A P Football Ratings See Page 4 T h e T e x a n Weather: Cloudy, Warm Low 48; High 82 “First College Daily in the South” AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY. O CTOBER 20, 1959 Eight Pages Today No. 44 Vol. 59 Price Five Cents Bacteriology Head Named a d m i n is tr a t io n | n atio n al scientific m e e t in g held at A m s t e r d a m . He is a m em ber of th e A m erican A ssociation of B acteriology and the A m e r i c a n C h e m ic a l Society. liegeman Heads Athletic Council M y ro n L. B e g e m a n , p ro f e s s o r of m e c h a n ic a l en g in e e rin g a n d a con­ s u lta n t w ith th e D e fe n se R e s e a r c h app o in ted L a b o ra to ry , h a s been c h a i r m a n of In te rc o lleg iate the A thletic Council t e r m of the late D r. O. B. Will­ ia m * . to c o m p le te the h a s P ro f e s s o r B e g e m a n long b een c h a i r m a n of the M e c h a n ic a l E n g in e e r in g D e p a r t m e n t an d is a f o r m e r l i e u t e n a n t Colonel in the US A rm y. B e r e c e i v e d public a c ­ c la i m for his book “ M a n u f a c tu r i n g P r o c e s s e s . " V ernon T. S c h u h a rd t, p ro fessor of bacterio log y, h a s b e e n ap p o in t­ ed to fill the v a c a n c y left by the late Dr. W illiam s. A lthough he is filling the v a c a n c y , the r h a i r m a n - ship w a s given to th e p e rs o n w ith th e c u rr e n t ti m e on th e council. longest P ro fe sso r S c h u h a r d t w a s fo r­ m e r l y d ir e c to r of b ruc ello sis r e ­ s e a r c h at th e U n iv e r s ity and p r e s i­ d e n t of the Society of A m e ric a n B acteriolo gists. L ynn W. M c C ra w , p ro f e sso r of P h y s i c a l E d u c a tio n , h a s been a p ­ p ointed to re p la c e D r. J. A. B u r ­ d i e , as a m e m b e r of the Athletic Council. T he U n iv e r s ity a n n o u n c e d th e a p p o in tm e n t of D r O rville W yss as chairm an of the D e p a r t m e n t of B acteriology to su c­ ce e d the l a t e D r. O. B. W illia m s. D r W y ss c a m e to the U n iv e rs ity in the fall r f 1945. li e has sin ce s e r v e d a s a s s o c ia te pro fesso r of B a c te r io lo g y , a n d D irec to r, R e ­ s e a r c h in B a cte rio lo g y . F r o m 1941 to 1945 h e h e a d e d the the N ew l a b o r a to r y of biological J e r s e y of firm p h a r m a c e u t i c a l W allace a n d T i e r m a n . Before 1941 he w a s on the fa c u lty of the I Di­ v e rs ity of W isconsin. In 1952 h e a n d th r e e o th e r s c i e n ­ tists a t th e U n iv e rs ity of T e x a s won a c a n c e r r e s e a r c h gran t to t a l­ ing 521.403 fro m th e T exas division of the A m e r i c a n Society of C a n c e r . D r W yss re c e i v e d 59,000 of this g r a n t for s tu d y in g ''O rg a n ic P e r ­ oxides a n d C a n c er. In 1953 h e s e r v e d on the N atio n a l S cience F o u n d a ti o n B oard. In the fall of 1954 h e sp o k e a t th e in te r- Johnson Grants New Fellowship In an effort to p ro m o te b e t t e r re la tio n s b e tw e e n the U n ited S ta te s and M ex ico. S e n a to r L yndon J o h n ­ son a n n o u n c e d S u nd ay night that he is e s ta b li s h in g the Adolfo Lopez M ateos F e llo w s h ip tw o e x ­ ch an ge s t u d e n ts , one fro m th e U n i­ ted S t a t e s an d th e o th e r fro m M ex­ ico. for The fellowship, w hich p ro v id e s $1,000 fo r e a c h stud en t, is n a m e d in h o n o r of th e P r e s id e n t of M e x ­ ico, w h o h a s b e e n visiting in the U n ite d S ta te s a n d C a n a d a a n d w ho s p en t t h e w e e k e n d in Jo h n s o n City at the J o h n s o n r a n c h “ It is m y b e lief,'' S e n a to r J o h n ­ son c o m m e n t e d to D r. L op ez M a ­ teos, “ t h a t s u c h e x c h a n g e s of o u r fine y o u n g p e o p le a r e th e su re r o a d to s t r e n g th in ou r h e m i s p h e r e a n d t o p r o s p e r it y for b o th of o u r n a t i o n s . " T he T ex a s stu d e n t chosen for the sch o la rsh ip m a y a tten d a n y uni­ v e r sity in M exico. T he M e x i c a n stu d en t m a y sele c t any T ex a s uni­ v e r sity . T h e T e x a s s tu d e n t will h e ch osen by th* U n i v e r s ity E x -S tu d e n t s ’ A s­ sociation S e n a to r Jo h n s o n will a n n o u n ce the q u a li fi c a ti o n s for th e s c h o l a r ­ s h ip n e x t w ee k . Greeks Register For Sing-Song Six f r a te r n i ti e s an d 12 so ro rities r e g i s t e r e d M o n d a y for t h e a n n u a l G r e e k Sing-Song to he h eld D e ­ c e m b e r 5. E n tr i e s will be a c c e p t e d until 5 p . m . F r i d a y in the D e a n of Men s office, S p eec h Building 102. F r a t e r n i t i e s t h a t r e g i s t e r e d w e re Chi P h i. P i K a p p a A lpha, D e lta T a u D e lta , A c a c i a , K a p p a Alpha, a n d B e t a T h e t a Ti. S o ro ritie s e n te r e d w e r e A lpha G a m m a D e lta , K a p p a A lp h a T h e ta . D e l t a Z eta , S ig m a D e l t a T a u , Al­ p h a E p silon Phi, a n d Zeta Tau A lp ha . Also, A lpha P hi, Alpha Chi O m e ­ g a . K a p p a K a p p a Gam m a, G a m m a P h i B e ta . D e lta G a m m a , an d Al­ p h a D elta P i. D e a d lin e fo r w ith d r a w i n g S ing-Song is N o v e m b e r 20. G o in g Up—G o in g Down A: the c id D rama B u ild in g Is b e i n g razed, construct on of the Texas U n io n ad d .non t a last b a c k g r o u n d ) continues. G u t t e d b z January, the Dram a Building has been c o n ­ dem ned, ex ce of for the b asem en t, which w; fire b e i n g u s e d b y the D r a f t * D e p a r t meint t o ho use w o r k s h o p s . M u c h of t h e d e o n s of th e bu d m g is b e i n g c h u t e d dow n t h e cylindrical f rn e s ­ c a p e on t h e no rJh e n d of th e b u g. nj£'. i v* ” — Photo by Vena* Reps Vote to Endorse 28-Plank Platform all students ga r d to stu de nt g o v e r n m e n t . is n e c e s s a r y in re-1 m e n a n d m o r e publicity of those j s c h o la rsh ip s t h a t a r e a v a ila b le , e s ­ p ecia lly tu itio n s c h o l a r s h i p s ; (2) M o re pub licity of all a v a i l ­ Union Retreat To Be Discussed E ffe c tiv e n e s s of the T e x a s I nion c o m m it te e s ’ r e t r e a t la st w ee k e n d to 7-Acres R a n c h R e s o r t in \\ im- b e rle y will b e d is c u s s e d a t a m e e t ­ th e T e x a s U nion Council ing of T u e sd a y a t 5 p rn. in T e x a s Union 316. the M e m b e rs of th e Council an d r e ­ p r e s e n ta t iv e s of th e v a rio u s c o m ­ m itte e s a tte n d e d leade rship- tr a in in g r e t r e a t . T h e p r o g r a m d is c u s­ sions on g e n e ra l I ’nion info rm a tio n a m ovie en titled 1 J he In n e r M an Steps O u t," and a ta l k b y C a m e ro n H ightow er on the in dividual s role in the d e m o c r a ti c p rocess. included D ean C a rl B re d t p re s e n te d hypo ­ thetical c a se stu d y w h ich w a s r e ­ lated to w a y s of a iding an d im ­ pro ving c o m m it te e s . M ain goals of th e r e t r e a t w e re to e s tab lish m o r e s p i r it a m o n g Union to p ro m o te c o m m itte e m e m b e r s , le a d e rsh ip , a n d to gain m o r e in­ fo rm a tion about, the Union s y s te m , Mrs. J o a n W a rb u r to n , T e x a s Union p r o g r a m s u p e r v is o r , said. E n d o r s i n g a “ new co ncep t in s t u ­ d e n t g o v e r n m e n t , ” R e p re s e n t a ti v e P a r t y night u n a n im o u s l y ad op ted a 23- p la n k p l a t f o r m for the fall e l e c ­ tions. vo tin g delegates S u n d a y , T h e p a r t y p re s e n ts its fall p l a t ­ fo rm w ith th e following id e a ls In m i n d : I T h a t a m o r e m a t u r e an d in tellee - : in to a c a d e m i c I f r e s h m a n o r i e n t a ­ an d trial a t t i t u d e is needed in r e g a r d to e v e r y p h a s e of ca m p u s life a n d e s ­ re la tio n p e c ia lly re s p o n sib ility , tion. n a ti o n a l a w a r e n e s s , stud ent g o v e r n m e n t , a n d g e n e r a l stu d en t w e lfa r e . T h e s e th e five po in ts fo rm the c o re of p l a t f o r m a n d will he th e m a j o r po ints w ith w hich "the e x e c u t iv e s a n d a s s e m b l y m e n will he c o n c e m - in t e r n a t i o n a l j | ed. . T h a t th e r e is a definite n e e d for m o r e contact betw een f a c u l ty , a d ­ m i n is tr a t io n . an d stu d e n ts in w o r k ­ ing fo r th e g e n e ra l w e lf a r e of s t u ­ d en ts . T h a t p ro p o s a ls can n o t o n ly ne d is c u s s e d ; th ey m u s t a ls o b e c a r ­ r i e d out. T h a t th e r e is a la c k of c o o r d i ­ n a tio n b e tw e e n the s e v e r a l o r g a n i ­ z a tio n s on c a m p u s in­ vo lve d in student g o v e rn m e n t. th a t a t e T h a t a m o r e r e s p o n s i b l e ro le for In Chicago Nixon-Rockefeller Battle Lines Drawn j CHICAGO, feller con test p re s id e n tia l n o m in a tio n opened u n ­ officially M o n d a y this city w he re the p a r t y convention will be Ti A Nixon-Rocke- of N e w Y ork flew in for a tw o day t o the R ep ub lican w h irlw in d v isit which m ax t e s t for a b ility to w in su pp ort in th e s t r a ­ t e g i c Midwest* now h e a v il y in f a ­ vo r of V ice p re s id e n t R . c h a r d M Nixon. in f r o m held n ex t s u m m e r . _ . . *, ‘ G o v e rn o r N elson A. R o ckefeller The party announced plans to extend Its a c tiv itie s. A ccording to the pro posal, "Through Its organ I ration, tho party w ill form rP search groups to stu d y the p r ­ ions questions and p resen t tarts and suggestions to the student as sem blym en r e g a r d le ss of party affiliation. The R epresent*!!* r Party will fo r m sp e c ia l com m it toes to work on tho p r io n s pro- jerts d esign ated .” These a r e a s in clu d e th e follow­ ing : M ake all c o n fe r e n c e ro o m s a v a il­ ab le in those b u ild in g s w h ic h stay open in the e v e n in g s ; P r e p a r e a p a m p h l e t listing all U n iversity lib r a r i e s , t h e i r contents, a n d th e ir h o u rs ; M ake c la s s r o o m s in those buildings w h i c h s t a y open in th e ev enings; a v a ila b le P r e p a r e a r e f e r e n c e m a n u a l for m e m b e r s of the D isc ip lin e C omm it- t e e ; . P r e p a r e a p r o g r a m of re g u la r s e m in a rs a t a p u b lic iz e d ti m e and : place a t w hich t i m e in f o r m e d p er­ sons would p r e s e n t a n d d e b a te v a r ­ ious crises a n d p r o b l e m s . Compile a h a n d b o o k for foreign stu d en ts to h elp p r e p a r e th e m for life at T e x a s, th is h a n d b o o k to he m ailed to th e m b e f o r e th e y leave h o m e ; , , ., Have a c o m m i t t e e to stu dy the Constitution a n d p r o p o s e an y n e e d ­ ed c larification s o r im p r o v e m e n ts ; Conduct a q u e s t i o n a i r e poll _of all p rofessors to get th e ir reaction to the valu e a n d n e e d s of student g o v e rn m e n t; Work in the a r e a of sch o la rsh ip f o r ; rn, I (D More s c h o l a r s h i p s for fre>n- rn President Seeks Injunction W A SH IN G T O N (ZP)— P resident Eisenhow er, callin g M onday a “ sad d ay for tho na­ tion ” ordered governm en t la w y er s to ask a federal court to send 500,000 striking steelw ork ers back to th e m ills for 80 days. E isen h ow er issued h is instru ction s to A t­ torn ey G eneral W illiam P. R ogers about 3* '2 hours a fter h is special fact-fin d in g panel re­ ported to him th a t “W e see no prospects for an early cessation of th e strik e” w hich read y h as lasted a record 97 days. al­ T he W hite H ouse announced the baok- to-w ork order w ill be sou ght in federal d istrict court in P ittsburgh T uesday a fter­ noon. Pittsburgh is headquarters of th e steel union. The bid w ill he made by (•corge ( 1. Doub, assistan t attorn ey gen ­ eral in charge of the Justice D epartm en t’s ------------4 civil division. Dr. Ransom Speaks To Faculty Council D r. H u r r y l l R a n s o m , vice-pres­ ident a n d p ro v o s t of th e U n iv e r ­ sity. s{>oke to th e F a c u l t y Council M o n d a y co n c e rn in g th e E x c e lle n c e F u n d a n d P r o g r a m w h ich evolved fr o m th e 75th Y e a r C ele b ra tio n . R e g i s t r a r W. B y ro n S hipp of the S ched ule C o m m it te e introduced the s u m m e r school sch ed ule for a vote. F a c u l t y Council a p p ro v e d th e nine- w eek session w hich will beg in J u n e 13 and run th r o u g h A u gu st 16. L a r g e r a c c o u n ts d is c u sse d b y D r. institutional r e ­ in cluded R a n s o m s e a r c h . r e s e a r c h , p r o g r a m m a t i c g r a d u a t e ed u c a tio n p r o g r a m , in di­ vid u al r e ­ s e a r c h collections. listed th r e e s m a ll a c co u n ts w ith a to tal of $60,000. T h e y a r e for im provem ent of te a c h in g a n d te a c h in g e x p e r i m e n t r e p o r ts , eval- r e s e a r c h , a n d fa c u lty I l e Law Students Win Moot Court Case u a tic n and plann ing , a n d su rv eys a n d consu ltantsh ips. D r. R a n so m e m p h a s iz e d th a t no fa c u lty s a l a r ­ ies a r e ra ise d in th e s e plans, no building o r bu ild ing im p r o v e m e n t is included, no l i b r a r y collections a r e provided for d e p a r t m e n t a l Ii- j b ra r ie s , an d U n i v e r s ity funds a r e J not being used as p r o m i s s o r y notes a g a i n s t m a t c h in g funds. r>r. R a n s o m it h e a r t e n in g felt t h a t the B o a rd of R e g e n ts su p p o rt­ ed the E x c e lle n c e F u n d a n d P ro ­ g r a m and th a t it w a s a p p r o v e d t> the legislatu re, it D e a n s ’ Council Approves 9-W eek Term Retention I C o n d n u a n c e of th e n in e - w eek | s u m m e r school s e s sio n w a s reeo m - ! m e n d e d u n a n im o u s ly b y th e D e a n s' j Council a t a r e c e n t m e e tin g . The in­ this tw o six-w eek s h o r te r s u m m e r s e s sio n w a s a u g u r a t e d for th e firs t ti m e I y e a r , re p la c in g th e I C e rta in schools a n d colleges such a s p h a r m a c y a n d la w w I! continue on a tw elv e-w eek sch edu le, how- . e v e r. T h e Council e x p r e s s e d th e belie, th a t a p a r t fr o m co n sid e ra tio n s of ir p d f o r * lo n g e r t0 c ontinue the - r ■ -- f u m m e r _ v ___ ___ _______ _ B efore th e P r e s i d e n t a c te d un­ d e r the T a ft- H a r tle y Act, the union p led g e d to fig h t a n y strik e-en din g injunction to the S u p re m e C o urt, if n e c e s s a ry . " W e w ill fight its issuance with said Union might and m ain," P resident David »J. McDonald. ‘'But if It Is issued, w e will live up to the law of our country." E is e n h o w e r re c e iv e d th e th r e e - fact-finding b o a r d 's report m a n M on day m o r n in g a f t e r th e p a n e l a< k no w ledg ed d e fe a t in its effort to m e d i a te th e disp ute. He took the 37-page d o c u m e n t w ith h im to the W hite H ouse to stu d y w h ile he a te lunch. living q u a r t e r s A fter consulting w ith v a rio u s le­ gal, l a b o r a n d o t h e r ad v is o rs, th e P r e s id e n t m a d e public his l e t te r to R o g e r s , sa y in g : "It is essen tial to the national that production be re­ the ste e l im m ed ia tely in Interest sum ed Industry. " F r e e collective b a r g a i n in g h a s not w o rk e d in th is d isp u te d e sp ite th e d e d ic a te d effo rts of th e fe d e r a l g o v e r n m e n t a n d th e fa c t - finding b o a r d of inquiry'. " I n o r d e r to p r o t e c t th e in t e r e s t s th is of all th e A m e ric a n people, le a v e s m e w ith no a lt e r n a t iv e ex ­ cep t to seek a n inju nc tion u n d e r A m erica ’s hopes for a volun­ tary responsible settlem en t have not been fulfilled. It Is a sa d day for the nation." If the o r d e r is g ra n te d , th e steel­ w o rk e rs w ould b e re q u ire d to r e ­ t u r n to t h e i r job s for 80 d a y s—a "co o lin g off” p e rio d Intended to allow n e w effo rts to negotiate set­ t le m e n t. B u t th e end of if, a t s u m m e r sessions u s e d befo re. I th e e x is tin g law’. f th a t RO Royal Spirit G ro u p ■ d a y s, th e d ispu te still is unsettled. - - - # To Meet T o d a y at 4 p.m. t h e s te e lw o rk e rs will he fre e to go , h a c k on th e picket lines. And th e r e — ----- - w ould b e no f a r th e r tools av ail­ able to th e g ov ern m en t, although it could continue to try m ed iatio n. T h e R o y al S p ir it C o m m it te e will m e e t T u e s d a y a t 4 p m . in A rch i­ te c tu re Building 365. - ab le s c h o l a r s h i p s ; (3) W o rk w ith b u sin e sse s ann fu nd s a n d fo r m o r e institution s p riz es a n d s c h o l a rs h i p s ; P r e p a r e a list, of t h sc prof! so rs a t th e U n iv e r s ity v ho v im . , stu den t to to sp e a k be w illin g g ro u p s on in te re s ts t h e i r sp ecial and c i r c u l a t e su ch a list. In closin g th e m e e tin g at thn Alpha Chi O m e g a house, c h a i r m a n G a r y N o r d h o i m e r sta te d , “ R e p r e ­ s e n t a ti v e P a r t y ' s p la tfo rm r o v e r s all a r e a s of I n i v r i ­ life a t s k y . We a r e a p a r t y se e k in g to b e tt e r the in d iv id u a l's r ig h ts and o p p o rtu n itie s ” th e R ep resen ta tiv e P a r t y c a n d i­ d a tes, steerin g co m m ittee m em hers. party a ssem b ly m en , student a sso cia tio n o fficers, and com m it tee ch a irm en w ill have a pre- c a m p a ig n m eeting at the D elta G am m a house T hursday at 8:3f> T heta P l house Thursday at * E d L a n d r e a n d F r a n k H o u se r, U n iv e r s ity la w s tu d e n ts, won the U n iv e r s ity of T e x a s M oot C o u rt C o m p etitio n M onday with a m oo * C o m p etitio n M o n d ay w ith a m o c k c o m ’ c a se ab o u t th e a lle d g e d u n- law fu l e n t r y of a social w o r k e r Into a h o m e . T h e w in n e rs w e r e sele c te d at T o w n e s H all b y a g ro u p of nine ju d g e s w ho A u stin s e r v e d a s m e m b e r s of p re m e C o u rt a t th e m o o t tr ia l. la w y e r s a n d the Su- i E ig h t t e a m s s u b m ite d c a s e s b e ­ the c o u rt. The w in n e rs will fore th e the U n iv e r s ity a t r e p r e s e n t R e g io n a l Moot C ou rt C o m p etitio n on N o v e m b e r 20-21 in H ou ston . L a n d r e an d H o u s e r w ill c o m p e te a g a i n s t s tu d e n ts fro m law- scho ols in L o u isia n a , A rk a n s a s , O k la h o m a I a n d T e x a s . G a y n a r K en dall, a n A ustin la w ­ y e r h a s b e e n the d i r e c t o r of the M oo! C o u rt P r o g r a m a t th e U n i­ v e r s i t y sin ce 1954. T he c o m m it te e will discuss the R ic e pep ra l ly to lie held F r i d a y night and m a k e a d v a n c e plans for the SMU g a m e . A ccord in g h e a d c h e e r l e a d e r , b e g in ra lly will t o Avis T ie b e r , co­ th e R ice pep a t C a ro th e r s I D o rm ito ry a t 7 F rid a y ’ night an d p ro c e e d in p a r a d e sty le to Moore- ‘ HUI Hall. Engineering Hopefuls Issue Challenge for Public Debate if t h e i r cl d a te s for publicity, w h a h ic w h at this effort re p r e se n ts , ” I kike is iou* effort in m y opinion, on th e ir p a r t f u r th e r stated . Y Group Studies Integration Issue Pi -bb m s of in te g ra tio n ra cial ■ University w e r e d is cu ssed a t et mg of th e R a c e R elatio ns a t th a it C om mi “tee of th e \ n iv e r sity Y M o nd ay afternoon. si In th e it ex ists aro u n d des. rilling : rn cs se g r e g a tio n th e , rn pus. A nthony H en ry, com m it* tee eh u r m a n . n a m e d H o m e D ru g, a n d the N ig ht H a w k Snak Soak ; -he only in t e g ra t e d e a tin g p la c e s n e a r the c a m p u s . M re t h i n SO p e r cen t of 600 stu­ tw o su r v e y s d e s e g r e g a te * d e n t q u e stio n e d \ c a r f a v o r e d ... in re st u i r a n t s , he said . student d irec to r T wo In d e p e n d e n t c a n d id a te s for issued two c a n d id a te s E n g in e e r in g A s s e m b ly m a n a c h a lle n g o M o nd ay R e p r e s e n t a t i v e P a r t y for a p u b lic d e b a te . the to T h e c h a lle n g e w a s Is sued by Ronnie Boyd a n d T ren t C a m p b e ll, I n d e p e n d e n t ', I >oke a n d K e n n e th G la s e r . R e p re s e n t i- tive P a r t y , for M onday. to M a u r ic e sp e c ific “ C a m p a i g n s to d a t e h a v e been b a s e d on p o p u la r it y but w e belie* e in issu es an d q u f ' t i o n the a s s e t s of a c a m p a i g n con- a p o p u la r ity b a s i s .” tw o Bide p e n d e n t c an d i­ ; d u c te d on t h e said d a te s . a d e b a t e open to the pu b lic, C lo ­ s e r said , “ O th erw is e this p ro p o s a l b y m y is noth ing b u t a p u b ­ o p p o n e n ts lic ity s t u n t c o n d u cte d in fr o n t of a h a n d f u l of p a r t i s a n in d iv id u a ls .’’ he con clud ed. T h e ch allen ge less g e n e r a l f u r t h e r stated . ta lk an d is sues a n d a w o r k ­ to p r o b l e m s w hich " W e w a n t m o r e specific a b le solution will he p r e s e n t e d .” "I do not Wish to w a ste tim e tw o op p o sin g c a ndi- th e i h e lp in g D u ke s t a te d t h a t h e w ould bo di late I S tha t h a p p y to m e e t the other for E n g i n e e r i n g Assert " I f I c a pu blic d e b a te , " I f I c a n h \ m eed this sta n d effort on I wil op position, into d< to e n t e r But until th a t c a n d i d a t e s c a n I p u b li c it y ,” h»' s£ H I H ' . xik id th e P a g> m o ­ r t of m y ins? h a p p y Ai t h t h e m , my w ert ny cw h e re for I i t ' a Henge* i to a s In ans " M y op p o n e n ts have I it th a t f i r m to w h a t IxmIv H '.Sit It m e they ref et d e b a te o pen to th e publ w e rin g th is ch Alenge, I p h a s i / e is my t h a t b e fo r e the studen m a k e a n intelligent *1 c e r n i n g w h o m th e y w a n t t sent t h e m a s E n g in e e r in g bl* m a n , th e y m u d ca re f u lly stu dy w ho th e c a n d id a te s a r e an d w hat thc'O c a n d id a te s stan d for lf such a d e b a t e prop osed w ould a c c o m ­ p lish th is p u rp o s e. I a m c o m p l e te ­ ly for i t . " said G la s e r . > rep Asse m y on- Hp f u r th e r s ta te d k ’he a t t e n d ­ a n c e of a la r g e p e r c e n t a g e of E n ­ g in e e r in g stu d en ts to a d e b a te of th is ty p e is n o t p o s 'i b l e d u e to con­ flicts of sch e d u le d c la s s e s " I f th e a d m i n is tr a t io n of the C ollege of E ngine, i .r e ** > si I d i - m i s s c la s s e s for the pet xl of that th e d e b a te is to bp sehedu cd rn o r d e r to allow all of d e n ts to a tt e n d , th en th is w ould be the ' Ticket Sales High For UT-Rice Tilt T ick et sales a r e b o o m in g for the R io e-T cx as football g a m e s c h e d ­ uled S a tu r d a y a* 8 p rn. in M e m ­ o r i a l S ta d iu m Al L u n d ste d t, ticket m a n a g e r , that ab o u t one-fifth of e s t i m a t e d the stud ent tickets, o r a lm o s t 3.000 w m l d tie d r a w n by the ti m e the office closed M onday. All of th e 200 d a t e tic k e ts in the s ‘ -.dent section h a d b een sold by Bixin M o n d ay . H o w e v e r, p le n ty of uldit m a l tick e ts a r e a v a il a b le in s c * c: tile sectio n s ad jo in in g the s ’'.dent s' ct mn T he p r i c e for the s a m e p rice lh se tic k e ts is St a s the d a te tickets. I of Mr. L u n d sted t e x p la in e d th a t the s i r ill n u m b e r of d a te tic k e ts a* asl­ a k e a ss ires U niversity s t u d e n ts of a tick- cts l a r g e r n u m b e r of s t u d e n t • F ob every ad d itio n a l d a te ti c k e t **c o ffe r o v e r the 200 m a r k , one m o r e U n iv e rs ity stu d en t is kn >ck- Pd out of a t i c k e t, " e x p la in e d Mr. L u n d ste d t. T i c k e t s m a y be d ra w n at G r e g ­ ory G y m T u e s d a y th r o u g h F r i d a y frnrn *t a rn to noon and T u e s d a y th r o u g h T h u rs d a y , 1-1 30 p rn. They tie d r a w n F r i d a y , 1-4 m a y a ls o p . m ., ii a n y r e m a i n . R o c k e flle r so fa r is N ixon s oruy s e r io u s c h a lle n g e r for th e n o m i n a ­ lined up m e e t i n g s w ith tion. He M i d w e s t R epublican in ­ c lu d in g G o v e rn o r W illiam G . S t r a t ­ ton of Illinois who h a s e n d o r s e d no p re s id e n tia l no m inee. S tr a tt o n h a s b een m entio ned as a p o ss ib le v ic e p re s id e n tia l c a n d id a te l e a d e r s , R o c k e fe lle r hinted he w ou ld m e e t w ith a re p r e s e n ta t iv e fro n t W is c o n ­ sin, site of a key p r e s id e n ti a l p r i ­ m a r y next ye ar. N e w s m e n w ere u n a b le to get fro m R o ck efller a f o r m a l d e c l a ­ r a t io n going beyond his o f t - r e p e a t ­ e d s t a t e m e n t th a t he h a s not. y e t m a d e u p his mind w h e t h e r to r u n . On the o th e r h an d he w o u ld n o t r e ­ m o v e h im se lf as a p o te n t ia l ean- j I d id a te . ! p l a n s R e f e r r in g th roughout to the e x c u r s io n s be c o u n tr y , R o c k e fe l le r said th ey h a v e no po- th a t he is m a k i n g th e m only a s ch ief execu- live of a m a j o r state * Utica I significance an d th e .. Dr. Roach W ill A d d re ss ‘Y ’ O n US-Soviet Policy i " F a s t D r. J a m e s Roach a s s o c i a t e p r o ­ f e s s o r of g o v e rn m e n t w ill s p e a k on the T w a in Shall Meet ’ W e d n e s d a y at 7 p . m . at thf' U n i \ e r s i t v a n d W est: W h e th e r 5 He will discuss R u ’- ' i a n A m e n - the b a c k ­ two p o ll* -os. The o an foreign policy a n d g ro u n d s of ’he I p u b lic is invited. Action Platform Is Due Tuesday Action P a r t y m e m b e r s failed to complete w r it in g of t h e i r fall c a m ­ p aig n p la t f o r m M o n d a y , although a m e m b e r of th e Styles C o m m it­ tee said th at p l a n k s will be ready T uesday. ‘ M e m b e rs of the Action Tarty re, o n n le have not been a b le their ind ivid ual s t a n d s on two or three >f the m a j o r i s s u e s , ” said M arv in R o g e r s , f o r m e r p a r t y ch a ir­ man. to The p la t f r o m h a d b een dis- us- sed e a r l ie r in S u n d a y ’s open m e e t­ ing in the U nion. A bout 25 persons at the m e e t in g h e a r d so m e of the tentative p l a t f o r m p la n k s discuss­ ed. r Action P a r t y > a n t e d a t e s t >r of­ fice in the fail ele c tio n a d d re s se d the m e etin g fo llo w in g a speech by Rogers Speaking of th e u p c o m in g c a m ­ the Action paign, R o g e rs c d ie d P a r t y “ no lo n g e r a novelty. “ It s an uphill h a ttle , n o w , ” he told the p a rt y w o rk e rs . M a rsh a ll La y s in State WASHIN GTON T U n d e r the flag w hich he s e r v e d rn w a r ami p o m e , the b od y of G e n e ra l of the A rm y G e o r g e C a tl e tt M arshall .a* in public view Monday. Registration Begins K * • n ry IJ ’ I rn ai Te< "Ie • M th r o u g h NA e fn r The' a s q rn a P” ■ ■ .a 5 p.m . unit Pre ley w ady r ’ rpn " ' * ’ c o n te '’ . Reo:” ret c will pal ism Bulla cg 305 trcm 2 Photo by Venne Beau1 IG e s d a y in Jour* r A L o n g -A w a it e d Purchase 'to by Venn* Pew r e ' w e e n -CU Sh 5 d re ■ ray tna remainder of the wees. c d c* ' a moment to buy the long- - Doug SwaJ . A total cf M e r ray a re: ' u o e n ~q Increase of . < f 7 -emeries wi be su'd aqam at g.eo a Drag bookstores through pur* f l © C S Q C S G I & C f . i l j c j I &KG& t ~ . ~ H W T H E D A I tY T E X A N P age 2 ■ftie 'Well See Routine If it didn’t all seem to bo such a coin­ cidence, Lyndon B. Johnson rn..!* b c n - cused of grabbing easy page one h. ad lines on Monday. P r o p a g a n d i s t s and p o litic ia n , h a v e co m r a w a re o f th e tact th a t non* « na u a llv “ slow " fo r th e M onday m o r n .n g rn- p er! So th e y o fte n ca p ita lize upon th a t u, “ nitikinc their own head* situation hv maKinn lines.” * But w hen y o u ’re h osting the president T exas sen ator to m ake of Mexico, (a* the senior was over the weekend) it’s easy the local dailies—without trying. . , * * What realK was most obvious In Mon- d a y ’s headlines were various references to Senator Johnson's possible president:.!, candidacy. „ “I don’t even want to talk about it, Senator Johnson said Sunday. He told reporters, however, that his statements of the past still stood. He has 'repeatedly said he is not a candidate. He recently television told a nationwide audience that if tho Democratic nomina­ tion were tendered him by the next con­ vention he would want to “take a look" at it. P erh a p s th e really sig n ifica n t n e w s or the w eek en d co n cern in g I J H ’* c a n d id a te ­ ship, w a s th e boom set o ff in D a lla s h> S p ea k er S a m R a y b u rn . The Speaker said the Johnson cam paign intensified in T exas to would h e insure t h e s e n a t o r ' s “ favorite son" d esign ation . It would e r u p t nationally of lls ow n mo­ m entum , Mr. R ayburn added. ★ * It s rather tiring to sit hack and see pager can d id ates forcing to say, "W ell, I d on’t know . . . m a y b e I ll take a n om ination if . . .’ th em selv es relief it’ll be w hen S en ator into the open w ith out W hat a Johnson com es h is cam paigning. By now, th e foregone conclusion is tiiat j1(. H ants th e D em ocratic nom ination. His “ m oderate" role, how ever, m a y present som e in terestin g situations w ith extrem a T exas liberals and c o n e e n a tiv e s w hen tho .Johnson hat finally “goes in the ring.” Go Early J,HW is a good tim e fur groups to begin work on projects for raising C am pus C hest funds. K ickoff d ate for the cam paign proper will he N ovem ber 6. H ow ever, judging from requests already in for 1959-60 funds, overall needs of the Chest probably w ill lie about $2,000 m ore than required last year. y and work needs. And UT will have to start ear this yea r’s late to m ake “ea rly ” is now. " L o n g -R a n g e P la n n in g w i l l ta k e care o f th e d o r m s . By JO H N LUK News STAND G O F Rises Again Well, w ell, th e Young R epublicans are rising again. Yes, th e y ’re having their organizational m eeting at 7:30 p m. Tuesday in h x peri- mental Science Building 300. E stablishm ent of the Young CO P organ ­ ization is encouraging; it perhaps m eans that political apathy on this cam rati is not com pletely overw helm ing. Furthermore, it means that there ll he a second side to present its viewpoints dur­ ing pre-election months ahead. As on e of the Young GGP m em bers said, “W e want, to get stu d en ts interested in polities. W e feel that stu d en ts should be aw are of w hat's happening.” W o r ld o f S tu d e n ts Contem pt for BM OC vs J By D I\M VI* VALA P a r t It I would like to clear up any confusion between the Bu; Man on Campus and the politician. The BMOC is usually far from bein? Interested in politics. His id e a l is “ school s p irit.” an d I believ e th a t school sp irit is one of firm e s t stro n g h o ld s of c o n fo rm ity on ca m p u s th e It *e*-rn* to rn* (in t h e light that of m v personal c o n ta c ts ) t ho s t u d e n t s wh o a r e r e a l l y In- forested and a c t i v e high c o n te m p t at Pig Man On < asnpu*. fact However, th e lo o k wi t h the childish to succeed remains that the BMOC enjoys a great forces popularity fin cam pus, the consideration of the admin­ istration, and probably he has more chances in life after graduation. In an editorial in the Jan u­ ary issue of the National Stu­ dent. News, the official news­ paper of the million-member HS National Student Association, the editors noted. “ When the 1947 Constitutional VSNSA's Convention called for academic freedom . . . recognition of stu­ dent responsibility to campus, community, nation and God, it spoke for CS student desire* but not for anything a majority were willing ” > work or to sa c . riflee lo bt mg a i - it T S Fanners a population projected beyond lh*» \ ear 2,(MM). Amarillo, as another example, obtains w ater from wells from a huge underground w ate r r e s ­ ervoir that underlies much of the Panhandle. Eisenhower flew into a vastly diffe: e nt s i t u a t i o n . In one farming county of 37,- 500 persons as many of 30,000 looked to the relief office for subsistence food issues. Th > October, only half finish­ ed, already is tile* w ettest in his­ tory in some places. San Angelo, where F.isenhow- e r centered h i inspection tour, is well above norm al for the y e a r with 30.4S Inches, grea test sir e 1942, !n< iuding the w ettest September of record. In 3956, San Angelo recorded only 4.36 inches for the y ea r to Ort. 3. What a: c the prospects for an­ other drought? In I®87, a** the s e v e n y e a r s of drou gh t w e re c l o s i n g , Dr. \ a n r e M o v er of the U n iv e r s i ty of T ,,x ‘ a* predicted another w ou ld be I i i full sw in g around 1973. He said records show severe droughts in the Southwest have centered on 187a, 1895, 1915, 1935, and 1955, giving consider­ able support to those who be­ lieve in weather cycles. In my opinion, sacrifice is the key word in the whole mat­ ter Ax long as the American idea student h a s ,.f w h a t a c t u a l l y “ s a c r i f h e " means, he is v ery likely to re ­ main in a state of complacency a n d lit Me or no i n d i f f e r e n t c in tho I ailed st a te s , Th,* a c c u s a t i o n that the A m e r ­ ican stu d e n t ’ politically Il­ in lite rate ” Is e x a g g e r a t e d and un­ fair. G iv e n a c r e s s section of a student g e n e ra tio n in F ra n ce the Anil pe r ce n ta ge of polite al literacy Is not m u c h higher in F ra n ce , although F r e n c h student- a r e o f t e n c ited for their p o tttk ism . By and large, students in tho US arc, propoi ttonally, as pol­ itically aw are and informed as students anywhere >n the world. in their re- Tho difference lo politics. Here one action conv"- ( h e w o t ti s a c r i - h o k ; w ienies the usual rea- lice; a t - ’d b y A m e r i c a n s t u - sons t xpl.'unsng their atti- n don' - t hi i a r I p o l i t l e x , is t o you AX' LA HAM. S SC N I INTO TSA N N’ TO . \ Pl RST OU", SR SPACE SAUSMfc^j O w * Wet to loo Yell lexas By n o m KT F O R D lated P ress Vt rifer I/Css th a n three years ago a solemn P re sident Eisenhower flew to a d r y Texas and viewed firsthand a drought disaster so vast few persons could fully com prehend it. He wouldn’t know the place today. XX here farmers and ranches once pleaded with the President for loans to sa,e their land and subsidies for feed to save their rattle, they now have only one complaint: The m u d K loo d e e p for the h a r v e st. and The two rainy spells din It. ranchers hate. F a r m e r s enough m oisture in the ground to assure winter pastures, fall seeding, and a probable c a rry ­ over into the spring. for Cities, just scrambling enough w ate r for drinking three their years ago. could view brim m ing almost with complacent y. lakes But the farsighted warn of the future and receive serious at­ tent ion from a citizenship re- iriornluring rationed and brack­ ish w a te r of the drought years. in sta n c e , still Is for reservoirs, building d a m s both for drought vear* and for D a lla s, lur F Ic: g.20 In • (i* i « ti In* r* i-**x Ijk k of Im m ed ia te eeo- The I e-xtiro on stu d en t1* e x ­ H O I U M p l a i n - - . i n >- o f th e lack of p o l i ­ the Nm erloan tica l tuition Cam pm c a n , In v > m e w a y , a l w a y * bt* m et. D stu ­ i it** I n b e r s lta ir e d en t- ' u . ti strik e In O cto ­ in Pari* .’;td refu sed to pay i n ­ ber. la <**, t h e y d i d s o i’m w *1 been us Pi, \ t w illy could not ti> p i v a f f o r d , r, w h en i n c r e a s e . < ’ the in I I Ament an ■ p* obi of st who own libel orde thf - nit ien’x do have -y are net those other countries «• f.i ...ut wars on their • have sacrificed in regain petty. even life eserve or (i.t’i .tv. I o B e ( ontinued C am p u s political figures g et newsier and noisier, bu some of (h em fin ally com e up w ith a good thin!:, In the full draft Of the fall elections, C harlie Hayden decided to make news hilo n o t running for any office. S tra n g e ax that m ay *eem , the new s item " a * ex stra n g er In that It w a s for som ething th at m ade sense. ( harrie s re,,nest for tw o hour parking m eters around the cam pus has been cussed and discussed enough to familiarize, ev eryb od y with the situ ation . W hen C harlie approached th e Austin C tty F at lers a or the idea, the results were unusual. The idea w as referred to the ( ’Sty E ngineering Department and the Police Department. M ayor Tom Miller told Hayden that the city w as being generous in allowing the students to park their ears on the street overnight, which Is against a city ordinance. This is more generous than It sounded to some student*. At a certain Oklahoma university students have to contend with parking m eters in front of a girls’ dorm which. are operated on a 21-hour basis. The stu d en ts rail it paid love. .lust what the city plans to do about th ese m etal m eter m on sters is unpredictable, lint it is hoped th at th ey don t ch a n g e th e rather g en erou s practice of not putting more than tw o tick ets on one ear for the sam e violation. ★ ★ T e x a s newspapers around the state have headlined the p lans o f Speaker Sam Rayburn to get the Dem ocratic nom­ i n a t i o n for Senator Lyndon Johnson. Johnson has not yet d efin itely Slated that he will accept the nomination. "Diplo­ m atic denial." it’s called. . , . . . Y e t S a m pushes on with the plans. Could bo he lias inside inform ation. The Firing Line SIKH KING D R E A R IN E S S ’ To the Editor: is dreary, Ax a rn em bef of the G riev a nce I was invited to visit, ('• •inmittcf* the Whit is Home for N egro girls on the University cam pus. We first the separate rooms. The visited loose anti w allpaper l u g e stained. W aler w arks a r e and evident. The girls try one has bright yellow' bedspreads; anoth­ e r's fathe r painted her room for h e r birthday present last year. How can a normal young girl study in such an atm o s­ or be happy . p h ere ? The building is old and h a z a r d ­ ous. T here is no fire extinguisher, and the eight girls living there is a narro w F a i r ­ , w ay. And what if a fire w ere to b reak out on that stairw ay" The cricket situation is no joke. Housing offi­ build c i a l s w ent over to sec what Their be done about the m a tte r, solution newspapers stuffed under doors. The bathrooms show leak­ ag e from above on the ceilings; one of stops up; cricket* do make their homes in the tubs Maybe the girls try to m a k e a joke of it but would you laugh if you found crickets in your bath w a te r each morning? the only’ exit for the bathtubs , . The kitchen is ap p a llin g . The re­ is tiny and ancient. frigerator There a re no sinks washtubs serve. The stove is also tiny, and until the article c a m e out in the Texan, no one bothered to fix the hinge to open the ovpn door. There is no dining room. T ry eating your every m eal standing up Only one girl can cook at a time, so with eight it takes a while. The stove is gas-lighted; again, no fire ex­ tinguisher. there. The yard The back porch sags; there is a broken step is non-existent. Tile other co-ops have green grans and flower gardens The Whiffs girls have only mud and drea rine ss to look at. In the rooms one floor is so obviously weak they a te afraid to walk on it. Another floor has a beautiful sixty-degree slope to it. E ver have to walk up hill to get to your bed? I could go on and on. hut a great deal of this has already been r e ­ ported in the Texan, so this is b as­ ically a le tter to those who have w ritten in with “ Witty” r e m a rk s - those who laugh, who don t believe the stories cf the Negro housing. I believe them now. P erhaps a few other people should he invited to visit Whit is. The dreariness IS shocking. Enough said. A nne -IonaIi 44X 1 B lanton D o r m M o s a i i b o x By Al Al R U F “ MO” O M AN T e x a n New* Editor dis- ussions . behind H u s h h u s h closed doors . telephone con­ . versations until the early hours of . - 1 hallenges for the morning debates . . . speeches . . . signs . . . printed literature. . . . y ep, e le c t i o n t im e I* h ere a g a in . In t w i c e a y e a r c h a n g e It* w ith n a m e * and far e*. With an October 28 voting date, a lies for candidates, c a m pa ig n hectic support-seeking week ahead m a n a g e rs, and die-hard backers. And m eanw hile . . . about 85 p e r cent, of the c a m p u s ’ population will continue on its uninterested, obli­ vious way. . . . last (Onlv 2 6 2 0 students voted in the U niversity's 1957 fall general e l e c ­ tion; approxim ately 2 . 8 0 0 students cast ballots. Total is about University 1 8 . 0 0 0 . | enrollment year. B u t this “ s i l e n t ” 85 per r en t w ill e v e n t u a l l y “ *peak o u t ” . . . T h e * * non vo te r* w ill be the one* to y e ll loud est s tu d e n t g o v e r n m e n t . In c r i t ic i s m of . When a fellow’ sings his own praises, he hit* many sour notes. ★ ★ ★ ★ . . Nothing is done in a day not if you put wff everything until tom orrow. ★ ★ M o n d a y w a s a d a y o f r e d o i n g for ut l e a s t thr e e group* of p e r ­ s o n s in th e Austin a r e a — o p e r a to r* at th e (Blin D orm * (K ln so lv in g phi* the q u a i l D o r m * ) , e m p l o y e * at tho R e g i s t r a r * o ffice , and In f o r m a ­ tion o p e r a t o r s at the S o u t h w e s t e r n B ell T e le p h o n e C o m p a n y . The reason: The U niv ersity * 1 9 5 9 - 6 0 Official Student D irectory w’ent on sale, of course, com plete with previously unknown telephone num bers. Cheer up, operators and other b e d ra g g led informant >n-giver*; the roughest tim es have passed. ★ ★ Daily Texan headlines one y ea r ago this week: P etition Ask* U n io n T o Run B o a t D o c k * F x a m E xem ption Proposal Shelved by F aculty Council T e x a s Rank* F o u r th In N a tio n a l Stan d in g* .Jupiter-C Signal Lost Seconds After Launch P r i v a t e Dorm P h o n e s E n d o r s e d by A sse m b ly We've also heard - Some people never le arn to he economical until they run out of money. F a t m en sh ould e x e r c i s e ; ti'" road to t h in n ess I* just around the bend. fob Opportunities Representative* o f H u m b l e O i l a n d m - i t to interview student* w no R e f i n i n g C o m p a n y w i l l v»si t ■ h e v e r s . t v of T e x a s c a m p u s October •2(1 and 21 w i l l graduate In engineering and * e n c e d u r i n g DBO P r o s p e c t i v e g r a d u a t e * i n e n g . L e e r i n g a t al t d e g r e e c h e m i s t r m a t h c n t . i t ' * i m n m * p h y s m cc hard < it advanced 1 a n d e n g i n e e r i n g mechanic! for , i n l : U . ? h e c o m - l e v e l s o n i ) , w i l l per rn a n e n t e m p l o y m e n t w i t h the c o m pany. b e - r b e m P a l ex els. a n d " i i i i n c P r u d e n t i a l interview January H o * ca W a r r * n a n d B o b b y J o h n s o n n ' I n s u r a n c e C o m p a n y S t A m . r l r a ! Ordln.rv D l v t . l o n A u . t m o r B r a n c h ’ n>> graduates " 1 t h a major in liberal art, o r b u s i n e s s o n W e d n e s d . a O c t ­ o b e r 2 8 P o s i t i o n s o p e n a r e f o r A g e n . v R e p r e s e n t a t i v e t o e « d m g management *"d * (,rk wr"‘1? b p ,i n A u s t i n f o r a p p o i n t m e n t s i n t e r v i e w s i n S t u d e n t E r r p l o \ m e n t B u r * e a u , Pearce Hat. 106. a r e a . M a k e t r a i n e e s W VA-O N 1 £vgsi A L L R O R T H S ^.fHUKPtflS S T BL L A A T R A D IA ') T H A T ? C O R P . Ai »UN5' KMB J *C35>A MEAS i a M*W COMPAUV < UHPIRP8IVIU61PI '0 35 NS PEACE. JCV \ A s’* A Oss C* SM A N’T ANSCADS 'Z 7*8 Bld CA t v . * - C S A 6WIMMIN’ UMpEBPfflVlUGEP - rT > .5 T A R 5 - - * * v n & r ~-i r Y0ULI NEVER bcT ANYuMiRE UJiTM M ISS OTHMAN BV V T USING BC!BEGY Y— B R IB E R Y ? TM(6 ISN'T BRIBERY... I PREFER TO TKINK Of f IT AS PUMP-PRIMING!, I T CHH,. Bowling Alley N ot Competing W ith Holism; B v J E R R Y C O N V Editorial A ssistant timjp E ach the a r e n blow* to sta rt or stop work on the Texas Union Building, students turn their heads to see once again w’hat the gound means. Some students wonder when the p n e u m a t i c drill* wall stop and r e 1 notion will the $200 WK) howling alley and at Bil­ liard tables in the $25 fIOO r e c : ca­ tion a r e a . start action in d o r m ito ries And no doubt, s o m e of tho w on­ derer* will be a m o n g the BOC stu­ d e n ts w h o could not find splice lo be c a u se U n iv e r sity there w a* no a v a ila b le s p a c e . I hex m ight e v e n b e c o m e s o m e w h a t dub­ ious of the good e ffect* of “ long- r a n g e p la n n in g ” at the I niversltv. Yes. 52,356,000 will be ready in the recreation center for I I stu­ dents by January, 1961, but “ can the students one sleep quizzed. “ Considering the dormi­ tory situation as It is now and the they needs of the University as now exist. I think the money mu d be spent in better w a y s,” he added m ore seriously. Other students, al­ though proud and glad to be get­ ting the “ u ltra '' in college recrea­ tional their facilities, professed am azem ent at how’ the “ immediate problem, space ' could be overlook­ ed. there" lAisines* m ajor. “ It sound* g o o d ,” c o m m e n t e d a we that w e s o p h o m o r e c a n tell the guy* at TC I have a how ling alle y in our union. Hi* add ed that a m o r e needed way to sp en d the m o n e y m ig ht have be e n found. But Jitte r Nolen, director of the Texas Union, has the facts in re­ gard to the problem of dormitories and other needed facilities vs. money for recreation in the Union. •< \ u x ilia r v e n t e r p r i s e * ” a n sw e r* the qu estion of h o w an a p p a re n t .lire need I* not fulfilled before a recreational n e e d . T h e T e x a s Un- Ion | h an a u x ilia r y e n t e r p r is e of the I niv ersltv . H o u s i n g is anoth er . Neither use* m o n e y app ro p riate d by the sta te l e g i s l a t u r e . They hor- row from o ther s o u r c e s , and that In ex a ctly what th e T e x a s Un ion ha* done, e x p l a in e d Mr. N olen. The dormitory’ people can bor row money, too,” he commented, Klnsolving D orm itory w as financed in this way. p is the borrowing though, stu- dcnts themselves a r e paying ap­ p r o x i m a t e l y $ 1 6 6 , 0 0 0 beginning this semester on the $5 Texas Union registration fee. “ This w as a com- puNorv fee that the students voted on the spi.n,; three yea rs a g o .” Mr. Nolen stated The 2-1 passing of the raise in that fee w as during a rec­ ord vote of 30 p er cent of the stu­ dents. i t a general election in \ bond*. Oilier m e a n * of f in a n c in g c a m e through SUMI ,OOO In a p r iv a te *al« bon ds $1,500,000 o f through the D i v i s i o n of H ousing and H o m e F i n a n c e A g e n c y , and $'.’90,000 t h e D ivision of Housing and F o o d S e r v ic e * of tho I niversltv. through in I’ inning on the new I ’nion fac- ilit.es began five years ago and was thrashed about until bids were let in D ecember of 1958. At p re-‘Hit, the building is thiea months ahead of the scheduled finishing date in 3961, Mr. Nolen now hopes that, b arrin g an excess of bad weather, the whole opera­ the $130,000 tion, complete with automatic pm se tte rs on the 16 bowling lanes, will be ready for the Dad s Day football gam e early in November of I960. Ransom s Intros I net ion Opens Fall Quarterly Continued K arl Shapiro writes about the critic “ In Spite of H im se lf' and m akes a big case for the sociolog­ ical position which criticism has achieved in our tim e, lie says that . . Criticism is an attitude of mind. not. simply an a r t of eluci­ dation. It is w hat rem ains when literature itself has begun to ex­ Mr. Shipiro wonders pire . for e n ’ - is w hat rem edy cism? He answ ers: “ There is n t any except the creation of new poems which will divert attent on away and toward the work of a r t itself . . intellectualism there from . T h e m o s t In terestin g title in the Q u a r ter ly is Archibald R. M w I*' “ Did the Dark Age* E x i s t ? ” In a histo rical roundup, Dr. I>ewU give* hi* v o te of c o n f id e n c e to “ l o c a l ’ d ecline* rather to m a ssiv e d e c a y . than . “ E astern E urope: A Study in Political G eography’’ is George VG Hoffman'* contribution to the au­ tumn issue. He is quite frank: F ro m tim e to tim e both E ast and West have said that Eastern Eu­ rope is unstable and backward. Both have been e a g e r to assert their influence without acknowl­ edging that the instability in this region result of is p a r t of power politics . . . " the The Q uarterly concludes with I /x u s D. Rubin Jr.N “ No Place on E a r th ,” a new critical study of the works of Ellen Glasgow and J a m e s Branch Cabell. The artie r- is an informal, even personal com­ m e n ta ry on the work of the two in term s of the Virginia authors, place from which they came. Rut, then, who r a n say thai H a r r y H R a n s o m ' * Introduction, “ Art* and S c i e n c e s , ” th* meatiest a r tic le In the l a te s t Quar­ l*n’t terly? highly Dr Ransom speaks eloquently individual contin­ for the uity of the learning process . . . the gradual He speaks for maturing of w isdom .” He speak* . educated m an who far the “ . know* how to waste time, joyfully and to good effect . . .” . . — BH L M CREY NO LDS Official Notices t o q u a T i l e v\ r ' t e n e x a m i n a t i o n s t f far Pnl> c a n d i d a c y in busine** adm in­ istratio n have been sc h ed uled as fol­ , l ows S tatistics t o 12 Ac m i n t i n g T u e s d a y . N o v e m b e r a. m _ F r i d a y . N o v e m b e r * * t o I’. r i e f l n K s e s s i o n * f o r c a n ' . - d a t e s have been s cheduled a s f o l l o w s : '<• Asb- \V lf, 2*>5 o n O c t o b e r 21, 4 30 A c e o u n ’ n u < T r i c e o f D r 9 a rn. ii p m . b u r n e J . . t a t l i t ■ J o b n R. Stockton W H. 425 on October 22. 4 aa O f f i c e o r D r P. "i n u m b e r s v\ h e r e e x a n v n - V ' . n n * wi l l b e b e l d w i l l b e a n n o u n c e d a t t o * b r i e f i n g sessions. S A Ar i nsnst G r a d u a t e Adviser S t u d e n t s en rolled in T h e I niversltv* of Texas Who a t t e n d e d a n o t h e r co, co or un-vers tv d u r i n g t h e 19.>9 s u m m e r session have been notified lf t h e i r s u m ­ tv * m er record h a s been received by R e m s t r a r s o f fi c e An" s t u d e n t who a t t e n d e d a n o t h e r t h e p a s t s u m m e r a n a received a cred it m y ; <* t h e R e g i s t r a r s o n c e . I , S e c t i o n 6. f o r f u r t h e r _ _ n n „ , e a ( JIF.I s s college d u r i n g t l a s w h o should call at St I n B u l Id n g I n s t r u c t i o n * . E l . W O O D J t . A s s i s t a n t D ir e c to r i if Adn is- n» T h e D a ® ’ T e x a n O p in io n r expressed in The ’l r in are thote o f the Editors or of (he u n l e r of the article and not necessarily those o f the V n h et c ly adtntm c a iio n . "~~The Dally T e x a n , a * t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f T h e U n i v e r s i t y Is p u b l i s h e d In A u s t i n T e x a s d a m e x c e p t M o n d a y a n d S a t u r d a y a n d h o i . a , p e r i o d s S e p t e m b e r t h r o u g h M av ov T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n * . Inc. T e x**- of N e w s c o n t r i b u t i o n s J . H w il l he a c c e p te d bv e d i t o r i a l off ic e th e N e w s 103 o r a t c o n c e r n i n g d e l i v e r y s h o u l d be m a d * in J B ( G R 2-2750) _______ ___ t e l e p h o n e ( G R 2-2473* o r I . a b o r a t o r - J R flt In o u . r i- ! IT? a n d a d v e r t i s i n g “ 11 •• F '3. . J __________ E n t e r e d as * e c o n d - c l a s i m a t t e r O c to b e r 18 1953 a t t h e P o s t O f f i c e a t A u*’ n. T e x a s u n d e r t h e A ct of M a r c h .3 187!* ASSOCIATED PKJ ** WIKE SERVICE T h e A s s o c i a t e d P r e s s t o t h e u s e fo r r e p u b l i c a t i o n in t h s n*w’*P*P local H em * < r s p o n t a n e o u s o r i g i n p u b lis h e d h e r e i n . R i g h t * of p u b l l a in all n e w * d i s p a t c h e s c r e d i t e d U a n d of all o t h e r m a t t e r h e r e i n a lso r e s e r v e d r ne* of • r\* se e ra t I .ted is exciusivelv e n t i t l e d i* - A s s o c i a t e d 4 o l l e a f i s t e P r e « « A l l - A m e r i c a n r * c e t t J * * r Hntithwe-tern Joarnallsm C o a g r e s a S t u d e n t E d i t o r i a l P r e s s 4 (i n ferenc e a n d P r e s s S e r v i c e MEVJ U K K » D e l l ' a r e d i n A u s t i n ( t h r e e m o n t h s r n .nim. rn) Mailed in Austin ............................................ Malled out of town ................................................................................... SI RS( RIPTION KATIS ............................................. ’ 7 5 c m o n SPOO J 75c month PERMANFNX STAFF .................... Editor M a n a g in g E ditor ...< News Editor ( XKI, HOM ARD J AUK KEEV ER , .. Maurice O ir i;l STA FF FOK THIS IS S U E ........................................................................... T E D D Y E SH A W V E R ................................................................................................. E D STX $ 3 ' Night Editor D e sk Editor Issue News Editor ..................................................................... Maurice Olla1'* Night Reporter ................................. Tina Wi*« Copyreaders ...................................................... Carol Hale, Julia H atchet Night Sports E ditor .................................... Charlie Smith Assisants .......................................................... G eorg” P h a r r, Bill H am pt Night Amusements Editor ............................................... Victory Van D y G A s s i s t a n t s .................................Cynthia Vol I m e r . Carolyn S o f f a r . K a r e n I ' ' Night Cam pus Life I Milo. ..............................................................Jean Rut1*' ! A '- i- ta n t ............................................................................................. Lynne Gi ,v ................. .................................................... J e r r y Co^11 Editorial Assistant Tuesday, October 20, 195? THE D A IL Y TEXAN Page 3 Allen, Branch Injured; Dowdle on No. I Unit om a ut SPORTS Pros 'N Cons by CHARLIE SMITH A ssociate Sports Editor S la u g h t e A UT H E NT1 CS ...interesting new shirt creations the look natural in slacks Big change for the better! N o belts, buttons, or buckles. Pock­ ets are up front— polo style. THey're naturals for comfort, convenience and fashion. See these in the new 7 5 % Dacron-250 0 Cotton C A V A L R Y C O R D Suntan or Loden Green F i r s t D o w n s R u s h .o k V a rd a sip P a s s i n g Y a r d a g e P a s s e s •• ........ Intercepted bv .. P u n t s ........ •••• F u m b le s I jost Y a r d s P e n a liz e d C L A I R B R A N C H . suffers freak injury Ray P o a g e O u t With Hurt Leg u h o h a s been c o m m e •omoted to the s ta rtin g H ow Can You b e s u r e ? g e n u i n e Goaioo!**) bv Good H <*»*b**P|r’f In choosing a d iam o n d ring, the w a y t o be sure is t o c h o o s e a genuine r e g i s t e r e d K e e p s a k e Dio* in m o n d Ring. Q u a l i t y j u d g e d by d i a m o n d s c o l o r , c u t o n d c l a r i t y , is a n d K e e p s a k e s q u a l i t y is c l e a r l y d e f i n e d in w r i t ­ ing f o r your p r o t e c t i o n . O N T HE D R A G $400.00 R O I A N D W e d d i n g Rmg $ ’ 25 00 a l l a n d a l e v i l l a g e V E R N O B L O M Q U I S T H A R L E Y C L A R K H U G H E S M A S T E R S f e l l o w s h i p s . The H u gh e s M a ste rs Fellow s h ip Pro gram o ffe rs u n u su a l o p p o rtu n itie s for ac a d e m ic tra in in g lending to a m aster s degree and. rn addition, provides each ‘- low w dh practical experience in the professional field of his choice. Approxim ately one hundred new aw ards will be rnade by H u gh e s in 1 9 6 0 to qualified applicants who p o sse ss a bachelor s degree rn science or engineering Additional aw ards are open to qualified app I- ca n ts interested in bu sin e ss adm inistration and education. PR OGR AM. Participants in this program will receive fellowsh ps t at permit them ta attend an o utsta nding university on a full time basis during the regular academ ic year with a substantial stipend. Other award winners will be a ssigne d to the W O R K S T U D Y P R O G R A M and will attend a u n i v e r s i t y sufficiently near a facility of the H u g 1- - ? Aircraft C o m p an y to permit them to obtain practica experience, in a professional field of their choice, by w orking at the com pany part time each w ee k A n appropriate stipend will also be awarded. H u g h e s conducts extensive research and development in the scientific A f t e r c o m p l e t i o n of the M a st e r's Program , fellows are eligible to apply and engineering fields, W hile w orking for Hughes, fellows may be a ssign e d to such areas of Research & Development as microwave devices parametric amplifiers, m asers, infrared search and track syste m s m icrominiaturization, antenna arrays, sim ulation methods, pro p a g a tio n , data h an d lin g, h u m a n factor a n a l y s i s - - a n d to a variety of engineering areas such as guided m issiles, w eapons con­ trol syste m s and system s analysis. A selected group of award w inners will be offered a FULL ST U D Y for H U G H E S ST A FF D O C T O R A L F E L L O W S H IP S . The classified nature of work at H u g h e s m akes eligibility for security clearance a requirement. C lo s in g d a te for a p p lic a t io n *! January I ? Id e o H o w t o a p p l y ! Write Dr. C N W a r f i e l d , Scientific Education, Hughes Aircraft Com pany, C ulver City, California. H O W A R D H U G H E S D O C T O R A L F E L L O W S H I P S , lf you are i n f ­ ... ested in stu d ie s leading to a doctor s degree in physics or eng -re you are invited to apply for one of approxim ately IO new awards in l h 9 1 9 6 0 How ard H u ghe s Doctoral Fellow ship P ro g ram. This unique program offers the doctoral candid al- the nr com bination of high level study at an outstanding ins tu practical industrial experience in the H u g h e s .aboratories. rn n p Each How ard H u gh e s Doctoral Fellow ship provides a p p r o x im a t e $8 OOO annually. Of th.s am ount $ 1 , 8 0 0 is for tuition, books , - s thesis and research expenses. The rem ainder is the award 0 . a ca sh stipend and salary earned by the fe^ow. H u gh e s co nd ucts extensive research and development rn t*-e sc and engineering fields. Typical p ro g ra m s include: networn analyt s and sy st o le s *, sem iconductor m ateria s. plasm a e ectron nicatiors. c o m p u t i n g . . .and solid state physics, atomic and nee - a * physics, tests of the general theory of r e v iv if y , chemistry, phys a. chem istry and metallurgy, inform ation theory, mechanics of struc­ tu re ? electro m echanical pro pulsio n systems, and sy ste m s analysis. I A rd H u g h e s Doctoral l r ow sh ps are open to outstanding; stu­ d e n t s qua ' ed for ad m s s von to graduate sta n d in g. A m a s * - ' s degree, o r equ.va’ent graduate work, is considered very dost rah • b e fo re 'be g nning the Fellow ship Program . T h e class f ed nature of w ork at H u gh e s makes eligibility fo r security clearance a requirement. C l o s i n g date for a p p l i c a t i o n * ! January 15. 1960. H o w t o a p p l y ! Wnte Dr. C. N Warfield, Scientific Education. H u g h e * Aircraft Company, C u lv e r City, California. j n ne'I world uUh ELE TRO PICS H U G H E S / Hughes Fellowship Programs NOTICE TO ACCOUNTING STUDENTS R ep re sen tatives of Arth ir An I* s* n A Co , A c r o u n t - , . S I I to r. w ill I O r r r " X O r t h , ! 2. a n i T h u r ,rta -V “ n<1 ... .w e n .rn- students in t « r ...- M n • c a re e r in public sccountinx. P o s itio n , s r . . p e n on the s t,* ! in o ffic e , of the F ir m throughout the In tte d States in the a r e a , of a t i t ' ne -tx se.roun.m g sn*I r t k m in is tra tiv e sccou n tin *. including sy s te m ,. T h e ,eh ed . . . o f T ille r^ le w . i , betne prepared by .he P > « c e m e n t S « n d e . of The School of E tc r.es, A (annist! anon, 115 W ag g en r Hal1 . A ll Interested student, are u r g e d to attend a short u . group m eeting the evening of W e d n e s d a y . O etn h er . T h e tim e and pis, - of the group m eeting m a y he oh- tam ed from the P la c e m e n t Office. rn Outstanding Value presented by the Gentry Tuesday. October 20, 1959 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 Merchants, DU | Win in C’ass A gam es in D n s s A rn M n[day night therwiiH* mon iton- r, a vs a y v :ar to Stu art Daesed rvoint that i extra Xu>O CC XU ‘(>1 i i : »pa Sig m a. 'hi pf IVV ( T c ‘ ’)*,■» from ; a r r Pig n e t. : am cs Cai'I- B ru n e t >(-> offen sive. .. ho ti C a rt is Ter- ti L e w i » Fox who nclud ng six In tra m ur T h e b ig g th’ chan* s % con tr-' rn '!' i 'n M e rc h a n ts xx Rot-* ; * Bu-h ; f o r 'v i n • th e Douglas t for ‘ Sic CT B a r r y Toll N e w la n d f >r m ean t a U p silf r Top d isp lay I ,1 th* B ru n e tte , 5 N e a l A r ;? w e ll sp u rn T he Ran g* ra c e 41-6 com pie to I T D • vt se? O ddity t th e G ig o lo ! six n en H em p till n * .*ht nrovi-Ie 1 by rh pl av rd w ith only still ** vrrpovx’ered IU W ilso n C -si sta rre d as I slau gh tered S H a rg ro v e xxi 25-0 and B P a c k O'. * r th* and VI ex P a lm ro s ( i'Utim a D e lta ti th I M u H-0. rzed pa. -I B lo c k e r ;ru( hart I led the R a t S \ ‘ y -' * | ne*TS 20*^. Texas Still Third ' H o r n ■ As Porkers Rise _ ■ Developed LSU Leads Poll Field Goal Defense Mentors With 'Cats 2nd B a a e d on the \«* **001 a ted P r e ? ? T ex a s held on ’ > its No rank ag behind I n a ­ tion al * r'd N o rth w estern *1* -pit** a tigh t 13-12 rugged A rk a n sa s sq u eak er p a*' I i ? ! Sa tu rd a y . A rk a n sa s a- * ta lly gained statu re in defeat a? .jumped 'he from 12th to 10th on the basis of th e ir strong show ing a g ain st the Longhorns losers L SI." regained the top spot b y a co m fo rtab le m arg in despite a IM) squeeze b y downtr alden K e n tu ck y T he B e n g a ls polled 68 of the 144 first pin ■ e v t cs >nd totaled 1 2-8 points counting for a first pl a en vote 0 for sc* ond, etc. T h .s w as the lit h stra ig h t tim e the T ig e rs h ave led the poll, IO points B y ( X K I O S D . C O N D E T r i m Sp*>rtt Editor If O rv a l F a u b u s had been in the stands du rin g the second q u a rte r and seen A rk a n s a s m uff ids biggest o pportunity to defeat Texas, pro­ bably w ould h a v e felt Uke ( ailin g out the N a tio n a l G u a rd ag ain . T h.s tim e h o w e v e r it would h a v e been to m o w down ’ The B ig R e d ,” * The W ild H o g s ,” and " T h e T h u n ­ firs t dering T h .rd 1 — A rk a n s a s ’ 15 m iles per hour and you couldn t n ave asked for a bo tt*: angle It i*5!' hut not w as slig htly to the enough to m ake it d iffic u lt. The only thing the R a z o rb a c k * hadn t figured on w a s a speciei defensive pattern th at C oach D a r ­ re ll R o y a l had stash ed a w a y for such events as this. C enter B t l1 L a u g h lin broke open a hole and end L a r r y C ooper rushed to block A k e r ’# a ttem p t. in three units. and facing a The R a / x rb a c k s w ere tra d in g Texas, 7-6 fourth and four situ ation on the T e x a s 13- yard the kickin g tee and sp ecialist F r e d d y A kers cam e in to attem pt a field T h e y called line fo r M ik e Cotten field ed it hut w as ta ck led on the goal line H o w e ve r an A rk a n sa s p la y e r d re w a p e r­ sonal foul and I J yard s of b rea th in g room . Sh o rtly after that T e x a s punted out and w as out of trouble. it g a ve T ex a s 12-f e a r ly in the third period when 1_ . early i pla>s ,nf a f a s h i o n that e v e r a. ■*.• 1 rm e a c h R o * . I . T ^ m a k i n g a ?ing.e .... eri the Longhorns around l.*< ^ * r » .7. ;; soldiers. T h e y showed a v e r s c f *' s h o r t p a s s o ffe n s e on this d rive and had scored them W rit touch­ down on such a pla> 5 c* on . ie • extra point attem pt the) went the Jim tw o points by sending M o o ty around e n d Mo*itx -mound end seem ed like a cinch, o - Branch storm ed short o f the goal. to nr I h; in T he point in question is v h > didn't A rk an sa s tr y another ?t goal. l f A kers had c o verfed as m an y p ass? And A rk a n sa s, w h ic h pride# fl­ m its quick k ick in g gam e, T h a t d id n ’t work " ^ X ^ x v a s at sa fety and . P la y . H e retreated , . nP b ack close and seeing correct, . irnptions w e re i bn* k and w a s there to field . ,^n h s 'vlK it. Tt w as a g*vod 41-yard kick by Vn, . , ..t it b a c k fire d again. Sax- , ,n *,M ;< ii 12 y a r d s lo A rk a n s a s ’ ,nd 14 p la ys la te r, T exas scored n fir s t touchdow n and L a c k e y s t# leek put the Steers ahead. T cx.is w a s n ’t outstanding in this . lP -n bv an y m eans hut it showed ,u id produce in the c hitch and !, pep its head in spu e of the m is­ takes it m ade. T h e re are other ris e g in this g a m e that b e ar this instance, there w as the tim e Tex s q u a rte rb a c k s kept a drive a in e by going for the f i r s t > y >r down on fourth down. B ’s tr u e ’ A rk a n s a s w a s in spired hut Texas w as cool. H og fans veiled long md after the gam e that Texas w a s lu c k y to find the breaks - ne th eir w a y , but thp blocked field goal w a s n ’t an y break It xvas a c a r e fu l'y designed pattern by the T ex a s coaching staff R IC E H A L F B A C K B IL L Y B U C E K . r e a d y to knock Texas ou t of f l i t e ? SWC Statistics C ON KF. R h N I » i \ n h i m * W a n J t T ied . * flrhonl Texas A rk an sas TOU . . . . R i o S M T . . . aa m . . . . B a y l o r .. School Texas A rk a n s a s . . . . . . . S M I ' ----. . . . . . . TOT . . . . . . . . . . . a a m B a y l o r ........ .. Ro e ................. I F S H IN G bi! \ -ON ll M OKI* L*»?t Tied 7 Pe t , o 667 « p , 500 ,5(?) .OOO P l? . 13 .38 39 13 13 6 7 , P? Vi 2 11 €j 13 T3 39 23 Opp. P f 4 21 27 .38 31 - r, i 76 P r t I K»i .KO* . 625 Se»t 6 m 5 * i .167 T O T A L O F F T . N 8 E P l ? I I I KU fvK 67 61 36 36 IN D IX I D I A L I I X I I I HS Pl*I ' e r M< refill h M I ! s; f> -td S p Kl-? ( 'n Hins M* ti it V M ,, Bv tU ( S M U ) ( A g r M ) ( T ( '( » (T e x ) ( A r e p (A A M ) (IBnv ie r » I k a D IN I, T o ta l (■ain 647 459 347 314 297 276 253 P i a v » i m I *5 62 4.3 54 45 33 P l N I T KN (a t leant 9 p a n t? i I T p x 1 ( p j ‘-t * P l over t r j ;,. XKOn I , mu! t p b r r ( I hris*< I a n r * \ lh ( A r XX i.?cr 1 - . B a vl< r I P u n t ? Yd?. 665 14 38K 9 724 17 461 12 41s* l l 757 3 0 676 TS I N T L H( I P I t l l P X - K F S (RI- p ) f i t U I • S M U ) k i I at Iea.?t 2) B A l l, t X R R l I RH T itnc. I .»r r . lf A* e ' I rx Pl*VCT lites ii i n ? * C o ll B u l l (B a y l o r * . . . . . . . . M •< »uir* 1 A .vM ----- Saxton (Tex! ............ R a m I r f ' (T e x ) ............ Lo Bo* -t * Av Mi ....... W e b b * R ic o . .............. H a r r ; ? * T C * . I L A D IN O B A I I 35 -> SSO 138 I •' 61 28 31 C A R R I I RS 2 t, 4.1 ........ S p ik e s 'T C C » M r« iiv i A rk > C o ig n s < Texa‘ > . . . ........ B u ll 'B a y l o r ) McGuire (A A M ) •• . . . . S a x to n ( T e x ) R a m ire z Lf>Roeuf W e b b - R ic e ' H a r r is ( T ! '! * I A>T ll L l K 10 I ' 11 I I -I 9 4 a I I . . . .. ........ (T e x t ( A A M ) L l A D IN '. r xn s i rn "6 -I I 50 12 Per imp A tt Co m e (.a in Pa-* A v e c Plover Coner) (Tex 1 S p ik e s ( T C I ) XX-lemon (SM U ) D a v is S a x to n ( T e x ) Harris *Ark» ( T C I • H a r r is (Ba'- * A»* Per Int 6-5 2 *> 41 0 25 0 9 0 7 0 4 0 TA* Ret I’B 123 M 1H 14 g Int 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 L L A D I X ) 8 C O R K R * ( .inversions T H < K 0 0 cr o 111 96 si 50 PT IO I R I O 6 1 3 1 ( C-'T t ’ 1 ’ A A M ) ( B a - P U v tr Mer* ■ I th Rtan I*- Mils** 3 G e o rg e ( T C C ) Monroe < Ark - Dawson * r k' H a r tm a n P Iv (Baylor* pfhnahle * f! re ‘ F n il w e ” < B a r> Meredith * SN ’ Stanley- (Ba* r) M lls t* ud < A • '.I i George (T C C ) M o n ro e * A rk • D a w so n * C V ) H a r t e -n P I V ( B a y l o r I Snhnatile (Rice) ( B a y l o r ) F a llw . d l ( R I e) I KADIN*. P A NSI l{ I \ 'T XX I I K r, I ■I 9 2 o 8 Did not play 8 I 8 0 3 I *)• t t> 1“ 0 8 3 6 6 0 36 31 n 9 12 0 7 7 Did not play (R ic e r 'A A M ) Player C o llin s (T e x ) Ja c k s o n M ilste ad M o o ty (A r k * ‘g o re 'a m i Hucek ( R i r e ) B u t le r ( A r k ) M*•< .ulre 1 AAM ) (T e x » I Lackey ( T C C ) Cal! Questioned In Owl-Pony Tilt D A L ie A S LF1 Abb C u rtis, su per­ viso r of Sou th w est Conference o ffi­ c ials, sa id M o n d ay night th ere w as a strong p o ssib ility that the o ffic ia l m issed a p ia v in tho S M U - R ic e gam e that cost S M U a touchdown. H o w e v e r, hp added that he did not know w h at could be done about if an o f'ic ia i protest w ould be filed. it or team s. A ik P e r T r y 5 0 4 I 5 6 7 3 5 5 6 I 7.7 A 's 47 5 43 I 42 6 > 4 I- I .37 9 37 6 C u rtis m ade his com m ent a fte r v ie w in g film s of the gam e. The that Don M ered ith , ru lin g w as S M U p asser, crossed the s c r im ­ m age line before throw ing and the com p leted pass w as canceled. I C u rtis said he had no o ffic ia l I ; co m p lain t from S M U and d id n ’t it would he taken know w h eth e r before the conference or not. T h e D a lla s N ew s had hinted M o n d a y night that P M C w as dis­ left g run tled o v e r the ruling that the g a m e a 13-13 tie C o a c h B ill M eek. afte r studying m ovies of the play refused to d is­ miss the c a ll “ ap p are n tly b em u se of the g ag ’ n ile wh; h prohibits coaches and other o ffic ia ls from c ritic iz in g decisions of g am e a r ­ biters, " the N ew s said “ P la y e r s w ho saw the p ictu re said M ered ith w as fu lly two y a rd s behind the scrim m a g e lin e when he lofted the short pas# and took tw o long steps before crossing it ” M e e k refused to com m ent on a teport that N a p p er D a v is, ve te ra n re fe re e who called the disputed foul, had telephoned to apologize a fte r seeing a delayed telecast of the p la y w h ic h originated on R ic e s 5-yard line. P ts ,3*i IN ! - IN IN 14 14 l l 13 WANTED! w fcE R W EIG H T S — OVERWEIGHTS— M I U WHA L A C K E M I R S Y! SPIWmtdi 'r ."4, . 7, ■ Im p ro v e y o u r physique fled go 3 just 60 d a y ? in r e v tupervix on c t export un gr *r 0 e n e rg y in r/ru c’ ots. 'Mural Scores ll < lax. A * '.a* *u* T e rr >*-e 6 Mer- ten 7 (M»r. ham* wen on H a rg rn v a 25 B lo c k e r 0 R a n g .'! * cha tits ~ 1 i .-nt * rat ion*. ( .a m m i G ig o lo * 32 H e m p h ill 19. P h i D e lta 41 S ig m a Alpha M u a D e lta U p silo n 13 P h i Kappa S ig m a 12 R a t i>n S lx t i N m e rs 6 , B r u n e t t e 45, , I Pignet b L l as* B T a u D* 'n P h i 12 I heta X I 0 A lp h a T a u O m i'iu 2 0 K a p p a A lp h a n D e l t a 1 K a p p a U p silo n 29, Sig m a P h i U p silon 0; T h e ta ( hi 19 P h i K a p p a T a u 0 Sports Notice Dead .ne for 'niramural Golf entries 'I o d , , Entries are due In is - i rn Gregorv Gvtrt 114. N o rth vees* em , 20-7 v ic to r over I | § v M ic h ; ’ -n after a sh a k y s ta rt, re- re iv e d 23 first play a tight 1 a <*n the No. 2 spot. A k e rs is A rk a n s a s ’ m an w ith the '’oldi l l toe and, b ettors, he h ad .-*) 'n 11 a V N , votes and kept p ra ctic e d u n til dark . ai! w eek long for such an occasion. E v e r y th in g was fa v o r T h e w ind w a s to th c .r back, b low ing the P o rk e rs ' * « in in*ac* Although th*1 top th ree re m a in ­ ed ‘ he rest of the top 10 w as pr “ v w ell sh aken up as G e o ­ rg ia T ech , Pu rd u e, and Io w a tast­ ed de G a t. M iss is - ipoi clin zed a notch to I irth . S'* P lier n ( d;b>rr i lum ped from seventh to fifth and S y ra c u s e m oved from eighth to «.xth. C om pletin g the top 10 w ere Au­ burn, P e n n State, * *eorgia T ech , and A rk an sa s w h o hoi cl down the 7, 8, 9, IO spots re s p e c tiv e ly . B e a te n e a r lie r in the season by .T en n essee A ub urn bounced back - to stop ( I*'* c v a ! * ' h in a . -6 th r ill­ er T e c h dr opp* d fro m fourth to ninth cs a resu lt of the loss D espite some n e rv o u s m om ents b y each L S C . N o rth w e s t« *n and T ex a s are the " B i g T h r e e ” am ong the n atio n 's elite fo r the second .straight w eek as th e y continue to lead the ra p id ly d eclin in g list of m a io r college u n defeated, untied, T h e top ten, p oint* based on IO for a first place vote, 9 fo r second, etc. F irs t p lace votes and xx on-lost records in p aren th eses: '23* (5-0) • .......... '18' *5-0) - • • . 1 Louisiana State *68) (5-0) (4-0) • 2 N o r t h e a s t e r n ( 8 ) 3 T e x a s 4 Mississippi 5 S o u th e rn * ai <*2* 6 S y ra c u s e <4* 7 A u b u rn (5 ) (3-1) 8 P e n n S ta te *3) *5-0) (4-1) 9 Georgia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ieoh IO. A rk a n s a s ( I ) (4-1) .......... (4-0) ' thought he w >uid w ith that seen ingly easy shot it w ould have been his toe and not L a c k e y ’s that would h ave dec; led the score. T h e re ’s q w s tio n a h .e an o th er period in w h ic h A rk a n s a s b ,r’< ,n* other chance to p u ll ahead hut did- not. T his cam e on an e x tra point conversion a fte r the H o g s’ second touchdown. T h e y had p u lle d ahead again. Few, McGuire Ouit Aggie Grid Squad C O L L E G E S T A T IO N H a lf­ backs Jo n F e w , ju n io r from M id ­ lothian, and sophom ore Je s s e M c ­ G u ire of P la in v ie w h ive quit the T exas A & M fo o tb all team . T h e y fa ile d to si'- »w UP ^or 8 s q u a d 'm eeting and p ra c tic e M o n ­ day. T he tw o b o js , who played in T C U ’S 39-6 v ic t o r y o v e r the A ggies a t F o rt W o rth S a tu rd a y , attended a Su n day m e e tin g of the squad. Conch' J i m M y e r s , w h en asked " I th eir d e p a rtu re , s a id : about did not m a jo r in ch d p sychology but an ytim e one of m y p la y e rs fails to attend a m eeting of the squad, be s through ” 'Mural Schedule T H ! ( I I F O O T B A L L ( L A N N R B ’ ln e tte vs B la m * )', s 'Fetas L a v vs A .r t e r c e 4 A rab s r- rr .s I LA N N A 5 r> rn - T h e t a X I vs. A ca cia A lp h a C am p u s G u n * -- M e rc h a n ts vs. ( ’ ne rves A L T vs. Newman Arm> vs Mc- A I­ « P T . - B ' u» D g Ti* a? Cracken. B S U vs. i Vv . I S A . S ta g vs h a m b ra " B A D M I N T O N P u m srt v 7 n in, — XV hit us vs. C o n o lv V, e ln e r Jo h n - n H ; vs He cv ve rle u N e u se B e rn s te in vs Ma*. h a s o m 'h a rd ra M a tth e w s vs N u f m a n I horn* T, r t .n , i r a , ;* Keu aii vs. W ill,a s Lewis Vc' S ? h lu n 1 l vs. N o e l S m it h : p e n la rn ■■ 7 15 p rn I crnanaa t o o k vs. Stokes vs i epaee . ' * T I N N I N S IN * I L L S ( L A N S A 4 pm — Kram er vs. Pf * JJ m G a llo w a y S c h a p p e r . G u it t a r d vs vs olg- H o lt H am rn n n U vs 4 n m — W a s h in g to n vs F-skena/ H a y e s vs H a i l e cast* r H a llm a r k vs B ip p e rt W o o d m an W in n e r veok vs W in n e r O lds R o b e rts M a*- d o n a 'd S e ^ e fta YS^ I-an ( >nol> . S e a e vs. i *mrW vs h a lv a XX in n e r D a n ie l bk fin e r B r a n c h vs S h in e - vs I I K o e n ig vs W ln k le m a n W il l ia m s vs. M a rs h M a y h a y o m c h a n d ra vs. B a s te n . R a n k s vs B r o w n G ris s o m 5 n m ( o l e vs vs L e e M a so n vs M a rc a k M id d le to n vs t u n d e r h u r g M y e rs said he xvas m ak in g some X K t 1 v .^ C ra b b T * Herber" vs W in n e r _ G *v!n - G rlfflr w >rner Ayers-Dnvis vs. h a r j *uQ Attt\-irtiim of F e w ’ ort ■-« I no lo ? i r e t * Mail*-! N a g ie v - «•:••••**■ M ('A n d re w s vs Mvf-rs N'.iher vs. B r v n n t . I-en Mer**- c r e a t e d b y t h e d e p a r t u r e 0 1 and M c G u ire . ? W in n e r ---------- 'pfiI m s* w m wWmMW &JL rn rn r 4m % e n g i n e e r s ff1 y? '*;*■ t 'To. *. Sa™ss w y rn 4 ■ I - fe..." : ' CT i rn x CT M S K " T h e C onvair engineering departm ent Is a real “ engineers e n g i­ neering departm ent - im aginative, energetic, explorative - and exceptional care is exercised to make certain that each new em- plovee is assigned to the job for w h ich he is best qualified, d e p e n d ­ ing upon his interest and education. O n e of the finest graduate training program s in Industry is offered bv Convair-Fo rt W o rth . Classes are conducted in the plant after w orkin g hours bv u n iversity professors, w ith emphasis on both technical and m anagem ent studies. G ra d u a te w ork in allied sciences is also a vailab le on-campus as are undergraduate courses of a technical or professional nature. Personal recognition and advancem ent, based strictly on m erit, p ro vid e an incentive for rapid professional growth. In addition, io u w ill discover top-notch engineering facilities, excellent w orking atmosphere, personal job advantages and salaries that are tops in the industry! r- I I j R E W A R D ! GOOD HEALTH AND A TRIM \ PHYSIQUE! Frank Baesptlug achiev­ e d t h e s e r e s u lt s : B E F O R E A F T E R 37 C h e s t A rm s W a i s t 45 16 30 W e i g h t 165 30 130 Anniversary Special BRING THIS AD . . . AND RECEIVE 2 Weeks Free MEMBERSHIP A 10.00 Value'. This o ffe r Expires Sat., Oct. 24 HOURS: IO-iO Daily 10-6 Su n d a y SPRING SEMESTER 1960 o( european *r- r o n g n Iagli»W toxgkt I t v t i t l !•*»■ th r o u g h t h * U n lv * r » it y o< V io n o n Stu d *# * p h o ttt on to o r n 'n g G * '" n « n S tu d o n tt ti vo w ith A u l t n o s E o m .liu t, to k o m o o t, o t th * IfS itu d u n t to n to r T h ro * S t u d y Tour* th r o u g h 8 e o u rv tr io . w h o a th# U « iv # r» ity it M i * t o m on. $vy MONTHS IN fU tO fi $ 1 3 9 5 F r x # c o v t r t ro u n d tr ip o e o o n tro v o l, soon*, b o a r d , tu itio n o n d * tu d y to urs. S A I I I N O M oo^dom , fo b 4, M ow Torh A P P U C A T 1 0 N D C A D I I N I Doc IO, 1*54 f o r (ortho* m (ornw H io«. w r it# to: INSTITUTI OF EUROPEAN STUDIES 33 I. Woehor Chicogo I SENO THIS COULON fO» U S iU U lT IN LAMAR PLAZA CENTER P le n 'y o f F R E E Parking 1134 S o u i h Lamar HI 2-7871 aam # a d d r . t i «i*y mNooI »*a*o * Perso n al Interview s O N C A M P U S OCTOBER 21,22 & 23 Live in a mild climate year-round, with countless recreational, educational and cultural facilities . . . enjoy a low cost of living with no state sales or income tax. TODAY . . . investi­ at gate the opportunity awaiting you . C O N V A I R - F O R T W O R T H ! . . A n odd pant which co m b ’nes richness of fabric, last­ "7, ing smartness, a w ashw ear-ability, is pressnfed b y the G e n try. Due to recen t innovations in textiles, thi# 1 , V v . - - ;V$ • ' • ’ J i : I **. j } - ■ rn lu p e rio r slack of hopsacking is within the reach of a l U niversity students, G re y , G re e n , Brown. Traditional or Continental. 9.95 CONVAIR , FORT WORTH Reynolds-Penland P. O. Box 748-N A D i v i s i o n o f GENERAL DYNAMICS Gentry Shop * "■ 'Me i i iWk f f l W ' V ■ 2 3 3 8 G n a d a ' j p e g u a r a n t e e d to fade . . . cur india madras shirtdress, 17.98 skirt, 12.98 Tuesday. October 20. H W THE DAILY TEXAN N y S Candy-Striped Bus N o Longer U T Landmark used last F r id a y in the pep r a lly parade It has been used in pep rallies for o ver tw o y e a rs In addition to its re g u la r runs to the cam pus and back the new bu* w ill also be h ire d out for sorority retreats, ro a d trip s to foot- - hall gam es, and c h u rch functions. it w ill pro­ D uring the s u m m e r bably he used b y lo cal churches t > carry ch ild ren to v a c a tio n B ib le schools, ■ W e plan to le a v e the new bus just plain blue and w h ite ,” Han­ ders said. The n ew bus seats 40 people w ith stan ding room for an­ ith e r 40 to 50. T h e old bus seated 32 and w it s cro w d ed on the heavy carle m orning and noon runs. re v e a l the price of the n ew bus hut said it had been c o m p le te ly co ve re d by an alum nus of the ch ap ter. The bus is d riven by four m em b ers of the chapter w h o re c e iv e 85 cen*' for each run th e y m ak e. Sanders w ould not ! The route of the bus takes it the P h i P s i house to the from drag, down the d ra g to Twenty- first Street, dow n T w en ty-first to , Speedw ay, and dow n S p e ed w a y to the E n ig n eerin g B u ild in g s . Pa sse n ­ gers w a il at W a g getter H a ll, L itt le ­ field Fou n tain , the Co-Op. and at the corner of Twenty-fourth and Guadalupe. B y BO B MOOKE L a s t w eek a fa m ilia r U n iv e r ­ s ity of T e x a s lan d m ark d> ip p e a r ­ ed fro m the cam pus. T he D r a m a B u i ld . n g ? No, Hie orange and w h ite c an d y- strip ed bus operated for o v ­ e r tw o y e a r s by the P h i K a p p a P s i fr a te r n ity . T h e 1948 model school bus g a v e w a y to the path of p ro g ress. A 1958 blue and w hite G reyh o u n d - style bus began m aking the ro u te w h ic h the old bus had c h u rn e d so m a n y tim es. , T w o y e a rs ago, the P h i P s i s s ta rte d operating the old school inis fr o m th e ir house at 2401 L o n g ­ v ie w to the cam pus and b a c k a g a in e v e r y h ou r from 8 a rn. to 6 p rn. In ad d itio n to some 75 or IOO I ’ m P s i s the bus also picked up p a s s ­ en g e rs at the Sigm a D e lta T a u . D e lt a P h i E p silo n , and K a p p a A l ­ p h a T h e ta sorority bourses. T h e id ea for the bus c a m e fi m i B u m m y J a n . who reason ed th a t P h i P s i ’s w e re to w a lk from their new hows* 1 > the c a m p u s e v e ry day. (i n u n the bus to the fra te rn ity w h e n he J a r s lazy .lust too ! g ra d u a te d in the spring of 1958. " S in c e then the old bus had gotten a n ew coat of paint and m o re and m o re passengers. It began to show' sig n s of w e a r and te a r th is v e a l and N e lso n Sanders, the c u rre n t bus m a n a g e r, decided it w a s h ig h tim e the fra te rn ity got a m w bus. W it h the help of an a l u m n u s the P h i P s i s bought the se c o n d hand 1958 bus from a s e m i - p r i d e s ’■ - n u Architect Wives Will Have Party , The Student A rchitects W ives Chih of the U n iv e rsity will hold a dessert-bridge p arty Tuesday at 7 30 n m . at the Austin’s W o m e n s n u b 708 Sa n Antonio. G uests of She club w ill he the presidents of other wives clubs on the U niversity cam pus. ,jrT_ L a . T h e new bus was r e m o d e l and began its runs to the c a m p is ( I an d b a c k last T h u r s d a y T h e r e are about 180 la d ers on ’I he rib. i s • b u * e a c h month. c h a rg e d $5 each m onth and m a y rid e as often as th ey lik e In • a m . to fi p.m. The bus It >ves the Tp P h i P s i house a1 20 rntorutrs to h o u r an d returns from the ca m p u s on the hour. S a tu rd a y the P h i P s i Ihe new bus P ^ d g e c la s s used to taKe about 200 children fro m the A lis ­ o n State School to the c h a r r o s R odeo, The pledges c h ap ero n ed the ou tin g for the children. “ W e hope to sell Ih e old h as b s m u ch as we can ,” S a n d e rs said. T h e candy-striped m o del w as last Insurance Society To Meet Today T h e I n s u r a n c e S o c i e t y • U n i v e r s i t y w i l l m e e t T u e s d a y 7 - 3 0 p m . , to e l e c t O ff ic e r * and i n t h e V a r s i t y ( a f * - . e t . p la n me a y e a r ' s p r o g r a m . “ S t u d e n t s m a j o r i n g i n i n s u r a n c e f i n a n c e , o r r e a l e s t a t e a r e e s p t i a l l v i n v i t e d t o a t t e n d s a i d . e\ Z e l e n , a m e m b e r o f t h e g r o u p . v a r i e t y w i l l S t u d y i n s u r a n t e p - s i - I p o l i t i e s i n s a l e s a n d m a n a g e m e n t . Hall to Lecture On Mathematics o f P r o f e s s o r M a r s h a l l H a , the V n a r t m e n t o f m a t h e m a t i c s a t d i e Institute of T e ch n o io v G U fo rn ia w ill give his second le c tu r e o n the ■‘S o lv a b ility of F in ite T u e s d a y at IO a m . (.ro u p s. in G a rris o n H a ll IOO. Monday s con mea I e ' ' o r e “ M a t h e m a t i c * ! p ro b le m * of Ar- m g e m e n t . ” • C O #O P»C O »O P#C O «O P*C O *O PtC O « 3 £ Beat the Crowd! Shop How © for \«ur Pc mr »"rn * ■ CHRISTMAS C A RD S *a\p 10*V pl"* ( O r d p p p r i i d p n d — >.*. s c ry t u un » •**•** with le ttu c e and to m a to . • • a bit with th e c o g n o sc e n te . BURGERHAUS 2116 G u a d a lu p e A ustin, Tex. H O W A R D T O U R S ’ C liristinas i n M E X I C O t w o full weeks e s p e c ia lly d e sig n ed fo r • T E A C H E R S • S T U D E N T S • y o u n g p r o f e s s i o n a l P E O P L E . a > / - W rgy J b J I 0 5c. I R t o J a n. 3 S373O4 a-Gv'U '”’ ? f r - rn o a u s t i n M n co City, 7 IT IN E R A R Y 4 day* d a y ! in w o rld -famous A ca p u lco . I d«Y* G u .d a U -rn 4 full dayt hi th© colorful towm of Pa rt Caro Mora * Guanan Due and whi e, ing to N elso n Sanders, bus m a n a g e r. o.-ven by ,g h t to U _____________ _________ ' e ^ Y , ........ n W h a t Goes on H ere T u e s d a y 9-11 tl Cookies, r .{fee, and orange ju ic e offered in sch o la rsh ip ben*- fit snack sale, H o m e econom ics 9-9 B u ild in g 129. I F a ll c an d id ates requested to in q u a lific a tio n s and p ic ­ bring B u ild in g to tures Jo u r n a lis m m m 9-5 Bluebonnet B e lle n om in ation s Jo u r n a lis m B u ild in g 10i. 9-12 and 1-4:30 D ra w in g for R ic e g am e tickets. G re g o r. G y m . 10— F a c u lt y W iv e * S o c ia l C lub, home of M rs . K e n Jo h n . IO Coffee H o u r and discussion, H ille l Fo u n d atio n . 1-S p e cia l e x am in a tio n s in d raw in g, econom ics, E n g lis h , finance, in­ su ran ce, and in te rn a tio n a l trade, G a rris o n H a ll I . 2-5 R e g is tra tio n for T en Most B e a u tifu l contest, Jo u rn a lis m 2 S o cial C a le n d a r C om m ittee. B u ild in g 305. T exas Union. University Dames To Hear Moore Speak on Children “ C ris is in C h ild re n 's L iv e s " an address b y M is s S a lly B eth M oore I m ent of the dep artm en t of home I econom ics, w ill highlight a busi- i ness m ee tin g of the N ational A ssoc­ iation of U n iv e r s ity D am es T u e s­ in A rch itectu re d ay at 7 15 p m. B u ild in g 305. T he group has extended a w e l­ come to student w iv e s and m a r ­ ried coeds. T hose who wish to a t­ tend. and need transportation, are asked to co n tact M rs. L v n C r a w ­ ford, p re s id e n t, a t GL-3-2168. M rs J i m P e a rs o n facu lty w ife , has been announced as N A I I 1 sponsor, in add ition to M rs. F re d 3-fi E le c tio n C o m m issio n , A rc h i­ H elm . tecture B u ild in g 195. Rocket Society To Hear Becker lect ire L e ro y B e c k e r, sen ior e le c tric a l on student, w ill g ive a “ F u n d a m e n ta ls of In e r tia l G u id ­ an ce Sy stem s, at the So u th w estern R o ck e t S o c ie ty m eeting T u esd ay at 7 30 p m . in the E x p e rim e n ta l Scien ce B u ild in g . F u tu re plans, such as building this y e a r 's th ree stage rocket and bouncing a h eam off the moon, w ill he discussed at the business m e e t­ ing as w e ll as the p r o g r e s s m ade at the B a lc o n e s ex p e rim e n ta l lab­ o ra to ry. 3 K U T - F M , 90.7. 3 V a r s it y D eb ate W orkshop, I Speech B u ild in g 214 I 4:14 and 7 :15—1C ath o lic classes. N e w m a n C lu b in qu iry c lass­ room . fi 30 O rie n ta tio n p ro g ram for vol­ un teer w o rk ers. State Hospital. 7 Sex and !>ove Stu d y G roup, W S F C en ter. 7:30 L a re d o C lu b , B a tts H a ll 215. 7 30 You n g R e p u b lica n s Club to h ear E a r l Y e a k e i, E x p e rim e n ta l Science B u ild in g 309. 8-10 F a c u lt v and staff reception, W estw o od C o u n try C lub 9 W o od y H e rm an show. M u n ic ip a l A u d i t o r i u m . Christian Group To Have Meeting The C hristian Students A sso cia­ the Southwest Christian tion of C h u rc h w ill m eet at fi p m. W e d ­ l e a nesday a t House. the University T h is w ill he the first m eeting of the as so c ia tio n , whose purpose - to pro m ote fellow ship, provide B e ­ au u n u m * of C h ristian youth and aid students in the service to the ch urch . Its time to nominofe BLUE BONNET BELLES tor Ihe I9 6 0 C adus Nom ination form* and picture specifications are now a v a ila b le in Journalism Building 107. Any approved campus organization m a y m ake up to four nom inations. Bluebonnet se m ifin a l­ ists w ill ap p ear at Round-Up R e vie w next spring, and pictures of finalists w ill be in the 1950 Cactus. All nomination forms and pictures must be turned in to Journa!ism Building room 107 by 4:30 p.m. W ednesday, O ctob er 28 p i n . , , go b y K e e n > Stu d io 2306 G u a d a lu p e no atar than W e d n e s d a y , O c to b e r 21 a t 5 00 p.m . UC ta ia M fc I ■ rn.. I T M DAILY T O A N j>» „ e , H in g ifc Woody Herman Band To Play in Dallas To Play Jazz Tuesday ,n by Ivrui* rent TW iet a Top Authors Entertained < boers p ann C a t on a irk at th *1 T S H O A T ."i Ut I ' M 2 BIG FEATURES 2 SID B E R G M A N Ingrid Bergman Ma In Television Show Nose G ains Prominence !n Book by B?dichek WHAT'S SHOWING T e \ n % T o o t a k e th e u t m o s t r a r e in s e l e c t i n g > o u r c l o t h e s , w h y n o t a o u r c l e a n e r ? scrno UNIVERSITY CLEANERS A N P I O N \ I R " I ' 2 9 1 0 ' j t . n a d a l u p e ami S I R S T A T I O N t n u n d rs a nd D r y C l e a n i n g \\ ,-ekda\ * 7 a m t o lh p . m N u n d a ' * Manager on (Juts to B. C . I O G E R S Ophthalmic Dispenser C o n t o r t l.en .ea I itted W i t h i n e a s y w a l k i n g d i s t a n c e o t t h e c a m p .s 1501 G u a d G R 7 -1 4 2 2 Thursday Is Turkey D a y Scholz Garten Y O U ARE INVITED TO A S K POR A S C H O L Z C R E D IT C A R D 1607 San Jacinto Si, Si . . . Es Muy Deliciosa! EL M A T 504 East Ava. GR 7-7023 EL T O R O 1601 Guadalupe GR 8-4321 M O N R O E 'S "Mexican Food to Take GR 7-8744 EL C H A R R O 912 Red River GR 8-7735 \ /i' / J i H K \ I a LA i T n U V j ----- I M — H, , ----- JV ^ Austin's "B ig Four" in Authentic Mexican Food ARE Y O U A RESPONSIBLE T H IN K IN G P E R SO N ? IF SO, W E NEED YOU. FRI. A N D SAT. D A N C I N G A N D FLOOR SH O W F E A T U R I N G STU and O SCAR W E D . — C O O L J A Z Z SUN. — J A M S E S S I O N E. 9th G R 8 0942 M E M B E R S H I P S N O W O P E N M a k e a G u e s t Visit A n y t i m e First Meeting: Tuesday, October 20 Experimental Science Building 309 7:30 p.m. a u d it o r iu m MUNICIPAL C H R IS BARBER and his B R IT IS H DIXIELAND B AN D 11 - HOUR CLEANING I DAY LAUNDRY | l o n g h o r n c l e a n e r s •,3fi t . u i i d a l u p . CHARITON I CHARLTON DELWOOD 3931 Cost Avenue M a u r i c e ( he va Her .I i »ii rd si n EN C H A N T ED ISLAND SOUTH AUSTIN 3900 Son Antonio Highwov_ V U M I S S I O N 50r THE BADLANDERS A l a n I a d d t r n e - t R o r c n l n e FORBIDDEN ISLAND ,|f — Son Adam* S t ar t * K 15 FINE S H O W S FOR T H E S A M E PRICE ( O M E R E TAA H ? M » T M u n » * t r a a a b e r h i f s - M A I . R A I T " i n s P H T O R T m A N D T H E IM ’ A l a s t a i r S I M . « . G r e E m » MAN HICKEY ROOKEY STEVE COCHRAN T H I f ie MAMIE VIN DOREN C In C in e m a S c op e f . D I G UPERATOR FEATURE NO. 2 * • 'H M IO N ■ FREDRIC U M • (WIRT BLOOM t I R - T V I I ' H O H 7 :1*0 I ' M I O I ( t K P H f X . R A M THE M A N W H O KNEW TOO MUCH . l a m e * s t e w a r t DO N'T G O NEAR THE WATER (i l#*n n THE F VE PENNIES H a n n a K a ' Wee huinnp^ F E S T I V A L PM Broadcasters .Guests in Austin IN T H I S S C E N E F R O M " T H E L A R K ■ 3,; Vs slory of Ss t Jean, ;Fe Archb p'aye.1 b y W . H . C r a -.cm o Dauphin of F r a "° as Slayed b. a>-e a page* Sigrid \rc, she, realizer , Dauphin crow-ed. kerihp. Hungarian U rchestra t o ria Thursday in C ity Auditorium g e t y o u r a m p l i f i e r -t u n e r s C S f ^ E E O W A Y Y O U R HI-FI CENTER 2010 Speedway G R 8-660 f f i Q I 1809 Guadalupe P) ’S s P v v / s h a v e serve I i F e UT t J r a b j A P R M A. L. L A R S O N ' 9 ' ^ fcrcler, o r J qnrerai repairs. F s e r v ic e is o u r b y w o r d * BRAKE SERVICE , TUNE-UP A N D E L E a ^ C A l , W H EEL B A L A N C E A N D A LIG N M E N T » G E N E R A L A U T O REPAIRS ► R O A D SER V IC E / / A. I ‘Auto Service With a Conscience FO* VOUGHT VISIT TO YOU* CAMPUS — SE! BCV K l OW Five Vought Divisions Provide Engineers Greater Opportunity for Space-Age Advancement Young engineers, particularly, will be interested in the new opportunities created by Chance Noughts recent rf*.* go- m ent into five divisions. F o r every V ought engineer, there is a division to mako fu llest use of his talents and to speed his persona] advance­ m ent. A nd, of course, he is backed b y the four other divi­ sions w hose balan ced activities add security to his com pany an d h is future. N ough t’s realignm ent intensifies a diversification program w hich b egan early in 1950. It gears this 42-year-Oid aircraft firm for the opportunities of the age of space. C?CHAL &K1WWC RESEARCH fo rm e r R T stu d en t NY. m ain tain s his # ' atom atic ev orcise SET THESE R E S U L T S LOSE G A IN SEMESTER RATES FOR STUDENTS A N D FACULTY W e 'r e open six for men only. V less? 1211 RIO G R A N D E e n PER i M O N T H CALL T O D A Y ! E L E C T R O N I C S D I V I S I O N N ough t electronics w ill tx* dev elo p ed , m an u ­ fa c tu re d an d m arketed in in creasin g volum e. M ilitary sy stem s under developm en t in clu de an ten n as an d related e le c tr o n ic s, groun d su p ­ port electro n ics an d an tisu b m arin e w arfare a p p a r a tu s. OUR REPRCSENTAT1VE W ill B l IN YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE O C T O B E R 26-27 C U M f , 'M i I I linkable D O Y O U HAVE 8 0 ' H O U R S T O W A R D DEGREE? If *o ' OU a r f d ig it ) !* to o r­ d er y o u r Sen ior R in g now ! O rder b e fo re O ctober 31st fo r d eliv ery b y C h ristm as. P le a se p resen t R in g C ertificate w hen p lacin g ord er. TI VT R O I It U T T " n d I I . O O H ,p,CO .O P.CO .O P.CO .O P.CO .O P.Ct N O EXTRA C H A R G E FOR FAST SERVICE the most in DRY CLEARING L a u n d r y S e r v i c e a.m. to 6:30 p.m. M o n d a y -S a t u r d a y 510 W est 19th Street • A B C Approved • Conveniently Located • Automatic Pin Setters The Bowling Center 3409 G u ad alu p e CGL 3-9161 C l A t t u r n A D V ! H U S I N G R A T E S Each Word 0 5 -word m inim um )............................... Classified Display I c o l u m n x I Inch o n # t . m e E a c h A d d it io n a l T im # 20 Consecutive Issues k words is w o rd * ?N*o"copy chan se for' co n secu tive issu e rates) * ................ . . . . * * * * * ............................E M n n i .i .i . ............... ................... .............. ............. .. D A IL Y T E X A N C lassified CALL J O H N N Y A l t e r a t i o n s W anted A p a r t m e n t s d e s i g n i n g d r e s s m a k i n g c a m ) ’ • s clo th 'a F o rm a l co n na a spec jn ;; v etc L ib b y S a c k r la e r. SNF* V> e* 48th,’ G L 3 3984. ll HOD D O N O R S AU tv needed for u sa g e n A) lonal d o n o r* now acre iountv B lood B an k. 290,. [rn pa C N R h ' o r k . F u r n i s h e d . S~' v > fo r 3 m en. i n s p e c t i o n . l r •cl C L 3-1562 'n Br lie I ‘".th F u r- c>l two bed room du» ted. B u s. K e y next STF DY-bed room. it,es ; d Also • •dwny. l .R S-5588, Help W an te d F O ! 'R P A R T V O CAL E N S E M B L E cap* ab le of re a d in g m u sic and s r-^.ng <-• .so h arm ony for r a d i o c nim.cr la ., * ma 11 in str am en tal co • bo J.. *ud* x Ing v ib e s F o r a u d itio n ap poin tm en t. (.'•tU A ustin R e co rd in g C o m p a n y GR 6-8112 rED: TV P F.SKT I F R H and c- * lion A fternoon s P re fe r under- an Make appointment by ca .mg *431. L-sAj-vW'WV'Wa—'' Rooms for Rent ROOM o r s!n *l« V ery nice i i alk era I tv* GR 2-4051 7 n igh t a t S A IL F IS H I L B O A T S ted f l b e r g O a s s r I Nits. I F ly .n u D utchm an. In t* -rs *>- I ’JU* (I Star, $*>; -kiV rn "’os. Sun bon I Sa irs. [ERAL DISCOUNTS N riter — electric portable r e m a a v a i l a b l e . 1 a ll L im KW type- . or rnH nu- .. G L 3-62", 13 Vi S i n A n t o n i o H as room for t\pe your R e a s o n a b l e . T u ^ T . O c * o W » ■ I W ^ T H E P ^ T E X A N _ P * g * ^ University Building Expansion Program At Record High, Says Alcalde Magazine W ils o n Em phasizes P o licy for Faculty B , » \ \ D K \ T A U S UF Contributors Geologists Determine Cause Not Pressured Q / Jumbled Rock Structure ™ dirwt'-r - exaj terra ed Chicago. < > r*id P . K u i p f r . o z o n a t o r ' th* «U*r«»«r> It »hould th* study o T h o u s a n d of t h e » - ' » • r n i t * r , e v i M o n a n d m o o * . in that ? rM rate . CM ber m ore . , ; i b u t f e w e x i s t o n t h * e a r t h b e r a i n * Ty,* k *f to th*Sr o n c lu v n »»> t vm&ll *, r .J^ t u ** dt*f OV*ry In . 'an' * r f i n d i c t * d i s r u p t i o n o f r r w k ' * h k h a n b y i n t o n * * & &bark • » ' * rnote< ritio b> * h o r k w a v e . h b* cau**d Ob tv im p a rt and not ny > o k a i k e v p k ^ i ' T , t h e y r e p o r t r d . The Official 1959-60 Build Lopez Leaves Austin * R\ Th* \ w * lated f’r^s ■ s rr\ that t, % assumed that about feet of the Sierra Madera • Triter has eroded away to r • underlying root strap. Tro geologists estimated th% i ^ West T^-xas crater re- to be 50 million years. f,r other known world Vv •' ;ere evidence of such an .(-> sho^k exist are the Stein- n m Germany, the Kent- : ;ri ire n Indiana. Crooked A n Missouri, and Wells Cr*ek r nnes';ep. b i R > v r » r guests, Pedomales R iver ranch, r a n r h »h. Mexican party were Johnson drove y .tp< s ’o a nearby meadow • he Provident boarded a heli- f r a 65-minute flight to : rty split up at Bergstrom - r> Base. They fanned out . r.’v in l l cars on a si r I -hopping tour that t -o trying to keep up w - Mate >s did not stop at • • campus or at the state drove slowly by, ad- j g the buildings. cl presented I/>pez Ma'ens a Texas hat and the original £ \ a proclamation making .;-.v-Tex ai Good Neigh- • I Head Cheerleader Seeks More Spirit J )hn*»-n cam e lo th* plan* ^rrie*1 the Pre sid e n t home. hH rm s vUm ked with fan- > tlft-wrmp- ad parka***# for th* via Hora. University Given Energy Machine Hi 'ram >' before the c : ( 'N ' n e - 'n ' * -* r 5 A exas w BBA Confab Date Delayed to Nov. 4 -ri p B B A Council meeting has been changed from Wednesday, r>. - .ber 21 to November 4 , 1959 at Gamma house, annotine- Do Domning, secretary. A n i w . • r M u n c U m t r t m ig v , hr 4 Wednesday, October 7\, Lopez Mateos U for th* whole ti , ief e • ‘ • ■■■ " ' . ••Wa ar* glad you cam* and we n ,n Caro* hers vr* #off» to . a* von go. ’ .Johnson a* ■ - I ■"• “ .old. '>fz Ma tool h vodbye p mc!’ will discuss the cam- r,? Tules "for the coming flee- LEN SES CO M PLETE O P T IC A L SERV IC E PRESCRIPTIONS f il l e d Ju d ic ia l Council to M eet Va. dJkw (jo &Ilm / OPTOMETRIST evident Govemmen* *udic:< r r o a d O P T IC A L 5306 b u r n e t ROAD (next door to Shopper* W orld) H e .irs: 9-6, Mon. thru Sat. • G L 2-2393 Humble will interview on the Campus October 22 and 23 ic teams from Humble Oil * Refining Company will be October 22 and 23 to interview students graduating at all Ic terne w :r campus en the degree levels ie i accounting. h oung me it in the de oil lr Humble a lead; of era pany. en gag* ;J in Re in Ho b or. UStOEL fo: md at B contr; butions • n at Humble share in the dynamic progress and growth of re .o'.cum industry. Humble is one of the leading producers the United States and is a completely integrated oil corn­ 's B town Refiners, one of > o I 'cest in tne world, ii nine and Petrochemical Manufacturing. Research centers ^.^v.^t-nont of better methods of exploration and produc­ e s n. for research in manufacUn ne, ire making sal nab. 9 o the petroleum industry. A Q u i c k L o c k at the H u m b l e C o m p a n y fjti if Opriti*1' T # I0 1 l o u n o n o , C o lit o r n iq , M it lllt ip p i, S » « M f * .CO. F lo r id a , k lo b o m o A r n o n a , G » O r S o- W o jh ir 'f lt o n . O r * g o n , A lo »ko Rtf.* " I Capacity 2 8 2 .0 0 0 b o r r # l, d a ily . Retail S*i*t T » « o i, M i l e s , a rid A r iio n o T *> o i M a n i l i r cf ta x p a id g a io lm * la n d in g HUMBLE P ’ P« U M C t : O p « r o * « cru d * oil and produc*. p ip . tin*. in T h o ., b a i to p a r i^ y *0 Tran ip o r! m e r . *K pez M a t e o s F e l l o w s h i p e x ­ c h a n g e s t u d e n t s , o n e f r o m t h e U n i ­ t e d S t a t e s a n d t h e o t h e r f r o m M e x ­ ico . t w o f o r T h e fe llo w s h ip , w h i c h p r o v i d e s J I ,000 f o r e a c h s t u d e n t , is n a m e d | in h o n o r o f t h e P r e s i d e n t of M e x - I leo, w h o h a s b e e n v i s i t i n g in t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s a n d C a n a d a a n d w h o s p e n t t h e w e e k e n d in J o h n s o n C ity a t t h e J o h n s o n r a n c h " I t is m y b e l i e f , ’’ S e n a t o r J o h n ­ s o n c o m m e n t e d to D r . Ix>pez M a ­ te o s , " t h a t s u c h e x c h a n g e s o f o u r fi n e y o u n g p e o p l e a r e s u r e r o a d to s t r e n g t h in o u r h e m i s p h e r e a n d t o p r o s p e r i t y f o r b o t h of o u r n a t i o n s . ” t h e T h e T e x a s s t u d e n t c h o s e n f o r th e s c h o l a r s h i p m a y a t t e n d a n y u n i ­ v e r s i t y in M e x i c o . T h e M e x i c a n s t u d e n t m a y s e l e c t a n y T e x a s u n i ­ v e r s i t y . T h e T e x a s s t u d e n t will h e c h o s e n b y t h e U n i v e r s i t y E x - S t u d p n t s ’ A s ­ so c i a t i o n S e n a t o r J o h n s o n will a n n o u n c e t h e q u a l i f i c a t i o n s f o r t h e s c h o l a r ­ s h i p n e x t w e e k . Greeks Register For Sing-Song Six f r a t e r n i t i e s a n d 12 s o r o r i t i e s r e g i s t e r e d M o n d a y f o r th p a n n u a l to ho h o ld D e ­ C r e e k S i n g -S o n g c e m b e r 5. E n t r i e s will ho a c c e p t e d until 5 p m . F r i d a y in th e D e a n of M e n s offiep. S p e e c h B u i ld i n g 102. F r a t e r n i t i e s t h a t r e g i s t e r e d w e r e Chi P h i , P i K a p p a A l p h a , D e l t a T a u D e l t a , A c a c i a , K a p p a A lp h a , a n d B e t a T h e t a Pi. S o r o r i t i e s e n t e r e d w o r e A lp h a G a m m a D e l ta . K a p p a A l p h a T h e t a , D e l t a Z e t a , S i g m a D e l t a T a u , Al­ p h a E p s i l o n P h i , a n d Z e t a T a u A l p h a . Al s o , A l p h a P h i . A l p h a Chi O m e ­ g a . K a p p a K a p p a G a m m a , G a m m a P h i B e t a , D e l t a G a m m a , n n d Al­ p h a D e l t a P i. D e a d l i n e f o r w i t h d r a w i n g f r o m Sin g -S o n g is N o v e m b e r 20. President Seeks Injunction Steel WASHINGTON (ZP)— President Eisenhow­ er, calling Monday a “sad day for the n a­ tion,” ordered governm ent lawyers to ask a federal court to send 500,000 striking steelworkers back to the mills for 80 days. Eisenhower issued his instructions to A t­ torney G eneral William P. Rogers about 3 1J hours afte r his special fact-finding panel re­ ported to him th a t “We see no prospects for an early cessation of the strike” which al­ ready has lasted a record 97 days. The W hite H ouse announced the back- to-w ork order will he sought in federal district court in Pittsburgh Tuesday a fter­ noon. Pittsburgh is headquarters of th e steel union. The bid will be made b y George C. Doub, assistan t attorn ey gen ­ eral in charge of the Justice D epartm ent’s ♦ civil division. B e f o r e t h e P r e s i d e n t a c t e d u n ­ d e r th e T a f t - H a r t l e y Act, t h e u n i o n p l e d g e d to fig h t a n y s t r i k e - e n d i n g in ju n c t io n to t h e S u p r e m e C o u r t , if n e c e s s a r y ’. "We will fight its is s u a n c e with said Union m ight and m a in ." P r e s i d e n t D a v id J. M cD on a ld . "Rut lf it is issu ed , w e will live u p to the l a w of our c o u n tr y .” f a c t - f i n d i n g b o a r d ' s E i s e n h o w e r r e c e i v e d t h e th ree- r e p o r t m a n t h e p a n e l M o n d a y m o r n i n g a f t e r a c k n o w l e d g e d defeat, its e f f o r t in t o m e d i a t e t h e d i s p u t e . H e to o k the 3 7 -p a g e d o c u m e n t vvith h i m to t h e W h ite H o u s e t o s t u d y w h i l e h e a t e lu n c h . liv ing q u a r t e r s A f t e r c o n s u l t i n g w ith v a r i o u s le ­ g a l, l a b o r a n d o t h e r a d v i s o r s , t h e P r e s i d e n t m a d e p u b lic h is l e t t e r to R o g e r s , s a y i n g : "It is e sse n t ia l to th e national that production be re­ i m m e d ia t e ly in the steel Interest s u m e d Industry. " F r e e c o ll e c t iv e b a r g a i n i n g h a s n o t w o r k e d in t h i s d i s p u t e d e s p i t e t h e d e d i c a t e d e f f o r t s of t h e f e d e r a l g o v e r n m e n t a n d t h e f a c t - f i n d i n g b o a r d of i n q u ir y . " I n o r d e r to p r o t e c t t h e i n t e r e s t s o f a ll t h i s t h e A m e r i c a n p e o p le , l e a v e s m e w i t h no a l t e r n a t i v e e x ­ t o s e e k a n i n j u n c t i o n u n d e r c e p t t h e e x i s t i n g law-. A m e r i c a 's hop*-* for a volun­ ta r y responsib le s e t t l e m e n t have not been fulfilled. It Is a sad day for the n a tio n .” If t h e o r d e r is g r a n t e d , t h e s t e e l ­ w o r k e r s w o u l d b e r e q u i r e d t o lo r rg r r ’ t u r n t o t h e i r jo b s f o r 80 d a y s " c o o l i n g o f f ” p e r io d t o i n t e n d e d a ll o w n e w e f f o r t s to n e g o t i a t e s e t ­ t l e m e n t . B u t if, a t t h e e n d o f t h a t 80 d a y s , t h e d i s p u t e still is u n s e t t l e d , t h e s t e e l w o r k e r s will b e f r e e to g o h a c k o n th e p ic k e t lines. A n d t h e r e tools a v a i l ­ w o u l d b e n o f u r t h e r a b l e t o t h e g o v e r n m e n t , a lt h o u g h it c o u ld c o n tin u e to t r y m e d i a t i o n . Dr. Ransom Speaks To Faculty Council D r . H a r r y l l R a n s o m , v i c e - p r e s ­ ident. a n d p r o v o s t of t h e U n i v e r ­ sity , sj»oko to t h e F a c u l t y C o u n c il M o n d a y c o n c e r n i n g t h e E x c e l l e n c e F u n d a n d P r o g r a m w h i c h e v o l v e d f r o m t h e 75th Y e a r C e l e b r a t i o n . R e g i s t r a r W. B y r o n S h i p p of the S c h e d u l e C o m m i t t e e i n t r o d u c e d th e s u m m e r s c h o o l s c h e d u l e f o r a vo te. F a c u l t y C o u n c il a p p r o v e d t h e n in e - w e e k s e s s i o n w h i c h w ill b e g in J u n e 13 a n d r u n t h r o u g h A u g u s t 16. i n s t i t u t i o n a l L a r g e r a c c o u n t s d i s c u s s e d b y D r. r e ­ i n c l u d e d R a n s o m s e a r c h . r e s e a r c h , p r o g r a m m a t i c g r a d u a t e e d u c a t i o n p r o g r a m , in d i­ v i d u a l r e ­ s e a r c h c o ll e c t io n s . l is te d t h r e e s m a l l a c c o u n t s I l e t o ta l o f $60,000. T h e y a r e w i t h a f o r i m p r o v e m e n t of t e a c h i n g a n d t e a c h i n g e x p e r i m e n t r e p o r t s , e v a l - r e s e a r c h , a n d f a c u l t y Law Students Win Moot Court Case u a t i c n a n d p l a n n i n g , a n d s u r v e y s a n d c o n s u l t a n t s h i p D r . R a n s o m e m p h a s i z e d t h a t n o f a c u l t y s a l a r ­ t h e s e p l a n s , no ies a r e r a i s e d in b u i ld i n g o r b u i ld i n g i m p r o v e m e n t is i n c l u d e d , n o l i b r a r y c o lle c tio n s a r e p r o v i d e d f o r d e p a r t m e n t a l li­ b r a r i e s , a n d U n i v e r s i t y f u n d s a r e no t b e i n g u s e d a s p r o m i s s o r y n o tes a g a i n s t m a t c h i n g fu n d s. felt D r . R a n s o m it h e a r t e n i n g t h a t t h e B o a r d of R e g e n t s s u p p o r t ­ e d t h e E x c e l l e n c e F u n d n n d P r o ­ g r a m a n d t h a t it w a s a p p r o v e d by t h e l e g i s l a t u r e . ★ Deans' Council Approves 9 -W e e k Term Retention C o n ’i n u a n c e of t h e n i n e - w e e k s u m m e r s c h o o l s e s s i o n w a s r e c o m ­ m e n d e d u n a n i m o u s l y b y t h e D e a n s ’ C o u n c il a t a r e c e n t m e e t i n g . T h e in­ s h o r t e r s u m m e r s e s s i o n w a s t i m e th is a u g u r a t e d f o r t h e f i r s t t w o s i x - w e e k r e p l a c i n g t h e I y e a r , s u m m e r .sessions u s e d b e f o re . C e r t a i n s c h o o l s a n d c o ll e g e s s u c h a s p h a r m a c y a n d l a w will c o n t i n u e t w e l v e - w e e k s c h e d u l e , h ow - E d I . a n d r e n n d F r a n k H o u s e r , J o n a t h e c v p r - l a w s t u d e n t s , w o n U n i v e r s i t y U n i v e r s i t y of T e x a s M o o t C o u r t C o m p e t i t i o n M o n d a y wuth a m o c k c o u r t c a s e a b o u t t h e a l l e d g e d un- j t h e b u d g e t r e q u i r e d f o r a l a w f u l e n t r y o f a s o c i a l w o r k e r into a h o m e . s e s s io n , it w a s w is e to c o n t i n u e t h e p l a n s t a r t e d l a s t s u m m e r . T h e C o u n c il e x p r e s s e d t h e b e li e f t h a t a p a r t f r o m c o n s i d e r a t i o n s of T h e w i n n e r s w e r e s e l e c t e d a t T o w n e s H a ll b y a g r o u p of n in e j u d g e s w h o A u s ti n s e r v e d a s m e m b e r s o f t h e S u ­ p r e m e C o u r t a t t h e m o o t t r ia l . l a w y e r s a n d L i g h t t e a m s s u b m i t e d c a s e s b e ­ t h e c o u r t . T h e w i n n e r s will f o r e r e p r e s e n t th e t h e U n i v e r s i t y a t R e g i o n a l M o o t C o u r t C o m p e t i t i o n on N o v e m b e r 20-21 in H o u s to n . L a n d r e n n d H o u s e r will c o m p e t e a g a i n s t s t u d e n t s f r o m l a w s c h o o ls in l o u i s i a n a , A r k a n s a s , O k l a h o m a a n d T e x a s . Royal Spirit Group To M eet Today at 4 p.m. T h e R o y a l S p i r i t C o m m i t t e e w ill in A r c h i ­ m e e t T u e s d a y a t 4 p m . t e c t u r e B u i ld i n g 305 T h e c o m m i t t e e w ill d i s c u s s t h e R i c e p e p r a l l y to b e h e ld F r i d a y n i g h t a n d m a k e a d v a n c e p l a n s f o r th e S M U g a m e . A c c o r d i n g G a y n o r K e n d a l l , a n A u s t i n law’- r a l l y w ill y e r h a s b e e n Moot C o u r t P r o g r a m v e r s i t y s i n c e 1954. t h e d i r e c t o r of Hill H a ll. to A v is T i e b e r , c o ­ t h e R i c e p e p a t C a r u t h e r s n i g h t a n d a t t h e U ni- . p r o c e e d in p a r a d e s t y l e to M o o re - h e a d c h e e r l e a d e r , b e g i n t h e D o r m i t o r y a t 7 F r i d a y T Group Studies Integration Issue r a c i a l P r o b l e m * of i n t e g r a t i o n it tho U n i v e r s i t y w e r e d i s c u s s e d a t i m e e t i n g of th e R a c e R e l a t i o n s cc of the U n i v e r s i t y " Y ” C M m d a v a fte r n o o n . In d e s c r i b i n g s e g r e g a t i o n t h e i m p u s , A n t h o n y H e n r y , c o m m i t - t e e c h a i r m a n , n a m e d H o m e D r u g , t h e N i g h t H a w k Sn vs S h a k - f i e ->n’v rd e g ’-a t e d e a t i n g p l a c e * it e x i s t s a r o u n d * ’ . i'i o n a n d t h e s n e a r th e c a m p u s . M r e t h a n SO p e r c e n t of 600 s t u - tw o s u r v e y * d e s e g r e g a t e ^ k - r t s q u e s t i o n e d ' o f y e a r r e s t u i r a n t s , h e s a i d . f a v o r e d In s t u d e n t ^RECTORY Going Up—Going Down A s t h e c i d D ra m a B u il d in g is b e i n g c o n s t r u c t i o n c f t h e Te xas U n i o n a d d i t i o n b a c k g r o u n d ) c o n t ^ u e r'. G u t t e d b y f i r e r a z e d , (in last J a n u a r y , t h e D r a m a B u il d in g has b e e n c o n ­ d e m n e d , e x c e o t f o r t h e b a s e m e n t , w h i c h w a : b e i n g u s e d b y t h e D r a m a D e p a r t m e n t t o ho us e w o r k s h o p s . M u c h o f t h e d e b r i s o f t h e b u i l d i n g is b e i n g c h u t e d d o w n t h e c y l i n d r i c a l f re e s ­ c a p e on th e n o r J h e n d o f t h e b u i l d i n g . 7- i V ‘r " — Photo by Venne Reps Vote to Endorse 28-Plank Platform s t u d e n t s all g a r d to s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t . is n e c e s s a r y in r e - i m e n a n d m o r e p u b l i c i t y of th o se j s c h o l a r s h i p s t h a t a r e a v a i l a b l e , e s ­ E n d o r s i n g a " n e w c o n c e p t in s t u ­ d e n t g o v e r n m e n t , ” R e p r e s e n t a t i v e P a r t y S u n d a y n ig h t u n a n i m o u s l y a d o p t e d a 28- p l a n k p l a t f o r m f a ll e l e c ­ tio n s . d e l e g a t e s v o t in g t h e f o r T ile p a r t y p r e s e n t s its fall p l a t ­ in th e f o llo w in g i d e a l s f o r m w i t h m i n d : in T h a t a m o r e m a t u r e a n d i n t e l l e c ­ t u a l a t t i t u d e is n e e d e d in r e g a r d to e v e r y p h a s e of c a m p u s life a n d e s ­ to a c a d e m i c r e l a t i o n p e c i a l l y f r e s h m a n o r i e n t a ­ r e s p o n s i b i l i t y , i n t e r n a t i o n a l a n d tio n . n a t i o n a l a w a r e n e s s , g o v e r n m e n t , s t u d e n t a n d g e n e r a l s t u d e n t w e l f a r e . T h e s e t h e five p o i n ts f o r m p l a t f o r m a n d will bo t h o m a j o r p o i n ts w i t h w h i c h ‘ t h e e x e c u t i v e s a n d a s s e m b l y m e n will h e c o n c e r n ­ ed th o c o r e o f T h a t t h e r e is a d e f in i t e n e e d fo r m o r e c o n t a c t b e t w e e n f a c u l t y , a d ­ m i n i s t r a t i o n . a n d s t u d e n t s in w o r k ­ ing f o r t h e g e n e r a l w e l f a r e of s t u ­ d e n ts . The p ar ty an n ou n ce d p lan s to e x te n d Its a c tiv i ti e s . A cco rdin g to the projvosal, "T h rou gh Its o r g a n ­ ization, tho p arty will fo r m r e ­ s e a r c h g r o u p s to stu d y th e v a r ­ ious q u e s tio n s and p r e s e n t fa r ts and s u g g e s t io n s to Ihe s tu d e n t as r e g a r d l e s s of party solubly m e n affiliation. T he R e p r e s e n t a t iv e P a r t y will fo r m sp e c i a l c o m m i t ­ t e e s to work on the v a r io u s pr o­ j e c t s d e s i g n a t e d . ” The.se a r e a s in c l u d e t h e f ollo w ­ ing : M a k e all c o n f e r e n c e r o o m s a v a i l - I a b l e in t h o s e b u i l d i n g s w h i c h s t a y o p e n in t h e e v e n i n g s ; P r e p a r e a p a m p h l e t l is ti n g all U n i v e r s i t y l i b r a r i e s , t h e i r c o n t e n t s , a n d t h e i r h o u r s ; M a k e c l a s s r o o m s in t h o s e b u i l d i n g s w h i c h s t a y o p e n in t h e e v e n i n g s ; a v a i l a b l e p e c i a l l y tu it i o n s c h o l a r s h i p s ; (2) M o r e p u b l i c i t y o f nil a v a i l ­ a b l e s c h o l a r s h i p s ; (3) W o r k w i t h b u s i n e s s e s a n d a n d f o r m o r e f u n d s i n s t i t u t i o n s p r i z e s a n d s c h o l a r s h i p s ; P r e p a r e a t h e s e p r o f e s ­ list of s o r s a t t h e U n i v e r s i t y w h o w o u ld s t u d e n t to s p e a k be w illin g g r o u p s o n i n t e r e s t s t h e i r s p e c i a l a n d c i r c u l a t e s u c h a list, t o In c lo s in g t h e m e e t i n g a t th e A lp h a C h i O m e g a h o u s e , c h a i r m a n G a r y N o r d h c i m e r s t a t e d , " R e p r e ­ s e n t a t i v e P a r t y s p l a t f o r m r o v e r s t h e U n i v e r ­ life a t all a r e a s of sity . W e a r e a p a r t y s e e k i n g to b e t t e r i n d i v i d u a l s r i g h t s a n d o p p o r t u n i t i e s . ” t h e R e p r e s e n t a t h e P a r t y c a n d i ­ d a te s, ste er in g c o m m i t t e e m e m liers, party a s s e m b l y m e n , student ass o cia tio n o f fic e r s , and c o m m i t ­ t e e c h a i r m e n will h a v e a p r e - c a m p a i g n m e e t i n g at the De I til G a m m a h o u se T h u r s d a y at 8:30 T he ta P i ho u se Thursdnv at 8 P r e p a r e a r e f e r e n c e m a n u a l f o r m e m b e r s of t h e D i s c i p l i n e C o m m i t - , t e e ; T h a t p r o p o s a l s c a n n o t o n l y h e d i s c u s s e d ; t h e y m u s t a l s o h e c a r ­ r i e d o u t. T h a t t h e r e P r e p a r e a p r o g r a m o f r e g u l a r s e m i n a r s a t a p u b l i c i z e d t i m e a n d n a t i o n b e t w e e n t h e s e v e r a l o r g a n i - p l a c e a t w h i c h t i m e i n f o r m e d por- so n s w o u l d p r e s e n t n n d d e b a t e v a r z a t i o n s on c a m p u s ions c r i s e s n n d p r o b l e m s ; v o l v e d in s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t . l a c k o f c o o r d i- t h a t a r e is a in ­ T h a t a m o r e r e s p o n s i b l e ro le for Nixon-Rockefeller Battle Lines Drawn IP A N ix o n - R o o k e - C H IC A G O , f e l l e r c o n f e s t th e R e p u b l i c a n fo r p r e s i d e n t i a l n o m i n a t i o n o p e n e d u n ­ o f fi c i a l l y M o n d a y c it y w h e r e tile p a r t y c o n v e n t i o n will be h e ld n e x t s u m m e r . tin s in G o v e r n o r N e ls o n A. R o c k e f e l l e r of New Y o r k flew in fo r a t w o day w h i r l w i n d v is it w h i c h m a y tost his a b i l i t y t o w in s u p p o r t in t h e s t r a ­ t e g i c M i d w e s t , now h e a v i l y in f a ­ v o r of V ic e P r e s i d e n t R i c h a r d M N ixo n Roc k e f l l e r so f a r is N i x o n 's o n ly s e r i o u s c h a l l e n g e r f o r tile n o m i n a ­ lin ed u p m e e t i n g s w i t h tion. H e M i d w e s t R e p u b l i c a n in­ c lu d i n g G o v e r n o r W i l l i a m G . S t r a t ­ to n of Illinois, w h o h a s e n d o r s e d no p r e s i d e n t i a l n o m i n e e . S t r a t t o n h a s b e e n m e n t i o n e d a s a p o s s ib le v i c e p r e s i d e n t i a l c a n d i d a t e l e a d e r * , R o c k e f e l l e r h i n t e d lie w o u ld m e e t w i t h a r e p r e s e n t a t i v e ti >m W is c o n ­ sin , site of a k e y p r e s i d e n t i a l p r i ­ m a r y ' n e x t y e a r . N e w s m e n w e r e u n a b l e to get f r o m R o c k e t e r a f o r m a l d e c l a ­ r a t i o n go in g b e y o n d h is o f t - r e p e a t ­ ed s t a t e m e n t t h a t he h t s not y e t m a d e u p his m i n d w h e t h e r to r u n . O n t h e o t h e r h a n d in* w mid not r e ­ m o v e h i m s e l f a s a p o t e n t i a l c a n ­ d i d a t e R e f e r r i n g t h e e x c u r s i o n s to t h r o u g h o u t lie p l a n s c o u n t r y , R o c k e f e l l e r s a i d t h e y h a v e n o j*> l u t e a l s i g n i f i c a n c e a n d is m a k i n g t h e m o n ly a s c h ie f e x e c u ­ tiv e of a m a j o r s t a t e t h a t h e t h e Dr. Roach W ill Address *Y’ On US-Soviet Policy D r , J a m e s R o a c h , a s s o c i a t e , p r o ­ f e s s o r o f g o v e r n m e n t will sjre a k on t h e " E a s t T w a i n Shall M e e t ” W e d n e s d a y at 7 p m . a t th e U n i v e r s i t y " Y ” a n d W e s t : W h e t h e r He will d i s c u s s B u r i a n A m e l i- th e b a c k ­ i*>lu:cs. T h e e a n f o r e i g n policy a n d til*, g r o u n d * of p u b l ic is i n v it e d . tw o Registration Begins P h o t o by Venne Bui .rn. Engineering Hopefuls Challenge for Public Issue Debate the! if d a t e s f o r public ! is w h a t t r e p r e s e n t s the p a r t a te d . C o m p i l e a h a n d b o o k f o r f o re i g n s t u d e n t s to h e l p p r e p a r e t h e m for life a t T e x a s , t h is h a n d lro o k to be m a i l e d to t h e m b e f o r e t h e y l e a v e h o m e ; H a v e a c o m m i t t e e to s t u d y th e C o n s t i t u t i o n a n d p r o f u s e a n y n e e d ­ e d c l a r i f i c a t i o n s o r i m p r o v e m e n t s ; C o n d u c t a q u e s t i o n a i r e poll of a ll p r o f e s s o r s to g e t t h e i r r e a c t i o n to t h e v a l u e n n d n e e d s o f s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t ; W o r k in t h e a r c a of s h o l a r s h i p f o r : i i ) M o r e s c h o l a r s h i p s fo r f r e s h - Action Platform Is Due Tuesday A c tio n r n rty' m e m b e r s f a il e d to c o m p l e t e w r i t i n g of t h e i r fall c a m ­ p a i g n p l a t f o r m M o n d a y , a l t h o u g h a m e m b e r of t h e S t y l e s C o n in t- too s lid t h a t p l a n k s will be r e a d y T u e s d a y . a d e b a t e o p e n t o t h e p u b l i c , ” Glas­ s e r sa id . " O t h e r w i s e t h is p r o p o s a l by’ m y is n o t h i n g b u t a p u b ­ o p p o n e n t s in f r o n t of lic i ty s t u n t c o n d u c t e d a h a n d f u l of p a r t i s a n i n d i v i d u a l s , " he c o n c l u d e d . le s s g e n e r a l f u r t h e r s t a te d . t a l k a n d i s s u e s a n d a w o r k ­ to p r o b l e m s w h i c h T h e c h a l l e n g e " W e vv a n t m o l e s p e c if i c s o l u t io n a b l e wall b e p r e s e n t e d . ” ‘ I d o not w i s h t h e h e l p i n g t i m e to w a s t e t w o o p p o s i n g c a n d l - Ticket Sales High For UT-Rice Tilt T w o I n d e p e n d e n t c a n d i d a t e i t h e E n g i n e e r i n g A s s e m b l y m a n a c h a l l e n g e 5 l o n d a y R e p r e s e n t a t i v e f o r a p u b l ic d e tot P a r t y < b a t e . t w o c a n d i d a t e s T h e c h a Hem?e w a s is s u e d b y R o n n i e B o y d a nd T r e n t C a m p b e l l , I n d e p e n d e n t s , to M a u r ‘i r e B o k e a n d K e n n e t h < B a s e r . R cpi c s e n t t- tiv e P a r t y , fur • M o n d a y " C a rn p a ig tis t o d a t e In a v e b e e n b a s e d o n p o p u l a n t y but ■we b e li e v e in q u e s t i o n th** d u c t e d on s a i d : d a t e s . a c a m p p o p u l a t 'd I n d e p e n d t e n t c a n d i - is a s s e t s of a t w o s p e c if i c t h e I'toke s t a t e d i h a p p y to m e e t t h a t h e w o u ld b r t h e o t h e r c a n d i d a t e s f o r E n g i n e e r s ig A s s e n t b l y m a n in a p u b l ic d e b a t P. " l f I r an b e c o n ­ v m e e d s t a n d e ffo rt t w o o r t h e i r i n d i v i d u a l s t a n d s on I p u b l i c i t y , ” h e i s s u e s , ” s a i d t h r e e >f . M a r v i n R o g e r s , f o r m e r p a r t y c h a i r ­ m a n . t h e m a j o r to " M y o p p o n o n t s h a v e to w h a t m e d e b a t e o p e n ti > trie p u n t t h e y rcfcir c h a l l e n g e d to a s a T h e p l a t f r o m h a d b e e n dis. a s ­ . veering t h is ch a l l o n g e , I.et m e em- sert e a r l i e r in S u n d a y ' s o p e n m e e t ­ ive I ie! , p h a si/.e ing in t h e Union. A U .u t 25 p e r s o n s , a t t h e m e e t i n g h e a r d s o m e of th e t e n t a t i v e p l a t f o r m p l a n k s d i s c u s s - is rn v Ifirm t h a t rt . t h a t b e f o r e th*e s t u d e n t ,i , ’ision con m a k e o n t t o repro- c e r n i n g w h o m se n t t h e m a s E ngineer! c g A s s e t : ! intel j, in P a r t y < u n d u l a t e s ( o r of- th e fall e l e c t i o n a d d r e s s e d ’Cling fo llow ing a s p e e c h by I W y m a n , t h e y i Act i. f i l e if t h e rn R o g e r Spell p a i g n , P a r t v a n u p h ill b a t i k p a r t y w o r k e r s . ing c a m ­ of t h e tipi th e Ai tutti to rs < d i e d l o n g e r a n o v e l t y . ” ' It s n o w , ” h e to ld the M arsh all Lays in State WASIM! T O N r Un fla g w h i c h he s e r v e d in w a r a n d jrc a c c , t h e b o d y of ( J e n e r a I of th e A r m y * i e o r g * U a t le t t M a r s h a l l la y in p u b l i c v i e w M o n d a y . w h o t h e c a n d ! d a t e s a r e t h e s e ca rid ala t es s t a n d I o r a d e b a t e p ro ; rosed vv ou pi ' h th:* p u r r *se. I n m c o m p l e t e , ly for i t . ” s a i d G l a s e r . a n d w h a t If such l i e f u r t h e r s t a t e d ‘ die a t t e n d ­ a n c e of a l a r g e p e r c e n t a g e of E n ­ g i n e e r i n g s t u d e n t s to a d e b a t e of t in s t y p e is not |*>s.*ihlc d u e to c o n ­ flicts of s c h e d u l e d c l a s h e s . ” " I f t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n o f th e C o lle g e of E n g i n e e r . rig w nil I d o t i m e m i s s . l a s s e s f o r t h e p e r i o d t th a t t h e d e b a t e is to be s c h e d u le d t h e stu t o allow all of in o r d e r dents to attend, then t h i s w o u l d be A Long-Awaited Purchase to by Yenno si o f a of a at ough p.m., if any remain. m a - e ^ a i n d e r of mo wee*. a v n K r u 1-4 e J rt \ T u e s d a y , O c t o b e r ^ 1 9 5 9 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P a g e 2 Hie W ell See' Routine If it didn’t all srem to br such a coin­ cidence, Lyndon B. Johnson could be a c ­ c u sed of grabbing easy page one tiead- lines on Monday. P r o p a g a n d ists and politicians have be­ c o m e a w a r e of the fact that new s is u s­ ually “ slow" for the Monday m orning pa­ pers. So th e y often capitalize upon that situation b y “ m ak in g their own h e a d ­ lines." B u t w h e n y o u ’r e h o s t i n g t h e p r e s id e n t o f M exico, ( a s t h e s e n io r T e x a s s e n a t o r w a s o v e r t h e w e e k e n d ) it's e a s y to m a k e t h e local d a ilie s— w i t h o u t tr y in g . ★ ★ W h a t re a lly w a s m o st o b v io u s In M o n ­ d a y 's h e a d lin e s w e r e v a r i o u s r e f e r e n c e s to S e n a t o r J o h n s o n ’s possible p r e s id e n tia l c a n d id a c y . “ I d o n 't e v e n w a n t to ta lk a b o u t It," S e n a t o r J o h n s o n sa id S u n d a y . t h a t H e told r e p o r t e r s , h o w e v e r , h is s t a t e m e n t s o f t h e p a s t still stoo d. H e h a s R e p e a t e d l y s a id h e is n o t a c a n d id a t e . H e r e c e n tl y te le v isio n a u d i e n c e t h a t if t h e D e m o c r a ti c n o m i n a ­ tion w e r e t e n d e r e d h im b y t h e n e x t c o n ­ v e n t io n h e w o u ld w a n t to “ t a k e a lo o k " a t it. n a tio n w id e to ld a P erhaps the really significant new s of the w e e k en d c o n c e rn in g I .It I s c a n d id a te­ ship, w a s the boom set off In Dallas by S p e a k er Sam Rayburn. T h e S p e a k e r s a id th e J o h n s o n c a m p a i g n in T e x a s in te n sifie d w o u ld b e in s u r e t h e se n a to r s “ f a v o r i t e s o n " d e s ig n a ti o n . It w o u ld e r u p t n a t i o n a l l y o f its o w n m o ­ m e n t u m , M r. R a y b u r n a d d e d . to ★ ★ I t s r a t h e r t ir in g to sit h a c k a n d see to t h e m s e l v e s . . . maybe I’ll * t e a g e r c a n d i d a t e s f o r c in g s a y , “ W ell, I d o n ’t k n o w if . . . t a k e a n o m i n a t i o n it’ii be in to when Senator t h e open with W h a t a relief J o h n s o n c o m e s o u t h is c a m p a i g n i n g . B n now, the fo r e g o n e conclusion is th a t he w a n ts the D e m o c r a tic nom ination. His “ m o d e r a te " role, h ow e v e r , m ay present so m e in teresting situ a tio n s with e x tr e m a T e x a s liberals and c o n s e r v a tiv e s w hen tho Jo h n so n hat finally “ g o e s in the ring." Go Early N ow is a g o o d ti m e f o r g r o u p s to b e g in w o r k on p r o j e c t s fo r r a is in g ( ’n rn p u s C h e s t f u n d s . K ic k o f f d a t e fo r t h e c a m p a i g n p r o p e r will b e N o v e m b e r 6. H o w e v e r, j u d g i n g f r o m r e q u e s t s a l r e a d y In f o r 1 95 9-60 fu n d s, o v e r a ll n e e d s of t h e C h e s t p r o b a b ly will he a b o u t $2,0 00 m o r e t h a n r e q u i r e d last. y e a r . I T will h a v e to s t a r t e a r th is y e a r ’s y a n d w o r k needs. A n d l a t e to m a k e “ e a r l v ” is now. GOP Rises Again Well, well, the Young Republicans arc not completely overwhelming. rising again. Yes, t h e y ’re h a v in g their o r ga nizational m e e tin g at 7:30 p.m. T uesday in e x p e r i ­ m ental Science Building 300. Establishment of the Young GOP organ­ ization is encouraging; It perhaps means that political apathy on this campus is F u r th e r m or e , it m e a n s th at th e r e ’ll he a second side to present its view points d u r­ ing pre-election m o n th s ahead. As one of tire Young GGP members said, “We want to get students interested in politics. We feel that students should be aware of w h a t’s happening." W o r l d o f S tu d e n ts Contempt for BMOC By D I WI \F. YADA P a r t II I would like to c l e a r up any confusion bet ween the Big Man on C a m p u s nm! tho politician. The BMOC is usually far from bein? int erest ed in polities. Hi* ideal is “ school spi rit , ” and I that school spirit is one bolter of strongholds of fi rmest conf or mi t y on c a mpus . tho It s e e m s to m e (in Hie Ugh! that of m y personal c o n t a c ts ) th,, students who a r e rcallv Iii Too Wet to Plough :r Ii\ KOBI UT KOKI) Associa ted P r e s s VV rl|er Taws than t h r e e y e a r s a 140 it s ol e mn President, Ei se nhowe r flew to a d r y T e x a s and viewed fi rst hand a dro u g h t d is as t e r so va s t fully few pe r s ons could c o m p r e h e n d it. He wouldn't, know the place today. VV tie re farmer*, and ranches on c e pleaded xx 11ti the P resident for loans to s a v e their land and su b s id ie s for feed to s a t e their r a ttle , they now h a v e only one c o m p l a i n t : The m ud Is too de e p for the ha r ve s t , a n d The two 1 ainv spells did It. F a r m e r s r a n c h e r s h a v e enough mo i s t ur e in Ihe ground to a s s u r e w i n te r pa st ur e s, fall seeding, arui a proba bl e c a r r y ­ over into tile spring. Cit ic*, -ust s c r a m b l i ng enough vv ' Pe r for dr i nking t hr e e thei r ye a r s al most with hri could view ago, ne lakes for ighted w a r n of thp ’n r i ve serious at- a citizenship r e ­ pinned and brat k- he dr ought years . Is Instance, still reservoirs, d a n drought v o i r * and for for is tnomtiori jsh watei Dallas, building both for a population projected beyond the w a r 2,(MN). Amari ll o as anot her exampl e, obtains u P e r from wells from a huge unde r gr ound w a t e r r e s ­ that underlies muc h of ervoi r the Panha ndl e Eisenhower flew into a vastly di l at i on rat ing county of 17,- m a r y of lOJkiO for ♦‘lief office as to p '■st in d to st e n c food issues Hi,. October, only half finish­ ed, a l r e a dy is tile wr i t es ' in his­ tory in some places. San Angelo, whor e Ei se nhow­ e r c e nt e r e d his inspection tour, is well above n o r m a l the y e a r with 30 IS int he*, gr ea t est since 1942, Including the wettest In 133(1. S e p t e m b e r of record. San Angelo r ecorded only 4 36 inches for the y e a r to Ort for I What a r e the prospects for a n ­ ot h e r d r o u g h t ’’ In UM 7, as the seven y e a rs of drought w e r e c losin g. Dr. V an ce Moyer of the I n I vc rally of T e x ­ as predicted another would Im In full sw in g around 1975. He said r e c o r d s show se ve r e dr ought s in the Southwest h ave c e nt e re d on 1875, 1803, 1913, 1033, a nd 1955, giving c onsi de r ­ able s uppor t to those who be­ hove in w e a t h e r cycles look with the childish forested and a c t iv e high c o n te m p t at Big Man On < amptis. fact to succeed Howe ve r , die r e m a i n s (hat the BM( X ' enjoys a gr e a t force* popul ar i t y on < ampu*. the consi derat i on of the a d m i n ­ istration, and p r oba bl y he ha* m o r e c hanc e * in life a f t e r graduat i on, in In an editorial the J a n u ­ a r y issue of the National Stu­ de nt News, the official ne ws ­ p a p e r of the mi l l ion- me mbe r ES National Student Association, the edit ors noted, “ When the Constitutional 1017 USNSA’* Conventi on < ailed for a c a d e m i c . . recognition of stu­ f r ee d o m to c a mp u s , dent c o mm u n i t y , nation an d God, it st udent desire* spoke but not f r a i n thing a ma j o r i t y worn willing to work or to s a c ­ rifice to bri ng a b ou t . ” responsibility for CS long as In niy opinion, sacrifice is die key word in the whole m a t ­ the A me r i ca n ter As idea st udent h a s of wha t a ct ua l l y “ sacrifice me a n s , he is ve r y likely to r e ­ m a i n in a state of c ompl ac e nc y a n d indifferen< e little or no the I tilted State*, t h e ii e c u s ;i teat that the A mir- lean stu dent Is “ politically i l ­ lite rate " Is e x a g g e r a te d and u n ­ fair. G iven n c ross se ction of a student generation in I r a n e e the ami In p e r c e n t a g e of p o l i t e , ii lite ra c y is not muc h higher in F ra n co, although students a r e often cited fur their pollticixiti. in the a* pul­ ped a s WI I rein Ii b v ! *Oun5 TO [0+10 A 3 3 IC 3 • fO i/Atf CHURCH/ S ~Q 9s WOKOff? M y ou AX TA 3 S C Nj FIRST OIA IR 5PAU SAUSMfcM I | \ ! I \ / r \ / A i l th o Im By ; CS ar it tea lh stud cr; ii Ohe .• a c t c o n flee. . cie nt s tud< The mimic plains Ileal c a m p i i c a n. met. ll. dents In d a n her, I i crease) beenus afford a i he w o r d s a r n ­ i es tho usual rra- ’V Ame r i ca n st u­ t hei r attt- nning Iii a l w a v * I ll I 111 I'll lit to coo- I e on student* e x - f tho lark of polk tho A m e ric a n n tuition < .is, * l i e w i v , ' w h e n t he *tu- < Me I i i i v o r x l t a l r e oil strike bi O c t o ­ pi fused to p a y In- ex, they cl lit so tuftily could not i i i in c r e a s e , l e n t k d o h a v e ■y a t e not t h o s e o t h e r c o u n t r i e s . tit war * o n t h e i r s a c r i f i c e d in l i fe r e g a i n h a v e •rty, e v e n o r s e r v e t h e I i t B e ( uiitiniied " L o n iz -R a n g c P l a n n i n g w i l l ta k e care o f th e d o r m s .’ ____________ B y J O H N L E K N ew s STAND M o s a i l b o x Bv M XI KH K “ M O ” O H A N ’ T e x a n N e w s Editor . discussi ons . hehind Hush-hush closed doors t el ephone con­ . vers at i ons until the e a r l y hours of . cha l l enge s for the mor ni ng de bat e s . . signs , s pe e c he s . . . , pri nted l i t er a t ur e . . . . . . . Yep, e lection t i m e la here aga in , in t w ic e a w e a r c h a n g e It* with n a m e * and fac es. With an Oct ober 28 voting date, a lie* for c a n d i d a te s , c a m p a i g n hecti c suppor t -s e eki ng w'eek a h ea d m a n a g e r s , and di e - h a r d b a c k e r s . And m e an w h i l e . . . about 85 p e r cent of the c a m p u s ’ population will continue on its u ni nt er e s t ed, obli­ vion* way. . , . last (Only 2620 st ude nt s voted in the U n i v e r s i t y ’s 1057 fall ge ne r a l e l e c ­ tion; a p p r o x i m a t e l y 2,800 st ude nt s e a s t ballots. Total is about e nr o l l m e n t University 18.(XX). I yea r , But Ihl* “ s i l e n t ” 8.3 per c en t will e v e n tu a lly “ apeak o u t ” . . . T h e s e non voter* will be the one* to yell student loude*t In c r i t ic i s m g o v e r n m e n t. of . . . When a fellow sings his own prai ses, he hits m a n y s our notes. . . . Nothing i* done in a d a y - not if you put off e ve ry t hi n g until tomorrow. ★ * if ★ ★ ★ M onday w a* n d a y of rejoicing lca*t t h r e e group* of p e r ­ for at son* in the A u*tin n r e a — operator* at the Quin D orm * (K ln xolving pin* the (|uad D o r m * ), e m p l o y e * at the R e g i s t r a r * o f f ic e , and in f o r m a ­ tion operator* at Hie S o u th w este r n Bell T e le p h o n e C o m p a n y . The r e a s o n : T h e U n i v e r s i t y ’s 1959-60 Official Student. Di r e c t or y went on sale, of cours e, c o mp l et e with previ ously unknown t el ephone n u mb e r s . Che e r up, o p e r a t o r s and ot he r b e d ra g g l e d i n f o r m a t i o n - g i v e r s ; the r oughe s t t i me s h av e pass ed. * * Daily T ex a n he a dl i ne s one y e a r ago this w e e k : P etition Ask* Union To Bun Boat Dock* E x a m E x e m p t i o n Pr o p os a l Shelved by F a c u l t y Council T r x a * B a n k * Fourth In N atio na l Standing* Jupi t e r - C Signal Izist Seconds After L au n c h P r iv a te D orm Phone* E nd orsed by A ssem bly * * W e ’ve also h e a r d . , . Some people n e v e r l e a r n to be ec onomi c a l until they r u n out of money . . . I at m e n sh ould e x e r c i s e ; the road to th in n es s is just around Ute bend. Jo b O p p o rtu n itie s Represent*!; R e f i n i n g ( ‘o n i i (>f T e v e r s i t v 21) a n d 21 t o w i l l gi a r t u s Ie d u r i n g I (My) ’ HI a r d t f H u m b l e ca " 111 v is t T h e I ' m - a n \ l h. . a s c a m p u s O c t o b e r i n t e r v i e w s t u d e n t * w h o n e n g i n e e r i n g a n d s «i - I n c h e m i s t r g r a d u a t e * P r o s p e c t i v e r h e i n ! al a m i e n g i n e e r i n g a t a l l d e g r e e I n m a t h e m . - i t * p l u s s e s a n d e n g i n e e r i n g m e h a m * at a d v a n c e d f o r l e v e l * o n l y , w i l l b e p e r m a n e n t employment w i t h the com­ pany. i n t e r v i e w e d l e v e l * • a n d B o l d l y Ii s. a W a r n n t h e P r u d e n t i a l J o h n s o n o f I n s u r a n c e C o m p a n y o f A m e r i c a O r d i n a r y D i v i s i o n A u s t i n B r a n c h , w i l l o r i n t e r v i e w J u n e g r a d u a t e s w i t h a m a j o r In l i b r r a l a r t s o r b u s i n e s s o n W e d n e s d a y O c t ­ o b e r 28 P o s i t i o n s o p e n a r e f o r A g e n e " R e p r e s e n t a t i v e t o m a n a g e m e n t a n d work w o u l d h e i n t h e A o t i n f u r i n t e r v i e w s i n S t u d e n t Employment B u r * I a i, I V a n e B a l ! J* Hi. a p p o i n t m e n t s a r e a M a k e J a n u a r y t r a i n e e s l e a d i n g Campus political figures got newsier and noisier, but some of thorn finally come up with a good thine. In the full draft of the fall elections, Charlie H ayden decided to m ake news while not running for any office. that m a y se e m , the n ew s Item w a s even str a n g e r it w a s for so m e th in g th a t m a d e sense. C h a r lie ’s request for tw o h ou r parking m e te r s a round th e c a m p u s lias been c u sse d and discussed en ou gh to fam ilia rize e v e r y b o d y w ith the situ atio n . S tr a n g e as in that When Charlie approached the Austin City “F a th er s” about the idea, the results were unusual. The idea was referred to the City Engineering Department and the Police Department. Mayor Tom Miller told H ayden that the city w as being generous in allowing the students to park their cars on the street overnight, which is against a city ordinance. This is more generous than it sounded to some students. At a certain Oklahoma university students have to contend with parking meters in front of a girls’ dorm w hich are operated on a 21-hour basis. The students call it “ paid love." .lust w hat the c ity plans to do a bout th e se m e ta l m e te r m o n ste r s is unpredictable, but it is hoped that th e y d o n ’t c h a n g e the rather g e n e r o u s practice of n ot pu ttin g m o re than two tickets on one e a r for th e sa m e violation. ★ ★ Texas newspapers around the state have headlined the pions of Speaker Sam Rayburn to get the Dem ocratic n o m ­ ination for Senator Lyndon Johnson. Johnson has not vet definitely stated that he will accept the nomination. “ Diplo­ matic denial," i f s called. Y e t S a m pushes on with the plans. Could ho he has inside information. Z~Tr—t ¥ J H I • • I be tirin g Line y • ‘S I K H K I X i i D B K A K I N E S S ’ To tho E d i t o r : is d r e a r y , the s e p a r a t e r ooms. loose As a m e m b e r of tile G r i e v a n c e I wa s invited to visit, C’omr nit tee tho Whit is Home for N e gr o girls on the University c a mp u s . We first 'Hie \ s t< d and w a l l p a p e r st ained W a t e r w a r k s a r e l a r g e nnd evident The girls try one ha* bri th? yellow b e d s p r e a d s , a n o t h ­ er s Pullet paint ed h e r r oo m for h e r bir t hday present last y ea r . How i an a n or m a l yming girl st udy in s i n h an a t m o s ­ o r he h a p p y phe r e ? The building is old a nd h a z a r d - fni- T h e re is no fire ext i ngui s her, a nd the eight g a ls living t he r e is a n a r r o w s t a i r ­ way. the only exit for And what if a fire w e r e to b r e a k out on Plat s t a i r w a y ? Tile c r i ck e t situat ion is no joke. Housing offi- r i al s went o v e r to sec wha t could the m a t t e r . T h e i r he done a flout solution n e w s p a pe r s stuffed u n de r doors. The b a t h r o o m s show l e a k­ the ceiling*; a g e f r om above on stops up; one of the b a t h t ub s in cr i c ket s do m a k e t he i r h o m e s the to t r y m a k e a joke of it but would you laugh if you found c r i cke t s in yo u r ha t h w a t e r cat h m o r n i n g ' ’ tubs Maybe the girls 'Hie kitchen is appall ing. 'Hie r e ­ is a n d tiny ancient. fr i g e r a t or T h e r e a r e no sinks w a s h t u b s serve The stove is also tiny, and until the ar t i c l e c a m e out in the Te xa n no one bot he r e d to fix the hinge to open t he ov e n door. T h e r e is no dining room. T r y ea t i ng your every' mea l s t andi ng up Only one ti me, so with girl ('an rook a t a 'Hie stove eight is ga*- l i ght e d; a ga i n, no fire e x­ tinguisher. it ta ke s a while. step floor t h e r e The y a r d 'I’he ba hern ar hod ui#d a* foi­ om t o q u a Intra T K-.'da'-, N o v e m b e r A st, it s c . to 12 9 I rn L ‘ nu Lrlrtnv. N o v e m b e r * 3 P ni B r i e f i n g s e s s i o n s I " f o r c a n r t l - d.i't's have hern s c h e d u le d e s fo ll o w s : »ffI ce of Dr J, (). Ash- Vi on October 21, 4 AO A c c o u n t inn; b i u n e VV ){. p rn ' t a ' «' v M o n VV ( t f f i c e o f D r Ii 425 o n O c t o b e r 22 . J o h n R. I 30 “ "i ' ' i l l b r bel l) vv ill b e a n n o u n c e d a t b r i of I n sc Hes s i ans . o b i ’ s vs h e r e e . x a m i n i ' n n s t i m S u n l e n t * e n r o l l e d V A Ari r east G r a d u a t e Adv im r In T h e U n i v e r s i t y e x a * vs h o a t t e n d e d a n o t h e r co, e g * o f o r u n v e r s t t h e 1959 s u m m e r s o w . , n h a v e b e e n n o t i f i e d lf t h e r g u m - record U s b e e n r e c e i v e d bv th* R e g i s t r a r s O f f i c e d u r i n g l r st . d e n t " h o a t t e n d e d a n o t h e r t h e p a s t g u m m e r a n d c o l l e g e d u r i n g r e c e i v e d a c r e d i t n o t : * " ho shoo'd t h e R e g i s t r a r * o f i e e , U t n It . d n g I, S e c t i o n B. f o r f u r t h e r Instructions rigs n it ( ni l a t E L W O O D J P R E I S S A s s i s t a n t D i r e c t o r ( l f A d o .S' t The Da^ Texan O f w o n t e x pre* r d t o I r e I , in are t h e : ; e n f i t i f l i d / t o r t o r o f t h e a r t i e r o f t h e art i cl e a n d n o t iii L' ni t ernty a d m i n i U i a t i o n . c e e i n ! ) t h o s e o f t h e T h e D a l l y . e x a m a s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f ' ’ ho t ' n w « > r * u u ' l e v a l f * 6 ro stipend and salary earned by the fellow. Hughes conducts extensive research a nd developm ent in the s c ’ent fir end engineering fields. Typical program s include netwo-K ana ,< and synthesis, sem iconductor m ateria s, plasm a e ectron r s. comm .. m cations. com puting and solid state physics, atomic and rn - ®ar physics, tests O f th* general theory of re'ativsty, chem istry, phy! v chem istry and m etallurgy, inform ation theory, m ech an ics of stru c­ The d a w L e d nature of work at Hughes m akes eligibility for security Clearance a requirem ent. C l o s i n g d a t e f o r a p p l i c a t i o n s t Ja n u a ry 15. 1960. H o w to a p p l y » W n te Dr. C N W arfield , S cie n tific Education, Hug* e t A d c ra ft Com pany, C ulver C ity, California. <1 w e - / V O*-r f * Uh E L L T R O P I C S H U G H E S , . j Hughes Fellowship Programs Hr SM*., -i«M. ( J V : x*. Si v f m Tuesday, October 20, 1959 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 Merchants, DU Win in Cass A I A pair of d o e cames in Clas* A Intram ural a ra n IV' n i y night highlighted an others*. .S p monoton­ ous parade d r i r iu , . v t r , -- The biggest th rilirr ss * the* M e r­ chant's \ int rn ov< r C mien. The the contest ende d in a 7-7 tie. Merchants w in un pen* fm L ins. Robert Bush p -s cd ’n - v --. ■■ White for the w in - < rs’ TD, and Ronald Douglas to- - rd to arr.es Taylor for the C r r n ' r B a rr y Tolly J : • d to Newland for meant a 13-11 \ Upsilon Stuart • <• \ ’.t i point that ‘ tv f i r Delta p; i Sigma. Top display of power cam e from r over Pignet d : . s Caid- Brunette, lad) w Neal Arr .st: ll The Rangers e rr-! hod Ca' * is T er­ race 41-6 I eh in cl Lew is Pox who complete I 25 pa T D tosses it Oddity of the night provided bi­ i played with only verpowered s’ . I ttie Gigolos, u h six men hut Hemphill .'ll IO. Wilson C'si-y and \lex Palm ros shirred as ! hi G in •• a D( ? a slaughtered S ■•.ma Alt ha Mu 41-0 Hargrove uh /zed B i c k e r 25-0, and B-h Tm; r d led the Rat P a rk over tv- •.. . < R IC E H A L F B A C K B IL L Y B U C E K . . . re a d y to Itnoclc Texes out of e lite ? SWC Statistics I O M F Ii J, M I ‘ I IM llM i , . , . . • .. W o n I ..vt I) T ied it Sr-hanl T e x a s A n va r,sa* ................. ............. R U * ......................... S M ! ' ....................... A A M ....................... B a i l o r ................... School ..................... . . . . T e x a s A rk a n sa s ................ . . . . S M ! T C ! ....................... ....................... B a v Io r ................... R ic e ....................... . . . . 2 ___ 0 . . . . 0 S I \>()N U K O K I) vt.. n ____ 5 ____4 I -.vt (i I 0 0 2 2 0 1 I 0 T ied (j 0 I 0 0 2 (V t I OOO 667 . DOO .NIO .N r) .OOO Pe t I (XX) Mkt .625 G n 600 500 167 r i a J 3 38 39 13 13 6 * IMx 111 89 68 67 61 36 .36 I F S H IN G B A I , I C A R R I E R S T O T A L O F F E N S E IN D IA I D I A L L E A D E R S ( 297 N it (■ain . . . . . . . . . . . .. ' (T e x • i B a l l o n T im ** P la y e r t ar r iid 62 S p ik e * ( T C L ’ ) . . . . M oo? 54 .‘18 C o llin '; B u ll 33 M ( e r r ' i A A M 29 S a x to n ( Tex i ........ . . . . 35 . . . . 27 R a m ir e z l ’a»* 12 2 i 13 13 39 23 24 38 34 53 76 Opp. lh * Av B P e r T r y 5 9 t t 5 6 7 3 5 5 6 I 7 7 A v t 47 5 43 I 42 6 38 4 38 1 37 9 37 6 ( T C P 1 * v * r ( S M U ) M e re d ith S ta n le (Ba- • r) M ilste a d A C . ! ) G e o rg e M o n ro e ( A r k ' D a w s o n H a r tm a n P l y ( R a i l e r i Sen n a h i* i H ire > F a llw e lt ( B a ' V r ) ( A r k ) I i f , ( A A M t ' I S ’ M e re d ith S t a n le y M ilste a d G e o rg e ( T C C ) M o n ro e D a w so n ( U ' t ’ ) H a r m n P l y ( B a y l o r ) S o h n a b ie F a t I w e ll (A r k (Rb-e) ( B a i l o r ) ( R : e) 51 43 16 ia ’I 16 9 9 2 9 b 30 IO 13 8 7 8 J 3 4 ( T C I I P la v e r r YU ion i T c v l Sp ik e s 55 ilem on ( S M U ) I 'n vl* ( Ba v i S a x to n (T e x ) ( A r k ) K a r n s ( T C C ) H a r ris 7 5 12 9 12 « 9 2 IO I in 7 IO I 8 I 9 6 Vd* R e) 26 123 5(> 18 14 8 A * * P e r In t 6 5 2 6 11 0 25 0 9 0 7 0 4 0 In t .1 4 3 2 2 2 2 L E A D I N G S C O K F K S t o m e ralnn* 11 1 B la v e r 3 0 C o llin s (T e x ) 12 4 Ja e k s o n 17 0 M ilstead ( R l r e i 'A A M ) 8 3 M o o tv (A r k * M oreland 0 0 IlU 'e k (R t e * ) 32 f> I B u tte r ( A r k ' 7.7 ; M G u ire ( A A M ) ( T C C ) I L a c k e y (T e x ) T H 5 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 I I K k 0 (I 0 o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 7 IM* 3(i 18 18 18 18 l l I t I I 13 ]Old not p !a v I Id in t pla V 76 71 62 74 -14 so 32 9 75 IS 244 I U 96 81 59 67 fr * 68 66 36 31 L E A D I N G I* S >s K S I I T W I F Iv WANTED! U N D E R W E I G H T S — O V E R W E I G H T S — M C N WHO I A CK C NCR CY! ■v energy just or th® su pcvis'on in Cal! Questioned In Owl-Pony Tilt D A L L A S '.pi Abb Curtis, super­ visor of So'Hhwa st Conference offi­ cials, said Monday night there was a strong possibility that the official miss* I a play ’ he SM C-PJee in game that cost S M U a touchdown However, he added that he did not know what could be done about it or if an official protest would be filed. Curtis made h.s comment after viewing films of the game. The ruling was that Don Meredith, SM U passer, crossed the scrim ­ mage line before throwing and the completed pass was canceled Curtis said he had no official complaint from S M U and didn't know whether it would he taken before the conference fir not, The D allas News had hinted Monday night that SNT!’ was dis­ gruntled over the ruling that left the game a 13-13 tie Coach R ill Meek, after studying movies of the play, refused to dis­ cuss the cad ''apparently because of the 'gag' rule which prohibits coaches and other officials from criticizing decisions of game ar­ biters, ' the News said "P la y e r s who saw the picture said Meredith was fully two yards behind the scrim m age line when he lofted the shoji pass and took two long steps before c r o s s in g it " Meek refused to comment on a leport that Napper Davis, veteran referee who called the disputed foul, had telephoned to apologize after seeing a delayed telecast of the play which originated on Rice s 5-yard line. 'Mural Scores Ran**-!* H i I ii * * A * ictus T e r n e * 6 M er chim in " < .i r • 1»-n 7 (M erc hant* won <>n I e n d ra t tom, H a r g r o v e 25 B lo c k e r (I 'c c n i , , ; D e lt it 41 I i s ion I i -, 20 S ix ty- M in e rs 6 P ig n e t 11 (.a m m a S gm a A lp ha M u a D e lta R a t B ru n e tte 45, P h i K a p p a S ig m a 12 ,12 H e m p h ill 19 P h i l l C ia** H T a u D- ta P h i 12 I h i ’ a \ i 0 A lp ha T a u On e ira 20 K a p p a A lp ha 0 D elta K a p p a e p s ilo n 29 S ig m a Ph t Ep silo n 0; Theta C h i 19 P h i K a p p a T a u 0 Sports Notice f >* el ine for ct r;tu ra l ("inlf entrta* K n irte * are due In c 5 p m G r e g o r y Civ rn ,. sri i l i t R E W A R D ! GOOD HEALTH AND A TRIM {' PHYSIQUE! Frank B eespf lug a :hiev- ed these resui’s: B E F O R E A F T E R 37 11 30 C h e s t A rm s W a is t 45 16 30 130 W e ig h t 165 Anniversary Special BRING THIS AD . . . AND RECEIVE 2 Weeks Free MEMBERSHIP A 10.00 V a lu e ! This o ffe r Expires Set., O c t . 24 H O U R S : 10-10 D eity 10-6 Su n d ay LAMAR PLAZA CENTER Pie n fy o f F R E E Parking 1134 South Lamar HI 2-7871 noma a r W r t n tit, whoa! K S 'Horn Field Goal Defense Developed by Mentors It left hut not 15 miles per hour and you couldn’t , 12-7 early in the third period when irs quick kicking game, they marched 89 yards in 19 piavs have asked for a better angle in a tr od nlv once. That didn’t work that even amazed was slightly to the Coach Royal, They did th. s w . * ii •■> it pjthpr Saxton was at safety and enough to make it difficult. sensed such a play. He retreated, making a single mistake and pu-h- cd the Longhorns around like toy * then ( one hack close and seeing h > assumptions were correct, rushed hack and was there to field if. •- -*— — * — • soldiers. fashion on And Arkansas, which prides it- They showed a very effective short pass offense on this drive It was a good 41-yard kick by and had scored their first touch­ \kcrs b it it backfired ag ain . Sax- down on such a play Yet on their extra point attempt they went b r 1on took it 12 yards to Arkansas' 49 and 14 plays later, Texas scored the two points by Jim its first touchdown and La cke y's Mooty around end, Mooty around kick put the Steers ahead, end seemed like a cinch. but Clair Branch stormed in to nail him short of the goal. .sending The paint why didn’t Arkansas try another short pass? in question is Hog fans yelled long and loud after the gam* that Texas was lucky to find the breaks going their way, hut the blocked field If was a goal wasn't any break carefully designed pattern by the Texas coaching staff Texas wasn't outstanding in this game bv any means but it showed it could produce in the clutch and PPp jts head in spite of the mis­ if made. There are other takes c isos in this game that bear this out. For instance, there was the time Texas quarterbacks kept a drive alive by going for the first down on fourth down. It s true! Arkansas was inspired hut Texas was cool. NOTICE TO ACCOUNTING STUDENTS Representatives of Arthur Andersen St Co., Account­ ants and Auditors will he on the campus. Thursday and Frid ay , Octrber 22 and 23, to interview students interest­ ed in a career in pubi c ai counting. Positions are open on the staff in offices of the F.rm throughout, the U nited Stales in the areas of auditing, tax accounting, and a d ­ m inistrative account.ng. including systems The schedule of interviews is be ng prepared by the Placem ent Service of The School of Bu* ness Administration, 115 W aggenef H all All interested students arp urged to attend a short group meeting the evening of Wednesday. October 21. The time and place of thp group meeting m ay be ob- tamed from the Placement Office. An Outstanding Value presented by the Gentry LSU Leads Poll With Cats 2nd Rased on the Associated Presa Texas held on to its No. 3 na­ tional ranking behind L S U and Northwestern despite a tight 13-12 squeaker past rugged Arkansas Saturday. Arkansas actually gained stature In defeat as jumped the from 12th to 10th on the basis of their strong showing against the Longhorns losers L S U re’ ii ped the top spot by a comfortable margin despite a 9-0 squeeze by downtrodden Kentucky. The Bengals polled 68 of the 144 first place v c 'fs and totaled 1 238 points counting for a first place vote 9 for second, etc. This was the lith straight time the Tigers have led the po']. IO points Northwestern, 20-7 victor over M ichi - in after a shaky start, re­ ceived 23 first place votes and kept a tight rom on the No, 2 sprit. Although the top three rem ain­ ed Intact, the rest of the top 10 was pr tty well shaken up as Geo­ rgia Te ii. Purdue, and Iowa tast­ ed defeat. Mississippi climbed a notch to I fourth. Southern California jumped from seventh to fifth and Syracuse mover! from eigh'h to «,xth. Completing the top IO were Au­ burn. Penn stat - Georgia Tech, and Arkans is who hold down the 7, 8, 9, IO sprits respectively. Beaten e arlier in the seas n by ! Tennessee, A burn bounced hac k I to stop Georgia Tech in a 7-6 thrill­ er. Tech dr pp* ! from fourth to ninth rs a result of t v loss Despite some nervous moments by each, L S I Northwestern and Texas are the " B ig T h re e " among the nation s elite for the second straight week as they continue to lead the rapidly declining list of ma mr college undefeated, untied, teams. The top ten. points based on IO for a first place vote, 9 for second, etc. Firs t place votes and won-lost records in parentheses• 1 L o u is ia n a S t a t e (68* 2 N o rth w e s te rn <23i 3 Texas ( S ' 4 M ississip p i 5 S o u th e rn Ca! 6 S y ra c u s e (4> 7 Auburn <5i C VIi 8 Pe n n S t a t * c l i 9 G e o rg ia T e ch IO. A rk a n s a s ( I i I 2.38 I 171 1,010 989 , 769 (VTI . 462 . .913 280 . 213 (5-0) . ........ (5-0) ( t i l (5-01 (18i (12> (4-0) (4-0) (4-1) (4-0) (5-Oi B y C A R C O S D. C O N D E T e x a n S p u rt* E d it o r If O rval Faubus had been in the stands during the second quarter and seen Arkansas muff ifs biggest opportunity to defeat Texas, pro­ bably would have felt like calling out the National Guard again. Thus time however if would have been to mow’ down "T h e Big R e d ," "T h e W ild H ogs," and "T h e Thun­ dering T h ird " — Arkansas' first three units. facing a The Razorbacks were trailing fourth Texas, 7-6. and and four situation on the Texas 1.3- yard the kicking te* and specialist Freddy Akers came in to attempt, a field goa I. line T hey called for Aker* is Arkansas’ man with the golden toe and, besides, he had practiced until dark all week long for such an occasion. Everyth in g was favor The wind was to them hack, blowing in the Porkers' 'Mural Schedule T O I ( I I F O O T B A L L < l . l v s II 4 p m B r u n e t t e v* B to m q u st A rab * vs T e la s N a v y \* A r Forn P u m s n v 7 p m — W hitu s vs C o n o ly : W e in e r vs B o v e rie vs N e u se . B e rn s te in vs Mad- h a y o rrv h a rd ra M a tth e w s vs Nu* m an ; I'horpe I 'i r o n > Lew s v . I , i>. ive; sa I vs w i vs vs S c h lu n tz vs. N o e l S m ith Mv i rs. Cook vs 7 15 p rn B e rn a n fla L e p a g e : I ’.e n -v i Sto k e s i T F N N I S M N C L L S C L A S S A 4 p m — K r a m e r vs. P f ' 5 p m G a llo w a v S c h a p p e r; G u itta rd vs D o lg . R o lf vs H a m m o n d vs ( L A S S ll 4 p rn. — 55 -tshlngton i s Kskena/i vs. H a v e s vs H a ile y . S t basta vs I^an- < aster H a llm a r k vs C o n o ly ; N e a le vs B lp p e rt B ra n c h vs S h ir le y . C u rrie vs W o o d m a n W in n e r K u hrm an-C haiya- veok vs 5Vinn er O ld s-R o b erts M a c ­ 55’in n e r D a n ie l- S k in n e r : donald 5Vink!em an W illia m s vs Koan k \ ; M a rs h . M ay ha > om ch an d ra vs .astern 5 p m B a n k s vs Bro w n G risso m vs L e e ; M a so n vs M a re a k C o le vs K n ig h t K u n d e rb u rg A h n e rt vs C ra h b H e rb e r vs 5\ in n er G a y le - G riffln W in n e r A v e r s D a v is v*. 55';nner R e h o e n fie ld - H lll 5Vinner R o b ­ erts-H i no Visa M a tte l N a g ,* v.» M a r s h a ll: M c A n d re w s , vs. M y e rs N a her is , B r y a n t. M id d le to n w i n n e r vs vs The only thing the Razorbacks hadn’t figured on was a special defensive pattern that Coach D a r­ rell R oyal had stashed aw ay for such events as this. Center B ill Laughlin broke open a hole and end L a r r y Cooper rushed in to block Aker's attempt. M ike Gotten fielded it hut was tackled on the goal line However an Arkansas player drew a per­ sonal foul and it gave Texas 15 yards of breathing room. Shortly after that Texas punted out and was out of trouble. If Akers had converted as many thought he would with that seem­ ingly easy shot, if would have been his toe and not La cke y s that would have decided the score. Thorps another questionable period in which Arkansas had an­ other chance to pull ahead but did- not. This cam * on an extra point conversion after the H igs’ second touchdown. They had pulled ahead again, Few, McGuire Quit Aggie Grid Squad C O L L E G E S T A T IO N B H alf­ backs Jo n Few , junior from Mid- lothian, and sophomore Je->se M o Guire of P la in view have quit the Texas A & M football team. They failed to show up for a >quad meeting and practice Mon­ day. The two tuns, who played in T C U 'S 39-6 victo ry over the Aggies at Fo rt W orth Saturday, attended a Sunday meeting of the squad. Coach .Tim M yers, when asked " I their departure, said: about did not m ajor in rh l'd psychology but anytim e one of my players fails to attend a meeting of the squad, he's through." M yers said he was making some backfield changes to fill the gaps L o n g e r * - c r e a t e d b v t h e d e p a r t u r e o f Fe w and M cGuire. * E N G IN E E R S %- r n j ,} , ^ , 3 ,.. • ' H, *&]&#/$,'*% ' - -w>. m m P e rs o n a l In te rvie w s O N C A M P U S OCTOBER 21.22 I 23 L i v e in a m ild c l i m a t e y e a r - r o u n d , w ith cou n ties? recreatio n al, ed u cation al and cu ltu ral facilities . . . en joy a low co st of living with no state sales o r in com e ta x . T O D A Y . . . investi­ at gate C O N V A I R - F O R T W O R T H ! the op p ortu n ity aw aiting you . . . GENERAL DYNAMICS SPRING SEMESTER 1960 E u r o p e o n S t u d '* * or I n t t i t v i * e l t a v g k l f a u n * * I a g I i * h r a n g * ) th r o u g h iK a U n lv * '* i* y a1 V I a n n e l o * p h o t o a * lao rit> *g G a m * * S *v d a n ** ti wa wri th A w i t r i o a F a m ilia *, t a k a m ao!» a t I k * l f ? i l u d m l ( a n l t r T h ro * S t v d y T o v '* Through 8 *o*ra (h a Uaivaniry it aor a i i n t r a k a n ta t* i a a. *w m o n t h s in f u t o n $ 1 3 9 5 E t k o C o w a n r a v e d t r i p e c a a n N a v a l , N o w b o a r d , tu itio n a n d t t v d y ta v n S A B I N O M a o t d o m . F a b 4, M a w V ow i A P P L I C A T I O N DI A O I I NI D m F a * (a r r h a * in F o r m a t io n , a r r h a INSTITUTE OF E U R O P E A N STUDIES ta ; IO . I F S * 3 9 I W o r k e r C k , f o g * I SEMO TM IS COUPON FOf (ES lU llf T IN An odd p an t w h:ch com bines richness o f fab ric , la st­ in g sm artness, a w ashw ear Ability, is p re se n te d b y the G e n tr y . Due to recen t nnovation* in textiles, thi* su p e rio r slack of hopsacking I* within the re a ch o f a l U n iv e rsity students. G re y , G re e n , Brow n. T r a d it io n a l or C o n tin e n ta l. 9.95 Reynolds-Penland Gentry Shop 2338 Guadalupe guaranteed to fade . . . our india madras shiriaress, 17.98 skirt, 12.98 A * r raw dress. "a b ° t. Tm** s tir' S U F M H I JV S M . ii, 5? M tw SL rn* ~ WI f X mmm Tuesday, October 20, 195? THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 Candy-Striped Bus No Longer U T Landmark B y B O R M O O K E L a s t w eek a fa m ilia r U n iv e r ­ s ity of T exas la n d m a rk d isa p p e a r­ ed from the cam pus. T he D r a m a B u ild in g ? No, the orange and w hite candy-striped bus operated for o v ­ e r tw o y e a rs by the P h i K a p p a P s i fra te rn ity . T he 1948 model school bus g a ve w a y to the path of progress. A 1958 blue and w h ite Greyhound- style bus began m ak in g the route w h ich the old bus had ch urn ed so m an y tim es. T w o ye a rs ago, the P h i P s i's started operating the old school bus from th eir house at 2401 L o n g ­ v ie w to the cam pus and h ack ag ain e v e r y hour from 8 a m. to 6 p.m . In addition to som e 75 or IOO P h i P s i's the bus also picked up p ass­ engers at the S ig m a D e lta T au , D elta P h i E p silo n , and K a p p a A l­ pha T heta sorority bourses. T he idea for the bus c a m e from R u m m y J a r y , w ho reason ed that P h i P s i's w ere to w a lk from their new house to the J a r y donated cam pus e v e ry day. the bus to the fr a te r n ity w hen he gradu ated in the spiring of 1958. la zy just too rn rn O' d used last F r id a y in the pep r a lly in pep It has been used parade. ra llie s for o v e r tw o ye a rs . In addition to its re g u la r runs to the cam pu s and b a rk the new bus w ill also be h ired out for sorority retreats, road trip s to foot­ ball gam es, and ch u rch functions. it w ill pro­ D u ring the su m m e r bably he used by local churches to c a r r y ch ild ren to v a ca tio n B ib le schools. “ W e plan to le a v e 1he new bus just plain blue and w h ite .” S a n ­ ders said. The new bus seats 40 people w ith standing room for an ­ other 40 to 50. T h e old bus seated 32 and u s cro w d ed on the h e a v j e a r ly m orning and noon runs. re v e a l the p rice of the new bus but said it had been co m p le te ly covered by an alum nus of the ch ap ter. T he bus is d riven by four m em b ers of the ch ap ter who re c e iv e 85 cents for each run th ey m ake. Sanders w ould not the bus takes to T he route of ti'.e P h i P s i hon e it from the drag, down the d rag to Twenty- first Street, down T w en ty- first to Sp eed w ay, and down Sp eed w ay to the E n ig n e e rin g B u ild in g s. P a sse n ­ gers w ait at W ag g o n er H a ll, L it t le ­ field Fo u n ta in , the Co-Op. and a* the co rn er of Tw enty-fourth and G u adalu pe. Architect Wives Will Have Party The Student A rc h ite c ts W iv e s Club of th** U n iv e rs ity w ill hold a dessert-hridge p a rty T u e s d a y at 7 TD p m . at the A u s tin ’s W om en s Club, 70S S in Antonio, G uests of die club w ill tie the presidents of other w iv e s clubs on the U n iv e rs ity cam pus. , CHICKEN BURGER 4 V V ' , Pie c e s of te n d e r i n V j u J S chicken in a fine \ - 1» / fricasse e sauce . . . - —• se rved on a bun . . . with le ttu c e and to m ato . . . a bit with the c o g n o sce n te . B U R G E R H A U S 2116 G u a d a lu p e Austin, Tex. H O W A R D T O U R S ' CL,mas cst ti in M E X I C O tw o full weeks e sp e c ia lly d esig n ed for • T E A C H E R S • S T U D E N T S P E O P L E j? / • Y O U N G P R O F E S S I O N A L D ec. IR to J a n . 3 — >04 d ^ a s B $373( ' ' C S i L ' - ' A U S T IN I T I N E R A R Y 4 d a y ! l r M » , c o C i t y . 3 d a y ! I " w o r d t a m o i A c a p co. J d a y ! G a b a a ar a 4 f I d a y * n t h e c o o r t J t o w n » o f P a * i c a * o M o r e * G . a - * i a to, S a n M q a A a n c * ; * i H t o C . a r a v a c a a n d T a i c o . F E A T U R E S i r a f a m e d r e j o t " p o i a b a i d r i n g C b r , i * m a i h o ( d a y * ’ o u t - o * - t h e w a y t o w n , * * h h i » o r > e * b a c k ­ g r o u n d a n c i e n t a r c h a e o l o g i c a l i h r i n a i a n y r o n m m t a n d w o r n o f O r o t C O . R t'n a n d o ' t a r M a , c a n * r t i * t i , n a * . v a w o r k m o p t » h o w a g h a n d i c r a f t i n <5 a i t t ‘ a , c o p p e r i i » r r a n d b a l l a t w e a v i n g , F U N : g a a N e w Y e a r E v a p a r t y i n A e * p l e o c r t a a - o - d A : a p c o B a y . v t * c f t d i v e r t b u 1 f , g M » . To r P r i c e d a t ro . n d t p , V j n to ,r ,♦ r a n a ; c o m m o d a ‘ o n i a* f i n * c h i b o t a t w * n p r i v a t e b e * h 3 t a b a t " O ' ! m e a t c i a y a i r e r * » M a i i C O t y t r a v e l a * h n M e , rn b y a r r o n - d 111o n a d m o t o r r o a c h b n g a g o a t f p r o g r a m o f I g h t » # e , n g a n d I O C a a c t » * e t . F o r f i r t h#r d e * a t c o n f a c t : M r * K s + h e r H e V Z . N e a t A p e a D e *a P H o ta I (>Ci1 U n « a r » * y A * e . A i t " Te , a t G R 7 5*66 Insurance Society To Meet Today The Insurant e S o c ie ty of the U n iv e rs ity w ill m eet T u e s d a y t 7 30 p m . in the V a r s ity C a fe te ria t o e l e c t o fficers and the y e a r's p ro g ram . p' n • Students m a jo rin g in insurance f in a n c e , or re a l estate are espec­ ia lly invited to attend ' s u d Steve Zelen, a m e m b e r of the group 'Die society w ill studv insurant e p« — .- bilbies in sales and m an ag em en t. Hall to Lecture On Mathematics Pro fesso r M a rs h a ll H a ” of the 'Apartm ent of m a th e m a tic s at the 'alifo rn ia In stitu te of Te< hn< in v w ill give his second lectu re on the ‘ So lva b ility Tuesday a t H all UK). of F in ite Groups IO a rn. in G a rriso n M o n d a y s eon nm ed le c tu re ■ M ath em atical P ro b le m s of A l ­ ig n m e n t ” , C O * O P * C O e O P « C O « O P » C O * O P # C O * 2 £ Beat the Crowd! Shop How § o tnt \ o i i r f V r » < i n a l i » * ft CHRISTMAS CARDS I O", . p h i* I i i l i p to l>itl .Nut, ftiMut O r d e r p r i o r *th fu r V i n a * d e l o t r ) . ‘• C O *O P*C O *O PdCO «O P«C O »O P»CO C actus Sorority Proofs W e d n #sd«y O c t o b e r 21 \ th * ’ast d a y th a t m em bers of th# follow ing so ro rities m ay choose the V ow n proofs. A fte r th s d ate proofs will be se le cte d by th * C a c tu s S ta ff. K A PP A A LPH A THETA K A PP A K A PPA G A M M A PHI MU Pl BETA PHI S IG M A DELTA TAU ZETA TAU A LPH A hom e of M rs , K en .Tehn. ness m eeting of the N a tio n a l A ssoc IO C offee H ou r and discussion, H ille l Fo u n dation . iation of U n iv e rs ity D am es Tues d a y at 7 45 p m. in A rc h ite c tu re bus each month. 1 -Special ex am in ation s in d raw in g, B u ild in g 305. N E W P O S S E S S I O N O F P H I K A P P A P S I F R A T E R N IT Y , t h ♦ G re v h o u n d - s ty e bus has taken th e p la c e o f the o ra n g e and w h ite, c an d y- strip e d one w hich had b e c o m e a fa m iliar sight to U n iv e rs ity stu den ts. The new, 45-passenger bus, w hich is d riven by four mem­ bers o f the fra te rn ity , will rem ain just p a in blue and w hite, a c co rd ­ ing to N elson Sanders, bus m a n a g e r. W h a t G o e s on H ere IO F a c u lt y W i v e s So cial C lub, T ex a s Union. T u esd ay 9-11 C ookies, coffee, and orange ju ic e offered in sch olarsh ip bene­ fit sn ack sale, H om e econom ics B u ild in g 129. 9-9 F a ll b rin g tures 103-B. t andidates requested to in q u alificatio n s and p ic­ B u ild in g to Jo u r n a lis m 9-5 B lu e b o n n e t B e lle nom inations Jo u r n a lis m B u ild in g 107. 9-12 and 1-4 TO D raw in g for R ic e g a m e tickets. G re g o ry G y m . Rocket Society To Hear Becker L e r o y B e c k e r senior e le c tric a l on lecture student, w ill give a In e rtia l G u id ­ “ F u n d a m e n ta ls of an ce Sy ste m s, at the Southw estern R o ck e t S o c ie ty m eeting T u e s d a y at 7 TO p m . in the E x p e rim e n ta l S c i e n c e B u ild in g . F u tu re plans, such as bu ilding this y e a r 's three stage rocket and bouncing a beam off the moon, w ill be discu ssed at the business m e e t­ ing as w e ll as the progress m ade at the B a lc o n e s ex p erim en tal la h ­ ore t o n 1. econom ics, Fn g lis h finance, in­ su ran ce, and in tern atio n al trade, G a rris o n H a ll I . 2-ri R eg is tra tio n for Ten M ost B e a u tifu l B u ild in g 305. contest, Jo u r n a lis m 2 Social C a le n d a r C o m m ittee, T-fi E le c tio n C om m ission, A r c h i­ tecture B u ild in g 105. T K U T - F M . 90.7. •T V a r s ity D ebate W orkshop, Speech B u ild in g 214 4.14 and 7:15 C ath o lic classes N ew m an C lub room . in q u iry c l a s s ­ ti TO O rientation p ro g ram for vnl- unteer w o rk ers. State H ospital. 7 Sex and I /ive Stu d y G ro u p , W S F C enter. 7 TO L a re d o Club, B a tts H a ll 215. 7 TO Voting R e p u b lica n s C lub to h e a r E a r l Y e a k e l E x p e rim e n ta l science B u ild in g TOO. 8-10 F a c u lt y and staff reception, W estw ood C o u n try C lub 9 W oody H e rm a n show M u n ic ip a l A u d ito riu m . University Dames To Hear Moore Speak on Children Sin ce then the old bus had gotten a new coat of paint and m ore and m ore passengers. It began to show signs of w e a r and te a r this y e a r and Nelson San d ers, the cu rren t bus m anag er, decided it w as high tim e the fra te rn ity got a new bus. W ith the help of an alu m n u s the P h i P s i's bought the second-hand 1958 bus from a sem i-professional bask etb all team in L a k e C h arles, m ent of the d ep a rtm en t of hom e j ^ " T h T k e w 'b u s " w T s " r e m o d e l e d econom ics, w ill highlight a husi address by M iss S a lly B e th M oore “ C risis in C h ild ren 's L iv e s .” an of the child developm ent d e p a rt­ and began us runs to Ute cam pu s and back last T h u rs d a y . T h e re are about IOO rid e rs on the I he rid e rs ate barged $5 each m onth and m a y ride as often as th ey lik e from 8 a rn. to 5 p m. T he bus le a ve s the Thi P s i house at 20 m inutes to the hour and returns from the cam pus on the hour. T he group ha« extended a w e l­ com e to student w iv e s and m a r ­ ried coeds. Those w ho w ish to a t­ tend, and need tran sp ortation , are asked to contact M rs. L y n C r a w ­ ford, president, at GL-3-2168. M rs S a tu rd a y the P h i J im P ea rso n , fa c u lty w ife, pledge P s i class used the new bus to take a b o u t 200 ch ild ren from the A us­ to the C h arro s tin State School has been announced as N A U D sponsor, in addition to M rs . F re d R o d e o The p le d g e s ch aperon ed I Dc H e lm . 1 outing for th e ch ild re n . __________________ . “ W e h o p e to sell the old bus for as m uch as we c a n ,” Sa n d e rs said last The candy-striped m odel w a s Christian Group To Have Meeting The C h ristian Students A sso c ia ­ tion of the Southwest C h ristia n C h u rch w ill meet af ti p m. W e d ­ nesday at T ea House. U n iv e r s ity the T h is w ill he the first m eeting of die association, whose purpose < to prom ote fellow ship, p ro vid e a c ­ qu ain tan ce of C h ristia n youth and aid students in the s e rv ic e to the church. Its time to nominate BLUE BONNET BELLES for the 1960 Cactus N om ination form* and picture specifications are now a v a ila b le in Journalism Building 107. A ny approved campus organization m ay make up to four nominations. Bluebonnet semifinal- lits w ill appear at Round-Up R eview next spring, and pictures of finalists w ill be in the 1950 Cactus. All nomination forms and pictures must be turned in to Journalism Building room 107 by 4:30 p.m. W ed n esd ay, O c to b e r 28 P i l a t e go by Ko en % Stu dio 2306 G u d d d 'u p # no linter than W o a n e s d e y , O c t o b e r 21 et SO O p m . esday, October 20, 1959 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Taepartment B sity D ram a Iden P a yn e , guest professor of D ra m a and P a t Hingie, B r o a d w a y s ta r and Texas-ex w ill ap p ear in the p lay. M r Payn e one of the co u n try 'n outstanding au thorities on Sh a k e s­ peare and d ire cto r of the annual Shakespearean production, w ill ap ­ pear as The V oice of H is to ry in “ Jo h n B ro w n .” P a t Mingle a g rad u ate of the U n iv e rs ity D ra m a D ep a rtm e n t has recen tly starred in A rc h ib a ld M a n ­ on B ro a d w a y , and liest! s ‘J B. has also had roles 'T a t on a Hot Tin R o o f,” and * D a rk at the ’ H e s ta rre d in 'Fop of the Stairs the Hollywood m o vie “ No D ow n ’ P a ym en t in H ingie s retu rn in g to the T exas c a m p u s t u t s w eek to see the open­ ing of “ The P a rk ” on W ed n esd a y, and to speak to the dean a classes He wul a r t r e T u e s d a y for a four- d av visit in Austin. P a y n e Although M r d irected Hingie in U n iv e rs ity prod rtions of ’The T am ing of the S h r e w ’ and “ R ic h a rd I I ” , the D a lla s produc­ tion of “ John B r o w n ” w ill m a rk th eir first ap p earan ce together on the s t a g e The production Wi l l he ; seen af the D a l l a s M e m o ria l A u d i­ torium at 8 IO p rn S a tu rd a y . Oct- ■ oiler 31, anti 2 30 p m . Sunday, N ovem ber I Allied Theatre Artily Present FIRST AMERICAN TOUR' ..** A MAJOR M U S IC A L ; ; ORGANIZATION ‘n CELEBRATES i t s f l i g h t : TO FREEDOM Where a girl can get anything she wants. except a wedding ring! ■THE BEST OF ... EVERYTHING C i n e m a S c o p E C O LO R by DE L U x e f. - - HOPE I E E ^ STEPHEN BOYD SUZY PARKER MARTHA HYER DIANE BAKER BRIAN AHERNE ROBERT EVANS I0AN CRAWFORD „ as DAV© tAvAee AS AMANDA rANNO^ ~ “ FM Bi X * Tjuesi R o d e ric m a n a g e r U M bn sat as cities Delegate: tin Sync rig h t an Sunday opening tin Synv right. R and KA/ represer To st F M rad i conduct! Re! E M Sal other ti Head! ers wci the B r i J im Ai lng Agt tonio; Sales Broadc V. Ca Durstir Wilson 1ng. Ii M c L a r tea in 0 201 Top Authors Entertained Twenty top Texas authors gave autographs and chatted with some of their readers as they were hon­ ored F rid a y night at the eleventh annual W riters Roundup in fhe Commodore P e rry Hotel. More than 400 people heard J . Frank Dobie. many times an hon­ ored guest himself, dedicate the annual event to the late R o y Bedi- chek. Austin w riter and naturalist, Mr. Bedichek s widow and close friends were present. John H enry Faulk, writer, folk­ lorist, and television entertainer, was master of ceremonies for the event, sponsored by the Theta Sig­ ma Phi, national fraternity for wo­ men's journalism. Authors came from all over the state to attend, the Roundup, and Blithe Hamilton Kirkland flew from Hollywood where she was at­ tending conferences about the film­ ing of her book, “ Love Is a Wild Assault.” The w rite rs w ere entertained w ith a fo rm al buffet dinner at the H ead lin e rs Club before the Round­ up and a m eeting w ith the press after the Roundup. “ A C h ristian U n iv e rs ity professors who w ere honored at the event w ere D r. W il­ liam A. A rro w sm ith . “ Petronius The S a f y r ic o n " ; D r. H e n ry A. B o w ­ man In terpretation of M a rria g e '; D r A m e rico P a re d ­ es, “ W ith His Pistol in H is Hand ; D r. W a lte r Pre sco tt W ebb and Dr. Jo e B. Fran tz, “ An Honest P r e ­ : R obert C Cotner, “ Ja m e s face st ephen Hogg” ; and D r "Alchololism : William s, Roger J. The N li­ tritional Approach.” Other authors present w ere V ir­ gil Blossom, form er superintendent of the Little Rock schools and now Bishop. in San Antonio, “ It Has Happened H ere” ; Laurence Chinn, “ The Un- anoited” ; Curtis “ The First Texas Ranger: Ja c k H a ye s” ; Ram sey Y e rin g to n , “ A Cloud of Witnesses” ; PH it he Hamilton K ir k ­ land, “ Love Is a W ild Assault” ; Robert Bell, “ The Bu tterfly T r e e ” ; and George W illiam s, “ Some of M y Best Friends Are Professors.” Also present were M a ry Lass- well, “ IT I Take T exas” ; Esse F o r­ rester O 'Brien , “ Reindeer Round­ up” ; Charles Gallenkam p, “ M a y a ” and Ellen Clayton Garwood, “ W ill Clayton: A Short Biograp hy.” “ The Those not present because of pub­ lishers' co nferences or illness w ere W a lte r Clemons, Poison T r e e ” ; L o ll I a G ra c e Erd m an , “ The Good L a n d ” ; Aubrey Goodman. “ The Golden Youth of Lee P rin c e ” M a rg a re t A llison Jo h a n sen , “ V o y ­ agers W e s t” ; Al Dewlen. “ The Bone P ic k e r s ” ; Robert Renton and H a rv e y Schmidt, “ The In and Out Book ; and Bruce Grant, “ P a n ­ cho.” Several members of the U n iv e r­ sity chapter of Theta Sigma Phi w ere ushers at the Roundup. They included Jud> Eplen, Karen Wheel­ er, J o Eickm ann, and Ja n Brink- erhoff Thursday Is Turkey Day AT Scholz Garten YOU ARE INVITED TO ASK FOR A SCHOLZ CREDIT CARD 1 607 S a n J a c in to 4 - Vi i i Si, Si . . . Es Muy Deliciosa! O th e rs in the east of “ T u rn of a m Isobel F ls o m , who the Screw pf ayvs the housekeeper H ayw o od M orse as the ten y e a r old M iles, and A lex an d ra W a g e r as his sis­ ter, F lo ra . S e v e ra l ghosts populate the prem ises P a u l Steven por­ tra y s the ghost of P e te r Quint, and L a u n n d a B a rre tt p lays the ghost of a fo rm er governess, M iss Je sse !. Nose Gains Prominence In Book by Bodichek T V iu h ld a v h is is nose im portant as lite ra tu re and folklore. found the that in such things T he com p an y has announced the nubia Pion in ca ay J a n u a r y of a hook bv the late R o y B e d ic h e k en­ title I “ The Sense of Sm ell I ) ubleday describes the hook as “ an m’er-" ting account of the >ensr« of sm ell in a n im a ls and m an w h ich introduces the rea d e r to a w hole no v we Id of strange, in­ trigu in g fa c ts .” Vkii tnUp lh* utmost car* in *p|*rtin* \otir cloth**, i i bv not your eleanor? UNIVERSITY CLEANERS 2OOI VIM I MW W I. K 2 ■; ZMH EL MAT 504 East Ave. GR 7-7023 EL TO RO 1601 Guadalupe GR 8-4321 s i W F M H X V s \\ VSH \ R \ M \ 2 9 1 0 ' i 1 1 ii a it a I u p * amt st K v f IT K IN laundry and Dry U eanln* Weekday* 7 a m In It p rn 9 p m to 111 p.m. M i n d a x * 7 a in to ! p i i i . M an ag er ill X ado G I G VI h i r u e I mil* Joiirdan J* t ii r I * 7 RO l-l | * -------- I e * l l e C a r n ll I b e g u i l e r ENCHANTED ISLAND Jane Pow ell Hana Andrew* Marts '* IO SOUTH AUSTIN 3900 Son A nto n io H ighwov A D M ISSIO N .VIV THE BADLANDERS t m r-1 Bortnln* Alan I add M arl* 7 OO I’ I I s ------ FORBIDDEN ISLAND Jon Hall Nan Adam* Start* K A FINE S H O W S FOR THE SAM E PRICE 2 COM t lit I I M I V AA >1 I’ Al se*. AA ll I) s t KA AA It I-. HK IF s' I N s l'K ru n nr r i l l AA OKI ll vt AGR AIT” I I F SH A M I IH F HUA ll,” G r e En MAn tecn ih c e n tu ry Kngiand, “ T u rn cf the S c r e w ” w ill give the v ie w e r a sense of d rea d fu l and unguessable things to com e. It is one of Ja m e s most praised, most criticized, and most questioned plays. \ Y . > , t h e ch ild ren a c tu a lly driven by evil spirits, or w as the mind of the governess so w arped that she had is the p a -I becom e in s an e ? Th ■ M iss B e rg m a n must p o rtra y to­ night. WHAT'S SHOWING ’k Texan in Ango ” l/y>k B that the fdm version of the pla\ rocked lo n d o n and gave M e rrie O lde E n g la n d ? a heat generation r f Us own R ic h a rd Burton vi n s as the “ a n g ry young m a n .” C la ire Blo o m p la ys h.s actress girl-friend and M a r y U re re-creates her stage role as his w ife. “ T he S ta te F R I S to ry .” told the v ie w of a ty p ic a l F B I from agent p layed by Ja m e s Stew irt and ms w ife, played by V era M ile D o c u m e n ta ry scenes of Severn! of he most fam ous F B I cases a n w orked in. in P a ra m o u n t The M an W h v U derstnod W om en .” w th Levfie G role m n w h ile H e n ry Fonda and C e-arr D a n o va p la y her understanding men. the obvious fem ale V a r s ity “ It Started W ith a K is s ” and ended up in Sp ain a> om p an ied by Glenn Fo rd as th bew ild ered but v e ry m uch in Io u erg ean t, Debbie Rev tr Ids as the sergeant s w ife w ith som e vee; w e ird ideas, F le d C la rk as the gen era I w ho enjoys it all, anil G u s ta v i R o jo as the toreador who part leu 'a r ly en joys the sergeant s w ife. C ap ito l “ G irls T o w n ” w ill M a m ie V a n D oren as the head o a pack of g irl delinquents on a th rill spree. P a u l A rk ; constant m akes his singing T*nnely R e y " in a girls to w n ? film debut Xtistin the G n Alexander in the title with R ichard Burton role ps; the Macedonian prince who, at the age of 33. wept because he had no more worlds to con­ quer. F red rte March plays h s fa­ ther, K in g P h ilip of Macedonia and D a n ie lle Dariettx pla; s h's m other, the treacherous O lym pia C la ire Bl< nm plays Alexand er’s m istress, Barsine, who is depicted as his only love. FRI. AND SAT. DANCING AND FLOOR SHOW FEATURING STU and OSCAR WED. — COOL JA Z Z SUN. — JA M SESSION % „CU M EM BERSH IPS N O W O PFN M*k* a Gumt Viyit AnyCrn* ORCHESTRA of BO MITAN ROMMYAl THOMAS UNGA* Perm Conductor* n o X I V TEXAS I XI. So l VU NT ANTAL DORATI % rf fat lr TH ref tor ALL SEATS RESERVED 904-$110-$175-s250 TICKETS O N SALE AT I ’ s l m e r * I ’ h a r m m \ It lo in ii i i i * ! ( l a r k I h»* Ke< o r r l -an Ja n nto H e m p h i l l * H u n k M o m I e n t e r s h » i[t Itriie H o w lim e I I I K l TS ON <* *| Y IO (Mi S M fi OO I1 Vt Vt I M I I I’ A I SI IM I (IHI I Vt HOV ( l l H I F THURS., OCT. 22 8:00 P. M. MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM Auftm’$ Fine Arts Theatre IAMES STEWART VERA MILES Easna n o w ! S H O W TIME 2:00 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10 OO w a hmmamM _ W* * c r n IT S A J O Y - R I D E A L L T H E W A Y ! Ut TAI GO" DWTN MATCH ZTI AK ARCOJ P X -Cl ~Jt Hr " G le n n Ford • Debbie Reynolds* IT Stained With A K iss B R E H M i i s iio u :> in i* m 2 BIG FEATURES 2 A l a s t a i r S I M 125 I 9th GR 8 0942 7:30 p.m. TONIGHT 8 P. M , M G M nowh/ »r £ l f ? | 5 v ToWfi I L A S T D A Y O I I A ll ti MICKEY ROOKEY- STEVE COCHRAN [ THE (J ' T 3 S MAMIE VU DOREN Y "A In CinamaScOf •" C F E A T U R E N O . 2 * ■RT HOS went ID BURION' FREDRIC MUSCH • CLAIRE BLOOM A lliu m * I/'i a h i e ( j R e a t THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH lame* stewart pin* DO N’T GO NEAR THE WATER G l e n n F o r d ♦ B U R N E T A I M I I s ,n, • I Itll ll I IIM THE F.VE PENNIES Iliu m h e e Huh I rnthi IN I III UK pin* ALL AT SEA Alee tiinnne** FM Broadcasters Guests in Austin R cleric k K Kennedy, owncr- m anager of K H F I- F M , w as host to j I'M bn adcasters from seven Tex­ a s cities in Austin this weekend, re le g a te s were guests at the Aus­ tin Symphony Hall on Saturday r ght and at the Texas Theater S in day night. They attended the opening conc -rt of the new Aus­ tin Symphony sea'on on Monday night Representatives of K U T - F M end K A Z Z - FM joined K H F I- F M in representing Austin. To strengthen the position of F M radio in Texas, sem inars were conducted in Program m ing, Agen­ cy Relations, Audience Surveys, F M Sole n. Public Relations, and other topics. Heading the list of guest, speak­ ers w ere Ken Lloyd, form erly of the B ritish Broadcasting System ; J im Anderson of A ylin Ad vertis­ ing Agency of Houston and San An­ tonio; H erbert Groskin, National Sales M anager of Good Music Broadcasters, Inc., N ew Y o rk ; N. V . Cam pbell of Batton. Barton, Burstine, and Osborn in D allas; Wilson K. Goss of Glenn Ad vertis­ ing. in D allas; and Bonner M d ^ne of W inn-M cLane Associa­ tes in Austin. Inc. G E T Y O U R IS S E L KITS AHPLIFIER-TUNERS A T C S c i v K E F V V A Y YOUR HI-FI CENTER 2010 Sp e ed w a y G R 8-6609 DONT DELAY HAVE A DYNAMIC PHYSIQUE IN T H IS S C E N E F R O M " T H E L A R K ," Jean Anouilh's story of Sa'nt Joan, the Archb'r-hop of Rheims, played by W . H. Crain, crowns Charles, the Dauphin of France, as p!ayed by David Dannenbaum. Looking on are a page, Sigrid Skousgard, and Joan of Arc, as she. realizes her dream of hav'ng the Dauphin crowned. Je a n is played by Vicki Blankenship. I mm mm. rn. Hungarian Orchestra to Play Thursday in City Auditorium The Philharm onia Hungarica, the , 80-piece Hungarian symphony or­ chestra now m aking its first North A m erican tour, w ill present a con­ cert in M unicipal A u d i t o r ! u rn Thursday at 8 p.m. Tile Philharm onia is composed of form er members of H u n g a ry’s I leading orchestras who fled their homeland during the 195G Hungar­ ian revolt. in The orchestra, its present form, came into being in a refugee cam p in Vienna. Zoltan Rozsnyai, one of Hungary's foremost conduc­ tors, hit upon the idea of utilizing the abundant musical talent repre­ sented in the ram p. the Philharm onia was made with ! the aid of the local citizenry, who provided instruments and dark suits. The orchestra's debut; was such a success that it was awarded grants from A m erican philanthrop­ ic agencies to finance a European tour. rank among One P a ris critic predicted that “ it w ill soon the w orld's most reputed orchestras.’’ Antal D orati, m usical director of the Minneapolis Symphony, which was touring Europe at the same time, was impressed by the Hun­ garians. He espoused the rhiihar- monia's cause and m erits in this country and helped bring about the The first public appearance of I North A m erican tour. M r. D orati now serves as artistic director of the orchestra and, on its current is sharing the podium with M r. Rozsnyai and Thomas F n g a r, its regular conduc­ tors. tour, Because of his conducting com­ mitments in Minneapolis, M r. D o r­ ati w ill not conduct the orchestra in its Austin concert. The Philharm onia w ill be under M r. R ozsnyai's baton for the local program, w hich w ill consist of works b y lending Hungarian com­ posers as w ell as selects ns from the standard orchestral repertoire. IO : G A R R Y M O O R E : C a r r y hosts singer - comedienne, Carol Burnett, C liff Arquette, hotter known to teleview ers as O la r ley W e a ve r, patriarch of Mt, Id y, and and singer Johnny Desmond. Tile show is v a rie ty and wit. 11:15: T W IL IG H T Z O N E : Dan Duryea Is “ M r. Denton on Dooms­ d a y ." This is the story’ of a drunk­ ard, a battered old man who has only memories of the days when he w as a famous gunfighter. Then, he suddenly and m ysteriously re ­ gains his shooting ability. - K A R E N L E W I S College of Engineering Honors Oil Anniversary The 100th anniversary of com­ m ercial oil production is the basis for the College of Eng ineering ’s exhibit in the display cases In the M ain Building. D ie five cases on the first floor feature “ Oil in Tex­ Schwarzkopf Recording I “ Elisabeth Schwarzkopf To Be Released by Angel Angel Records newest release, Sings Weber and W a g n e r," has been ; timed to coincide w ith Mm e. I Schw arzkopfs appearance at the this I Worcester, M ass , month, after which she w ill fulfill engagements w ith the Chicago Ly- festival , lie Opera. L A R SO N 'S G ARAG E 1809 G u ad alu p e Phone G R 8-9279 W e have served the UT e-ea for 7 years, specializing in b rakev, tune-up, electrical, and general repairs. Prompt and courteous service is cur byword. - as." A . L. L A R S O N • BRAKE SERVICE • T U N E- U P A N D E L E C T R IC A L • W H E E L B A L A N C E A N D A L IG N M E N T • G E N E R A L A U T O R E P A IR S • R O A D S E R V IC E “ Aufo Service With a Conscience The various pictures, designs, and articles place special emphasis on the Santa R ita No. I, the first producing w ell on U n ive rsity prop­ erty; the w orld's deepest oil well, which is 23 340 feet deep and is in Pecos County; and tho famed spin­ dle top. r o t VOU GHT VISIT TO YOUR CAMPUS — S I! 10V BROW ■ / / \ / T m Svvecnev form er P T Milden now w ith M O N Y. m aintain* his I iv atque w ith ajstem ntic exerriie GET THESE RESULTS LOSE IV pound* and up to t or J Inch** o f f > o i i r vt aint a n d h i p * G AIN I to 3 In, I., * to vour client and I' I r ic h e * poll lid*. a r m * , ( l a i n t o u r to JA S E M E S T E R RATES FOR STUDENTS AND FACULTY W e 'r e open si* days a week for men only. W h y settle for less? • I rf* coff*-# • Sir conditioned • Heated pool • I »te«t rn nip .ta rn- rn mr til MEN! SS'*. brr* opened N new. o v e r h e a d , It «• ii > \ 11 ll n u a f f o r d I S b u i l d i n g Ina K i l n . M O N I ll J O I N 1211 P IO G R A N D E $3 PER M O N T H C A L L T O D A Y ! Texas Athletic Club 605 W e s t 13th S t . G R 2 7225 Five Vought Divisions Provide Engineers Greater Opportunity for Space-Age Advancement Young engineers, particularly, will be Interested in the new opportunities created by Chance Vought’s recent realign­ ment into five divisions. For every Vought engineer, there is a division to make fullest use of his talents and to speed his personal advance­ ment. And, of course, he is backed by the four other divi­ sions whose balanced activities add security to his company and his future. N ought’s realignment intensifies a diversification program which began early in 1959. It gears this 42-year-o!d aircraft firm for the opportunities of th* age of space. A S T R O N A U T I C S D I V I S I O N R E S E A R C H D I V I S I O N Vought is drawing on 12 scars’ expo et c m the missile field to obtain broader response! .1- iti• s in the race for space. Concentration is on advanced vehicles for space exploration, and on ballistic and anti ballistic missile systems. Currently, N ought is readying the four-stage Scout research rocket and its launcher for the National Aeronautics nnd Space Administra­ tion. Allo, N ought and other members of the Boeing tt .un are participating in ti'** cleve! p- met't of the DymSnar boost glide vehicle in competition for an Air Force contract. In the human factors of flight, Nought is taking the lead with its orbital night simulab r and sp ace- oriented Cockpit Laboratory. A E R O N A U T I C S D I V I S I O N N ew generations of main ed aircraft and atmos­ pheric missiles, devices for antisubmarine war­ fare, and many other types of weapons will take shape here. Among this division*! current contracts; a N avy order for development of an environ- m ental protection and escape capsule for aircraft pilots. Other work includes product__ :ion c*>ntrat ta for threo versions of F S L Crusader ani iaft, study contracts in submarine detects and classification, and contracts for militar) a: commercial aircraft assemblies. E L E C T R O N I C S D I V I S I O N Nought electronics will I * developed, manu* factured and marketed in increasing volume. M ilitary ss stems tinder development include antennas and related electronics, giouncl sup­ port electronics and antisubniaime w ai (are apparatus. In a new Research Center, scientists of this division will mine new knowledge from many fields. Basic research is planned into astronau­ tics, undersea warfare, the life sciences (relat­ ing to human facto!s of flight), elcctrogravitiei and other areas. As it evolves into applied n sc arch, tins advanced work will materially support other Vought divisions. R A N G E S Y S T E M S D I V I S I O N Twelve w ars’ experience in remote base opera­ tion qualifies Vought for additional business in this new field. The Bange Systems tram w ill establish and operate test ranges and test equipment for missiles and spate vehicles. Genes) s Corporation, a wholly owned sid>- sidiury company, intensifies Vought’s diversifi* t itk>n into commercial electronics. Company emphasis is on automation, and its key per* si nnel are «ngincers exp( rienced in the fields of • lectronics, computers, magnetic memory# und associated electro-mechanical devices. You live at a discount in Dallas In Texas there is no state income tax and no local or state sales taxes. I.ow school and property levies add to your savings. Home con* structif n < < isis — as w ell as house and apartment rentals — arc belnw the national average. Fuel costs are negligible, and most groceries cost lesj. Dallas has gruwn faster since 1950 than any other LL b city. One reason is the city’s wealth of entertainment and cultural centers. Another reason is the attractive cost of living. Stud* ut engineers are invited to w rite for fur­ ther information al>out new Vought activities, and I iw sou can start sour career with one of Not o n s . 1‘l e a i e a d d r e s s i n q u i r i e s to: Professional Placement Office Dept. UN-25 OUR RKPftf Si NT ATI VE Will BI IN YOUR PLACEMENT CFIICC O C T O B E R 26 27 C Aft A N C t i €i iM€» Mi M' I A I t i l , P l J A • TV Tonight Tuesday, October 20, 1959 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 Eerie Tale Sees Debut By Bergman 7; O Z Z IE A N D H A R R I E T : Ozzie invites guests and tells H arrie t not to w o rry about arrangem ents—he'll It's this w rite r's m ake guess he tho whole a ffa ir and his w ife w ill wind up w ith a crowd of unexpected people. forgets all about 'em all. 7:30: S E A H U N T : Lloyd Bridges stars as M ike Nelson, skin diver supreme according to the younger set. In this episode, a coastal fish­ erm an is tho villain, as he attacks the kelp harvesters along the shore. Jam es* 8:30; S T A R T IM E : “ Tile Turn of Jam es. the S c re w " by H o m y Screen p la y b y Ja m e s Costigan. Tonight sees the first Am erican television showing of Ingrid B e rg ­ man. She stars as the governess in frightening tale. The governess a rrives at a country es­ tate where she is to ra re for two children. One, Flo ra, Is sweet and friendly, but she hoars strange tales about the son, M iles. Ile is the least of her worries one day she meets a strange man on tho terrace only to have him disappear before her eyes. is becoming a classic, and it w ill he interesting to see how television handles it. Also stars Isobel Elsom , H ayw ard Morse. Alexandra W ager, P a u l Stevens and L au rin d a B a r ­ rett. Ja m e s ’ tale First Concert Features U N the composer's direction. It was In three sections, the fir^t melodious. j the second dram atic, and the third ' calm and leading into the Allegro. Contrasting melody w as presented g racefully by a trio played m ainly by oboes, bassoons, and horns. Excerpts from “ The Damnation of F a u s t" by Hector Berlioz follow­ ed the intermission. Unfortunately, I no idea of the composer's stature was noticeable during his lifetim e. E v e r y shade of orchestral color was represented in this rewarding piece. to Dedicated the m em ory of i Stayton Gammon w as Intermezzo j from “ Goyeseas." En riq u e G ra n a ­ dos demonstrates a refined teehni- ! que of mingling colorful folksongs I of his native Catalonia in an emo- ' tional, rom antic spirit. He utilizes the cello as the dominant instru­ ment. L a s t on the program w as W ein­ berger's Polk a and Fugue from “ Schwanda,” a fa iry tale of a bagpiper. It w as humorous, senti­ mental and dram atic. The brilliant clim ax meant the end of an even­ ing at the symphony. OPeCO*OI>*COeOPeCOeOP*CO*OP*< © D O Y O U H A V E 80 H O U R S T O W A R D A D E G R E E ? I f so jo u are eligib le to o r­ der yo ur Sen I nr Ring: now! O rder before October 31st for d elivery by Christm as. Please present R ing C ertificate when placing order. H A L K O I IL R F r ?nd K L O O R B y O R E L D U G G E R W ith the fa m ilia r raising of the ’ baton, E z r a R ach lin gave the sig- ; nnl for the opening concert of the Austin Symphony Orchestra before a half filled M unicipal Auditorium I M onday night. Tile program was dedicated to the United Nations and to peace, representing a compact m usical representing m any , travelogue I countries. i Opening the concert w as F in e K leine Nachtm usik (A little night music) by Mozart. It was a seren­ ade featuring strings and bass. It I was full of intricate surprises and featured Mozart in a light-hearted, : humorous mood. Beethoven's second symphony followed with the traditional sounds prem iered in Vienna in 1803 under South America Comes to Dallas The strains of South A m e ric a ’s best-loved classical and popular music cello through D a lla s during the “ South A m erican Fo rtn ig h t," October 18th through N ovem ber I. Contributing their m usical talents to the presentation w ill be Heitor Villa-Lobos, the continent's most famous composer conductor; Sen­ ora Guiom ar Novaes, piano v ir ­ tuoso from B ra z il; Ja im e Laredo, 18-year-old Bo livian violinist who recently was awarded first place in the Queen Elisab eth of Belgium international music competition, and the Carm en Cuevas Con junta— a group of 35 guitar-playing, sing- | cus Company, The G ra ce Line, and Pan-Am crican-Grace A irw ays, as­ surd by B ra n iff International A ir ­ ways, the Fortnight w ill feature ex­ hibitions, cultural manifestations, merchandise, and celebrities from I the ten South A m erican countries. Sinatra, Cole, Kingston! Acclaimed Top Sellers. The Billboard, a Jeading-record industry trade publication, has re­ leased a listing of the best-selling E P recordings for the y e a r ending Ju n e 1959. Thirty-two of these top albums were products of Capitol Records. Columbia and R C A V icto r tied for second place w ith twenty-two each. five al­ bums on the list, N a t “ K in g " Cole four, followed by the Kingston Trio, Tennessee Jonah Jones, and Dakota Staton, with F ra n k Sinatra placed E rn ie Ford. I three each. Local Gallery Exhibits Work of Michael Frary it la g u n a G loria A rt G a lle ry featuring w atercolors done by M ichael F r a ry , assistant professor of art at the U niversity. The exhibition of 30 paintings is from a collection of more than IOO coastal scenes of the Atlantic that F r a r y completed during the sum­ mer. Tips from CCUS Button, Button Who's Got The Button? W h e n yo u’re all dressed up In that new C C U S suit, don't for­ get, button only the middle or the top two and N E V E R the bottom button. GLtjdc CamjiWJL ?Iniucr5itqSlioy NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR FAST SERVICE . Ing, and dancing Chileans. THI STUDENT S OWN STO*! 2350 G u a d a lu p e Sponsored by the Neiman-Mar- JPeCOeOPeCOeOPeCOeOPeCOeOPeCt y-jjsstf i f & i Enjoy gay, informal times at our bowlers' haven G u ys and gals go for our spic-and-span bowling lanes. W e ll, no wonder, 'cause we aim to please! Plan to come in soon and discover the m agical wonder of bowling. • Reservations for Parties • IO Lanes • Snack Bar • A B C A p p ro ve d • C onveniently Located • A u tom atic Pin Setters The Bowling Center the m o st in DRY CLEANING r n " ! Laundry Service Open 7 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday 3409 G u a d a lu p e G L 3-9161 510 West 19th Street DAILY TEXA N C L J iJ j)J> ( I ANSI! IF t» AnVKHTISlNO RATES F-ach W o rd ( 15-word m in im u m )................................ ClfiNsiflerl Display I column v I Inch en* tim * Each Additional T i m e 20 Oonaecutlve letups ....................................................................... K u ordt IS word* .................................. ......................................... 2o w o r d * ................................................................................................ (N o copy change for contecut.ve l a i u e rate*) ................................... ................................................................ 4e . I ! hO .90 . . , .JKI OO . . 8 OO c r a s s i p i I if ADF L B T I8 I.N O R E A I H IV T S ................................. M ondex 3 30 p ’n. Tu esday T exi.n ....... ................................... Tuesday. 3 30 p.m. W ednesday Texan .. .............................. W ednesday 3 30 p X T h u rsd ay T e x a n ....... ................ ................ Thursday. 3 OU p rn. F - lev T e x a n ............ .................................... . F rid a y . 3 30 p nu Su n d ay Texan ........... In the c \rnt of err- >ra made In an a d verttaement, ' a notice rn u t he n'ven aa the publishers are ie*pon5lb:# for only on* Incorrect Ina; rile a. lmme a CALL JO H N N Y — GR 2-2473 Special Servicer Alterations W an ted Apartments D E S IG N IN G D R E S S M A K IN G C A M ­ E L S ciothca F o rm a l gowns a apec- :k r laer. 260® W e lt •Ion B L O O D D O N F R S -A I tv pee of blend needed for caribe in A ’.st.n Profea- N E A R O N K h'orlc. Furnished. * pa ' STS O for 3 men, Inspection. f r ■it -pen ■I). A ll kind* of rep. model ear Renault-R \\>*t 6th. t aa < * a r u i *• r A L'T O V ILF; L I junai ties H I ’ort* h!**. D a lly R 2-2692. , U lli Miscellaneous T E N T IO N : A LD I .LO IN I SC I LN C R AND R U SIN m a j o r s : : ie giant O'-! Ind n 'ry h tried Arn i X R L R T A L T E R A T IO N S don* ihly. Qul.'k *erv ice >e« Mr* • 'leo6* ti t Men a Wear. 2332 Lost and Found 'IN K S T quaiity in clr*** I'm Quinlan. adoration.* • Apt 4 G R 7-4.138 •S A N D D R I SSM ( K I N G »th Street. G R 6-336(3 Help W an ted F'O t’R-R R T V O C A L I M B L K tata­ mi a nging Typing clos# h i ic VI he* F o r ill Austin R R 6-8142 P a D X R R R I a ru ra l HO VSS] d b Rooms tor Rent ; Y O U R « ‘Ovate I for g * r t>; ! H r die I'nth Fur- •1 two bad room du- .. y next I :* ;. KO ap- Cntver- Ti a f t e r Vi : I Mao 818 Speedway. G R 8-5588. ‘ > i ; I • - A r 1 .sd .'later paid. (. o u p l a • I ’m er» A P A 5! I N T S Kitchen* « I * i hi * na .1 GR 7-2873, ■,, - * ■ nj a p a r t m e n t I ROOM For Sate 'ATS S A IL F IS H U * e d S t i l t SAN I L SYAL ik ‘lays, a S. .A ^L,s Del private 2-1737. \s a i a• * h f ' _ M. M D IS S E R T A T I O N S . (K le c tro m a L e ). In. G R 6-707J Mn • U n iv e rs ity Area Com pletely A!r-Conditlor.ed F u lly Carpeted Throughout •s.** W a I i I rig Roem Opening t r io Fenced Ratio TU# Bath tu b and Shower V ' • 1 * . i i ' * - ' " I C wertna O n e E n t i r e W a l l Modern evocator F 'u rr*h e d '-a ■*" Extrem e v Clean \c a s h . r a n d I v e r F a c i l i t i e s to S. ,nd; - - J d ia le d B ric k J ' A E L T Y P E S W O R K typ U t, F Je ctro m atic bv experienced I i l l 2 5583 I •'•„-e M o m lite r 5 iii n Ante D F T M R S A L B R IC H ! EJ6cU’°m a t. l l * , room Tor | One SVA I It 8 394c S I V L E Y M A R T H A A N N St R A A comp,et# profess!, aI typing aerv- lea tailored to the neeMs of L niver- Sp<\ al keyboard atty langu age. science. equipment sea and d il­ and engineering seriation * atudent* for the! U c tive n ie rt;v . : ated at G O O D A L L W OL » N i O R M B L D G . 2HU Gun la: upo Rho. G U . 3 N u r s e r i e s C H IK N-DAI K N U R S E R * AND kinder* U L 3-0159 __ S M A L L N U R S E R Y c h i l d r e n H a v e v a c a n c y I MLI T D to three f o r o n e I n ­ tra th provided N AVL non, G D 3-3216, .'(wood. Mrs. T u * s 3 » y O c * o t » » 2 0 . 1959 T V J ? D A C Y J ’a g * ? University Building Expansion Program A t R e c o rd High, S a y s A lc a ld e M a g a z in e W ilson Emphasizes Policy for Faculty R t « A M > K * T \ ! J V • Today . . . ” • Vn.-.er* • « e-.'s-r” %e The Official 1959-60 i.jrr.e-.t .n nuclear a fence and rte " ’.feet n T-'e- is f The new F r j n < » r 'J Build fc- is ,r« cr heil ’iie.1 f r ct nm pie th*n « at a < vt of about i • -*»• i n^t rut ti,,n on a ive-a ( herrmtrv Rut kl- ic fait The addition in' 11Jn- of .exes and , „ , , r. ago. zona , IL Ss assumed that about a f thp Si®rra v - U •! t r ed-structure p West T e x t ~ - direet^r. . . . • ..... . . . . . . to h " ^ ed by natural explo*nor was cr®- f e d by an asteroid starLxe hod;* s t r j c . r . g t h e earth and ex - ' c . n together more earth and moon. Thousand* • a c h craters exist on th e m o o n , of th . . f » J y ..I . f r%, rs te - in that ti should tie t W * p. A--;-;. termed the discover* ,.e r h M w i f e d aHay to its underlying root struts T h . geologist* estimated th, ;,-e of ’be* West Texas crater re. ■ , :r,s to be 50 million years. , . ■ I ‘ T h e k e y to t h e t r r e s r l o s l M wa.* Few e v i * t on th e e a r t h tier a e r o s io n . The only other known world lo. I ra ttles where evidence of such an I jn*r‘nxe *ho® k exist are the Stein. r # rm .r.t rr rr Basin in G erm any, the Kent. - ^ t- y r, ... D « «tru ‘ .re. v : - r « *■' r U known € 3 - » ^ a ^ era b appears an- And structure in Indiana. Crooked I . m .. ■ Creek in M issouri, and W ell* Creek I ..rd at ’re Meteor C rater in A - at the Me’ eor C ra t- rjn Ari- rn Tennessee.________________ J a* * f Th,ere ..« no p.*®"x.ir® ort ar;. re to rtr. T'.te a sp®- .fied amount to •re United Fund. ’ D r Logan Wii- v*.r ‘ i d irs a rrerr.orandum to ’ he T r. vers tty facvil’y and staff " btu* rh nre ’sr* fry* in s t ’n .s Th a it Ts «■»'" c f ,.5 To be* g e n ® i s in sup­ port of *h * ' orth;. c t . v ? T*- c ..9 ’h e je--rir.d ’A W K of the Tv* entv-«;jc “ .’rd be served through Fund drive a gree .rr IT age r.'.e t v.. one cor * r; btitk t ■* .am I* Blunk Board ax*.-*- aTi» d o bem, I" *® v e lop mer* r who has grated as ’ re r-haimar. « » v * ’ * F d r . ® ’ - .•?- - • ' r e That The v .r f f - i’ H *. a rd st • < fo r tn a b u n d a n c e t h e d i« w o * e r T o f •hatter cone-*. • amati *t rue tares w h kh indicate disruption of r - intro** *hock wave. *orh by «/j a shock w ave can be rau*®d only impact a n d n o t bv b y m e t e o r i t i c t h e y r e p o r t e d . v o l c a n i c e x p lo s io n , The cone* w ere found in more »- .-dance than - a ry orrer «lm- .ia r structure in ’ he w - rid. H a r:by of "re <*.- - .rrser • e .« .rd ■?.**' I that or.lv four other localities are trw n 'n ‘he w r d vs I- r cr *; Lopez Leaves Austin •s aryl a tv rd disturbances resulting from such intense shock. President Adolfo Lopez M .M ext he cor., lus.'-r* a re thc.xe cd ge- after a j <*s w ho w e re sr;e«’ s at M i l *'-ru . ■■ ' -w • /*/ vin CW, B y The \%*o< lated Brews i < e rn pc a s . zed ’ h a ' md effo rt » ffe'-'s o r * '* rn. e T, ■ *ers No $■'. e rn *ie ttrr.or.z L alf Ot®*5: of * - a TR - operated jointly T i guests. V his Pedcmaies River ranch, •he Mexican party were Johnson drove I, r, Mateos to a nearby meadow :<■ •".« President boarded a heli- ; ■r r for a 65-minute flight to * party split up at Bergstrom -'e Base. They fanned out - • .p city in l l cars on a sight- • rd "h .pping tour that bah t-e trying to keep up with • Head Cheerleader Seeks More Spirit um came P..ce tear WI a *i r . Right now the rems to be lag* oms have a terr, m atter w hat o . it defrn ‘earn ha^ ;3V ‘n eed S ’ J » h n *o n ' a m e to the p la n e t h a i t h - P r M l d M t b o r e . , b b l W T M . L o P « M » t t « « 4 n o t a t a p b t fb i V O O .t a c k . t-d | « U ( M tor th. vbrttore. th o r e . kin «rep- ' T pus ° f 2 ,hr * '* • »>'• • * « I , . f , d I .. .. w e r » r ' n e l h * b u t l d j n g , . - • - - : ; r • - r ; • ;• pc -y P a r el presented Ixipez Ma'eos t i a Texas hat and the original . py of his proclamation making ! * ’ Mexico-Texas Good Neigh- | ' Ay: - • - a c l • t.it.s* he was reluctant to leave on bor D a y ." r R i» V U the h campos in the will f led in th e f-iJl of IM I . finished on the »rk f t o n • r . • b u ild in g, which w ill ( f . i St. > nitiit’ n and .d.ffio win h Id approxim al' I) **u ‘ n’» •• i! he one . f th. fir*t *•-' .via?- r %• rv eel campus build ins:* in th® natk»n T h e plant vviH ac ? J mils two units r'.n*i*t of ffipno- . ’a r-_a. .-.♦%• >ader ar. lh ® council w.i] discuss the cam- ,j T -.--2 M .s goodbye pa.zn rile s for ’he coming flee* torv tions. C O N T A C T l e n s e s p r e s c r i p t i o n s f il l e d Mn Petri. P nor I C orp ora!ion * San A r ." f Hnc A Hcy\- C O M PLET E O P T IC A L SERV IC E Ju d icial Council to Meet T h e Student • • System corr.rr.:” ee of k-® F -- • man Council vs.. I m e f’ We ire-1 a at 5 p m . Fe.-re!. Smith c r a. mean, a n n " rn • cd in K in sci', -g Iv J)a . d lv w OPTOMETRIST / BU RN ET R O A D O P T IC A L 5306 BURNET ROAD (next door to Shoppers W orld) Hours: 9-6. Mon. thru Sat. • G L 2-2393 ?.h ad- • * iv a« 52 f ’ • from Westinghouse I I4; I Founds’ mn C H Lehr d . .or.* man- g I h^| v I ' •'.re to f. ' T> rn e *- o ta 1 _ , . ' p T *t r * o w c. ”. y T5 v G t? f f r f i T-® rr• v r®-.®'' 7^0 iv,- ma rh ne is a “ comp’ete el® • rn a-h n® laboratory in t .® -g.- ' Prrf*«sc.- kj t ffnni < adapter-D'pe m ach ne ulate i' ' =• f .rrr.t of cie t can : p i ' An re- f ■** inz% v- OS and r.pu« o' The cost .’(t RT > t V S ft. 6 r \ TI ; ^ J v chines 5 I ma-* * r > - ; VIT- hH **udc-tS I v r n : v everv* tvpe cf f rotating m arhine.' Prev- * reeded a number of m.a- n the laboratory to ill Lis­ les® different m a m -.es,’ - G a ff rd p* -*c-d o*ut. T-* r®w 1 a1 **r a*orv m a -'n v*. ^rI *o • c-a ® h *’ . d*-t ® - z nc^r* •-p Kqs r pr - T ° s ck cor.'. *-* ” Z me® car. a er-ergy *o e e " ’r i!’ '- encrgv a-d v t ® versa. 5M ‘Bad Day at Black Rock’ Next on Union Calendar • : i • . v K Ro. k ’ «*ar- r.esdav at 7 Ba 11 room. p m in ’ n® .-.a - Average -<** • rd ar * a* the ’ ’n ®r- sponsored m ovie* ha* been from y . s’ .; I en’* vs t , o\ cr »*♦ ■ * i yea- s g® a mrdir.g *o Joan ’.Va-I i -o r ,. T exas Un r. pro. gram supervisor. * f- s W - • • .r*r,r a ir • *c 1 to a c reaved attendance *h new er ' V n- C SI <- J t A -.Un. r, 'X’ctAnasA-. A .d.’or. .rn. and ‘ ber *ho’.v rn es a’ 7 and 5 .• p.* the tw a Pharm aceutical A w a rd Goes to Ed Gonzalez Adw ard Gorzalez. graduate pha ma* y s ' id- n* won rh® Am erica Ph arm a eu‘ .<'al Assoria?.en s K m®r Aw ard th * year. The awacs Si Vi rd .a travel exnerses to the ai lonzaiez studied the rffcm s of iHrrel '• a' A a pM ,n?-growth os*cr <>r Outfits ( axle n e ts For lutdics, C om plete Knsemble — Pants, Shirts, Ti®. Ktc. 9 IJnlla— sun cities M E X I C A N Curio Shop it. eta o r : m s ✓ / \ Hum ble will interview on the Campus October 22 and 23 In ten e • ng te.tms f*om Humble O il A Rctininz ( ompany will b^ rn ’he campus O ctober 22 and 23 to inter\icw students graduating at all degree levels in accounting. 'j mg men ' H um Me sh.ire in the dynamic progress and growth of a leader in me pc.- cum industry Hum ble is one of the leading producers of crude c in the United States and is a completely integrated oil com* p - c r ; H 'c's B a town Refinery, one of hie hugest in the world, is in R ef ning and Petrochemical M un ! .ciurtrg Reseatch centers in H id n. * >r d c *chapmen? of better methods of exploration and produc- * n. -r.M v B sn. for rose rch in m.mut.Ktu r . , arc rn ^ing valuabl* contributions to the petroleum industry. A Quick Look at the Humble Company ires if Opri* •*• T#*o« Louuiono. California, Miuimppi, N » * M * i co Florida, Alabam a Anjona C»«rg a, WaiSington Oregon, Alalia le f « *>l Capacity 282 OOO horr«!i daily. R(t»il Si it T aioi, N»re M o r o , end A n jon o T«j O» M e r»«*«r of ta i poid gatolm * t#edi I I I I I (tg«fei« P