weather: light showers low 70, high SS T h e Da ily T exan Student N ew spaper a t The Ur r*xa% pages 8, 9: ballet, ’smoke' reviews Pric* Rv# Cqnts AUSTIN, TEXAS, THURSDAY v Ten Pages Today No. 51 Vol a Reps Vindicate Biracial Group As Party Plank 31-Part Platform Also Recommends B-Tax Transfer Representative Party drafted a platform Wednesday which called for setting up a student biracial commission study problems that will face the campus “when and if integration of all Univers­ ity-owned facilities becomes a re­ ality.’’ to The human rights plank states that student sentiment on integra­ tion of athletics has already been made public (referring to a cam­ pus referendum) and also states that integration of University-own­ ed housing is in the hands of the judicial the United States. system of INTEGRATION PROBLEM Most debate during the meeting centered on wording of the inte­ gration plank and opposition to planks calling for standardization of Outstanding Students and Good- fallows criteria, and a plank advo­ cating transferability of the Blank­ et Tax. The move to standardize the Cactus outstanding student require­ ments was defeated after discus­ sion that the plank could be mis­ interpreted. The Blanket Tax proposal, which would increase “flexibility of the use of the Blanket Tax for per­ sonal use by expansion of trans­ ferability rights,” was passed after limitations of the discussion on transferrin* power. The 31-ptank platform was di­ vided into four sections — Univer­ students ser­ sity development, vices, housing, and human rights. FlUEflHCAN ENGLISH PROBE Among ether planks, the first section asks aa Investigation of the policies governing freshmen Eng­ lish, proposes modification of the University's “in loco parentis" policy, and supports building af a new band hall. Nhu Arrives To Talk in Gym Today T h e University Will be the Mme. Nhu Is a controversial fig- ■ ceedure for any event of this na- only campus in the South and ure< and we are aware that die tore where a crowd Of more than Southwest to be visited b y 1 sfV J at the airport a n d at Gregory „ Madame Ngo D m n N hu, th e I Gym, but we do not anticipate any controversial f i r s t lady of violence.” South Viet N a m . p,a™ing f m°n’tra,ions 6000 <» p o l i c e w i l l g u a r d . . . . Mme. Nhu changed planes In Dallas W e d n e s d a y and was scheduled to attend a party in her honor at the ranch of Dud­ ley Dougherty a t Beeville. The exact time of her arrival in Aus­ tin is being withheld a t her re ­ quest. She will go from the a ir­ port to the press conference a t the Texas Union, which will be followed by a dinner In the F ar- ulty-Staff Dining Room. N either of these events will he open to the public. Although it is not known whether or not Mme. Nhu will spend the following her night speech, is believed her next destination will be Arizona. in A u s t i n it The five-foot two-inch mother of four has been called the ruler of the men who run South Viet Nam. Officially, she Is chief of South Viet Nam's women’s movements and a Deputy' in the National A« sembly. NEVER CALLED STUPID When asked whether she is anfi- A m e r i c a n , Mme. Nhu replied. “Why should I be? People accuse me of everything, but I think that so far nobody has ever said I am stupid.” .. „ Mme. Nhu, sister-in-law of ,™ereTw111 ^ , !ecuri,y .?,flce” . . . A at the Texas Union as well as at the president Of .South Viet Gregory Gym. Hamilton reports Nam, Will arrive late Thurs- there will probably be about six day afternoon for a press con- University officers at the scene, ference, followed by a dinner as we^ as °^‘cers from the Aus- 1 tin Police Department, but he in her honor b e f o r e she described this as the usual pro- speaks at 7:30 p.m. in Greg­ ory Gym. POLITICIANS VIE “Free Speech for Mme. Nhu— Why Not for the Vietnamese Peo­ ple?” is the slogan to be displayed by University Student Peace Union members at the airport arrival of Mme. Nhu. The SPU members are going to distribute leaflets at Gregory Gym Thursday night, said Carl Mantee!, coordinator of the group. On Oct. l l , Mme. Nhu accept­ ed an invitation of the T e x a s Union Speakers Committee to ■peak at the University, as re ­ ported in an exclusive D a i l y Texas story. H i g h student Talk Becomes Party Debate By JUAN VASQUEZ Texan Staff Writer What began as a discussion of the purposes of student govern­ ment turned into a debate on the He said that students had a mis­ conception of the administration as "nasty and mean." , . , , The administration When Mme. Nhu arrived Oct. 7 In New York for her three- week speaking tour, she said, “I have come here to see you, to try to understand why we can’t get along better. I hops at the end of ray stay to know you better.” Mme. Nhu had 29 major en- , „ gagements planned when she ar- is full of rjve(j jj, ^ United States with her „ ,, Interest In the ! restive merit, of the Represents- i Q,lr pr0^m,« he stated. Hie en who are willing to listen to ,inuerh»«.r ^ tv,,,,, ck* Historic Big Lift Success * . . the final plane left Bergstrom A F B for G e rm a n y at 600 miles per hour late W e d n e sd a y night. —Texan Photo—Cornett 'Big Lift' Complete; Roiueam s Final Troops Leave ; Castro Tactics BERGSTROM A I R F O R C E BASE (JR — The final plane In the Army and Air Force’* historic transatlantic airlift to Germany took off Wednesday night. A slim, four-motor C-135 rocket­ ed off the runway st Bergstrom AFB near Austin at 11:47 pm . (CSTt ami headed for Germany at 600 miles an I lour. During t h e 234 transatlantic flights, more than 15,350 troops j ami more than 500 tons of equip- j merit was shifted from the United j States to Germany, a distance of \ about 5,600 m il«. Cuban Vtt Reveals Guerrilla Offense A former member of Castro's personal appearance prompted the tive and University parties Wed- necessity of drawing tickets for nesday night, the event. Student tickets are free The meeting before members with an Auditor's receipt. Tickets of Freshman Council in the Tex- for faculty and staff are going at as Union Auditorium began with a speech by Students* Associa­ tion President Julius (Hickman. _ ________________________ The combat soldiers carried only graduate student, Wednesday de- flrkets *re offere^ at *2. ! guerrilla army. now a University * ? * • w h 11 * a rifle, pack, and personal belong- scribed Castro’s winning tactics in ings with them. In Germany they ■ the 1958-59 Cuban Revolution to the immediately began o p e r a t i n g Marauders, an Army ROTC coun- stockpiled tanks, artillery, and oth- j ter-guerrilia unit on campus, er heavy equipment. In a few days, FEW TICKETS REMAIN Mrs. Shirley Bird Perry, pro­ gram director of the Texas Union, said that hundreds of people are expected from Houston, San An- nwrhv It is scheduled to land near Min- denhall, England, about IO hours later (approximately 3:01 p.m. lo- the Second Armored will be ready didate in Latin American history, J " I ’J ^ w Snetdav Mrs Per™ w ere’ Mn ’.bident for a mock nuclear battle with the was & flrsl iieutenant ln Castro’s cai time). From there, the person- ne! will be taken to Germany. Be- Third Armored division already in {orces from August 1958 to March ; cause of a sudden thunderstorm, j Germany. th . d ^ r t u r . of delayed almost an hour. neavy equipment, in a icw uay», I Neill Macaulay, doctorate can- j Cosmo', tactic, tot,owed tart pun* w a, j 2959, Hodges to Speak To Businessmen student body’s failure to criticize the administration when it feels criticism is needed is one of the faults, he student community’s continued, and one which can be partially solved by student govern­ ment. “In short, we feel that student government's purpose is to equip and train students with the skills to be citizens," Glickman conclud­ ed. on “Meet toe Press,” “Face the Nation,” “Issues and Answers,” and “Today.” STUDENT PROTESTS ABOUND t h e policies of the Diem administration, Mme. Nhu has encountered protesting student (See MME. NHU, Page 3) Defending Students Plan CORE Branch 7ftn rri Macaulay said. t e Tung in the 3927 revolution, c B 9 t Mme. Nhu’s Ronnie Cohen, m em ber of the U niversity P arty Steering Com­ m ittee, gave a brief history of tickets left and 300 general admix- Secretary of Commerce Luther student parties on cam pus and i sion, IOO at which udll be sold Hodges will give the opening ad- charged that most of the “ ag- dress Thursday at the Texas Per- Thursday night. gresiveness and creative” legis­ 9, w ill tele- sonnel and Management Associa­ tem established by China’s Mao KLRN-TV. channel lation had not been done by Rep. appearance tion’s tw e n ty -fifth annual three- P arty. starting at 7:15 p.m. After live day conference at the University. He said Urn party' fitted into tile coverage, the program will switch Ile will discuss “ The Business- panorama of political parties which to KLRN studios for a panel dis- man s Challenge" at IO a m. in the have been active at different times on campus since the post-war era. First, the guerrillas established themselves In remote areas and began making forays into settled cussion of the speech. The panel, Texas Union Auditorium, areas. When government troops comprised of Dr. Walter C. Neale, Arriving Wednesday night launched an offense, the guerrillas struck back and forced withdrawal. t h e I r his wife, and Dr. John B. Cornell, Hodges was met by a group of ; associate professor of anthropol- Austin businessmen who will honor Failure to destroy the guerrillas ogy^ vvill be headed by Dr. Ben him with a breakfast Thursday Party, said that the majority of the legislation passed by the As­ sembly was introduced by Rep Party members. Robert Mueller Municipal Airport, professor of economics, i associate at The nationally affiliated organi­ zation would probably be a mili­ tant direct action group and would concentrate primarily on voter registration, according to David Oliver Heard, chairman of Rep Martinez, freshman, who presided Wednesday night at a meeting of about 20 students interested In or­ ganizing CORE in Austin. Texas’ second branch of toe Congress of Racial Equality may be organized In Austin. was a blow to the government’s and many uncommitted side Higgins, professor of Following toe panel discussion, a economics, in the Austin Club. Army officers and officials of “Castro’s basic tactic was the Military' Air Transport Service harassing ambush. Superior fire- (MATS) said toe airlift went even Power_isn’t needed for this type of ; operation -you fire a few- shots at a smoother than expected. “Planes are IOO per cent on distance to cover the retreat of the time, there have been no unusual j 8Ue m lla band," Macauley said, maintenance problems, and every'- thing is just fine,” said Col. Rob­ ert Oliver, MATS mission com­ mander at Connally AFB. session was held . Mme. Nhu,” will be presented. civilians began to with the revolutionists. actively j tape, “At Issue: The Press and Commerce Before becoming Secretary of in 1961, Hodges had been governor of North Carolina for six years. During this time, he the Southern was chairman of Governors’ Conference and the Southern R e g i o n a l Education Board. A rrangem ents have been m ade for showing of the speech on closed-circuit television on ca m ­ pus. About 1,000 students will be accom m odated on a first-come- He was vice-president of M ar­ flrst-served basis in the following shall Field Company from 1943 to ambush, an ave- room s: B atts lot, lo t, 103. to t. nue of retreat was always left for 1950. After retiring from private Sot, 307, and SIS; Mezes 101 business in 1950 he snent a year C8n Qub ****** 8 resolutlon WeLd* If s u ^ n t interest in Austin is toe enemy. This was done in order Benedict it, 15. and 115; BER indicated, _ nesday night demanding that the field worker and to create, in the enemy's mind, in West Germany as head of the 305, SU, and 316; Experim ental trouble-shooter may spend as much Board of Regents make the office an alternative to death and thus industry division of the Economic Science Building 137 and 733; of Daily Texan editor an elective as a week here, Martinez said. diminish his resistance and in­ In Cooperation Administration. and Chemistry SIS and 319. post. crease his desire to retreat. Allen Hamilton, c h i e f traffic 1961, he was consultant to toe State and security officer, told The Daily Department on the International T e x a n Wednesday, “We know, Management Conference. Martinez called the meeting to determine the amount of interest in CORE on campus. Tentative plans call for OORE's national field secretary, Isaac Reynolds of New Orleans, interested persons here early in November. Reynolds is scheduled to speak in Houston at CORE meetings on The University Young Repubh- Nov. 4 prior to his Austin v isit YR's Ask Board To ’Elect’ Editor “Guerrillas are no match for (See ROTC, Page 3) In laying to speak the to , Rice Tickets Left A brief question and Houston has answer CORE in Texas. the only other Martinez said CORE would prob- The Texan editor is presently ably work hand in hand with local chosen by the nine-member board organizations of the National As- for Advancement of of directors of Texas Student Pub- satiation lications, Inc., and the editor in Colored People and the Campus office, making IO votes. Interracial Committee. mumm mmmmmmmm Planks advocating an Increase in parking facilities, an investigation ; of the Cultural Entertainment Com- j mitts# program tickets will be available, and a Btu- j troops In such a short time, began neuvers the Second Armored derat exchange with the University of Mexico ire Included In the stu­ dent services section. The history-making airlift, larg­ transatlantic movement of that ample est to first exercise to Hak up a major United States based land force with combat materiel poeitioaed overs eas ready for pickup and use. This capability for rapid re­ inforcement projects a new mag­ nitude of military reeponslve- neas.” After about two weeks of ma- will return to Fort Hood, 70 miles north of Austin, with moot of them back by Thanksgiving. Plans call for the return trip to be spaced out over IO days. Connally AFB, Waco, scheduled its last plane out at IO p m. The last plane from Sheppard AFB, Wichita Falls, left st 1:40 p.m. Gray AFB, near Killeen, sent out Its last plane about 3 a m. Wednes­ day. just before midnight Monday when a C135 jet transport roared off the runway at Bergstrom. The plane, carrying Maj. Gen. Edwin H, Bur­ ba, Second Armored commander, landed near Frankfort, Germany, 10H hours later. Burba estimated Wednesday the te a l plane will land In Ger­ many Thursday morning, about SS hours after the airlift began. The original schedule called for 79 hoars. The housing section advocates allowing sophomore men and wom­ en who ars either seniors or 21 to have free choice of housing; a nd a senior women’s honor dorm­ itory. At conclusion of the meeting, Chairman Oliver Heard declared Pl Kapp* Alpha fraternity had re­ turned to active Rep party status. News in Brief Compiled From AP Reports PRIME MINISTER SHEDS TITLES. Britain’s prime minister, Home, shed his long string of noble titles Wednesday, renouncing 500 years of proud family history, and became a commoner in order to govern this island kingdom. The fourteenth Earl of Home, Baron Home and Lord Douglas, by a simple stroke of his pen, became Sir Alec Frederick Douglas-Home. He cleared away the biggest hurdle blocking his entry Into the House of Commons—a right previously denied him by his noble heritage. HAYATO IKEDA CALLA FOR VOTE. SmUlag and conli, deal. Prime Minister Bayete Breda e l Japan dissolved the tower house of Ile Diet aad called far a national vote of confidence en hie eeaaerrattve, pro-American policies. It mem rn political move to toernsoo his hold on the Diet at a tim e when tho government lo relatively free from serious attack by leftist opposition parttoo. GINNY GETS WEAKER. Hurricane Ginny squalled more than IOO miles off Miami most of Wednesday and then resumed a slow advance toward Florida's east coast—shorn of some of her fury. Highest winds still were estimated at 75 miles per hour. The storm will probably come to a virtual standstill 50 miles offshore early Thursday morning, the weather bureau saki. GRAND JURY STARTS ANTITRUST PROBE. A federal grand Jury Wednesday began em natl trust investigation of tho nation's steel industry with emphasis on pricing practices. The jury subpoenaed IS steel producers apparently taking Ow industry by surprise. Executives are hopeful that tho probe turns oat to bo routine aad not nae that might prove harassing to business la Bewend. CORPUS CHRISTI EXPLOSION KILLS THREE. An explosion within the grounds of the Coastal States Refinery killed three Wednesday and injured 26. The blast occurred in a group of about IOO workmen who were working on renovating the oil refinery, th e dead wars identified as Charles Stites, BIB Kick, shaw, and Bob Benches. WALTER WILLIAMS APPOINTED SPACE CHIEF. W ater a Williams, opormtisae tiftsectot tor Projsct Mercury, tots chosen Wednesday to diesel all manned spare flight asAntiins for t ie National A im nantiis aad Spics Administration, Wil­ liam s will operate under NASA Washington headquarters bet will Bv# In Houston where he baa been assigned to tbs Manned Spacecraft O ater. For B-Tax Holders More than 5,000 Blanket Tax tickets are left for the Rice game, said Al Lundstedt, assistant busi­ ness manager of athletics. Approx­ imately 250 general admission tickets for the south end-zone re­ main to be sold. He states toe general admission tickets should be sold out some­ time Thursday. But there are more than enough tickets left for Blanket Tax holders. They may be drawn until 4 pm. Friday. Nominations Open For IO Beauties Nominations tor the IO Most Beautiful Contest are being accept­ ed in Journalism Building 303 from I to 5 p.m. daily through Friday. Any female students who is not on scholastic probation may be nominated by a group or another Individual. Nomination fee is 13. No group may nominate more than four persons. Platforms, ‘M ugs’ Duo Student Assembly candidates must submit platforms end pic­ tures to The Delly Texan fay noon Saturday, Dave M cNeeiy, Texan editor, said. Platforms must not exceed 250 words, end pictures should he two by three inch mug shots. They may ba turned Ie at Journalism - ■ B H (E d ito r's note: T he fo llo w in g is th e fourth in a series o f fiv e stories on the f i l e ex-students bein g honored Friday n igh t at H om ecom ing by th e Ex-Students’ A ssociation o f the U n iie rsity .) By JANE PAGANINI Texan Feature Editor Carrying on her father’s con­ cern for Texas and its people is one of the jobs of Miss Im a Hogg, one of five ex-students being hon­ ored by toe Ex-Students’ Associa­ tion of the University F r i d a y night. She is the daughter of the late Gov. James Stephen Hogg. M iss Hogg attended the Uni­ versity from UM to IMI. While a student here, she was a mem­ ber of the Blue Bonnet Club, a social club for women on the campus at that time. HOGG FOUNDATION Mila Hogg has frequently given large sums of money and shares of stock to funds tor mental health work. Due to her efforts, part of her brother Will Hogg’s estate was donated tor the establishment of the Hogg Foundation for Mental Health, which was established in IMO. M iss Hogg serves as an ad­ viser to toe foundation. rand es Dame Hogg Active As Philanthropist, Patriot In 1956, she was awarded the ' title of Texan Woman of the Year by former Gov. Allan Shivers. The ; award was f o r outstanding pa­ triotic, philanthropic, and human­ itarian contributions to toe wel­ fare of Texas. Miss H o g g lias deeded her j Bayou Bend home In Houston to the Houston Museum of Fine Arts. It is currently being tr&ns- j Should the Board of Regents re­ fuse to change the selection pro­ cedure, states the resolution, the YR’s will appeal to the Student Assembly for removal of The Daily Texan from the Blanket Tax. Jerry' Gibson, YR president, told the Texan that the reason for the resolution is explained in a recent editorial the Young Republi­ in can Banner. formed Into a m useum of de­ corative a rts , featuring colonial furnishings and ra re Eighteenth C entury painting. to Texas as a GAVE A PARK In 1958, she gave her family’s According to the editorial, the Daily Texan is commonly consid­ ered to represent the opinion of a Varner Plantation, which is near majority of the student body; and, West Columbia, therefore, it is only fair that the park. The park has 53 acres. editor be elected by the entire student body. She is probably best known in Houston as one of the founders The University Young Democrat and long time presidents of the Club was asked to join with the Houston Symphony Society, found- YR’s and Young Americans for er of the Child Guidance Center, Freedom (who have passed a sim- ilar resolution) in supporting the and former member of the Hous- measure, but the YD’s refused. ton Board of Education. initiated During her school board term, “ We’re as much in favor of the Miss Hogg the visiting | editor being elected as anyone, bul teacher program In the elementary we feel that the YR campaign is schools. aimed at destroying the newspaper rather than altering the means of choosing said David Perry, YD president, in an Inteview with the Texan following the YR meeting. leadership," its Time magazine c a l l e d her, “One of toe g r a n d e s t of all musical ‘grande* dames’ In the US.” Miss Hogg has also been active cm toe state level. She has served on the Board of Mansion Super­ visors and was erne of the charter members of the Texas State His­ torical Survey Committee. Miss Hogg w i l l receive her aw'ard from former Gov. Shivers, who was s e l e c t e d as a distin­ guished alumnus in 1962. A resolution demanding that Gov. John Connally call a special ses­ sion for redistricting the state’s congressional districts was a l s o passed by the YR’s. Jim Dobbs, Republican candidate for Congress, visited the meeting and answered questions from the floor. —■—- —... “CORE is interested in achieving lasting goals — something that will still work in a year or two — less flamboyant perhaps (than other more militant groups working for racial equality).” University, Austin Give Cycles Space For the first time, motorcycles parked Tuesday on Twenty-fourth Street in approximately 50 new spaces designated by the Univer­ sity and City of Austin. The new area, plus approximate­ ly 25 spaces by Brackenridge Dor­ mitory', partially alleviates t h e parking problem. 'Die Motorcyc ling Interests Group will, however, con­ tinue its campaign to obtain more space on the Southside. Hunter El- linger, vice-president of the MiG’s, said they would ask clarification of city laws on motorcycle parking a t the City Council meeting Thurs­ day. D e y will also suggest that a por­ tion of one of toe islands on Uni­ versity Avenue next to Littlefield Fountain be made into a cycle parking lot. The University will have juris­ diction over the new area on Twen­ ty-fourth Street. “M” parking per­ mits for motorcycles and motor­ scooters will not be required here, but w ill be required et other eye]* parking a m a en campus. MISS IMA HOG G UN Birthday (T h e j o l t o u i n g n o s u n tte n by A l E n g lish o f th e CCJ ,\ rn recognition of the birthday a l the I fitted Cations. It is printed here because it coincides with our t.en on the hope for world peace and the part the V S can play rn achieving that g^al.) Today is United Nations Day; 18 years ago with the ratification of its Charter the United Nations came into ex­ istence. Still feeling the ramifications of a devastating world war, the organization was established as a practical means for establishing world peace and justice for mankind. The C harter states the purposes: “To maintain international peace and security . . ” “To develop friendly relations among nations . . “To achieve international cooperation in solving in­ ternational problems of an economic, social, cultural, or hum anitarian character, and in promoting and encouraging respect for human rights . , .” “To be a center for harmonizing the actions of na­ tions in the attainment of these common ends.” Over the past years, the f l e d g l i n g organization, through International cooperation, has successfully faced a number of world crises. It has halted agression, localized conflicts— these things we all are aware of. But behind the scenes, seldom mentioned, the real work of the UN is being perpefrated without fanfare. In the underdeveloped areas of the world UN pro­ grams ike UNESCO and UNICEF work d ecen tly , quietly —feeding, sheltering, curinc. teaching, informing, and sav­ ing lives of people of all races and cultures. This is the key to peace—understanding; it is in the hearts and minds of men that we will achieve a just and lasting peace. No, the UN is not perfect, but it is our one best hope. It ha* had to function in a world divided not only by the major powers, but by opposing ideologies. We are still in the first movements toward the end expressed in the Char­ ter. We must not forget that we have too much in common, too much that we might lose together, ever to weaken in our quest for human understanding and world peace. As President Kennedy said in his speech before the UN General Assembly this year: “Let us take our stand in this United Nations organ­ ization and see if we can move the world toward a just and lasting peace.” Guest Editorial The Visit of Tito Welcoming President Tito to the White House Thursday. President Kennedy stressed the need for understanding among nations of differ­ ing political philosophies It is the need which appears to ha\e escaped those who, like Senators G o ld en er and Dodd, have been denouncing the Tito visit. However, it is probably a sign of increased political m aturity in this country that news of President Kennedy's invitation to the Yugoslav leader stirred only a minor flurry of objections, in contrast to the furor that arose in 1957, when a visit by Tito was first suggested. President Tito's reception in Washington Thursday and his sched­ uled trip about the United Stages in the next few days should serve to improve United States-Yugoslav relations and to give Yugoslavia^ President a far better picture of the reality of American life than he has had in the past. President Tito is a Marxist, but his whole career as a national leader has shown that he is far from dogmatic and that he is prepared to give the hard facts precedence over the preconceived notions of the long-dead founders of modem communism. It would not be surprising if his observations here gave him new ideas for the bold experimentation which has already made Yugoslavia the most unorthodox of all Communist-ruled nations. The two Presidents must certainly have touched Thursday upon the current effort in Congress to force President Kennedy to deny Yugoslavia moet-favored-nation status in its trade with the United Sta’es. It is hard to understand why there should be such zeal for punishing the most independent of all Communist-ruled countries, and for worsen jig this nation's relations with a Yugoslavia whose coopera­ tion with us has played so vital a role in weakening Moscow's control over the Communist world. - THE NEW YORK TIMES T h e D a i l y T e x a n ‘First C o llege D aily in the S o u th ’ Opinions expressed in The Texan are those o f the Editors or o f the writer o f the article and not necessarily those o f the University administration. A A editorials are u bitten by the editor unless otherwise de signaled. The Dally Te- ar a student newspaper of The University cf Texas. Is Published riai’v except Mondav and Saturdav and holiday periods Septem­ ber throng! May and month,y ,r» August by Texas S tudent Publication*, Inc . Drawer D University Station. Austin. Texas 78712 Second-class postage paid at Austin. Texas Ma.,ed In Austin II OO month Mailed out of town ...................................... ................................ "Vc month Delivered in Austin (three months minimum > ............................. 75c month ti I BS< KI PTICX KATES ............................................. New contributions will r>e accepted by telephone (GR 1-5244* or at th* Inquiries editorial office J B I CS a r at th* news laboratory. J concerning delivery should be made in J. B 107 and advertising J B 111 (GR 1-3227) 102 B A KSOCIATKll PREUS WIKE SERVICE The Associated Presa is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of a !i news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise! credited in this newspaper and local items of spontaneous origin published herein Rights of publication of ail other matter herein a.so reserve! PE R M A N E N T ST A FF ED ITO R ................................................................................ DAVE MCNEELY M ANAGING E D ITO R .......................................................... RICHARD COLE ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITO R ................................... LAURA B IR N S CH ARM AYNE MARSH N EW S E D I T O R ............................................ A M USEM EN TS E D ITO R ...................................................... J E T F MILLAR ...................... HA Y D EN F R EE M A N C H IE F AM USEM ENTS C RITIC E D ITO R IA L PA G E E D I T O R ......................................K AYE NORTHCOTT JA N E PAGANINI F E A T U R E ED ITO R ................................................. . SPO RTS ED ITO R .............................................................. BILL L IT T L E PANORAMA E D ITO R ................................... JO Y C E JA N E W EEDMAN fimm I Visitors For someone who is not a visitor to this country on official business, Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu has created quite a stir. Whether, in telling her side to the public, she will obtain the results sh# des.res, is doubtful. in early A visit like hers is not without precedent. As th# American republic's history' as 179,7. diplomats were stumping the country like candidates be­ fore party primaries in an at­ tempt to influence foreign policy by going to the citizens before going to the leaders of their gov­ ernment. In that sear, Edmond Genet arrived in Charleston. He wa* supposed to proceed to Phila­ delphia. then the seat of the federal government, to present his credentials as the first min­ ister from the new French re­ so, be public. Before doing could not act in an official ra ­ pacity. Less firm than Madame Nhu, who has not allowed even eggs to deter her from her stated pur. pose, Genet's head was easily turned by the opposite sort of reception. He took a roundabout route to Philadelphia, and everywhere h« went vi.a? received with acclaim, until he went to present his cre- dcntia a to President George Washington. The President much received to Genet • him very coldly. chargrn, Madame Nhu's cold reception by government officials in this country. which she has com­ plained about even though sh# is not making an official visit, has been seen by rightist ele­ m ents In this country as an evidence of an Administration policy of being “ soft on com­ m unism ." That Tito w as re­ ceived at the Whit# House Is contracted with her reception. in not welcoming W ashington, Genet, was accused of seeking a crown because of his treat­ ment of an em issary of a reg­ icide government. Genet's mission accomplished so little of its purpose that h# spent the rest of his life in exile. like Count W ife who negotiated treaty pro­ visions favorable to Russia after th* Russo-Japanese War, ar# s lbtl# enough to use public o p t ­ ion to gain their ends. lack suf­ like Genet, ficient diplomacy. Madame Nhu, from reports of her United States tour so far seems to fall Into th# tactless category. Some diplomats, Others, But whether ar net this judgment is correct, sh#’# her# to be seen and beard, that all m ay judge from experience. Ail applause to the Texas Union Speakers Committee, which has not spared expense to make sot* that all students will be able to hear this timely and controvers­ ial speaker. —LAURA BURNS Job Opportunities Th a red * ). O ctober 24 R ADIO COR PORA TIO!* O F AMERICA Po*!* on* F i n a n c i a l Specialized Training Program Locations: Mtd-west or E astern US Major* Liberal Aru. w i t h course* n accounting economi'*. A finance Open Salary: F rid a y , O ctober 25 RADIO CORPORATIO N O F AMERICA San.* Informs: on as above Monday. O cto b er t i HUNKE A PILLOT < l>iw of KROGER 1 P o r tio n s. Management Trainee* Location* H ouston Are* All Majors 85 JOO m inimum Salary. Tuesday, October 2* R ETA IL C R ED IT COM PANY Position Location: Majors: Insurance Inspector Throught T exas and US L i b e r a l Arts and B u * i- n '-« Adm inistration. Eco­ Insurance nomic* Sa I ar J ; S5 JSM $5 SOQ W ednesday. October I# CALIFORNIA PACKING CORPORATION ! Del Monte) P osition . R etail Sales-Trainees Location!: Various Majors: Salary: Open L i b e r a l Arts and B u s i n e s s A d m in istratio n Thursday, October SI CONNECTICUT MUTUAL LIFE I JO* FRANCK Pos t ans: Sales A Sap-* M anagem ent or Austin Donation; San Antonio Major*: Salary Area Any $400*426 The National Security Agency has announced 'ne dates and deadlines for application to take the Profes­ sional y u a lif leat ion Test* Testing date, Oct. 26, 1963. Dec. 7. 1963 Deadline for filing application, Oct. 18. 1988; Nov. 22. M Interview date, Dec.. 12, 1963; Feb, These tests are open to senior* and graduate students of all academ ic ma­ jors and are a prerequisite to Inter­ tile N ational Security view v with Agency, ST A FF FO R THIS ISSUE N IGH T EDITO R .............................................. DAY ED ITO R ................... D ESK E D ITO R ................................................ COPY DESK C H I E F .........................................................CAROL GRAHAM N ight R e p o rte rs ................................ PAT SH A R PE I* E R IC K KANTER C A LEB PIR T L E N ight S ports E d ito r ...................................... N ight A m u sem en ts E d ito r N ight W ire E d ito r ................................................. N ight F e a tu re E d i t o r ............................................................. E d ito ria l A ssista n t .................................................................... Sharon Shelton J . D avid M oriaty, K a re n T aylor, Jo hn Bandel, Steve Is ra e l, Jo h n SeaweLi Bill Little Je ff M illar J a n e P ag an in i ........... 26. 1984. Sheila S tew art Thursday, October 24, 1963 THE DAILY TEXAN Peg* 2 little Man on the Campus By Btbler M PM C ltf TATT** P -4 _ t g t f N P ' lf. The Firing Line able that a city daily under pres­ sures of competition, circulation, advertising, etc. should be so des­ perate as to create the “big lie’’ in this fashion. Presumably, a University publication is not un­ der the same threat. Even if it is, it ought to be able to make its case without resorting to Rich distortion of the news. To have permitted this editorial to be re ­ printed, to have missed its impli­ cation. to have made no rem ark about it, seems to indicate that this student publication ii very second rate and it reflects badly upon the University. There is too much journalistic irresponsibility in America right now to allow this to pass by un­ challenged. What will the present editors of The Daily Texan per­ mit editorially IO years from now in other situations when the pressure is really on? A friend of mine and former member of your staff suggest! that the in­ clusion of this editorial is a “ tick Joke" which everyone is “ in** on. Even if this were true, I would not feel “ in" on i t It is bad judgment and rotten journalism. William M. B axter Visiting Fellow Episcopal Seminary of tho South­ west (E ditors note' This is the fifth in a series on the recent­ ly named Ashbel Smith profit- sort. Smith, first president of the University Board o f Re­ gents, laid the foundation for present research and teaching programs. Salaries of $20,000 go with tho honor.) Th* personal satisfaction in freedom to choose th* type of research to pursue as opposed to the high salaries of private industry lured Dr. Alfred Schild, into professor of mathematics, the teaching profession. Comparing teaching with op­ portunities in private industry, Dr. Schild expresses th* opinion that teaching salaries at colleges ar* catching up quickly to the salaries offered by business. Dr. Schild was one af IO out­ standing members af the Uni­ faculty named Ashbel versity Smith Professors Sept. 28. The appointments were made by the Board of Regents, on rec­ ommendation (rf Chancellor Har­ ry Ransom. Salaries for the pro­ fessors will be supplemented from the Available Fund to bring them to 130,000 a year. Dr. fcfctld was bora la fartaa- bul, Turkey, la IKL la 1944, ha received bls bachelor’s degree from tho University of Toronto and remained terne to complete Ma m aster's degree bi 1944. A ) took his doctor of pkflosophj kl theoretical physics In Itta, alae at the UM versify of Taranto. In IMO, Dr. Schild cam* to the United States for the first time and was an instructor in mathe­ matics at th* Carnegie Institute (Editor's note: Contributions to The Firing Line should be ad­ dressed To the Editor and should be kept as short as possible. The Texan risen es the right to edit fit space require­ all letters to ments or to return them for con­ densation. A maximum o f 250 u ords letter is suggested. Each should be tnple-spaced and must include the author's signature, address, and phone number. (Letters may be m a 1 1 # d tot Editor, The Daily Texan, Drawer D, University Station, Austin, NUV VISIT To tho Editor: Ai a graduate of the University and a former candidate for Pres­ ident of the Studenti' A nocia­ tion, I wish to make a few com­ ments concerning the visit of Ma­ dame Nhu. First, I would like to congratu­ late those students who arranged for the visit. Further, I wish to urge you as editor of The Daily Texan and a public representa­ tive of the entire student body to extend st least some degree of Texan hospitably to this mem­ ber of the Diem family. Apparently, as has occurred in the past, the left wing rabble at the University, known as the Stu­ dents for Direct Action, will b# permitted to dominate the spot­ light, insulting and smearing this South Vietnamese lady through picketing and other forms of agi­ tation. You as editor can see ttv t the connotations of th# w o r d “ gentlemen" will b# associated with the name of the University in the national press covering Madame Nhu’s visit in Austin. Charges of corruption have been thrown at the Diem govern­ ment just like the charges hurled st Chiang Ka] Chek 15 years ago while he fought the Communist Mao Tsung, followed by a sudden elimination of American aid and military support, and the conse­ quents! loss of China to the Com­ munists. The corruption that ex­ ists in South Viet Nam with our foreign aid money la the s o l e responsibility of United S t a t e s foreign service officials stationed there, not of Madame Nhu's. Regardless of your personal opinions in this m a tte 1, I urgent­ ly request you to treat with re ­ spect this lady who has courage to face th# poop}# of this nation despite, not only Communist in­ vasion and war at home, but be­ trayal, sellout, and double cross in the United States. Box MISS Houetoa lf , Texas it BAD ‘SICK JOKE* Th the Editor: Friday, October 18, In your Daily Texan I read a very dis­ turbing guest editorial taken from the Dallas Morning News. I was d i s t u r b e d to read r news­ paper sponsored by an important academic institution that allowed a logically fallacious editorial to be accepted and reprinted. The Dallas editor’s opening paragraph quoted President Ken- nedy as saying that Yugoslavia “is not controlled by th* Interna­ tional Communist Conspiracy ’ and President Tito as declaring that Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union both “ aspire towards the same g o a l. . , building of a new society of socialism and commu­ nism.*' From then on the editorial assumes that it is obvious that “controlled by** and “aspire to­ ward” mean the same thing. Tbs choice of this Dallas Morn­ ing New* editorial dramatizes a serious problem in our contempor­ ary situation. It kl regretable, no, deplorable, but more understand­ Modern Methods Seen For Teaching Three R’s By MAHY JANS GORHAM Editorial Aastoteat instruction Programed em­ erged as a vibrant new learning technique Tuesday to many Uni­ versity s t u d e n t s and faculty members. Teaching machines, textbooks, and recordings intro­ duced this m w educational tech­ nology In an exhibit In Texas Union 340. The demons tora tion-exhibit was prepared by the Center for Pro­ gramed Instruction, a non profit in New research organization York, and Is under the auspices of the Educational Media Branch of the US Office of Education. It is open through Thursday from • a.m . to t p.m. EXHIBIT'S FEATURES Included in th* 1,000 square feet of apace, are a walk-through demonstration on programed in­ struction, sample teaching ma­ chines, a library of academic programs available for the 1963- 04 school year, a case history of the use of programed instruction in a school system, teachers’ rec­ orded comments, and a film (rf students at work with a program of instruction. Programed is a in*true ho* ■ aw OOMInstructional tech­ nology baaed apod the learning theories of experimental p sy­ chologists. T h e essential ele­ ment of this technology la Hie “program," rn sequenced text that may, bat n e e d not be, presented through teaching ma­ chine*. “ A machine is nothing but a vehicle by which a program is presented.’* says Dr. A. Harvey Block of CPI, w ho developed the exhibit. He stressed t h a t pro­ gramed instruction may be used in textbook format as well as machine, and programs are pub­ lished for first grade how-to-read programs up to postgraduate study for physicians. Program s are developed with students in mind and are tested to prove that students can learn them before they are used, he explained. Teachers need to know like, what their students a r e their academic achievement to date, their vocabulary and arith­ m etic levels before writing the programs. Then they should de­ termine what they want to teach or communicate. MOTIVES QUESTIONABLE Persona today often write texts that try to prove how erudite they are, with the attitude “Look at me, how smart I am," rather than “TW* teaches," Dr. Block A apodal section e l the ex* b t b i t la deeded Ie teaching machine* w i t h windows, or frames, with question* aa vari­ es* sob joe ta. Aa example Is “The USI Legislature consists of tim Senate aad B o o m el Representatives. cantatas . . . (hew many?) divide**." ghr* It In tim r a a d a r aa what ha has learned. Light# flash aa when tim correct batton ta praised. “We know learning takes place when we introduce one element after another In one process," says Ernest Hematin, director (rf the University Visual-Instruc- tion Bureau. “W h e n we intro­ duce new ideas or concepts, we deal with elements or informa­ tion, thus we build blocks. “ Programed learning Is mad* up of learning blocks of informa­ tion which are additive and as rf by adding bricks, we build new understanding." he added. “ T y i n g programed learning w i t h is a teaching machines wrong idea," TV rn ann continued. “ It is not necessary to have a machine at ail. Books may also the answer found by be used. turning the p a g e , getting re ­ sponse to the question. This ii called “ Immediate feedback." IQ AM) ACHIEVEMENT for Schools employing I h e tradi­ tional curriculum schedule of ten use the technique tor homework assignments. Block s a y s . "A teacher may assign a number of frames the next day * class. The brighter students may take only an hour at home to complete the work, while a slow student may take three hours. Here the correlation between IQ and achievement falls down In­ dependent of IQ, a l l studen's achieve well, and the next day the class­ they all c o m # into room knowing the same informa­ tion.'’ Block compared the machine to a tater, not a replacement for the classroom teacher. A program, through as* af a ma­ l a r g e chine er text, asks a ■umber of carefully construct­ ed question* la aa orderly Md logical presentation, allowing students to proceed at their owa pace, he said. illustrated Use (rf programed instruction In public schools in in the exhibit by The Ulster County Story, a visualized description of a rural New York State school system’s experience* with auto- m ated learning. Teachers’ reac­ tions are played on tape with the display. “ F or the first time In their lives th* slow learners are mo­ tivated because they are able to work at their own speed and are not embarrassed when they can’t compete with others." an eighth grade teacher at Ulster said. “ They are now getting the w o r k faster, comprehending it better, and are abl* to see their own progress '* Any skill that can be clearly specified can be programed. Program s available for schools today include mathematics, sci­ ence, English language • k 111 a, and social studies. UNIVERSITY USE Dr. Mary Alderson, assistant professor of physical and health education, w a s among faculty members who viewed the exhibit and m w opportunities for Univer­ sity use *T think there ar* passim - tiles far problem situations to guinea. For example la saft- bsfl, we coaid describe a piny or a sportsmanship situation, and glen several response#, tis* said. “Tide woald give ex­ perience la problem oetvtag by i»vtag student# mere time to think than they w a s l d ta a gam# where decisions would lu n e to be made quickly." Viewing programed learning only as a supplementary method, Dr. Alderson believes machine* could be used rules, and could benefit students who are sometimes unable to perth cipate in a class. teach to In 1958. Dr. Schild was consul­ tant for the physics laboratory of Hughe* Aircraft Company. He served as consultant for Gonvair of Fort Worth in 1960. During 1960-61, he was a visiting profes­ sor at the University of London, King's College, England; Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, Ireland; International School of Physics; and “ Enrico Ferm i," Italy. During 1962-63 Dr, Schild was consultant for General Atomic of San Diego. In 1962, he eras sci­ entific secretary of til* Confer­ ence on Relativistic Theories (rf Gravitation in Warsaw. Dr. Schild is an American Physical Society Fellow and a member of the American Mathematical Society and rf the Canadian Congress Mathematics. PUBLICATIONS In addition to a book, "Tensor Calculus," which he coauthored with J . L. Synge In 1949, Dr. Schild hM written more than 30 scientific papers which h a v e appeared bt publications such as “ Physics Review," “ American M athematic! Monthly," “ Ameri­ can Journal (rf Physics," and “ Journal of Mathematics Analy­ sis and Applications.'’ Include Other achievements of Dr. Schtid two patented combustion processes for the production of oil; a translation from German af a play, “The Mission af tee Veg*;" more than 99 lectures delivered at ■■ wWH IMHtitimtimlSNmPSS f Ktemi dh^MMF flAaman lets ffiflflrss I rn w i lPoiPiston * tetekaA mteVdkMhl Koivir oawlwma Aaa I VVMPVVv na “Mathematical R e v i e w s." “Quarterly r Robert E. Summers, profes­ sor of speech, said, "I am in favor of it. I don t see Dead Week as necessary' I won t say I like the other. I d like to see a shorter ex­ am w eek.” ROTC . . . (Continued from Page I) in a fair fire regular soldiers the confidence, fight They lack training, and discipline that are instilled in the reg u lar soldier. It would be absured for the guerrilla to try to heat the regular at his own gam e The guerrilla plays by his own rules, M acauley said. representatives Macaulay went to Cuba in Aug­ ust, 1958, after making contact with Castro's in New York City. After the revolu­ tion, he was given land by Castro and became an exporter. He left the island in July, 1960, because the government took over s p o r t­ ing and he could no longer make a living. He carries a picture taken with Castro during the days of I U . o - ' norma* hair with sta ff O p e n 8 a.m. — 6 Days a W e e k w , 4 . I I I 104 fat* A»a. GR 7-7023 OPEN EVERY DAY C A L C A S I E U MAIN STORE • 2nd .t LAVACA 2530 G U A D A L U P E G S 5-22’4 lesso r’s request But if a student refuses to heed a summons to this office another rule will be violat­ ed and the student can be dropped from the U niversity." K ennam er said that his office has had neither official nor unoffi­ cial notification of the degree of absenteeism , except in those de­ p artm ents which aie keeping r e c - ; ords on beginning courses. "There is no way of telling whe’her it has increased or decreased, and we m ay never have the information. it depends on the policies adopt­ ed by different departm ents.” The rule*, governing cia*,* at­ tendance have been In effect at the U niversity for som e tim e; when and how required attend anre cam e Into being is not def­ inite. “ Those requirements were set up under different condi­ tion s,” Kennamer said. “ They went back to earlier \e a r s when the U niversity took a more pa­ ternal attitude toward the stu­ dents." Dr. M. G Hall, assistant profes­ sor of history, said in his opinion the new ruling is excellent. He feels that a student is wasting his if he doe sn f corn* to class, but that if a student can do the work without coming to class it’s okay with hun. He said th at he Is happy with the rule and in­ tends to im press the importance of class attendance upon h;> stu­ dents Rnd then leave the rest up to them. tim e thai Dr. Leonardt F Kreisle, the 1962-63 chairm an of the Faculty- Student Cabinet, praised the chang­ es in regulations. He told The Sum­ m er Texan that the old rules' were "entirely outmoded. ’ Kreisle said that “ students can’t be whipped into class. If you w ant to have m a­ tu re students you h a \e treat them that w ay.” to CHANGE NOT EXPECTED Dr. Glenn E. Barnett, form er dean of students, said during the sum m er th at he did not think the new rule was any groat change the old. but it was merely from a m a tte r of clarification. Tine new rule "shouldn’t make much differ­ ence’’ because professors have been doing what they think appro­ priate all along. Dr. William Arnold, visiting as­ sistant professor of sociology, said, "I think ii s better, first because it is a m ore flexible way of doing things. It takes into account the different kinds of courses And sec­ ondly because the procedure of the instructor s w arning the student for excessive absence is more like­ ly to happen than warning him v ia the college ‘cham of com m and.’ this method because you don’t have to t«k*> roll rail every d a y ,” he added, “ This is especially difficult large cla ss w here roll count consum es cla ss tim e. Also because It is a m ore com fortable and Informal method. It g h e e me a chance to get to know people and their personal problem s.” "I Uke in a The absence question cam e into prominence as early as 1945 when it w'as recom m ended to the Gen­ eral F aculty ( to t after five cuts a student be dropped with an F. with absences before and after holiday* counting as double ruts. After a storm of student protests rained on the adm inistration, a new com m ittee of five students and five faculty recom m ended in 1946 that nine cuts, with no drop F ’s and no double cuts, be allowed. This w as to five cuts, but the G eneral Faculty still w asn't satisfied and appointed a new com m ittee to m ake a fresh study in 1947. later am ended OLD DAYS TOUGH This Special Com m ittee on Ab­ recommended sence Regulations regular attendance at all that classes and labs be required. The instructors w ere to keep records of all absences, record these on grade sheets and file them with the R eg istrar a t the end of the se­ m ester. Absences in all freshm an and «ophomoie classes w ere to be reported weekly to the student’s dean In all junior or above class­ es. absences were reported to the student's dean after throe in suc­ cession or after an accum ulation of five Thoro reports w ere made im m ediately, on Absence Report Cards, for each student. requiring ail In 1918 the departm ents wee# their given authority to m ake own rules in accord with the 1947 resolution. Also passed was a rul­ student* on ing scholastic probation to a t t e n d cla sses “ consistently." Any ab­ sence of a student on w ho pro was to be reported by the in­ structor. U nless the student pre­ s e n t e d an acceptable excuse for the absence to his dean within two weeks, he was to be dropped from the course with an F. In 1949 a change wa* approved to accept excuses for absences re­ sulting from attendance at Univer­ sity-sponsored functions. There arose a conflict on rule* concerning absences in 1953. Some departm ents hod set up their own rules, some operated under the G eneral Absence Rules and some left the decisions up to individual instructors. But the rules w ere still more strict on the freshmen and sophomores. If they w ere carrying 12 or fewer hours and missed three classes in a row they were dropped from the University. It was a l o decided to give in­ dividual instructors the responsibil­ ity of judging the .^stability of any Instructors reason w ere told to accept all *‘legitim ate" to co­ reasons for absences and operate with in re­ the students spect to make-up w ork for absence The other requirem ents w ere to keep absence records, that a stu­ dent may be dropped for extensive une.\> used absences, and in­ structor was still required to report these successive absences. These nile* were retained un’ii the pres­ ent ruling. th# ■nit A truly versatile wardrobe maker . . . . imagine s SHIRT e a sily accessorized with a jumper . . . . wrap sk irt. . . fashion’s new est craze . . . double yoked pleated action back . . . spiced with locker loop, 5 .9 8 t fyjuft ,4th AT GUADALUPE Thursday, October 24, 1963 THS D A ILY TEXAN Pogo 7 • 2118 9U«d«kip« on tilt dreg • aiUndtlo vilUgt ta!!, ta!! C apel’© toot rn Wack on!y, 19.95. Shallow boot in suede and trimmed in kid, black or tan, 13.95. Gamin cossack boot, in black only, 24.95. Ankle deep boot in black, red, or natural, 11.95, Sahara boot in silky tan suede with cobra insets, 14.95. KLRN Will Carry On-the-Spot Nhu's Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu's visit to the University will he carried live by KLRN-TV, Channel 9, the educational station for the Austin-San Antonio area. Madame Nhu will speak to a jammed Gregory Gym­ nasium audience at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, to be followed by a question and answer period. The entire proceedings will be televised on Channel 9 with on-the-spot camera c o u r ­ age. The program from Gregory Gym will be followed by an analysis bv local experts headed by Dr. Ben Higgins, an authority on Southeast Asia. After the local analysis, the NET tape production, "At Issue: The Press and Mrs. Nhu” will be seen. Channel 9 will rearrange it’s regularly scheduled pro­ gram at approximately 9 p.m. Singers to Hoot In Hopes of Loot A Hootenanny will be held Wed­ nesday, Oct. 30, at 7:30 p.m . in the Union Auditorium, sponsored by the T exas Union Music C om m ittee. T h e p e rfo rm a n c e * w ill h a v e l l a c t s by lo c a l p ro fe s s io n a ls . T h e p u rp o s e o f th e H o o te n a n y I* to to p -n a m * r a is e m o n e y to brinie e n te r ta i n e r s to th e U n iv e r s ity . T ickets will be 50 cents for stu­ dents and St for non-students. They m ay be purchased at the Union Program Office, at the booth out­ side the south entrance of the Un­ ion, or from any m em ber of the Union Folksinging Group. is T hin th e f ir s t In a s e r ie s of folk m u sic sh o w s to b e p u t on by th e M u sic C o m m itte e , a c ­ c o rd in g to B ill C h e n a u lt, c h a i r ­ m a n . WXS? A Good Night at the Ballet ’M S a y s M r Freeman Stage Whispers J By H A Y D E N F R E E M A N j Every reviewer eventually meets the nemesis of his ob­ jectivity, and the Ballet Folkloric© de Mexico is mine. So, with the hands still smarting from one of the longest and most enthusiastic standing ovations I have ever participated in, I take typewriter in hand to write a love letter to this brilliant group. From first native dance to final harabe, the Folkloric© program was a pinata of pore pleasure. It Is impossible to begin to enumerate the goodies. Undoubtedly the high point of the evening was Jorge Tiller’s striking, startling, shattering evocation of the hunted and dying beast in the "Deer Dance of the Yaquis Indians.** Exhibiting perfect control of a magnificent body, Tiller gave something which can only be compared with the fables of N ijinsky creation of faun in "An Afternoon of a Faun." The ebb and flow of kinetic force was delineated with every muscle. Facial expression, even the tiniest cast of the eye, was calculated to contribute to the characterization of that transcendent fear native to the innocent being caught in a fate beyond its understanding. Tiller received an ovation all his own, and seldom has there been one more richly de­ served. Picking personal or crowd favorites after Tiller would be impossible. Certainly everyone loved "The Quetzal Birds of Puebla,” which opened the show’, w ith the huge feathered hats, but the next delight wmild pale that and then the next, and the next in seemingly unending array of colors, sounds, sensations to blot sensations, thrills to replace thrills. la aggregate, the company boasts the most beautiful women, the handsomest men, the cleanest costumes, and the highest spirits of any group of entertainers I*ve ever had the unmitigated joy of seeing. One of the main beauties of the group Is that there are no shoddy performers whatsoever. All 75 dancers and musl- | clans are really stars contributing to an ineffable galaxy. But some are featured, and certainly, for this reason, a few seem to shine brighter. The breathtakingly beautiful Pilar Sanchez and Martha 'Garcia and the fresh and engaging Carlos Navarrete and Gabriel Loyo come at once to mind as standouts—but then there’s Maria Luisa Gonzalez, and Rene Rivera, and Bemar- ' do Diaz and on and on until the entire setenta y Cinco are j named. It is difficult to account for the absolute perfection of the Ballet Folkloric© de Mexico. The performers obviously I love their work. None of them looked tired, or bon'd, or like they would rather be doing anything on earth than j dancing in Austin, Texas. If there is a heaven, and I go there, I’ll be entertained nightly by The Ballet Folkloric© de Mexico, with matinees on Wednesdays and Saturdays. NOW SHOWING! F E A T ! K H : l l IS . I to s t* e st f m t t t v ! m "B eat f i n e t toe Peer. * B u r t X m a n c m s t a r in “ T h e L o o p r d ” i m t t v r m § A l a i n D o la n . ted r d ix ia lo Ik.M IU S MDC .to ADULTS K A T . .YA C l a u d i a I a v a ck kid ta to CARLOS N A V A R R E T ! , left, and Jorge Tiller warm up before performance. - ■ Texan P h o to —D ra d d y T FA A Fall Exhibition Displays Texans' Art The second annual T exas F ine Arts A ssociation’s Fall Invitational Exhibition began Sunday with a tea st the E lisabet N ey Museum, 304 East Forty-fourth Street. M rs. C. B u rg o rd W eller, T F A A c irc u it d ir e c to r , I* r h a ir m a n e l th is e x h ib itio n . M rs. J . W . R u t­ la n d , c u r a t o r of tile m u s e u m , w hich is o p e r a te d u n d e r th e a a - HELD OVER 2nd WEEK! I.A8 T SIX DATS! ! ' s p ic e s of T F A A , a n n o u n c e d t h a t f r e e p u b lic e v e n t w ill b e th e op en th ro u g h O c t. 28. Joseph A. Cain of Corpus Q u i* ti ; and William Lester of Austin com- the jury. The two artists i prised for circuit selected 61 paintings merit, nam ing "Th* P rophet,” an I oil painting by Don Frizzell of Dal- ; las, as first choice and “ Rugged Coast,” an oil by Jerry Seagle of Corpus Christi as second choice. the is president of Mr. Cain I South T exas Art League, a chapter at TFAA. A mem ber o f the TFAA board, he serves as Region l l di­ rector, is also on the Corpus Chris­ ti Fine Arts Colony board, and serves a* art critic for the Corpus Christi Cailer-Times. He received h it bachelor of arts, and m aster of arts degrees from in the U niversity of California the Berkley and has served on j faculty of D ei Mar C ollege since 1948. V LESHE CHII ' S e x i s n o l a f o r b i d d e n w o r d I 0 SMP •m -JuzG xm UNIFORM CENTER Professional W ear Fo r Mon sod W o w os D O C T O R S R E C E P T IO N IS T S D E N T IS T S B E A U T I C I A N S N U R S E S R E S T A U R A N T S H O S P IT A L S IN S T IT U T IO N S M I W . 5th St. G R 2-6891 Defused ORIVE-IN THEATRE IM In t fen. BOX o m e n OPKNS * to ADMISSION 7#c ■ ID S E N D ER Vt FR KR “ T o y * In th# A ttic ” D. M artin A Y v rtt* M im ics* , 7 :to — P is s — “ S E R G E A N T S T H R E E ” F ra a k Si a n tr a A D ean M a rtin . 8:48 BOX OFFICE OPENA «:M ADMISSION 7*e ■ID S IN D E B IS F B E I “ Com# B lo w Y o u r H o rn ” P. Sinatra A B arbara Bnafc, L M PIM -------- “ T H E T IN S T A R ” I . F o n d a A A n th o n y P ark in * . f : M In r e p re s e n te d M r. L e s te r b a s b e e* * m e m b e r of th e U n iv e rs ity o f T e x a s a r t fa c u lty s in c e 1842. H is p a in tin g s to p -ra n k in g a r e a r t m u s e u m s th e U n ite d S ta te s . E lisabet N ey Museum Is open to the public Monday through Fri­ day from IO a m. to noon and 3 to 5 p m and Saturday and Sun­ day from 3 to 5 p m. th ro u g h o u t I C h in Shi Huang TI, who wan re­ sponsible for the building of the main part of the Great W’all of Chi­ na, is rem em bered in hi* epitaph for the book burning and burial of scholars and not for the Great Wail, whit h, in any event, did not work. Barbarians from the north pierced it at will. Clo s FAST FOODS 407 W**t 24th l/l Block W*st of Dr*g P izza — Spaghetti M exican Food Sandwiches For Fast University Area Delivery CaI GR 2-0049 1 1 -GOlilIEL.J ROBER! ISE .A T HILL H O U S E ...T H E D E A D D o n 't s t a y q u i e t ! W ho d o th e y w an t? who w ill satisfy them ?w ho c a n soothe the half mad sob, the eerie giggle, the s o u n d le s s s c r e a m s ? U D iH E C tE O a v Im S C R E E N RUAV BV Ow Actor of “afoot atm I STARTS T O D A Y ! B A S C O O N Th e NOVE I. I * Haunting of Hill House b y S H I R L E Y J A C K S O N J J V / l l u t LZ Lr 11 I U AIM A A N A R G Y L E E N T E R P R I S E S P I C T U R E PANAVISION* F E A T U R E S : 11:50— 1:52— 3:54— 5:56— 7:58— 10:00 .25 M D C A D U L T S 1.00 C H IL D .50 STATE Thursday, O ctober 24, 1963 THE D A ILY T EX A N Pogo S C a Ba RPt B i i M Q ©Smack* 4 Centaur O SO MAKI RESERVATIONS NOW! j A A A V Z m I W B OPEN v / r c l ^ 1 1 :4 5 »•* Al STH* SHOW ING Only A d u lt Ticket* Sold ( n**r le a r * Admitted ° * * l l P A S 5ID N H O L I D A Y low kto*sitosd beauti** • T I :• C H I E F * .'S .^ .K w .v : ^ B O X o f f i c e o p e n s « p . m . S H O W T IM E 6:52 ' Lu • op, showing of *«ch film. * nor run chi* fo Rd fur* of film. On* complot* .- 7 '.,t J ’ 5.- „ • _ M IKS C H COM PANY m o C O M M O L ALPCRSONom otn* [ c a s e h i s t o r y # t a t t y & ' ugli ' ' Claims she is stripteaser Young intelligent beautiful. only because of higher monetary I returns than other professions. I Her torchy performances however, reveal her avid reaction to the — excitement of male audiences. S l a ^ 1 ' Diagnosis: Manic sensualist H O n * o f t h . S h o c k i n g P o o p U y o u 'll m o o t j * J "SHOCK CORRIDOR" I •fCMMMXO rot AWIUS PKW, J SEime BUY w id er* i m m r D O U O C M R ^ I^ g in c H M C O tJ o r panavwon* m s ■ ■ p l u s . 2nd F E A T U R E A T 9:30 O N L Y ! ! H o ? 7 A R A S B U L B A " «rYNuU H U S T A U S T I N S H O W I N G ! METRO MAVER PRESENTS A KING BROTHERS PRODUCTION P U I "SEVEN SCAS IO C A L A *" Rod Taybr C l tro t/* t>: u . “CALAIS” 1:4* MOWI B U R N E T © M M « ; l f Sa* f t o t w * C:M Almost as Good So Mr. Hickey Tells U s . . . If you Ilk* Tennessee Williams and more particularly if you like Tennessee Williams' women you should by all means see the De­ partment of Drama production of "Summer and Smoke.” The ladles, particularly Nina McGuffin and Bobbie Kerns, bring the show off, but not without a fight. The play Ie a two-acter about a spiritual spinster and a senses! doctor who change {daces to he* come at toe play's climax, a spiritual doctor and you guessed It. Unfortunately, toe play baa a broken back. It reaches lie clim atic action toe ninth In scenes and a lot of shoring ap to got everyone Into their proper In the end it la the ladies and Tennessee Williams the veteran play-patcher Vernia Tennessee Wil­ liam s the philosopher, Hogg Aud­ itorium, and a clumsy s e t B u t there Is no doubt that the girls did win and that the play is worth seeing. The credit goes first to Miss Mc­ Guffin, who portrays the spinster, Alma. She carries the play as many other Williams’ heroines have had to do before her. She moves beautifully on the stage, | I \ [ | d e p a r t m e n t o f 2 )i V a r n a PRESENTS Tonnott— Williams9 J I Slum m er a n d No Dram# Season Tickats wilt ba told attar th# final performance of "Summtr end Smoke." I B u y flo w a n d S a v e ! Hogg Auditorium GR 1-1444 FINI ARTS BOX OFFICi Pit A A A A A A A A A A A A A , a a A a a a AA a a a .AAA.a a AA.a a a a a clipt off her lines quickly wi*h excellent diction, and hat that rare ability to alt with her hands In her lap and mouth one of Williams' long confessional passages, ami really make you care. Miss Kerns, who plays Nellie Ewell, the spinster’s feminine com­ plement, also carried her part with a great deal of vivacity and fi­ nesse. She {days to Miss McGuffin with a tact tost shows a real re­ spect for toe play. Both of these young women also deserve credit for refusing to overplay these over- playable roles even when they be­ gan to feel the {day buckling, which it occasionally did. And toe play nearly does buck­ le for a number et reasons, two of which may be attributed to the barbaric conditions In H o n Audi­ torium. Williams’ script calls for a delicate, suggestive setting; the one an the Hogg stage la anything but that. It is m assive, cluttered, and replete with a large stone angel which moves back and forth like a Wagnerian swan. Setae ehaages which need to ha Instantaneous are agoalslBg- All Xskss TYPEWRITERS A in u ■seats** genfcioM - JSCUPE rara* Frees LEMOS PIZZA CORNER Doss* A asses Msis Dilly WW r A N I S OF OKE KIND AKO GET OHS'r i S l I Call to N ek s e —OL I4 IJ 1 ~ O sss^ D sll^ ll p.si. F r l-S e t U s s r A CatSi* at. till i^MtoMMtototoMtoMtrararararararararararararararararararararara* TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE Spec! el Rates to Student* Monthly . . . $6— Semester . . . $20 a Typewriter • Adding Machines GR 2-3233 GR M IU 1701 San Jacinto Tonight, Friday, Saturday SERVICE— RENT Hogg Auditorium S p.m. MAKE A NOTE! freshmen! Wednesday, October 30 is the DEADLINE for Making Your Class Picture Appointment for the CACTUS Fee 1.00 ly long, and even after toe seen# has changed you are never quite sure which playing aren Ie In use because toe primitive lighting ta Hogg spills nil aver the stage. Another problem Miss McGuffin faces in carrying this play is play­ ing to Pat Rucker, the sensual doctor. This is not say that Ruck­ er’s performance is not compe­ tent; it certainly is, but he has an infuriating mannerism of ending every speech, declarative or inter­ rogative, tm the up-beat, which leaves a small ques- ! inevitably 1 tioning silence in the air no matter how quickly the cue is picked up. If this seem s to be damning with faint praise, I would like to add that Tennessee Williams Is probably an acquired, lf not an exotic taste. There Is drama and ; good drama In Williams’ plays but ti Is created In a bucare I manner. J In m ost dram a the ch aracters placed on the stage a re draw n toward each other. They come is into conflict and the resolved. In W illiams’ plays ch aracters tend away from each other and the d ram atic tension Is caused by their flailing about for com munication. the conflict in But "S um m er the ch aracters -Alma and the doctor and Smoke” are good exam ples - a r e so isolated and self-centered that the conversations become a queer com bination of confessional and Weltering. These Isolated characters make tremendous acting parts but sel­ dom do they attain any stature. They have to be bolstered up by onstage symbols and can only communicate rather In heavy-handed language of visual symbolism. The spinster cannot express herself but she can point to to* stone angel: The doctor cannot communicate so ho uses this In t< is ti h o o k I l ol l is l( a( ' Ii i t i (j tis h o n I < I r < (K Ii o n I / oi I u h lli'ji ti I ideas Like moat of ae, you probably fed pressured at times with the demands made on you for original thinking, — for fresh ideas that will lift your work above the commonplace. Through the study of this book, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy, we are learn­ ing how to turn to God for the intelligent ideas ws need. You oui do this, too. Wo Sarita you to come to our Biestings and to hsar how wa ara working out our problems through applying the truths of Chrirtiaa Science. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS Mediae MKSI T p m . Ttasdeys m fiafs^s and «fc—Ak A- OW .W ||j eta OSO |||f§lf Burke Will Visit Campus Next Week Kenneth Burke, author and critic, will visit the University Monday and Tuesday for a lecture and conferences. Author of nearly a dozen books on semantics and philosophy, Burke also writes stories, trans­ lations, critical articles, book re­ views, and magazine article*. Bark to a former visiting pro* lessor of English at the Univer­ sity of Chicago. He will speak at 4 p.m. Tuesday 1 in the Academic Center Auditor­ ium on "Definition of Man.” Mon­ day, he will m eet with toe Junior Fellows, and an informal confer­ ence with other students may be scheduled, Dr. Robert L. Mont- | gomery, associate professor of English, said. books, One of B urke’s "A Grammar of M otives,” deals w ith the paradoxes of substance and considers resources of placem ent all I and definition thought. common to i deal with unique isolation, In "Studies of Symbolic Ac­ tion,” he says, "Symbolic should individuals, each its own personal construc­ ted act or form. These unique capable ’constructions,’ being of the treatment In Symbolic should consider them principally In their capacity as singulars.” Another book, "T he Rhetoric of Motives,” deals w ith the possibili­ ties of classification in its p artisan aspect, considering the w ays indi­ viduals a re a t odds w ith one an ­ other, or become identified with groups m ore or less a t odds with "Identification Is affirm ed with earnestness precisely b e c a u s e there is division,” he says. "Iden­ tification to di­ vision. If men w ere not ap art from one another, there would be no need for the rhetorician to pro­ claim their unity." is com pensatory Priztwinning Photog On Display in Union Silhouetted against a night sky', two headlights appear as m otor­ cycles cross a bridge. is in This the scene depicted in the first-place print the Fif­ teenth annual $25,000 International Picture Contest on display in the Art G allery, Texas Union IO2. subjects from people to landscapes, and prints are m ade from all kinds of film and exposures. P icture range The A rt G allery is open from 8 a m. to 5 p.m ., with the exhibit on display until Saturday. A L M A ’S AN G EL wait* until tomorrow. Diantha Davis sweep* up. aa anatomy chart. th a t It seem s the characters should be the symbols toe play­ to express himself, w right uses and that perhaps his ch aracters shouldn’t have to resort to play­ w right’s methods. T h e y should talk, or better they should say something. As it turns one another, out the Stone Angel and the An­ atomy C hart steal the show, and the actors m erely move about and com m ent upon them . than that This again is not to say that Williams is no dram atist, th at he is. When all is in order and the scenes are changing and focused, everything clips along at a m erry pace. The m inor ch aracters are created with a flair that Ian Flem ­ ing would envy. In "S um m er and Smoke,” we have a lustful S en o r­ ita and her pistol-toting father; a spinster nutty m other for A lm a; an effete young poet with a verse play; and a mom-pecked French horn player. All by I he way, portrayed with great spirit. So if you like good theater, surprisingly competent acting, with a little parlor metaphysics thrown In, see "Summer and Smoke.” It is an enjoyable ride on a squeeky streetcar, which m irac­ ulously never breaks down. the —Dave H ic k e y P H Y L L IS Y O U N G , ce Ho, a n d Verne H ard e r, piano, will a p p e a r in a d u o recital Su nd ay in Recital H a il es one of the Fa culty A rtist Recital Series. J C E I E By JEFF M IL L A R tha* he interm inable More on “The Leopard” from Dave Hickey. Rummage around and find a Wednesday’s Texan to pick up his train of thought. They a re only if Once you allow L ancaster to con- you have been so conditioned by Dwight Macdonald and the "N ew ^ince you is a Sicilian W ave” that you think all a rt exists Prince and not the Crimson P irate. in black and white, and that any his perform ance is quite a^cept- conversation in a technicolor film „b!e. Your objection th at Lan<-am Building 301, 4 4 :8 0 —UN P av program and tea. In­ ternationa! Center. IOO West Tw ee- ty-*!xth St 5:30— P ress Conference for M adam s Nhu. accond floor o f Texaa Union Training ('b rist tan Faith and Life Com munity. sees I on 7 30—M en's Glee Club. T e x a s Union tot 7—Slide rule connie, experim en tal Science Building .133 and 115. I * 7—Dr. W illiam H andy to conduct fir st 945- P opular P hotograph y, T e xas Un­ Faculty F ireside ‘ Y .“ ion 102. 9 4 —Tickets N go Dinh Nhu. T e x a s Union. 9 5 —Coffee, “ V,” 1 9 9 p.m. —A rts for a d d r *** by M adame floor of second and C rafts C enter open. T e x a s Union 333 10-12 and 3-5 -T exas F in e A rts As­ sociation exhibit Ney Nuseurn. 304 E ast F orty-fourth St. IO—L u t h cr H odges, of com mence, l e x a * P er­ to ad d ress sonnel and M anagem ent Association on "T h e B u sin e ** C h allen ge," T e x­ as Union Auditorium secretary 10—Speclal coffee for International stu ­ dent*. " Y .” 1 0 9 —Show ing o f pictures by contem p­ orary Dutch pain ter* paintin g* by B .J.O . N ordfeldt, Art Museum 1-4—N om ination* fo r Ten Mo»t Beau­ tiful. Jo u rn alism Building 303. I —Orville L Bandy to vpeak on "P ale- a eoenvironm ental M ean* o f D efining Oil-producing T re n d s," Geology Building A n a h sl* a* i i i 7 - Sculpture class. T e x as Union 333. 7-10—Study room * open on first floor : of B u tin e**-Econom ic* Building j 7—D uplicate B ridge. T exaa Union JN S- ’ : 7—C hristian Science O rganisation. S ta t tor Ballroom . Guadalupe 7.15 Lecture Series- “ M aker* o f Mod­ ern Mind * N ew m an Classroom s 7.15 Pre C a n a Conference, St. AUS- ! tin « Chapel 7 :80 Practice for studen ts who wish to Join St Austin s Choir, St. Aus­ tin a Auditorium 7 30— y olk .Sing Group, T e x a s Unlou j 7 .3o - M adam # N go Dinh Nhu to speak. televised on K IA N - Gregory <;yrn T V : and closed in B att*, M ere* and Benedict H all*, and Experim ental Science. Chemia­ try. and Business-E conom ic* Build­ ing* K offre-K latch. B a p tist Student Cen* tf*r. Student A ssem bly, T e x a s Union SXL W. Page K e e t o n , dean of the School of Law, a n d Walter P. Brenan of San Antonio, member of the Board of Regents. Young has been a partner in the firm of Stradley, Ranon, Stevens, and Young since 1935 and is an officer or director of 15 companies or funds. He holds a law degree from Harvard. MORE SPEA K ER S Other conference speakers will include attorneys Frank B. Apple- man of Fort Worth, Robert W. Murphy of Nacogdoches, William P. Fernville and Joe C. Stephens Jr. of Dallas, and Rupert P. Gres­ ham of San Antonio. Fund to Begin Center A 5226,000 grant from the Nation­ al Institute of Mental Health will be used to establish a Personnel Services Research Center in the Department of Educational Psy­ chology. Charles O. Galvin, law profes­ sor at Southern Methodist Univer­ sity; William H. Hoffman Jr., ac­ counting associate professor at Louisiana State University; a n d and Profs. Parker C. Fielder and The center, directed by Dr. John Joseph H. Wilkinson of the Uni- j Pierc e-Jon es, educational phychol- ogy professor, is initiating a five- versity law faculty. The final session, beginning Sat- year study of the constructive ef- urday at 9 a.m., will include a feet* which a team of psycholo­ talk on “ Fraud—Or How to Keep gists, social workers, sociologists, Your Client Out of Jail” by Wil­ and psychiatric nurses can exert liam P. Fonville and a panel on on the scholarship, achievement, tax ideas moderated by Appleman. I and behavior of school children. They helped make a major advance in medical technology .. .yet there's not an "M. D." in the house These six men were members of a team that developed an x-ray system so advanced that, even with exposure to x-radiation reduced by 80%, Images come out much sharper on the diagnostician's viewing screen. By bring­ ing to the task the unique talents, experience, and educational background of each member, this team of experts has made it possible for radiologists and phy­ sicians to do a better job of medical diagnosis. Of these six men from General Electric's X-Ray Department, Milwaukee, four have degrees in engi­ neering, one majored in physics and math, and the sixth in economics. Not one was. trained primarily in medical science-although, of course, their Depart­ ment works closely with the medical profession. Nor did any of them anticipate^ when in college, that their major subjects would be put to use in providing improved tools for diagnostic medicine. But they did recognize-as their record shows~that better-than- average performance could qualify them for challeng­ ing jobs with a forward-looking company tike General Electric There are hundreds of such teams at General Elec­ tric today. Theirmake-up varies, and almost every field o f specialization/ technical and non-technical, is rep­ resented somewhere in the Company. The projects Sire ju st a s s a ile d : n ose cones forjn issiles, desaliniza­ tion of sea water, computerspr power plants to squeeze more electricity from a pound of coal or a gram of atomic fuel. The more than 36,000 college graduates at General Electric comprise one of the largest and most varied pools of talent in the nation. But the Company's future is, in many ways, wrapped up in people still in school and college. As projects increase in size and com­ plexity, so will the need for able young people. People who demonstrate, through their college record, the best use of their educational opportunities, who know the meaning of excellence, who understand the dif­ ferences between specialization and narrowness* breadth and shallowness. Such people, working to® gether, will make up the teams of the future, and be the architects of what we call progress. The team (left to right): ferry f. Rich, Georgetown Col­ lege, Ky.,'53; Robert I. Mueller, Marquette/44; William A. Mayer, Univ. of Calif.,'47; John F. Kelley, R P J.,'47/ William C. Waggoner, West Va. Univ., '33, Pratt Inst, '37; Arthur Pruneau, Univ. of Vermont '52. SEN ER At A Elf Cf RI C