weather: clear, colder low 38, high 65 T h e D a il y T e x a n page 2: marsh on loyalty oath Vol. 63 Price Rye Cents Student Newspaper at T AUSTIN. TEXAS, THUP*< *rsity of Texas L T iw T Johnson Urges Increased Voice For Consumer totter Packaging, Family Budget Plan Sought by President WASHINGTON - W - President Johnson urged Congress to slap new curbs on deceptive packaging and to require disclosure of inter­ est rates on installment purchases. He also suggested a plan to help city families figure out their bud­ gets. Consumer Too Weak In a special message Wednesday on consumer problems, Johnson said that “for far too long, the ('onsumer has had too little voice and too little weight in govern­ m ent." Declaring that the consumer now occupies a back seat, he said, “We cannot rest content an­ ti! he is in the front row.” Johnson endorsed nine specific pieces of legislation — eight of them originally sponsored or en­ dorsed by the Kennedy administra­ tion. Require New Inspection The ninth proposal, now with Johnson, would require inspection of all meat and poultry sold in the United States even though it does not cross state lines. Most of the new ideas ad­ vanced b f the President woald Involve administrative rather than congressional action. For example, he announced that all federal agencies having a hand In consumer education will “ex­ plore fully such possibilities as the adapting of the extension service concept, so successful rural In areas, to an urban setting.’* Give Bodge! Ads ice Such a move, if adopted, would provide lower-income city fami­ lies “ with Information to help them get th** moot for their money” and to learn more about budget m an­ agement. JoImmor Mid the federal gov­ ernment aho will try to promote connu mer e d u c a t i o n In the schools — coarse* in the funda­ mentals of budgeting, haying aud borrowing. And he called upon his new com­ mittee on consumer interests “to develop means of keeping the pub­ lic continuously informed of dove! opments of importance in the con­ sumer field." Poor Are Target The President said that most budget management and consumer publications are aimed at middle- lnoome families. “ Yet it is the poor who suffer mast from sharp practices,’’ he said. Virtually all the legislative pro­ posals in the message were warm­ ed over from past years and many of them were included by the late President John F. Kennedy in his first sjmx ial message on consumer problems in 1962. Eight Pages Today No. 108 ights, Tax Bills .lear Big Hurdles House O K 's Accommodations A s Senate Pushes Tax Cut speedily By the Associated Press Congress had a busy day Wed sday moving toward ssage of two bills of m ajor con- rn to President Lyndon John- n. The House retained a strong blic accommodations section in ? civil rights bill Wednesday aft- beating back a dozen attempts weaken it. Defeat Heavy The final effort by opponents, attempt to limit sharply the verage of the provision, was de­ nted on a standing vote of 153 68. Left nearly egro leaders intact was what the regard as _rart of civil rights hill and what provided the bipartisan coalition supporting it with a smashing victory. The public accommodations sec­ tion would bar hotels, motels, res­ taurants, movies and other places serving the public from discrimi­ nating against Negroes. the omnibus For nearly three days, South­ ern opponents battered at it trying its various provisions, to soften but the major attack was made by Rep. George Meader, R-Mich., who sought to scrap the entire provision for a much narrower one of his own. Limiting Fails Under Mender's proposal, only facilities on, or advertised along, interstate or primary highways would have been covered. He called his proposal “fair, reason­ able, workable and as far as the federal government ought to move in this area at this time." the opposition Although the Meader amend­ ment represented the last real attempt by to amend the section. Southerners kept the debate going for anoth­ er hour with rem arks about the bill being “ steam ­ rollered” through the House. The House adjourned at 8:05 p.m. and will move on to other sections of the bill Thursday. bitter Meanwhile, the Senate gave the administration a clean sweep on all key issues in the $11.6-billion tax-cut bill by refusing Wednes­ taxes on day to repeal excise jewelry, handbags cosmetics and furs. Batting Average High Even on lesser issues, the ad­ ministration's batting average was high as the Senate drove toward quick passage of this top priority legislation. However, there could be reverses in the final voting or in working out Senate and House differences in a conference com­ mittee. The vote against a Republican tho excise r e p e a l effort to taxes was on a 48-45 ha:rlinc, with Democratic leaders scram ­ bling for support. T h e three-vote difference w'as the victorious the same margin by which administration w a s Tuesday on two other key issues. Then it beat by 47-44 an effort to knock out House repeal of the stock dividend credit and defeated 48-45 a move to give special tax deductions to parents with children in college. Excises I>eft From War The IO per cent excise taxes at the retail level were imposed in World War II and repeated efforts to repeal in recent years have f a i l e d . It was estimated knocking them out would add $450 million or more to the $11.6-billion tax losses in the bill. them The House defeated similar efforts when it passed the tax- rut hill with an understanding that its Ways and Means Com­ mittee would hold hearings on separate excise repeal legisla­ tion later this session. Sen. Paissell B. Long. D La., Student Pays Loitering Fine A senior business administration major, 26, was released Tuesday by Austin police after paying a $17 fine in the Corporation Court. He was arrested early Tuesday on a window peeping complaint. The student was officially charg­ ed with loitering after he was caught peeping into the window of an apartm ent house in the 3000 block of Red River, Police Lieuten­ ant Harvey Gann, said. irresponsible. He said floor m anager for the tax-reduc- tion measure, called the excise re­ pealer it would start a rush to toss out all federal excise taxes which bring the Treasury some $10 billion or more annually. Before the vote against repeal of the excise taxes, the Senate re­ jected. 71-23, an amendment hy Sen. Paul H. D o u g l a s , D-Ilh, aimed at giving more relief to low-income families. City Group Hears Law Professor O rdinance Study Given to Council A University law professor told the Austin City Council’s Com­ mittee on Human Relations F ri­ day that a city non-discrimination ordinance could be written within both the state and national con­ stitutions. Making clear that he did not represent the School of Law or the University, professor I^on Lebowitz also presented a 200- page study of non-discrimination ordinances from other local and state governments. The study was prepared by Dr. Joe Witherspoon, law professor, now' on leave and teaching out of the state. Lebowitz a Supreme cited Court decision which said hump rule cities, such as Austin, had authority to pass non-diserimina- tion ordinances if they are writ­ the to avoid conflict with ten state constitution. In the first public meeting of the seven-man panel, Chairman Harry Akin, president of the Night Hawk chain, announced the committee intended to “ hear re­ ports and study areas of concern in group relationship and to sub­ mit its report and recommenda­ tions to the City Council as soon as practicable.” Hearings are set for 3 p.m. each Wednesday. He said persons or groups the wanting committee should contact him as soon as possible. to appear before Pensive Mexican Historian . • Dr. Villous considers Panama Canal situation. —Photo by Piru* M r*. B. Ideo Payne, choreographer, show* Bert N ee ly the proper University O p e ra W orksh o p will present the production at 8 p.m. w ay to bow during rehearsal of "Shakespeare at the O p e r a ." Tho Friday and 4 p m. Su n day. (See story, Page 6.) Let's G e t It Right This Time —Texan Photo—Echols Regents to Consider Brackenridge Housing goner Carr has granted permis­ sion for the Regents to file a suit asking the Court for judgment in the wording of the deed jiving the Brackenridge the University T ra c t ! Frank Denius, attorney represent­ ing the law firm. will attend the Regents’ meeting Friday and ex­ plain the situation to Board mem­ bers, Frank Erwin, Austin Regent, said. University Regents may pass a! resolution Friday petitioning the District Court (rf Travis County to interpret the Brackenridge TYact deed. Clarification of the legal paper is necessary to establish validity of bonds which would finance new housing for married students at the Unive rsity. Corr Give* OK State Attorney General Wag Attorney General Carr joined ■ait with the Austin law firm of (lark. Thomas, Harris, Benins ft Winters, hired by the Univers­ ity, to art as joint piantiff in seeking the deed clarification. SA Exam File Being Compiled O ld Tests Accepted In Texas Union 323 The Students’ Association is be­ ginning an exam file of hour quiz­ zes and finals donated by students. vice-president, Greg Lipscomb, said Wednesday. Available to any student for study purposes, the file will be in Academic Center 15, Lipscomb said. He said the file will be arranged by subject and professor and will be similar to those kept by private student groups. Students or groups wishing to submit exams may take them to Texas Union 323 between I p.m. and 5 p.m. Lipscomb said he hoped students would recognize the value of such a file. He faculty members had expressed Interest in contributing to the project. reported several County Residents Start Registration Travis County residents, w h o who did m i pay their poll taxes must register in the tax assessor* collector's office to become eligi­ ble for voting in the November federal elections. State Attorney General Waggon­ the er Carr officially notified Travis County tax assessor-eollec- tor’s office that tho federal poll tax amendment had become law. Fritz Robinson, Travis County tax assessor-collector, said he has pre Future married students at the University may be able to enjoy living in two-story brick, one and two-bedroom apartments, planned for construction on the tract if the suit is filed and the court interprets in the University’s favor. 12 Buildings Planned The deed reads, Plans have been finished, and a federal loan of $1.8 million ap­ proved since June, 1961, by the : Federal Housing and Home F i­ nance Agency for the 200-unit stu­ dent family housing. A total of 12 buildings, all of the two-story brick type, would be constructed on the land deeded to the University by the late Col. George Brackenridge. in p art: “I, George Brackenridge . . . hereby grant, donate and convey, in trust j for the benefit of The University of Texas, as a part of the perman­ ent fund for said University,” a tract of land approximately 502 acres, “ but in case said State of . sell or convey said Texas . the aforesaid at property any time before the death of the last survivor of the above named person,” the property will revert to the County of Jackson. Heirs are still living in San An­ tonio. . from then legal question In order to obtain a mortgage loan, real estate is conveyed, temporarily, in trust as security. Since r e n t a l units produce revenue, the is what did Brackenridge mean by the term, “permanent fund?" If this reference concerns per­ manent trust only on the Bracken­ ridge property, the bonds will be (See REGENTS, Page 3) Add, Drop, Register Deadlines Today Deadlines, deadlines, deadlines. Thursday is the last day to add or drop a course, without obtain­ ing a dean’s permission. Before this deadline, the students must get the approval of the chairman of the department in which he is en­ rolled. Beginning Friday, the student must have the permission of the dean of his respective college to add or drop a course. Thursday also is the last day a graduate stu-j dent may register without special approval of the dean of the Grad­ uate School. If these aren’t enough last days, Thursday is also the deadline for registration without a penalty ($5 and special permission). Total reg­ istration through Wednesday was 30,090. pared poll tax receipts marked “ For use in voting for federal of­ fices’’ to issue to otherwise eligi­ ble voters who failed to pay the poll tax. University students from outside Travis County may register by notifying by mail the tax assessor- collector of their counties. for The federal poll tex amend­ ment, certified Tuesday in Wash­ ington, D. prohibits poll taxes federal aa a requirement elections. Texas, however, re­ quires a poi] tax for voting in primaries and state races. Dead­ line for paying the tax was Jan. SI. Registration for those wishing to vote in only the federal elections began at the tax assessor-collec- tor's office Wednesday and w i l l continue for 30 days. The amendment was ratified Jan. thirty- 23 by South Dakota, eighth state do do so. the The new election provision does not affect persons reach­ ing their 21st birthdays before the election. According to Texas Election Laws, 1963-64, a person who be­ comes 21 years old after Jan. I, 1964, may vote in any election pro­ vided he obtains “from the tax collector of the county of his resi­ dence a certificate of exemption from the payment of a poll tax not later than 30 days before any election in which he wishes to vote." Olympic Flag Heist Lands Two in Jail INNSBRUCK, Austria — CB — Two American students were in jail Wednesday after taking a Tyrolean flag from its staff as a souvenir of the Winter Olympics. A spokesman for Innsbruck po­ lice headquarters said, “Unfortun­ ately they will have to be kept in jail until their trial because flag- snatching must be reguarded as theft.” Panama Crisis Serious Break —Dr. Villegas By C ALEB PIRTLE Texan Staff Writer The Panama Canal—a narrow strait of water sliced through the I tbs rn us of Panam a—set the background for the m o s t serious break of relations be­ the United States and tween Latin America in recent years. this canal gave birth to the friction which has plagued these neighboring coun­ tries since its construction in 1903,” said Dr. Daniel Cosio Villegas, former director of El Collegio de Mexico. “ In fact, He was on campus this week lectures on “ The to present United States in Latin Ameri­ ca ” and “ Frontier Trouble and International Friction” for the taped television history series being conducted under the su­ pervision of Dr. Joe Frantz, chairman of the Department of History. Dr. Villegas considers this latest eruption of feelings to have evolved from the United States’ failure to recognize the changing political and econom­ ic conditions in that country. “Nationalism in Panam a re­ sents the fact that the canal the country, zone making it a a state,” Dr. Villegas said. “ The people foreign resent having authority on their home soil." state within separates in “ The important fact the rebellion was its instigation by youngsters—youths who under­ stand that world conditions are changing.” Dr. Villegas regards the iso­ lation of the Americans living in the Canal Zone from die rest of Panam a as having ignited this violence. “They are un­ aware of the feelings of the people around them and con­ set of tinue living within a rules laid down 50 years ago," he said. The only real solution, said Dr. Villegas, is for the United to b a s e States and Panam a their relations on a level that all of Latin America can view the US, not as a possible en­ emy or m aster, but as an economic equal. it’s “At present,” the historian said, “the image of tee Unit­ ed States is at its lowest point in the Latin American coun­ tries. However, ironic,’’ be added, “because the Latin American image in the US is at its highest peak." This American image h a s been tarnished because of the progress of communication and transportation, Dr. V i l l e g a s notes. “ Latin America present­ ly sees the US more clearly," he said. “The Chinese w a l l (See PANAMA, Page 3) News in Brief . . . compiled from AP reports COURT ASKED TO STOP REA. A Justice Department attorney asked a federal court Wednesday night to enjoin N otasulga Mayor Jam es M. Rea from blocking the admission of six Negro students to Macon County High School. John Doar filed a petition asking US Dist. Judge Frank M. Johnson Jr. to issue an order prohibiting the mayor, his employe*, agents, subordinates, and successors in office from “blocking, preventing or interferring" with the desegregation of the high school. HOFFA THOUGHTS REVEALED. Edward Grady Partin, a Teamsters official and onetime associate of onion President James R. Haifa, testified Wednesday that Boffs talked often of trying to fix his ISCH conspiracy trial jury . Partin testified over the objections of lawyers defending Hoffs and five others being tried Witt him for tempering with the jury. AMERICANS LEAVE CYPRUS. Two jetliners shuttled 454 Amer­ ican women and children Wednesday from tense Nicosia to the safety of Beirut, Lebanon. The exodus was the result of terror­ ism, which capped widespread demonstrations in opposition to a BritishAmerican plan for a peace-keeping Atlantic Alliance army on Cyprus. The death total consists of two Greek Cypriots and one Turkish Cypriot. CONNALLY PROGRESSING. Three doctors at Southwestern Medical School la Dallas examined Gov. John Commlly Wed­ nesday and said his recovery la progressing satisfactorily. They were the same physicians who attended Connelly when he was woonded by the ««ssssin who killed President Kennedy In Dallas Nov. 23. Tho doctors Mid the small cast pot sn Wed­ nesday coaid be removed in another six weeks. MRS. OSWALD STICKS TO STATEMENTS. Chief Justice Earl Warren saki Wednesday teat Mrs. Marina Oswald’s testimony for the commission investigating tee assassination of President Ken­ nedy concurs completely with her earlier accounts to police and federal agents. Her facts support the FBI’s conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald was the unaided slayer of Kennedy. Testimony is expected to continue through Thursday and possibly longer. A Writer's Delight M an y a m y s te r y w r ite r m u st h a v e sa liv a te d o v er th e s t o r y p o ssib ilitie s in th e r e c e n tly te r m in a te d J a c k B o n d s m u r d e r tr ia l. W ith th e fin e sse o f a fla m b o y a n t d e fe n se in a co u rt - r o o m d ra m a . P e r c y F o r e m a n sp un a v e r b a l ta p e s tr y d e p ic t­ in g a lo v in g f a th e r d r iv e n to m u rd er to p ro tec t th e " h o n o r ’ o f h is s te p -d a u g h te r , H e sq u eezed th e c o u r tr o o m an d th e p u b lic d ry o f s y m p a th y . H e titila te d th e H o u sto n p u b lic w ith ta le s o f te e n a g e d r in k in g o rg ies, ju n io r h ig h sc h o o l g a n g s, an d ju v e n ile p r o m isc u ity , for su ch s h o c k in g in c id e n ts a c t u a lly h a d an d m igh t still be ta k in g p la ce in o n e o f th e " b e tte r p a r ts o f to w n .” H e cin ch ed th e d e fe n se w ith a s e r ­ m on d e liv e r e d fro m an o ld -fa sh io n e d ch u rch p u lp it an d a sta n z a fro m S ir W a lte r S c o t t ’s ‘ L ad y o f th e L ak e. T h is e n te r ta in in g d ra m a lack ed n o th in g . A g o o d tim e w a s h ad b y all, an d th a t p oor J a ck B o n d s d o esn 't e v e n h a v e to g o to jail. co u r tr o o m clap p ed . V h i n th e v e r d ic t w a s retu rn ed , th e a u d ie n c e in th e “I t ’s all o v e r d a r lin g .” w h isp e r e d M rs. B o n d s "Happy en d in g to tr ia l,” read a H o u sto n C h r o n ic le Y et h ow can th e r e be a h ap p y en d in g w h e n a 1 5 -y e a r - in an E a r le oid b o y is d e a d 0 W h a t is p e r fe c tly e n jo y a b le S ta n lev G a r d n er m y s te r y sh o u ld lo o se so m e o f its z e s t w h e n a c te d ou t in a H a r ris C o u n ty d istr ic t co u rt. "I th in k w e m ig h t h a v e tr a c k o f tr y in g J a ck B o n d s fo r m u rd er and tried th e ju v e n ile s o f H a r r is C o u n ty ,” p r o se c u to r E r w in G. E r n st said q u ie tly in h is c lo s in g a r g u ­ lost cu t line. m en t. W h ile n o t c o n te s tin g th e v er d ict, w e p r o te st th e m a n . nor in w h ich t h e c a se w a s h an d led . A n o th e r trial, m ore e m o tio n a l an d m o r e s e n sa tio n a l, so o n w ill t a k e p lace in T e x a s. M elvin B elli, an a t to r n e y n a ­ t i o n a l s fa m o u s fo r h is h istr io n ic s , w ill d e fe n d J a c k R u b y fo r th e sh o o tin g o f th e a lle g e d a ss a s s in o f J o h n F. K e n n e d y . W e h o p e th a t th e c o u r t w ill r e m e m b e r w h o m it is Ir v in g in th e R u b y c a se . — K A Y E N O R T H C O T T Pools Rush I n . . . T h e L o y a lty O ath re q u ir in g s tu d e n ts to p led g e a lle g i­ a n c e to th e U n ite d S ta t e s is ju st o n e m o re p iec e o f p aper to be sig n ed d u r in g r e g istr a tio n . It h a s n o sig n ific a n c e . It h ad n o n e w h e n th e F ifty - fir st L e g isla tu r e p a ssed H o u se B ill 8 9 7 w h ic h fo r c e d s tu d e n ts to t e s t if y to th e ir lo y a lt y b e fo r e t h e y co u ld e n te r th e U n i­ v e r s ity . T h en , in 1949, th e U n iv e r s ity h ad a g e n u in e C o m ­ m u n ist. W en d ell A d d in g to n , an e c o n o m ic s stu d e n t, w illin g ly a d m itte d h e w a s a m e m b e r o f th e s ta te C o m m u n ist p a rty . A n d W en d ell p r o m p tly s i g n e d th e o a th w h e n h e w e n t th r o u g h r e g is tr a tio n . O n ly th e fo o lish h a d e x p e c te d th e o a th to b a r c o m ­ m u n ism fro m th e U n iv e r s ity , In ste a d o f r o a r in g lik e a lion an d sc a r in g all th e C o m m u n ists a w a y , th e o a th h ad sou n d ed th e m e e k b a a -b a a o f a la m b . N o w th o in a tte n tio n an d d isd ain s tu d e n ts g iv e to th e o a t h — it s ju s t th a t first w h ite p ap er y o u sign o n c e in sid e G r e g o r y G y m — m a k e s th e m en w h o put it in to e f f e c t m o re rid ic u lo u s. — C H A R M A Y N E M A R S H Reefer Seles Down F r o m th e H o u sto n P o st, a fte r th e sm o k in g rep ort: In c h e e k in g on an e x c lu s iv e g ro u p o f H o u sto n s m o k e r s I A . B. G. B ond o f th e p olice n a r c o tic s sq uad if m a r ih u a n a sa le s w er e d o w n . They h a v e u a * a sk ed fa lle n o ff s h a r p ly , he said . D o e s E t. B ond a ttr ib u te th e d eclin e to th e su rg e o n g e n e r a l’s r e p o r t? g e t if w e r a tc h th e m .” " N o , w e a ttr ib u te it to lo n g p riso n s e n te n c e s th e y a ' n i s g a c r o s s ■' r e b e llio n a g ain *! < 'n'ie!', is probably the short cu: bidden grass ma', he a B u . the un pat cd road to a cla t cross-campus. —-Texan P hoto— Drew,, y 7 he grass suffers until someone is employed to lay d o u n another new student-made sideualk jim..'ar to the one near the Student Union. Elevators, Ramps Open Detours For Disabled Student on Campus A dose of aspirin ha*? been giv­ en to soothe the latest head . ches of the disabled students on the University cam pus. from This headache was the new Academic Center and U ndergrad­ uate Library. Ramps were con­ veniently constructed tho street level up to the firs? floor of the Academic Center, hut once the disabled students had gotten inside, they wore at a stalem ate. Na Basem ent Trips the building inside are too stoop for those students to cope with and elevators also w ere restricted. Elevators used to carry students to every floor ex­ cept one—the b asem en t Staircases is T h e basem ent entrance very important because of the huge lecture hail on that level. C h a r l e s Eskridge, graduate journalism student, thought he had discovered an e n t r a n t into the basement auditorium of the Academic ( enter, w Ii o n he th** Texas ram p on found a Union side of \caulomic the Center. He soon found out that steps lead down into the audi­ torium proper. rian. stated that the two eleva­ tors in the Academic Center pre­ sented an unique problem to the library. Elevators Ineffective H ic elevator which is designed for passenger use goes both to the first and fourth floors. The base­ ment opening had to rem ain lock­ ed to prevent someone from c a r ­ rying off the valuable paintings and docum ents contained on the fourth floor. Therefore, disabled students could not use this eleva­ tor effectively. One wheel chair student found in ob­ that the time involved taining a key, unlocking the doors, and traveling around the long corridor into the auditor­ ium took about 15 minutes. The other elevator is a freight elevator which opens right by the basem ent auditorium door. How­ ever. Folm er would not let this elevator bn used by students, be­ cause one boy nearly lost a hand in the door when it was first in­ stalled. On this particular elevator, the doors op' n from top to bottom rath er than from side to side. At an earlier date. F red F l- m er. associate University libra­ Folm er said that one elevator problem in the Academic Center Texan Survey Reveals High Greek Readership By DOTTIE LILLARD Texan Editorial Assistant Texan editorial pages are read m ore widely by m e m b e r s of Greek fraternal groups, according to a cam pus readership study m ade in November. The poll was prepared by stu ­ dents doing in m ass research m edia under the supervision of Dr. William Hazard, associate professor of journalism . Greeks Read More? Linkage between sorority o r fraternity m em bership and high­ e r readership was supported in random interview s conducted by J312L students. frequently Students from small to med­ ium hometowns also read edi­ torials more than those from (arg* towns. U te study recorded that independ­ ents from high occupation fami­ lies tended to show more in­ terest in editorials. Yet, des­ pite the parent's occupation, the G reeks always beld h i g h e r readership percentages. This definitely seem s to m ake the dominant G reek affiliation factor, Dr. H azard said. Election Proof The trend m ight be explained by seemingly g reater discussion of cam pus events among Greeks than among independents. G reek participation in cam pus elections reflects this. With increased d is­ cussion, students in sororities or fraternities are forced to keep abreast of editorial page m a ter­ ial. Although the scheduled poll fell on the weekend of the as­ s i ssi na Lion of President John F. Kennedy, the results are fairly accurate in most cases, Dr. Hazard said. Tile mechanics of the poll in­ twentieth cluded calling every student in the directory. How­ ever, due to the exodus from c a m ­ pus on that weekend, the num­ ber polled totaled 338. At news of tile assassination, an extra section was added to the questionnaire to which media the public turned. to see Talk Spreads News Seventy-five per cent of the students polled said they learned of the event by word-of-mouth. A in 1945 si im Jar national report found that S3 per cent of the pub­ lic heard of Franklin D. Roose­ velt's death in the same manner. Face-to-face conversation is al­ ways a vital source, said Donald Ward, journalism student, in his study of the assassination. After th** first nrw s of the Firing Line Kind Word for Texan To the Editor: Well. The Daily Texan is awakening. issue, no less the Feb. 4 In than four articles on various cam pus intram ural activities ap ­ peared. As a senior, a m em ber of Theta Xi fraternity, a form er Intram ural M anager, and an cx- Intram ural Coordinator for the Texan, I am gratified. and UT intram ural* last year had 7.000 i n d i v i d u a l participants (m ore than 51 per cent of the m ale enrollm ent) encom ­ passed 131 different organiza­ tions. For the most p art these groups, even though they rep re­ sent a m ajor cam pus activity, get absolutely no publicity. The Daily Texan should be the m eans of giving these individuals recog­ nition. Through experience while work­ ing on I am the Texan staff. aw are that there a re space lim ita­ tions on the sports page; but I am aw are also that the sports editor can, if he wants to, fight for enough space to give in tra­ mural* its due recognition. Even with space limitations, sports columns and non-interest­ ing stories could be cut enough to allow for in tram ural results and stories. It only takes desire to serve the students, organiza­ tions, axal work by the sports staff. At any rate, I hope that the Feb. 4 issue is exem plary of a new Daily Texan policy aim ed toward recognition of an excel­ lent intram ural program . Thanks for your increased efforts, but don’t let it stop here. Curtis E, Dobbs 2419 San Gabriel event, radio was the source sought by 95 per cent of the stu­ dents. L e s s radio-orientation was seen among the males who turned to the television ta larg­ er numbers than females. The most startling data indi­ cated that television instead of the newspaper was the second source of information. Forty-one per cent chose television as the follow-up method for information. The study was unable to deter­ m ine if this second choice rep­ resented a first preference once the emotional shock was over or not. Texan Ranks Low Running behind television pre­ ference w as the newspaper. On cam pus, the Austin American out­ stripped The Daily Texan in poll­ ed results. Eighteen per cent read the A m erican in contrast to the five per cent preference for the Texan. However, the Texan was published Saturday morning fol­ lowing the Friday afternoon edi­ tion of the American. Radio drew last place in the medias for secondary sources and dropped markedly aa a news source. Another study lumped the Tex­ an readers into categories. Affili­ ations. background, personality, status and income were weighed as qualities of the reader. Is Reader Typical? The typical Texan reader, ac­ cording to the study, is a junior, male, and is from a m oderate occupation fam ­ ily and a hometown greater than 100.000. independent He Other independent s t u d i e s show t h e typical Panorama reader as a junior. This differs from idea t h e hypothesised that seniors and graduate stu­ dents from th** largest reader­ ship for the monthly supple­ ment. Other studies wvre inconclusive due to the effect of the weekend on Panoram a interest. Another more complete study is scheduled in the spring sem es­ ter to m easure readership in all areas of the Texan. Most Happy ’Feller California GOP Race To Test ’64 Nominees By MORRIE LANDSBERG SACRAMENTO, Calif. - r - On a cold, foggy night last week. a cam paign took shape, and the complexion of California's Repub­ lican presidential prim ary began to change. Several the hills across thousand people lined up on a road leading to an a l­ ready jam packed country club the Golden in G ate from San Francisco. They were waiting their turn to get in and greet Gov. and Mrs. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York. tu capture Rocky Starts Race It was the first day of Rocke­ feller s drive the state in his biggest single con­ test with Sen. B arry C oldw ater of Arizona. The New Yorker beamed b e t w e e n handshakes when told it was the greatest po­ litical turnout in Marin County history. E stim ates ranged from 5,000 to 10.000. stood out The reception. In aa area that always supported Richard M. Nixon warmly, in sharp contrast to the cool re­ sponse to Rockefeller's visits before he became s formal candidate for the (KIP presi­ dential nomination. Together with the solid c a m ­ paign team put loge iller by the governor's m anagers, it served notice that Coldwater faces p er­ haps his most critical precon­ vention fight of all in a state once rated his te rritory. Primary In June the important California is still a Tile prim ary long way off—June 2—and hustling f o r votes h a s barely begun. Even so. issues a re clear enough, the lines tightly draw n, I* some say crucial — to both candidates. Its balloting is the last in the nation before t h e Republicans gather in San Francisco on July- 13 to select their ticket. And 86 convention votes will be at stake in the wirmer-take-all prim ary— Hie the p ri­ m aries. largest of any of Back Or Forward? Rockefeller h a s done every­ thing he can to m ake it a clea r­ cut contest. He says it s a choice between his for­ ward-looking Republican princi­ ples" and the conservative cause espoused by his opponent. "progressive, State GOP factions are lining accordingly. Rockefeller up pointed U ap by bringing in Sen. Thomas H. Rachel, known as a party liberal and a good vote-getier, to captain U s state campaign and the prospective convention delegation. The rival Coldwater forces led by Kuchens onetime colleague. William F. the booming is are Senate Knowland, and voice of the former senator full of confidence. Kuchel, who fought off efforts by COP conservatives to defeat him in 1962, heads a com mittee ti sat includes supporters of form cr Gov. E arl Warren, now- the chief justice, as well as Nixon. F orm er Gov. Goodwin J. Knight and form er San Francisco May-or George Christopher are m em bers. Coldw ater has expressed m ini­ mum concern over Die fact that Kuchel has joined with Rocke­ feller. Yes, b e s a strong vote- getter, Coldwater s a i d , b u t large segment oI "there our party supports him solidly." is no that Kuchel app alled the combined total of two party foes the 1962 prim ary by 900.000 vote*. He defeated the Democratic candi­ date in November 700,000. in Rockefeller spent three days In California last week, mainly to get acquainted with and fire up his cam paign troupe. He drew good crowds, met private]v with groups of fi­ nanciers, and went about the handshaking routine with smiling fervor. top-ranking “The momentum is just sta rt­ ing, ' he told newsmen, H ie presidential primary' con­ test is a novelty for the sta te 's Republicans. C oldw ater, clearly however, was the early front-runner, A "D raft C o ld w a te r' movement was launched nearly a year ago and he was organized here far in advance of Rockefeller. He was urged to run by the conservative United Republicans of Cal dom .a. which lists 5,000 members. JFK Death Tile Arizona senator m ay have the in popularity since John F. there s no doubt to com m and slipped death of Kennedy, but that he continues strong support. . President Du recently, the other hand. Knight commented two or Ihroe months ago nobody gave Rockefeller a chance in CaJJ- forma. The outlook, he said, has changed completely. the Know land predicted b e f o r e presi­ entered Coldwater dential ra te that he would sweep the Republican prim ary by up­ w ards of 500.000 votes, He says he hasn’t changed his assess­ ment. Coldwater ha&n t really begun to cam paign in California. H e* scheduled for speaking engage­ in San Francisco and ments Sacram ento on Lincoln’s birth­ day, Feb. 12, but no extended tour is planned until M arch 13 through 21. Winner Take All The winner of the primary will get ail of California's con­ vention votes. Delegates, running as a slate, sign an affidavit of preference and they're morally bound to support their candidate until he releases them. In recent times, Republicans have avoided a primary fight by fielding a single slate pledged to a favorite son or to a COP In­ cumbent. Warren figured in both contests since 1932, defeating an Alf M. Landon group in 1936 and a right-wing faction in 1952. State Republican leaders wel­ comed the Gokiwater-Rockefeller contest. But they made no at- tempt to hide their concern over what it might do to a party al­ ready beset with factional squab­ bling. and U ndergraduate L ibrary had been solved. Time Cut The disabled student m ay go to m ain desk in the library and an attendant will take him to the basem ent floor. In this m anner the tim e form erly used to getting around the corridors and in ob­ taining keys for the elevators will be lessoned greatly I nfortunately, t h e disabled s t u d e n t s have ntmny more transportation problems on the cam pus than just those present­ ed by the new Academic ( en­ ter. There are very’ few* ways for the disabled s t u d e n t s (wheel chair) to get from the mall to the area south of G arrison Hall or the West Mail Office Building. In order to avoid the steps aw ait­ ing them all along Uirse points, the students m ust go clear up to Guadalupe Street and around by the A rchitecture Building. Routes Detour The sam e problem pops up con­ the steps by cerning mounting the Geology Building. They m ust either go around by Waggoner Hall or up by the Academic Cen­ te r to get up on the m all, or around it. Crossing the campus Is just one of the disabled students’ headaches. They run into much difficulty in getting in and out of almost a1! of th'* buildings on the campus that h a\e steps leading in or out of them. Much of their tim e and energy in finding keys and Is wasted tiding the elevators, or chancing further injury by attem pting to ascend or descend s l i p p e r y ram ps. Very few of the buildings on cam pus arc designed to accom ­ m odate the disabled s t u d e n t . Since the cam pus is on a hill, travel is tireso m e for even the healthiest of students. The size of the cam pus presents another problem. Since the Academic C e n t e r , newest of buildings on the Forty Acres, has taken steps to aid the disabled students, other buildings m ight take heed and do som e­ thing to m ake it easier for these the students cam pus, and also inside the va­ rious buildings. to get around on Job Opportunities the from R epresentatives follow* tog schools and colleges w ill inter­ view prospective teachers in our o f­ follow ing dt.u* fices on La the l a Puente, California Puente P S Fe b , 12 I n d i a n a S t a t e Col! ego. Terre Haute, Indiana Feb. J3. Tuc­ son P S Tucson Arisons —Feb. 12 and 13 Central Missouri State Cob h g e. Warrensburg. Missouri * e b 14, Appointm ents should be made in Sutton Hall 209. J o h n O. B o d g e r * . D i r e c t o r T eacher P lacem en t Service On Monday. Feb. IO. a represen­ tative of General American Life In­ surance Company will be on campus to interview senior m ale students for part-time student repi«-sentative posi­ tions Appointments may be made Sn VV MOK 205. J o h n H . D o d so n S t u d e n t F i n a n c i a l A id s P l N M I S NOBODY Ut3£ \ ME EVERYBODY) HATES M F T / UELL, CHARLIE BROUN, IF THE (JHOtE UORlD 16 EVER AeAlNST VOL! IV UKE TO HAVE VOO KHOU HOU IU FEEL... y t UJiLL VOO BE MV FRIEND? HO, I LL BE AGAINST HOD, IOO! x ------------------ T h e Da il y T e x a n 'First Co lie ge D a ily in the S o u th ' Optra us expressed tv The Texan are those o f the Editors or O' the writer of the article and not necessarily those of the V niters tty administration. A ll editorials are written by the editor unless otherutse designated, Th** Da: v Texan, a st lent new .paper of The University of Texas, Is publisher! ShI '.- except Monday and Saturday and holiday periods Septem­ ber through May and monthly in August bv Texas Student Publications Inc Drawer la University Station, Austin. Texas 78712 Second-class postage paid at Austin. Texas __________ _ Mauled in Al i n ........... Mailed out of t vn Delivered in Austin (three months minimum! ................ .......................... month J5c month 75c month St BM R1PTION HA THS News •• ■•ntnhut ->n* will be accepted bv telephone (CR I-52441 or at the editorial of'. • J B I CS or at the news laboratory, J B 102. Inquiries eon- cerning dm,very should be made In J B 107 and advertising. J B 111 (GR 1-3227) ____________________________ _____________________________ AbSOCIATFO PH I.SS WIRK SERVICE The Associated Press is exclusively entithd to the us" for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this news­ paper. find local Items of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of publication of all other matter herein also r e s e r v e d ________ PERMANENT STAFF EDITOR .............................................................................. DAVE MCNEELY MANAGING EDITOR ....................................................... RICH ARD COLE ASSISTANT MANAGING E D IT O R ..................... CHARMAINE MARSH NEWS EDITOR ................................................................... RODNEY DAVIS SPORTS EDITOR .......................................................... RICHARD BOLDT FEATURE E D IT O R ........................................................ JANE PAGANINI AMUSEMENTS EDITOR ..................................................... PAT SHARPE CHIEF AMUSEMENTS CRITIC ........................... HAYDEN FREEMAN EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR ................................. KAYE NORTHCOTT PANORAMA ED IT O R ......................................JOYCE JANE WEEDMAN By HAIRY RANGER Well, gang, H airy’* trial, just like Jack Ruby's, comes up Tues­ day. The o n l y difference Is, where Jack Ruby has to convince the jury that he was loco when he shot Oswald fit is reasonably certain that he did actually s h o r t him — there are several reliable w itnesses), Hairy faces the much m ore formidable task of trying to convince the Texas Student P ub­ lications Board of Directors that sexy girlie pictures in the Ranger will not corrupt the morals of 20,000 University undergrads and send in Nothing- their m others ville into catatonic shock. thinks As ridiculous as this m ay seem. Hairy the Ranger that Girls of the Month are individual people, w th different s e t s of characteristics, and as w i d e a section of University femininity as possible should be presented: from the big to the jietite, from the fair to the raven-haired, and from the shy to the—yes, friends —sexy. On the other hand, the Ran­ ger A d v i s o r J Board (their friends call them "Censors” ) thinks that the magazine should present a steady diet of spark­ ling, wholesome, bubbly maid­ ens from a sociological envi­ ronment w h e r e , supposedly "sex" is a condition something like psoriasis. Since H airy failed to receive any letter-? from the "ira te Lad­ ies from Lubbock” whom he m en­ tioned in his column last week, he will have to assum e that nobody in Lubbock pays a hell of a lot of attention to the products of TSP, and he w ill proceed with the a r ­ is a gument magazine for U niversity of Texas students, and not for their m oth­ ers. the Ranger that This very sam e publications board, for an encore, will be con­ sidering a proposal for approving the appointment of the new edi­ tor, and at tho sam e tim e DOCK­ ING HER A MONTH’S SALARY! Now Hairy knows that a lot of J ou people out there don’t care a lot for Hairy, nor humor in general, hut this is a matter concerning MONEY! A whole m onth's salary of a hundred sm ackers (which averages out to something about like 16Gc an hour) they want to skip, "to Im* fair to the outgoing editor," among ether things. GREAT S H A D E S OF THE TWEED RING! You realize how much beer that hundred dollars might buy? Needless to say. the great, sweaty, hairy spirit will be hovering menacingly over Tues­ day's board meeting, w aitin’ fcr one of them dudes to go for his red pencil. STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE NIGHT EDITOR .................................................................. LEON GRAHAM DAY EDITOR .......................................................................... HANK EZELL DESK EDITOR ................................................................. LEE MCFADDEN CDPY DESK C H IE F ......................................................SUE JANKOVSKY Night Reporters ....................................... Rose Saunders, George Beach, ........................... Night Sports E d ito r Night Amusements Editor ........................................................... Ann Bolton Night Wire Editor ............................................................ Frank Denton Editorial Assistant ................................................................... Dottle Lillard Thursday, February 6, 1964 THE D A ILY T EXA N Page 2 Vivian Silverstein Glenda Hunt Official Notices from N otices |7nlver*Uy Li­ the brary or any of JU) branch*** are official U niversity com m unications requiring im mediate attention S tu ­ dents who fail to respond to libra rn notices will be referred to the Of­ fice cit the Dcan of Student Life A. .Hoffit Librarian Sigma Xi Plans Chemistry Talk Rosoarch Society To Hoar Cromwell Dr. Norman Crom w ell, profes- *o r of ch em istry at the University of N ebrask a, will speak at the U niversity F rid a y a s a national le ctu re r of Sigm a X I. graduate scie n tific re se a rch society. His talk is scheduled a t 8 p.m. in the A cadem ic C enter Auditor­ ium. “ C arcinogens, C arcinogenes­ is, and C arcin o lytic A gen ts" will be the topic. A m em b er of the N ebraska fa c ­ ulty sin ce 1939. D r. Crom well has been a visiting professor a t the j U niversity of C alifornia m edical cen te r in San F ra n c isco . He held a Fu lbrig ht re se a rch scholarship at U niversity College in L o n d o n ' in 1950-51 and was a John Simon I Guggenheim M em orial Fellow a t! the C alifornia nology in 1958. Institute of Tech B efo re entering the teaching pro­ fession. Dr. Crom well worked a s a c h e m i c a l engineer and re ­ sea rch chem ist for industrial firm s in Indiana and C alifornia. C urrent­ is a consultant to sev eral ly he groups. Including t h e A m erican C a n cer S o c i e t y and US Public H ealth Serv ice. D r. Crom well earned a bach e­ lo r's degree from Rose Polytechnic Institute and a doctorate from the U niversity of M innesota. He bas been N ebrask a chairm an of the A m erican Chem ical Society and N ebraska president of the A m erican A ssociation of U niver­ sity P ro fesso rs. He belongs to nu­ m erous other scie n tific and pro­ fession al groups. W H A T IS S O R A R E as an " I Love Y o u " tay« " I Love Y o u " in several different lan­ book lass than an inch in height! Sophom ore guages. This book is one o f a collection o f Yolan da C ro sb y adm ires the tiny charm which miniatures in the Rare Books Library. —Texan Photo— Echola Foundation Gives $20,000 For Five UIL Scholarships The Moody Foundation of G a l­ W inners of each of the schol­ veston has granted $20,000 to pro­ vide five scholarships for com p eti­ tors in the U niversity Interschol­ astic League sta te m eet. arships will re ce iv e SI OOO for four y ea rs. They a re good a t any uni­ v ersity in T exas. “ The Moody Foundation req u est­ ed that their scholarships go to Rodney Kidd, direr tor of the high achoo! students who want to U IL , announced the aw ards Wed­ go into the insurance field ,” Kidd nesday. Adder! to an e a rlie r Welch said. said. “ The Foundation was so well cd S ta tes “ there is m ore pleased with the five we selected j tion of the so cial life with por their scholarships that they doubled the num ber this y e a r .” Uniformed Girls year dent life .” la st j “ In G u a te m a la ,” o n e student Harry's Place Takes Scholars From BEB Foreign Relations Panel To Study Panama Crisis A panel discussion on relations betw een P anam a and the United S ta te s will be held at 7 ;30 p m Sunday in the Canterbury lo u n g e of G regg House. D r. D. D. Brand, professor of geography, and **v- students will erat participate. Panam an ian Foundation grant, a total of 15 $4,- In 1983 the Moody Founda­ 000 scholarships a re av ailab le to tion made a sim ilar grant of high school seniors who en ter the $28,608 to the T exas Interschol­ state m eet in Austin next M ay. astic le a g u e Foundation, the Kilt met with the direr tors organization which adm inisters of both foundations during Ja n ­ the scholarships. uary to acquire the grants. “ They “ The Welch foundation sch o la r­ a re the f i n e s t scholarships awarded in T e x a s ," be saki. ship* will be aw arded to students planning to study c h e m istry ,” Kidd A ttendance a t the study room s in the E asin ess and E conom ics Building has dropped sin ce the Edwin year. sam e period student P ric e , assistan t dean of life, attributes in­ cre a se d use of the U ndergraduate the decline to last Open Thursday, Friday, and Monday Until 9! Save Now on Mens 15.98 D ress Shoes with Hand-Sewn Fronts... Comfortable Heel-to- Foe Cushioned Insoles Guatemalan Students 5tience.Cenfer Begins Tuesday Visit UT on Exchange Ten-Week Program Will Use UT Faculty Austin w as the first stop for a group of IO G u atem alan students of econom ics who a r e spending 31 days in the United S ta tes. T he stu­ dents a re here by invitation from the Consulate E x ch a n g e P ro gram of the US D epartm ent of S ta te. The students a re from th ree dif­ ferent u n iv ersities: the U niversity of San Carlos, the U niversity of I Quezaltenango, and Catholic Uni- ! v ersify. Taken on Tour On arriving in Austin Sunday, the students w ere m et bv th eir hosts, ; five A m erican fa m ilies, and taken on a tour of Austin and the Uni- ! versify. In observing differences be­ tween student life in the United in G u atem ala, one States and student said, “ The em phasis here is on study rath er than work. In the em phasis is on G uatem ala both. Most have to w ork ." Another said, “ H ere, m ost are they pay to school. T h e re , sent their own w a y ." “ The North A m erican seem s to full-tim e stud en t,” another be a com m ented. Also noted was that in the Unit- integra- the stu ­ said, “ the only organization is in student groups and sp o rts.” On U niversity coeds, the G uate­ m alans said, “ They a re b e a u tifu l!” One student said th at here, though, “ the girls get uniform ed. In Guate- { m ala there is m ore individualism 1 in d re ss .” Recent troubles in P a n a m a , the students believe, a re a result of the colonial attitudes displayed by residents of the Canal Zone. “ Most of the countries now want to be sovereign,” one said. He added that they also want a limi­ tation of the territorial rights of m ajor powers. A fter the students leave Austin at l l a m. T hursday, they will visit Boston, New Y ork, E a ste rn P en n­ sylvan ia. W ashington, D .C ., and Regents... (Continued from P ag e One) valid. If this re fe rs to the property becom ing p art of the P erm an en t it could not be U niversity Fund, for the axed loan. the bonds to b a ck loan. When D ie bonds a re revenue producing bonds. R evenue from the stru ctu re built by the bonds would pay for the p ro je ct m a ­ the terializes, the U niversity m a y build the 200-unit com plex on a 40 year, 2.75 per cen t loan. U nits will rent from $68 to $80. that ju dicial decision the property’s revenue should go into a perm anent trust fund, then the U niversity ad m inistration may issue valid revenue bonds to repay : a federal building loan for m arried ' student hoaxing. If the is j M iam i. T hey will see H arvard, M IT . the United N ations building, the New Y o rk Stock E x ch a n g e , and In ter-A m erica Develop­ m ent B ank. the They will spend five days at L a ­ fay ette U niversity in P en nsylvan ia, w-here they w ill attend a sem in a r in the cultural and econom ic a s ­ pects of life in the United S ta tes. Panama... (Continued from P ag e One) countries has the sep aratin g been broken down.” He e x ­ plained. “ In open country, like T e x a s, if your neighbor lives 30 m iles aw ay, you don't ca re what he does. But. if you live in an apartm ent hoase w here the walls a re thin, you h e a r your neighbor and sta rt paying attention. So is Latin A m erica in form ing their new attitudes toward this country.” had “ R elations improved som ew hat under the Kennedy A dm in istration,” Dr. Villegas said , “ b ecau se L a tin A m erica liked P resid en t Kennedy very m uch. “ E v e n though he was rich. he was not a ttracted to any p a rticu la r branch of indus­ try , but to the whole national in terest. He had an intellec­ tual tem p er and had the sen­ to ap p reciate d iffer­ sitiv ity ent opinions.” in “ B u t,” D r. V illegas said is conclusion, “ L atin A m erica not Jo h n ­ ignoring P resid en t son 's po litical exp erien ce and ability on a national le v e l.” When A ustin's N atural S cien ce Center begins its spring term T u es­ day. m any U niversity students and faculty m em bers will p articipate. The 10-week program will in­ in nature studies, clude c la s se s geology, astronom y, and arch e­ ology. C lasses will be open to Aus­ tin children enrolled in the first through twelfth grades. Those affiliated with the U niver­ sity who a re taking part the program a re Dr. William S. Stone. I professor of zoology, a n d D r. David B u tts, a ssista n t professor of cu rriculum and instruction. in the program as U ndergraduate students involved in te a ch e rs and group lead ers a re R o g er Lee Bos ton, H erbert D u r a n d . David H aynes, and W illiam C raig. The U niversity m eteorological, a rch eo log ical, geological, and ape- Urological so cieties coop erate with the cen te r on field trips. U niversity f a c u l t y m em b ers serve as sp ecial sp eakers. Marty Purcell Hew Spooks President Newly elected o fficers of Spooks, women’s s erv ice organization, a re M arty P u rcell, presid en t; Teddy G riffith, vice-p resid en t; J ill H ar­ ris s e rv ic e ; M arg a ret Koy, s p ir it; M arg aret Hopkins, secretary-. Sue Wagnon, recording se c re ta ry . Also, Lynn R eed er, tre a s u re r; M ary E sth e r G arn er, foreign stu ­ d en ts; Diane R osenberg, c o n ta ct; Ja n e Leonard, ro y a l s p irit; Susan Turpi soh, h isto ria n ; P a tti Clem ­ ents, song lead er. L ib rary and A cad em ic C enter. Groups, how ever, cannot use the U ndergraduate L ibrary, and the BF.B study room s a re open to both individuals and groups. the room s w ere Under the supervision of Jim Pyle, opened Monday night and will be open ! from 7 to IO p.m . Monday through in Thursday. P yle ca n be found the study room s on f i r s t floor and will m ake arran gem en ts for groups o r c la s se s to study. the In 1959. the first study room s were opened in the E nglish Build ­ ing and w ere moved to B E B when it was finished. O rganizations have continually sought place** to study as groups, said P rice . “ This the only building on cam pus where groups can study to g e th e r." is P yle will keep tallies on using the num ber of students the rooms to determ ine if there is still a need for them . At present, Priest said, there a re still m any students axing room s. DL C.ouner the newest in sound record­ ing creation see it NOW only 8995 p us your d iv ic e -d I C o m e In T o d a y for . A C o m p l e t e Demonstration I ninth w Record Shop— Street Floor J Final Reductions Va toV3 off • Traditional Button Down Sport Shirts * Dress & Casual Slacks * Regular C o lla r Shirts * Shoes Va to V2 off • Suits • Sport C o a ts * Sweaters * Jackets Dress Shirts All W e a t h e r C o a t s UWVWSTT Ao r m en (SPECIAL SELECTIONS) A!! Sales Net ThuncUy, Ftbruary 641564 ,THE DAILY TEXAN Save 3.01 First Tim e oh Sale Dashing low seam styling in soft and supple leather uppers with lock stitched hand sewn fronts, flexible oak bend leather soles. Cushioned insoles w ith built-up arch put extra com fort in every step. B l a c k or Charcoal Brown, sizes 7 to 12. Hand-sewn fronts shape to your feet glove-like fit. L ik e m o st o f us, y o u p ro b a b ly feel pressured a t tim es w ith th e dem ands m ade on you for original th in k in g, — fo r fresh ideas th a t will lift y o u r work: a b o v e th e com m onp lace. T hro u gh the stu d y of this b o o k , S cien ce and H e a lth with K e y to th e S crip tu re s b y M ary B a k e r E d d y , we are lea rn ­ ing how to tu rn to God for t h * in tellig en t ideas we need . Y o u can do th is, to o . W e in v ite y o u to com e to our m eetings and to hear how we are w orking o u t our problem s throu gh a p p ly in g th e tru th s of Christian S cie n c e . CHRI STI AN S CI ENCE ORGANIZATION UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS Z U ! M n M m H m m : 7 porn. Tfcantfaya Shop at Sears and Save S a tisfa ctio n G u aran teed s c Y o u r M oney B ack 41st and Interregional Dial GL 2-9211 Plenty of FREE Parking Seism* * «md Health it mmdUHa at att C h risten Sr tenet Reading Rooms and at Hump teilegt b o c k e r e t , Paperwork Edition t i . i i . distinctive C harge A ccounts fo r F a c u lty , Students and S ta ff Invited Gridders Issue Air Challenge S e n i o rs of the 1963 n a ti o n a l r h a m - d on R o b e r ts , a n d C h a r le s T a l b e r t . p i o n s h ip L o n g h o r n football t e a m C oach D a r r e l l R o y a l p l a n s to h a v e c h a l l e n g e d the S p in n e r b a s ­ c o a c h the se n io r t e a m . k e tb a l l t e a m of r a d i o s t a t i o n K N O W to a ba.-'kethal! g a m e . J e r r y Lee, U n i v e r s i ty .sweet­ h e a r t . will th ro w our t h e s t a r t i n g S p i n n e r t e a m m e rn h e r H e r b ba ll. H u m p h r i e s said t h e c h a l l e n g e c a m e a b o u t w h e n " s o m e of th e disc jock- ev e sh o t off ti r , r rr. ut bs on th e a i r a b o u t how good they are. S e t fur L e a p lb s ' Tine m a t c h is set fo r 7 :30 p.m . F e b . 29 a n d Will be p la y e d rn ( I r e g o r y G> rn. P r o c e e d s will go to c e r e b r a i palsy. A dm ission will be IO c e n t s fo r s t u d e n t s a n d c h ild re n a n d SI for a d u lts T o m m y W ade h u r l e d the c h a l ­ the arr l e n g e a t th e S p in n e r s on W e d n e s d a y . O t h e r s e n i o r ’H o rn s p l a n n i n g to p l a y a r e Soh'? A p p le ­ ton, D a v i d M c W illia m s . T o m m y F o r d , C a r e m e B ra y. K e n n e t h H a lm . J i m B e s s c l m a n , T ony C r o s ­ by . J i m F e r g u s o n . Olin U n d e rw o o d . B o b b v G a m b k n . Ben House. G o r ­ Two U n i v e r s i t y s t u d e n ts . J a y H a ks a n d J o h n E. B a r g e r , a r e m e m b e r s of the S p i n n e r t e a m . S e v ­ e r ! o t h e r S p i n n e r s w h o a r e g r a d ­ u a t e of th e U n i v e r s i t y a r e M ike H udso n. D ick L a n e . J i m H o rn e . Bill Noble, a n d R o n R o g e rs . ( tth or S p i n n e r s a r e H e r b H u m p h ­ r ie s B r a d M e s s e r , H a r r y S m ith , anti Jo h n A m y . A ppleton C h a l l e n g e d An a d d it i o n a l jock e y. H o m e p ro p o se d c h a l l e n g e w a s m a d e to S c o tt A pp le ton , All-Amer- i e a l i n e m a n , b y J i m H o rn e . KNOW d i s c a h a n d w r e s t l in g m a t c h a t h a lf t i m e w ith A ppleto n. H o r n e is d e s e ri b e d b y a s b e in g t e a m m a t e s “ c o n s i d e r e d o u r m o s t t y p ic a l a t h ­ l e t e . ’’ fellow W o m e n 's Badminton B a d m i n t o n d o u b le s w i n n e r s in W o m e n s I n t r a m u r a l c o m p e t it i o n a r e J a n e P r u e t t a n d Ann H e n ­ d r i c k , i n d e p e n d e n ts , f ir s t p l a c e : S h e r} ! Y e a r v a n d S h e rly B e h n e . a n d i n d e p e n d e n t s , s e c o n d p l a c e ; N a n c y B o rn a n d Ann M cM illan, AXID, a n d D o r i s J a n e k a n d T h e r e s a C o m is k e y , Co-op, tied f o r th ird place. C on sola tion w i n n e r s in b a d ­ m in t o n a r e C a n d y B e a n l a n d a n d L o u is e Conically, KAT, first p l a c e ; B e v e r l y Still a n d B e th B u t te ry , G P B , s e c o n d ; a n d J a n e t Scott a n d C a r o l S m i t h , G P B , a n d B e ts y B r o w n a n d K a y T y le r , KKG, tied f o r th ird p lac e. T a b l e ten n is s in g le s w i n n e r s a r e S h a r o n Voigt, A D P ; f i r s t ; E v a J o h n s o n , I n d e p e n d e n t , s e c o n d ; a n d A nn A k r id g e , K K G , a n d E v a d e H a w e s , K K G , tied for th ird . H A I R C U T S $1i5 J J f ’s $1i5 BA RBER S H O P 6 0 7 I U O P E N 'TIL 6 P.M. M O N D A Y T H R U S A T U R D A Y Just off Guadalupe Plenty of Frat Parking PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE F ib erg la ss R ein forced H o l l i n s i i m . a m : is T h s A u s t i n in g t e e m o st r e m a r k a b le lu g g a g e v a lu e rn . a special fe a t u re at a n u n d e r s t a n d ­ low price. U s e our c o n v e n i e n t la y -a w a y . Norway Sweeps SpeedSkating Russia Still Going, US Still Blowing IN N SB R U C K , A u stria — ( A P ) - N o r w a y ’s tir e le ss K n u t J oh an n esen 1 a n d a pair of youn g te a m m a te s 1 further rocked the S o v ie t U n ion ’s sp eed sk a tin g dynasty w ith a 1-2-3 and sw e e p in th e a g in g Sixten J e r n b e r g of Sw eden ■ proved h i m s e l f k in g of the lo n g ­ d i s t a n c e s k i e r s W e d n e s d a y in the ninth W inter O l y m p ic G a m e s . 5,000 m e te r s T h e R u s s i a n s c o n ti n u e d to r a k e in the m e d a l s , h o w e v e r . C la u d ia B o y a r s k i k h . a 23-year-old sc h o o l ­ t e a c h e r . won h e r se c o n d gold a n d a m a t e , A le v tin a K o c h in a , g r a b b e d t h e w o m e n ' s 5,000- t h e b r o n z e m e t e r c r o s s - c o u n t r y sk i r a c e . T his b o o ste d a s t a g g e r i n g 21, e ig h t of th e m gold, in 24 e vents. th e S o v i e t ’s total to in The pow erful R u ssian hockey team also won its fifth straight g a m e , sm oth erin g G erm an y 10-0 and m o \e d c lo ser to its c lim a tic b attle Satu rd ay w ith C anada, also unlw aten in fiv e g a m e s after thum ping F inland 6-2. R ussia is h e a v ily favored . its Tile U n ited S t a t e s to d i s a p p o in t t e a m c o n ti n ­ followers, ue d to C z e c h o slo v a k ia . T he losing 7-1 a g a i n s t fourth s e t b a c k w a s o n ly o n e v i c t o r y fo r tile A m e r i ­ c a n s w ho d r o p p e d h a c k into a fifth- p l a c e tie with F in l a n d . the at t h e A l a r m sw ept t o b o g g an and bo b sle d a r e a Ig ls, w h e r e an A m e r i c a n sled flew off th e t r a c k in finals a n d c r a c k in g , m e l t in g ice p ro v o k e d h e a t e d p r o t e s t s f r o m th e b o b s l e d ­ d e rs. t h e t w o -m a n t o b o g g a n A C a n a d i a n c r e w . pilo ted by Vic­ t o r E m e r y , f o rg ed into a s u r p r i s ­ I ta ly 's lea d in g ly e i g h t - t im e w orld c h a m p i o n , E u g e n ­ io Monti, in th e first tw o of four ru n s for the f o u r - m a n bobsleds. s t r o n g o v e r the But E m ery com p lain ed b itter­ ly about c ra c k s in the ice, par­ ticu la r ly around tr ea c h e r ­ ou s W itch’s C auldron cu rve, and sa id : "AU of us took a ch an ce m ak in g that second run.” T h e r e w e r e no c o m p l a i n t s fr o m t h e A m e r i c a n of t h e m piloted by Bill H ic k e y of K eene, N . Y ., into fifth p la ce a nd other by L arry M cK illip of S ar­ a n a c L ake, N . Y ., into s e v e n th . s l e d d e r s —on e Appleton Toughest Middie Opponent A N N A P O L IS , M d. - m - O p p o s­ ing p layers m a k i n g t h e b ig g es t i m ­ t e a m p ression on N a v y 's football la s t fall w e r e T e x a s t a c k l e Sc ott A ppleton a n d A r m y q u a r t e r b a c k Rollie Stichw eh. T h e y w e r e n a m e d th e top lin e­ m a n a n d b a c k on th e M id d ie s’ a l l ­ o p p o n e n t t e a m . Franlc-ly Speaking Sand Dunes Hide Tech Hospitality Tailback Tommy To Talk to Cubs Sportsmanship W ill Bo Topic Landry Signs For 11 Years By FRANK DENTON Assistant Sports Editor The South Plains of W est Texas consists of three things: dust, mesquite bushes, and somewhere under a sand dune, Lubbock. Lubbock Is the cotton seed oil capital of the world and j the home of Texas Tech. The school has an excellent agricul­ tu re departm ent, an excellent engineering departm ent, and an excellent basketball team . O ther than th at, th e South Plains could be blown off the face of the earth , and no one would miss it. When Texas* Longhorns played Tech in Lubbock Saturday night they were beaten by Tech’s Red Raiders, I 94-90. N aturally, the hom e-eourt factor usually gives the home team an advantage. A t Lubbock, however, the crowds are so large and th eir m anners so poor th at it is said th at the Raiders have an 8-to-10 point advantage before they even take the court against a foe. Coliseum Normally Stuffed Lubbock’s coliseum holds 10.000, though they always m anage to squeeze in a few e x tra hundred. Unlike in Austin, the support in Lubbock is trem endous; it is rare when there is a conference gam e th a t is not a sell-out, even during a losing season. Again unlike the University, the fans are ill­ m annered and will do anything and everything th at they think m ight help the R aiders win. Anyone making a trip to Arkansas for an athletic contest is aware of how "gung-ho” the Arkansans are when it come* to athletics. The difference between Tech’s spirit and Arkansas* spirit is that the Hog fans are court­ eous and hospitable to their guests, while the Techsans are anything b ut Saturday night’s trouble started when the players were being introduced. Longhorn C enter Mike H um phrey’s name was announced, and the big senior joined his team m ates in the center of the court. But then a loud chorus of mixed noises materialized. None of the o th er Longhorns had rated anything of this sort, so we thought th a t a delegation from Midland, H um phrey's home town, was present. But no; it seems th a t the Tech band always picks out one opposing player to heckle. Tradition Demands Rudeness jumped When Tech to a four-point lead, Longhorn Jim m y P u ryear tied up N orm an Reuther, but the crowd didn't like it and let the referees know about It. Tile boos flowed profusely, and the ice and paper cups started hitting the court, as their tradition dictates. This didn't stop until the players left the court a fte r the game. Actually, West Texans should be more careful with their ice. The water on the court must have represented half the water on the South Plains, and the area just hasn't got the water to waste. A lthough they had to stop the game several tim es to remove the cups and wipe up the w ater off the court, the officials didn't even th reaten to call a technical foul on the crowd, which they ran do. We suppose they are used to it. Tech, because of all this, is known as the worst place to play the role of visiting team In the Southwest Confer­ th a t ence. We wonder about they won this year. M ust’ve been polities. th a t sportsm anship aw ard Tailback Tommy Ford of th* Texas Longhorns will address the annual Blue and Gold banquet of Cub Scout Pack S3 at 6:30 p.m. Friday. Ford, who won the Longhorn Club’s sportsmanship award, will | speak on "Sportsmanship.” He will be acccompanied by Charley j Shira, line coach for the Steers. The banquet will be held In the cafetorium of the Pecan Springs School. Also attending as guests will be Lambert Berkman. district scout commissioner; G lenn McAlister. d istrict scout e x e c u tiv e ; and C. R. O lson, a ssista n t d istrict c o m m is­ sion er. DALLAS — — Tom Landry, coach of the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League, signed a contract Wednesday giv­ ing him ll more years with the club. Cowboy officials said they be­ lieve It is the longest contract in professional sports. Money involved was not dis­ closed, but Tex Schramm, general manager, said Landry received a pay hike. Landry, 39, the only coach the Cowboys hive had, held a contract with one more year to go and aigned a contract for IO additional years. Announcement of the agreement w a s m a d e by Clint W. M urchison J r., ch ief ow n er of the C ow boys. “ W e’v e been trying to get him Frenchman Claim s Bargain W ith East PA R IS — lf* — A F rench gov- e m in e n t official said W ednesday that M exico City w a s se lec ted for the 1968 O lym p ic g a m e s a s part of a d eal insuring M oscow ’s s e le c ­ tion in 1972. M aurice H erzog, se c r e ta r y of sta te for youth and sp orts, m ad e sn the the F rench O lym p ic C abinet. co m m en t w h ile rep ort givin g to H erzog told the Cabinet that M exico C ity w a s se lec ted fo llo w ­ ing an a g r ee m en t b etw een "the cou n tries of A m erica the E a st, an a g ree m en t that fo r ese e s for the design ation of M oscow the O lym p ics in 1972 ” and H erzog w a s attem p tin g to ex plain w hy the F rench c ity of Lyon w a s not se lec ted H e said the fact that the O lym p ic C o m m ittee b y ­ p assed Lyon did not in d icate any “ d ip lo m a tic iso la tio n ” of F ra n ce to do this for over a year,” said Murchison, "and we finally con­ vinced him.” The C o w b o y s entered t h e league in 1960 and granted a five- year contract to Landry. The team has a 13-38-3 record and was 4-10 last year. Golfers Requested To Attend Meeting U n iv e r sity stu d en ts in terested in co m in g out for eith er the varsity or fresh m a n golf team this sp rin g are req u ested to attend a m eetin g a t 2 p m . F rid a y at the A ustin M unicipal G olf C ourse clu bh ouse. G eorge H annon, Austin M unici­ pal pro and the L onghorns’ n ew golf coach , has announced that v a r sity q u a lify in g p lay w ill sta r t M onday. Four rounds wi l l be played n e x t w eek —M onday and the M unicipal G olf T u esd ay at C ourse and T hursday and F rid a y a t the A ustin Country Club. GET ACQUAINTED OFFER! Praa To«i« W I Ob H aircut at A BAR Barber Shop 2612B Guadalupe GR 2-0013 BARBERS R am on M a n d a i Lucille W o lf# W E D , THUR,, FRI. 8 Channel TELEVISION No Outside Antenna Needed! ★ INDIVIDUALS ★ ROOMING HOUSES ★ FRATERNITIES ★ APT. HOUSES ★ SORORITIES HOTELS INDIVIDUALS----- ONLY J 9 5 ^ per Mo. • No Contract to Sign • No Installation Charges — COMMERCIALS - lf Your Building has a Master Antenna Distribution System, Contact Our Com­ mercial Dept, for a Special Deall 1 Dr. H a r r y R an som has been 'cello r of the U n iv ersity sin c e r" 1961. WMW'.lh* TV CABLE JL GR 8-4613 ii 'att ti* lid 1 »T *l«l • it Lf I 'J it ..lilt» l iie t lu llA > LOOK! "WHITE IN LEVI'S" CORDUROY I 3 Collegiate Colors ANTELOPE BR O W N S A N D £ m o t f T } ( a m e - ^ J \i s S c d Lu erS (Tenderly Broiled O v e r Glow ing Charcoal) at all FOUR HOLIDAY HOUSES All Sizes Economically Priced— $ 5 .9 5 Pair *j LEVIS Austin Army & Navy Store 201 WEST SIXTH Across from the Post Office NO. I 1003 BARTON SPRINGS RD. Informal Dining Room end Friendly Curb Service GR 7-1140 \ \ \ / NO. 2 GR 2-7942 / NO. 3 2000 SPEEDWAY CLOSE TO 2003 Guadalupe / \ / GREG O RY G Y M \/ G R 6-1106 No. 4 S325 Airport ll t i D IN IN G R O O M CURB SERVICE •mw OPEN DAILY from 11:00 AJA. to 12:00 PJI. (DRIVE-INS CLOSE I IKM AM. SUN.-THURS.) Fast 'To G o ' Service A v a ila b le This Coupon Good tor FREE Coke or Root Beer w ith p u r c h a a o f a Hamburger at Holiday House Ne. 2 or No. 3 I * M "I rn PURCHASES MONOGRAMMED FREE! F O H W O . Y I F . Y T h ree-p ’e ce set in S k y -B lu e , w a s h a b l e vinyl cov ering. C o s m e t ic ca se w it h m irror, tray , a cetate c overed b o t ­ tom , a n d bott e loops; w e e k e n d c a s e a n d p u l l m a n w it h tie t a p e s for c o r e g e n t p a c k i n g . M o n o g r a m m e d free 3-PC. SET R e g u l a r $ 5 9 95 N o w O nly . . . 39 93 pius tax F O H M E Y T w o piece set rn c h a r c o a l g r e y . C o m p a n i o n h a s Ii nan linen l i n i n g w it h e x t r a po ck e t inside. T w o - s u i t a r . . c o n v e n i e n t p a c k i n g a r r a n g e m e n t a n d . lin e d s p a c i o u s interior. All price* plu« t«* ll** PM' lay-way. aAarfi, ae 10 *0 *0 4my term*. N o w O n l y . . . 2-PC. SET R e g u l a r $4 5 2993 Mueller's pius ti* • ti 5 CONGRESS GR 2-1079 Serving Auitin Since 1893 Thursday, February 6, 1964 THE D A ILY T E X A N Page 4 Film Depicts Russian Life A tourist’s view of the Russian w ay of life was the theme of a film lecture, "R ussia and Its Peo­ ple," given Wednesday night by R aphael Green. Green, w h o recently resigned the audio-visual staff of the Uni­ versity of Minnesota, took the film as a tourist to show the American people how their "enem ies'' live. the The agricultural claim s of USSR a re easily seen to be false in the m any absurdities which show up on the farm s. Green said. The two types of farm s, collective and state, are supposed to supply the Russians with everything they need, but the wheat Is thrashed by old m achinery and hauled away by horse carts. "In the sum m er, 40 per cent of produce com es from the 2 per cent of the land which is individually ow ned." stated Green. This pro­ duce is m ore desirable than that the state and con­ provided by sequently sells for what the owner ra n get. a small exam ple of capi­ talism In the heart of the Soviet Union, he explained Green explained the far*. that tories do not work on the principle of supply and dem and, but sim p ly ; meet their quotas. there Therefore, in some parts of the continent is a shortage of w a t e r heaters, while in another in store­ p art rooms. they are stacked The women are a large sourer’ of labor because they greatly out-1 num ber the men of the country. Green showed pictures of women sweeping streets, digging ditches, laying heavy telephone cables, and working in factories. The R ussians’ p a y m e n t for meeting their quotas or excelling in their work is a m onth’s play and leisure in a com m unity rest home where Green filmed smiling faces. He also showed young children's groups, sim ilar to Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, where tlr ’y are kept until thee are of university age and are throughly indoctrinated in the Communist way of life. "A popular euestion among the children " said G reen, is, " 'Do you really cars over there*" And am ong the adults the main question is, 'Do the A m eri­ c a n s really want w ar?' ’’ a w a y throw Off; leers trainer, Newly elected officer* of Sigma Delta Tan en m ity are preoident, Shelley Steinberg; (scholarship chairman, B o n n y Slipaknff; pledge I Mane Rosen­ berg; recording secretary. Dtny PkMaky: secre­ tary, Carol Morgensteni, trea*- nrer, Cella bellman: house man­ ager, Debbie Druker; social chairman. Amy O p pert; and senior Panhellenie representa­ tive, llj r a Haber. corresponding Janin Berly Is the new president of Delta Delta Delta sorority. O ther new offices* are Sue H ar­ rington, executive v icepresident; activities vice­ Cindy B rantley, president; Suo Stiles pledge tram e r; and Ellen Shields, chaplain Also Lynne Mann, m arsh a l; recording secre­ F.uzann Smith, ta ry ; Aubrilyne Preston comet* ponding se creta ry ; Ellen Edwards, tre a su re r; scholar­ ship ch a 'rm a n j K a v Bowers, sponsor rh airm a n ; Bailie Carroll, social chairm an; and Karen Byrd heave president. Jane Howe, Also B arbara Pee! rush captain Suzanne Sorer von, assistant rush captain; Be^te Boyd, recom m en­ dation chairm an ; Debbie Bland), senior panhellenie; Carolyn Pence, junior panheHome; Andrea Ander­ son. historian; Iairalee Hodge, lib rarian ; Penny Brooks, fraternity education; and Cand Clew s, aery ice projects, a ♦ C hi Phi officer* for the spring sem ester are Keilh S etter, pres­ ident; John Siicke, vice-presi­ dent; M arshall Mabry, recording •e e re ta ry ; Mark Green, trea su r­ e r ; Rusty Alien, corresponding rush Ja y M artin, se c re ta ry ; chairm an; Jim B a rd , pledge tra in e r; and Barry H arrell and Joe Iw»stracco, co-social chair­ men. Debt By-Product Of Our Times -D r . Thompson Debt is a by product of our pros­ perous times, the chairm an of the Departm ent of Economics told the Young D em ocrats W e d n e s d a y night, specialised * There bs just one simple Idea that we need to get hold of in our interdependent econ­ omy — all income rises from som e­ one else s spending," Dr. Carey three Thompson said. There are group* of economic units in our so- < ,efy, he said; consum ers buxine** firms, and government. All these unit* have income and they spend. " lf any one group runs a our- pin*, the other group or groups m ust run a deficit. In­ come and spending are alwa.vs equal when you look hark.** Dr. Thompson said that consum­ er* are generally the ones who have a su rp lu s; therefore busmen* and government are the ones who have a deficit. then Dr. Thomps on va id that it does not m ake sense to say that ev ery ­ one should spend ic-** than hi* In incomes come this occurred, fortunate would go down. "The truth is that generally we haven’t tried this in the pa*t." If Corporate, Individual, and gov­ ernm ent debt* have nil increased since B orid B a r ll. and these have been prosperous scar*. He said, adding that debt creation is a part of the process of being prosperous. The well-rn a na get! concern gen­ erally operates at a deficit a n i the question is who has the deficit and how big is it going to lie, he saki. m w *10'Qty "IT S LOVELY ... Just the a c c e s s o r y to go with a gown dry cleaned by • • . Home Steam Laundry & Cleaning 14 th A Rad River Sine# 1914 GR 8-2586 FEATURING 3 HOUR ROCKET SERVICE ON “I LAUNDRY a CLEANING C H A R G E A C C O U N T S INVITED 1 1 . 0 0 In two style* to mak# th# outlook brighter, no m att er what the weather, both a rs reversible a n d h a v t their own umbrella. Right, in black, green and white p la id reverses to black. Left, f ’D-a1 print in blue to bla ck and p nk to be ig e . Sizes 8 to 16. two gad-abcuts 1.1.00 aud 7.119 W h e n the w eather is fair and w arm er, these tw o travel or shop. Left, the ' g a d -a b o u t in shock pink, hot o r a n g e and sun yellow, 5 to 15. Right, a slip o f e dress in yellow, S p r i n g green, blue, pink and violet, Sizes 5 to IS . mmmmswamv f"* ’ UU A tm * h v A AP H 'M to u>*» RI .*»> JR MMI rn* ta -tm kl ’M RKT' «*»*««* I KAW M DR 'NAT a nm. tu i ■ return * Vt.* ® IN i n w a jU w ii'ic E U....... . ivnv->itA4cL KE AR i vc i U t StaX IMMU* KUMI i W H O WILL STEAL YOUR HEART! • POLLS PREDICT AN ACADEMY AW ARD N O M IN ATIO N FOR JEAN SIMM ONS! SPECIAL EXCLUSIVE FIRST-RUN ENGAGEMENT ' I L C A D I L T S C H I L D IOO . 50 .’ 5 - ^ From the I Pulitzer Prize novel and play N O W S H O W IN G ! I K A T I R R S : ti OO - 7 .3 - 9 : 4 6 37 has appeared countries in throughout the world, including the Soviet Union. The com pany h a s traveled back and forth across the United States, perform ing in 241 cities in 48 states. Since its found­ ing in 1940, A m erican Ballet The­ a ter has traveled more than 500,- 000 miles. Torii Lander, Roves Fernandez, John Kriza, Diane Ri< hards, Ruth Ann Koesun, Sallie Wilson, Ca J Selling, and Eleanor D'Antuono will appear in the ballets “ Billy the K id,” “ Graduation B all,” “ G rand P as —- Glazuonov” and “ Them e and V ariations.” The event Is free to holders of the $17.74 Blanket Tax and season ticket patrons. Single adm issions for the ballet go on sale after 7:30 p.m. T hursday at Municipal Auditorium box office. Doors open at 7 p.m. Single ad­ mission tickets are $2.50 for ad­ ults, $1 for children through jun­ ior high. There are no reserved seats, and there is no advance sale of single admissions. ROUNDUP & • FREDDIE K IN G • BRUCE C H A N N E L • THE CRICKETS • ARTHUR K. A DA M S Other* — Plu* Local & Circuit Band* C O N T A C T ------- PAULA CRAIG AGENCY 1401 LORAIN GR 7-0055 Delwood DRIVE-IN THEATRE 3981 Last An B O X o r I K K O P E N S 6:0 9 41) M IS SI O N "Or K I D S I M U K IT I B F K “ Take Her, She’s M in e ” J a m e * S t e w a r t A S a n d r a D e e , 7:99 Plat ---- “ MISTY” Chil l Will* 4 D a v i d I a d d , 8:5 9 B O X O F F I C E O P E N S 6: 39 A D M I S S I O N lOi- K I D S I M I L K 12 F R E E “ M ID N IG H T LACE” D e r i * O a r 8 J o h n L e v i n , 7:9 9 — P i n a — “ THE LAST SUNSET” R o c k H u d s o n A K i r k D o u g l a s , 8 : 5 5 UT Opera Workshop To Salute the Bard from Berlioz’ “Romeo and Juliet;** an excerpt from Prokofiev's “Ro­ meo and Juliet;” the overture from Strauss’ “Macbeth;" a portion of the score from Cole Porter's “Kiss Me Kate,” which was based on “Taming of the Shrew,” and th* march from Mendelssohns "Mid­ summer Night’s Dream.” Among student artists perform­ ing Friday and Sunday will be Con­ rad Imrnel, William Neill, Jean Panther, Bert Neely, Ann Darden, Richard Firmin, Maria Alexander, Shaaron Melcher, Charles Birkner, Robert I^ee, Christine Stanford, t e e McKihben, Peggy Brunner, and Jane Crawford. Pianists will be Mary Elizabeth Hardin t e e and Dixie Ann Ross, music students. Musical interludes and orchestral effects will be pro­ vided by “tapes.” Russell Gregory, a former Uni­ versity music student, and Roger White, young son of Mr. and Mrs. Orville White, complete the cast. BARGAIN PRICES! im to 5 0 The University of Texas Opera! Workshop, a “lab” which intro­ duces voice majors to the operatic repertoire, will sing a s p e c i a l “Happy Birthday” salute to Wil­ liam Shakespeare Friday and Sun­ day. Commemorating the 400th anni-1 versary of Shakespeare's birth, the Opera Workshop will present two performances of excerpts and in­ terludes from operas based on Shakespearean plays. Entitled “ Shakespeare at t h e Opera,” the program will be given at 8 p.m. Friday and at 4 p.m. Sunday in Hogg Auditorium. Ad­ mission is free. Highlighting the production will be the death scene from Verdi s “Otello,” Falstaff’s appearance in Scene I. Act 2 of Verdi's “Merry Wives of Windsor,” and the finale from Benjamin Britten’s “Midsum- Olivier to Present Kennedy Program A special program of statements by the late President John F. Ken­ nedy will be presented at 7:30 p m. Thursday on Channel 9. “JKK, Son of Liberty” will feature dramatic readings by noted actors of his statements on national and inter­ national topics. Narrated by English actor Sir Laurence Olivier, the program will feature stage and stars Eli Wallach, Anne Bancroft, Gary Merrill, and Hews commentator Joseph C. Harsch. screen Topics will include civil rights, education, medical care the aged, religious liberty, the United States' relatioaship with Russia and Communist China, disarma­ ment, Berlin, and Cuba. for mer Night’s Dream,” including a special dance sequence. The singers, primarily University voice students and Department of; Music faculty members, will wear authentic costumes and perform with traditional stage “props” and scenery. The Opera Workshop performs several times each year to ac­ quaint voice students with the prac­ tical requirements of s t a g i n g , movement, and other aspects of musical acting. Directing the forthcoming pro­ duction is James Pease, guest pro­ fessor of music and American bass baritone widely known for his operatic performances in this coun­ try and abroad. He has been on the music faculty since September. Technical director of “Shakes­ peare at the Opera” is Orville H. White, guest assistant professor of music. White will be heard in the role of Verdi’s Falstaff. Other Music Department faculty members singing with the Opera Workshop include Soprano WUU Stewart, guest associate professor of music, who will appear as Des demona in Verdi's “Otello,” and Soprano Lorane Michalopulos, lei turer in music, who will sing in “Midsummer Night's Dream.” The dance scene in Britten's “Midsummer Night's Dream” has been choreographed by Mrs. Bar­ bara Payne, wife of B. Idcn Payne, guest professor of drama. Payne himself has “sat in” on several workshop rehearsals as a sort of unofficial consultant. Pease said. Other excerpts and musical In terludes to be included in the un­ usual program will be the overture and opening duet from Nicolai's "Merry Wives of Windsor;” par! of the film score from "Henry V ,” o v e r t u r e from Berlioz’ “King f r o m Rossini's t e a r ;” a duet I “Otello;” the Queen Mab scherzo Hickman ( E n c o ) Service f a st f r i e n d l y service plus • M E C H A N IC O N DUTY • REPAIRS M A Y BE PUT O N CREDIT CARD • Q U IC K ROAD SERVICE Green Stamp* 24th & Rio Grande GR 8-5813 SAH S P m j A N C E K S JOSE GRECO BiMf fctx CtftMtf it M a n x p a l A u d i t o r i u m TOMORROW NITE 8:30 P.M. TICKITS C«Op S**di Mull* Sl*r* V a AMERICAN BALLET THEATRE >> w \ v ' saggar -IJ. ■.— » f-MmJ &»p»«| * ** I—MW* A*»»W M unicipal Auditorium , Tonight, a t 8:00 p.m . Doors Open 7:00 p*m. Chartered Buses W ill Be Available for transportation to and from Municipal Auditorium FOR T O N IG H TS performance BUSES DEPART AT 6:45 7:00 7:15 M A K IN G STOPS AT 1. M oore-H iH Hell 2. Simkint Hall 3. Scottish-Rite Dorm 4. Resolving Dorm 5. C aro ler* Dorm 6. University Co-op Buie* will leave the Auditor­ ium immediately end 20 min­ ute* the perform­ ance. following Round-Trip Faro 25c m m i /s ViJ r- ^ T i u r n m m r n m earn nam »■■»»»*.#*ne D. t i , t h McNeal. M r El n»y J a m e s -------- I wood -H enry P aul ’I'. W rotenbery. J o h n ’ O liver W est. ----- I D onald O. ; bison M rs W ill B eth S tep h en s and I U r n s r F ly , H o u sto n —H u b e rt B angkok T h aila n d -H o n g I a n Owl. B eaum ont — Ja m e s M ilton M enard, B ellaire—T om m y Lo? A sh craft J r . B lacksburg Va —R o b e rt L. H arriso n . B orger- J e rr y F loyd D aw son. Brown- I) F. Cola. C a rth ag e C orpus N ellis. C h arles D ee Rob- I H ow ard M urphey. H illsb o ro — W alter . I ium - m or H elnen. T hom as E d u a rd H orton J r .. M ichael D ean R eifel. W a lte r A. S u tto n , and T hom as N o rm an W h ita ­ ker. Ivanhoe M inn.—W 'llliam A rth u r H oisted. L ockport, L a —L loyd Ja m es E llio tt. M idland—R o b e rt F . S tubbe- m an. Mt. V ernon. Ky. — H ow ard rp u s T hom as Bausum . New O rleans. I-a — Miss. C hristi B ert Ie ’'F ra n k lin B M wet I. Dei- M artin E m ile C henevert O dessa—Rob- ias—C harles Evans Bounds and J e r r y I e r t Jo sep h jo n e s O m aha. N e b ,- -J a c k J, Brown. Del R io L eo n ard o C a r- : A llan H ill. P a .- M r s . d r nae J r .. and Ted L. L an g fo rd . Ed- j B a rb a ra Boekus A ponte. P ra irie Mew enton, N. C .—W ade Jo rd a n . Com po—C alvin E ugene W oods. m ore C ity, Okia 1'iitton. s t . C loud, M inn -—A nthony E Soap- -C h arles C lifford e rla n d a J r . San A ntonio- A rnold Mcl- 1 vin B arb an , D avid F. Cu Id a s are, and Kl P a so —Michael E A ustin an d O ar- G erard R oland Vela. S an tru c e , P u e rto r c tt R. F o ste r. F ort W o rth —M rs AIK Rico—M rs A nnaliese M u sette, S eguin R obinson Basse!. Mrs. F lo ra C hung — Donald VV. S tu b b s S outh M iam i. IH ia H u a n g C h m , and Ben A. Shoul- F la .—R o b e rt H ow ard McCabe. Still der* G alveston- D onald W . S tubbs. G eorgetow n R alph M a rtin W hitm ore H acienda H eights, C alif. — W illiam El j “ A. D. S tew art, E l- ' P hilad elp h ia. ll. w ater. O kla.—M ilton F ra n k lin U sry J r . S to ck d ale—C h e ste r R ay H astings. T aipei. T aiw an — Y eth-P lng T ang. T ucson, T a lc o —J e r r y Dell H olm es. Aria:.—L a rry W arn er. T u la ro sa. N. M. L afk y . V icto ria — -John D elm ar Tile U niversity F ederal Credit Union paid its shareholders a reg ­ ular 4.5 p er cent per annum plus a I per cent special dividend in late Decem ber. The credit union, located in Waggoner Hall 14, pro­ vides savings and interest loans for U niversity faculty m em ­ bers and staff. low With a record m em bership of in the UFCU paid $66,602 3,614, dividends la st year. Total assets am ounted to $1,591,349.44. T h e credit union paid out $1,593,393 in 2,660 loans. Any University employe, includ­ ing students employed a minimum Starzel Conducting Journalism Courses iJ^ B assrt JArUS’!nd L ^ C ^ 3 ! b w . t nf 20 hours P°r Week’ m aV lnVeSt W oodside N .Y .- Alan a . F ra n k e d in or borrow from the U F C U . T h e general property deposit paid a t registration is returned to the student at the end of his career as a student. Davis Will Speak On Campaign Issues Dr. Milton V. Davis, Republican candidate for United States Sen­ ate, will speak to the Young Re­ publican Club a t 7:30 Thursday at Townes Hall. Davis, a D allas heart surgeon, is one of four Republicans seeking the p arty 's nomination for the Sen­ ate. A panel of students and Austin Republicans will discuss some of the issues of the cam paign w i t h Davis. Included in the topics will be civil rights, m edicare, P anam a, and veterans’ affairs. M rs. Mollie Kilgore, assistant treasu rer and m anager of the Cred­ it Union, said that loans and shares were rath e r even last year, but they still encouraged borrow ers and investors. "We want investors to enjoy the new interest rate, and, of course, we always w ant m ore borrow ers." Mrs. Kilgore said. " It seem s to run in cycles," she explained. "This tim e of year, peo­ ple a re investing and paying off loans. When sum m er sta rts, they tend to borrow m ore." Vehicle T ags A v a ila b le Motor vehicle registration tags for 1964 are now available a t the Travis County Courthouse. County Tax Assessor-Collector F ritz Rob­ inson has urged m otorists to bring their certificates of title and last y ea r's registration receipt w h e n they come for new license plates. April I is the deadline. Furnished Apartm ents Furnished Apartm ents Room and Board T y p i n g VILLA FONTANA 1051 S abine MEN. $56.*'*). E FFIC IEN T Y for ont o r two Gas. w a te r pa d At cam pus-stadium . M anager—2311 Red R iver w ith MsocSiraiman One bedroom — e le g a n tly fu rn ish ed I - itii*- heated pool, Tw o blocks from M em orial S tad iu m . S pecial for lease. ra le s M anager—G R 2-1 TH Ow n e r—C L 3-5690 Gov. CofinallyWill Not Speak At Traffic Courts Meeting Gov. John Connally, scheduled to address the 1964 Traffic Courts Conference, has canceled the ap ­ r e a ­ pearance because of health sons. The conference will begin a t 9 a.m . Thursday with addresses by the W. Page Keeton, dean of U niversity School of Law, and F rank C. Erw in J r ., m em ber of the Board of Regents. Approximately 150 state officials, law enforcem ent officers, judges, and attorneys a re expected to a t­ tend the conference in Townes Hall Auditorium. Thursday m orning speakers in­ clude Buster Cole, president of the State Bar of Texas, speaking on "The A ttorney and the T raf­ fic C o u rt”; Howard Fender, a s­ sistant attorney general of Texas, speaking on "T he Citizen and the Traffic C ourt"; Col. Homer G a rri­ son, director of the Texas D epart­ m ent of Public Safety, discussing the "T raffic Situation in Texas T oday"; and Inspector Glen Con­ ner of the D epartm ent of Public Safety, discussing "Speed M anage­ m ent." 1 Inspector Conner will preside over a panel discussion on "T ech­ nical Aspects of Speed and Its De­ term ination" a t 11:15 a.m . Panel , m em bers will be Inspectors J. B. Carlisle and W. N. Broman of the D epartm ent of Public Safety, and Lt. Benny McDavid and other m em bers of the Austin Police De­ partm ent. and discuss Professor John Sutton of the University School of Law will open the Thursday afternoon session at 2 p m. "E vidence P roblem s." P articipants in a pan­ el discussion will be Wallace Shaw, assistant city attorney of Austin; Judge Tom M cFarling of Corpora­ tion Court of Austin, and Officer Charles W right of the Austin Po­ lice D epartm ent. At 2:15 p.m. Judge M cFarling will preside over a dem onstration on "Qualifying R adar and Skid Tests in C ourt," aided by Shaw and Wright. Leonard Passm ore, Austin a t­ torney, will be guest speaker at the conference be held at the Gondolier Hotel a t 7 p.m. Thursday. banquet to i The conference will resum e at 9 a m. F riday with an address on "Proposed T raffic Legislation" by Jam es O. Musick. general m an­ ager of the Texas Safety Associ­ ation. Phil Burleson. D allas attorney, will follow with a discussion of "Appellate P rocedure From the Corporation C ourt,” and Sam Wolf, city attorney of San Antonio, will speak on "A dm inistration in T raf­ fic C ourts." The panel discussion on "Ap- V isiting Scot Professor Teaches Engineering is is Dr. Gordon Smith Grieve Bev­ eridge of the U niversity of Edin­ of burgh professor visiting the chem ical engineering during spring sem ester. He teaching undergraduate courses and con­ sulting with faculty m em bers on the reorganization of chemical en­ gineering laboratories. Dr. Beveridge was a visiting chem ical engineering professor at the U niversity in the 1962 sum m er session. He joined the Edinburgh faculty in the fall, 1962. pellate Procedure and Adminis­ tration" at 11:15 a m. will be pre­ sided over by Burleson, with pan­ el m em bers Wolf and Judge David L. Smith of the Abilene Corpora­ tion Court. Judge M cFarling will open the afternoon session at 2 p.m. Friday with a discussion of "Problem s Re­ lating to Right of W ay." Judge Titus Mitchell, Corporation Court, Wichita Falls, will speak on "Vio­ lations Involving Turning Move­ m ents," and Judge Mitchell and Judge M cFarling. S h a w, and W right will conduct a panel dis­ cussion on "R ight of Way Turning M ovem ents.” Judges K. K. Woodley, W. A. Morrison, W. T. McDonald and E rn e st Belcher, will be in charge of the various sessions. The conference is sponsored by the School of Law, State B ar of Texas and the Texas Safety As­ sociation in cooperation with the G overnor's office, A ttorney G en­ et a l s office, D epartm ent of P ub­ lic Safety, T e x a s Municipal League, American B ar Association, and State Junior Bar. THE DAILY TEXAN C L J iJ M s “ r f 4CCII IL ll I III I HT ICI V r. I.* I I t X C L A S S I ! I EI * ADN I R E I S I N G K A T E S .................... .................................................... (15-word m inim um ) E ach W ord M inim um C h arg e C lassified D isplay I colum n x one Inch one tim e E ach A dditional T im e 20 C onsecutive Issues 8 w ords 15 w ords 20 w ords ............ .............................................. ..................... .............................. 4c SI 20 l l on .’JU OO SC OO (No copy change I r cons. a llv a Issue ra te ) C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T ISIN G D E A D L IN E S .................... M onday 3:.% p.m. T u esd ay T e x a n W ednesday T e x a n ..................... T uesday 3:3o p m. T h u rs d a y T ex an .............. W ednesday 3:30 p.m . T h u rs d a y 3 30 p.m . F rid a y T ex an S u n d ay T ex an l r day 3 30 p.m . In th e ev en t of e r ro r s m ad e In an advertisernen: im m ed iate notice mu.-A be given as th e publishers a re resp o n sib le fo r only one in co rrec t in sertio n . ..................... .............. 58.00 CALL G R 1-5244 $45 OO. 'ERS1TY, itb , re frig e ra to r. 603 E lm w ood. CL V scene I* >r Hr m and B oard B C am pus B R U N E T T E ST E DEN" 1908 W C h it* GR 2-1131 * HOWS! BRYK ERV, ■ >OD - I tw in beds, klteh age Bills paid. $6 ! bath, gar- 7-7030; UL ; AND \V E LL rf u rn . shed a p art fo r tw o m en a t 191ft N ueces B ills paid. < all a t 1911 Nueeei New a p a rtm e n t for one or tw o men, B arking and C u rte r service, reasonable ra te s. < IL 3-3235 ESQ I IR E A PA R TM EN TS TA RRYTOW N m ent, k itc h e n e tte w alk $65.00. S tudio a p a r t­ in closet, tile bath. A S'. U tilities paid. P riv a te entrance, garage. GR 8-6380, R*JOKY O N E BEDROOM efficiencies 710 VV, JU.-. W ater, g a s paid. A-C. STAG CO-OP has opening fo r S p rin g sem ester A ccepting ap p licatio n s Room and B oard $5,j.OO per m onth GR 8-5 M3 TMO Rio G rande Board A LL VOL CAN e a t a t House No h u stle th e Bowen Ju s t cat cat and eat a t th e Bowen H ouse. \\ bu is 2506 S an A ntonio. Con­ ii* I on tr no bustle GOOD M EALS SER V ED a t lite H u d ­ son H ouse. 2310 R io G rande Two meal* S-f- OO, th ro e m e a ls —$54.00 per For Rent Rooms for Rent IL CAMPO HOU duce ct S p rin g r vpproved Re- toys. K itchen. m en t $ 2 *'.OU per m onth N ew a p a rtm e n t w ith all m odern e q u p - six m onths. B egin J a n u a ry o r F e b ru a ry . BUN paid. T w o bedroom . 2>* b ath s Tw o 'I V s— ste reo ( a il GR 2-8417. ,K. TW O vacancies $25.00 Ie Tw o s 181) C ongress GR 6 - $30.00. room F U R N ISH E D ROOM P riv a te $40,00 m o n th . K)MS fo r m ale *tu- n o rth cam pus. 2612 E N F IE L D FUR D etached frort A ir-conditioned. GR 8-6222. S H E D ROOM, bath. muse. U tilitie s paid. 5 OO. 45 'IO. A fter For Sale r e d l y O R D E R YOUR l'*>4 V olksw agen from G erm any, pick up I nivert dock save $125.*.*) o r m o n M otor • 2715 G uadalupe, GR J-7152 V OLKSW AGEN TRAU 50. Gall G I. 2-2506. Mc IR hi 1962 C H E V R O LE T IM PALA HARI T O P fo u r d o o r F a c to ry air, powe ste t-ring-powe r brake s. Push Hutto; Engirt radio, 327 H .P W-VV 3-7884, price. tin te d glass tire s R easonabi h e a te r a f te r 6 OO f C R ADDiVFH S T U D E N T D E SIR E S nicely fu rn ish ed , alr-condi- i to 1 CLOSE-* U .T , 1961 Voike-s*?dan; radio. (28 M E G. condition. etc. Good ti<>ned. iih ree bedroom hom e w ith one or two o th e r w om en. C L 2-8714. TW O ROOMS O N E $20.00, one $30- | ■x,ji , ■ -■ — --------------- --------- -- ------ i CHANGING IN S T R UM E N ’ES SAURI- F ICING ye a r eld W ursttzer el-'etrie oat S4TO.no. GR 2-6174. lrn ish e d . S e p a ra te i R iver. G R »-5o86. c ity ) $995,00. GR 8-8217. pian*>, $ 2 5 i 0 N eed cap ital e n tran ce. . ---- one GIRLS. JU N IO R S AND S en io rs One $25.00 '58 A L LST A 'I'M SCOOTER —$7".OO. ’48 F o r d —$175 tut B oth vi iideles exeei- m onthly w ith k itch en p rivileges Horn- ; lent c o n d It lotiv. See to a p rireciate. GR a y a tm o ;v p h e r e . W alk in g d ista n c e U.T., GR double 6-1173, room . LA K E AUSTIN COTTAGE O w ner. New co ttag e. F urnished. 525 arca. F ireplace. Air. sq. ft. L iving Mah-G.any paneling. C om pletely insu­ lated. E xposed beam s. C edar siding. trees. F ull bath. W alk-in closet. B g lake fro n t, 235 ft. I,, \ el deep E stab lish ed loan $7,500.00. HI 2-6669. ft. P rice- $11,230.00. tot, 56 TW O D A M SOFAS, M atching tab le. E xcellent condition. G rouping. $85.- 0 1 T eak E xecutive ty p e d esk —-ch air both $.0.00. Book she ' $5.00. Rug 2x12, $5.00. OR 8- ta b le to p desk TY PIN G . NOTES, TH EM ES, genera: R easonable. M rs. Vt nods. HO 5-1078. MRS A LBRIG H T w ill O p e y o u r pa­ pers REASONABLY. ACCURATELY. GR 7-0091 MARTHA ANN ZIVLEY M B A A com plete professional ty p in g serv­ to th e needs of U nivers­ ice tailored ity stu d en ts. S pecial keyboard eq u ip ­ m en t fo r lan g u ag e, science, and en g i­ ne* r ng th eses a n d dissertstKSB*. P h o n e GR 2-3210 & GR 2*7677 2013 GU A D A LU PE V IRG IN IA CALHOUN LEGAL T Y PIN G SER V IC E ty p in g , a fields. S ym ­ P ro fe s so ria l bols P h o to Copy. N o tary . V. e a re row: located a t o u r he w address. N EW A DDRESS 13M E dgew ood GR 8 2636 IBM KAST. E X P I ty p ist fica I N ear N --1755 M rs. 5 I). A -'CU R A TE rep o rts, sta tis- I i i a u d ito r.u m . FACULTY-STUD ENT P ro fessio n al T y p in g Service v Co- [>• : fit t ;-ing qi.ii fi<“.i t ‘e experience. M a n u scrip ts for theses, d isse rta tio n s re p o rts. Personal and const"entious h and- ling of every need including mui* tiU thing and photo copying books an d MRS. LAURA BODOUR P hone GR 8 -8 : J 907 V e s t 22 a ( F o u r blocks w est of d ra g ) T H E S E S, R E PO R T S. REASONABLE. F le c h e ’ma tic Mrs, B rady 2317 O ld­ ham . GR 2-4715 TY PIN G LOW RATES. S atisfactio n g u aran teed GL 3-5124. Mrs. T ullos TY PIN G . NOT Hi able. GL 3-306 T H EM ES R eascn- E X P E R IE N C E D T Y PIN G SER V IC E. n e a r AI la n ­ reaso n ab le, A ccurate ds! e. HU 5-5813 S. D ISSE R T A TIO IBM Select rte. Sv: e en, m ath em atics, age accents. G reek. Cs T ll I PO I tang 9617. Is tor PR O KI ISSI II G eneral AL TY ! L oin KU LEGA!*. III 4-2211* T H E M O O N LIG H TER S—IEM . M tiU th in g A fter 6 'U* and wreck** M a rg u erite Costello. C L A W e d 33rd 913a 1908- SOC page D I L A FIE L D G ram m ar, T Y PIN G c sp e llin g 2-6522. D ISSE R T A T IO N S T H P O R IS . C om petently perienced o p e r a to r of elect rom atic. Mrs. R e area. GR 6-7071* T H E S E S . D ISSE R T . PO R T S U nderw ood el sym bols. R ates re a so n a t GR 2-8132 3206 F a irfa x \TIO N S R I - •ctric S p an ish ie—p age-hour. W alk. T Y PIN G . TH E SE S AND E le ctric tv pew r u e r . R d isse rta tio n s ;'USO na bio. GL 2-4733. A P PROV E l) MEN DOI ’ B L E - $25 Or > Single--.$30 Of) A lso 180.1 S an Gab GR 8-7966. A PPRO V E lushed. . $35 'X) per GR 2-6053. JIN G L E FOR m an. I ut** re frig o ra to r. very nice. o n th . 2811 R io Grande-. BLOCK room FROM CAM PUS. P leasan t fur w om en. T ile b ath , cook­ ing f a r ,H ue. d in in g arc a . 2618 S peed­ w ay. g r s-piau AT CAMPI s . m a l e conditioned M aid stu d e n ts. Air­ ISoJG service. Lavaca. $25.00 double. (35 sin g le. GR 7-7574—Mrs. Dowel. GR 2-3191. A T T E N T IO N : L A T E R E G IST R A N TS. C onvenient location. W e st of ca m ­ pus. F or U n iv ersity m en. S ingle or double. GR 8-2691. P aneled M E N —Q U IE T LARCK double d rap es, room re frig e ra to r. Off G reet p ark in g $27..Vt 906 V e s t 29th. t>-5977. GR 7-1436: GII Duplex— Furnished U N IV ER SITY LONELY. one bedroom C arpets. A-C $9* * - P a r k P lace, G R 7-2480 CAM PUS: Couples. HIS1 a f te r 4 30 p.m . bedroom a p a rtm e n t D U P L E X - N EA R U N IV ER SITY . T h ree furn ish ed . $120.- 00. T w o bedroom s w ith stove a n d re ­ frig e ra to r. GR 7-8414. larg e efficiency on bus VERY CLEAN P A N E L E D , carp eted line. Con­ to stor**s a n d lau n d ry . $75.(X) venient 910 W est 29th. GR 7-14.36 GR 6-5977. Duplex— Unfurnished A R C H ITE C T D E SIG N E D MODERN lu x u ry duplex. T w o bedroom s, one fo rm in g balcony over open living room . D rapes. C arpet. C e n tra l air-h ea t. Re­ frig e ra to r. R ange. D isposal. P atio . O u t­ side storage, IGOI VV. 40th. GL 2-1253. Houses— Furnished T H R E E BEDROOM. I 1* b a tlr~2-.sto ry Colonial. G arage T rees. One bloek- b us p ark , sw im m in g pool, 1303 W in­ sted L ane. GR 8 7862. N O R TH O F U N IV ER SITY . F u rn ish ed ! One bedroom , den, fir* place; Ow li­ er. $8400 OO. $69.00 m o n th ly . GR 7-24*0 a f te r 4:30 p.m . CH E V R O LE T —1956. F o u r d oor h a r d ­ top. R adio an d h e a te r. N ig h ts, GL T H E M E S R E !’O RTS. LAW notes. 25c page. M rs. F ra ser. GR 6-1317 2-674 4,’ E P O R T A B L E STE R E O PHONOGRAPH, Voice of M usic ch an g er. E x cellen t speakers. side im m ediately. O nly $65 00. condition. D etachable Mu^t sell Call GR 2-4506 120 BASS ac­ cordion. $120.00. Good fo r begin n in g 3 T R E B L E SH I ET stu d e n ts. P h ilip L iston. GR 2-1930, Special Services KAL P E T P A M P E R . C om plete groom ­ ing service: all breeds B et supplies fo r sale. and birds. Poodle puppies 2D9C N o rth Loop C L 2-2791. USE OUR RE N T A L W A SH ERS F o r hom e w ashing convenience. F o r in fo rm atio n , call GR 6-2653. CE N TRA L TEX A S A PPLIA N C ES SALLS, SER V IC E AND R EN TA LS 904 LAMAR BLVD. W an ted ROOMM ATE W A N T ED . SH A R E w ild Juniors C en tral a ir-c o n d itio n ­ to cam pus, $ 3 5 'HI thro* ing. C arpet. W alk m o n th !' GR 2-5635. W A N T E D —T U TO R IN G IN S panish. C onversational S panish, n ot co u rse GR 2- passin g S panish. Da.-s on; 4666 guns ty p e w rite rs , W A N T ED —Radios. fire p lu g s, books, m agazines, m usical In stru m e n ts fu rn itu r e and household a r t supplies goods, w atches, ste re o e q u ip m e n t, go lf clubs, televisions, m o to r scooters, sta m p s, coins, cam eras, ta p e reco rd ers fu rn itu re , bicycles m e n s maid clothes h u n tin g and phono­ g rap h records, w e also re n t telev isions, $8 99 a m onth. Aa r o m -hod Red R iver. fish in g eq u ip m en t, d iam onds bab? and N E E D R ID E TO U.T. In m o rn in g s from NEW. A ustin <1210 Morrow*), t o pay. C all C arol Covey—* W’tUm g GL 2-3338. RKNT-PURCHA.SE T V. s Alpha Tel­ evision R ental. GR 2-2692. Lost and Found Nurseries A cross SHEAHAN S SMALT, DAY nursery’. baseball from U niversity park V acancy fo r tw o. 2313 Red Riv­ er. GR 2-4725. CALL GR 1-5244 TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD L O ST : pup Black an d lh W E E K G erm an S h ep ard ta n V icinity M e­ m o ria l S tadium . GR 8-4158 o r GR 7- 7643 L O S T -D IA M O N D . LONGIN !:, w h ite gold w atch B lack band N e ig h l>or- hood U niversity V icin ity U nion B u ild ­ ing R ew ard. GL 3-8611. LO ST ; RING IN P ierce H all J a n u ­ 1964. R e w ard o ffered . C all ary 8 C L 2-1176. Thuridiy, February 6, 1964 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 7 New LA CASA A PA R T M E N T S a n d C O N TIN EN T A L A P AR TMI NTS M anor Road <2 blk* ca*t of sta d iu m ) SW IM M IN G POOL \ St 2 be 1015 te n n a E ast 32nd. GR 6-6589; GR 2-8740. Mi: tw o bedroom . LA K E AUSTIN' VILLA. L u x u rio u s firep lace, b ar. patio, p riv ate dock F u rn ish ed . H as fan tastic view . GR 6-2608; G R 7- I Va bath, SHADOW OAKS A PARTM ENTS NEW ENORMOUS ONE BEDROOM APA RTM EN T N ear U niversity Sw imm nsc Pool 0 *' "tref • p ark in g L au n d ro m at 24*>4 L ongview O ne block cant of L am ar—GR 6-1398 "V IL L A ‘52 . AVAILABLE bed­ room , carp eted unit. A ccom odate 2* 2 3. 1311 F a st 52nd. HI 2-0995. ___ GARAGE A PA R TM EN T FGP. tw o boe* New Iv decorated. $65 (X1 UHS lies paid. 1012 W. 23rd. AGO one va- can cj-ro o m m ate $71 OO. B oard av ail­ able Miss Alma L axseter. GR 8-8456 B E TW EE N UNIV ER SITY AND C ap­ itol. A ir-conditioned. L iving-b e d ro o m : tub-show cr. S en­ kitchen-dinottc iors. graduates. GR 7-6859 tilt' S TU D EN T S OR W O R K IN G g irls To sh a re ap a rtm e n t. P riv a te room Se > - furnished ____ __ 00-$42 00-855 OO. GR 8-5528 U tilitie s T H E BLACKSTONE 2910 Red River P riv a te tw o bedroom S uites E specially designed for th e b ach elo r w ho takvs his studies seriously. 130.00 per m o n th per stu d e n t (F o u r stu d e n ts per suite) All bills paid Maid S e n ice I tarnished F re e P a rk in g R e sid en t M anagers Mr and M rs. W , M G ilbert GR 2-5166 a rtm e n t N ew LARGE. MODERN T W O bedroom ap ­ furn ish in g s. Q uiet neighborhood. $100.OO. O p en -2 5 0 3 B rid­ ie- P a th . GR 8-3937. E FFIC IEN C Y COTTAGE. A D JO IN ­ ING cam pus. 3**4 E ast 26 4. $57.50. P lease call GR 8-2329. IT ’S SMART T O re n t an a p a rtm e n t w ith a sw im m ing pool d u rin g sp rin g sem ester. Go by 2711 H em phill P ark Just th ree blocks directly n o rth of cam pus. One bedroom , fu rn ish ed a p ­ a rtm e n t 1 so rry , only one available) A ir-conditioned. $90.00 m onthly. M an­ ag e r u t a p a rtm e n t C or call GR 6- 1466. try GR 6-8449. If no an sw er, PEN T H O U SE . AIR - CO N D IT IO N ED . P aneled w alls-exposed beams. H uge closets. Desk. Also, a p a rtm e n t w ith fireplace. GR 8-5528. $22.00 T ire d of lu x u ry liv in g : Need tw o girls to sh a re tw o sto ry , air-conditioned, liv­ ing, dining, k itch en , th re e bedroom s. la rg e closets, tw o c a r g a r ­ I 12 baths, age, sto rag e. A cross stre e t (rom law school. IO m in u te w alk to INT., bus line. 2409 Red R iver GR 2-4456 THE INNER MAN r one is fun and f ro lic an11 fulfillment—ext opt College home melancholy omission: don’t get to enjoy Mom' ugh, I cooking. (In mv own undergraduate daw , curiously cr did pot under.:*) this deprival n my it other, a noted cross­ country runner, wa* never home long enough to cook a meal until her legs gave out kist Arbor Day.) But most of us arrive at college w I Lh fond gastric memories of Mom’s nourishing delicacies and we are inclined now and then to heave great racking righs a> we contemplate the stealn tables rn the campus cafeteria* Take, for sn extreme example, the rase of Kilister .Sigafoo* Hnster, a freshman at < r e of our great Eastern universities (Oregon State) came to college accustomed to home cooking of a kind and quantity enjoyed by very few. Until entering college, lin s ter had lived all hi* life in Europe, where his father was an eminent fugitive from justice. I i lister's mother, a natural born cook, was mistress of the bant/* cuisine of a dorm c o u n try , and hoister grew up ..v mg and eating in the Cob* tmentaJ manner. He arose each morning at ten aud breakfasted lightly on figs, my Ofter rn s vAcJ m s miler hot chocolate, and brioche. (It is interesting to note, inciden­ tally, that brioche wa.* named after its inventor, perhaps the greatest of ail French bakers, Jean-Claude Brioche (1934-1921). M. Brioche, a- we all know, also invented croissants, French toast, and —in a curious d ej» rtu re—the electric razor. Other immortal names in the hist* * of breadstuffs are the German, O tto Pumpernu kel (1509-1848) who invented pumpernickel and thus became known to posterity aa The Iron Chancellor; th** two Americans, William Cullen Raisin (1066-1812) and Walter Roe (1931-1932) who eollaliorated on the invention of raisin rye, and, of course, Hana Christian Andersen (1805-1875) who invented Danish pastry . But I digress. Fluster, I say, breakfasted lightly a t ten a m. At eleven a rn. his Mom brought him his elevenses. At twelve she brought him his twelveaes. At 1:30 she served his lunch: firet a clear broth; then a frnli course (porgy and baas); then an omelette; then the main course—cither a saddle of lamb, an eye of sirloin, or a glass of chicken fat; then a salad of escarole; and finally a lemon souffle. At three p rn. Mom served I irater low tea, at five p.m. high tea, and a t ten p.m. dinner—first a bowl of petite marmite (she trapped the marmites h e rr if); then a fish course (wounded trout); then an omelette of turtle eggs; then tho main course — either duck with orange or a basin of farina; then a salad of unborn chicory; and finally a caramel mousse. And then F inder went off to college, which reminds me of Marlboro Cigarettes. (Actually it doesn’t remind me of Marl­ boro Cigarettes at all, but the makers of Marlboro [»y mo to write this column and they are inclined to get surly if I fail to mention their product. Mind you, I don’t object to mentioning their product- n o sir, not one bit. Marlboro’s flavor is flavor­ ful, the filter filters, the soft pack is soft, the Fli|>-Top box flips, and the tattoo is optional. Marlboro* are available wherever cigarettes are sold in all fifty states of the Union. Next time you’re in the U.S.A., try a pack.) But I digress. We were speaking of Fin.-ter Sigafooa who went from Continental dining to dormitory feeding. So whenever you feel sorry for yourself, think of Finnier, for it always lifts the heart to know somebody is worse off than you are. • # • £ 19A4 Mn Shul rn* o We, th e m a k er« o f M arlboro, ca n ’t to y w h eth er European food beata aura, b u t th is we belier*: A m erica*• cig a rettes lead th e w hole w orld. A n d thia we fu rth er believe: am ong A m erica'a c ia a r e tte t, M arlboroa are th e finest. “ I got Into new spapers the easy way — m y father owned one." said F rank J . Starzel. The youthful-looking m an. now a visiting the faculty m em ber School of Journalism , w as Assoc!- ated P re ss general m anager until his retirem ent last te a r. in The Le M ars Globe-Post where Starzel first worked was a sem i­ weekly which he calls the hardest kind of paper to work on because the staff Is as sm all as a weekly’s with the deadlines com ing twice as fast. Ile worked on the Le Mars paper until World War I gave him a chance ‘ bigger league ” to enter a He then quit school and went to work cm the .Sioux City Tribune. the U niversity of Notre Dame and S tate U nivers­ ity of Iowa. Starzel attended "I quit college with Bine hours to go because I wa* offered a Job on the L m a Press*.* if a r n as m an­ aging ed ito r." Starzel sa vs. Starzel i* determ ined to get his degree, though. Having completed his m ajor in English before leav­ ing college, Starzel took six hours UNIVERSITY BROADCASTS h I I I M . sa T k a rtd n 1 K in s tv I III! < haBnpi i Btl Kme Aria P rim ary ypan W a rid i a JKL- TV Kinder**! OO - Active Spams- 9 I 4§~ :to j f * . Science 6 ■OO N .gii Noon 2 lid-* F ilm F e * ta re 2 Y> - A bout lh p f J V . Prim ary Span i 'MS A ctive S p a n n 3 8 - News 12 Science 3 2 ■*~ < o m m u aiiy C IO—So ie tv 4 2 1 0 - tv o rld G<<*grn 3 >rt - A m erican ti* 3 45 - I driver I 'Auca 4 i f i - •Discovery 4 IV - T he C hildren s (Mi­ W hat s New 5 x t— EV Hi •'d ir., af 6 OO—T h e A m erican W h at Money 6 OO—o p e ra tio n All j l i ­ E vening New 7 no - Special ' J I L iberty * 8 9 0 - New Europe L ite ra tu re a 3 0 - M useum 9 0 0- D ental Show 9 30- L eisure of geography by correspondence and is now completing three hours of political science. Starzel describes his correspond­ ence courses as "exciting" and "lots of fun." However, the first few assignm ents w ere hard, he says, because he had been away from college work so long. the Starzel accepted job with in 1929 because, he says, in AP ' people always w ant New Y ork." live to During his 35 years working for AP, Starzel served as promotion editor, night city editor, and gen­ eral desk editor in New York and served as chief of Ohio bureaus for six years. Returning to New York at the to beginning handle com m unications, he be­ cam e general m anager. for World War II When asked to com e to the Uni­ versity as visiting faculty m em ­ ber. lie replied, " I ’m not too old to accept a challenge.’ W‘hi!e a t the U niversity, Starzel will teach one course entitled P ress and Contem porary Affairs and give a series of lectures for three sections of a sophomore re ­ porting course. Starzel says he hopes to convey some of the benefits of journalism to his students. After this sem ester Starzel will return to Vermont and will do consulting for the AP and news­ papers. Glee Club to Sing In Houston Friday The U niversity Men’s Glee C*lub will perform F riday and Saturday in Houston and Beaumont, The 5 p m . Friday perform ance in Houston at the Rice Hotel will Im- for the Texas Music E duca­ tors Association in connection with All-State High School Choir selec bona. Tho Texas Exes Association Is sponsorin g the public perform ance at 8 p m. .Saturday in the Beau moot City Auditorium. the Truth and The best known inscription on a U niversity building is "Y e Shall Know the Truth Shall Made You F re e ” chiseled on the Main Building, according to t h e Student Activities Handbook. Others a re " 0 E a r t h , What Changes Hast Thou Seen" on the Geology Building, and "T ruth Con quers All" on the J o u r n a l i s m Building. Tho serene atmosphere c f O ld Mexico and superb Mexican Food combine to the Big Four the n u k e perfect place to dine. AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD The University Students' Link With Old Mexico a TORO A Touch of O ld Sci H e IM I Guadalupe GR 1-4321 EL CHARRO Delis try S en ice 812 Rad River GR S-773S MONROE'S Mexican Food to Go SOO East Ava. GR 7-1744 EL MAT Ham* af th# Original "Crispy Taco?' 104 Emf Au*. GR 7-7023 OPEN EVERY DAY Tate Reports Postage Abuse H ackerm an W arn s UT Departments vice-chancellor recently University postage meters are not for private use. Dr. Norman for Hackerman. academic re­ minded deans, departmental chair­ men, administrative officials, fac­ ulty, and staff of this stipulation in the Texas Penal Code. affairs, Dr. Hackerman received notice first assistant from C. B. Tate, state auditor, state that agencies were not complying with the rules concerning the use of postage meters, which arc used to stamp official mail. some The Penal Code requires that each state agency, including edu­ cational institutions, must place an imprint plate on postage meters showing that the mail carried by such postage is official State of Texas mail and that there is a penalty for th*1 unlawful use of such postage meters for private purposes. Anyone using the meters unlaw­ fully is subject to a fine of up to $300. Parry Talk Rescheduled A lecture by Adam Parry on “ The Two Voices of Vergil's Aen­ eid.” originally scheduled for F ri­ day, will be held at 4 p.m. Fob. 21. The lecture will take place in Physics Building 121. -from C H O IC E corn-fed heavy beef •irUlx Stet* . . . and, the D E L IC IO U S • j i g F R } * 0 0 >. . . America s ii M o st Unique H a m b u r g e r ! D O N ’T G IV E UP N O W . . . Cindy Brantley works with patients at Austin State Hospital. T exan P h o to L'-hots Y Spring Open House Today To Encourage Participation Spring activities at the Univer­ sity YMCA-YWCA are b e i n g heralded Thursday with “Y Day,” a program of multiple events. Ac­ tivities will take place in the “ Y,” 2200 Guadalupe. At 7 a.m., Jim Rush and Jan Jopling will direct a get-together and breakfast for present and pros­ pective “ Y” participants, partic­ ularly freshmen. T h e breakfast will offer an opportunity for those attending to meet “ Y” loaders and SA V E UP T O 2 5 % O N B P I P E S • T O B A C C O S • PIPE R A C K S • P O U C H E S • L IG H T E R S • BBB • Loawe • Dunhill 0 Imports 0 M edico 0 Yellobole 0 Kaywoodie SPARTAN DISCOUNT SM O K E SHOP 5501 Airport Blvd. STUDENTS . . . WE ACCEPT ALL M A JO R OIL CO. CREDIT CARDS! 0 20 Location* to Serve You 0 Friendly Expert Service Station Attendant! HANCOCK SER V IC E S T A T IO N S learn about the program. A mid-morning coffee hour in the lobby, at IO a.rn., will fea­ two stu­ ture art exhibits by dents—Ray Kubreeka, freshman art major, and David Earnest, graduate student. “What Is the Real P r o b l e m About Sex?” will he the topic of the first of a series of theological conversations t h e “Y” staff, Frank Wright and Anne Ap­ p e n z e ll. The discussion will be held at a noon luncheon. led by Interviews for students interest­ ed in “Y” study groups and com­ munity service projects will be held from I to 5 p.m. Discussion groups range from Texas politics to existentialism to campus sa ­ tire, with more than 15 topics in all. In community sendee, students may t u t o r underprivileged stu­ dents in the public schools, volun­ teer time for institutions such as Austin State School, or help with youth programs such as Y-Teens or scouting. At 3 p.m., the focus will shift to national and international pro­ jects sponsored by the “Y.” Stu­ in dents who have participated trips or work camps in Asia, Latin America, and Africa are scheduled to talk informally about their ex­ periences at a coffee hour. Those considering the projects or desiring m o r e information about them are invited. Finan­ cial aid is available through the recently established Block Smith for M e m o r i a l Scholarships, which several applications have already been received. A preview of the American Bal­ let Theater’s production, in­ form students planning to attend. to Grad Group Plans Open House Friday An open house will he held by the Graduate Group from 4 to 6 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Star Room. The group is open to all single graduate students, law students, faculty, and staff. A coffee is held at the beginning of each semester to welcome all who are interested in such activities. A dance also will be sponsored by the group at 8 p.m. Saturday in Texas Union Main Ballroom. Tickets will be $2 per couple or $1 stag. Music will be furnished by Jay Leutwyler and his orchestra. ' will be held at 4 p.m. At approx­ imately 10:30 p.m., or immediate­ ly after the ballet, a discussion will be led at the “Y” by Ann Gallaway, member of the Austin Civic Ballet. The Rev. Bob Walker, of the Wesley Foundation staff, will lead a coffee colloquy on “All the Way Home,” the movie now showing at the V a r s i t y Theater, at ap­ proximately 9:30 p.m. The show, which stars Jean Simmons, Robert Preston, and University-ex Pat Ringle, portrays the emotions sur­ rounding the death of a father in a Knoxville, Tenn., family of 50 years ago. lA J h a t (jo e s O n O le re T h u rsd ay I 7—B re a k fa st k ic k o ff for a ll-d ay open house. U n iv e r sity "Y ." 8-8 B a n n e d b o o k s on d i s p l a y , f i r s t floor c o rr id o r of M ain B u ild in g . 3 30-lo p m — K L R N -TV program s, i C hann el 9. I 9-5 -T ic k e ts for J o se C.reco. show , J R. R eed M usic C om pany. 9 -4 — T ic k e ts fo r J a n u s Schw a b a c to r r ec ita l, H o g g A u d ito riu m box o f ­ fice. 9. IO. and ll- - S h o w in g s o f c a n c er film fo r w om en tr a in in g cla sses, W om en 's G ym 334; also a t 2 and 3 p m. p h y sica l in 9 and 2 —T ra ffic C ourts C onference, 9-3 M **t*rpleoeg o f G raphic A rts,'' Tow ne* H ail. la g u n a G loria. seum . play. • •y .” 10-6— T h e a te r d e sig n e x h ib its. A rt Mu­ IO—C o ffe e hou r w ith s tu d e n t a rt d is ­ 12 " w h a t is th e R eal P rob lem About lu n ch eon , S e x " to be d isc u sse d a t "Y ." 2—5 Art lib ra r y . T ex a s U n ­ le n d in g ion 102. 3— C o f f l e h o u r f e a t u r i n g n a t i o n a l a n d In tern ation al p rojects. " Y .” M i K U T - PM. 90.7 mc. 4— It. L. C o llin s to le c tu r e on * Muss- ba a er S p e c tr o s c o p y ,'’ P h y sic s B u ild ­ ing 121. 7 C o r d it e s , RO TC B u ild in g 12 7 C h r istia n S c i e n c e O rgan ization , 2328 G uad alupe, 7-1't Stud.v room s open on fir st flo o r of Bus I n ess-E con om tcs B u ild in g . 7—General m e e tin g o f In te r n a tio n a l Texas U nion 304-305; " In ­ C lub te r n a tio n a l H our" a t 8. 7— D u p lica te b ridge, T e x a s U n ion I Ju n ior B allroom . 7 :1 5 A lpha P h i T au to e le ct o fficers, E x p erim en ta l S c ie n c e B u ild in g 223. 7:3<> A lpha D e lta S igm a to hear talk j by J K. H u g h es, J o u r n a lism B u ild - ; ing .307. 7 30 Dr. M ilton D a vis to sp ea k to Y oung R ep u b lican s, T e x a s U nion. S o c i e t y . 7 . 3o- In tern ation al L aw T ow n es H all IM 7:45- E n g in e e r in g W ives C lub. T exas i ’ni on .34!t A uditorium . 8 A m erican B allet T h ea ter, M unicip al 8— Dr. R, ML F r y e o f th e F o lg er S h a k esp ea rea n R esearch L ibrary to j ‘ M acb eth ," U n iv e r sity 8 on peak P r e sb y te ria n C hurch. P h a rm a cettes, P h arm acy IQI B u ild in g 9:30 Di s c us s i on th e W ay H om e." movi e, jed by the Rev. B ob W a l k e r . " Y . " on "AM 10:15— D isc u ssio n th e A m erican o f B a lle t to be led by A nn G allaw ay, " Y." WHAT’S N EW IN T H E FEBRUARY A T L A N T IC ? V a n c e P a c k a r d : "T h e In v a s io n o f P r i v a c y ” : Inform ation is power. This revealing article show s how m uch and how and by whom it is baing ferreted out about Am ericans. "Exhlbftlonshlp”: An expostulation by Ernst H. Gombrlch, prompted in part by the decision to send the V e nus de Milo to Japan for the Olym pics. " I t There a New G e rm a n y ?”' M artha Gellhorn reports on whether the y o u n g ­ er generation in Germ any could in tima ba responsibla for " a new G e rm a n y". PLUS AN ATLANTIC EXTRA "T h o Ghastly B la n k ”: Alan M oo re- head describes the first exploration of the vast central part of Australia. And poetry b y W illia m S t a f f o r d , Thom as H ornsby Ferrll, Robert. Graves. Fergus Allen, Stuart Hem sley and 4 naw poets. M onth In, m onth out The Atlantic's editors seek out exciting ex­ pressions of new and p r o v o c a t iv e Id e a s. And whether these expressions take the form of prose or po­ etry, feet or fiction, they always attain a rem arkably high level of academ ic value and literary interest. Make room In your life for The Atlantic. Get a copy today. c N O W m w y r j J s t u d e n t g r o u p s ABROAD i I Wide Variety of Tours planned for students only SORBONNE STUDY TOUR 70 days, $1388 including England, Holland. Belgium , France, Spain, Portugal DISCOVERY ADVENTURE TOUR OF EUROPE 76 days, !I29S Many ether Student Tours featuring Europe. Israel. Greece and USSR. or Form your Own Group Ask for Plans and Profitable Organizer Arrangements SPECIA LIST S IN STUDENT TRAVEL SIN C E 1926 [utraT I for folders and details SEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT or write U N IV ER SIT Y TRAVEL CO M PA N Y Cambridge 38, M ass. I G U A D A L U P E a t 20th " A t the Sign of the R o o fe r " New Recording Starlet the Ccouner ONLY 8 9 95 plus dividend Here s V * M 's newest sound recording creation . a 3 speed, compact size tape recorder value-priced to fit any budget! From brilliant musical recording fidelity to maximum recording and playback tape time . . . everything is yours for all your monaural tape recording pleasure or projects. . . Record Shop Downstairs 4 Thursday, February 6, 1964 THE D A ILY T E X A N Page 8 Cowboy Minstrels Saturday The C o w b o y Minstrels, post­ poned because of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, will be presented at 7 p.m. Saturday in Gregory Gym. Headlining entertainment t h e will be the Wanderers Three, folk singers, and country music star Sonny James. Cactus Pryor will be m aster of ceremonies for the program, which includes a east of 60 members of the Cowboys. The 1964 C o w b o y Sweetheart will be selected from 13 nominees. Nominees include K a y Bailey, Carol C I e w i s, Lynn Denman, Diane Douglass, Peggy McCaffer- ty. Anne Oaks. Carol Reeb, Linda Schwartz. Leah Stalarow. Jeanne Swahn, K a r e n Thompson, Flo Vaughn, and Sandy Wright. Tickets cost $1 and may be pur­ chased either from members of the Cowboys or from members of sororities which have sweetheart nominees. Proceeds will go to the Austin Council for R e t a r d e d Children. ★ A D S to Host H ughes J. K. Hughes of the Grant Ad­ vertising Agency in Dallas will speak to a meeting of Alpha Del­ ta Sigma, advertising fraternity, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Journal­ ism Building SOT. ★ Pharmacettes to Meet Pharmacettes will meet in the Pharmacy Building 101 at 8 p.m. Thursday. Newly appointed officers will preside with Mrs. Francine (Elbert) Johnson as president and Mrs. Judy (Jarrell) Bridges as vice-president. Dr. Robert Ledbetter Jr., coun­ selor, will speak on “Love and M arriage.” * Medics to Meet Today technology Alpha Phi Tau, professional medical fraternity, will meet at 7:15 p.m. Thursday in Experimental Science Build­ ing 223. Officers will be elected. ★ Mackin to Talk ‘Rockies' Dr. J. Hoover Mackin, professor of geology, will speak on “The Erosional History of the Rocky Mountains” as part of a geology technical session at I p.m. Thurs­ day in Geology Building 14. The .session will be sponsored by the Department of Geology. Dr. Mackin was elected to mem­ bership in the National Academy of Sciences in 1963. He came to the University in 1962 as the first reci­ pient of the William Stamps Barish Chair of geology. Wives Club Will Meet T h e University Engineering Wives dub nill meet at 7:45 p.m. Thursday in Texas Union 3 R). ‘Sanctuary’ to Be Show n “Sanctuary” will be shown F ri­ day and Saturday in the Texas Union Auditorium sponsored by the Union Film Committee. Showings will be at 4. 7. and 9:30 p.m. Friday, and at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday. Admission will be IO cents for students and 35 cents for nonstudents. ★ ★ ★ Law Society Will Meet The International Law Society will hold a business meeting at 7:36 p.m. Thursday in Townes Hall 111, announced Tom (ady, secretary. The group will meet Tuesday for dinner in the Villa Capri Ri­ viera Room. Dr. Richard N. Adams, professor of anthropol­ ogy, will speak on “Power, Na­ tionalism, and Sovereignty in (.alin America: An Anthropologi­ cal Approach.” ★ Behler to Lecture Friday Dr. Ernst Behler, a visiting pro­ fessor at Washington University. St. Louis, Mo., will give a Ger­ manic languages lecture at 4 p.m. I Cam pus News in 6rief Friday in Batts Hall. His topic will be "Romantic Irony.” Dr. Behler, of the University of Bonn, Ger., is the author of many publications, the most notable be­ ing “ Kritische Schlegel-Ausgabe.” With a French professor and a Canadian professor, Behler h a s published six volumes of this set. and three more will soon follow. The volumes contain the previously unpublished philosophical papers of Friederich Schlegel. * Stumpers to Talk Today Stump Speaking will resume at noon Thursday on the patio between the Academic Center and the Texas Union. Ail stu­ invited to listen or dents are participate in speaking. ★ ‘Ov0r 22’ Hop Saturday The Graduate Group will sponsor an “Over 22 Dance” from 8 to ll p.m. Saturday in the Main Ball­ room of the Texas Union. The J a y Leutwyler Orchestra will provide music with vocalist Corinne Davis who was recently on a nationwide tour with the Jan Garber Orchestra. counting clerk; Curtis Kirksey, I University Commons m anager; Dr. Ronald K. DeFord, geology pro- ; fessor; and Jack R. Maguire, Ex- i Students’ Association executive di- I rector. The group hosted 134 persons at its first dance in January. URI Applications Due Applications for In i versify Re­ search Institute research assign- ! ments for 1964-65 are doe in the Graduate School office Monday. S o m e assignments will be made after that date, but fac­ ulty members are urged to turn in their requests by Monday if at all possible. Application forms are avail­ able in the Graduate School of- | flee, Old Library Building 106. ★ ★ Students M a y Rtnt Art The last day for renting art from the Art Lending Library is Thurs­ day. Marilyn Dilley, chairman of the Union Exhibits Committee said. "DifFeront’’ Oifti, Indian Jewelry — Navajo and Oriental Rugs Maxican Import! I The library will be open from 3 to 5 p.m., and selections may be made from oils, watercolors, case­ ins, and prints. The rental fee is $2 per semester with a $10 deposit required. The deposit will be returned at the end of the semester. The paintings are on display in Texas Union 102. ★ Dr. Fry* to End Series Dr. Roland M. Frye will con­ clude a series of lectures at 8 p.m. Thursday in the University Pres­ byterian Church. Dr. Frye is a research profes sor at the Folger Shakespeare Li­ brary in Washington, D.C. He 14 a graduate of Princeton Univer­ sity a n d a former Guggenheim Fellow. The general topic of his lectures has been “ Macbeth: Mirror of tho Disintegration of Modern Man.” M n r n n m n f U ltA W A r \ I ECONO-CAR I S t NT AI SYSTEM pet 12 ho p e t. od. t 99 24 period plot pe-inie* 0 mi ta I S i ! i f | Pick-up, go*, O il, I mce I mnintanance and insurance IlkJ GR R "HSU lift R Aero** tram Or ink ill Present and former staff mem hers, students, a n d faculty and their guests are invited. Admission is $1 per person, and dress will be semiformal. Dance reservations are not nec­ essary, but table reservations may be made at the Union program office, GR 6-0222. On Saturday, call GR 7-0733. C h a i r m a n of the “Over 22 Dance” committee is Howard Sim­ mons. University draftsman. Other members of t h e committee arc Mrs. Lucille Baer, Union program assistant; Mrs. B r u c e Taylor. U n i o n administrative assistant; Mrs. Virginia Searight, Union ac­ I THE UNIVERSITY’S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO AND HI-FI SALES AND SERVICE CENTER 2010 Speedway GR t-660? 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