the orch estra prep ared to play Mantovani’» own “Dance of the Eighth Veil,” the conductor “ re ­ gretted for the sake of the men in the audience that I cannot m ake the num ber visual.” The exotic sounds of the o rchestra, however, did evoke pictures. “MARIA," which w as not on the MANTOVANI^ VERSATILITY program , was included in the per- form ance and the conductor varied from ! the usual version by adding < lari- w as evident, as his 45-piece or- ch estra plavpd everything “ The Sw an”' to “ Irm a La Douce.” I net and xylophone effects.^ Hum or was not lacking, either | At the end of T hree Coins in the F ountain," Mantovani stooped low to direct die violins as they m aine, sounded the three coins dropping closed with into w ater. j E vening." three encores, including “ Char- one of his first hits, and “ Some E nchanted “ M anhattan L ullaby,’' the other THK EVENING w as truly “pn« M antovani composition, emphases- chanted.” with the audience re­ ed the slow, sm ooth, sw eet sound ; spondinr. to his a rtistry and bril- !ia n e p M a n t o v a n i’s father is sup- that characterized the entire pro- the only adverse gram . Perhaps posed to have told him as a child, is a criticism of “ Put feeling into your m usic, my weak b rass section. boy, m usic without feeling is little m ore than a noise.” This advice he in followed when he played Austin. the orchestra Paul Baker to Direct "The Visit" at Trinity in SAN ANTONIO—W hat som e c r ! - 1 writing language the G erm an today, D urren m att is rapidly be- tics term as “ the m ost powerful ing recognized a s one of the m ost play of this generation" has been selected by Trinity U niversity significant of contem porary w rit- d ram a ch airm an Paul B aker for ors. Both “ The V isit” and D urren- and I m a tt s “ R om ulus the G re a t” have produotion I been produced on B roadw ay. He ja n u a ry . I has also authored sev eral novels, including “ The P ledge” and “ The “T H E VISIT," by G erm an dra- in D ecem ber for is Q u arry .” m atist Friedrich D u rren m att, In scheduled T rinity’s 65-seat Attic T h eater on Dec. 10-12 and 14-16 and again on Jan . 6 9. presentation Throughout the evening, M anto­ vani interpolated bits of wit and hum or into his announcem ents of the pieces num bers and them ­ the encore num ­ selves. One of bers delighted the audience by im i­ tating a rooster with a squawky trum pet end hens with plucky vio­ lins. an dropped A STANDOUT, both when he in stru ­ purposely m ent with a crash and because of a the fine perform ance, w as drum m er. M antovani’s drum m er played not only drum s, but cym- bols, xylophone, tam borine, a and m arim ba. In the the num ber “ G ra n d s,” j drum m er played all five of his instrum ents. The audience would not let the conductor leave. After two stand­ ing ovations, M antovani played Coed, Ex-Students Involved in Irmo Lo Douce' A U niversity g raduate student and three ex-students are partici­ the Austin Civic Thea­ pating in “ Irm a La te r ’s production of Douce.” Paula Howe will play Irm a In a dram a scene ballet. Joe Bill Hogan, a form er d ram a m ajor, Is the act director. Cecile King, stage m anager, and Ann W ebber, scene designer, are also ex-students. R eservations for the first p er­ form ance F riday can be m ade by calling GR6-0541. throughout The Art D epartm ent will have two exhibits open in the U niverse 1 tv Art Museum the F estival. “ R etrospective Exhibi­ tion,” paintings of Ja c k Tvvorkov, j will be on display the Main G allery and “ One Hundred Y ears from a of A m erican D raw ings” collection of P aul M agriel will be on display on the Mezzanine. A j student exhibition will be shown in the Loggia of the Music Build­ ing. in THE FESTIVAL officially opens at 4 p.m . Sunday, Nov. 15, in Hogg Auditorium with a concert by the U niversity Symphonic Band, J. F ra n k E lsass, conductor, and the A Cappella Choir, M orris J. Beach- v, director. The concert will be o- pen to the public w ithout charge. The band, with Dr. E lsass conduct­ ing, will perform B a c h s “ Jesu. Joy of M an's D esirin g ;” Tele­ m a n n 's “ Suite in A m in o r;” and H andel's ballet suite “ The Gods Go a-B egging.” The band and A C appella Choir with Dr. Beachy conducting will present Hinde­ m ith 's “ A p p a re n t repentina d ies.” The band, again under the baton of Dr. E lsass, will conclude with Ber­ trand H ow ard's f o r B and” and “ P salm for B and” by Vincent P e rs ic h e tti “ Chorale T h ere will be a concert every night, M onday through Saturday, and another the following Sunday aftem oon. A concert by the B altim ore Sym ­ phony O rchestra, under the direc­ tion of P e te r H erm an Adler, will be presented at 8 p.m . F riday on KLRN-TV, channel 9. The concert which m ark s the first nation-wide television appearan ce of the B alti­ m ore Symphony will feature guest a rtist Leontyne the M etropolitan O pera. P rice of The from Internationally Miss P ric e will sing the concert a ria “ Bella Mia F ia m m a ” by Mo­ zart. Tatiana^s L etter Scene from “ E ugene O negin" by Tachikovsky. “ Zweite B rautnacht! Zauberna- c h t!” “ Die Aegyptisohe H elena” by Strauss, and “ Vissi d' A rte” from “ T osca” by Puccini. acclaim ed sta r of the opera and concert stage was born in L aurel, Miss. This year she was honored by P re si­ dent Johnson when she received the D istinguished Citizens’ Award. KLRN-TV’s c u rren t “ N um ism a­ tics" series presents the history of m oney and its evolution from coins of Biblical days to our p re ­ sent-day m onetary system . View­ ing tim e Is IO p.m . F riday, and Nov. 13, on Channel 9. Series host Is B ernard Kissel, who discusses the origins of money with num ism atists F ra n k O 'Sulli­ van and H. N. Schw artz, both n a ­ tionally known coin collectors and authorities on coins and money. STATE Feat: l l :5ft-1 52 J:54-5 .V> 7:58 IOO* CHIEF D R IV E - IN T H E A T R E MOI H. VA MAK HO M710 — . Adnlta I OO Dim. Card .75 C hild Fr««. Ro* Office A Rnwk Bar Open# 8 PYC I his is one of the funniest comedies of the year . . . even better than Pink Panther ! T W O A L L C O L O R FEA T U R ES YUI BRINNER RICHARD WIDMARK GEORGE CHAKIRIS ■ joined B aker, who experim ental the Trinity faculty a s ch airm an of the d e p a rt­ m ent of d ra m a In Septem ber, 1963, Is nationally known for his work theater in of techniques. His Robinson Je ffe rs’ “ M edea,” Au gust Strindberg s “ Ghost Sonata,” and S. I. H siung’s “ I^adv Precious S tre a m ” have captivated San An­ tonio audiences. productions BAK ERS PRODUCTIONS of “ Julius C easar S hakespeare's and “ Comedy of E rro r s ” by the Dallas T h eater C enter repertory com pany will be brought to San Antonio Dec. 16-19 in the McAllis­ two plays, te r Auditorium . The which will be presented in m a ti­ nee and evening perform ances, will m ark San Antonio’s m ajor observance of S hakespeare s 400th anniversary. T rinity g raduate students study a t the D allas T h eater C enter for m a ste r degrees in d ra m a . B aker is m anaging d irector of the Cen­ ter. “ N oah's Also scheduled for the fall se a ­ son is Benjam in B ritte n 's m usical Flood,” spectacular, the which will be presented by U niversity's dep artm en t of m usic and d ram a on Nov. 20 , 22 and 23 in the Ruth Taylor Music Center Concert Hall on cam pus. Union Flick Stars Gleason in ’Gigot' “ G igot,” pronounced “ Gee-Go,” is the Texan Union m ovie choice this week. Jack ie Gleason sta rs In the title role of a kindly tram p in Europe He also w rote the original story and composed the m usic. Co-starring is K atherine Kath, and Gene Kelly directs. Show tim es a re 4, 7, and 9:30 p.m. Fri day, 7 and 9:30 p m, Saturday, and 4 and 7 p.m . Sunday In the Union Auditorium . AdmiSvSion is 15 cents for stu­ dents, and 35 cents for nonstu­ dents. la th e only w ay you will re a c t to th is sto ry of tw o m en, and w hat h a p p e n e d th e day th ey tu rn ed th e ir b a c k s on F a te . D irecting the play, considered to be D u rre n m a tt’s finest work, Is T rinity a ssista n t professor of d ra ­ m a R obert Swain. Swain, who ob­ tained his BA a t W ake F orest Col­ lege and MA under B aker at B ay­ lor U niversity, joined the T rinity faculty in Septem ber. the “ The V isit" concerns re ­ turn of an elderly m illionairess to her hometown in C entral Europe and the vengeful plot which she unwinds a fte r using h er w ealth to turn into a boom town. the depressed a re a F rom these basic elem ents, D u r­ re n m a tt fashioned a m any-level play which is a com bination of a m acabre parable, a deeply m ov­ in­ tragedy, and a scathing ing dictm ent of the power of greed. The T rinity U niversity produc­ tion in taken from the translation by P atrick Bowles which, unlike an e a rlie r version adapted for the English-language stage, adheres to It the au thor’s original play as was published and perform ed in G erm an. THE LEADING DRAMATIST • j TMF A U f T N CIVIC THEATRE SAUCIEST MUSICAL EVER! CURTAIN FIO tfO*. *ES£K*T!0«G Dial 0# 6 0541 STARTS SUNDAY O N T H E B E A C H LAST 2 DAYS I Nu d ie* «n I (*rti(rM i “SHIRT OFF HER BACK” — P L IS — “NAKED COMPLEX’ BOTH IN GOLOB ADI I.T ONLY ALL SKATS SI 60 rfElwood BOX. OI KH K O P E N «:30 ADM . 75« R I D S I’N H E K 18 KREK DRIVE - I U THEATRE 3981 Ult Am. I THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN D eb b ie R e y n o ld s A Harr* P reen eil 10ft GOLIATH & THE SINS OF BABYLON Murk F o r e e t A Joe* Greet 9:00 ca* MUHM, a* A BLAKE EDWARDS anour PETER SELLERS SOMMER ELKE J a s h J2Ji n ™ eI1 Huron** BM • UNHID ARTISTS f«n*4 a PAWIVISIOH im : EASTRAHCBLOft j ATALE OF SWANTON WOMEN A M D T H E FAT- B L A C K pussy C A T Exclusive Showing ^ Adult Entertainment FRATI KR TIM KS 6 4 5 A ID P M. I PPI! PLUS 2 ND ADULT FEATURE AT 8:30 C O M M O N IMW WI CE Puthbodi Seats • FrwPorPfV* Art Gallery • larger Screw 'n (Sc Southwest "AT THE CANNES FILM FESTIVAL, ‘ONE POTATO, TWO POTATO’ SCORED THE LONGEST, LOUDEST OVATION IN 9 YEARS!” — TIME "A deeply touching picture ..." — J O H N B P S TIN "T op! in Artistic M o t ie T ra d itio n ” J i m R u m o u r , A m i n Ed ito r— DfvUj Texan b a r b a r a HAK KIK B E S T ACTRESS AIV ARII CANNES FILM FE STH AL! G raj. o f I'n it. of Tex ••BE RNIE HAMILTON IR SPLENDID!** -The N e w Yorker ONE PORTH HIO WWD W n J BIG W IIK OPEN I: IS KEAT I R ES t 1:86 8 16 4:56 0 85 3 :15 IO Oft "O N T H E D R A G ’* TAYLORSUZANNEPLESHETTE im is ms Hunter .AARON ROSENBERG C i n e m a s c o p e A D U L T S $1.00 • D IS C . C A R D .75 • O P E N 6 P.M. -------------------- N O C H IL D R E N , PLEA SE -------------------- ■ ■ B B d r i v e i n! theatre| FIRST RUN IN AUSTIN 646ft Rd Burnet | § 1 DRIVE-IN THEATRE BOX O F F IC E O PE N 6:30 A dm . R i d s Under 12 F rea HOW THE WEST W AS W O N D eb b ie R e y n o l d s A J a i new S te w a r t 7 (16 co ava**** ST’JANE HI lo o n I P WALLY n NEHEMIAH K I M I Lox • Persoff otevensm O mARK ___________ — -MICK** OOOIAN'H enooixeo AARON ROSENBERG RALPH NELSON HAROLD MEDFORD £SE R N E ST K .G A N N scaetNeiAY er STARTS TODAY! ■PARAMOUNT F E A T U R E S : 12 OO „ 2 OO . 4:00 6:00 8:00 . 10:00 PRICKS AIM LTS I Oft YI DC .50 t H IL D 35 The U niversity Collega of Fin? A rts will present the* twenty-third from annual Fine A rts Festival Nov. 15 through Nov. 22. During this eight-day period there will be lectures, and concerts, exhibits, three d e­ panel discussions. The partm en ts of the College of Fine Arts-Art, D ram a, and Music—a re joined by the School of A rchitecture and to the School of Journalism m ake the Festival one of the m ost outstanding events of the South west. This is the first tim e that the School of Journalism has particip a­ ted in the Fine Arts Festival. Kd- ltors from leading new spapers and m agazines over the state will g a ­ lectures ther for a program of and discussions during the Con­ ference on Fine Arts Criticism on Nov. 20 and 21. in The School of A rchitecture Is opening its exhibit “ The new Phil­ harm onic the in new Berlin the A rchitecture exhibit room of Building on Nov. 16 w here it will continue to be on display until Nov. 21. A lecture “ Designing E x ­ periences” will be presented in the A rchitecture Building at 4 p.m . T hursday, Nov. 19. ANOTHER SPECIAL FEA TI RE of the F estival will be the m eeting of the Texas C hapter of the A m er­ ican M usicological Society in the Music Building. T wo C r tat Film* STARTS SUNDAY AUSTIN THEATRE m at the / > S T Stanley Kubrick's " A " A r- Dr. Strangelove yr. Htw I Inroad Ti Stop Worry**! And Im Till Bom* PETEE SEI.LEES PLAYS 8 DU FERLIS I ©KOELE C. SCOT T • STERLING HAYDEN A K KEN AN WINN r u e se c o n d as f in e as T in A lso : ( I*ABAC I EH" i i r ^ t mMEW INTERNS ...and their ne loves /' r n Adults M D C LOO 50c HEU) OVER! team the BAG G ERS." that brought Second G R E A T W E E K from the blistering best-seiler from ' THE C A R P E T ­ you susan Human rn Bim gains A X nu ' r n rn Gone mw ? M IC H A E L CON NORS' HEATHERTON J O R A H W * aer t urn A H I C M H E L O L S D T R p h " E 'L E O T S E E V V D K ) D M I N V rcawcMi rfCEBOK M Y V R T For — Vo Child Sold Adell* ...» .5,1 MDC Child .50 FREE PARKING 7Hi A LA V A C A STS VARSITY . m ilt* 71 M IM .50 I h i I ii 5(| I a s t z d a y s: BEF. “J IV ING DESERT” AT I 4*8 50 41 Oft* ie-IO;26 ■ • • T i l ® BK. L iv in g D e s e r t J. F a b u lo u s ly B e a u tifu l! E x c it in g ly D iffe re n t! Witt “BIAR COUNTRY" and BEN ANO MC* S T A R T IN G S U N D A Y WHITE WILDERNESS Legendary Creatures in the Land of U n e n d in g Snow s! ....... — * 6l»*Y**r Witt *Fttr FREE PARKING 7th & L A V A C A STS. m w A towering triumph of Adventure and Excitement! I I H GUINNESS W HAWKINS meBnBioeoNTHe | M i M | p H U m i I S i M M f l i PERY DEMA N 4 ES: W i n n e r o f 2 7 I n t e r n a t i o n a l (SWM T IM E S a AT.) A w a r d s . . . ? A c a d e m y A w a rd s ! i. 65 A I FREE P A R K IN G A T ALL TIMES Friday, Nomwbtor Ai 1964 THE DAILY, TEXAN Page 8 The m ost honored series m motion picture h isto ry 1 V ! k i Whitbread Publishes Poems Entitled Four Infinitives Swoboda, Texan Now Music Heard ' World “ Four Infinitives,” a book of poems by Dr. Thomas Whitbread, assistant professor of English, will be published Friday by Harper and Row. The 43 poems are grouped under the headings “ To Observe.” “ To “ To Enjoy,” and Remember,” “ To Be,” the four infinitives of the title. Although Dr. Whitbread's verse has appeared in several leading magazines the New (Harper’s, Yorker, Atlantic Monthly, Paris Review, and Kenyon Review), this is his first book of poems. Most of them have been written since 1955. DR. WHITBREAD grew up in Massachusetts and was educated at Amherst College (BA 1952) and I Harvard University (MA 1953, I PhD 1959). He taught part-time at Harvard while in graduate school, gaining experience for his teaching career which began at Texas in 1959. This year he is giving a graduate read­ ing course on four Twentieth Cen- j fury American poets ( R o b e r t Frost, Wallace Stevens, Robert Lowell and Richard Wilbur), a j junior course in selected plays of Shakespeare freshman and (liberal arts) course, I “ Plan Introduction to World Literature. In addition, he is guiding two master's theses, one in poetry writing and one in short story writing. l l ” a FRIDAY IS FISH 'N FHY DAY AT BURGER CHEF Pmmw Bin* H a t i r ton** Bali Stat, llffct- It kraal!ad md tool*! ta a (H it, | a I d a n tawan. Tetrad arith tar­ ta* st ad tar Mutt aa bun. Oatietouil FRIDAY ONLY 35 3 3 0 3 N. LAMAR Rh. GI 2 -2 3 1 7 Store Franchises Available through BURGER CHEF I n d ia n apalit, Ind. h a m b u r g e r s Home of tho Worlds Greatest 15( Hamburqpr! / U * FREE TICKET TOP '''^ '" D R A W I N G BEGINS FRIDAY, NOV. 6 Fine Arts Box Office— H ogg Auditorium Open Weekdays 9-4 Saturday 9-12 Free to $17.99 Blanket Tax Holders as long as tickets last Puccini's I Dr. Whitbread writes stories, as j well as poems, and one, “ The Re- : memberer,” won a prize from ! Paris Review and was included In I the 1962 volume of 0. Henry prize stories. He likes to teach and finds that when he is most productive as a 1 teacher he is most creative poeti* | cally—“ the two seem to feed one I another.” IN W RITIN G PO ET R Y, .Dr. | Whitbread likes to try his hand at various forms. His new book con-! I tains some sonnets, some poems , which employ quatrains and quite a few written in blank verse. For at least one, “ Civilities,” he has I invented unique patterns. Among the titles, “ Why I Eat at Caruso’s” will catch the eye of Austin readers. Dr. Whitbread is represented in a new book, “ Of Poetry and Pow-; the er: Poems Occasioned by Presidency and by the Death of j | John F. Kennedy,” with a fore­ w ord by Arthur Schlesinger, Jr . ; Another of his poems will appear 1 in a forthcoming special supple- | ment on the South in Harper’s. Approach, a quarterly published in I Rosemont, Pa., also w ill publish one of his poems soon. Artist to Discuss His Exhibit Sunday I Jack Tworkov, chairman of the art and architecture department at Yale University, will discuss his art exhibit at 3 p.m. Sunday; in the University Art Museum. Sixty paintings and 25 drawings and collages by Tworkov will be shown In the museum’s main gal­ lery. The exhibit of Tworkov’s works covers the period from 1958 to 1963. The Art Museum is open from IO a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to I p.m. Satur­ day, and 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sun­ day. Although he now resides in Tex­ as, lr* has credentials to be a citizen of the world. Although he speaks with a rich Slavic accent, he has been a US citizens for 20 years. And although he has spent most of his adult life working with pro­ fessionals, he now finds it exciting to be among college students. This paradoxical personage is Dr. Henry Swoboda (pronounced SWO-boda), who joined the Univer­ sity music faculty this fall as con­ ductor of the 70-piece University Symphony Orchestra. DR . SWOBODA succeeded Prof. Alexander von Kreisler, who has retired as conductor of the Uni­ versity symphony but who contin­ ues to teach in the Music Depart­ ment on modified service. The University’s eminent new conductor spent the last two years as conductor of the Harvard-Rad- cliffe Orchestra. At Harvard, with what the Chris­ tian Science Monitor called an “ iron but loving hand,” Dr. Swo­ boda injected thorough profession­ al musicianship into a large or­ chestra made up mainly of non­ specialists. What Dr. Swoboda took to Har­ vard and now brings to Texas, is a musical career that spans more than 40 years and three continents and stretches from the shadow of the Acorpolis to the concert halls of South America. TH E PR ELU D E to this long ca­ reer began in Dr. Swoboda’s na­ tive Prague, where he studied at the Academy of Music and then earned a doctorate in musicology from Charles University, He gain­ ed his early conducting experience in European opera houses—first in Prague, then at Duesseldorf and Elberfeld. Dr. Swoboda returned to Prague in 1932 to spend six years as mu­ sic program director and conduc­ tor of Radio Prague. During that time he also appeared as guest conductor in Edinburgh and with thp Berlin and Dresden Philhar­ Ticket Drawing Friday For Butterfly Opera The Cultural Entertainment1 Committee will present the popu­ lar opera “ Madama Butterfly” in Austin’s Municipal Auditorium at 8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 12. Pucci- j ni’s “ Madama Butterfly” is a pro­ duction of the Houston Grand Ope­ ra Association and will be conduct­ ed by Walter Herbert. Season ticket holders and holders of a $17.99 Blanket Tax who have i drawn tickets in advance will be admitted without charge. free Drawing of tickets by Blanket Tax holders begins F ri­ day in the Fine Arts Box Office in Hogg Auditorium and will con­ tinue as long as tickets last. Box office hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays and 9 a.m. to noon Satur­ day. j ^ T H E TOUCHING O PERA reveals a conflict between cultures of east and west and a poignant mlsunder- individual values. J standing of Tragedy is delicately portrayed : through the medium of opera by j the genius of Puccini in his adap­ tation of a story by John Luther Long. Long’s short story, Madam Butterfly, appeared in the Janu­ ary, 1898. issue of Century Maga­ zine and in 1900 the American producer David Belasco success­ fully fashioned it into a Broadway play with great success. That same year the show was present­ ed in London where it was seen by Puccini who immediately sens­ ed its operatic possibilities. PA R T IC l EARLY P E R C E P T IV E in the art of portraying unfor­ tunate heroines wdth a touching musical glow. Puccini blends into the opera an exciting mood of beauty and pathos. Puccinian melody emerges at its best in a notable orchestral score. The first performance of the opera at Milan's La Scala in February, 1904. was a howling fiasco. It was immediately with­ drawn and drastically revised on advice of Arturo Toscanini, a close friend of the composer. Af­ ter revision, it was given with great success the following May at Brescia, Italy. From this point on “ Madama Butterfly” was to go swiftly on to international popu­ larity. THE UNIVERSITY'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO A N D HI-FI SALES A N D SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 S e r v i n g the U n i ve r si ty A r e a for 14 Years PA R KIN G IN REAR B E D W A Y “ H IG H FIDELITY AT REASO N ABLE PRIC ES" H O M E OF W O R LD REN O W N ED PA N CAKES Also Offering A Complete Luncheon And Dinner Menu PANCAKE HOUSE Opan 24 Hours a Day 19th and GUADALUPE Madama Butterfly Thursday, Nov. 12 8:00 p.m. Municipal Auditorium free to season ticket holders PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES EXPERT CAM ERA REPAIR Hallmark Cards and Tape Recorders Studtman Photo Service 272 W EST I9TH G R 6-4326 monic Orchestras and the Vienna Symphony. Greek State Orchestra at the Ath­ ens Festival. In 1938, during that phase of European history which Dr. Swo­ boda refers to as "the Hitler epi­ sode,” the young conductor came to America, where he became a naturalized citizen in 1944. He held musical directorships with two American recording com­ panies for several years—Concert Hall Society and Westminster Rec­ ords. His recordings, now regular features of radio network* all over the world, include a wide variety of symphonic works ranging from the pre-classic to the contempo­ rary. Dr. Swoboda’s best-known recordings were made with the Vienna Symphony. : SIN C E 1949 Dr* Swoboda has de- j voted most of his time to guest appearances with leading sym­ phony orchestras throughout the world, Including those in London, P a r i s , Copenhagen, Barcelona, Mexico City, Stockholm, Vienna, Buenos Aires, and other music centers. As an “ ambassador of culture” for the US State Department in recent years, he has conducted the Turkish Presidential Orchestra in Ankara and, just last summer, the Currently, he is coordinating a new project for the Voice of Amer­ ica which will result in a series of 20 radio programs on the scope of the American symphony orches­ tra. The programs, to be broad­ cast in 80 foreign languages, will feature Dr. Swoboda in discussions with Isaac Stern, Aaron Copland, Leopold Stokowski, and other lu­ minaries of music. AT THE UNIVERSITY, D r. Swoboda is busy rehearsing his young colleagues three times a week for a Nov. 20 concert during the University Fine Arts Festival. In addition, he is teaching courses in intermediate and advanced con­ ducting and is in charge of the Music Department’s Opera Work­ shop. Impressed with his students’ “ enormous enthusiasm and inten­ sity,” Dr. Sweboda takes satisfac­ tion in contributing to the techni­ cal preparation of future conduc­ tors, though conducting needs a long time to develop as a skill.” “ even Of the repertory he expects his students to master, he will be lim­ ited “ only to good music.” O r a n a e K H X rrantje ounae 27th * Guadalupe (Upstairs} No Cover Charge Weekdays— 3 p.m.— 12 p.m. Saturdays— 3 p.m.— I a.m. For Those 21 and O ver W ith Discriminating Taste Faculty! Students! Pay Only 10% Over Our Cost Z EN IT H electronics N O R G E appliances STEVES 4225 G U A D A LU PE HO 5-0222 “Austin's Oldest T \ r sales & sen ice dealer'' Musical Globetrotter Dr. Swoboda has appeared with leading symphony orchestras throughout the world and has served as a cultural ambassador for the United States State Department. Beware the Pit Falls of H u n ge r . . . C a ll G R 2-7S11 for Fast Delivery. PIZZA HUT 19+h & Guadalupe spry. T h M erk ow - 1 ■ I : , in is*.,,. M S W I “*Li ,f tM class hit pc d raft cal t ended June j lf Its Results You W a n t ... Use A Classified Ad in T h e D a i l y T e x a n GR I-5244 Friday. Novambar 6. 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 9 «■»*.' j ■»y|gjp|i|t, Law Clinic Doubles As Class-Courtroom " I t ’s a chanco to get a crack at the real thing,” explained one law student about the Legal Aid Clinic of the University Law School. In the current issue of Alcalde, Miss M illie Douglas tells of the growing popularity of the clinic and the ad­ vantages it affords to law stu­ dents. The clinic performs the dual function of educating future law­ yers and providing free legal aid to people otherwise unable to af­ ford it. STAFFED by 30 senior law stu­ dents who spend at least five hours a week in the office, the clinic is an optional course which offers one credit hour toward a law degree. Mrs. Douglas, who is the local president of Theta Sigma Phi alumnae, w o rn e n’s professional journalism fraternity, pointed out that a student taking the course has the opportunity of gaining ex­ perience. Under the supervision of a licensed attorney, a student law­ yer may get a chance to handle Phi Kappa Tau To Open House Phi Kappa Tau fraternity will dedicate its new chapter house. 2804 Rio Grande St., on Saturday and Sunday. Festivities will begin Saturday evening with a semi-formal for parents, alumni members, and actives and pledges of the chap­ ter. Sunday’s agenda w ill include a buffet at noon with formal dedica­ tion ceremonies beginning at 2 p.m. Guest of honor at the cere­ monies w ill be Taylor A. Borra- daile, the only living founder of Phi Kappa Tau. Other distinguished guests will be Donald R. Mighell, former di­ rector of fraternities at the Univer­ sity, and Dr. T. V. Jenkins, the present director. Representing the national fra­ ternity will be Lou Gerding, na­ tional president; Jack Anson, na­ tional secretary; and Dr. W. A. Hammond, president of the Phi Kappa Tau Foundation, a nation­ al fund for building and scholar­ ships. The two-story house, which fea­ tures a contemporary front with vertical panels, accommodates 24 in its living area and has facili­ ties for chapter and social affairs. the case from the initial interview to the appearance before a judge. In 1963, the clinic served 888 cli­ ents who would not otherwise have i ben able to afford legal counsel. The clinic first hung out its shin- i gle in 1941. MOST OF THE CASES deal with divorce and family problems, but debts and claims, child adoptions, ! name changes, torts, contracts, and small estates also are found on the docket. More than 50 per cent of the applications at the clinic concern family problems. Woodrow Patter­ son, director of the clinic, said that because of the high divorce rate in Texas, these cases are good experience for the law stu­ dents. After an Interview with a pros­ pective client, the student submits his application to two practicing attorneys who direct the clinic, U N TIL LAST Y E A R the stu­ dents’ only contact with criminal ; cases was answering hundreds of prisoners' letters and researching prisoners’ questions. In coopera­ tion with the Travis County Junior Bar Association Defender Pro­ gram, students are allowed to do initial interviews and some re­ search for defending attorneys In j criminal cases. Mrs. Douglas noted in her arti­ cle that although 5 per cent of the lawr school enrollees are women, few of them elect to take the Legal Aid course. Director Patter­ son feels that this may be because many of them do not plan to work directly with clients after gradua­ tion. Tlio University clinic, according to Mrs. Douglas, is the largest op­ eration of its kind in the United States. Debaters to Vie at TCU Members of the University sen­ ior and junior debate squad will compete in the TCU College De­ bate Tournament Friday and Sat­ urday. Fifty colleges and universities will debate the topic “ Resolved: That the F e d e r a l government should establish a national pro­ gram of public work for the un­ employed.” Participating in the senior divi­ sion will be Jack Love, Malloy Gould, Mike Phillips, and Edwin Knaak. Junior division members are Terry Satterwhite, Lloyd Doggett, Jean Shearon, Shirley Bacons, Syl­ via Beckey, and Phyllis Beckham. H A I R C U T S $1 25 :*1 BARBER SHOP 25 REG. 607 W . 29th OPEN ’TIL 6 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY FLAT TO PS $1.50 Free Parking Free Parking At Berkmon's /c 'oreleo' N E W lo r CORDLESS TAPE RECORDER S. £ portable M your candid came1-! In its custom- (cattier carrying case. Optional accessory. take anywhere. tape anything Now you can tape professional quality recordings wherever you go. The new Norelco '101* tran­ sistor portable weighs only 7 pounds — yet gives you 3 full hours of recording (or playback) on a single reel. Included is ultra-sensitive dy­ namic microphone and built-in loudspeaker. Also records directly from your radio, TV, or phono and plays back through radio or hi-fi. Comes with 3 inch reel containing 45 minutes of prerecorded music. COMPARE V A L U E S SEE WHAT YOU SAVE L O W M O N T H L Y TERM S mom- 2234 G U A D A L U P E G R 6-3525 friday, N o ve m b e r 6, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page IO New Telescope Set For Planet Studies to The ground-based telescope be built at the McDonald Observa­ tory by University and NASA funds will be used for detailed studies of the atmospheres of planets and satellites in the solar system. Dr, Harlan J. Smith, director of the observatory and chairman of the Astronomy Department, clari- jfied details concerning the tele­ scope. Construction w ill take about three years and will cost ulti- j mately about $2.1 million, Smith said. The telescope will be the | sixth largest in the nation. “ BEFORE NASA CAN DESIGN space probes to visit these objects, engineers have to know the com­ position and detailed temperature and pressure structure of their ‘‘A atmospheres,” he continued. relatively small mistake can ruin average in their course work. Although McDonald already has an 82-inch telescope, the new one will double McDonald’s large-tele­ scope work capacity and will be designed particularly for detailed spectroscopic analysis of light. THE TELESCOPE will be used about one-fourth of the time on specific problems concerning ob­ jects In the solar system. In the remaining time, it will tackle o- ther problems of interest to the space agency. Although the telescope itself Is NASA property, its use and opera­ tion are entirely under the direc­ tion of the University, which will I supply the 60-foot dome, building, and supporting facilities. Drama Students Receive Award Fifteen University drama stu­ dents have been awarded fall se­ mester scholarships through the : Drama Department. Recipients of the Laboratory Theater Scholarships are William Louis Do!ive, Nan Elizabeth El­ kins, Linda Kay Fisher, Sandra Ann Hudlow, Eliseo Lino Martinez, Alice Elizabeth Polley, Margaret Rideout, and Loraine Elenora Smith. Other awards were given to Fred Dayton Behringer, Sallie Dickson Memorial Trust Fund; Iden Payne Chester Eitze. B. Scholarship; and Mrs. Nina Mc- Guffin Harper, Ruthe Norton Me­ morial Scholarship. Also, Mrs. Ladonna Hammett ! Heaton, Donna Dellinger Memorial Scholarship; Robert Allen Heaton, Morton Brown Scholarship; Giva Richardson, Lucy Barton Scholar­ ship; and Richard H. Smith, Ro­ bert West Memorial Scholarship. ■’ I I II i When M ik e Pyle goes skiing... ’ST ' I CaPeR CmuoMs are the slacks.! Zantrer and cotton is the blend. And w hen the nameol the game is j crispness, neatness,^ lust tor hard wear.! Zantrel Polynesia rayon j delivers copiously. Caper Continental: trim, tapered/: beltless, cuffless, wow! $4.98 or thereabouts,; gets you fitted out. " Z a n ie r and “ Poiynos c” are registered badnmarKs af American Enka Cor p. for its new high modulus rayon. American j Enka Corporation, Enka, N.C. j Producer of nylon • polyester i * rayon • yarns • fibers ] • Zantrel” Pofynostc' rayon. > E||Ka zantrel lf t \ I h a A ‘Chap Stick’goes "A n y guy who spends as m uch time outdoors as I do really needs ’Chap Stick’,’’ says the Chicago Bears’ star center.“For me, it’s a necessity.What w ith the real raw S u n d a y s on the field, hot sum m er practice, and winter skiing off-season, my lips used to get weatherbeaten twelve m onths a year. But a couple of swipes with 'Chap Stick’ and my lips feel great— it helps heal them fa sti” A favorite in Canada. The lip balm selected m i n i *or use kV *he IU D ' U.S. Olympic Team. DON’T LET DRY, SORE LIPS SPOIL YOUR FUN-WHEREVER YOU GO, GO WITH 'CHAP STICK' •CMM 915*’ l l U d .I tf ©UM HOUSH UFS. COV., IfKCHIUM, VA* [loft to right) Hople Cantu, Sylvia Gamboa, and Thomas Davila listen intently to University student Vonnie Arnold. Tell Them A Story — Texan Photo-—D raddy Basketball to Square-Dancing Center Alive With Activity dosey-do in a square dance exccr cise; a little boy reads haltingly from a library book—and the after­ noon activities are well under way. FOR BOYS, tile Center offers boxing, team sports, cooking, skat­ ing, woodwork, arts and crafts, and trampoline. The girls partici­ pate in cooking, sewing, dancing. Combined groups use the library whose bookshelves have been filled from the Austin Public Library. Manuel Garza, a Texas-ex, is the I supervisor of the Center. Greeks Schedule Sing-Song Practice fraternity division while Chi Ome­ ga came in first in individual so­ rority competition last year. Nelson s G ifts IN D IA N JE W E L R Y M E X IC A N IM PO R TS 4612 S. Congress HI 4-3814 Register Now For Students' Association Official CHARTER FLIGHTS to EUROPE Next Summer $ O A l 5 0 Round Trip 3 U I (Approx.) Austin— L O N D O N — Austin (L a it year'* charter wa* an early lell-out end 1965 flight* are a l­ full. Book early re ad y one-third to insure y o u n e lf a place.) For Inform ation Ca!! G R 2-4052 UNIVERSITY BROADCASTS By Gay Nagle Texan Feature Editor It Is 3 p.m. in East A u s t i n . Grammar schools, junior and sen­ ior high school dismissal bells sig­ nal the end of another school day. Children scurry outside, textbooks in hand. By 3:30 p.m. the corridors are empty. And the Pan-American Center, 2100 E . Third, bubbles with life as children of all ages stream through its door intent on spending their energy until dinner time. T H E PY N -AMERICAN C EN T ER is one of four community recrea­ tion centers operated by the Austin Parks and Recreation Department. Through a variety of programs and activities, the Center serves more than 1,000 persons a week from tots to adults. Housed next to Zavola School, the Center is the nucleus for many Latin Americans in Austin. Activities for pre-schoolers at the Center are similar to those of a kindergarten, providing opportuni­ ties for social adjustment, rhyth­ mic appreciation, and develop­ ment of skills. In the mornings, the Well-Child Clinic, a service of the City Health Department, pro­ vides free medical checkups, U N IV ER SIT Y ST I DENTS, and several sorority pledge classes vol­ unteer their services at the center. jA *Y’ volunteer group has begun a Reading Club for the school children in the afternoons. “ It is fulfilling to work with these students,” said University student Elizabeth Ewing. “ They teach me as much as I teach them, and this kind of work is a real challenge and very stimulating.” Basketballs swish through nets; a sewing machine whirs; partners Austin Author Traces Sam Houston's Path Sue Flanagan, Austin author, traveled 7,300 miles with a camera and note pad to document “ Sam Houston’s Texas,” which the Uni­ versity Press will publish Monday. through Christmas, an exhibit of To pictures from the book will be featured at the Amon Carter Mu­ seum of Western Art in Fort Worth. Miss Flanagan's objective was i to retrace Houston’s steps and re­ cord “ through the eye of the cam­ era places and things that remain of the Texas he knew and saw.” ’ The 213-page volume illustrates “ yesterday’s description of today.” j The author chose to publish 113 of her photographs; she has taken about 1,000 pictures since 1961. “ Sam Houston’s Texas” is a bi­ ography portraying with film and words the life of the man who served as a leader of the Texas Army, President of the Republic of Texas, United States Senator, and Governor of Texas. In waiting the book, Miss Flana­ gan visited every place in Texas where Houston had been. In pho­ tography, she had to contend with rivers which had changed courses, houses which had been remodeled since Houston's day, television an­ tennas, and telephone wires. Miss Flanagan has received nu­ merous requests for reprints of her photographs. F r o m M o n d a y : Kl T FM, 90.7 mc Friday 2 OO— K aleid o sco pe 5:00—Serenade 6 OO— Foothill Fable* fi .Yi— Sim ulcast: P u b lic A ffairs 7 .OO—Musk' of Distinction: “ In c Chorus” 9 15—Oplnlon Omnibus Saturday 2 OO— Classics P ro m e n a d e 5 00— Seren ade 6.OO—-Concert in K h a ki 6:30—-Weekend News Round-l p 7:00— J u s t Ja z z Closed Circuits Friday (Closed circuit programs m ay br in the following buildings: j Batts, viewed Benedict, M '/es. economics. Journalism . Experlm en-, tai Science. Geology, Speech, Chem- j istrv, Texas Union, and Academic Center Auditorium ! Business- Closed Circuit, Channel t 9 OO—L a V i d a Pa na mer:' ana. “ So u th A m erica n G eo g ra p h y ” 9 30-—Geology: “ Ground W a t e r ’ 10:00— L a V i d a P a na mer ira na ■ “ South American Geography” ; again at 12 noon, 2 pm. , and 2:30 p.m. AUSTIN'S BIG 4 IN AUTHENTIC .MEXICAN FOOD — EL MAT "Hom e of the Crispy Tacos” 504 E. Ave. G R 7-7023 EL TORO "Austin's Original Mexican Restaurant 16th & Guadalupe G R 8-4321 EL CHARRO "Big Steaks, Mexican Style" 91 Red River G R 8-7735 The 29th annual performance of Sing-Song w ill take place in Muni­ cipal Auditorium on Dec. 5. Fraternities and sororities prac­ tice sessions will continue until the night of the performance. Until last year, Sing-Song con­ sisted only of individual fraternity ; and sorority competition. Lambda Chi Alpha and Chi Omega joined forces in 1962 to present a Christ­ mas medley in the middle of the program. The change was made in 1963 to provide a separate division for judging combined groups. The first mixed fraternity and sorority division wras won by P i Kappa Al­ pha and Delta Delta Delta. Theta X i took top honors for the 10:30— Geology: “ Ground W a t e r " ; a- gain at I and 1:30 p rn. 12:3 0 -Geography 3 40— Geology: “ Glaciers” 4:15— Introduction to Visual Arts “ Ambiguous Space— 19 20* h Centuries ‘ th and 7 OO—T E M P P review ; “ H um anities” 8.00— T E M P Special le c tu re ; “ G al­ axies and M ankind” Closed Circuit, Channel 4 I:Of)—G eology; “ Ground W a te r” KLRN-TV, Channel 9 Friday 30—'TV Kindergarten OO—art. Music 27— Spanish I .45— Spanish 2 :02— t i<-o graph v 25— Com m unity Calendar 32—Science 3 02—Si lence 8 25— News 30— The Answer 02— H isto ry, Government 20—Com m unity Calendar 35— < ieography 05— Science 6 28—News 38—Science 8 OO—Spanish I 2:18— Spanish 2 2:37—Geography 3:0O—I.a H ora Mexicans 4:00— T V Kindergarten •i 30— Fu n W ith Fuzzy 5:00—W h a t’s New 5:30—Com m entary 6:00 -Of People and Po litics; “ L y n ­ don Ti. Johnson” §:3Q~ Evening New* 7:OO—Sports P rin t 7 30—( ’alloquy 8*00—New Symphony Series 9 ;00— New r Trleans J a// 9:30—The T u rn of the Century L O O K — Y O U R — BEST C A P IT O L BEAUTY College Hairstyling OPEN 8 AM Til IO P M Phone G R 2-9292 16th & G u a d a . — P A R K F R E E SWITCHING TO A PIPE? SAVE U P TO 2 5 % O N PIPES • T O B A C C O S • P IP E R A C K S • P O U C H E S • L IG H T E R S BBB # Loewe • Dunhill # import* • Medico # Yeilobole # K ayw oodie M ONRO E’S "Mexican Food to G o " 500 E. Ave. G R 7-8744 Listen to O ur C om m ercia'* on K A Z Z F M Radio. O P E N EVERY D A Y Ladies' Pipes SPARTAN DISCOUNT SMOKE SHOP 5501 Airport Blvd.