Lawyers Duel In Mock Trial By BILL LITTLE Hinger Ginic and Foundation, To­ peka, Kan. the mock case of a packed audience Slashing into the testimony of two expert witnesses, a pair of Houston attorneys debated a mythical case in Ixifore Townes Hall Auditorium Monday night. In Dr. Modiin, who had supposedly been treating the girl, discussed her as “ tense, anxious, subdued, and mildly depressed, with her voice inconstant." He discounted Marge j as contributing factors, the facts Brow n vs. Paradise Point Theaters I th at her older sister was much a pot ation, George E. Pletcher, J more beautiful than she, her fath- attom ey for the plaintiff, and lorn er supposedly an ardent athletic Alexander, representing the defend- enthusiast, her brother a great ant, argued practically-even evi-1 football star, that she had suffered dence in a shortened three-hour a previous such attack after she segment of the full trial. Concen­ entered Oberlin College a t 15, and, trating on the finally, that only three days be­ psychiatrists, Dr. Herbert C. Mod­ fore the accident, she had been iin and Dr. Hamilton Ford, the jilted by her fiance. lawyers showed court room proce­ dure and tactics to an audience made up predominantly of law stu­ dents. He pointed to her concert career as exceedingly important to her, and diagnosed her case as a severe neurosis. testimony of the Quoting from Dr. Modlin’s own article on trauma-neurosis, Alex­ ander cross-examined, building on tile points the witness had dis­ counted. Dr. Ford, professor of psychiatry at toe University’s Medical Branch in Galveston, contended that the girl's condition stemmed from sev­ eral factors. He maintained that she was psychotic and needed shock treatm ents, which lh*. Mod­ iin hadn t seen as necessary. The Texas doctor said m arriage and a home were the girl s true goals in life, not toe singing ca­ reer selected by her family. He called the "D ear John L etter" the last straw. The reason she didn’t lose her voice immediately, Dr. Ford said, was that she was strong, but subconsciously needed an ex­ cuse, The accident provided this, he said. Trying to discredit Dr. Ford, Pletcher questioned his short en­ counter with the girl. (He’d only seen her twice, compared to Dr. Modlin’s 14 months of work). After a recess, Judge W. R. Ses­ sions of Dallas charged the jury, and final arguments were present­ ed. No decision w*as reached. Dr. Hubert Smith, director of toe the I*aw Sciences Institute, said case has been presented through­ out the US, to see how juries reas­ on and react where there is no organic injury. "This is just another training vt* it gives the students a chance to hear fine trial lawyers and expert witnesses under pres­ sure,” he said. Several participants in the trial appear in a public panel discussion Tuesday afternoon in Townes Hall Auditorium. singer, claimed In the case, Miss Brown, a con­ cert damages against the theater, after she was hit by a falling curtain weight bar. No physical injury was incurred, it was brought out, but the girl lost her voice and was in a men­ tal institution. The lawyers started by reviewing for the make-believe jury and au­ dience the facts in the case. Then Pletcher called to the stand Dr. Modiin, senior psychiatrist at Mon- Briefs 9 rn rn From the Wire By The Associated Press Glenn Prepares to Try First US Orbit Flight CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - M a ­ rine Col. John H. Glenn Jr. moved into special "ready room " quar­ ters here Monday to begin exten­ sive preparation for a space flight three times around the world ex­ pected late this month. Glenn, named last week to make the first US manned orbit flight:, unpacked his suitcase in the same aqua-colored lodgings where space pilots Alan B. Shepard Jr. arf! Vir­ gil I. Grissom stayed before their I hide — suborbital rides earlier this year. ★ Laos G u ard ia ns N a m e d GENEVA «—« The 14-nation Laos peace conference took a m ajor step Monday by naming Britain and the Soviet Union aa perm a­ nent guardian* of the Southeast Asian kingdom's peace and neu­ trality. ★ Cardinal s Pardon Near T h e D a iEy T e x a n "First College Daily In the South1 Vol. 6! Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1961 Eight Pages Today No. 79 Katanga Crisis Eased Roadblocks Lifted ELISABETH VILLE, Katanga (ZF)— Katanga bowed to a announced agreement on reopening the airport artery, reat of UN force Monday night and agreed to reopen the Kimba professed surprise at the new barricade construc- mam road to the Elisabethville airport that was barricaded lion that followed by hours his threat to shoot down all UN Ui?n g . day by Kaianga troops and police. planes flying over the secessionist province, ensigns between UN and Katanga forces built up to a The agreement came within an hour of a UN ultimatum j flashpoint before Katanga Foreign Minister Evariste Kimba threatening military action unless the Katanga forces re- m o v e d the roadblocks th att*— ------------------ — ........ ■ ... h a d p a r a ly z e d tr a f f ic b e tw e e n j news conference to announce with- E lis a b e th v ille a n d th e a i r p o r t drawai of toe roadblocks. .. ....... ^ Troop Shifts Russians bn, but no one in an official posi­ tion would talk. BERLIN CB—A US Army battle group 1,500 strong headed for Ber­ lin Monday in a replacem ent move that has brought warnings from Moscow. a n d a U N I n d ia n tr o o p ca Thie" UN and hatangan armored cars George Ivan Smith that both sides confronted each other across one withdraw* the roadblock. F i v e minutes before main artery and open toe road to the I N ultimatum was to expire, normal transport Katanga paratroops still were dig- ging in at one barricade. I E l s e w h e r e in EBsabethvUle. K im b a l , h r l / , Z ™ described h eat to LN plane* “ freshly arm ed Katanga gendarmes k set up new barriers. The Swedish i a b o u t ^ h i f ' t o ^ a f ^ ^ ^ ' and irish UN camps were com -I J pie rely P la n e s T h re a te n e d troops from isolated, all their -...i; l!! t. . ^ P three main irs| ai rrraJ . spent ihe night M Mum- | roads leading to them brine guard- } ’ ed by Kantangans I if inuit mn I itiitiatiim Issued The US command in Berlin pro­ tested to the Russians against re­ inforcement of toe wall, but the British and French commanders In 175 vehicles, the 1st Battle in Berlin did not join in, appar- Group, 19th Infantry, rolled out of figuring such protests are 24th Division barracks at Augs- futile* In London- however, a For- "We shall shoat down any un- that We cannot accept that the announced aircraft." he said "In burg o iT h ^ X , ,nS S S f° the * i r P ° r t be I the cease-fire agreement it* was - r f S aiS helm In West Germany. It still has ac- j blocked. He gave Katanga 30 mi- clearly stated that the United Na- a day’s travel ] lion* were not allowed to fly over moves out Wednesday morning on i Simultaneously, the British gov- However, after Kimba agreed to; Katanga. Any aircraft used for the 110-mile trip across Comourn- l a m e n t issued a 483-page volume order the road cleared. U rq u h art! normal"purposes” su c h 'ta f l ^ g 't o ist East Germany to Berlin. ?fa ld nhe Hs dean ^ d L uhv rn mp th ! A petition protesting the methodj the University of Texas in singling I legal ass,stance from them to the J , , . , J i action of the Board of Regents of I formed the I .aw faculty that anv « School of r .«* Dean or prior notice to : or to other disciplinary action. ! The petition reads: ★ the "faculty rel*®s« from the University News ! criminology major, and Bob B urle-; --------- . _ Jim Bass, junior philosophy ma I jor, was elected chairm an of The University of Texas Society for dle Abolition of ment Monday evening. D r John J. Mc-j Bom in Wyano, Pa., he received _ — ---------------- Lerna, University ^ e m ic a l engi- a bachelor’s degree from Tri-State ^cering professor, will be installed College in Angola. Ind.. and ad­ YORK T- T Capital Punish- 1 uesday night as president of the vanced degrees from the Univer- Charles Laughlin, f r e s h m a n Eiyineers. . re su lts of toe preskJi son, senior history major, will head ™ b>' J ai\ baUo0n« the Research * mittees respectively. B o t h will meetmg of t h e 22,000-member alumnus" in 1953. Education com -1 nour,ced Monday at the 54th annual ; American Institute of Chemical sity of Michigan. Tri-State Col- jege selected him in 1956 as ita living alum- L _ vvere an* nus-” The University of Michigan Results of toe presidential alec- "most distinguished . and ~ - , designated him as a “distinguished Labor Policy A p p ro v e d WASHINGTON—President Ken­ nedy approved Monday a policy of recognizing the right of federal employes to join or stay out of union*—but not to strike or to have closed or union shops. The President directed that an executive order giving effect to the program, recommended by a special task force, be drawn up for him to sign by the end of the year. . dents of The Untveretty of T ega. dignity end integrity.- School of Law, strongly protest the I The statem ent of the Board In- \ me Student B ar Association, sa,,! k o s s as C o ^ “ U 0? % ^ Dr. W. Page Keeton, dean of the | rn and without prior consultation I with the Dean,’ Santiesteban said “ We’re not at all discussing the Law School Petition Heads Student Assembly Program B y DEBBIE HOWELL A resolution supporting law stu­ four will be introduced top Ranger staff members a resolution by Janice ChadwellJ dorni by J o h n n y ; Education Assemblyman, asking ref I1 i value or merits of the action," he group was discussed in detail and f*180 continued. "We’re offended by the referred to the education commit- procedure used in giving notice." ; tee for further drafting --------------------------- Prior to Saturday’* Board m e e t-1 ha,? unsn>- Go/dsfein Statue Found mously agreed in a faculty meet- mg not to assist the plaintiff if the O n M useum Front Lawn “The Cellist," a six-foot statue a law suit, Santiesteban ; sculpted bv Mrs P eeev Goldsmin He added that som e mem- w a, f o ^ siightiy damaged ^ r i l of the! X l l X u S t v l ? X T ? ^ integration question should morning on ^ leal Engineering since 1958. On a rotating chairmanship basis with the late Dr. Kenneth A, Kobe, he headed the departm ent in 1950-52 j and 1955-57. WASHINGTON — The org an ics-, it O A S Deals Castro Blow • dents in their petition of protest j Weeks, Arts and Sciences Assem Inward of Regents’ blyman, and Jim Neyland, newly against statem ent to toe UT Law Faculty lion of American States dealt Cu- WiU be intfoduced by Students’ As- b a ’s Fidel Castro a sharp diplo- sedation president Maurice Olian m atic defeat Monday by agreeing Iat toe Student Assembly special to consider collective a c t i o n ; session Tuesday at 7 ;15 p.m. in against the Communist dictator’s Union 319-21. regime. appointed Pine Arts AsMmblyman. | According to the bill, the loves- j in the ligation would be done by a com- according to t a chairm an,0 Ronl denti M d X S t ^ a X h i v h l l ' r f mittee composed of five represen- J tative m em bers of the Assembly, information of investigation would be at all times public, with i ^a11 coaching staff and the team results being asked publication by Olian also will ask for a com- I mendation of the Longhorn foot Steinhart, \ ice-president of the fended by t h e Union A r t M e e t Ends I this w a, han * v t k i°l first-place honors in the four »lass- entries by S os of the first University Campus A7. S R e c d v iL firs t place to oils « ,« I "A M I ■T o J S l ol The Artist rt Believed to be the naUon’s first, His Easel" by Ken Zonker. Ned Utoterseher won second and third places with his "Scholz" and “ Sun- I flowers.” New Deadline Set For OBA Filing Jon B racker’* s i n g l e entry, "M arcia," led the watercolor divi­ sion. Second place went to Hiliiare Wilder for "House on a Cliff," and Deadline for students who wish i an untitled watercolor by Greg in the College of Business to file for election as a class of-; Gannaway was third, ficer F irst place winner in caseins was Administration has been extended! Robert Eaton’s "Still Life." Linda I Zimmerman captured second place until 4 p.m. Wednesday. Filing forms may be secured in wlto "Children’s H o u s e , ” and the office of the Dean of Business ^ Jcir y VU Seagle’s "L au ra" was Administration in Waggoner 123. A third, filing fee of S3 and a sign removal I Sandra Johnson’s commercial art deposit of $5 is required upon reg- entry placed first, and an entry by Pong Yiu Lee was second place istration. A president, vice-president, and winner. for each of secretary* four Competition results w e r e an- classes will be elected Wednesday, trounced at a Sunday afternoon re- Dec. 33. ception in the Texas Union, the The other resolution asks that the orange tower lights be turned ! on after every Longhorn basketball j victory*. I Gw*en Jordan, Arts and Sciences Assemblyman, will introduce a resolution requesting the Students’ ■ Association Investigation Commit- i tee (form er called the Grievance Committee) to conduct an immed­ iate investigation as to what cri­ teria are used to determine dis­ tribution of Campus Chest funds. Olian will inform the Assembly of persons who will represent toe University at a Students Confer­ ence on National Affairs at Texas A&M Wednesday through Saturday and representative* to the Texas Inter-collegiate Students* Associa­ tion D istrict Four meeting in San Marcos Saturday. Olian may make appointments to the Faculty-Student Discipline Committee and to the Southwest Conference Sportsmanship mittee. The Campus Affairs Committee, headed by Arts and Sciences As­ semblyman B arbara Tosch, will report out negatively a bill by Fine Arts Assemblyman Kerry O’Quinn dealing with a reduction of art fees. Reported out favorably will bo Lockout Ranger editor aspirants have until 4:30 p.m. Tuesday to re­ turn their applications to Texas Student Publications offices in Journalism Building 107. The padlock will be removed from the door to the R angeroo's sanctum sanctorum l a t e r this week. —Photo by Crossly Com- 3,000 Tickets Rem ain For Cotton Bo w l Tilt Orders for Cotton Bowl tickets will be taken throughout this wfeek. There are approximately 3,000 tickets remaining at the Gregory Gym ticket office, Ticket Manager Al Lundstedt said Monday. Tickets are at the regular $5.50 I Judges were Nick Vaccaro, as- ; Mutant professor of architecture; J. Robert Phillips, Austin com me r- j rial artist; William Radford Thom­ as, San Antonio artist; Benjamine E. Soto, Austin artist; and W, Eu­ gene George, associate professor of architecture and planning. f X S T , T The Texas Union Exhibits Com­ mittee is planning to purchase one or more of the paintings for a | permanent collection in the Union u u F m ? » “ * * « « » '* > » t o ™ * I in the Texas Union’s first floor a rt gallery and music listen­ ing rooms, second floor lounge, and third floor arcade. T C T J the appointments of Allen Greber price as student Court alternate justice L i n k tWs W e i. L ^ t o t tax and ol the wood Jones as a me rn bi­ xrial Calendar Com m ittor A’to voted out favorably will be ers may purchase them for $2.75. All remaining tickets vvilJ be sent to Dallas, Itowev-r J o r f J T i r i S I Portrait of the Artist as a Winner Ken Zonker, right, and G erald H. Jones, director of the Texas Union's A rts and C ra n s Center, look over Z orker's painting ‘ Self-Per- .trait cf the Artist af H is Easel." lh ® painting wen Zonker first-place honors In the oil division of the first annual University Cam pus A r t C om - petition. W in n ing paintings will be on view in tv y ^ c k th e Union tk p y g h ft Norman Mailer, autoor of "The Naked and the Dead," “ B arbary Shore" and other novels, will ap­ pear as guest speaker in the Main Ballroom of the Texas Union at 8 p m. Thursday. Mailer, whose visit is sponsored by the speakers committee of the Texas Un ion, will read excerpts from his works. The controversial author is the fourth speaker in the current speakers committee series. At 6 p.m. Thursday, Mailer will be the guest of the speakers com­ m ittee at a dinner to be held in the faculty dining room of the Tex­ as Union. Following the meal, he will hold a press conference in the faculty-staff lounge. Challenge Meets Today A meeting to discuss plans for this spring’s C’halleng*' Program will be held a t 7 p.m. tonight in Texas I nlon 310. The meeting will be open to those Interested in the event, Hand> Parker, c o c h a ir­ man, has announced. D elegates from other Southwest <'onferenre schools will be incited to participate the study on in "Freedom of Expression" Feb. 17. The executive committee of the program will m eet at 5 p.m. toda.\ Texas Union 320. Weather: Cloudy, M ild Low 65, High 75 Citizens in MiddleCa tight Between Far Right, Left They a rr told, “ You are deny­ ing the basic rights of the Con­ stitution which you so fervently advocate, Are not the Com mun­ ists hum an? Do not they have the lig h t to be heard? Doesn’t our Constitution guarantee th* freedom of opinion and expres­ sion"” Tile m ore liberal proclaim the Communist m enace a m y t h - breaking down A m erican confi­ dence and trust, creating nothing but discord when A m erica needs unify, J. ed g a r Hoover, co n serv a n t* Chitto of the F ederal Bureau of In­ vestigation, warn* against eoun* ter-espionage am ateurs, He say* the overzealous am ateur, “ un­ trained In the use of proper In­ vestigative techniques, m ay con ­ stitute a serious m enace to civil rights . le a l cannot com pensate for a lack of detailed, technical know ledge . , . the work of the vigilante too often deserve* tho label ‘witch hunt’ ; the work of tin* fifth colum nist needs no label. Let u* beware of both,” . patriotism and , F o rm e r President Dwight Eis­ enhower. in a television p rogram on Nov. 22, expressed distaste for “ su p erp atn o ts and the rise of ex­ tre m ists.” But Eisenhovvev w as o n c e branded a Com m unist by Welch, Who to believe? The “ middle A m erican” is con­ fuse I. Which side is un A m erl. can? Few person* will attem p t honestly to judge which side I* taking the wrong approach. In ids book, “ Rededication to Freedom ,” liberal It e n j a rn i a G insberg says, “ Martin Dies tDe- moeratic f r o m representative T e x a n created ant:-Communism as a permanent political move­ m ent and as a permanent and growing activity of governm ent in violation of tile express injunc­ tion of the Bill of Rights forbid­ ding the government to interfere w uh freedom of opinion. ♦ * Anyone who does tilings ap­ proved of by Ute Com m unists i* branded a Communist tool.” He m aintains th a t if the “ sen­ sible and respectable m a jo rity ” refuse to take seriously the luna­ tic fringe and realize their lun­ the “ entrenched m inority acy, m eeting with inadequate resist­ ance from the rational m ajority', < an encom pass the destruction of freedom and civilization. “ If w© arc to stop th© danger of the complete destruction of our way of life, if we ar© to se ( Ute toe blessing* of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, we m u-t und» rstaml th*’ force* that haw* dam aged our freedom and w© inn-t take positive action to shake them off.” says G a sb u rg the “ rational m ajo rity ” believes as he does. either actively or passively, but. Gold w ater says the m ajority a re of his views. Which is co rrect? Another conflict. Perhaps the attacks against th* far-righter* prevent Am erican* their patriotism . from voicing (iraham say*, Evangelist Billy lf a man get* out and wave* flag, h© I* now ‘reaction­ the American ‘suspect' or called a a r y " The constant conflict of idea* hits the “ Middle A m erican.” Which way is he to tu rn ? Hi* eagerness lo help has been arous­ ed. but from every angle he is hit by another conflicting opinion. Which is he to believe? No deci­ sion can be made for him . He will have to think it over and come to his own conclusions. If he comes to a decision, which­ ever one he m akes — even if his opinions a re middle of the road— be will meet with strong criti­ cism from someone. But, with ail the fervor and th© middle A m erican” w ill sit down the first tim e conflict, for and think. Tuesday, December 5, 1961 THE D A ILY TEXAN Page 2 L i t t l e M a n o r t h e C a m p u s By Bibier Better Communications P o o r c o m m u n ic a tio n s h a v e been b lam e d f o r a m a jo r ity of tro u b le s a n d m is u n d e rs ta n d in g s w hich h a v e o cc u rre d at th e U n iv e rs ity in recen t m onths. To a la rg e e x te n t a tt r ib u t in g b lam e to in a d e q u a te in­ fo rm a tio n is justified. A nd it is well t h a t th o se w h o h ave th e b e s t in te re s t of th e U n iv ersity in m ind a re hoping to do so m e th in g a b o u t this, One proposed effort to unclog communications channels is the Presidents* Council for the Consideration of Cam­ pus Tensions. This group, which would c o n s i s t of siv student* and three faculty members, would help estab­ lish a medium of informational exchanges and meet reg­ ular! > with top administration officials. A n ad ditional unclogging could come th ro u g h reorganiza­ tion of the Presidents' Advisory Cabinet, o r some similar group. This group existed in the past, but often was such a large body that it could not be effective. However plans for the reorganization call for a smaller and, hopefully, a more workable group. Suggestion for tile council on tensions came f rom tile I ac­ u ity -Student Cabinet, and a com m itter headed by Dr. W. T. Tucker, professor of m arketing adm inistration, and Ram d h arm a , who is a grad u ate assemblyman. Studei Is* Associa­ tion President Mo Olian and Dr. Glen B arnett dean of u n ­ d er tv, are heading establishm ent of the advisory cabinet. The T van a n d lea d e rs of v a rio u s segm ent* of cam pus th o u g h t have d ra w n som e criticism this y e a r for c e rtain action* t h a t p e rh a p s would not have been ta k e n h a d there in fo rm atio n w a s not been p ro p e r c o m m u n ic a tio n s. Hut m ade public and o fte n th e re was little effo rt to c o rr e c t m is u n d e rs ta n d in g s until long a f t e r the public h ad form ed opinions o r a c c e p te d ideas. That good communications are lacking may he evidenced in the statem ent by the Board of Regents which instructs m em bers of th.*'- Law Faculty to restrain from any legal assistance to plaintiffs in the integration suit against the University'. Reportedly most of the faculty m em bers had decided on th eir own th a t they would take no active p art in connection w ith the suit. '•’iii T here is no doubt th a t b etter communications arc needed. F rom Regents to students, with adm inistration and faculty in the middle, there m ust hr m utual understanding lf the U niversity is going to mer* and properly resolve ids prob­ lem '. I II I i e n I *y—! • • I be tir in g Line j r • C o m m e n ts on R a n g e r To the E ditor: It is m y understanding That The Texas R anger is faced with r xpulsion from the cam pus of The U niversity ct Texas Good, 'that m agazin e is nothing but a dirty, vile, filthy sm ut sheet w h o s e is corruption m aterial purpose obscene, editorials p i n k , and staffers and editors utterly worth­ i e r Congratulations to the U ni­ v ersity adm inistration U r pro­ tecting young minds Lynn Ashby N ew Y ork T im e* , N ew Y ork, New Y ork ♦ V ile W o r d s To th e E d ito r ; The E xecu tiv e C om m ittee is to be congratulated for irs cou rage­ ous art In firing four T exas R a n ­ g e r editors. The faculty and stu­ dents m ust indeed be shielded again st contact with Hie filth that e v il m en thrust upon us. My only com plaint is that the public sta te­ m ent of the C om m ittee did not m ore explicitly indicate the loca­ tion rf loathsom e violation in the N ovem ber Ranger. I be­ liev e that I have as dirty a mind it took as any on cam pus, yet m e nearly an hour to locate the v'.ic word which the sharp ey es of the C om m ittee had im m ediate­ ly spotted, the I fear, however, that the ser­ pent ev il has been scotched, not killed. Indeed, ex-art-editor 0 - Quinn will now be m ore aw are of the possible consequences of the random strokes of his typew rite-, and henceforth ex-editor R oue 'Ail! look closely for filth in every unlikely place. And the resulting publicity w ill undoubtedly reflect w ell on the reputation of the Uni­ v ersity , N evertheless, the price of censorship ;s eternal vigilence and there are other sources of dirty words from which we m u v also be protected. I w ill mention only two of them at present. T he sta tis tic a l od d s on any ran* four letter ae- dom c o n se c u tiv e q u em * being the d irty w ord in q u estion (h e r e a fte r referred to a* “ **), p u rely by c h a n c e , are a p ­ p r o x im a tely one out of 456.876. N ow I have ex a m in e d one aver textb ook w hich J u se , a g e -alae seq u en ces.. and estim ate that It contain* ap ­ consecutive proxim ately Imagine four letter, that m y horror at d iscovering the v ile probably oertir* not once but tw ice, in a book I re- quire my student* to read! Cun­ ningly concealed by m isleading word boundaries, perhaps, but still there there. Furtherm ore, are probably two occurrences of each four letter words we all abhor. filthy the of Are you not a la rm e d by th n ' Accidental” obscenity to which our students a re exposed'* The textbooks used in journalism and in m echanical engineering, for exam ple, m ay be just craw ling with filth. The University' L ibrary m ay be a cesspool of random - chance pornography. Wa m ust search out every hidden bad w ord, how ever accidental a m ay claim to be. and tak e appropriate disciplinary action ag ain st those who have hitherto so negligently ignored it. a to it w as colum n of the eighth), P erh ap s lh* E xecutive Corr. rn it - tee should also turn R* vigilant attention com m ercial the press. Ear iv in N ovem ber (I be­ the lieve the Austin poetry- poem contained Statesm an about sonic booms. This, as some sharp eyes noticed, was an a c ro ­ tic poem . The capitalized first let­ ters o f each line, If read dow n­ w ard, spelled out an obscene in­ sult to C E G., the elites’ of the Statesm an The statistical odds against this happening by pure chance are staggering. Probably the contributor of the poem v. a s a deliberate purveyor of filth. My point is th a t the editorial staff of the Statesm an did not notice and the printed the poem. Yet they vs. e not fired by me ow ners of the n ew sp ap er! concealed obscenity Dav id Dec am p English Bldg. TIS h I S P To thf- E d ito r; While the TSP Board is firing people, why not fire the incom ­ petent censor who passed the il­ lustration with “ the w ord’’ it it? D avid Doan 2512 A Si* ton T h e D a i fey T e x a n O pinions expressed in T h e Texan are those o f the Editors or o f the writer o f the article and not necessarily those o f the L nj i et shy administration. newspaper of The University of Tex**, ut Austla, Texas, daily except Monday and Saturday and holiday PAJotS Mnoas,.September through May and monthly Us August by Texas Student I UT *' jnc Second-class postage paid at Austin Texas EDITOR ..................................................... . .......... MANAGESG E D IT O R . HOYT PERVIS DAVID T. LOPEZ PER M A N EN T STA FF Fidel May Find Soviet Coolness In rite Future By J. M ROBERTS Associated Press Set. r Analyst Som e thoughts picked up over a w eek end : Fidel Castro, publicly confess­ slyly a n d ing to communism bragging about how he fooled some people for a long time about his real Intentions, must be hurt­ ing in the breadbasket. Soviet P r e m ie r K hrushchev had expressed some doubts about the quality of Castro'* communism. This may have produced some in­ difference International the Communist economic aid depart­ ment in There nr\ cr Wa* much charier t h e Communist* c o u l d HH t h a t she place formerly held by the United State* In Cuban economic affair*. Having burned his bridges to tile United States and to more 'nan half of Cuba’s former trade partners in la tin America, Cas­ tro would be sunk if the Cl rn mo­ nists also decided he i s n t wort Ii fooling with. Blandishments are in order. Khrushchev, too, may realize that he'* rn* go im; to be able to maintain an o h p st. right under \ m r viva n guns for * vo long, and that the less show he makes of holding it the less defeat when he can't, Yes, F i d e l ha* problem*. There * a difference between a good rabble-rouser and a good family provider. •* * tile w :>i I ! If Moscow is truthful in claim­ the spread of communism ing a is v e ’urJary, sn I Andrei Y. Mi sh in sky should be in­ dicted for wasting "he party's expense money on his * ultima­ tum trip ” to Czechoslovakia in 1948, a n d Khrushchev for th** powder he shot up in Hungary in 1956 * ii During a weekend in whlrh a t h r e e I N soldier wa* killed, wounded, 15 taken a* boatage* and a xhoot-dow n order Issued against I N plane* by the banian f o r e i g n m i n u t e r . P r e s e n t ga in P a ris Molto© Tshombe said that e%etything I* ‘‘perfectly norm al.” To him goes for regrettable a r ­ high en r a w , In Katanga score * it Can you rem em b er when ti e World Federation o' Trade Un­ ions. now meeting in toe Kremlin, got a serious public hearing ss a liberal organisation ? * it You can start cheering about the Laos agreem ents if they show "tov signs of being worthwhile aft. cr six month*. A * People have been criticizing me for 15 years for saying what Ar­ I »can. America s Erst th u r H. string disarm am ent m an. said on ins ti 'urn from his latest nego­ tiation* with the S o v i e t * at G e n e . a: Tho.* s no such tiling as e a t ­ ing tensions with these people,” IN AX EFFO R T TO bridge th* chasm that exists between p er­ sons w ith a science background the hum anities and a : ‘'a the fa cully are bettering their educa­ tion. v arious m em b ers of those from Believing thai it was important to broaden scope and to be able to profit from thoughts and ideas of tole area to which they did not •'♦•long they have set up a series of talks designed to in crease m u­ tual understanding. C urrently 149 persons have re­ turned form s indicating their in­ te re st in the p ro g ra m , Already th ere have been two talks with larg e turnouts. The third is plan­ ned for W ednesday night with A n te n F . Riggs, associate pro­ fessor of zoology, speaking on * O rigin of Life,” as a p a rt of a 13-part series on evolution. to The original plan w as to have discussions rallier than the usual question and answ er session fol­ low ing each talk. Therefore at­ tendance was more or less re­ stricted faculty m em bers. However the turnout for the first two talks has indicated that the audience is so great that such discussion does not develop Since size restriction is not im ­ portant, students will also be w el­ com ed. size STA FF FOR THIS ISSUE NIGHT E D IT O R ......................... DENK EDITOR ..................................................... ISSU E NEW S EDITOR A ssista n t New* Editor N ight R eporters „ .............BILL HA SULTON .......................................... JEANNE R EIN ER T ......................................... Nathan Fain, D a v e C row ley, Barbara Tosch. B illy P um phrey, Bill White, D ebbie Howell J a m es Vowel!, B ill Vandiver, Mike P ettit Mi .......................... ........................................ ..................... ................... Bill Hampton Lana Bradshaw Jane Paganini Connie Catter ton Eli* a D avis, Richard V anSteenkiste A fter the scien ce presentation, due for conclusion in February, the group hopes for a reciprocal program designed lo show the w ay of thought of those in the field of hum anities. LARRY L E E key Cranford B assett M aguire Jr., assistant professor of zoology, has been in­ s’rum ental in organizing the pro­ gram . ★ * Knocke FOOTBALL HAS FIG U R ED in Ed a lot of off-the-field new s lately. There h ave been announcem ents of num erous all-star team s and other aw ards, the firing of coach­ es, the a ccep tan ce and refusal of to)k !x>wl bids and continuing C o p y r e a d e r s............... Night Sports E ditor N ight A m u sem ents E ditor Night Wire Editor Night C am pus Life E d it o r Assis tan t E ditorial A *sb rtan ts ........... IM M I M M 0FTH£l£ LOJ5Y EAT! ONAL PKO&ZAM- rf JUST p0g6tfT UA\te A QUY a,MY ti vie fop s tu d y . ¥ Both By CAROL SC LUI A S College hum or m agazines ac­ cording to an article in the Nov, 26 New York Times M agazine, have a problem : m odern student*. The m agazines these days are to slay alive because fighting ‘‘college hum or is rah-rah, and the rah -rah sp irit is gone.” l a c k i n g In ad d itio n to ‘ rah - r a h , ” stu d en t* now are m o r e de- tn a n d i n g . The pun* a n d b o o tl e g ­ g in g Joke* of the tw e n t i e s , ble ak b a n k r u p t c y quip* a n d c a rto o n * of th e th i r t ie s , a n d re b e llio u s t h r u s t* a t c a m p u s life of th e f o r tie s a n d flftie* h a v e h a d t h e i r day, joke*, Liquor and *cx '.'rite* the author, Will.am Is Zinsser, a re not sophisticated enough for the 1961 u ndergraduate Although today pre students “ inevitably serious products cf th e Megaton ic Age,” they have not entirely lost the gift of hu­ m or, he continues, O n e of th e reason* th e y don t like “ old *ev a n d c o r n ” joke*, he s t a te * , i* t h a t this d e c a d e of ‘Un­ de n t* ha* a m o r e s o p h i s ts a te d s t a n d a r d tor h u m o r . They w a rt m ature “ but not an g ry ” social com m ent, and articles relevant to m atters th a t preoccupy them . hum or, satire, * ic His story im plies th a t they a e less preoccupied with liquor an i o th er tim e-tested topics that he associates with cont. m m m m tm x im m m i ^ a Bl abow a possible football betting scandal Ohio State h as been m uch dis­ cussed its re ­ in th* press for jection of a Rose Bowl bid, This wa* a result of a 28-25 vote ag ain st acceptance by the fac­ ulty >unriJ, Tile vote foiiowf d a unanim ous vote in favor of going by the football team and a 6-4 favorable vote by the athletic council, The faculty council c a n 't be overruled. They gave as a reason the in­ the business of terferen ce with education. We to instead tend look to some jealousies and p e r­ sonal conflicts, especially since Coach Woody Hayes is a dom in­ ating type who doesn't seem to take g n at pains to m ake friends. .Moines R egister, which probably covers Big Ten thoroughly as any football as paper, “ Ohio S tate's football fam e and glory h av en 't been dim inished a bit , , . Its prestige as a school w here academic achievement is highly valued has been enhanced.’’ But the IFS editorially, said We disagree. The glory and fam e of a bowl ap p earance and national acclaim can not lie re ­ the alistically denied. W hether R egister likes it. o r not th at is the m an ner in which the intercol­ legiate program is set up. Furtherm ore we fail to see how such an action automatically es­ tablishes the school as a truly g re a t cen ter cf learning, to would seem to require a little m ore in toe way of concrete accomplish­ ment within the University. And certainly if there is to be such a policy there should be p roper notification before the se a ­ son and a stan d ard pattern so th at fans, coaches, players, stu ­ dents, and officials will know. This has alw ays been Notre D a m e ’s procedure. Or else they could drop football. Wonder if they would m iss it? Or Uh money it brings?, e Students Mags A poll of cam pus hum or m a g a ­ zine editors seem ed to disagree with the trend, because they list­ ed a* “ best all-round” The Texas flan g er, The U niversity of F lor­ ida O range Peel, Tile California Pelican, and The Stanford Chap­ pal al. The poll is conducted by the R anger. if The R anger and ((range Peel have obviously not com e lo tho conclusion that this genera tion pretor* other humor to Jokes of liquor, etc. the ★ According to several standards of the article, the H anger would fall short. The author claim s that college hum or m ust reflect th* w orld beyond the cam pus. The R anger seldom steps beyond the forty acres, hardly ever past the bounds of the Southwest Con fer­ vor*', A narrow base of m aterial is not considered a fault of the R an­ g e r by m ost of the students, how­ ev er, O ther failures ar* frequent­ ly heard concerning the Univer­ sity hum or m agazine, but seldom is a com plaint heard it doesn t include the outside world. Students at VT look for other things in a cam pus hum or pub­ lication som e of the answ ers to a poll were, “ The H anger needs b e t t e r writing,*’; “ m ore c a r ­ toons,” ; ” , . . why so m any dou­ ble m eanings?” th a t “ The R anger ha* no imagine* live stories—too m any article* exp erien ces,” are on personal *a,v * Ken D avis, senior ad vertis­ ing m ajor. E ave F loren ce, sen* lor elem entary education m ajor, agrees: “ The subjects they w rite their on has e no appeal, only *hort joke* a re good.” Sr A Some students reflect Zinsser « description of m ore sophistication. O ther answ ers to “ Why do you o r why don’t you like the R anger?” showed th a t UT students undoubt­ edly judge the ( a m p u l m agazine on sophisticated standards, “ I d ra th e r read P layb oy,” ; ' The jokes are ju st too, too ob­ vious,” ; “ T h ere’s no subtle bu­ rner, ’ w ere some of the com­ m ents. F avorable com m en ts w ere on the cartoons in the R anger and its satire. Again, this resem b les Z insser’s article In it* m ention of the enthusiasm for satire. Stephen Knoll, M ary Hartwell, sophom ore E ng­ lish m ajor, said, “ The best thing about the R an g er is its sa rc a sm ; it puts dignified to ngs in a rid i­ culous light, and does it w ell,” form er ch air­ m an of the Princeton Tiger, 80- year-old cam pus hum or m a g a ­ zine. says m odern students de­ m and sharp-edged humor. “ Noth­ ing would be m ore appreciated a com pletely destructive than view cf the university.” * A Vain attem p ts to rech arg e the waning popularity of the Tiger bad included Use of off-thc-cam- pus articles ranging from fashion and entertainm ent to social com- m cot and world affairs. One of t h e w eaknesses of the T iger's new look, Kroll explained w as th a t it needed sa tire for student appeal. U s successor, Henry M cLaugh­ is students lin, also b elieves that satire necessary . “It keeps from being over-acad em ic." ★ ★ Tile author of the article, hav- lug looked at the Princeton Tiger and at ram pH* humor problem* and ai today’* “ m ature. Mega- t o n i c Ak*'” student*, conclude* that an editor today mu*t be both wit and wizard in order lo satis- Iv his discerning readers. He explain* th at, in this com ­ plex world, students want less sim ple w itticism s. We can agree w ith him on this point. Looking at decades-old jokes from Princeton T igers, w e find such jokes as: N O R A : Richard is so handsom e and spiritual. pretty often. DORA: Y es, I hear h e ’s tanked If this is Ute college spirit he considers “ rah-.'ah ,” w e're glad it ’s gone. horns B f H O Y T PU RI AS Texan Editor (E ditor’* N ote; This Is the se c ­ ond In a series of articles the Texan will present this w eek on the m eaning of “ A m erican ism ,” “ the A m erican w ay of life ,” and sim ilar term s w© all hear used every day but seldom stop to think about. For the m ost part, th© w riters have found the term* Im possible to define by ordinary m eans, *o the writer* have used a number of different approaches and ideas, representing beth con­ servative and liberal thought.) B y DEBBIE H O W E L L Texan Staff Wr i te r The harsh term s “.spineless, luxury-loving, and sp iritle ss” re­ cently w ere aim ed at a “ vanish­ ing sp ecies—the A m erican pa­ trio t,” by Dr, M ax R afferty, a California school superintendent, in R eaders' D igest. R afferty is only one relatively unknown voice in a growing, vo­ cal m ovem ent whose p rim ary concern is prom oting the “ Amer­ ican w ay of life,” and squelching to* feared m enace Communism. A m ericans who never had an opinion about their country b e­ fore have suddenly becom e aw are they m ight have som ething to protect. Y et they are also told A m erica Is safe. The Communist m enace is a (rnth. A gro at m any Americans stand in the middle, not knowing what to think. Americanism and pa­ triotism take on added meaning but they are not sure what m ean­ ing. There are so m an y groups, all presenting their propaganda, pulling the unsure A m erican, tru­ ing to recruit him to their side speak ou* Strong “ Think for yourself’’—but sr? it m y w ay. individuals What are these groups? The moat m ilitan t, right-wing patriotic group* such a* the John toe fighting Birch Society, a re “ overabundant Communists in the United States.” Robert Welch, founder of the society, claims to have proof that top government officials are “ pink. ’ that A mer­ ican universities and colleges are headed toward Communism that most of America is infiltrated. According to the October bull© tin of the Birch Society, “Our strength throughout all of the »to* fort* to destroy us ha* lain in the fact that w e are no ephem eral organization of loose ties and un­ certain loyalties. Vie are a select body of men and w om en seriously dedicated to creating a better world, We want no w eaklings In our ranks. “ We m ust have associated with us, now and in the future, only m en and women of good will, good c h aracter, good conscience, and religious ideals, as well as fervent p atrio tism .” ★ ★ Despite the fact that religious to th*1 So­ ideals a re important ciety, United States R om an C ath­ olic hierarchy at a national con­ ference in Washington, IXC., a t­ tack such groups “ which em pha­ size the danger of domestic sub­ version, and give little attention to the w orldw ide activities of Com m unist p a rtie s” also “ use tactics and m ethods borrow- and Official Notices Registration for the Spring Semes­ ter 1961-62 will occur Mondav, Tues­ day, Wednesday and Thursdav Jan. 29. 30. 31. and Feta. I, 1962. Any stu­ dent who has previously attended re­ The University of T&xa* may registration mater mfg by ceive his mall hy filing an application which is available outside the Office of the Registrar in the Main Building and et each Dean'# Office. This must be done not later than Friday, Jan 5. 1962 P e r r i n V . S m i t h A s s i s t a n t R e g i s t r a r Is Ja n u a iv 5 1962, the deadline for receipt of applications for Atomic Energy Commission Special Fellow­ in NutStar Science and Engi­ ship. neering Stipends nm JIECX), $2 boycott AAU events unless get a stronger voice interna­ tional affairs, The NCAA bas en­ listed the National Federation of State High School Athletic Associ­ ations in its drive to take away power from the AAU. .r. An NCAA proposal to increase the num ber of high school \ o t s in the Olympic Com m ittee w as de­ feated 325 to 269 Another proposal t v the colleges to put high school f ode ra ti ors on 16 Olympic gam e com m ittees wa* beaten on a voice vote. However, the group la te r voted unanim ously to increase the NCAA vote from 90 to IOO, giving it equal pow er with the AAU a s fa r as the two national organizations w ere concerned. However, the sm aller units of each organization allo vote and since the AAU has m ore units it still ha* about IOO votes m ore than its rival At the opening of a tvwvday the Olympic quadrennial m eeting, the US Olympic Com m ittee and constitu­ a Association adopted tional change m erging two the group# into a single organization to be known a s the US Olympic C om m ittee. In other action, the delegates re­ elected the officers of the Olympic Association as officers of the US Olym pic Com m ittee. They includ­ ed Kenneth L. ‘ Tug * Wilson of W ilm ette, III, president; Douglas F . Roby of Y psilanti M ch., vice­ p re sid e n t; A «a * Bushnell of P rinceton, N J., secretary, and R, M ax R itte r of Jenkintow n, P a ., tre a su re r. Arkansas State Receives Scholarship from Moon JONESBORO. Ark. P — Wally Moor an outfielder for the Lo*- Angeles Dodgers has donated a $750 baseball scholarship to A r­ kansas State College -Moon. a graduate of T exas AAM raised and a-fended school the w as a t Bay about 9 miles from A rkansas Stat# cam pus here that the •cholarsh p go to a resident of th# Jonesboro area, but that he w asn ’t going to tie it up with any stipu­ lations. Moon said he prefers . . . . . . . . ............... T ram Texas A rkansas Rice Baylor Texas A*M r e t : T exas Tech SMU . . . . . R - ........... . 5 .. . 4 ............... . 3 . 4 ............. . 2 W I. I 2 3 5 5 $ K ............. . 6 . . . . . S . 5 , . 3 ............... . 2 T Texas A rkansas Rice Texas AAM TOU Baylor Texas Tech .. . 2 ......... SMU* . I Confer #n c# W I. I I 2 4 4 5 5 5 .......... ....... . T o 0 0 0 I 7 0 I T ft ft ft 0 I a a I --- r , i ,90() A r ay AA• I VV SOO ,450 iiUU .400 *230 Pct .857 .857 .714 .429 .357 .280 .286 .214 Bv Cl HTiS DOBBS In tra m u ra l ( o-ordinal or T hree Class B cham pionships were decided and cham pionship playoffs w ere set up in nine other leagues in tram u ral basketball M onday night, in for the In a ass B competition P ra th e r defeated Roberts league title, 25-15. P ra th e r, featuring a steady offense vvas led by sharp­ shooting Mike Pinkie who had IO points. R oberts' offense m ere y sputtered as R ichard Liggett pump­ ed in six points P ra th e r's fire defense and srror*-h offense were just too m uch for Roberts. Blocker was another title winner with a victory over Arm y. 29-14. la w re n c e Gil bort led Blocker with IS points as A rm y's offense was stopped by a si out Blocker de- lense. F or the lost t s , tile high point m an w as Cliff rd Thompson, In the third cha mpionship gam e, FCH dropped Tx eterne m erciless- Iv 55-22 L arry Besch p ie r I ihe FOH high geared attack as an out­ m anned and out played The Ie me showed $ never igns of coming fr tm bs trance D a v i d Hall paced the losers but. vvas helpless as FG B pumped the points through the hoop. the M erchants im portant gam e w as Another played by and AIChL In tb s one, the M erchants w ere victors, 45-20. This set up a retu rn m atch between the two for the league title. Ben McCrary’ led the pepped-up M erchant attack w ith 21 points AIChE s W illiam Floyd Floors McNeeley ild Fourth Round In times TORONTO UP) — F l o y d Patterson floored Irish Tom .Mon­ McNeeley eight day night while knocking out the previously unbeaten dead- game challenger in 2:51 of the fourth round of a free-swing­ ing brawl to retain his world heavyweight boxing title. M cNeeley a l l o Gipped down several tim es a n d m anaged to stag g er the cham pion whose hand just about scraped the floor In the wnId fourth round. It wa* obvious that M Nee ley a 10-1 underdog, cam e to fight. He went out a badly bantered and beaten m an but a braw ler who won the cheers of the crowd R eferee Je rse y Joe Walcott, the ex-cham pion, counted out McNee­ ley as he gam ely struggled to get hack on hi* feet after last knockdown, the The 24-year-old challenger, un beaten in 23 previous fights, drew an ovation from the fans a* he the ring F o r a few fleeting left seconds In the fourth round he had P atterson on queer street but the s eek and fit cham p snapped out of it and resum ed his attack The cham pion, vowing he would be IOO per cent better than in his last title defense in M arch against Ingem ar Johansson, weighed Ms in while at 197. th* challenger checked P atterson won easily as expect­ ed but McNeeley was hardly the sacrificial iam b he was supposed to be, He showed the Maple I^eaf Gardens fans why he is known as boxing s angry' young m a n . but Patterson * M cNeeley rushed to the attack from the opening bell, shoving off th# cham p left hook dropped him in the middle of the first round. He wa* up ort one knee at I but had to take the t h e Ontario autom atic * under com m ission rule* In a few sec­ onds McNeeley wa? down again on his green trunks with the white sham rock on the side. This time W alcott called it a slip. in third tim es round and ’bree m ore in the fourth McNeeley hit the deck before toe end. Four m ore the For one perilous moment in the fourth, M cNeeley almost hit the tossing cau­ jackpot. Patterson in to the vv i n d s, walked tion swinging and M cNeeley nailed him as he cam e waltzing in. Floyd spun, dipped toward the men recomm end it to other men I fM ■ I Cagers To Play Wednesday The Texas Longhorn cagers will take on Texas Wesleyan Wednesday at 8 p.m. in Gregory Gym. This will he Texas' sec­ ond game of the 1961-62 basketball season. The Texas freshmen, under the leadership of Coach Jam es Gandy, will also try for their second victory when they meet Wharton Junior College at 6 p.m. The ’Horns, led by the accurate shooting of cen­ ter Jim m y Brown, who got 19 points, defeated the Howard Payne Yel­ low Jackets, 81-68, Sat­ urday night. The T e x a s-Trxas Wesleyan contest will be broadcast over R a d i o Station KMET. Washington Drafts Davis in First Round CHICAGO UP)— H a lf b a c k w ill b e t r a d e d to . ^ ___ . ^ — E r n ie D a \ is, H e is m a n T r o p h y l^ n d Bi o w n s, w i n n e r f r o m S y r a c u s e , b e - _ c a m e the f i r s t N e g r o e v e r going to the Browns for their first forA dea! „ t h e W a s h in g t o n found selection of end Gary Col- !and coach d r a f t e d b y clubs- They had him eventually / VT . j . . th e Cleve* service for about five week* but continues to play for the Brown* pn sundays on a weekend pass— m ake w y 8Uch % Pau2 Brown Q eve- ..We sciorted cfeUini r ^ o r s were denied by both pro football's newest offense. Redskin* Monday but rum ors1^ t K P S M S T E S *“ s p r e a d q u ic k ly a t t h e 2 6 th breaking speedster from the Urn- N a tio n a l F ootb all L e a g u e versitY of Illinois who now is sta- , ,, 7 , p layer d ia f t m eetin g th a t he Mitchell has been ; boned at Fort Meade, Md. , in m ilitary Tigers M ay Sign Dressen as Scout MIAMI BLACH, Fla. (P Charlie Dressen m ay soon sign with the Detroit Tigers ‘•trouble­ shooter**—a term used by baseball people for a scout on a m ajor league level. as a The form er m ajor league m an­ ager. still hopeful of landing a coaching job w ith either the New York Meta or the San Francisco Giants, has prom ised to give Tiger .m a n a g e r R h Si hefting an answer within a vv eek, the Milwaukee Braves D ressen, discharged as m anager last by Sept. 2, was unsuccessful in his efforts at the recently concluded baseball m eetings to gel the job he is socking. from “ I v e had offers three I ’m clubs," D ressen no? certain that s w hat I vvant. I still feel I can be of m ore help to a chib as a roach ’ said, “ but H ie Giants apparently thought so, too— for a while. They weighed the decision for som e 24 hours then m anager Alvin D ark decided against it. There is still a chance that Alvin might, change his mind again. T here was no hesitancy on Ca­ sey Stengel s part. Tile old skip­ per of D ressen, who succeeded him as m anager a» Oakland hark in 1949, hut he could not get Gcorer Weiss, the head of the New York club, to go along with him. Casey hast; t given up. however. we "*"* him' Hf '» " fine pass catcher and also a punt- e r." there still Of course, rem ains the question of signing Davis and Collins. D avis was the first choice of the Buffalo Bills in the Ameri­ can Football League d raft Satur* day and Collins was No. I choice of the Boston P atriots. T h f inter-league b attle of th# pocketbook already has broken into the open Sid Gilm an, coach of the AFL San Diego C hargers, was reported in Columbus, Ohio, trying to si in Ohio S tate's great fullback, Boh Ferguson. He was first choir# of the Pittsburgh Stealers Monday, The Seeders at once sent an em is­ sary to Columbus for a contract chat O ther first round choices includ­ ed: Dis Angeles, quarterb ack Ro­ m an G abriel. North Carolina State, tackle Merlin O l s e n . Utah and S t a t e *a d o u b le-b arrelled pick stem m ing from a d r a f t choir# trade from t h e M innesota Vi­ k in g s'; Cleveland, halfback Leroy Ja ck so n Western Illinois Univer­ sity (another delible choice along with Collin* as p art of a draft choice deal with D a lla s'. Sr in a I -oui*, tackle F a te Echols, Northwestern, and c e n t e r Irvin Goode Kentucky, trade for Philadelphia’s first choice; Chica­ go, halfback Ronald Bull, B aylor; San Francisco, halfback Lance Al- half- h a c k Wendell H arris. Louisiana State. Detroit, q u arterb ack John Hadl, K ansas; New Y o r k , end Je rry Hiilebrand. Colorado, and Green Bay, halfback Earl G m s, I Jill. the Mets w anted to hire worth. A rkansas; B altim ore W ingm an scored six point-, but the red-hot M cCrary couldn’t be stopped. M erchants held com m and all the way. Class A action derided the win­ ners of league losers’ brackets in o rder to set up league title play. The closest gam e featured an exciting 26-25 victory for ASML over L aredo. With the gam e tight a1! the way, G arcia Reynaldo fi­ nally led his team to the winners circle. Gus Hein of Laredo was just as outstanding, however, as the gam e w-ent into a tense ov er­ time. ASM ii m anaged the winning points in the final seconds of that period player, In the second overtim e gam e of the night, Moore Hill edged P ra th ­ er, 36-35 G r a h a m G alloway, ail. intram mal led football P rat nor. b u t the gam e > s ta r was Moo re-Hill’s P au l Philbin. Phiibin w as outstanding all tile way but his p e r f o rm a n c e two m inute overtim e was great. With seconds left, Philbin calm ly sank two free throw’* to sew up the gam e for his team . the in JA M ES SAXTON LANCE ALWORTH A u r a l C a g e r s N e a r F i n a l s Flavor Crisp Flicker! — IN A BASKET OR TO GO — 4 0 9 W est 2 3 rd Just O ff the Drag Its Pressure Fried O pen Daily IO a.m,-9 p.m. • Sunday 4 p,m.-9 p.m. floor and alm ost went down Ref. it was a slip erne Walcott said and did not count although some ringside™ t h o u g h t P atterson s glove touched the floor the cam e B a c k 26-year-old cham p, firing aw ay savagely driv­ ing home a stunnir g left hook that brought down McNeeley o n c e m ore. Again W alcott got a chance to count eight. Th# ex-Michigan State Dothan player hardU wa* erect before P atterson wa* a fte r him again slugging him t h e cham p’s into corner w here he sagged down and took another eight-count Tom had one punch left a long landed off left target and Patterson finished him off with a that i left-right com bination. M cNeeley fell on his back along the rope* while W a l c o t t again started hi* count. This time he went ail the w ay to ten with Tom- ' m y pawing and struggling to get up for one m ore try, in the braw l If W alcott had wanted he could hav e stopped the . third round for P atterso n w as mak- j T g a yo-yo of McNeeley, But the the Irishm an continued atta c k with determ ination e v e n tim e he cam e off the crowd loved it. the deck and I to press M • Neele % Ko m ed up at 2 after in the third j the first knockdown hut W alcott m ade him take the 8. I A P atterson hook dum ped._ Tom ■•vu>;n md he hung one a r'-’ over the middle rope w atching Walcott i count When McNeelv c a m e up this tim e he turned wildm an. rushing : across the ring with both hands flaying bu- so over-eager that he fell to hrs knee*. “ W V V I E W S O S B E R U S ’* Khritthr ft. F.laenhnvrvr This tie rh Eisenhower speaks his mind on the Berlin crisis, He tells u By the Russians hate s t e p p e d u p th e p r e s s u r e . Whether, in his opinion, they will risk nuclear war. And how each of us can help stave off nuclear nor. Read this weeks Saturday Et ering Post. 1 X J N T IN IOX WHITf GOLD. MICH PIUS TAX 'p h u A A FUIL YEAR TO PA Y ! 2236 G u adalupe— O n The Drag \W 0G SK ! Viceroy CONTEST1 jNo.F; (For games played Saturday, Nov. 4) 1st Prize $100°o CASH! Donald lignum, (Photo left), Electrical Engineering Major, Class of '64, took first prize of SI(.0.00 cash in the VICEROY FOOTBALL C O N T E S T N O . 3 b y pick­ ing the most teams to win and predicting the closest correct scores. Ronny Carthage, Class of s63 vvas next in line and won second prize of $50.00 cash and third prize of $25.00 was won by Robert Laughlin. Class of ’62. 20 PRIZES OF $10 EACH WON BY THESE STUDENTS ON CAMPUS! J * r r y C a in , C l a s t of 63 C im r e n C a m p b e ll , C l a s t of 62 N o n n a C u n d iff, C l a s t of '63 Yea J o t Davit, C l a s t of 62 R A. Davit Jr., G r a d u a l W a l t e r P o rt r a y , C l a t ! of 62 Paul H a r ri n g t o n J . C . W an oraclr, C l a n of '62 J o e R. Alien, C a i t of 63 D u dley O l d h a m , C l a n of 63 Sam Laughlin Jr., C l a n of 64 Will Lawis Sharon M oo re, O a s t of 62 Norman N ation, Clast of '65 J o h n Phiilipt Clast of 62 t o m m y R o bertson, Clat* of 65 l a r r y S adek, C l a s t of 64 A en Read Sm th, C l a s t of *62 Allan Stelm ach, C l a n of 64 J. K. S tep h en s G r a d u a t e fluS- A carton of Viceroys to ail students who got al! the winners right,’regardless*'o f'scores! rciTDKlK] VICEROY CONTEST1 INO.4 (For games played Saturday, Nov. 18) I - 1st Prize $10050 CASH! Waller Fortney, (Photo left), Law Major in the Class of ’62, flew-the-coop with the first prize of 8100,00 cash in the fourth and final VICEROY FOOTBALL CONTEST for this year. Sam Copeland, Class of !66, took second prize of $50.00 cash and third prize of $2.5.00 cash goes to Robert I^aughlin, Class of 62. 2 ° PRIZES OF $10 EACH WON BY THESE STUDENTS ON CAMPUS! '64 J o h n C r a i g , C l a t ! of C . C . C r e a g e r , C lat* o f *63 Kay D e n n a r d , C l a n of ’63 , Me'-y M. L indley, C l a n of 62 A l b e r t W . M eyer, C t a n of '63 C o l d e r M y er J o n N ew ton , C i a i i of ’63 Key D. Nunn, C lat* of '62 Tom m y O ’Dell, C l a n of ‘64 D. M. G t t m e r i , G r a d u a t e J o e K. S t e p h e n i S. H . Ratliff, C l a n of ‘64 Eddie W a l l a c e , C l a n of H u g h F. W a i t J o e C . Smith, C l a n o f ’6J ‘64 '65 t h o m a t L. A d i e t a , C l a n cf 62 Bill Butty, C l a s t o f Donald Bynum, C l a s t of Cim aron C a m p b e ll , l i t yr. Law Rnnny C a r t l i d g e , C l a t t of ‘63 f l u s '64 A carton of Viceroys to all students who got all the winners right, regardless of scores! Coof, clean did Spice Af? e r Shove lotion always fje 'i you c l : > o lost smooth start Feels j st c: ' .e: a i I does after shoving t i ' Od r e . ee» $ to* A Of. w I OO cod 72 p .r >c> i v i j/iY i S ■ W u ti. T O NJ /J ( C f . AFTER SHAVE LOTION A \ TD H u n g ry • S W C Teams Score M ore tram s football DALLAS — Southwest Confer­ achieved en ce their objective* of stopping up their attacks in the 1361 season by touchdown production by 27 per cent. increasing their C lim axing die cam paign Satur­ day with one of the bigger offen­ five siv e sprees of the season, m em bers counted an aggregate of 14 touchdowns to push the sea­ son total to 180, 38 m ore than w ere scored in the 1960 season, Co-champion Texas w as the moM im proved offensively, scoring 42 touchdowns in contrast to only 22 the previous season. T exas AA M and SMU also in touchdown showed big gains scoring, w hile Arkansas, Rice and B aylor scored the identical num ber they counted sn 1960, F ield goal prodm lion increased at even a higher percentage with an all-tim e record of 26 kicked this tw ice a* m any as the 14 scored last year. H ie 1960 total w as also a league record. season, almost Butch Blum e of Rice establish­ ed both team and individual field goal records for a season when he kicked two in the 26-11 con­ quest of Baylor. That ran his season total to six, eclipsing the Individual record of 4 set by Dan P etty of Texas last y ea r and erasin g the team m ark that was shared by Rico and Texas, Both Baylor and T exas Tech equaled the old team record this season, and H. L. D aniels of the Red Raiders m atched Petty % standard by kicking three field goals in T ech’s 16-14 com e-from - behind victory over West Texas State Saturday. Seven of the eight m em bers stepped up their scoring in 1961. with only T exas Tech falling short of the 1960 figure. Although SWC Statistics N et C-aln F orw ard Pa**! n* Yd* ¥ ***** Pen 43.3 : m .38*8 374 437 .362 258 386 356 430 27! 366 277 454 467 267 Int i; n*h P a n t * Iii . . . . I!- I ** rn A Sc bl Opp . . . A rkansas . . . . Opp Ba • lor IO 161 . - ( >pp ----- . J 35 . . , R ife 130 Opp ----- 154 SMU . . . ! l o 319 161 OPP *•*• TCL ___ . IO 139 161 Opp I pi h I IO 147 T. Opp 158 Tex aa 1*7 Opp — * 102 Cl Un* ria? * Ka • h I*Mn* Tot 3627 "89 2416 3121 987 2408 2189 726 2915 i 145 629 1774 1553 3314 2867 1559 927 2486 1566 81.3 2378 1580 I 68 2648 937 1001 1938 2137 1«K)6 3 ! ft . 1*150 IOT' 2480 1982 872 2854 1720 ani .521 2027 1029 3 >56 2858 973 3831 902 859 ITR:. 515 . IO 136 143 . 445 364 536 I'ifi 428 398 172 441 484 372 SOI 430 520 507 ITI 753 376 A ll < nap % Int TD N V A v * st 61 132 3 59 38 0 204 85 IO 8 52*34.8 IO 8 113 49 19-36 0 57 12! 5 68-33 ft IO 234 114 34 .ft 50-34 2 I if. 7 ft 32-35,7 TI 1.36 7 8 62 AS 37 9 1% 92 15 52-37 3 5 198 10.3 l l 5 61-36 8 9 158 76 45-36 9 5 "6 158 Cl 12 44-37.3 8 112 66 .36-38 9 5 149 I 65 IO 52-36 4 157 IO 52-35 7 8 79 148 Tit l l 9 41-33.2 201 86 32 79-35.5 5 LAST 34 EE K . 462 .417 .43-4 .471 187 .486 . 456 469 3.7" .481 .481 59< i 136 503 .473 428 . . . : in ----- . . . . » or R ice ___ . 26 .. . 14 Ba' J o r SM ? . 28 . 28 TCL T , J < * h . ’ 6 W . T ex. . . . . u 17 52 14 35 14 35 55 23 23 69 IO 42 195 142 25 179 73 133 209 J 32 37 318 25 189 337 >4 206 341 355 214 18 9 12 23 9 IS 25 13 IO 2 4 2 Son 522 600 520 200 5 »! I I 0 I I o 0 2 2 0 0 0 4 38 8 6 3» 8 5-38.6 3-4,3 .3 2-3 o 6-32,5 .36 *5 5< • 72 37 84 t i i ) s r A^O V PE R G A TIK A3 I HAGES Off** n*e and D e f e n s e * . School AdrM . . . Arkansan B a y lo r Rh o SM U T C ! ’ Tex** T, T ech . . . . . . . . . . . . . <; H ob J.M Ti** F t . Opp 118 I 87 0 0 16*1 0 135 I 191 191 2 0 59 0 201 4 . . IO : o 8 . . . . IO 5 .. IO 7 2 . . IO J . . IO . . IO 9 . . 30 4 3 84 180 388 176 92 11.3 291 9 4 5 2 5 3 5 I 6 O p p Kiixh Pas* I’cr G •>i»p I VK 162 7 218 9 155 -I 156 6 93 7 145.0 285 8 172.0 IV r (. Ave I if fen*.# Rush Pax* D efen se 78 9 I 42.1 314 5 72.6 j ■>3.9 I31.4 SI J I ON 0 I no I 15 7 98 2 I03 n 90 2 97 3 80 I 2 12 7 24! ft 291 5 286 7 J ’7 9 : 9,3 x 248 . Baylor also led in touchdown passes (24) to l l for T exas, T exas AAM em erged as the in punting with a a thin 2s .0 to 27 9 edge over R ice. leader team !Mural Schedule Basketball Cl aaa A * jt in D elta epsilon vs A pha Phi Alpha; Deans Team vs East Texans I 45 p m Sigm a Chi vs Sigma Alpha Epsilon Kinst.iv;cg Krew vs Warren a.IO p.m. Beta Theta Pi vs Phi Gam­ ma IVUa: SRT) : ‘ark Bo tsp* vs Hond­ ah W ooten W: 1.4 pm Deita Kappa Epsilon vs Kappa Sigma; M erchants vs Blocker; A D D IN G EXPERIENCE *o ■ « "e-as Fneup W ed n esd a y right •'a i en the Longhorn cagers take on I e > a s W esley a n will be gva-'d Butch Skeet#, Skeete a from W e mar, was a s e - or last y e a r s Lorq- m em stay on horn squad. Tuesday, December 5, 1961 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 SWC Cagers See Fruitful Weekend By ED KNOCKE Texan Sports Editor J time but opener! up a six-point lead in the final 90 seconds th-v The Southwest Conference bas­ ketball team s uncorked the 1961-62 season this past weekend w ith four wins and tw o losses against non conference foes, In last F riday night’s a -Don. T exas AAM bea» Centenary 68-66; Southern M ethodist defeated Geor­ gia Tech, 67-55: Arkansas fell to Kansas. 85-74; and Oklahoma City U niversity outscored Texas Chris­ tian, 97-91. T exas defeated Howard Payne, 81-68, and Rice beat Georgia Tech, 84-80, Saturday night, Monday night saw Texas Te< h play Colorado a t Lubbock; Baylor vs. Oklahoma City U niversity at Oklahoma City; Arkansas vs Mis- rouri at F ayetteville; and Rice vs. Florida at. G ainesville The hot-shooting all-America can­ didate Carroll Broussard of the Aggies set ar, SII-time school scor­ ing record in the Friday night con­ tes*. The tall F’or* Arthur senkn scor­ ed 19 points to bring his total to 988 points for his career It broke the old record of 984 set in 1959 by Net! S\\ isher. Although Broussard s effort w as most talked about, high sooting honors went to sophom ore Bennie Lenox with 21 points. The A ggies trailed 28 23 at half Cage Standings SEASON STANDINGS T e ar n Texas ........... SMU Rice ....... Texas AAM ....... Baylor Texas Tech TOU . . . . . . . Arkansas re*. i. 0 I OOO ii loom 0 I OOI I 0 I. OOO .OOO 0 .OOO 0 .OOO 1 .coo i I a it W eek’s Result* Texas 83 Howard Payne 68, Rice 84 Georgia Teen 80, SM U 67, <;■ o r g ia I p. h 55 Texas AAM 58 Centenar} 56. IHI*' MMS eo**o«*r»o« New York 17, N.Y. Tuesday, December 5, 196 f THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 Houston s Alley Nears Perfection in Sheba' Bachauer and Russia: W orld's Finest Union But then . . . Ah! then! Then Miss Bachauer entered to play Serge Rachmaninoff s “ Con­ certo No. I I I in D M in o r," Opus I tcrmezzo ended with a sigh from : nearly everyone in the audience. i played with a In the Fin a le : aile breve, sh® restrained dyna­ mism that pulled the listener al­ most out of his seat toward her. Rachm aninoff’s Concerto No. I l l I was written as a show piece for the artist. Here in Austin it show­ ed that w-e were listening to one of the finest pianists in the svorld. Tile tour de force was Stravin­ sky’s “ L e Sa ere Du Printem ps ** The final question, and maybe the only one, that can he asked about a performance of this well known, and controversial work is, “ Did it w o rk ?” Did the performance pre­ sent the theme and sustain the il­ lusion? It worked, and it worked beauti­ fully. No one was happier about this than Alessandro himself. When they finished he went around the orchestra s h a k i n g hands with everyone he could find, and he had each section take w ell deserv­ ed bows. The piece and the orchestra re­ ceived warm, extended applause. If you don’t happen to know the work, it s about a pagan rite that builds up frenzied dance in which the sacrificed girl dances herself to death, and the conduc tor commits suicide. into a final One thing is certain, if this rep­ resents spring in the Steppes, we might be justified in adding to our defence budget. RUSSELL GOLD AND VIRGINIA PAYNE a re p ic t u r e d i~ a see s from Houston s A ey Thea‘re production of W illia m leges power- ful des "-a Come Bac*, L’rrie Sheba. ' The ac* on t a ‘-es p a a e f rer Doc come- home drunk and renews I s be igere~t a 't a o s on his wife Lola. The p ' s y continues through this weekend. Faust' Faltered in Houston with his “ L e W a il d O r ." Troigle’s impersonation of the de-, ti Mephis­ topheles was intriguing He crouch­ ed and was magnificently sa* a rus­ tic in his maneuver. Treigle s von e is bold and rich and adequately beholding of all the necessary prop­ erties of a leading bass. Then Arlene Saunders sang M a r­ guerite s “ Ballad of hic King of Thule" and “ Jew el Song" with even greater clarity and beauty than I had anticipated, and I had been told she was excellent Her beauty c h a r m coupled with her splendid soprano voice ga\o her the opera’s top lau­ rels in m y o p in io n There ran be great in Miss Saunders' c a r e e r . things expected and apparent Richard Verreati had moments • ALL TYPES • [ I BODY WORK K L j g t t i FCMDER R EPA ID FAINTING I . / I S q A - T / f P Swenson - Forrester Body Shop GR 6-4101 1407 W . 5TH FREE PICKUP 4 DELIVERY TONIGHT AT 8 P.M This is a deighbful tale about four invalid soldiers who tackle the en­ tire German army — with amazing results— PLUS I he Ma PETER USTINOV Who Wagged His Tail Naturalism throbs through “ Ger- vaise " which w ill be shown Wed­ nesday ai Batts A iditorium. The follows me book movie closely written by E m ile Zola, from which it was taken, “ The first to write in naturalis­ tic style, Zola seas heavily influ­ enced by a realist, (lu stave Flau- bet, His tendency was to empha­ size impinges, upon man s everyday existence." said D r. D avid H ay man, associate professor of English. the sordid which Characters the naturalistic style tend to be puppetlike, and rn wmmnm O N D I C . 7 I 8 4 1 ? details are often sordid in the n4-■ tempt to print the complete truth. Naturalist authors, such as Zola, in a scientific deal with stories manner. , "G e rv a is ® ," the winner of IO worldwide awards*: including Hic New York C ritics’ Award for the best foreign picture of the year, revolves around G ervaise and her two children. G ervais has been abandoned by her lover, who squandered their money. I She meets a kind and gentle roofer, Coupeau, whom she m ar­ ries They are happy until Coupeau is severely injured in a fall from a roof. Enforced idleness causes him to start drinking. Aixiut this time, the old lover returns and moves in with Ger- vaise and her husband. The lover is return causes more trouble. The story, in keeping with natur­ alist theory, tells of "decent hu­ man beings overw helmed by the bitter ens sronment in which they liv e ." The film w ill be shown at 1:30. ♦ I, 6:30, and 9 p m, It is free to students, staff and faculty' mem­ bers. Special: SCRAMBLED EGGS* Two large whit© eggs, scrambled In cream and buffer, with choice of toast or hot biscuits, jam or jelly, and coffee. CHARTER BUSES I n d ltio n e i — A ir Suspend v. gro o m Aboard KERRVILLE BUS CO., IHC GR 8 9361 B O X O I I K F ort x-v S IM) ADMISSION M r MASTER OF THE WORLD 5 in ten t B ric e , M a ry Vt rb ater S ta r t* 7:00 — Flu* — ALAKAZAM F u ll- Len g th C artoo n F e a tu re '•tart* 9:00 SOUTH-AUSTIN .19*0 S O I T H C O M O R O S box or i ii I o n : s s « no •\nwi*->io\ fifn FRANCIS OF ASSISI Bradford Hillm an. Dulnre* H art Mart# 7:00 — Plu# — THE OKLAHOM AN Jl« rl M et re#. B a rb a ra H a le M a rt* 9:00 I'oarf*** ar-vtd at G.eaa .pa a* and Sovtt Cong few r*i*e e- y from ? >1 ll am. RODGERS & HAMMERSTEIN S " IT V i p e r m in compact. DEBORAH KERR m B R Y M ER & STARTS T O M O R R O W VARSITY 10141 CHRIST*AS GIFT! book of theatre tickets N O W SH O W IN G ! FEATURES: 12-2-4-6-8-10 OPEN 5:45 REG. FEAT. 6 & 9:45 ELVIS* HAL Wa LUS recHMCom CAPITOL BROUGHT BACK BY POPULAR OPEN H AI DIWAND! ONE CARELESS MOMENT... and then shame | S * j f % r ff I tormentI N O W SH O W IN G ! I KA T I It K S : I J.-20 - 2:3* - 4:50 TROY D O N A H U E C O N N I E S T EV ENS DOROTHY M cGu ir e • LLOYD N O U N ( H I L D ,25 VARSITY NO W ! OPEN 2.00 Features: 2:15-4:45-7:15-9:45 ti ROBERT ROSSEN'S m m See Jackie Gleason in His First Dramatic Role! KIMI SOTA FATS Christmas BONUS MONTH CHIEF and BURNET DRIVE-INS Fine Features Each Program, at No Increase in Price— This Month Only! Austin's Finest Drive-in Entertainment, < I H L I ) F U L K A D I L T S fibr • I H O T S H O W 6 30 » VI A It.VI I N -C A E H K A l L E S AN A ll S B L K ^ a , 'L //k r r d £ . . . L x m A A j L I W E H I M R OET S BEATVIK OH B O M B S H E L L ? trine Bancroft earns over $110,000 a year — yet eats in Times Square cafeterias. And she s probably the only gal in Hollywood to turn down a star- ring role opposite Frank Sina- ira. Meet the star of “ Miracle Worker" in this week's Post. T h * S m t u r 4 m r Italian and American F O O D OPEN 5 P.M. 'TILL I A.M. WEEKDAYS 5 P.M. ’TIL 2 A.M. FRI. & SAT. PIZZA DELIVERY SERVICE GR 6-6111 Dining & D a nc in g INO COVER CHARGE} 2900 Rio Grande SAN JACINTO CAFE W H fe lS D SPECIALIZING IN DELICIOUS MEXICAN AND AMERICAN FOODS REGULAR LUNCHES EVERY DAY AT REASONABLE PRICES p l Visit Our Rainbow Dining Room OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK I6TH AND SAN JA C IN TO GR 8-3984 EYES E X A M I N E D CONTACT LENSES P R E S C R I P T I O N S FI LLL D NOW! OPEN 5:45 FEATURES: 6 - 8 - 1 0 FA N N IE H U R S T ’C Susan Hayward John Gavin f t i n i t f C O LO R * A T t: Mi l l ' % "COLD WIND IN AUGUST" ap* Lula Albright • brott Marlowe U # 'G O NAKED IN THE WORLD BB* v £ It CH na l.oHubrigida A T 9:55 "LET'S MAKE LOVE" Marilyn Monroe AT »:22 A T 6:30 "M ARTY" E r a t # ! Borg nine A T S:3® HORSE SOLDIERS Jobn SS at no ST 19:30 ’ 12 ANGRY MEN*1 lf nary Lund* introducing SUSANNAH YORK as J TOMORROW BURNET ROAD OPTICAL OPTOMETRIST (next door to Shoppers ll or id ) KEIKO... who became N j wit*. .. but not his br»d« I I starring l u a n m u ti •> Admiral Yamaguctu ■ W IT H A C A S T I O F T H O U S A N D S ? » mirv j*c*son * scar rattle* Prw4*«*i A AARAOI Reitait * A ?cho tw Afo4wcb©« STARTS THURSDAY S T A T E t o CADET COL. JOHN PROL- LA, A r m / ROTC, p r e s e n t s G o v e r n o r P rice D a n ie l an invi­ t a t i o n t h e A r m y - A :r F o r c e M i li ta ry Ball. T h e bal! will b e in M u n i c ip a l C o l i s e u m S a t u r ­ d a y n :g h t f r o m 8 :3 0 t o m i d ­ n ig h t . S p o n s o r s o f A r m y R O T C a n d o f f ic e r s o f A n g e l F lig ht will b e p r e s e n t e d a t t h e fu n c - W M SHR* ■ • . . . . . .'-A.. W U T a e i d i f 8. I 30. am i 7 — In stitu te fo r T ax A s­ sesso rs, V illa Capri. 8:30-4— In terv iew * for stu d en ts int* r- ested Ut th e N A V IG A TO R program , I th e Com- j T e x a s U n io n m ons. lo b b y near 9 - ! 30- A p p lica tio n s fo r R an ger and e d ito r . J o u rn a lism B u ild in g R sata 107. 9-12 and 1-5—-Prize B ook C ollection s, ? H u m a n itie s R esea rch C enter, M ain B u ild in g IMS—C E A C ouncil e le c tio n f ilin g ex - j th r o u g h W ed n esd ay, w a g - j ten d ed e e n e r H ail 123. 9 -4 —R e se r v a tio n s for Reason T ick et \ Center Promotes M id d le East Study By EDWARD STONE Increasing interest in the Middle E ast as a center of world attention led to the creation of the Middle East Center at the University in 1960, The C enter is a co-ordinating agency for tile various cooperating departm ents to yield a well-rounded program of study. Cooperating departm ents in the p r o g r a m are linguistics, government, geography, classical languages, and history. A cooperating departm ent is one which offers work on the Middle East, The Middle E ast C enter is not a departm ent, but sponsors an interdepartm ental program. Each of the cooperating departments has a specialist in studies of the Middle E a s t . The department offers courses 111 its own discipline but relating to the Middle East, Dr. Walter Lehn, associate director of the Center, said. .Special opportunities for advanced students in the Cen­ te r are provided by a program arranged in cooperation with Brown and Cornell Universities for the teaching of English and application of linguistics in Egypt. This program will provide interested students with p o ssib le es for field work in the Middle East. In a related program at the University more than 50 students arc brought annually from Saudi Arabia, making available an unmatched number of speakers f r o m the least explored area of Arabic linguistics. “There is a great deal of interest in the Middle E ast,” Lohn said. This interest m ay stem from m any sources. The Middle E ast is strategic because of its location—it is the j land bridge between Europe, Asia, and Africa. This area has two-thirds of the proven oil reserves of the world, and i thus is of great economic importance. MAN, OH MAN! It's Time To Nominate Bluebonnet Belles for the 1962 Cactus N om ination forms a n d picture specifications are n ow available in Journalism Building 107. A n y approved c a m p u s organization m a y m ake up to three nominations. Bluebonnet semifinalists will app e ar at Ro u n d-U p Review next spring, an d pictures of finalists will be in the 1952 Cactus. -, - I P A ll nomlnafion forms must be fum ed in at Journalism Building Room 107 by 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 13 m m m h w TK V'- - - -J* Private G rant ! T h e D a il y T e x a n u s e u m H a s W as the Patient? Study Begins News of a study being conducted ! on private grants is included In the Main University newsletter. The study is under the supervision of Norman Hackerman, vice-presi­ dent and provost. Upon its completion an interim statem ent is expected to be made. Use of funds granted to the Uni­ versity for staff members must follow University policy since the University is responsible for them. The Initial negotiations for grants are the responsibility of the indi­ vidual, but any tentative agree­ ment should be cleared with the departm ental chairman, Also, in-1 formation should be submitted to I the President’s office, A private grant will usually in­ volve overhead costs. A provision in the term s of agreement should : be given careful consideration. Overhead costs are 5 per cent on j aggregate amounts between 52,000 and 510,000 and IO per cent on larger amounts. 'L iv e ' Exhibit rattlesnakes, Two two garter snakes, and a fox snake are being exhibited live on the main floor of the Texas Memorial Museum as the December Exhibit of the Month. Museum curators say die snakes are attracting a lot of attention from visitors, particularly one of rattlesnakes who has been the nicknamed “ Buzzy.” The five snakes were obtained from the Philadelphia Zoological Gardens as the result of a trade arranged by Gerald Baun. The Philadelphia Zoological Gardens received several Texas water snakes in the exchange. Officials of the museum say that while live specimens draw great responses, more can be learned from stuffed-animal exhibitions for they can be shown in their natural habitat and can be displayed with other animals. Table Tennis Tournament Scheduled to r D ecem ber 8 The Co-Recreation mixed table tennis doubles tournament will be held Friday, D e c . g. at: the Women * Gym, Entries arc due by 9 p.m., Wednesday, Dec. 6. This tournament is open to any sturiom, faculty, or staff mem­ b er. ( a m p u s I. iii* Tuesday, December 5, 1961 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 7 Spring Note to Folks M ay Mean UT Honor Come the middle of next semes­ ter, a flurry of ‘'flunk” slips will undoubtedly be mailed to bewil­ dered parents of failing University students. The University will also, come springtime, send out other notices to parents -invitations to the fourteenth annual Honors Day convocation to be held April 7 in Hogg Auditorium. ! Where 'O Where An ambulance pulled up at the side door of the Home Economics Building at 2:15 p.m. Monday. At­ tendants unloaded the stretcher and raced upstairs. Finding nothing, they returned lo the ambulance and made an in­ quiry on the call they had received from the Student Health Center. After numerous delays and dead­ end inquiries, the Health Center responded. It had received a call, saying that a student fainted in the hall of the Home Economics Building, and had, in turn, called the ambu­ lance. In the meantime, the student re­ vived and went home. | Honors Day is the University'* way recogni­ to giving official tion to its top students. Honor students ares (I) stu­ dent's selected for special aca­ demic awards and scholarships; (t) member* of national honor sock*tie* which require a B aver­ age minimum for membership; (3) members of University honor societies; (4) students and organi­ zations who merit recognition for and distinction scholarship; (o> undergraduate* in all school* and eolicgea who have themselves during the two previous sem es­ ters bv being in the upper three per cent of their class. Honors Day 1962 will h ate as it* sjx1 aker Dr. Harold C. Urey of the University of California, S a n Diego, Dr. b re y was awarded the | Nobel Prize for chemistry in 1934 after he identified heavy hydrogen - the basis of the H-bomb. Known the world over, Dr. Urey is now doing research on cosmo-chemis- try. distinguished citizenship in Past speakers have been Fred Cole, president of Washington and Leo I n h e rslty ; Willis Tate, pres­ ident of SMI ; and Wilson El­ kins. president of the University of Maryland, I h M M ' i K l i i b i l h v * rn tyw d JiA t y p i n g s e r v i c e 2033 Guadalupe GR 2-3210 Where typing for students is a full time career. he Daily Texan CLuifud JIL CLASSI KIEU A D V E R T IS IN G K A TE S CL A d d l I I ED A D V E R T ISIN G D E A D L IN E S E ach W ord (15-w ord m in im u m ) C la ssified D isp la y t colu m n x one Each A d d ition al Tim # 20 C on secu tive T im es a w ord s ......................... 15 w o r d s JO w o r d s ..................... .............................. inch on e tim # ........... ........................ 4c ........... $1,00 .90 SOO 8.00 H . 0 0 (N o cop y ch a n g e fo r co n se c u tiv e issu e r a te s,) ................ M onday, 3 30 p .m . T u esd a y T exan .......................... T u esd a y. 3:30 p m . W ed n esd a y T ex a n T h u rsd av T ex a n ............. W ed n esd ay. 3:30 p.m . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T h u r s d a v , 3:30 p rn. F r i d a y T e x a n F riday. 3 ,30 p m. ..................... S u n d ay T e x a n In the event o f error mad*' In sn ad vertisem en t, i m m e d i a t e n o tice m u s t be g iv en as t h e p u b lish ers are resp o n sib le tor on ly on e in correct Insertion. M inim um C h ars# SI.So C a l l G R 2 - 2 4 7 3 Furnished Apartments Printing Typing cy, A m ple sto ra g e, n e a r ” UNIVERSITY Q U IE T e ffic ie n ­ F ree p arking. B ills paid S63 OO sin g le *70.00 d ouble. GR 9-8064 2013 E R E D BIV KR. A ir co n d itio n ed . L ow er. L iv in g room , d in in g room . 3, S. in 2013 B. kitchen bedroom , bath. F or I $55. SLV) GR 7-8228 or GR 6-3720 $65. M an ager d itio n ed L ow er. 1932 SAN A N T O N IO . N o. I . A ir co n ­ L iv in g - bedroom . d in ette, k itchen bath Gat and w a ter paid $35 d ou b le, $30 s i n g l y M an ager M anage N o, 7. GR 7-2204 or GR 6*3720, __ F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T F O R gen - H em en n ear L aw S ch ool on bus fine cen ter. Call c o m m u n i t y ge fir N ear G it 7-9596. _______ CO LO RFUL, P A N E L E D . AIR co n d i­ Gas. 22. tio n ed . w a ter paid GR 8-9125. or GR 6-8064. bedroom . 1102 W est S ep a ra te $80,00, BA C H E L O R A P A R T M E N T A V A IL A B L E 1000 B a y lo r ie U ni­ P r o fe sso r w is h e s to ren t v e r s ity unusual s ta ff m em ber. h illsid e stu d io a p artm en t. B eau ti­ ful v ie w o f c it y : fu rn ish ed B u ilt­ in b arb ecu e pit. $500 a m onth bill* P hon e by paid. _ HI 2-7683.______________________________ T erm s xear. Houses— Furnished $60. T W O BEDROOM n ic e ly fu rn ish ed h ou se. R edecorated W alk U n iver­ 16th 903 L a s t d ow n tow n s it y , GR 6-94 44, CL 3-7535. Alterations A L T E R A T IO N S ANI) DRESSM A K ING 715 W est 25th Sir- ct CR 6-3360. A L T E R A T IO N S. D R E SSM A K IN G . R E ­ W EAV ING on m oth, c ig a rette holes; For QUALITY PRINTING Cali e f j u i t i p t i n I C o . GB 3-3(47 r r in n a g • D u p lk a tin g • Mai I U s Special Services R E N T — P U R C H A S E T.VVs, Alpha T e le v isio n R en tal. GR 2-2692. SA N TA CLAUS S U IT S fo r rent. Santa sa le . Cam pus C ostum e beard* for Shop, 2328 G uadalupe. GR 2-8561. Help W anted W A N T E D T w o c o lleg e b oys to take su b ­ scrip tion order* for T h e H o u s­ ton C hron icle in end around i-ollege. Good com m ission Call Jim Boger, GR 7-8829 E X P E R IE N C E D TY PIN G REPO P.TS. etc, E lectric. Mrs. H unter, theses OL 3-3546. E X P E R IE N C E D TY PIN G SERVICE. A ccurate reason ab le. C all HO 5-5813. E X P E R IE N C E D SECRETARY W IT H IBM m ach in e. HO 5-9926 a fter 3 30 p. m NEI RD A T Y P IS T T C lose to UT. GR 8-5446. ALLRIG H T. A ccurate If It’s d on e bv A LBRIG H T. I f s done rea­ son ab le, exp erien ced ; near U n iv ersity ; GL 3-291.1, ty p in g : M U L T IL IT H IN G A N D P R IN T IN G . T H E S E S A N D D ISSE R T A T IO N S sp ec ia lty . A z t e c P rin tin g C om pany. I r06 San J a cin to . GR 2-5620. San J a cin to , GR T H E SE S. REPO RTS. R EA SO N A BLE . Elect rom ano. Mrs. B rady, 2317 O ld­ ham. GR 2-4715. T H E M O O NLIG H TER S—I. B, M .. Mul- lU ith in y A fter 6 OO and w eek en d s. M arguerite C ostello GR 2-1535. 3217 H am pton Road. N E E D A T Y P IS T ? A ccurate ty p in g , rea so n a b le rates. T h em es, d iss e r ta ­ etc. D icta tio n . B e tsy L loyd . tion s, HO 5-7534. N E E D C H R IST M A S M ONEY* hours par hour. W ork in g ch oice. A pply TO W est loth. $2-$4 l o u r D E L A F IE L D I G ram m ar, HI 2-6522. T Y PIN G . s p e l l i n g 30c page. correction . For Sale 1958 T R IU M P H TR-6 m o to rc y cle. Ex- n Lent $530. S to n e. GR 6-1708. All ch ron ic CUSTOM GO-K ART. ALM OST new. fram e xx uh dual w h eel d rive by M cUuliock. MC-10 a p p reciate. S e e GR 8-6295 fam ou s C a r d ia en g in e. to m o n o g ra m in g L ad ies, gen ts, At rea- j i960 PLY M O U T H C O N V E R T IB L E . It sortable rates. 903 Vt. 22% . GR 2-77J6. j m onth s old . O rigin al cost $4)83 Go­ ing o verseas m u st set! SIRK). H I 4-2017 or GR 6-6481, E x t. 431. W anted BLO O D D O N O R S - AU ty p e s o f blood n eed ed for u sa g e in A ustin. P r o fe s ­ sio n a l donors now accep ted T ravis C ou n ty B lood Bank, 2907 B R ed R iver, M EXICAN CITIZEN MAN d esires to tu to r In S p an ish and tra n sla te sam e in g GR 6-3867, to E n glish . UR 7-1637. 1939 A L L S T A T E M O PED . 2200 m ile s Good co n d itio n . A ccessories. $90. J im KU m er, GR 2*0476, I960 AI S I IN 11 LALKA XX) l o u r T U c m c Seater Delux Roadster. White match- $2195. Call I o p tio n a l. h ard top \ u p p e r c l a s s m a n g r a d u a t e stu d en t to sh are h ou se. Q uiet, w a lk ­ in g d istan ce U n iversity. $37.50. b ills o r 1957 LAM BR E T T A MOTORS! 'OOT KR. cffe r- co n d itio n . R ea so n ab le th an 2,000 m iles. Call Good co n sid er. L ess D u n lap . GR 2-1649. R ID E R S TY) S H A R E e x p en se s to Lub­ bock. L eavin g T h u rsd ay or F r id a y S u n d ay a fte r ­ aftern oon . R etu rn in g noon, GR 2-7767, P A ID U P S C H O L A R SH IP a l lo ca l busine#* c o lleg e. B ig red u ctio n in cost, C o n t a c t K a th e rin e K e lh , HO 5-1368, Lost and Found LO ST: Mf DO M E N S w r is t w atch . R ew ard. Call G R 2-4451. For Sale S E T O F D A NCE band drum s. Good con d ition . O rigin al cost $350. P riced fo r q u ick sale. HQ 5-1368. F IN E Q UALITY U N F I record player; F our sp eed s. B e a u tifu l w a ln u t ca b ­ in et table m odel. GR '2-7871 a fter 6 OO p m . D ISS E R T A T IO N S . T H E SE S, BOOKS. reports. N ew arm b ol-equipped elec- in. R itchie, c lo s e trom.utic Mrs GR 6-7079 ACCURATE TY P IN G . R EA SO NA BLE. electro n ic. Carol V o llin tln e. IBM GR 6-1069 ACCUR ATE B E A U T IF U L T Y P IN G — IBM electro n .tie L A W WORK S P E ­ C IA LIST . R easonable. C ourteous, con­ st A n ticu s, service. Call GR 8-7079 co n sid era te R A T ES. E X P ! R IE N C E D R E A S O N A B L E IBM A ll kind*—rep orts, thebes, m an u scrip ts, law w ork F orm at know -how Mrs, De B u tts GR 8-3298. j a w MOT ps; r GR 64717 sp ace. G R 6-4717.________ a E h u ’ term papers, TYPING. D ISS E R T A T IO N S T H E SE S, th em es E l e c t r o n i c . ; accu rate, rea so n a b le rates. Ann N elso n . : GL 3-4340. GR 2-1151, SH O R T I N T 3 P I N G tim e and m o n o ? M iss G raham . GL 3-5725. P R O F E S S IO N A L (th eses, IST >oripts F ive blocks dour GR 8-8143 rep o rts) d isserta tio n s, ’ ‘NIV K RSITX T Y P ­ roanu- IBM. R easonable. 'rom cam pus Mrs. Po- \ M UHM V CAI HOI N S tu d en t T I PINO S ervice N otary P u b lic N ew IBM Ss rn bo is 2914 Bean na—'Off Park Pfa -e (J u st N orth of T o w n es H ail) Cat! GR 8-2836 Or I to p - • B etw een C lasses M ARTHA ANN H Y L E lf M B A co m p lete m tfe a s lo a a l tailo red A serv ice U n iversity t~ a rd scien ce and d isserta tio n s ty p in g th e need* c l .students. S p ecia l key* la n g u a g e theses en g in eerin g eq u ip m en t and for to P h o n e GR 2-3210 Mer** ( 'anvenientl.r Located At O ar NVO Add res# 2013’it G U A D A L U PE JI. ere holders and sin g le ad m issio n tic k e ts to “ H otel Paradise),'* M u sic B u ild ­ ing box office, 9-11—Coffee and snack sale, H om e I Econom ics B u ild in g 139. 9-5—C am pus A rt C o m p et.tio n ex h ib it, Fe .as Union A rt G allery. 10—-Coffee H our w ith ta lk by R abbi D onald D. C rain, Hilled F o u n d a tio n . 10-12 and 3-5—T ex as F*ne A rts Asso­ ciation m em b ersh ip ex h ib it. L ag u n a Glo: is, I —S tudy g ro u p : P sy ch o lo g y an d R e­ ligion. - v * 3 - 5 - P ic tu re s b y S u zan n e Jack so n H eldt and ex h ib it by P o rc e la in A rt Club, TFWY •• W h e t h e r s h e s a n e w b r i d e . , . o r i e l e v a t i n g h e r s il­ v e r a n n iv e r s a ry . . . th e r e is o n e C h ris tm a s g i f t t h a t s t a n d s out . . . arui th a t is a d i a m o n d , A n u n u s u a l lov ely r i n g o r p e r h a p s a p e n d a n t c o u ld he h er o n e tr e a s u re d gift this C h r i s t ­ mas 6 i O N THE DRAG ALLANDALE VILLAGE FINE JEWELRY in J tin's Only Keepsake Diamond Jeweler L E T S G ET A C U P O F C O F F E E and talk a b o u t th e n ew T -B lrd, ta n ow n b efo re C h ristm as w ith bank ra tes an d ap p roved cred it, w ork ou t a p lan t o m eet you r G a la x .e. F a ir la n e o r F alcon th a t you h a if-p a y m e n ts u n til grad u ation , w ith C all for an ap p o in tm en t and w e w ill b u d get T r a v is R. C raw ford U n iv e r sity A u tom otive A dvisor A rm stron g-J o h n so n N o rth s id® 6518 N orth L am ar Re* H O 5-9641 * HO 5-8753 K H R l S R C H E V ’S S E C R E T P R O M I S E T O I H E We c a n t discuss Berlin, says Eisenhower, unless we know its b a ckg ro u n d . In th is w eek's Post, he tells why he opposed the Allied plan for Germany. W hy th e N a zi su rre n d e r was hushed up for 24 hours. And w hat K h ru sh ch ev p ro m ise d him privately at Camp David. TS* Smtmrdmy F .taint POST o n e 0 1 f t S t A l l C S Tuetday, December 5, 1961 THE DAILY TEXAN Paqe 8 Frosh Beauty Field to Narrow j For Spring Semester-- Coed Apartments Ruled Out L O N G H O R N FOOTBALLERS, e twist c o - fesA. an autographed football auction, end a 6 2 !/ j hour broadcasting marathon between disc* jockeys Bill Noble and Buzz Long were all a part o f radio station K N O W s United Fund pro­ gram m ing last week. Here, left to right, David Russell, Mike Cotten, K N O W news man Jim © re ag, and Jack Collins do them part to boost the fund drive. - Photo bv DraddT Nasher to Aid in Organization O f M o c k U N Delegations a t 'Y ' R a y Nasher of D allas, state chairman of the Am erican Associa­ tion for the United Nations, will b e guest speaker at a meeting c f the University “ Y ’ UN committer at 5 p.m. Wednesday. Nasher will present information on the actual United Nations, and how the “ Y ’ Mock United Nations Assembly will parallel regular UN functions. L etters recently went out to moss J n v 1 1 i n 2 campus organisation* them to represent one of the IDI nations in the second annua! mock assembly, which will be held April 13-14. Groups will be g i v e n a choice in selecting the nations they wish to represent according to the order in which requests are re- c^ivpd. Forty of the 101 nations will be represented by 35 colleges and uni­ in the versities from five states Southwest, Last year IB schools other than the University partici­ pated. Two hundred eighty-three delegate' representing 65 nations composed the 1961 assem bly. This year, the “ Y ” staff hopes that different organizations will fill all of the rem aining 61 places Two to ten interested students are needed to represent a country, A minimum of two and a maximum of five delegates may represent a country on the floor during a ses­ sion, but delegates may alternate among themselves f o r different sessions if their group is large. Once a group has registered with the University “ Y ,” or with UN co­ chairm en Judy Tucker, or Ch cr if Faidi. the “ Y ” will absist the group in finding an ach iser, and in plan­ ning how to represent that nation in the assembly. Advance preparation of informa­ tion should be made on the coun­ try itself and on recent UN N~ue* C am p u s New s Round-Up interview students oratories will interested in medical sales. Cours­ es in science, business ad m in istra-1 tion. sales, and marketing will be helpful in getting this position. Delta Air Lines, Inc. will inter­ view for stewardesses on Thurs­ day, Dec. 7. Potential claim s representatives and sum m er cabins representatives I for the Social Security A dm inistra-1 lion will be interviewed on F r id a y ,! Dec. 8. On Thursday, Dec. 14, Lever Brothers & Co. will interview for salesmen, Hinkle has also served as technical adviser to the church’s Division of Higher Education at Richmond, I Latin Policies ‘Yf Topic M ich ael B e rio n , a e ro -s p a c e e n ­ from B u enos g in eerin g stud ent A i n s , A rgen tin a, will sp e a k on cu s to m s and p olitics of his c o u n ­ tr y a t 3 p .m . T u esd ay in the U n! v e rsify “ Y . ” A fte r atten d in g p rim a ry and in Bu enos tw o se co n d a ry A ire s , B e rro n sch ools studied for y e a r s In London. H e c a m e h e rs In J a n u a r y , 19(51, re tu rn in g to A r­ g en tin a rn te a ch in g stin t. th e s u m m e r fo r iii The talk will be sponsored by the L atin A m e ric a n A ffa irs Study G roup of th e “ Y ” . ★ Engineers lo Hear W a re “ Bioelectric Transducers” will bs the subject of a talk by D r. Ray Ware at a meeting of the Am er­ ican Institute of E lectrical Engi­ neers and the Institute of Radio Engineers. The meeting will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday in E xperi­ mental Science Building 115, Dr. Ware is on the staff of th e School of Aviation Medicine at Brooks Air Force B ase in San An­ tonio ■CO»OP*CO*OP*CO*OP*CO*OP*CO*OP*CO*OP*CO#OP*CO* ! w - - - C - N a R / / j j I It’s Light I .It's Right...It’s i\ 8 * ★ OZ Sets Up Scholarship Tho U n iv e rs ity D e p a rtm e n t of Sp eech will a d m in iste r a new sch o la rsh ip in sp eech and h e a r ­ ing th e ra p y , e stab lish ed by D e lta Z e ta s o c ia l s o ro rity . sp rin g T he $50 s c h o l a r s h i p , to be aw a rd e d for th e first tim e d uring s e m e s te r , Trill be the known a s “ T h e D elta Z e ta S ch ol­ arsh ip for Stud ents E n ro lle d In an Academie Program of T rain - log for S p eech and ((r a r i n g T hor- apists.” A Speech Department com m u­ te© will select the recipient. ★ Church A p p oin ts Hinkle The G eneral Council of the P r e s - 1 byterian Church, US. has appoint-1 cd Olin E , Hinkle, associate p ro -; fessor of journalism , to a three- year term on its committee cm in-1 the formation. Headquarters of council D at Atlanta, Ga. Prof. j Twenty-five sem ifin alists in the I Freshm an beauty contest will be ! final­ announced Thursday. F iv e ists will be selected Monday, and the winner announced at the F r e s h - j j man Council banquet Dec. 14. The 87 contestants a re : Lynda Al)inc. Frances Aftergut. B arbara Abelman, Linda A rm -! strong, Carolyn Adams, M arilynne j Alien, Clarice Andrews, Sharon An-1 derson, Dani B ailey, B arb ara B ail­ ey, Bunny B all, Charline Beards- j ley, and Sandy Beesley. A lso, C e le ste B im b a u m , Genie B ra c k e n r id g e , Ju d ith B ra d le y , B a r b a r a Ann B ro w n , N a n c y B ro w n , N a n cy C aln , C a ro ! T e n ­ a n t, S a lly C a rro ll, V ic to ria C a s ­ well, A nn ette C o ch ra n , K eith Con will, P a t t C o rn eliu s, J a n e B a r- phln, J a n ic e D a v is, L y n n Den m a n . D iane D o u g las, J e s s i c a Dup lissey , R ita F a g e im a n . Also Susan Fow ler, M artie F is h - 1 er, Linda Friedm an, Ja n ita Fry®, : Nancy Hale. Nancy Harrington, M arcia H arris, Cindy H erbert, Syd Hodgin, Sharon Hoffer, Sue Howell, Shirley Jenkins, P at Kahn, Nancy Koch, Carolyn M cCarty. Je r r y Lee, T racy Lewis. * J u d y j Also L y n d a M an n , G re tch e n J a n i e M ayfield , M atlock, M c M a ste r, K a th y M cC oy, S a n d ra M oran, Susan M u rfe e , S haron M uth, Susan M y e rs, S h e ry l M y ­ e r s , M ary Ann O’Connell. Also, Sharon O’Shea, Madeline Polios, Cheryl Neef, Carol Nor­ wood, P a t Richards, Carolyn Rob- J inson, Jea n Rogers* J ill R oss, N ik -1 ks Bylander, Sanchez, : Sally Schley. J ear. ire S m ith , S m ith , Alan C a m e ro n T h e re s a S in s B e tty S m ith , \n n S p e n ce , H elen S p am p in ato , S p e n ce r, V ick y S ta rk , Sue S tiles, B a r b a r a T h e rio t, M elody T u ehtn , B a r b a r a V ern on , L in d a W ah lhof J a n e t W a rk , c r , S h aron W aite, N a n cy W ien er, S usan L yn n WH- son, and L in d a XX m enes. Undergraduate women will not be granted permission to live in j unsupervised apartments during the spring sem ester, Miss M ar­ garet P eck, Dean of Women, an­ nounced Monday. Apartment permission cus­ tom arily granted only when a shortage of housing in approved i residences exists. is “ There will be ample housing available in the spring for women students to live in dormitories, co­ operative houses, student residen­ ces, sorority houses and in several University - a p p r o v e d apart­ ment houses which have supervis­ ors,” Dean P eck said. Women students who received permission in September to live in unsupervised apartm ents m ay con­ tinue to occupy their apartm ents and will not have to renew' their permission, Miss Peck said. Women students who plan to move from one approved residence to another for the spring sem ester may do so by giving written notice to their residence supervisors not later than 5 p.m . Ja n . 15 and by forfeiting room deposits. That provision does not apply to Scottish R ite Dormitory and G race. * Kirby, and Newman Halls, which! are built by religious and fraternal organizations and are operated on a non-profit basis. their A student’s failure to notify her residence supervisor in writing of her intention to move will indicate that the student has assumed a ! contract for the spring sem ester, Miss P eck said * N e w m a n Queen N a m e d chosen S ch legel wa.* N ew m an Club S w e e th e a rt a t the fo rm al F r i d a y c lu b ’s a n n u al night. N a n cy M iss S ch le g e l, a Junior e d u c a ­ tion m a jo r fro m A ustin, i« re lig ­ ious a ff a irs v ic e p resid en t fo r the : N ew m an Club. T h e o th e r fin alists five s w e e th e a rt w e re A v e ry S in c la ir, B a r b a r a S h irle y Karen. I^ep p ard , for J a n S ch ie ffe r, (fa n n y , P h y llK and Job Interview s O pen Interview s for life, accident, and I insurance sales positions j health will be held by The Travelers com­ pany in P earce Hall 106 Tuesday. The Student Employment Bu­ reau will sponsor other interviews for positions as salesmen, claim representatives, and stewardesses throughout D ecem ber. On Wednesday, Dec. 6, Ross Lab- JOB? Is the time Now to start thinking about that job you want. W rite direct to the man who makes the decisions. A c­ curate nationwide list of Per­ sonnel Directors and Sales managers available to you. Send $ 1 .0 0 pdd. to J. W . 14 Riverview Highbcrger, Lane, Bettendorf, Iowa. I S V O T O I H WO. I S P O R T ! So says the owner of the Wash­ ington Redskins. He lashes out at baseball ( “ it's cooked" J. Basketball ( “the public doesnt care"). Boxing ( udoesn't even deserve to be called a sport”) . Andf in this week’s Post, he tells w hy fo o t b a ll is tops. Th. J«Mr*ay (mi,, i *o n T O o and prices start as low as * 1 4 95 A TrtpW-conttnsctiofl Sirnmttu * tcuff-reswUnt wny! cover; nj uke* rough and tumble in ii rid#, (towny interior*. Sturdy driwbolts can't taring open. Made to lait - in the clinic dei gn th*! never foe* out of (Ult Mitching colon for mm *nd women. * Mwt't T«#8«Aw • Min Iterative Oremt^t . . . . C L«f>es CUM# ., 0 ladies’ Wardrobe t he! tm........ Me SNH (UM . IHM . SMM IU M Sporting G o o d s —- D ow n stair CL o • o ft o • O *C O * O P * C O * O P * C O * O P * C O » O P * C O * O P * C O « O P w C O * O P * C a 2246 Guadalupe Career Cues: "This age of specialization opens special opportunities for the well-rounded man!” I | Robert Saudek, President Robert Saudek Associates, Inc. “T h e m ore specialists so ciety cre a te s to cope w ith its com p lexities, the easier it can be for a non-specialist to ach ieve success. If th at seem s p arad o xical, look a t it this w a y : th e m ore m en who go out fo r specific positions on th e ball club, the m o re ch an ce y ou have to wind up as m an ag er! T o d a y ’s w orld - in governm ent, business, th e arts, even s c ie n c e -n e e d s th e w ell-rounded m an . H e ’s the m an who can see the en tire p ic t u r e ...the m an who can draw on a broad background of know ledge, evalu ate the problem , then assign the details to specialists. T h e w orld of en tertain m en t m a y seem som ew hat spe­ cial, but it’s a case in point. T h ese days, it dem ands m ore of its people th an ever before. T o d a y ’s m usical com ed y score is often as sophisticated as grand opera. D ram a draw’s heavily on psychology and history. Television pro­ ductions a re concerned with n u clear science and political science. If y ou ’ve ever w atch ed ‘O mnibus’ you m ay have seen how our productions h ave run the gam ut of a wide range of m an ’s interests. So I suggest to you th a t even though you m ay con cen ­ tra te on one special field of interest, keep y ou r view point broad. K eep your college cu rricu lu m as diversified as pos­ sible. A tten d lectu res and co n certs, the th eatres and m u­ seum s. A bove all, read and read , and listen and listen! B u t p ay scan t heed to the o racle who says th ere s no rou te to the top but th a t of specialization. I don’t believe it!'’ . . . grow ing wills ss groat o r Austin Unlike the an cien t city a b o v e , Austin is a city en the g r c v in every w ay: r e * ’ population, new :ndu str/, new r e tre a t! faculties. O ur job, as A ustin’s old est and la rg e st bank, is to p -ovid e part of the leadership into the future . . , for you as a d epositor . . . for our city in any way possib Due to your continued co n fid en ce, we are now t.'»oceedin< With the constr a c ‘ .on of A ustin’s mo: f modern ba - '• • g 'n -V« thank you for your con fid en ce . . . and p led ge our effo rts a ways to improve our banking service to you. A U S T I C '-s l B a n k Wk 517 CONGRESS Member FC C Have a real cigarette-Camel THE BEST TOBACCO MAKES THE BEST SMOKE R 3. Kl’mold* Tobacco (Vim p., cif tv I inurn Kl I, m Monk Caroon# And for a special kind of sm oking satisfaction... Robert Saudek is the creator of many of television’s most famous p ro g ram s-in ­ cluding the award-wiuning “Omnibus’' series. F orm er network executive and head of the T V -R adio Workshop of the Ford Foundation, Bob enjoys a “ Camel break ’. H e’s been a Camel fan since undergraduate days at H arvard.