Editorial Reading: Election Re-Hash See Page 2 THE T exan W eather: Fair, M ild High 78, Low 43 41First College D aily In the South” Vol. 60 Price Five C ents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY^NOVEMBER I. I960 Six Pages T o day N o . 57 Students Buy C a n d l e s ^ ^ T e x a s Union Repairs To Hex Baylor Bears On Congo Crisis Will Cost $1000-$1500 R ed c a n d le s by th e s c o r e b e g a n j b u rn in g d oom for B a y lo r M on d ay I n igh t. E stim ates of the repair co sts for th e d am age done to the and eaved them in. Minister Charges UN With Secrecy About Belgian Acts B y M IL T O N B E S S E R U N IT E D N A T IO N S , N .Y . tm T exas Union by tho rains F rid ay n igh t ranged from less B oth M cGieger and N olen expressed appreciation o f th e than $1,000 to about $1,500, not including labor. work done by 50-100 student betw een 12 F riday n igh t and 6 T he m ost dam age w as done to th e bow ling lanes. E ight Satu rd ay m orning. Including APO ’s and tw o SMU students, cannot be used now, and the oth er eigh t “are not in top th is group used mops, squeegee buckets, and to w els to condition,” said John M cGieger, m an ager of the gam es area, rem ove w ater from the lanes. T h e S o v ie t U n io n d e m a n d e d Mon d a y an im m e d ia te rep ort from UN S e c r e ta r y - G en er a l D a g H a m m a r-1 T h fl carpet in the Union A uditorium w as w et about six “ I'm an ex -A g g ie,” com m ented M cGeiger, th e U N c o m m a n d fe et up the aisle, but the w ater w as out by 5:30 S atu rd ay A ggies could work, hut I had no idea th at U n iversity of sk jo ld on how is c o p in g w ith a lle g e d e ffo r ts of m orning and there is no evidence of th e tile buckling yet, T exas stu d en ts would com e to som eon e’s rescue like this. B e lg iu m a r m y o ffic e r * ab ou t e c o n o m ic and p o litic a l ch a o s to b rin g said Jitter Nolen, director of th e T ex a s U nion. W ater collected inside the w alls of th e h at-check room It w as m arvelous.” “and I knew A bout 2:30 a.m . som e students w ere g ettin g tired. An A P O put in so m e p h on e c a lls , sa id S tu d en ts p u rc h a sed an untold n u m b er M o n d a y at the tw o book­ sto r e s on th e D r a g . C h e a p sk a te s u n rolled th e ir C h r istm a s sto c k in g s for m a n y m o r e nu bs. T h e c o m p le te sto c k o f six dozen c a n d le s at T he U n iv e r s ity Co-Op w a s e x h a u s te d by m id -a ftern o o n . “ W e’ll h a v e m o r e e s soon as p o s s ib le .’’ C. W. S w en so n . Co-Op m a n a g e r , sa id , a s h e h u r r ie d ly put In an o r d e r for 12 d ozen m o re. An e n th u s ia s tic T e x a s b o o ster w a s tu r n e d d ow n w h en h e a sk ed for IOO c a n d le s. At H e m p h ill's, c a n d le s w e r e g o ­ ing a t th e ra te o f on e e v e r y se v e n m in u te s A ru sh to w a r d the end is a n tic ip a te d . T u n of th e w e e k d ifferen t ty p e c a n d ie s t h r e e in d iffe re n t s iz e s h a v e b een sto c k e d . a fo rtu n e Tn 1041 th e red c a n d le s te lle r p r e ­ to cu re sc r ib ed str ea k an 1 8 -y ea r A g g ie v ic to r y o v e r in K y l e lo n g h o r n s F ie ld . U p lig h ted the c a n d le s and dow n m e lte d th e A g g ie s , 23-0. the SM U te ste d th e m a g ic sp ell In 1050 and w a s su b d u ed 23-20. (T he M u sta n g s w e r e r a ted N o. IC B a y ­ lor found the p otion too p ow erfu l to co n q u er in 195.3 and fe ll, 21-20, (T ile R e a rs w e r e r a n k ed N o 3>. And. g u e ss w h a t, it s th e w e e k of H a llo w e e n ! Call Issued to U g ly M en To M eet in APO Office All p o te n tia l U g lie s t M en on c a m p u s w ill m e e t at 5 p m T u e s­ for U T s d ay c r o o k ed est e le c tio n and to d ra w for p la c e s on the b allot. to go o v e r r u les T o h a v e h is n a m e p la c ed on the b a llo t, a c a n d id a te m u st etv ter b efo re T u e s d a y ’* m e e tin g at th? Alpha P hi O m eg a o ffic e in T e x a s U n io n 207. W rite-in c a n d i­ d a te s m a y he e n te re d la te r . in th e C on go. V a le r ia n A. Z orin , S o v ie t d ep u ty fo r eig n m in is te r , a c c u s e d th e U N s e c r e ta r y - g e n e r a l o f im p o sin g a c u r ta in o f s e c r e c y on " s u b v e r s iv e a c t iv itie s o f B e lg ia n a g e n t s ’’ in th e A fr ica n r ep u b lic . Z orin s u b m itte d th e r eq u e st for a H a m m a r s k jo ld rep ort to A m b a s­ sa d o r F r e d e r ic k K. B o la n d o f Ir e ­ lan d , p r e sid e n t o f th e G e n e r a l A s­ se m b ly . T h e r e w a s no d ir e c t r e p ly from H a m m a rsk .io ld to Z orin B ut the in a n s w e r j sa id s im ila r s e c r e ta r y -g e n e r a l to a req u est s o m e w h a t from P o lish A m b a ssa d o r R ohdan L e w a n d o w sk i, p r e sid e n t of the S e c u r ity C o u n c il, that a n e w rep ort w ou ld h e a v a ila b le abou t th e m id d le o f th e w e e k . c u r r e n t ‘ Y ou r in q u iry c o r r o b o r a te s m y j ow n fe e lin g th a t tim e is r ip e for s u b m iss io n to th e S e c u r ity C ou n cil of a n e w rep o rt, n o w th a t a sta g e h a s b e e n r e a c h e d w h en tion c a n he m a d e a v a i la b le ,’’ H am - m a r sk jo ld sa id . s o m e m e a n in g fu l th e C on go j in fo r m a ; in from H is c o m m e n t c o in c id e d w ith r e ­ th e C on go th at th ree ports B e lg ia n s Rnd a w h ite R h o d esia n had b een a r r e ste d on c h a r g e s of m a ste r m in d in g a plot to p lu n ge K a sa i P r o v in c e into c iv il w a r. Photo by Collum W e're A-Coming, Waco Red candles, spelling out the doom that lies in W a c o Saturday f or th e Baylor Bears, light l o *’”* w "dews of campus re- dences M o n ­ d a y a fte r a day c f besieging Drao merchants. D e '’ a Un- Fra­ ight in every tern ity was the first campus e rg *- zot-on to ha.® a w in d o w ," a s the Longhorns put the he* en the Bapt sts. Robbery A ttem pt Reported by Coed c e n t s A U n iv e r s ity c o e d got rid o f a 8 .4 0 p m w h en a y o u n g ma n w ou ld -be r o b b er M o n d a y n i g h t rapped on th e window ’ and a sk ed w h e n sh e s h o w e d him sh e h a d o n ly for d ir e c tio n s. She r o lle d the w in- s i x in h o r p u r s e . A. R. dow p a r t-w a y dow n s o he could H am ilton , c h ie f U n i v e r s i t y tr a ffic h e a r . W hile sh e looked on a m a p for in and s e c u r i t y o ff i c e r , s a i d , th rou gh th e w in d o w and u n lock ed the door. A fter T he girl w a s s i t t i n g a lo n e In h e r lock ed park ed c a r at T w e n ty * * a v - a n d U n i v e r s i t y A v e n u e at en th d ir e c tio n s, r e a c h e d he to Explore Texan SA Committees t h e A< levitie s of s t u d e n t g o v ­ e r n m e n t c o m m i t t e e s will he e x ­ p l a i n e d e a c h w e e k on t h e e d i t o r i a l in a p a g e of T h e D a i l v T e x a n , n e w c o l u m n th e G a v e l , ” s t a r t i n g ' R o u n d c d i e d t o d a y . An i n s i g h t in to s t u d e n t gov r r n - m c n t a f f a i r s a n d a p r o g r e s s r e p o r t on a c t i v i t i e s will he p r o v i d e d by’ t h e S t u d e n t s ’ A s s o c i a t i o n P u b l i c R e l a t i o n s C o m m i t t e e . T o d a y , on P a g e 2, r e a d about th e g e n e r a l f u n c ti o n s of e a c h c o m m i t t e e a n d th e r o l e e a c h p la y s in t h e s t u d e n t s . liv e s of th e fo r cin g hts w a y Into the c a r, he p u lled a kn ife on the girl and a sk ed her for m o n e y . W h e n sh e had sh e non e, he le ft. sh o w e d h im th a t T he a tte m p te d r o b b ery w a s the third in a s e r ie s w h ich U n iv e r sity p o llee b e lie v e h a v e hcen c o m ­ m itted b y the sa m e p erson . Theft of 3 Billfolds Reported at DZ House T h ree b illfo ld s, w ith a to ta l of abou t $30. w e r e tak en M on d ay b e ­ tw e en 5:45 and 6:15 p m from the se c o n d sto r y of th e D e lta Z eta h o u se at 2315 N u e c e s . in R e sid e n ts w e r e th e din in g room w h en the b u r g la r y o c cu rr ed . D i e ro o m s w h ic h w e r e robbed w e r e w id e ly se p a r a te d . th r e e Ticket Deadline Set Wednesday T he d e a d lin e I* W e d n e sd a y for m a il a p p lic a tio n * to o b ta in tic k e t' th rou gh the C otton B ow l A s so c ie - tion for the 1961 C otton B ow l g a m e A p p lica tio n s for th e g e n e r a l pub­ lic m u st he p o stm a r k e d by m id ­ nigh t W ed n esd a y . U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s stu d e n ts w ill he c o n sid e r e d g e n e r a l p u b lic, a c ­ tick et co rd in g s a le s m a n a g e r , u n le ss I/ong- h o m s d e fy p r e se n t od d s and slip into th e h ost te a m p o sitio n . to Al L u n d sted t, th e A p p lica tio n s for tic k e ts sh ould he m a ile d to the C otton B ow l A th letic A sso c ia tio n , P O B ox 7185, In ­ w ood S ta ’ion D a lla s 0. T he p rice o f tick ers is $5 30 each and a 25-cent m a ilin g fe e should he add ed tick et ord er. C heck* or m o n e y o r d e r s m u st ac- r e m p a n y a ll a p p lic a tio n '. to e a c h No tic k e ts set on lim it h a s b e e n the n u m b er o f that m ay he ord ered A d r a w in g vvill he held to d e te r m in e th e a llo c a tio n o f the 25 000 a v a ila b le tic k e ts . T ic k e ts wi l l he m a ile d out and c h e ck s se n d er s u n filled a p p lic a tio n s and w ill he retu rn ed the sh o rtly a fte r D e c e m b e r I, to Campus Chest Setting Sail Briefs. . . From the Wire By th e A s s o c ia t e d Press Castro Limits Refugees By Extending Blacklist tig h te n e d H A V A N A - F id e l C a str o ’s g o v e r n ­ m e n t M on d ay its m n - tim! o v e r C u b a n s se e k in g to flee th is trou b led is l a n d b v e x t e n d i n g Its b la c k list of th o se b an n ed from s e e k in g r e fu g e a h road . the said s o u r c e s In form ed list in clu d es m a n y ty p e s of p ro­ now in C a s t r o ’s f e s s i o n a l m e n n e e d e d e n g i n e e r s , p e ­ p l a n n e d g o v e r n ­ t r o l e u m s p e c i a l i s t s , m e n t e m p l o y e s and C u b a n e x e c u ­ t i v e s of the m a n y n e w l y n a t i o n a l ­ ize d US a n d C u b a n b u s i n e s s e s . e r e n o rn \ a 11 I r o n C h e e r s N e w H e i r T E H R A N , I r a n —Q u e e n F a r a b P . ba .M o n d a y p r e s e n t e d '•'hah Mn h a m m e d R e / a P a h l e v l h i s first ann a n d t h e r e w a s w i l d r e j o icd u g s t r e e t t h r o u g h o u t c r o w d * c h e e r e d s h o u t e d : “ It s a b oy I f i n d is g r e a t . ’’ P o l i c e b a d f ire h o s e s to c o n t r o l t h e m . I r a n . M o s l e m to u s e a n d N ixon Berates Kennedy N E W A R K . N . J V i c e - P r e s i ­ d e n t R i c h a r d M. N ix o n s a i d M o n ­ d a y n i g h t S e n a t o r J o h n F . K e n - j n e d v h a d s h o w n “ s u c h i g n o r a n c e of s i m p l e e c o n o m i c s a s to d i s q u a l ify h i m to b e p r e s i d e n t . ’ Archbishop to See Pope I/ ) N P O N — T h e A r c h b i s h o p of C a n t e r b u r y w i l l v i s i t P o p e J o h n W i l l at t h e V a t i c a n n e v i m o n t h . It w i l l b e t h e first s u c h m e e t i n g s i n c e t h e C h u r c h of b o g l a n d s p l i t f r o m R o m e fo u r c e n t u r i e s a g o . LBJ Raps ‘C a tty ’ N ixon S P R I N G F I E L D , M o . - S e n a t o r L y n d o n B J o h n s o n S t r u c k h a r d af V i c e - P r e s i d e n t R i c h a r d M. N ix o n in t w o w e s t e r n M i s s o u r i a p p e a r ­ er,' e s M o n d a y , c a l l i n g h i m a ‘' d a n g e r o u s m a n ” a n d d e s c r i b i n g h i m a s “ j u m p i n g a r o u n d lik e a cat o n a hoi t in roof Ru s s i a O p p o s e s G r o w t h it w i l l I M T E P N A T I O N S , N . V . — A d r i v e to e x p a n d t h e I N S e c u r i t y C o u n c i l a n d t h e E c o n o m i c , an d S o c i a l C o u n c i l w a s l a u n c h e d ' I o n I n ion q u i c k l y d a y , T h e S o v i e t the f i g h t s e r v e d n o t i c e m o v e u n l e s s R e d C h i n a I* » e a t e d . it Medical School Needed? T h e e x e c u t o r t h e T e x a s M e d i c a l r o t a r y of sr A i d h o n s a i d M o n d a y a T M A c o m m i t t e t is s t u d y i n g tile n e r d for a filth m e d ic a l sc h o o l in T e x a s. SAN A N T O N I O I ★ ★ A ★ ★ N o le n , and 20 m in u te s la te r 20 o r 30 m ore A P O * c a m e to h e lp , “ If th e w a te r had. b e e n a llo w e d to s t a n d e v e n tw o o r th r e e h o u r s, the d a m a g e w o u l d l ik e l y h a v e b e e n p e r m a n e n t. M ost o f it is te m p o r a r y n o w ,” h e a d d e d . B e c a u s e o f th e w ork d o n e, the p its w e r e s a v e d .” T h e fin ish on th e a p p r o a c h e s to e ig h t l a n e s w a s ru in e d b y th e w a te r and th e m o p s M a n y o f th e b o a r d s w e r e w a r p e d . F a n s h a v e b een p la c e d on la n e s th e l l , 12, 14, an d 15 to s p e e d d r y in g p r o c e s s . T e m p o r a r y r e ­ p a ir s w ill ru n a rou n d $200, M c G e ig ­ e r e s tim a te d . T w o c o a ts o f fin ish w ill be pu t on th e a p p r o a c h e s an d th r e e on th e e n tir e la n e s. A fter c lo s in g h o u rs th is w e e k , th ? te m p e r a tu r e in th e b a s e m e n t w ill he s e t fr o m 50 to 75 d e g r e e s . A ll 16 la n e s m a y b e c lo s e d F r id a y an d S a tu r d a y . T e m p o r a r y r ep a ir * w i l l s u ffic e u n til T h a n k s g iv in g , w h e n th e e ig h t la n e s p r o b a b ly w ill be r e s u r fa c e d . th e w a te r fr o m T h e d a m a g e w a s c a u s e d w h en s t o r m d ra in * ! b a c k e d up to th e n o r th e a st te r r a c e and w e n t tn th e fron t d oor. T h e tw o p u m p s w e r e not a b le to ta k e c a r e o f th e w a te r and it ran a c r o s s a b e a m a b o v e th e la n e s an d se e p e d in th rou gh th e c e ilin g . In tr a m u r a ls and p h y sic a l e d u c a ­ tion c la s s e s w ill c o n tin u e a* usuaL M r. M cG eig e r a s k s th a t r e p r e ­ s e n ta tiv e s c o n ta c t h im ab ou t r e s c h e d u lin g g a m e * fo r thi* w e e k . le a g u e * t r im Checking Check Room Damage H e r e is ©ne result of the Texas Union s b a p ­ tismal of rain c n the night of its formal c p e r mg. T he h o e in the checkroom, is p art of the d a m ­ ages which ma. run to $1,500. Two S M U stu­ dents in A u F T for the g ame w e-e nmonq r r r y from 12 ro 6 a m . UT student* who wor ko d S a * u rd ay, h e lp in g *■© s o p o u t th ? b o w lin g a lley* a n d o th e r low er p a r ts o f th e $2.1 m illion U n io n . J it t e r N c 'e n , U n ion d ir e c to r , sa id m uch p e -m a n - e n t d a m a a * w a s e im in ab ed b y th e late-w ork'm g stu d e n ts . (The bottle p ctured is king size.) —Photo by Collum Art, Fashion, Movies Head Union Schedule A rt, fa sh io n , m o v ie s , and a le e - on s a le for $7 50; th e c o m p le te set ture b y a n oted s c ie n tis t hold the of fr a m e d p rin ts is $40. sp o tlig h t in a c t iv itie s sc h e d u le d for th e T e x a s U n ion th is w e e k . O rig in a l p a in tin g s b y U n iv e r s ity fa c u lty m e m b e r s wall be on art d is p la y from 2 p m . to 5 p rn. in th e U n i o n Art G a lle r y through W e d n e sd a y . T he p a in tin g s, v a lu e d at $2,150, w e r e c o m m is s io n e d for the 75th O b se r v a n c e o f U n iv e r s ity in 1058. C C N o l e n , o p e r a tio n the U n ion d ir ec to r, h as bou gh t th e y wall o r ig in a l w o r k s so that r e m a in in o n e g rou p , h e r e at the U n iv e r sity ’. P r in ts o f “ T he C a m p u s in Art. IO A c re s F o lio ” a r e b e in g sold in tile Art G a lle r y . S in g le u n fra m e d p rin ts m a y he b ou ght for 75 c e n ts or $1.25, T h e S t u d e n t E d ition P o rtfo lio c o s ts $4; th e d e lu x e E d i­ tion. $10. S in g le fr a m e d p r in ts a r e S h i v e r s Bl ast s P l a t f o r m O K L A H O M A < I T V and < p .m . T u e sd a y and Th irsd a y , Tim w e ek en d m o v ie w ill run at r e g u la r tim e . the Oil p a in tin g s b y m e m b e r s o f the Stu dent Art d u b w ill h e on d is ­ p la y in th e lo g g ia o f th e third floor U nion un til N o v e m b e r l l , in th e 0 f Bow ling Show Cancelled Because Alleys D am aged the D ick W eber, m e m b e r o f T h e stu d en t p a in tin g * in c lu d in g B o w lin g P r o m o tio n S ta ff of A m e n “ M o rn in g .” by R o d B u c k n a ll; “ Z a c ,” bv W allp C o n o ly ; “ L an d ­ s c a p e ,” b y T e rr y M o rro w ; "A b­ str a ctio n ” by J a m e s O lso n : " B o t­ tle. T a b !e, C h a irs, and F r u it.” by B ill S te w a r t; " F ie ld ” and ’’N igh t l-a n d s r a p e ,” bv C arl U m la u t; and " A b str a c tio n .” bv F re d W h iteh ead can M a ch in e A F ound ry C om p an y, w h o w a s sc h e d u le d to a p p ea r at the I ’nio n W e d n e s d a y a n d T h u r s ­ d a y f o r a de rr.o n stra * si, h a s c a n ­ c e l l e d t h e a p p e a r a n c e . . T h is w a s d o n e a f t e r W e b e r w a s a d v i s e d cf the r e n d tio n o f the ’ane* b y J i t ­ t e r N o 1 e n . Election Results Receive Approval T h e E l e c t i o n C o m m i s s i o n c o m ­ p o s e d of D a v i d C o u c h , J a n e t im ! leerier, a n d E d C o w a n , c e r t i f i e d t h e c a n d i d a t e s e l e c ’e d in the F a ll G e n e r a l E l e c t i o n h e ld W e d n e s d a y a n I s ib m a t e d the t h e S t u d e n t C o u r t . r e s u l t s to r e p o r t e d T h e c o m m i t t e e t h * t t h e r e w e r e 3.218 v o t e s c a s h T he r e s u l t * w e r e as fo llo w : G r a d u a t e Sc h o o l i i s e a t ) • K eith C 'X Colle-gp of E d u c a t i o n • Y v o n n e P f ce E ne A r t ' • I se a t» • ’ \m c- M a e se r • M a r t ! i I issell • Fit I P ut • 11 n iel H ub ilk E n g in e e r in g (2 s e a t s ! • C a r l A N m two r h e • R g e r I .. P c • X an B S ch m itt L a w <1 s c a t > • S tc v e O r’- s • J J H J • Bill S u n s h ne P h a r m a c y l l seat* • G r a m s o z • M - k l • M KC Nu - c r b t I *’•’ A rts & S c ie n c e s • Be tty ° S ' • [ tm' Crowe • \t I * ' m n • B tnt e Bey ' ie, T pow . • I .c u r u I ’ if • A m e n d m e n t One F o r A g a in st B a llo o n s < a r n m g p o ster * de p u ttin g C a m p u s C h est a c t iv it ie s w ill he la u n ch ed F r id a y at noon to se n d fu n d -r a isin g d r iv e high into th e air. the B eth B la /e k and B u tc h S c h e c te r . c o -c h a .r m e n of th e * C a m p u s C h est c o m m itte e , w ill cut th e s tr in g s s e ­ c u r in g th e b a llo o n s on th e W e s t M *11 to T i c k e t s ‘M i d n i g h t L a c e ,” s t a r r i n g R e x H or: iso n, D o r is D a y , a n d J o h n ( l a s in, a r e a lr e a d y on in d o r m s , c o -o p s, and fr a tr r - s a le m ’ v Rnd T h e s h o w n N o v e m b e r m o v ie xvi I: he 3-1u a? tho P a r a m o u n t T h e a te r . T i c k e t s w ill he sold on c a m p u s T h u r s d a y the S p o o k s s o r o r i t y F r id a y h o u s e s and by ta len t C h e s tc a p a d e s, a s h o w o f nin e a et* 'e le c t io n s from " S outh P a c i f i c ,” w ill tm h eld a fte r the p ep r a lly F r id a y e v e ­ ning in clu d in g O ther fu n d -r a isin g a c t iv itie s w ill in; Iud* D im e s Day and an au ctio n M o n d o v and the U g h M an C on­ te st N o v e m b e r 8-10 M u m s w e re o r] O st w eek for D ad s P a y a s part of the dr vc C a m p u s C h est tin s s e a r w ill f e a ­ tu r e "M r. C h e s t y .” a la r g e fig u r e , ten feet ta ll, " p u sh in g a ch e st up th e M all w h ic h w ill b# m a r k e d s h o w lik e a the \ s p >grcss of am oun t c o lle c te d in c r e a s e s "M r. Chesty** w ill he m o v e d c lo s e d to th e T o w e r , th* $10,000 m a r k . field tho d r iv e fo o tb a ll to Young Democrats Give $ 2 0 0 to Austin Group • G e o r g e R a m s e y B u s in e s s A d m in istra tio n (2 " ■ a t ? 1 ted Mon- A $200 i h e i « -v.is pie? d a y a fter n o o n by th e o f T e x a s Y ou ng D c m ix T r a v is C ounts Pc q u a r t e r s b y M a r t i n Ga d e n t o f the U n iv e r sity >< M i k e L ev i, c h: m a n o ' t h ' T r a v is C ou nty D em oc: h ic H ead ­ q u a r t e r ' w a s r e c i p i e n t of the d o ­ n a t i o n . T h e p r e s e n t a t i o n w a s a u a* a m e e t i n g of t h o r i z e d F r i d a y t h e t h e E x e c u tiv e C o m m i t t e e o f Y o u n g D em oc’rats D r . J oh n Si I b e r . a s s o c i a t e p r o ­ n e w a t f e s s o r o f p h i l o s o p h y . s p o n s o r f o r t h e m e e t i n g . t h e o r g a n i z a t i o n vvas A ir Force to In terview For O fficer Training A t e a m o f A ir F o r c e o ffic e r s f r o m S a n A n tonio and A u stin w; h e in th e T e x a s U nion W ed n esd ay i n t e r v i e w m en t o t h r o u g h F rid ay a n d vv« m e n t h e A ir l n t e r c ' t e d F o r c e O f f i c e r T r a i n i n g P r o g r a m rn S t u d e n t s i n t e r e s t e d m u st h a v e a t l e a s t a b a c h e l o r s d e g r e e T hey m a y a p p ly 135 d a y s p r i o r to g r a d ­ u a t i o n . i n f o r m a t i o n m a y h e A d d i t i o n a l o b t a i n e d f r o m t h e A r F o r e R e ­ c r u i t i n g Office at 124 W e s t S ix th I S tr e e t. Ten Most Deadline Set at Noon Today , a lm o s t h e r e for h b e a u ty , b r a in s. se . and th r e e d o l­ or for th e T en M ost B e a u tifu l c o n te st. is the N ion to d a y final hour. I h e r e w ill hp a m e e tin g o f c o n ­ te sta n ts in J o u r n a lism B u ild in g 307 a t I p rn. to e n te r versity w h o or d isc ip lin a r y p rob ation ■ h ie • Any w o m a n e m 'o iled rn the U n i­ is not on sc h o la stic is e lig - s a y s B e tty L ta th e r w o o d , w h o handle,* i p u b ’w h y for the e v e r t sp o n so red by T heta S ig m a P hi. w o m a n ’s Ktur- n a lism fraternity the c o n t e s t .” F tty se m i-fin H ists w ill I t c h o se n i from all e n tr ie s D i e n a m e s vs ill in D ie he an n ou n ced W ed n esd a y D a ily T exan, A gro u p of 25 fin a l­ from th e se . ists w ill be s e le c te d F in a l s e le c tio n s w ill he m a d e bv a w ell-k n o w n H o lly w o o d sta r. the T he n a m e* and p ic tu r e s o f T en M ost B e a u tifu l w ill he an- noun red in a sp e c ia l e d itio n of the 1 , lexan th* week belar* Christmas I Erstwhile Spooks M e e t G u m d r o p s C o m i n g and G o i n g B ill M r R eynold*, jo u r n a lism la b su p e r v iso r , and lbs m o th er w e r e glad to s e e th e s ie g e o f h o b g o b lin s M onday you th fu l night b e c a u se they could g e t rid of so m e old h om e m a d * g u m d ro p cook ie* that no on* s e e m e d to w an t. T hin king the th e y ’d to g e t lik e in on fun, BUI and his m o th er d r e sse d up in s p o o k outfit* and w ent trick or tr e a t­ ing n ext door. Not r ec o g n iz in g t h e i r d is­ g u ise d n eig h b o rs, M rs. M i l l ♦ • h e n s r e c e iv e d them w ith a g e n e ro u s help in g o f g u m d ro p c o o k ie s . itfj-rftfl ii - ' - * Mk-t&Saei f Chest Boosters Busy Campus Chest boosters H a r v e y ICein, Bart M e r he- a - J Marie Pa., i finish the ground wo-k for • e * . d r e Y - q drive by d is t r ib u t e e info- ; eerier o p e ’ . Fr ne t o w a r d ’ n* q-^el of $ 10 OOO s e t p y th e C a m p u s C h e s t C om m * ir a * . T icket* j S tam pp. Toe drive off t a re Pe n o o n L * a r* already on sa'* fo r " M id n ic h * Lace ’ shown Thursday through Sunday a t tee P a 'a - am - m o u n t I h e a ‘ e r. P r o c e e d s o f tic k e ts sold c a pu s w ; o n t o the dr . e . A ta le n t s 1 ow c u e .b e d C h e s t e r p a o e s w c e h eld F rid ay n gh*. _ . —Photo tar Couum t h a t ’s what the political polls have been saying. Our side’s winning, and the race is m ighty close-— Just One More Poll ’Round the Gavel T h a t ’s about all th e y ’ve been saying. So far nothing very s i g n i f i c a n t has come out of th e plethora of polls taken since the sum m er con­ ventions. J u s t as one candidate is soothed by the pub­ lication of his p a r ty ’s poll reassuring percentages in his favor, he is jolted back to the jitters by the figures which the opposition releases. to keep 'And here he is, the candidate headed for the big-tim e . . *.-*• 2, e a i ■ i t #*.*,• - s Gi - A IM ftp v I yr \ I 1 •% %, K f \ 'N « Student government ii making a student new effort body of the University Informed S', to im goings, comings and h ap ­ penings. the The P C c Relations Com m ittee of the Students' Association is pre­ senting to the students a weekly column n T V Daily Texan on the s e th ties of the various student grnernmen* com mittees. * fatcat Explanation* of and “ insight" into student affairs will he the pri­ m ary role of the column. A The ( a m p in romrr ftr* spor sor s the ma jority cha rity drive on cam pus. The goal to be raised this y e a r is $10,000. The C am pus Chest, Drive eon- sists of C h e ste rp a des, f u m e s Day, Ugh Man and Miss C am pus Chest contests and m a n y oth er activi­ ties. it tr Tile Cam pus Survey Council polls student opinion on a variety of sub­ jects to aid the work of other com­ mittees and to aid the ad m in .s t a ­ tion. to which T he G r ie v a n c e C o m m ittee In a the student can group bring his problem s to get the most direct action from student govern­ ment. ♦ T h e ★ In te r n a tio n a l C o m m issio n coordinates the activities of foreign students on cam pus The com mis­ sion finds housing for newly a r­ rived students frr rn other coun­ tries, a rra n g e d for American stu­ dents to take them home for the holidays and plans a conference of foreign students from colleges all over the state. ★ ★ The National Student \ssoclatJon Com mittee and the Texas In ter­ c o lle g ia t e S t u d e n t Association the University com m ittee keep in contact with others campus the state and nation. throughout Although TISA m em bership holds little value for the University be­ cause other m e m b er schools are and have very different small to problems, NS A the University. This com mittee co­ ordinates KSA projects and serv­ ices with the needs of other Stu­ dent Government committees. D ie com mittee doe* not come directly under student government but is very closely connected with it. im portant Is * * Tile Educational Climate Com­ mittee is a new group designed to tile academic opportunities study at the University Its ma jor project Is the various study places for students on cam pus. The results of the study will he pub­ lished la ter to help students m ake better use of their study time, review to T h e G reat I s s u e s C o m m itte e brings speakers of im portance to the cam pus to discuss curren t topics and subjects of general in­ terest. Official Notices T h * qualifying: e x a m i n a t i o n for th* d o c t o r of p h i lo so p h y d e g r e e In E n glis h will b*> given in tw o p a r t s I A l l fi 2 p rn A large blue needed Before t w o - h o u r w r i t te n ex a m in a tio n In E n glis h will be offered bv t h e Com ­ m i tte e on G r a d u a t e S tud ies In E nglish F r i d a y N o vett- B u ild ing bock and pen b*r 18 the e x a m i n a ­ will be t i o n s t u d e n t s m u st t r a n s c r i p t Of Course* and g rades an d an Austin a d d r e s s In E nglish Bu id lng 106 S a m ­ ple copies c f the questio n * and a n s w e rs the g r a d u a t e m a v be o b ta in e d a d v is e r D r M M C ro w English B u i ld in g J30 E n glis h office t h e D e p a r t m e n t of leave a from c r and the d a te of th e S a t u r d a y . November fees m u st II T e e g r a d u a t e record exam inatio n t r * will he given at 8 45 a p t i t u d e IU Ail at* a rn the reach plications E d u c a t i o n a l T e s t i n g Service office In not. inter t h a n P ri n c e t o n New Jerse> 15 dav s b efore tex' App lication b l a n k s a r * available In English B u ildin g 106 a n d In th e T e s t ­ in g and C o u nseling C e nte r V Hall IQI No st u d e n t will be a d m i t t e d to ran- the docto- of philosoph y didacv d eg ree in English until a cops' of his scores in flip g r a d u a t e record e x a m i n ­ atio n a p t i t u d e test has h»en received bv t h e chn r r m n of th* C o m m i t t e e on G r a d u a t e Studi es Dr E. C. Mossner, E n glis h B uilding 216. for Somehow most of the Democratic polls seem to Show Kennedy on top. Likewise, the Republican sam ­ plings give Nixon the larger half. As accurate as any election forecasting we’ve seen has been the A P jest of the weekend which showed “ Kenedy” way ahead of N ixon — if rainfall totals a f f e c t th e political b a ro m eter, th a t is. Last week, the news service reported, the South Texas town of Kenedy received IS inches of rain to only 14 inches for the nea rb y com m unity of Nixon. Bnf though the AP pun amuses us, lf doesn t satisfy our desire to get a preview of the presidential outcome. N either do the polls. F o r we’re especially interested in the campus angle of the campaign. In the last poll taken in a cross-sec­ tion of students, Mr. Nixon showed great popularity. H as the campaign changed an y of that feeling0 We think it’s about time for another student poll. Besides having students mark their preferences for the ticket of their choice, the study might also ask for the “voter’s” age and major. It would be interest­ ing to know with what groups the candidates have their major support. Campus Survey Committee of student governm ent would be just the group to conduct such a poll. S tu ­ dents from the political factions here on campus could beat their fellow teasips out of the bushes and the coffee houses and to the polling places. A peek at the p r o b a b l e campus re tu rn s before the votes have even b e e n east could b e interesting. How about it—anybody curious enough to find out? Tutoring Team Play W h a t Texas needs right now is to get its first and fo u rth team s together for some plain old skull practice. And we’re not talking about football. On the scholastic gridiron all signs point to the possibility t h a t such a combination m ight produce a reg u la r w inner in the w'av of academic excellence. We’d say that there needs to bf* a meeting of minds between the two Dean’s teams— the honor roll and the marginal list. The ideal medium for intellectual exchange and aid to pass from one to the other, it seems to us, is a University tutoring service. Such a service, to provide scholastic aid free of charge to students who w ant and need it, would fill a definite need on the F o rty Acres. Last y e a r 1,391 students sought help from the Stu d en t Em ploym ent B u re a u ’s tu to rin g service. The potential for beginning such an organization Is enormous. We have almost innumerable organiza­ tions In which membership Is b a s e d on scholastic achievement. Several of these honoraries, particularly those in special fields of study, already offer tutoring services. F u r th e r m o r e , th e learning helps m ight be offered to a w ider cross-section of the stu d en t body. W e’re pleased th e fre sh m a n m en ’s h o n o ra ry f ra te r n ity , P h i E ta Sigma, h a s tak e n the ball on the esta b lish m e n t of such a stu d en t tu to rin g agency. to see th a t If there were more study time communication be­ tween the Phi Beta Kappas and the Sco Beta Pros, there might be more borderline students on the sunny side of “C” level. And th a t, in o u r book, rac k s up a winning score any day. There Is So . . . On this d ay a fte r Halloween, we have but one thing to say to doubters, skeptics, and bewildered little girls: Yes, Virginia . . . th ere IS a Great Pumpkin. T he Da® T exan T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r I , I 9 6 0 P a g e 2 O p in io n s expressed in I he I e \ a n are those o f the Editors e t o f the u rifer o f the article an d not necessarily those o f the V n ite r s ity ad m in i strati - n. T h e Daliv T e x r n . a «tudent n e w s p a p e r cf T h e U n iv ersity cf T exas and S a t u r d s v in August Inc. Secon d clas s postage paid a t ta published an n holiday period* S e p t e m b e r t m ich M.c and m o n th !' bv T ex as S t u d e n t P ub licatio n s, Aus tin. T e x a s in Austin Te-.as ex ept M< nd.-r da Deliver ed In Austin ii*'j !n A u s ti n Malle d o u t of to w n .......... Mt'KSCRIPTION HATES ( t h r e e m o n th s r .................................................................... inlm um ) . 7.V m o n th $1 fni month 75c m on th N ew c o n t r i b u ti o n s will be acce pted bv teleph on e P a g , ■ nj. T o m m y S t u c k e y , B o b L a c y , . . . J C p y r e > ‘ r - N ■’ ♦ N ight S p o r t s E d i t o r A • u r t r o t N tht A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r A N l r t e n t 'n v ; ; r e E d A>r . . I Kid F r a n k ! rt. J o a n J a m e s , K e n E d m i s t o n C h a r l i e S m i t h ...................... J e r r y S c a r b r o u g h ......................................................... S u e B i r k e l ....................................................................... K a r e n L e w i s ....................................................................... Bill H a m i l t o n c L i U j i tSU ........................................ D o r o t h y ’ . a v e s B e t t y e S w a l e * Well, ol’ Hairy has really stirred up a hornet’s nest xx ith his last H T . on sororities. And although he has received everything from orchids to ticking packager, he has po desire to take part in a run­ ning gun battle with Panhellenic. If an y group of stu d e n ts w ish to band th e U n iv e r ­ s ity , g iv e th e m s e lv e s a n a m e lik e S ig m a O m e g a S ig m a , and d e c id e all th eir fr ie n d s sh ould w ear the s a m e kind o f Jew elry, that s th eir If th e y w ish to k e e p b u sin e ss . ou t all r e d h e a d s. C a th o d e s, R e ­ p u b lica n s, F ilip in o s, S e m in o le s, tu b a p la y e r s , or sta m p c o lle c to r s, th a t, too, is th e ir b u sin e ss. to g e th e r a t What they do, drink, sing, say. or think does not fall under the jurisdiction of the AFDCIO, Tower, Ku Klux Klan. o r Speech Build- ing The G re ek s’ business is the G re e k s’ business, and no one else s. If to keep Olympus pure, then okay. I f s just too had the G reeks without a paddle. it takes honey walks they c a n ’t keep up On th e o th e r to he th e h e a t, g e t out o f sid e . h o w e v e r , H a ir y m u st sa y th a t th e se banda o f b ro th ers (or s is te r s ) m u st r e a l­ iz e that th e y a r e not a b o v e c r it i­ th a t a pin Is not a s ti I t c is m , lf th e y c a n ’t of a r m o r , and th at sta n d th e k itc h e n , to q u ote a M issou ri h a ­ b e r d a sh e r . the G reeks have always Now the power behind claim ed Round-Up This can be shown by the fact that the next R-U p ara d e promises to he the biggest, bestest, grea test ever; with 715 f l o a t s , thou­ 212 hands, and a cast of sands, I f s only fair that t h e y get the credit, and Hairy, to coin a phrase c a n ’t believe R-U will be so suave. H e ’s snowed. Ro to su m It up, H a iry is not an tt-G reek . and Is a firm b e lie v e r th a t th e P in Is M ig h tie r than th e H ord e. H e ’s g ot n oth in g a g a in st G r e e k s; h e Just w ou ld n 't w an t on e to m a r ry h is sis te r . Meanwhile back at the Union, the Independents gather. This is the first y ea r since General Cos visited the Alamo that UT h asn't had an independent student group. ISA de­ Mica wqnt. so did Wica. ceased, and the Tea-Sip Club h a r d ­ ly stayed to get a long enough parking ticket. So this year the the independents are faced with task of being independent. B e a r up. b r a v e so u ls . the I'nfortunateiy, the fact that th® Greeks do have all of the parties is nobodv's Inde­ fault but pendents. E very Saturday night the m e n s’ and w om ens’ dorm s are things just aching to go out on the town. In Austin s case, it s go out and w a t c h a few haircuts or flats fixed. full of w arm young th in k s A nvhnw , H a iry t h e s * L onghorn* sh ou ld fig u re out so m e w a y to g e t out o f th eir rut and go r a is e hell on S a tu rd a y n ig h t. I ^ t a t le a s t o n c e a w e ek b e d e ­ v oted to fo r g e ttin g ab ou t th e o th e r six d a v s of sen pro, d ie ts, p a r k ­ footb all g a m e s , and ing a th le te ’s foot. tic k e ts , Such doings as an occasional warm-milk-and-coffee hop o n l y scratch the surface, and th# G re a t Unwashed still sit in their rooms and listen to the crickets or g o out with the gang and get stoned to two choices usually depend on the gender o f the the gills. These individual. for tw o H o w e v er , H a iry Is not on® Ut sla m w ith o u t o ffe r in g a sim p ly r e m e d y or th e s la m e e . F ir st off, w h y not h a v e s o m e e v e n t to g e t a ll th e u n -d rop p ed , un p in n ed , un sp o ile d fem ale® to ­ g e th e r w ith a ll th e un sh a v e d , u n ­ w a sh e d . u n s u n g m a le s ? O n e # th is b a r r ie r th e r e s t w ill a d e q u a te ly he h an d led by M oth er N a tu r e , p ro v id in g sh e h a s c le a r a n c e w ith th e S p ee c h B u ild ­ in g , o f c o u r se . Is c le a r e d Now what kind of an e v e n t ? Ah-ha. Hairy again has s o m e suggestions What about a bank run? Think of the thrills of ta k ­ ing p a rt in wrecking the s t o c k m a rk e t. Or a panty raid. An­ other sure-fire event is a b a r n burning, or a Vigilante L y n c h Mob, always good for laughs. su c h a s a T h e r e a r e o th e r s, d raw a n d -q u a rte rin g on th e W est M all, v a n d a liz in g W’a g g e n e r H all, d r a in in g Ijsk e A u stin , to s s in g a ll th e lib r a ­ r ia n s) off the to w e r, sto r m in g th e C ap ito l, and m a r ch in g d o w n to W ash in gton (to sh a k e h a n d s w ith John W ilk es B o o th ). lib ra ry b o o k s (and th e So now- Hairy Ranger, the poor m a n s Dag H am m arskjold, has kept the pesce and m ade the c a m ­ pus safe for dem agoguery. What have you done today? The Firing Line An "Anti” A nsw er letters which attack I, for one. am disgusted with the student thp Austin Anti - Communist League s F reedom Week Several appeared In the Firing Line column of the Texan last w’eek. Are we 19,000 plus all so secure and smug about that we sit o u r co untry’s future idly by and allow r few “ intelli­ gen t" students to ridicule the good work being done by this organiza­ tio n 1* In th e O cto b er ** Issu e o f th e T e x a n , R a y M ullen a s k s In h is le t ­ te r w h at “ th e s e su p er p a tr io ts" h o p e to a c c o m p lish by th eir n e g a ­ tiv e a ttitu d e . H e r e a liz e s that th e le a g u e Is o p p o sed to c o m m u n is m , b u t w o n d e r s w h a t It Is for. this group and others like it a r e trying to m ake the American public a w a re of the C om m unist threat to our freedom. I t is trying to show us what com ­ munism it wants, and how it s going about achieving these goals. Mr. Mullen, is, w hat This organization also shows us the best w ay to fight com m unism H aving an informed nation is the first step in this fight, lf we al­ low ourselves to keep on believing th a t the Com munists will never conquer the world, then they will • and it will be too late for us to do anything about it! I wholeheartedly agree with Mr. Mullen th a t A merica ha* a basic core of decency wh ch is epitom­ ized by individual freedom found in few if any other nations; and th a t we need to “ clean house ’ be­ fore we can serve as a true model of dem ocracy for the rest of the world. The fact remain*, however, that this ha* nothing to do with the alm s of - Communist League*. the Anti What he is doing in his letter is this: he ridicules the group that Is fighting com m unism and th e re ­ by m a k es it seem that their be'iefs and aim s are ridiculous also. This is a fallacy! Their aim s are to m ake us aw'are of the com m unist threat to the free world so th a t vv# will educate ourselves on the prob­ lem and w’ork in unison against com m unism . There is nothing ri­ diculous about this. What has been brought out In the letters criticizing the work of the league in question is not rele­ vant to the main issue. It doesn't change the fact that communism is against every decent and hu­ m ane principle held by a dem oc­ racy. That is precisely what we have in the US—a democracy. Reader, ask yourself the follow­ ing q u estio n s whenever you run across an article or speech that •vade* aa laws*; la ti true? D oes it h a v e cold fa c ts to hack ll up? If you r a n s w e r is " y ea " to both q u estio n s, then you c a n be c e r ta in th at you are not b ein g m isle d . In other words, it doesn't m a tte r they say it s what it, who says that counts. — 0 * o a r L . H lnoJo*» 7804 W hitts A v en u * .la rk " Figures N ev er Lie T was v e ry pleased, and s o m e ­ to find “ It's A ll what. surprised, r e ­ favorably so Right, viewed by Mr Hampton in F r i­ day s Texan. However, I do not think Mr. Hampton gave sufficient credit to one of the co-stars, w’ho. as he h i m s e l f m ust admit, turned in what was by far the m o s t th* rem a rk a b le perform ance of film. I am r e ferring, of course, to Terry-Thomas. “ Terry-Thomas. a comical delight in his own . . in Mr. H am p ton w a s o b v io u sly th * the a u d ie n c e w h o o n ly p erson p e r c e iv e d th e true v a lu e o f T e rr y - T h o m a s s p e r fo r m ­ r e m a r k a b le a n c e , y e t he b a r e ly m e n tio n e d h im In his r e v ie w . Of th e e n tir e a u ­ d ie n c e, M r. H am pton w a s p r o b a ­ b ly th e on ly one u ho r ea lize d th a t th e yo u n g th e a m p le la d y w ith fig u r e and th e flow in g blond h a ir w a* a c tu a lly " T erry T h o m a s , a c o m ic a l d e lig h t In h is ow n I w as also very g ild . to have Mr. Hampton clea r up certain other misconceptions minor ones to be sure — with which I ca m * aw ay from I actually the film. thought, until I read the review, that sported bv P e te r Sellers was a Hitler m ous­ tache r a th e r than a Stalin mous­ tache, and th a t the m ale co-star'* than J a n Inn r a th e r n am e was Carm ichael. the moustache . H o w e v e r c o n fu sin g tho*# p o in te w e r e , tm th e y w e r e not n e a r ly c o n fu s in g a s T erry -T h o m a a . M ost o f th e a u d ie n c e had th o u g h t, a* I did, th a t T e r r y -T h o m a s w a s a e - tu a lly a r a th e r sh a p e ly y o u n g la d y . R o n ald M . F a r r l* erv4 E . 2 0 ’ ', Musings Emerald Bay It was a day w'hen the sun shone cold Beside the sea with stinging wind And the white tongues against the sides lashed Of the pitted w'alls of stone The sea was brmvn and laughed Spitting salt into the m ist But her lips curled downward aloud saying Ad angry sea a best left aion* —BILL DAT T \ U Fall Elections Generate Little Interest, Concern interest, government election* regardless of is spasmodic flurries of that until an endunn gly interested electorate aw akens neither .student elections nor student government can escape their political penitentiary. from T he c r im e c o m m itte d Is fa ilu re to e x c it e v o te r s. T h e p e n a lty is so lita r y c o n fin e m e n t w ith r id ic u le . T he r eh a b ilita tio n su g g e s te d is to in o c u la te all w ith the p o s sib ilitie s for r e p r e se n ta tiv e stu d e n t a c tio n . FARWELL, FARERI!,FAREWELL! THANKS FOR El/EWTHINS; B y B E T T Y E .SWALES E d ito ria l A ssista n t Each sem ester a small, frantic, perhaps even fanatic core of stu­ dents become concerned and lost in the fra tty, cut-throat, and un- educational grind that is a student election The the 18,000 snicker from their vantage point of apathy. rest of There seems to be po m ean be­ tw een these tw o extremes. One is the either engaged new deal, or convinced student government gives him nothing but a raw deal. in getting in C a n d id a te s campaign on p itifu lly Im p o ssib le p la tfo r m s, or w ith no p latform y e t d e v ise d . T h ey Just c a m p a ig n . I f s not w h a t you 're for, hut w h o ’s for y ou . I f s not w hat y ou c a n do, but w h at you p r o m ise . Often the office is not an end in Itself, a way to Implement plans and ideas: hut r a th e r it is a step­ ping stone to a position After all, “ assem b ly m an " looks pretty good on one s job application. But still sa d d e r Is the c a n d id a te w h o rea lly h a s (som ething to s a y , w h o r ea lly w a n ts to do so m e th in g for the stu d en t b od y. One o f tw o th in g s wilt h ap pen to h im : first, he w ill Im* d e fe a te d not k n ow in g th e “ i f s w h o 's for y o u , n ot w h at y o u ’re for" s to r y ; or se c o n d , he w ill be e le c te d , but on ly by a d if­ fe re n t “ hard c o re " of w ork er*. R ichard R oe, stu d en t, still d o esn t g iv e a hoot. The cntiie campaign, whether staged by a superficial politico or a sincere candidate, resem bles a Nineteenth Century medicine m an show. The chief concern in M illing the product, who care * if it cures the ills i f s supposed to. The bark- e r will be gone by the time anyone has decided for sure ♦ ♦ to Y et, It w ould be un fair to c o n ­ d e m n all c a n d id a te s w ith su ch a Ju d gem en t. M any p m m l* * on lr w hat th e y can d e liv e r , m a r x liv e their platform * man"- do up e v e n m o re. B ut th ey still h a v e the iw t e n d le s s list of q u alifica tio n * g e rm a n * to th e ir c a n d id a c y , t> a i is u n less th e \ w an t to r1*k r w * * ta f * for o ffic e or Issu es to m ak e voter* think to ta t* In short m any th -.*• * pol.t: a1 atmosphere "■* * * e *»*• wh.ch forces rally . j v * t -id issueless campaigning The preval­ ent attitude of tile futility and stu­ pidity of student government limits candidates A fter a ll, th e m ain Idea Is to g e t e le c te d , if one d o e sn 't, it m a tte r s little w h at you w ould h a v e don e In stu d e n t g o v e r n m e n t o ffice . Some would explain this apathe­ tic attitude of the student body by pointing to the existing one p arty system. They often go one step farther and put politics on a com­ bative level between independent* and Greeks. the e le c tio n In one s e n s e the "cia®* str u g g le " d efin itio n is valid . T he G re ek s do d o m in a te the R e p r e s e n ta tiv e p a rty , and it m a d e a virtu al c le a n s w e e p of la st W ed n esd a y , lo sin g on ly one o ffic e , F in e Art* A s se m b ly m a n . But the R ep P a r ty is m a k in g an effort to r a ise p o li­ tic-, from th e in d ep en d e n ts v e r su s frat rat c a te g o r y . It has established a University Club for individual* who either be­ long to no group or whose group docs not belong to the party. Al­ most IOO have joined the club. This is only a step towards th* Ideal goal of all campaigning, to elect a representative government. Many BMOC's believe that until another responsible party is on the campus, elections will not generate any more intelligent concern than they do now. A r esp o n sib le seco n d party need not be an all In depend en t on e. J u s t a s the R e p r e s e n ta tiv e P arty broad- ened Its sc o p e and ben efited from th e m e r g e r of the tw o, so a seco n d p a r ty w ou ld be b etter for it* b r e a d ­ th of m e m b e r sh ip . ♦ it Not quits 3 300 voted In the fall cam po* election or about 17 per cent of those e ..g ib ie Two candi­ dates. gradual* assemblyman, and education assem blym an, were not even contested largest school Ar ts and Science*, in which over 7 'OO registered, only ar* about 1.100 '.'re d the In mr) votes. ,w» r te # , One AAS ra~e was decided bv 13 total was w * . Bonnie B ry a n * r - r t than Joe that much more Pvwe! » Laurin Currie, the sixth CA-.dids*e n trailed by O? > ? W * »- the r esu lts are so c lo s e , every vote c o u n ts" • - tru ism &*»UK»** ex en g r ea te r m e a n in g . T V » ga* " N e it tim e I ’ll vote ■ 1 c a n d id a te %r, th in gs w o n ’t th e should tn Ute sp rin g , though v o t e tim e th e p r e sid e n t. * Ss* ap for grab*, ju st aa to vote a s m ark " x ’*" r io t* ;* ’ ‘*ut flood SM * * ** ’lOL •’ n* Of j *ur* thing about *tudent Job Opportunities i - ( k . s j * -t*rv!*vr Bachelor*. Mas- -’- Ll > In G eology for G#o- t.* p it ration. E xp loitation and • Novem ber 2-3 in E n gin eerin g t - r> ? ?. - - nr w ill have a rep reten ta- T hursday N ovem ber '•>rv aw irrid u atm g senior* w ith ■ 1 n liberal art* or Dh'*ic*l edu- to r petition* as Sale* Repre- **'■*! e», A p p o in tm en t* for Interview* Pe made in the S tu d en t E m ploy- - 1 1 t Bureau. P earca H ull 106. • ’.<"*erie L a horatorle* wilt have Mr. lam P. Cvirrle on cam pu* Thur*- for to 0* S trm aceuUcai s a l e s Location w ill 'N ' niteiv be T e x a i S tartin g salary of expense*, and bonu*. 5150 plu* c a r G r a d u a t i n g senior* from any field w (ah­ to Interview m av m ake ap p oin t­ i n t m ent* th e *tudent E m p loym ent Bureau P earce Hall 106. N o v e m b e r 3 Interview' • N a tio n a l Life and Acciden t Insurance Cornpan> will have r e p re s e n t a t i v e * on c a m p u s T u e s d a y . N o v e m b e r I. to In­ terv iew g r a d u a t i n g senior*. O p e n in g s are for for selling a n d u n d e r w r i t i n g m a n a g e m e n t t r a i n i n g course P rob able location would be In Austin vicin ity. Interested *tud en ts m a v m a k e ap­ p o i n t m e n t s m the Student E m ploy­ m en t Bureau. Team # H all 106. • A rr-pre*entative of W, T. G r a n t Cm s p a n s will be on 'a m p u l T y e id a ' . l o i n t e r v i e w graduates In N o v e m b e r I. liberal aru or bu un*— adminstration. In in for s r # intervie w* fo r m a n a g e r " e n t Po sition* open j t ^ r e m a n a g e m e n t Mak* train ee* for a p p o i n t m e n t * t h e S t u d e n t E m p l o y m e n t B u r e a u . P i a r c * H a ll 106, • F oley 1 of H o u s to n will be on cam pu * W e d n e s d a y N o v e m b e r 2 to Interv iew prosp ectiv e g r a d u a t e * for nos '.ions In t h e i r J u n i o r E x ecu tiv e T r a i n i n g P r o ­ g r am . T he-' will t a i k to stu d e n t* w i t h m a jo r * in l ib e r a l a r t s P lan II horn# a d m i n i s t r a ­ a nd economic*, tion. o r w i t h a n y i n t e r e s t In r e t a i l in g I n t e re e te d m ale o r stu d e n t* sh ou ld m a k e a p p o i n t m e n t * In the S t u ­ d e n t E m p l o y m e n t B u r e a u . P e a r ' e H all 106. • N ew E n g la n d M u t u a l L i f e I n s u r a n c e C o m p a n y will h ave a r e p r e s e n t a t i v e on c a m p u s W ed ne«d a v . N o v e m b e r 2. to in te r v ie w g r a d u a t e s for position* in th # Sales M a n a g e m e n t P r o g r a m L o catio n would b" In Dallas A pp oin tm ent* for Interview* m a \ be m a d e .Stu­ d e n t E m p l o y m e n t B u r e a u . P e a r c e H ail 106. business f e m ale th e In th e Stu d en t* e nrolled in T h e U n i v e r s i t y of T e x a s w h o a t t e n d e d a n o t h e r col­ lege or u n i v e r s i t y d u r i n g i960 s u m m e r se ss io n h av e been not ified lf t h e i r s u m m e r r eco rd has been received bv t h e R e g i s t r a r s t i f f 1 »> An s t u d e n t w h o a t t e n d e d a n o t h e r co ege d u r i n g th e p as t s u m m e r an d who has r o t received a c r c d i ’ notice should call a t th# R e g i s t r a r a rn ? r Ma n (J liq ng, Roo m JL. Section 6. tor f u r t h e r i n i t r u o Uoo*. 1 L I i t o r ........................................ N e l l a S k i n n e r ’ £ JT N S U C A N ’r W&MZ Y C U £. CWN C L O T H E S TO THIS — \V<> F C F t t A A L . " L i t t l e M a n O n t h e C a m p u s B v B ifc:er Texas No. I Target for A ll—Royal Coach D arrell Royal let fly w ith asked incredulously. "Y ou bet I his own viewpoint about a favorite am . It rips you u p ." attitu d e of other Southwest Confer- ence schools hreaking a season with a victory o ver T exas—a t his M onday press upcom ing g am e w ith B aylor, conference. " I really rubbing Then he th a t of m aking or his thum b across a ra th e r m enac- ing letter-opener, and turned to the "B ay lo r is a real good football that s te a m ," he said. " I guess leaned hack, feel w e’re the m ost I if he planned any kind we can afford to m ake the mis- j Asked ta k es we have been m aking, on I 0f such as increased passing, scoring plays Not ag a in st B aylor | fof ^ Rputtenng Longhorn of- , I m sure B aylor will have * top e f - 1 (' n se ' Roy®! answ ered, We ll ju st fort, especially plan o u r norm al attack . Of course, happened la st y e a r." situations th a t arise in a gam e The lo n g h o rn s b ea t the B e a r s ,! in view of w hat „ , , 13-12, afte r recovering a late fum- dictate w hat you do. p opular No. I team to defeat, he- about all you ran say. I don’t think hie in Baylor te rrito ry . —CH A R U K SMITH T h e D addy T e x a n Sports 'Tween the Horns By H O Y T PURVIS Associate Sports Editor Tuesday, November I, I960 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 Alvin Dark Named To Manage Giants i.P SAN FRANCISCO - Alvin D ark , the sparkplug shortstop of the N ational League cham pion Gi­ a n ts in 1951 and 1954, Monday be­ ca m e the club's m an ag er with a tw o-year contract. w hether he m ight a playing m an ag er. la te r becom e Speaking quietly. D ark also said for im m ed iate plans Baylor's Star Still Shines rn—,-.." Baylor may have lost some national eclat after last w eek’s mg . . 'n ,»♦ o r f o r - a e tVio T o v n s I / m e h o m s loss to Texas Christian. But as far as the T exas Longhorns are concerned that Fort Worth game just proved that things are tougher than ever. Schedules and contracts being what they are, the Horns must go against the bounce-back-minded Bears this week and the no-longer-slumbering* giants from TCL1, w h o are to snend New Year’8 by the near‘ ~ The 38-year-old N ational Teague v e te ra n player, with no previous m a n ag e ria l experience, succeeds Tom Sheehan, the head scout who took over as Bill R igney w as fired 18 To get D ark, who finished the I up the n e a re st b eanstalk, the fol- sp jr jt eith er T exas Ive had no trad e s and th a t, " I ’m going into threatening to send everybody this with an open m in d .” lacking in is a "b ig " g am e for the B ears and alw ays the j About this ec la t th a t Baylor m ay has been. It took a te rrific effort 1960 season w ith M ilwaukee, G iants trad ed utility infielder An- j have lost. A ctually this little five- ^y a cham pionship ’H orn te am to le tte re r is a H om eric donation per- down fifth place B aylor 13-12 last dre R odgers to the B raves. The m o ­ tim e the B ruins a re taining interim pilot when new m a n ag er sta rre d with the Gi- m ent g reeted w ith acclaim . B ut the top spot and have ants clubs of 1950-55, as the "ta k e I charge g u y " and field captain. B aylor looks no w eak er than ev er • re m e m b e r th at 28-14 w in o ver Ar- k an sas). In stead the B aptists re- sem ble as m uch as ev e r H o m er's boy Achilles, w ith a gardol shield on his heel. ‘njnf, for plenty to m n w ith. to brilliancy of achieve- y p ar B aylor and T exas h av e had big B aylor w ill not be lowing S atu rd ay . A ddressing a crowded p r e s s room throng. D ark said he would not go to train in g cam p as an a c ­ tiv e p lay er b ut h a s n t decided last June I ___________________________ e n n f r r r - r , r» t B r l —I . i k . the 1 1 1 T L r t r . ______I m e n l : _______ u n t h R l l t I V . / . o t l H i m n e . : t . . Royal schorl the state university and said the la rg est " I i d o n 't believe that ’beating Texas and losing all the others can give you a good se a so n '- th a t’s fa r too ex trem e. But I do think if some of th e others w ere offered onn v ic­ tory' free and th eir chances on the others, the one they'd m ost like to have would he T ex as." In review ing the Longhorns' 17-7 victory over winless S o u t h e r n M ethodist, Royal said, "SM U play­ ed good football. They played us they’ve four q u arte rs played one q u arter ag ain st ev ery ­ one else.” the w ay Concerning the sloppy condition of the turf at M em orial Stadium . he said, "M ud s the equalizer. If th ere is a difference * in football te a m s), faster that equalizes th an anything else." Handball Champion To Play UT Stars A four-tim e national open hand­ b all cham pion, Jim m y Jacobs, will p lay an exhibition m atch with top local play ers a t 7 p m. Tuesday In G regory Gym. Jaco b s, ------------------ w h o w on th e n a tio n a l open crown in 1955-56-57-60, is cu r­ ren tly on a nation-wide tour and w ill stop off at the U niversity for one day. Jaco b s rep resen ts the Los Angeles A thletic Club. He w as sidelined during the 1958- 59 season because of an injury. Loyd H am pton, P ete Tyson, and R ich a rd B eeler will be Ja co b 's opponents in the m atch es Tuesday evening. A fter the m atches, a m ovie of som e of Ja c o h ’s recen t m a tch e s will be shown in A Hall, n o rth of G regory G ym . A discus­ sion period on handball will also follow. " J im m y (Jaco b s) picked The U n iv ersity of T exas as one of his stops on the to u r because of th e top-rated handball players the U n iv ersity has produced and the g re a t in te rest shown for h a n d- ball h e re ," Dick Roberson, for­ m e r UT handball coach, said. This will be first Ja co b s has m ade a visit U niversity. the t i m e the to Asked if he had w anted a free hand, D ark answ ered th at the only thing he asked w as to be included in conversations before trad e s are m ade. He also said he felt the m a n ag e r should d eterm in e which plavers a re on the field. The new m a n ag e r said he had not vet decided who he would se­ lect as the te a m 's roaches. 'Mural Schedule GOLF SIN GLES it trouble student body and such fun knocking the o th e r off top. An outstan d in g ex am p le of this w as the big upset by T ex as in 1933. T h at how ever ca m e a fte r So B aylor still d eserves the eclat " b u rn in g ” sp irit cam paign by the it has been having such a g rea t finding, and the F o rt Worth Frog- gam e by the 'H orns th a t Coach Eh gies are com ing along just in tim e P ric e said, " I think ev ery boy we to g rab the glory too. B aylor w asn ’t have played th e best g am e he s disgraced. The B ears have a 5-1 ev er p la y ed ." record w hich w asn t easily earned. And TCU tied P itt, the team that earn ed itself som e T exas friends by tak en taking th e juice out of the O range j y ear. and the ’H orns feel like re- discouraging to get touchdown runs i ta ile d burk. But as far as try in g . versing th e pro ced u re. T hey have from Syracuse. com e up w ith good efforts ev ery goes. th e y 're (the Longhorns) try- week, paying off at tim es (Okla- : in K h ard enough, T arpaulins, w hich had been laid the F rid ay night in advance of rain s, w ere roiled up allowing w a­ te r to flood the field. One theory w as th a t gam blers m ight h ave been behind the skullduggery. Tex- j as w as a 20-point favorite. "O ur effort has been good," Royal em phasized. " I f s discourag­ ing to lose close gam es, and its Those kind of things seldom h ap ­ Texas has licks pen. this its A rkansas and Rice. that. But how easy do these su p er hom a), but not enough against sh o w in g s c o m e T exas had scoring plays of 43 and 15 y ard s called back ag ain st the M ustangs. Saxton brought the D e s ir e Is th e first p r e r e q u is ite . casion-rising for th e T ow er to tu rn ‘ crow d of 34,000 to its feet in the and (h e ’H orn s sh o u ld n ’t hurt h ere. The Longhorns have had tim e to th ird period with one of his patent- this w eek. B aylor has a g re a t fleet think about it. And P a t C ulpepper, of hacks, co m p arab le to the 1953 cd sensations and G eorge Lewis broke for another touchdown in the last period. Both w ere called back | due to penalties. l i n e b a c k e r , w ent s o far as to call this a "Bowl G am e " for Texas, since the 'H orns a r e due crew of Cotton D avidson. J e rr y Coody, L. G. D upre, and Allen Jones. Rut it will ta k e som e re a l or- Bears Long on Ronnies alum s the M ustangs Nowaday* B aylor are well ag a in st last week. Then th e re a re fellows like nam ing th e ir new’bom sons R on­ Bobby G urw itz, R ay Poage, John nie, and it s no w ander. The B e a rs’ Cook, and Bobby N unis, and don’t th ree R ’s—Goodwin, Stanley, and be and Bull—a re all am ong the leag u e's G eorge Lewis M ike Coft en will be th ere as alw ays, and Johnny Ge- fine best And backs too, am ong them little Tom- i ming got som e valuable experience m y M inter, Q u arterb ack Bobby Ply against SMIL th ere a re o th er J e rr y Cook forgetting "A m I concerned about having those plays called b ac k ?" Royal NEW YORK Ti Yanks Complete Staff W ith A d d itio n of Moses The New York Y ankees com pleted th eir coaching staff M onday by signing W ally Moses, as batting and first base coach, and holdover Jim H egan, as catching and bullpen coach. In 1953 B aylor w as 6-0, ran k ed third nationally. T exas, fresh from a 16-7 (fa m iliar) win over SMU. won 21-20 and the B ears couldn't win again, losing next to m ediocre Houston 37-7, and two m ore con­ ference dates. Bull, as ap tly nam ed as C aptain j M arvel, c o m b i n e * speed and stren g th in g re a t fashion. H e’s a i 190-pounder w ith every sort of all- Collins has been so rt of a m ys­ tery m an all y ea r, and everyone Moses, 50-year-old fo rm er Ath­ has shied aw ay from d iscussing it letics sta r, will tak e over M anager for fe a r of Jinxing Ja ck , but he Ralph Houk s coaching duties. He alread y seem s to have run across is the some black cats, from staff, Houk previously p i c k e d som e of the bad b reak s h e 's had. Johnny Sam to replang fa m ilia r w ith W arin g fo l­ the fa c e and talen t of frog v o ice d ; d r u m m e r w ith th e P e n n sy lv a n ia n s. W arin g k n ow s M cC lin tock p retty lived next door w e ll, 0>o, T h e y to e a c h o th e r a s b o y s In T yron e, P e n n ., and P o le y h a s been a m e m ­ b e r o f W a r in g ’s m u s ic a l group is Eat Mexican Food Once A Day! EL MAT 504 East Ave. G R 7-7023 EL TORO 1601 G uadalupe G R 8-4321 EL CHARRO "M e x ic a n Food to Take H o m e " G R 7-8744 MONROE'S 912 Red River G R 8-7735 Delivery Service 7 D ays Austin's “B ig Four” in A uthentic M e x ica n Food T O D A Y AT I N T E R S T A T E Arm rn* a wovit DISCOUNT CAID PA RAM O U R ", NOW! ™ s; 12:00 S T A T E FEAT.: 12:00 - 2:25 4:50 - 7:15 - 9;40 Tbs story of k . FRANZ W it h o u t e n d DIRK BOGARDE GENEVIE MAF:'? m g CAPUCINE STARTS THURSDAY twwo* VINCENT J.DONAHUE • TECHNICOLOR* • WARNER BROS VARSITY NOW! 5 To—7 : 30—9; i f Metrg-Goldwyn-Mayer Am** ny* Penn KW WITNESS * ClNEMASCOPC 'Smit, I Pl! CIK! • i i iPlS • JOSI S II • SIM I H I • JIM WSI Tn- iTTTW - N O W S H O W I N G FIRST S H O W 6 P.M. awn uwcmitR ■ Ji m Shaw m s t fra yang) ■ mtsti ■ m e r Gm t r y H FOR ADULTS ONLY No Children Under 16 Mnved Unless Accom­ panied By >.n Adult « 8iwcuut* Lewis' ^ 1 1 ■ ■ t* ......... — T h e d a il y T exan Amusements Tuesday, November I, I960 THE D A I L Y T E X A N Page 4 Russian Classic ’Potemkin' Uses Techniques of Silent Screen “ P o te m k in ,” one o f the m ost co n sid e r ed to he im p o rta n t film s in the h isto r y o f silen t c in e m a , w ill he U niversity F ilm P rogram Commit- episode sh ow n T h u rsd a y by the tee. Showings of the revised version of the heralded R ussian film are scheduled at 1.30. 4, 6:30, and 9 p.m . in B a tts Auditorium. E m ploying a m usical b ack grou n d and E nglish subtitles, the film c o n ­ tains no dialogue. “ P otem k in ” b r o u g h t t o t he ' w orld's attention a disp lay of D i­ rector E isenstein'* em ph asis on m ontage, his stress of intellectual contact, and his treatm ent of the individual m a sses Instead of as the protagonist. the in the 1905 revolution The picture itself is based on an in w h ich sa ilo r s o f a R u ssia n flo tilla , m oored off O d e ssa , m u t i n i e d a g a in st th e ir o ffic e r s . T h is te m p o is str en g th e n e d b y a o r c h e s tr a te d h e a v ily p o w erfu l, m ilita r y r h y th m th a t c a r r ie s the sa ilo r s r e le n t le s s ly forw ard In a m a n n e r w h ich cou ld not h e e ffe c t- in the o r ig in a l. A u s tin 's t i n e A r t s I heatre NOW! OPEN 5:45 P O S IT IV E L Y L A S T 2 D A Y S • ' I ’M A U .R iG H T * • • • • • ? PETER ! SELLERS . IM C U M M * I MIK W B W B m o m s • I M B W B BW • • A F A M F I L M F E S T I V A I P R E S E N T A T I O N Regular Lentil re* ti-IO At O N I G H T O N L Y A T : ^ ] O N n a S 2 S H O W S r n T O N IG H T ! O N E P R IC E ! Gins Lollobrigida in a fast new com edy, gra d e d " A " on the sex curve! OPKV 8:15 E D G A R A L L A N P O L S House of Usher V I N C E N T P R H F. — Pi n * — The H eadless G h o s t DELWOOD 3931 Eost Avenue ADMISSIO N KOC • O P E N S 6 P M. THE LOST WORLD Michael R*>nnlc. Jill St. John Start* 7 IS — Flu*— HAPPY ANNIVERSARY David Niven. Mitt! Cavno r Start* 9 IO SOUTHAUSTIN 4000 SO CONGRESS ADMISSION 60c • O P E N S I P M HORRORS OF THE BLACK MUSEUM Michael Couth, June Cinnlntham Start* 7:15 — Plus— SCREAMING SKULL Ala* N lc co l. P e g g y W e b b e r Start* S .50 S T A U T S TOMORROW I O P E N 11:45 CAPITOL F IR S T A U ST IN SH OW ING W K v j Z K W S T I , m u m i « r A ' j n » H NOW O P E N 11:45 Ut Al M IN SHOYY ING 2 1 I LL ( OI < IR II YI I RI S TtiEYOVNG JpN H £SSm T E C H N IC O LO R * STARRING PATHWAY NL ANO LOUIS KEELY PRIMA* SMITH k s v * ® v i r a s v c a n s L B IA U L U U B S M U K B A R O P E N S fi P M. ^ I INK C O L O B SHOW S Natalie W O O D • Robert W A G N E R "A ll The Fine Young 1N ,olnB Cannibals" Susan K O H N E R • G eorge H A M IL T O N and Pearl B A ILE Y P l I S R I I " W AT U SI George M onUomrry, T a i n a El* Symphony Brings Variety and Talent By DAVE HELTON T exan A m usem ents Editor tellectual developm ent of Stravin­ sky s first m em orable stage suc­ From the d elica te rustling cess the air and expectations pffpct of thp gtring scction to the With in Kash- that accom pany any opening night, near. )azz of and an audience that filled a lit- chei s barbaric dance, the char­ lie m ore than half of M unicipal acterization is unique and com pe.- the brass A uditorium , the Austin Sym phony O rchestra show ed its city w h a t fine en tertainm ent could he pre­ sented, with a certain am ount of c iv ic interest and a valuable store of m u sical talent. B eginning M onday night s pro- g r a m w as Leopold S to k o w sk is transcription of B ach's T occata and Fugue in D Minor. T his stir­ ring perform ance w as done w i t h the confidence and near-perfection found large city boasting such an orchestra. in any F ollow ing the Bach-Stokowski se- lection w as B ra h m s’ Sym phony No. 4 in E Minor, M atueci's “ P iccoli P e z z i,” and Stravinsky's “ F i r e- bird S u ite ” O ne o f th e o u tsta n d in g fe a tu re s o f th e o r c h e s tr a w a s its v e r s a tili­ its a b ility to c h a n g e m o o d s ty, from th e a u s te r ity of B r a h m s to the liltin g “ P ic c o li P e z z i.” F zr a R a c h lin , the con d u ctor, ap­ p e a r ed p o w erfu l, c a p a b le , and, by the fo r c e fu ln e ss o f his m o v e m e n ts, n e a r ly a b le to c o n v e y a m e s s a g e h im s e lf. M r. R ach lin . h o w ev er, ludgm ent sh o w ed an e v e n g r e a te r in h is c h o ice o f m u s ic ia n s, w h o r e ­ a ffirm A u stin 's d istin ctio n a s a cul- ! tu ral o a s is . T h e p r e se n ta tio n “ F i r e- bird S u ite ” w a s fier y and e v o c a ­ tive Thp o r c h e s tr a c o n v e y e d to the in- a u d ien ce the im a g in a tiv e and o f linf? A s a lw a y s, the A u stin S ym p h on y O r c h e s t r a ' c h o se a m o st d ifficu lt r ep er to ir e and p rodu ced a fine pro­ g r a m . What's Showing STATE — D irk Bogarde por­ trays Franz L izst in “ Song With­ out F.nd.” a dram a based on the com p oser’s in the Columbia P ictu res production are G e n e v ie v e P a g e , P a tr ic ia M o n ­ son , and Ivan D e sn y . life. Also starring - “ J o u r n e y P A R A M O U N T to the L ost C ity ” is, a c co r d in g to th e into ad s, “ a w on d rou s a d v e n tu re a m y ste r io u s b a r b a r ic lost land fo r ev e r D e b r a P a g e t s ta r s. tim e I in T E X A S - A F a ll F ilm F e s tiv a l p r e se n ta tio n , “ I'm All R i g h t , J a c k ” fe a tu r e s P e te r S e lle r s. Ian C a r m ic h a e l, and T e rr y -T h o m a s. A B ritish the m o v ie d e a ls w ith that e v e r -la s tin g str u g g le b e ­ tw een w o r k e rs and m a n a g e m e n t. sa tir e V A R S IT V — A m an w itn e s s e s a m urd er, and h is fa m ily is t h e n terro rized by a grou p o f ju v e n ile th e plot of d e lin q u en ts. s u s p e n s t “ K ey W itn e ss,” a d ram a. S u ch is D L C J i u r a l E n t e r t a i n m e n t (C o m m itte e announced Drawing for tickets by $16.73 Blanket Tax holders begins today Novem ber I, Box O ffice, M usic Building Hours 9:00— 4:00 f o r TWO BIG SHOWS Monday, Nov. 7 and Tuesday, Nov. 8 M unicipal Auditorium d V D O R IS D A Y seerr.Y a lit*!* disturbed by w ua* two the fas ijst heard from Rex H arr -on. • •*r o Ur / e rsal - International's rew su v p e -'e- wr h open* ’ M id n ig h t Lace • e J dram a, .• Jay at th e Paramour f. I r e p c ' u ' e ma'ks H arrison* f rs* appearance on *he He / v a g e in s < y e a r , n - i is a so a comr v. ci -v ga c t p a c e for M ss D a /, w hose a v fwo h *s h a /e light co m ed y re os. A so fea tu red in the m ovie are M /ro a Ley, R oddy M cD ow ell, p ro c e ed s i V. a^d J o b - G a z i'. F-**y per cen ' c* a p o *0 : k#t sa es to from ti a ce M the U r / e - s :-y C am pus Dr Ticke-s may b e p u r o n tytv hr .based a* dorrr 'uses, a^d start . and I Thi Mate- rsday ry and ser ­ in cam pus. 'Laramie' HOI .LY WOOD Stagecoach Overturns Ti A sp e e d in g o v e rtu rn ed w h ile sta g e c o a c h ov ertu rn ed M o n d a y d u rin g film in g of a sc e n e for t e le ­ v isio n 's “ L a r a m ie ,” and a su p p o rt­ ing a c to r's leg w a s injured so s e v e r ly that. it had to he a m p u ta t­ ed N B O said B e rt S p en cer, about 50, of H ollyw ood , w a s rid in g sh o t­ it gun on s ta g e c o a c h w h en the tr a v e lin g dow n h ill at R e v u e S tu d ios. S p e n c e r ’s con d ition w a s listed a s c r itic a l. A n oth er a c to r, S. John L au n er of n e a r b y C a n og a P a r k , a p a s ­ se n g e r rn th e s ta g e c o a c h , s u ffe r e d la c e r a tio n s hut w a s r e le a s e d from th e h osp ital a fte r tr e a tm e n t. T h e p r in c ip a ls s e r ie s , R ob ert thp F u lle r and John S m ith , w e r e not in the a c c id e n t. in v o lv ed in THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS STUDENT CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE announces the The Second Event of the 1960-61 Series IN P E R S O N t e a M K E rn ■ ALL NEW SHOW ‘ STARRING THE PENNSYLVANIANS IN PERSON . The Sound That Surrounds'* h with the CUMBERLAND THREE 6:30 P.M.— 2 BIG SHOWS— 9:00 P.M. I TONIGHT, NOVEMBER MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM Tickets still available for drawing by $16.73 Blanket Tax Holders for both shows. Box Office, Music Building until 4 p.m. today Free to $16.73 Blanket Tax and Season Ticket H o ld e rs A D U L T Single Adm ission $2.50 N o A dvance Sale Children through Junior H igh School $1.00 N o Reserve Seats DAILY TEXAN C ^ la te iiie d s d c ls C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S ....................... 40 l l OO C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G D E A D L IN E S ............................. Monday ........................ Tuesday ....................... W ed n esd ay Thursday 3:30 p m- T uesday T exan 3:30 p rn. W ean esdav T exan 3:3“ p m . T hursday T e x a n F riday T exan 3:30 p m . ................ Sunday T exan .................................... F riday 3 30 P rn. In the event o f errors m ade in an ad vertisem en t, im m ed iate notice m ust be Riven as the publishers • r e resp on sib le for on ly one incorrect insertion. CALL JOHNNY GR 2-2473 Room s for Rent Alterations Lost and Found Typing iir co n d itio n e d ACCOM O DATIONS F O R T H R E E m en. s e rv ­ ice, paved p a rk in g . 306 E a s t 30th. N C _ __ A rm s D o rm lin en s m aid ROOM S F O R BOYS C lose t o cam p u s. S in g les D ouhle M eats A m ple p a r k ­ in g L ow ra te s. N ew C e n ta u r H ouse. GR 6-5891 T R IA N G L E H H A S u n e x p e c te d v a - ’ cancv fo r m ale s tu d e n t Q u iet, a ir room w ith d a I I v m aid c o n d itio n ed service. 714 W est 22Vfe. OR 2-9638. Room and Board U NIVERSITY A P P R O V E D ONE va­ cancy tn d o u b le room P riv a te b eth c o n d itio n in g . M e r­ S an S tu d e n t H ouse. R e frig e ra te d c h a n ts Gabriel GR 8-8213 UM) a r Furnished A p artm ents G IR L S —U N IV E R S IT Y A P P R O V E D L arg e, m odern. L iving room , k itc h ­ en ette F u r ­ tw o bed ro o m n ish ed for t u n to f o u r girls. b a th S T R A T F O R D ARMS M RS W A L K E R H O S T E S S GR 7-9373 U N IV E R S IT Y M ODERN E F F IC IE N ­ CY. F oam bcd off stre e t p a rk in g . $65 00 sin g le, $70,00 p a i d U tilitie s d o u b le GR 8-9125. W a n te d needed for usage BLOOD DONORS— All types of blood 'n A ustin P ro fes slonai d o n o rs now accep ted T rav is County Blood Bank 2907B Red River GR 8-6457 MEN S E X P E R T A L T E R A T IO N S don* re a so n a b ly Q uick service, bee Mrs J a c o b so n 's M e n s W e a r 2332 LOST ON BOTTOM floor Main Build ing Gold Gruen W rist W atch. Call M iller. GR 6-5712 R eward: A rnold. G u a d a lu p e A L T E R A T IO N S AND D R E SSM A K IN G . 715 W est 25th S tre e t GR 6-3360 LOST ON FR ESH M A N field, silver El­ gin w atch Call GR 8-2415. Reward! For Sale UN B E L IE VA B L E FL .RS - So 95. h u b c a p a - $6 '>5 m an) oids AUTCJ. rnirro rs I I 14 F fast 1st. BARG A IN S! M CF- s k ir ts d u als—$11.95: sp lit- plugs la k e s accessories. T E X A S L IE F Aft ual NI .W GI val Uf ' I. TETT I $ 375 VYill W rit Blvd. Sa n Antonio. VY < in herger. a c ro rd ta n . $200. ta k e 217 C ollege 1057 AUS T IN H I ALY ton m a u c o VIT t h I OUK h o u t. GR 7 262-3 (I v erdriv p J u m p se ats. I rn mf c ilia te 1315 YE e st N in th . PRK ’ED TC S E I L 1^58 MGA R oad- Ste-r. WSYY ties te r. G L 3-7426. 12-W A T T BOGEN A rn pl fler, D. r A C. co PVI•rte r G onset I'M c a r cCC B r o w n I n g 22 Sem i a u to m a ti G R 2-3963 * to C* rife. VY S.YV.’a VOL KSW AGON 1957 D E L U X E se d an only 3 I bd l e a t h e r se a ts 6995 m i l e s M ech an ically p erfe ct. G L 2-5882. 1959 A U S T IN HEALEY D eluxe 4 s e a te r B lack h a r d to p and clo th top. 19,000 m iles. P e rfe c t co n ­ d itio n M ust scil $2,000. C all GR 2-6383 1414 N ew field Lane. Special Services REN T - PURCH ASE T V s T elevision Rental. GR 2-2692 Alpha N E W O PE N IN G AUSTIN H ealth and B eauty H om e 901 W. 24th. GR 2-7776. R elaxin g ann su n ­ reducing lam ps. gym n astics, yoga. m assage. In­ dividual treatm en t tattles DANCING A N N E T T E DUVAL STUDIOS. U niver­ sity ballroom classes or private lessons are now bein* offered at reasonable stu d en t rates. E xercise classes have in also b allet, in ­ form ation. cal) or com e by T he Univer­ sity S tu d io from 1-5 p m. GR 8-3951. classes along w ith tap and m odern Jazz. For started F O R H OM E W A SH IN G , use our rental w ashers. Central T e x a s Appliance Company 904 Lam ar GR 6-2653. Typing D ISSERTATIO NS. ETC. ELECTRON!A- TIC ( Sym bo ls). Mrs. R itchie, d o s e in. GR 6-7079 E X C ELL EN T TYPING. REASO NABLE rates Call HO 5-9015 SHO RT ON TYPIN G , tim e and mon- t ' ping your In outline.* notes, reports. Mis* ey? Let m e help them es Graham. GL 3-5725. MARTHA ANN ZIVLEY M B A A com p lete p rofessional typ in g serv­ ice tailored to the needs of Univer­ Special Keyboard sity science, language, equipm ent and theses and d is­ sertation s stu d en ts for en gin eerin g Pho GR 2-3210 C onveniently located at GCX)DALL WOOTEN DORM BLDG. 21U2 G uadalupe DISSE R T A T IO N S T H E S E S . POR TS p rofession ally and rompeP electric LE c a m p u s . B Iv typed E xperienced Four blocks Bodour GR 8-8113 from TYPIN G P R O B L E M S’ Call R W. Holley GR 6-3018 after 5:00 Mufti- I B M . lith m ats a Electric. G uaranteed accuracy Rapid Service. sp eciality N ew D E L A F I E L D TY PIN G SERVICE. T h eses M im eographing. P hotocopie*. M u ltllith ing HI 2-6522 t r o n s tic Reports E X P E R IE N C E D CO M PETENT. Elec­ d isserta­ th eses tions. All typ es. G rad u ate/u n d ergrad - u aie C lose to cam pus. Mrs D eE utta. GR 8-3298 ACCURATE S T U D E N T PA PERS. Ex­ perienced R easonable. N>yv elect co­ m atic M anuscripts a sp ecialty. Clos# to U n iversity Mrs A lbright. CL 3-2941, REPO RTS. DISSE R TA T IO N S. THE? 150 Mrs Roberta B W inkler. W est 13th GR 7-7554 LAW NO TES TH E M ES, ou tlin es. 25c page GR 6-4717 GL 3-2212. TH E SE S. D ISSE R TA T IO N S BOOKS. .P etm eck y. E l t o t r o rn a t I c Mrs TYPIN G DONE IN m y hom e E lectric. Mrs M organ—GL 3-0354. IBM w £ ? J E D TYIMNG TO do in m v hot H I 2-4449 Brigance Wins T h e D a i e y T e x a n 'lU li c i t G o e A O n W r e r e T u w d sjr 8-12 — Registration for Ten M o st: Journalism Building Beautiful, 206. 8:30-12:30 and 1:30-4:30 — Sopho­ more pictures for the Cactus, Journalism Building 5. 9-11 — Benefit snack sale, Home Economics Building. 10-10-Arts and Crafts Center, Texas Union 333. IO — Professor Leon Lebowitz to speak on “ Great Jewish Person- Greeks Provide Halloween Treat Fourteen Greek organizations went back to school Monday night for a Halloween party for retarded children at the state school. Zeta Tau Alpha and Phi Gamma for Delta decorated the annual party. Music and re­ freshments were provided. the booths Four to six students were at each booth to help the children. Fraternities participating were Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Tau Pi, Phi Gamma Delta. Phi Sigma Del­ ta, Pi Kappa Alpha, and S i g m a Phi Epsilon. Sororities participating were A l­ pha Delta Pi, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha Phi. Delta Gamm a, Kappa Alpha Theta, Phi Mu, Sigma Del- ! ta Tau, and Zeta Tau Alpha. alitiea” st Coffee Hour, Hillel Foundation. 3-5—Grievance Committee invites students to register complaints, Texas Union 321. 3— Race Relations Committee, Uni­ versity “ Y .” 4:15—Catholic inquiry class, New­ man Classrooms, 2016 Guada­ lupe. 4—Helmut Motekat to lecture on “ The Significance of Hegel for Heinrich Heine. ’ English Build­ ing 203. 6 30 and 9 — Cultural E n te rta in ­ ment Committee presents Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians, Gregory’ Gym. 7 Freshman engineers to organ­ ize, Texas Union 302. Poetry Read ing Jo Anne Brigance, sophomore drama major, Thursday night won thet Oratorical Association s poe­ try reading contest. The contest is held every semester, U z Kelly took second p l a c e honors while Thelma M iller won third place. The winners were selected from 81 participants. Other students who reached the finals were Beverly Rates, last year's winner, Don Flournoy, Bob­ by Jane Harrison, and Pat Tay­ lor. D r . I/»ar Ashmore, Mrs. Mau- rine Amis, and Rrnoks Alexan­ der judged the contestants. Vaughn to Speak 7 and 9:15—Movie. “ The Wayward Bus,” Texas Union Auditorium To House Mothers 7—Jam es Medford to speak to Southwestern Rocket Society on “ Large Solid Propellant Grains for Rocket Roosters,” Experi­ mental Science Building 223. Mr. Dick Vaughn will s p e a k on the sub lect of “ Fraternities” at the meeting of the various fra­ ternity housemothers Tuesday at 7 :15—Dick Vaughn to speak to i Fraternity Housemothers, Delta Upsilon house. 7:30 - Dr, Donald Weisman to ad­ dress Architecture Wives Club on “ The Fundamentals of A rt,” Texas Union 325. 8 Otis Dozier to lecture on “ The Art of Japan,” Laguna Gloria. 8 Dr. Ralph W. Tyler to speak at social work conference on “ The Place of the Professional S c h o o l the University,” Townes Hall. in 9-10:30 — The Overplayers, Cliche 7:15 pm . The meeting will he held at fraternity the D e l t a Upsilon house, 2510 Leon. UT Ladies Club Sponsors C o ffee I Mrs. R. N. Little and Mrs W. T. Guy J r . will he co-hostesses for i the November meeting of the Uni­ versity Ladies club. Member* will he honored with a coffee at West- 1 wood Country Club from IO am . Coffee House until noon Wednesday. Campus Life Tuesday, N o v e m b e r I, I9 6 0 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P a g e 5 Cap and Gown to Sponsor Political Panel W ednesday Cap and Gown. senior women’s organization, will sponsor a poli­ tical panel Wednesday night at 7 in the University ” Y ” Auditori­ um. The panel, composed of women from the Austin arca acti\e in politics on the national and local I scene, is the first in a series of 1 four programs for the year spon­ sored by Cap and Gown. Mrs. Malcolm Millburn and Mrs. Felder Thornhill Jr . will represent the Republicans, and Mrs. W il­ lard Nitschke and M itt Barbara Nan Wilkinson will speak for the Democrats Mrs. H. S. W a 11, from the state Attorney General’s office, will give a non-partisan talk on election procedure. S e n i o r women students and invited to interested persons are attend. There will be no adm is­ refreshments will bo sion and served. F A L L S E M E S T E R lf) eel S p a c i a l Tw o for the Price of One B ring a F riend and Share the C o it R E M L A R 18 Treatm ent* 28.00 ( S r E C I VI, 15 T re a tm e n t* 12.56 S cie n tific Slenderizin g and Sp ot R educing Ii b l a d ; u s u die i ^ n j d ie m E N F IE L D SH O P P IN G CENTER G R 7-5905 Sophomores THE A LP H A TAU chapter of Kappa Kacpa Psi, rational honorary fraternity for cobego bands­ men, is celebrating its fwen*'eth anniversary this year. The local chapter inc udes approximately 60 Longhorn Bandsmen. Aiso pictured are Vincent R. DiNino, band director, and Richard D. Blair, assistant director, of the ' Showband of the Southwest. ' Twenty-Four Hours W ith the Herd' By Frank Reaugh in Barker Center ^ U c d tlin 9 •* The late Frank Reaughs art col-! of them on the longhorn steer lection, containing the $50,000 col lection of “ Twenty-four H o u r s with the Herd,” has been housed in the main reading room of the Barker Texas History Center since April. 1950. It was M r. Reaugh s wish that the University get this collection after his death. and Mr. Reaugh has been judged hv both American European painters as the greatest painter of the longhorn that h a s ever lived. He began sketching in 1876 at the age of 15. His family came to Texas from Illinois that year in a covered w agon. The great cattle drives f r o m Texas to the northern railroads from 1875 their peak were at to 1881. Frank Reaugh rode herd on sev­ eral of these cattle drives, living outdoors for weeks at a time. “ Twenty-four Hours w i t h the Herd” is the greatest collection of paintings on the vanishing long­ horn in existence. It consists of a series of seven paintings por­ traying a day s work with the herd. The art shows it as a full 24-hour job. The first painting is “ Driving It shows the h e r d the Herd.” moving out on the long trail north. The second painting is entitled “ Watering the. Herd” and s h o w s the longhorns standing up to their chests drinking their fill. “ Bedding The third and fourth paintings are the Herd” and "Guarding the Herd.” The herd is bedded down at sunset and guarded by two lone cowboys. The fourth and fifth paintings are entitled “ The Stampede” and “ The Milling Cattle.” T h e s e two tell the story of the dreaded stampede in the black of night and the control of the restless cat­ in the first few minutes of tle The artist made his first brush It was the be­ from cat's hair. ginning of a career in which he produced over 5.000 works, most dawn. The last painting is “ The Herd Moves On.” Things are hack to normal, and the herd is s e e n moving across the prairie, leaving a cloud of dust as it goes. This work in pastel, is a 24-hour history of M r. Reaugh s life. He lived this life on the range, and his paintings are a realistic pic­ ture of this life. Patricia Ann W illiam s, Univer to Calvin T e r r y sity student, Westbrook. Eloise McGuire, University grad­ u a t e . to Dr. Frank Dobinson, Uni­ versity research fellow. ★ ★ .Teannie Beal, U niversity cum laude graduate, to Jam es Richard Holland ITI University graduate. •OP«CO#OP*CO#OPeCO»OP*CO#OP#CO»OP#CO»OP« 9 i I Cive the Cift of Language | t i o 0. o • o o • OL e • o o English French German Hebrew Italian Japanese Russian Spanish The practical gift for every stu­ dent, and especially useful to one studying a foreign lan­ g u a g e is a Living L a n g u a g e Record set from the C o - O p . Living L a n g u a g e records are ideal as study aids, or as a re­ fresher course. $9.95. Th* Textbook Department, downstairs in the C o - O p dictionaries, offers Living Language records, course outlines, and many other truly useful gift items, whether for yourself or for gifts. You Help yourself while giving the best when you do your Christmas shopping at the C o -O p . IMI S ! HD tit I I OW N '- ii o 2246 G uadalupe Street ^ •O P*CO*O P#CO #O P® CO»O P»CO *OP«CO #O P*CO *OP Wednesday,November 2 DR. D O N A L D W E IS M A N , pro fessor of art, points to seme art ch eers. Last ye a 1- he broad as* te;ev: acinus southern atm o rphftf urb a t e n t m e n ta l flat c c ” Luneboon Every Day I I 30 2 OO Dinnnr 5 30 IO OO SATURDAY AND SUNDAY only for r«*ervation», call: HI 2-2343 B M W . liv e Oak I boclii af th# Austin Th**f*r Doctor Given Grant For Cancer Research A lifetim e gran* for canner re search has been awarded bv the to I >r American Cancer Society A. Clark Griffin of the M C An­ derson Hospital and Tumor Insti­ tute in Houston, The faculty-level grant, estab­ lished to further creative effort and productivity re­ search. Will make it possible for individual to pursue H r G riffin ranger in research un* ii he retires. UIL Annual Meet To Begin Sunday The U n iv e r s it y In te l grhoiastic League will hold its twentieth an­ nie: council meeting et 2 pm. Sunday sn the Texas Room rf the Commodore P e rry Ho*<• Councilmen are polling their ron- stituents 'his month to dc‘ermine what new business needs *o lie ccm sidered Opinions on business pend­ ing since last year a.so are being sought. A le g islato r subcommittee has rev nm mended r e v i s i o n of the League s constitution to md de rules dealing w i’ h scholastic r# quirements for eligibility The council also vs ii con .de r a s enc* that a tried on an e x p e l mental two years ago be react! recommendation c o n t e s t basis va ted Fred Covin, count ii cha rmar fiorn Pittsburg. Tex , will preside W EST AUSTIN PHARMACY 1012 W . 6th 10% Discount on Rx to Students for 21 hr Prescrtj'tton Serine r ii I, GR 2-5477 Resides m aintaining his indlvi- d tai research program at the hns- psfal for the past xix rears, Dr. Griffin has been in chang# of Its biochem istry department and has handled teaching assignments He re also has directed biological search program * at the hospital and at th# B a y lo r U n iv e rsity Col­ age of Medicine Dr. G riffin will discontinue most if ti s adm inistrative work to con­ centrate on individual research He rn engaged in studying the mechan- s of cancer induction, the nature of cancerous growth, and the ori- g n and growth of m alignant tu­ mors, B e ’ .re joining the staff o ' the hospital which is part cf the Un; cr tv system, Dr G riffin taught it M ichigan State U n ive rsity, the t'm v e rs ity of California, and Stan­ ford U n ive rsity. Ho has written or collaborated ip, more than IOO scientific papers Museum Personnel To Convene Here The Texas M em orial Museum mil host the Texas Museum Coll- ere e No em ber 1^113 in Townes Ila!! Auditorium . Personnel from T* v c museums w ill discuss prob- 1’ imi and expansions of museums Tile program w ill include panel md group discussions, speeches. reports, and films. ITie conference will have a tea at th* E l is# bet Nev Museum and a dinner at the V illa Capri restaurant. fir Joseph Ft Sm iley, viee-prev dent and provost of the University ■ ill w elcom e the m u seu m repre- sentatives to the c a m p u s . STI ’D I N I 5 RHIM, t h is An b t a v o AV cise Complete Grease Job FREE WI TH in GAMON o r C. vs R X s sinrln r '"♦OO Tannin CHARTER BUSES Football Gam #* — P#treah -— Picnic* — etc. Air-conditioned—-Air Ride Rest Rooms Eq uipped Kerrville Bus Col Tipany, Inc. Phone GR 8-9361 “ F r i en d ly Service" DR. A. C L A R K G R IF F IN Law Group Forms Blood Bank Fund st .d er’ A tiny g.rl created the n e e d for a Ftar Association Blood Fund wh ch now has a credit of 18 pin's of blood with the Aus­ tin Blood Bank Ja n F »rro J daughter of 'orm er law student * rn C arroll, needed blood last year when she was d;s- rovered to tie a victim of leuke­ Almost 40 pints of blood mia w ere dona'ed last year, most of it going to Ja n ("arroll The 11 nod fund s available to any law student, his wife or chil­ dren who ir ght need blood. I ' g M a li Flews pr esident of the U n ive rsity Sr loo; of Law B a r As- scv it rn said • We want to use #\ery n-< -s • ' publication to in­ form law students of the .Student B a r A ociatjon Blood Fund so that t|i#\ may • -k# full advantage of this service,*' According to D -ta tile School of I .aw pub' i at ion. a new blood fund drive to x:gn up donors will srvan be started in the main corri­ dor of Townes Flail. Social Scientist to Talk On Professional Schools f R , i oh W Tv >r w ill discuss Th# Place n r the Professional the University ' Tues­ ;n in Townes Flail, School day at. 8 p m Dr Ty cr ss executive director of the ('enter 'or Advanced Study of the Boh a: oral Sciences in Stan- 'ord, Calif Ho w i l l g i v e the kc- not* speech d iring a two-day observance of the tenth anniver­ sary of the U n ive rsity s Graduate School of Social Work. Goodyear Shoe Shop • Expert Sho* Repair • Modern fq ,'preen* • Key* D plicated WSH* You Watch 405 W . 23rd Street Mate Beats Mate During Debate Ma< k and V.rginia Kidd mar­ ried U T Juniors won honors Sat­ urday for arguing with e a c h other. This was no ordinary argument, however, but an e .rn.nation round of the B e lla ire ntercoheguate de bate tournament in Houston Af ter defeating Virginia and her part­ ner, I.inda Bieker, M ack and R a n ­ dy Ellio tt went on to win third place in tile tournament John I-ee a so made the elimint ’ ion rounds Out of the five U T teams participating, three got past the prelim inaries, Bob C ra ft and The debate tem s. sponsored bv the TCL' Rex W e ir, w ill attend tournament th s weekend. n O o •YJ• n o 0 o u 0 n o0 o • a o0 o u• o o• o a 0 o o• o TI • o o • o •o• a o0 o • William Mathis Rites Observed Funeral services were held Mon­ day for William L, Mathis He had worked for the U n ive rsity for the past 13 years as custodian a* C P. Hall and the Journalism Building. He lived at 202 West Spring Drive. West I-ake Hills. Harrison Mathews, minister of the University Church of Christ, officiated at the ceremony a* the Weed-Cor'.ey Funeral Home Bur­ ial was In Capital Memorial G ar­ dens. Active pallbearers were C O Bebee, L. F, FrymlTe. Ut Col. J. D Halton, Sam KieschBlck Louis R a n d a l l , Dr. Dewitt Reddick. Charles Schlemmer, and H. F. Teague. Honorary pallbearers were f>»o Rlackstock. Ernest Hamburger, T. D. Hipp. E, W J a c k in , Raymond Lindahl. Col. T. D Mitchell, Bob Phillips, and R H Porter Mr. Mathis is survived by his and several metes and wife nephews Meant Foundation Announces Awards A program of fellowship awards and grants totaling $29 800 design­ ed to encourage journalism edu­ cation In th# United State* has been announced by The William Randolph Hearst Foundation. Developed in co-operation with the A m e r i c a n Association of Schools and Departments of Jou r­ nalism, the grants and fellowships will go to the best of college jour­ nalists from 45 US colleges and universities accredited by the As­ sociation. The University of Texas School of Journalism is one of the ac­ credited schools and Is eligible to participate in th# program. Competitions for the awards will begin November I and end April 30, 1901. Each month a special phase of journalism such as news, feature, editorial, and sports w rit­ ing will be emphasized A $100 fel­ lowship will be awarded to th# student whose work is adjudged hest In each national monthly w rit­ ing competition Entrants will ac- cumulate points to be computed on a six-month basis. At the end of the six months competitions, fellowships ranging from $500 to $2,000 will be awarded to the IO individual student* hav­ ing the highest number of points and the best overall performance Grants like amounts will b# made to the schools th# winning students represent. in The University School of Journal­ ism will enter stories published in journalism The Daily Texan bv majors, A committee xxiii be ap­ pointed by the .journalism faculty to select the entrants Additional a w a r d s of $3,000. $2,000, and $1 OOO will he made to the three journalism schools whose students give the best collective performance t h r o u g h the six mon'hs’ period. Horn tooting won no honors for either Kenedy or Nixon at the re- rent Rand Day festivities Yet both schools did make a good showing Nuclear Expert To Speak Here D r William G. Pollard, exect> tive director of the Oak R I d g • Institute of Nuclear Studies, will speak Wednesday at 7 :30 p.m. in the Texas Union Auditorium, th* Union Speakers Committee ha* announced. His topic will be “ The Language lecture of a scientific of life , general interest. The Oak Ridge Institute is a non­ profit corporation of 77 southern universities operating under con­ tract with the U S Atomic Energy Commission. Dr. Pollard holds a RA degree from he University of Tennessee. a PhD in physics from Rice, and an honorary DSe from the Uni­ versity of from Ripon and Kalamazoo. Hp also has honorary degrees from Ho­ bart and Grinnell Colleges and an honorary professorship of physics at th# University of Tennessee. the South and Dr. Pollard is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Ni, Phi Kap­ pa Phi and an honorary member of Sigma Pi Sigma. A n d • C O ® O P ® C O # O P # C O # O P # C O ® O P ® C O ® O P ® C O ® O P ® C O ® O P ® C O ® O P ® C O # O P ® C O « O • O O a O• AL O• o o • I'm Giving M y Brother a Parker Pardner S e t " A Parker Pardner set— the Parker T-Batt Jo tter Pen and Parker W riteline Pencil— it an ideal Christmas gift for any member of the family. The set makes anyone alway* ready to write, with either pen or pencil. The Parker T-Ball Jo tte r pen, with Diamond dust fused into the point, is guaranteed for a full year of skip-proof writing. Choic* of five colors. 0.o 3 o• a. o a 0 1 1 0 Watches Need the tops in repairs Work Dona in Our Own Shoo! FREE ESTIMATES %fill M in e tto M n On Th# Drag 2268 Guadalupe P A R K E R " P A R D N E R S S E T * ^ 9 5 F,.*. Pa Wmston-Sa'*m N r M * *> N Y.: N o r * Andover. M e 0~afta, M b Lm * Rock, Kansas Cit 0 * U U , • « rq R»s*arcti C ant*' bio Am tarn [.eerie Otitributioa wntar* rn 32 cit is mo m il* alio* neacq.ar;»rj ip 16 hum Cr nr,bu*. Obi# G U - j C ' Mr. h P» r '» ‘m lie an® t a r t rat **aoquart*rt. 195 Broad*!/. Ka* York 7. U . t, Crrpcrat.cn. S *«. ». I . Z&fa, a p 0r the cool, fresh so ft­ ness in Salem’s smoke is the very essence of springtim e. This m ost refreshing cigarette of all is made even more so by Salem's special High Porosity paper th a t “air-softens” the smoke. You'll be delighted with Salem's springtim e freshness ~ its rich, tobacco taste. S m o k e refreshed * . . s m o k e S a le m ! • menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • modern filter, too Editorial Reading: Election Re-Hash See Page 2 T h e d a I H t T e x a n uFlr$t Co liege Daily In the South' Weather: Fair, M ild High 78, Low 43 Vol. 60 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER I, I960 Six Pages Today No. 57 Students Buy C a n d l e s Texas Union Repairs To Hex Baylor Bears W ill C o stS1000-S15 0 0 Minister Charges UN With Secrecy About Belgian Acts Estim ates of the repair costs for the damage done to the and caved them in. T ex a s Union by the rains Friday n ig h t ranged from than $1,000 to about $1,500, not including labor. B y M IL T O N B E S S E R _ ______ _______ U N IT E D N A T IO N S , N .Y . if) work done by 50-100 student betw een 12 F rid ay n igh t and 6 T he most. dam age w a s done to th e bow ling lanes. E ig h t Saturday m orning. Including A PO ’s and tw o SM U students, buckets, and tow els to c a n n o t * * used now, and the other e ig h t “are not in top this group used mops, sq u eegee Th* Soviet U n ^ d e m a n d e d Mon- day an im m ediate report from U N \ con d ition,” said John McGieger, m an ager o f the gam es area, remove w a te r from the lanes. “I'm an ex -A g g ie,” com m ented McGeiger, “and I knew S ecreta ry - G eneral D ag H a m m a r-! skjoid on how the U N command Feet up the aisle, but th e w ater w a s o u t b y 5:30 S a tu rd a y Aggies could work, but I had no idea th at U n iv ersity o f is coping w ith alleged effort* of j m orning and there is no evidence o f th e tile buckling yet, Texas stu d en ts would com e to som eone’s rescu e like this. Belg ium a rm y officer* to bring said J itter Nolen, d irector of the T e x a s Union. T he carpet in the U nion A uditorium w a s wet a b ou t six It was m arvelous.” less Both M cG ieger and N olen expressed appreciation of th e An enthusiastic Texas booster about economic and political chaos W ater collected inside the walls o f th e hat-check room About 2:30 a.m. som e stu d en ts were g ettin g tired. An Red candles by the score began burning doom for B a y lo r Monday night. Students purchased an untold number Monday at the two book­ stores on the D rag. Cheapskates unrolled their Christm as stockings for m any more nubs. The complete stock of six dozen candles at The U n iv e rsity Co-Op was exhausted by mid-afternoon. " W e 'll have more as soon as possible." C. W . Swenson, Co-Op manager, said, as he hurriedly put in an order for 12 dozen more. was turned down when he asked for IOO candles. At Hem phill's, candles were go­ ing at the rate of one e very seven minutes. A rush toward the end of the week is anticipated. Ttvo different type candles in t h r e e different sizes have been stocked. fortune In 1041 a teller pre­ scribed the red candles to cure an 18-year Aggie victo ry streak in K y l e over lon ghorns Field. Up lighted the candles and down melted the Aggies, 23-0. the S M U tested the m agic spell in (The 1030 and was subdued. 23-20. Mustangs were rated No. I •. B a y ­ lor found the potion too powerful to conquer in 1053 and fell, 21-20. (The Rears were ranked No. 3>. And. guess what, i f s the week of Halloween* Call Issued to U g ly M en To Meet in A P O Office All potential Ugliest Men on campus will meet at 5 p m . Tues­ day to go over rules for U T 's crookedest election and to draw tor places on the hallot. To have his name placed on the ballot, a candidate must en­ ter before Tuesday's meeting at the Alpha Phi Omega office in Texas Union 207. Write-in candi­ dates m ay be entered later. in the Congo. V a le rian A. Zorin. Soviet deputy foreign m inister, accused the U N secretary - general of Imposing a curtain of secrecy on "su bversive activities of B e lg ia n agents" in th* A frican republic. Zorin submitted th# request for a H am m arskjold report to Am bas­ sador Fre d e ric k K . Boland of Ire ­ land, president of the G eneral As­ sembly. There w as no d irect reply from H am m arskjold to Zorin. But the in answer secretary-general said to a somewhat sim ila r request from Polish Am bassador Bohdan Lewandowski, current president of the Security Council, that a new report would he a vailab le about the middle of the week. " Y o u r inquiry corroborates m y own feeling that rim e is ripe for submission to the S ecu rity Council of a new report, now that a stage the Congo has been reached when some m eaningful inform a­ tion can he made a v a ila b le ," H a m ­ m arskjold said. in His comment coincided with re­ ports from the Congo that three Belgians and a white Rhodesian had been arrested on charges of masterminding a plot to plunge K a sa i Provin ce into civil war. Ticket Deadline Set Wednesday The deadline Is Wednesday for m ail applications to obtain ticket® through th* Cotton Bowl Associa­ tion for the 1961 Cotton Row I game Applications for the general pub­ lic must he postmarked by m id­ night Wednesday. U n ive rsity of Texas students will ive considered general puhlir. ac­ ticket cording to Al Lundstedt, sales m anager, unless the l/vng- horns defy present odds and slip info the host team position. Applications for tickets should b* mailed to the Cotton Rowl Athletic In- Association, P O Box 7185, The price of tickets is 55.50 each and a 25-cent m ailing fee should ive added ticket order. Cheeks or money orders must a c­ company all applications. to each No lim it has been set on the number of tickets that may he ordered A draw ing w ill he held to determine the allocation of the 25 ODO available tickets. Tickets w ill he mailed out and unfilled applications and checks will be returned to the senders shortly after T'ecem ber 1. com- wood Station D allas 9 Photo by Collum W e're A-Coming, W aco Red candles, spelling out the doom that lies rn W a c o Saturd ay for the Baylor Be©rs, I abt ud th® vv ndows of campus residences M o n ­ d a y a fter a day c f besieging Drag merchant-,. De'*a U r r- !|~>n F ra ­ te rn ity was the firs* campus o rq a r ration to have a ’ light in every w indow ," as the Longhorns put the hee en the Bap* sh. Briefs... From the Wire By the Associated Press Castro Limits Refugees B y Extending Blacklist H A V A N A —Fidel Castro's cnvern over Cubans seeking to Its eon- ment Monday tightened flee trol th i t r o u b l e d island by extending Its blacklist of those banned from seeking refuge abroad. Robbery Attempt Reported by Coed A U n ive rsity coed got rid of a would-be robber Monday n i g h t when she showed him she had only six cents in her purse, A. R. Hamilton, chief U niversity traffic and security officer, said. girl was sitting alone In her locked parked ca r at Twenty-sev- U n iversity A\enue at anr^ Informed sources said the Texan to Explore SA Committees list now includes m any types of pro­ fessional men needed in Castro s planned economy engineers, pe­ the student gov- troleum specialists, a I I govern- ment employes and Cuban execu- em inent committees w ill be #x- tives of the m any newly national- plained r ic h week on the editorial in a ized U S and Cuban businesses. the Activities of page of The D a ily Texan, new column called G a v e l," starting today. "Round I r a n C h e e r s N e w H ei r 8.40 p m when a y o u n g man rapped on the window and asked for directions. She rolled the w in­ dow part-way down so he could hear. W hile she looked on a map in for directions, through the window and unlocked the door. reached he After forcing his w ay Into the car, he pulled a knife on thp girl and asked her for money. W h e n she showed him that she had none, he left. T h e a tt e m p te d r o b b e r y w a s the third in a series which U n iversity p o l i c e believe havp hem m u te d b y the s a m e person Theft of 3 Billfolds Reported at DZ House fi 15 p m Three billfolds, with a total of aliout $30, w ere taken Monday be­ tween 5:45 and from the second story of the Delta Zeta house at 2315 Nueces. in Residents w ere the dining room when the burglary occurred. Tile three rooms which w e r e robbed were w idely separated. An insight into student govern­ ment affairs and a progress report on activities w ill be provided by the Students' Association P u b l i c Relations Committee. Today, on Page 2. read about the general functions of e a c h com mittee and the role each plays in the lives of tile students. Campus Chest Setting Sail T E H R A N , I r a n — Q u e e n C a n t il D .lia M o n d a y p re s e n te d S h a h M n hammed R e m T a b le t i h is fir s t so n and th e re w a s w ild r e jo ic in g Ir a n . M o s le m s tre e t th ro u g h o u t c r o w d s c h e e re d s h o u te d : “ It s a b o y ! fin d is g r e a t . " T o lle r h a d to use fir e h o ses to c o n tro l a n d th e m . Nixon Berates Kennedy N E W A R K , N . J . — V ice-Presi­ dent R ich ard M Nixon said M on­ day night Senator John F. K e n ­ nedy had shown "su ch ignorance of simple C'-onomics as to disqual­ ify him to im president." + it Archbishop to See Pope L O N D O N — T h e \ re h ld s h o p of C a n t e r b u r y w ill v is it P o p e Jo h n X X I I I at the V a t i c a n next m o n th . It w ill tie the fir s t su c h m e e tin g s in c e the ( h u n h of E n g la n d sp lit fro m R o m e fo u r c e n tu r ie s a g o . * L B J Raps ‘C a tty ’ Nixon S P R I N G F I E L D , Mo. - Senator Johnson struck hard at lo n d o n R V a e-Pn sident R ich ard M. Nixon in two western M issouri appear­ a n c e s Monday, r a i l i n g him a "dangerous m a n " and describing him as "ju m p in g around like a cat on a hot tin roof " it R u s s i a O p p o s e s G r o w t h I M I L D N \ H O N S , n . \ — A I N S e c u r it y d r iv e to e x p a n d th e < n u m d l am t E c o n o m ic am t S o c ia l < m in ed w a s la u n c h e d 't o n I nion q u ic k ly »lav . T ile S o v ie t s e r v e d n o tice the figh t m o v e u n le s s R e d C h tn a Is s e a te d . I it w ill the it SAN A N T O N IO M edical School N eed ed ? The executive sc, etary of the Texas Medical .legation su d Monday a T M A A r < in1 mitts# is studying tile nerd foi * fifth m edical school rn Texas, i Cam pus C h est boosters H a rv e y Klein, Bart M er' her ann Mark Pauli finish the ground work for th© C d rain o drive by distributing info* oaf e* to P i w Sbim pp. The drive off ' a / Of c i | v tc *a rd th# goal of $ 10 'YlQ set lj th# w em p ^ i C hest C om m ittee. Ticket* I / c. a-® alrea d y on sal# for M id n ig h t Lac# to he shown Thursday through Sunday at the Para- mount T hea'er. Proc ce is o f tickers sold on cam- • a a.,hoed pus w C h a ste *pa aes wi be held Frid ay r g - t , on to the or .* . A *a cot . . —Photo far Cauma Chest Boosters Busy A P O put in some phone calls, said Nolen, and 20 m inutes later 20 or 30 more A PO s cam e to help. " I f the w ater had. been allowed to stand even two o r three hours, the damage would lik e ly have been permanent. Most of it is tem porary n o w ." he added Be cau se of the work done, the pits w ere saved." The finish on the approaches to the lanes w a s ruined by eight w ater and the mops. M a n y of the boards w ere w arped. F a n s have been plared on lanes l l , 12, 14, and 15 to speed the re ­ drying process. T em p o ra ry pairs w ill run around 5200, M c G e ig ­ e r estimated. T w o coats of finish w ill be put on the approaches and three on the e n tire lanes. After closing hours thi* week, th* tem perature in the basement w ill he set from 50 to 75 degrees. A ll IR lanes m a y be closed F r id a y and Saturday. T e m p o ra ry rep air* w i l l suffice until Thanksgiving, when the eight lanes probably w ill be resurfaced. The damage w*as caused when w ater from the s t o r m drain* backed up to the northeast terrace and went tn the front door. Th# two pumps w ere not able to take care of the w a te r and it ran across a beam above the lanes and seeped in through the ceiling, Intram urals and physical educa­ tion classes w ill continue a* usual. M r. M cG eiger asks that repre­ sentatives leagues contact him about rescheduling games for thi* week. from it * Bow ling S h o w Cancelled Checking Check Room Damage H e re is oc® result o f th© Tet and meta! prints w ill b« fea- at 52.150, were commissioned for hired in the modernistic disp lay The T exas Union ("harm Com ­ the 75th Observance of U niversity mittee w ill present a style show operation in 1958. C C. N o l e n , featuring Miss Wool of T e x a s thp Union director, has hought Joan W illia m s of San Angelo, and they will original works so that rem ain in one group, here at, the the national Miss M ohair, Sunda Callan, at 4 30 p m . Wednesday U niversity. in the J u n i o r Ballroom . W a rd ­ robes of Miss Wool and M iss Me- . , , P rin ts of "T h e Cam pus in Art. 40 Acres F o lio " are being sold in the Art G a lle ry. Single unframed ^ ,lr * 111 ^ modeled by them and of rn# C h arm Corm prints m av h e ‘bought for 75 rents 10 m em bers CorIp>’« ‘^ a ir m a n of or 5125 The S t u d e n t Edition J u l ’* Invited Portfolio costs 54; the deluxe E d i­ tion, $10 Single fram ed prints are the c o m m i t t e e , has U n ive rsity coed* to attend. ,, . , . 4. Because A lleys Dam aged th# Dick Weber, m em ber of Bowling Promotion Staff of Am eri­ The student painting* including can Machine Sr Foundry Company, "M o rn in g ,'‘ by R o d B u c k n a ll; ..Zac •• bv w a lle Conoly• "Land- who was scheduled to appear at — - scape," by T e rry M orrow ; "Ah- the Union W ednesday and Thurs- straction," by Jam es Olson; "Bot- day for a demonstration, has can­ tle. Table, Chairs, and F r u it . " by i celled th* appearance. This was Bill S tew a rt; " F ie ld " and "N ig h t done after W eber was advised of Im ndsrape," by C arl t'm la u f; and the condition of the lanes by Jit- "A bstraction " by Fred Whitehead I ten Nolen. --- ’ Election Results Receive Approval S h i v e r s Blasts P l a t f o r m O K L A H O M A C I T V n a — F o r t n e r P e n m e r a t i e G o v e r n o r A ll a n Sh iv e rs of T e x a s s a id M o n d a y his p a r t y h as a S o c i a li s t ic p la t fo r m a n d a c a n d id a t e w ith o u t th e ex po H o n e * needed I m* p re s id e n t to of ih»» I n it e<1 S t a t e s . th# Oak R id g e W illia m G. Pollard. Ex e cu tive In D irector of st.dute of Nuclear Studies, util speak on "T h e l anguage of L ife ," at 7.30 p m . Wednesday the Union Auditorium. Students with an A u d ito rs receipt w ill He ad- General E le c tio n held Wednesday mitted rent adrm*sion without a receipt The Electio n Commission com ­ posed of D a vid Couch, Ja n e t Gal- leaner, and E d Cowan, certified in the F a ll the candidates elected there w ill h e a 35 a nd subm itted the results to the student Court. for students free In# in com m ittee reported t h a t wpi> 3 218 votes cast. The M ovies to la* show- at the Union • V this week include B u s ." Tuesday; "A sk A n y G irl. T h u r s d a y , and "T o H ell and R a c k ." during the weekend The special showing times are 3 and 7 p m , Tuesday and Thursday. The j re iU lU w ere as f o l lo w j Graduate School ( I seat! • K eith ( ’( *x College of Education <1 seat) • Yvonn# P r u e Fine Arts ii scati Balloons c a rryin g posters de­ picting Campus Chest activities w ill b# launched F r id a y at noon to send th* fund-raising d rive high into th* air. Beth Rla/ck and Bu tc h Schecter, co-cha.rmen of tile* Cam pus Chest com m ittee, will rut the strings se­ curing the balloons on th# W e s t M all. to T icket* * Midnight L a i e , " s'a rrin g R e v Harrison, Doris Day, and John G avin, arc a lread y on sale in dorms co-ops, and frate r­ nity and sorority houses. Th# movie will he shown Novem ber 3-10 af the Param ount Theater. Tickets will he sold on campus T hursday the Spook*. F r id a y by and ( 'hest c apades, a talent s h o w including selection* of nine arbs from "South P a c ific ," w ill be held a Mer |>cp ra lly F r id a y ev e­ ning the O ther fund raising a ctivities will Include Dimes Day and an auction Mondav and the U g ly Man Con­ test Novem ber 8-10. Mums were sold last week for Dad s D ay as part of the drive Campus Chest this y e a r w ill fea­ ture " M r . C hesty," a large figure, tm feet tall. "pushing a chest up Iv* marked the M all which w ill to s h o w field like a progress of the As t ie drive "M r . amount collected O v e s ty " will be moved c!«'sed to ID# Tow er, Ut* $10,000 m ar le­ increases football Young Democrats G ive $200 to Austin Group A $200 check wa* presented Mon­ day afternoon by the U n iversity of T exas Young Dem ocrats to the T ra v is County Dem ocratic Head­ quarters by Martin G a rcia presi­ dent of the University group M i k e le v i, chairm an of the T ra v is County Dem ocratic Head­ quarters, was recipient of the do­ nation. The presentation w as au­ thorized F rid a y at a meeting of the Ex e cu tiv e Committee of the Young Democrats, D r. Jo h n Silber, associate pro­ fessor of philosophy, w as n * w sponsor the organization at for the m eeting. A ir Force to In terview For O fficer Training , , » A .- team of Air r o r -e o f f i c e r s , e from San Antonio and Austin will be in the Texas Union Wednesday through F rid a y to interview men and wom en interested in th# A ir Fore# O fficer Training P ro g ra m • • M Business Administration (2 seat®' 4 41 # George R am se y Ten Most Deadline Set at Noon Today lh # deadline is almost here for Texas worn en with beauty, brains, personably poise, and three do!- D s to register for the Ten Mast Beautiful contest, Noon today is the final hour. There w ill be a meeting of con­ testants in Journalism Building 307 at I p m . 1 v rrsi who ti pl mary* probation "A ny woman enrolled in the Uni- is not on scholastic is elig­ says I/catherwood, who handle.® r th# event * pen si 1 I bv Theta S em * Phi. women s tour- ible to enter the contest," Betty ’ ’ ' \ Students ^ ‘?-v *om»i-finaltsfs will Ive chosen w ill in Th# interested must have Undy Texan. A group of 25 f.nal- Selected from these n am es announced Wednesday ' r° in a J pntl <' v | at least a bachelor * degree They 1S,S w 1 m ay a p p ly 135 d a y s prior to grad- ! uation. A d d it io n a l will he m a d e Shy a well-known Hollywood star. information m ay be Th# names and pictures of the obtained from the A ir Fo rce Re- Ten M is t Beautiful will be an- rruitm g Off ic# at. 124 W e st Sixth nounced in a special edition of the \ Texans th# week belar* Christm as Final selections t Street. • Fred P att • Daniel R u b . - Engineering (2 scats) • Curl A N ontw ich • R< ^er L. Pie r. # • A lim B Schm itt L a w *1 seat 1 • Steve Oaks • J . J H ill • B ill Sunshine P ha rm a cy ( I seat* • # # M Arts & Sciences <4 seats) • I • # Jan n W hitehead # Bonnie B r y a n • • I Amendment One A m e n d m e n t T u n For A gainst For Against 339 241 245 log 164 141 82 55 123 IO 4 5 1071 1034 879 833 819 750 497 2779 489 Erstwhile S p o o k s M e e t G u m d r o p s C o m i n g a n d G o i n g Hill M i R e y H olds, jo u r n a lis m la it s u p e r v is o r , au d h is m o t h e r w e re g la d to se # Iii# sieg e o f h o b g o b lin s M o n d a y y o u th fu l night b e c a u s e they could g e t rid of s o m e o ld hom e m a d # g u m d ro p c o o k ie s that no o n # (teem ed to w a n t. th e D u n k in g they d to g e t lik e In on fu n . B i l l and h i* mother d re s s e d up In s p o o k o u tfits a n d w e n t t r ic k o r t r e a t ­ ing n e x t d o o r. Not re c o g n iz in g t h e i r d is ­ ' I r s . W i l l g u ised n e ig h b o rs , t i iv ens r e c e iv e d th e m w ith a g e n e ro u s h e lp in g of g u m d ro p ro o k ie s . --- - , J !--- f Just One More Poll ’Round - the O u r side's w inning, an d tho ra ce is m ig h ty clo se— t h a t ’s w h a t th e political polls h a v e been saying. 'And here he is, the candidate headed for the big-time . . - , I 1 v ~ \ ? i V V , V , ; ■ . I J \ I S h . % b t V t s ■ •PTY -rn/' J .-? , Gavel to keep Student g o v e r n m e n t is m a k i n g a s tu d e n t n e w effort body of the U n iv e r s ity In fo rm e d as to its goings, c o m in g s a n d h a p ­ penin gs the TTic P u b lic Relatio n* C o m m i t t e e of the S t u d e n t s’ A s s o c ia tio n is pre­ senting to the stu d e n ts a w e e k l y c olu m n n The D aily T e x a n on th* a c t iv i ti e s of s tu d e n t g o v e r n m e n t c o m m i t t e e s . the v a r io u s E xp la n a tio n s of and " i n s i g h t ’* into s tu d e n t a ffa irs w ill be the pri­ m a r y role of the c o lu m n . A ♦ T he C a m p u s f l i e s t r o m m itte © sp o n s o rs the m a j o r it y c h a r i t y d riv e on c a m p u s . T he go a l to tie r a is e d this y e a r is $10,000. Tho C a m p u s C h es t D r i v e con­ sists o f C h e s t c a p a d e s . D i m e s D a y , U gly M a n and M iss C a m p u s Chpst c o n t e s t s and m a n y o t h e r a c t iv i ­ ties. ■* ★ 'Hie U a m p u * S u r v e y Cou ncil po!!* st u d e n t opin ion on a v a r i e t y of su b ­ j e c t s to aid the w ork of o t h e r c o m ­ m i t t e e s and to aid the a d m i n i s t r a ­ tion. to w h ic h T h e G rievan ce C om m ittee Is a g r o u p th e stu d e n t can b ring h is p r o b le m s to get the m o st d i r e c t a c t io n from s tu d e n t g o v e r n ­ m e n t. ♦ T ile fin d s h o u sin g ★ International C om m ission c o o r d i n a t e s the a c t iv it ie s of foreign s t u d e n t s on c a m p u s The c o m m i s ­ for n e w ly ar­ sion from o th e r c o u n ­ r iv e d t ries, a r r a n g e d for A m e r i c a n stu­ d e n t s to ta k e th e m h o m e for the h o l i d a y s and plan s a c o n f e r e n c e o f fo r e i g n stu d e n ts fr o m c o lle g e s all o v e r t h e state. stu d e n t s + + T h e N ational Student A ssociation C om m ittee and the T ex a s In ter­ c o lle g ia te S t u d e n t A ssociation the U n iv e r sity c o m m i t t e e others in c a m p u s the s ta te and nation. thr ou gh ou t ke e p c o n ta c t w ith is A lthough TISA m e m b e r s h i p holds little v a l u e for the U n iv e r s i t y be­ c a u s e oth e r m e m b e r sc h o o ls are and h a v e very' d ifferent s m a l l p r o b l e m s . NSA to the U n iv e r sity . This c o m m i t t e e c o ­ o r d i n a t e s NSA p r o je cts and s e r v ­ i c e s w'ith the ne e ds of o th e r Stu­ d e n t G o v e r n m e n t c o m m i t t e e s . The c o m m i t t e e does not c o m e d ir e c tly u n d e r stu dent g o v e r n m e n t but is v e r y c l o s e l y c o n n e c te d with It. im p o r ta n t + + T ile E d u catio n al C l i m a t e C o m ­ m i t t e e is a n e w gro up d e s i g n e d to s t u d y the a c a d e m i e opp ortu n ities at th e U n iv e r s i ty Its m a j o r project Is stu dy p l a c e s for stu dents on c a m p u s . The r e s u lt s of the stu dy w ill be pub­ lis h e d la t e r to help s t u d e n t s m a k e b e t te r u s e o f their st u d y t im e . the v a r io u s to r e v i e w T h e G reat I s s u e s C o m m i t t e e im p o r t a n c e to b r in g s s p e a k e r s of the cur re n t c a m p u s t o p ic s and su b je cts of g e n e r a l In­ t e r e s t . to d i s c u s s Official Notices T h e o n e : f m e e \n m i n a t Ion t b s d o c t o r o f p h i l o s o p h y d e g r e e in K n c l i i h w i l l b e g i v e n in t w o p a r t s f o r I A 2 p m A l a r g e b l u e n e e d e d B e f o r e t w o - h o u r w r i t t e n e x a m i n a t i o n In E n g l i s h w i l l b e o f f e r e d b v t h e C o m ­ m i t t e e o n G r a d u a t e S t u d i e s in E n g l i s h F r i d a y , N o v e m ­ B u i l d i n g HO b o o k a n d p en b e r IS t h * e x a m i n a ­ w i l l b e t i o n t r a n s c r i p t o f co u rs < a a n d g r a d e s a n d a n A u s t i n a d d r e s t in E n g l i s h B u i l d i n g I el S a m ­ p l e c o n i e s o f t h e q u e s t i o n * a n d a n s w e r s f r o m m a v h e o b t a i n e d t h # g r a d u a t e M C r o w , E n g u s h a d v i s o r B u i l d i n g 23<> t h e D e p a r t m e n t o f E n g l i s h o f f i c e D r M o r s t u d e n t s m u s t l e a v e a n o t a n d r e a c h g i v e n a? f e e s m u s t t e U Will he . t e r s e ’ t h e d a t e o f II Tri # g r a d u a t e r e c o r d e x a m i n a t i o n 8 4S S a t u r d a y , N o v e m b e r 17 All a t e t h e In l a t e r t h a n a p t i t u d e a rn p l l e a t l o n s E d u c a t i o n a l T e s t i n g S e r v i n g o f f i c e P r i n c e t o n N e w 15 d n v s b e f o r e A p p l i c a t i o n h I a n k s a r e a v a i l a b l e In E n g l i s h B u i l d i n g 106 a n d In t h e T r s ' - l n g a n d C o u n s e l i n g C e n t e r V H a l l l o t , N o s t u d e n t w i l l h e a d m i t t e d t o c a n ­ t h e d o c t o r o f p h i l o s o p h y d i d a s d e g r e e In E n g l i s h u n t i l a c o p y o f h is s c o r e s In t h e g r a d u a t e r e c o r d e x a m i n ­ a t i o n a p t i t u d e t e s t h a s h e m r e c e i v e d b v t h e c h a i r m a n o f t h e C o m m i t t e e o n G r a d u a t e S t u d i e s D r E. C. M o » s n e r , E n g l i s h B u i l d i n g 216. tes t t h e f o r T h a t ’s a b o u t all t h e y ’ve been saying. So f a r n o th in g v e ry sign ificant has com e o u t of th e p le th o ra of polls ta k e n since the s u m m e r co n­ ventions. J u s t as one c a n d id a te is soothed by th e pub ­ lication of his p a r t y ’s poll r e a s s u rin g p e rc e n ta g e s in his favor, he is jolted back to th e jitte r s by th e figures w hich th e opposition releases. S om ehow m ost of to ah ow K e n ned y on t o p . L ikew ise, the R epublican s a m ­ plings give N ix on the l a rg e r half. the D e m o c ra tic polls seem As a c c u r a te as an y election fo reca stin g w e’ve seen h a s been t h e A P jest of th e w eek en d which showed “ K e n e d y ” w a y ah e a d of N ix o n — if rainfall to tals affect t h e political b a ro m e te r, t h a t is. I ^ s t week, th e news service re p o rte d , th e S outh T e x a s town of K enedy received 18 inches of rain to only 11 inches fo r the n e a r b y c o m m u n ity of Nixon. Bnf th o u g h th e A P pun a m u s e s us, it d o e s n ’t satisfy our desire to get a preview of th e presidential outcom e. N e ith e r do th e polls. F o r w e ’re especially in te re s te d in the ca m p u s angle of th e ca m p a ig n . In the last poll ta k e n in a cross-sec­ tion of s tu d en ts, Mr. Nixon .showed g re at popularity. H a s the ca m p a ig n ch a n g ed a n y of th a t feelin g0 We th in k it's abo u t tim e fo r a n o t h e r s tu d e n t poll. Besides h av in g s tu d en ts m a r k th e ir p references for th e ticket of th e ir choice, th e s tu d y might also ask for the “ v o t e r ’s” age and m a jor. It would be in te re s t­ ing to kno w w ith w hat g ro u p s th e can d id a tes have their major sup po rt. C am p us S u rv e y C o m m itte e of stu d e n t g o v e r n m e n t would be ju s t th e g ro u p to c o n d u c t such a poll. S tu ­ d e n ts from th e political fa ctio n s h e re on c a m p u s could b e a t th e i r fellow teasips out of th e bushes a n d th e coffee h ou ses and to th e polling places. A peek a t th e probable c a m p u s re tu r n s b efo re th e vo te s h a v e even been en st could he in terestin g. How a b o u t It— any body cu rious enough to find o u t? Tutoring Team Play W h a t T e x a s needs right now is to get its first and f o u r th t e a m s to g e th e r for som e plain old skull practice. And w e ’re n o t talking a b o u t football. On t h e scholastic g rid iro n all signs point to th e possibility t h a t such a co m b in a tio n m ight p ro d u c e a r e g u la r w in n e r in th e w a y of acad em ic excellence. W e’d say th at there needs to he a m eeting of minds betw een th e tw o D ean’s team s— the honor roll and the m arginal list. T h e ideal m edium fo r intellectual e x c h a n g e and ald to pass fro m one to th e o th e r, It seem s to us, is a U niv ersity tu to rin g service. Such a service, to provide scholastic aid free of c h a r g e to s tu d e n ts who w a n t a n d need it, would fill a definite need on the F o r t y Acres. L ast y e a r 1,391 atu d e n ts s o u g h t help fro m t h e S tu d e n t E m p lo y m e n t B u r e a u ’s t u t o r i n g service. The potential for beginning such an organization im enorm ous. We have alm ost innum erable organ iza­ tion s In w hich m em bership Is b a s e d on sch olastic ach ievem en t. Several of these honoraries, particularly th ose In special fields of stu d y, already offer tutoring services. F u r t h e r m o r e , th e le a r n in g h e lp s m ig h t b e o ffered t o a w id e r cro ss-sectio n of t h e s tu d e n t bo d y . W e ’re th e f r e s h m a n m e n ’s h o n o r a r y pleased f r a t e r n i t y , P h i E t a Sigm a, h a s ta k e n th e ball on th e e s t a b l i s h m e n t of such a s t u d e n t tu to r in g ag e n cy . to see t h a t If th ere w ere more stu d y tim e com m unication be­ tw een th e Phi Beta K a p p a s and the Sen B eta Pros, th ere m ight be more borderline students on the sunny side of 4‘C ” level. And t h a t , in o u r book, r a c k s up a w in n in g score a n y d ay . There Is So . . . On th is d a y a f t e r H allow een, w'e have b u t one thing t o say to d o u b te rs , skeptics, a n d bewildered little girls: Yes, V irg in ia . . . th e re IS a G re a t P u m p k in . T h e D a i m T ex a n Tuesday, N o v e m b e r I, I 9 6 0 Page 2 O p i n i o n s e x p r e s s e d rn 7 he I e xo n are those o f th e lid /to rs c r o f th e w r i t e r o f the article a n d n o t necessarily t h o \ e o f the U n i t e r s i t y a d m in is tr a tio n . T e x a n , a . ■ p u b i l l n N in A usti n T e x a s and h oli d ay pe riod* S e p t e m b e r l h routch M i b v A usti n. T e x a s it u d e n l n e w * r > a p c r o f T h * D n l v e r a l t v o f T e x * * and S a t u r d a y In A ug us t find niunthlv Inc. Sc <>nd c lass p os ta ge paid at rexa« S t u d e n t Dub! teat Iona. ex ept Mnndtr R s i l v e r e d In s i HSI T U I T I O N K A T I S A u s t i n ( t h r e e m o n t h s r n i m u n t t .......................... 7.V m o n t h ... a l e d ? L In A u s t i n to w n ........................................ ............................................ ........................................................................................................ $; qo m o n t h <3c mon th or at La tv. 107. (G R 2 2473), N e w c o n t r i b u t i o n s w i l l he a c c e p t e d b v te le p h o n e o r at R 2780). o f f i c e . J o u r n a l i s m B u i l d i n g jo.3 J02. T h e c i r c u l a t i o n o f f i c e t h e e d i t o r i a l o r a t o r ’,’. J p ■ r d t h e a d v e r t i s i n g o f f i c e is is J. B. 111. < G R 2 - ( G R 3 - 2 4 7 3 1 t h o N e w : I ’ E K M A N E N T S T A I F .................................................................. EDITOR m a n a g i n g e d i t o r .......................................... .................................................. .............. N e w * Editor Amusements Editor .................................................. C a m p u s Lift- E d i t o r ......................................................... .............................................................. Sports Editor Editorial Page E d i t o r ................................. JO EK HMASN . . . DON MYERS P a t Rust h . . . D a v e Helton Cynthia V o ilm r r .. C h a r l i e Sm ith J i m Hyatt Little Man On the Campus Bs B i b k l NIGH I h ill MIK DESK EHI r o il . Is mjp N evts E d I to Night R e p o s e r s C lei x l'r?> S T A F F I D R r i l l s ISSI E .............................................................. ................................................ SAKA Kl Ii KOI (.H S ................................................. .......................... C i r o l y n Coker, D a v id C r o s s l y , Martha S p en ce r * P aga n .u t. T o m m y Stu ck ey Boh L a c y , a n e. I add F ranklin , J o a n J a m e s , Ken E d m isto n ••• ED HORN ,V) nt A ’s Nitfht A i c N ‘bt i t A ad s Editor ...................................... J e rr y Sc a r b r ou gh m se m ar.ts Editor ...................................................... Su e B irk el ................................................................... K a r e n L e w is ’'-c .................................................................... Bill H am ilton L ‘f e Editor ................................................. N ella Skinner W ire I C h a rlie Sm ith J e r r y Conn ................................................. D o r o th y E av e s i i e i t y c a w a i t s r £u T Y O J C A M T W&AE y o l k CWH C 1 0 T H & 5 TO TH 16 p a n c £ — i f s f e a r * Y Fall Elections Generate Little Interest, Concern in te re st, g o v e r n m e n t e le c t i o n s r e g a r d l e s s o f s p a s m o d i c is flu r ries of that until a n e n d u rin g ly i n te r e ste d e le c t o r a t e a w a k e n s n either st u d e n t e le c t i o n s nor student g o v e r n m e n t their p o litic a l e s c a p e c an p e n it e n tia r y . from The cr im e com m itted Is failure* to e x c ite voters. The penalty is solitary confinem ent with ridicule. The rehabilitation suggested is to inoculate all with tile. possib ilities for rep resen tative student action. FAREWELL, FAREidEli.FAREljJEU.! THANK5 FOR EVERYTHING; By BETTYE SW ALES Editorial A ssistant E a c h s e m e s t e r a s m a l l , frantic, p e r h a p s e v e n fanatic corp o f stu­ dent* b e c o m e c o n c e r n e d and lost fratty. cut-throat, and un- In the e d u c a t i o n a l grind that is a student e le c tio n The rest o f th e 18,000 s n ic k e r fr o m their v a n t a g e point of a p a th y . T h e r e s e e m s to be po m e a n b e ­ t w e e n t h e s e two e x t r e m e s . One is in e it h e r e n g a g e d the n e w d e a l, or c o n v i n c e d student g o v e r n m e n t g iv e s h i m n o th in g but a r a w d e a l. in g e t t i n g C andidates cam paign on pitifully Im possible platform s, or with n o platform yet devised. T hey Just ca m p a ig n . It’s not w hat y o u ’re for, hut w ho's for you. It s not what you can do, hut what you prom ise. O ften the office is not a n end in Itself, a w a y to I m p le m e n t plans and i d e a s ; but r a ther it is a step­ ping sto n e to a position A fte r all. ‘' a s s e m b l y m a n ” looks p r e t ty good on o n e i job applicatio n. But still sadder Is the candidate who really has som ething to say, who really wants to do som ething for the student hotly. One of two things will happen to h im ; first, he will Im* defeated not knowing the “ It’s who's for you, not what you’re fo r” story; or second, he will Im* elected, hut only by a d if­ ferent "hard co re’* of w orkers. Richard Roe, student, still d o esn ’t g iv e a hoot. T he e n t i l e c a m p a i g n , w h e t h e r st a g e d by a su perficial p o litic o or a s i n c e r e c a ndid ate, r e s e m b l e s a N i n e t e e n th Century m e d i c i n e m a n show. T he c hief c o n c er n is selling the produ ct, who c a r e s if it c u r es the ills i f s su pposed to. T h e Hark­ er will he gone by the t i m e a n y o n e h a s d e c id e d for sure ♦ * to Y et, It would he unfair to eon- dem n all candidates with such a Judgem ent. Many p rom ise on!* what they can deliver, m any Bv# their platform s, manx do up even m ore. But they still have the en d less art list of qualification* germ ane to their candlrtac x tv at Is un less t h o want to risk n u M trf for office or Issues, to tak* ataxia, to m ake voter* think In m any Lh. ~s j r -e p olitical a t m o s p h e r e w h ic h forces rally r o e s r r r o ? . t • roe i s s u e l e s s c a m p a i g n i n g T he p r e v a l­ ent a ttitu d e of the futility and stu­ pidity of stu d e n t g o v e r n m e n t lim its c a n d i d a te s . After all, the m ain Idea is to get elected , lf one doesn't, It m atters little what you would have done In student governm ent office. S o m e w o u ld e x p lain this a p a th e ­ tic a t t i t u d e of the stu d e n t bod y by poin tin g to the e x is t in g o n e p a r ty s y s t e m . T h e y often g o one step f a rth er a n d put politics on a c o m ­ in d e p e n d e n ts b a tiv e l e v e l betw e en and G r e e k s . the election In one sen se the " c la ss stru ggle" definition is valid. The G reeks do dom inate the R epresentative party, and it m ade a virtual rle&n sw eep of last W ednesday, losing only one office, Fine Arts A ssem b lym an . But the Rep Party is m aking an effort to raise poli­ tics from the Independents versus frat rat ca teg o ry . It h a s e s t a b l i s h e d a U n iv e r s i t y Club for ind ividu a ls w h o e it h e r b e ­ long to no group or w h o s e g roup doe s not belong to the pa r ty. Al­ m o s t IOO h a v e joined the club. T his is o n ly a step to w a r d s th* Ideal g o a l of all c a m p a i g n i n g , to e le c t a r e p r e s e n t a tiv e g o v e r n m e n t . that until M a n y B M O C 's b e lie v e a n o th e r r e s p o n s ib le p a r ty is on the c a m p u s , e le c ti o n s woll not g e n e r a te a n y m o r e intelligen t c o n c e r n than t h e y do now. A responsible second party need not be an all Independent one. Just as the R ep resen tative Party broad­ ened Its scop e and benefited from the m erg er of the two, so a second party would he better for its bread­ th of m em bership. ♦ * Not q u it* 3 300 voted In the fall c a m p u s e .e c t io n or abou t 17 per c e n t of th o s e e.igib ie T w o ca n d i­ d a t e s , g r a d u a t e a s s e m b l y m a n , and • d u r a t i o n a s s e m b l y m a n , w e r e not la r g e s t e v e n corr od e r! the in w h ich sc h o o l A-*s and S c ie n c e s o v e r 7 OOO o n ly are s h o u t I IOO voted r eg iste re d , In O ne A Ar ^ r m e w as de c id ed by 13 total w a s than J o e » L aurin C i r n e , the sixth the ra'-e, tr ailed by v r # * B o r n e Br, an s J - r that m uch more P o * * r - ' , r . U ' , e or. > about ”0 votes. r tx-* Mfrtarr es ex en fro lh# results are en close, truism "every vote counts" greater m eaning, 'E g a n " N est tim# I i i vote x * a ndldat# so things w on’t the should Hut In the spring, though sot# alure the president- * Is up for grabs. Just as ►to** I,, vote a* m ark " x ’s ” '<* Rot. flood * to '4 / t a t thing about student Job Opportunities * ' - ’.*rv;«w Bachelor* Mas- in Geology for Gee » ........... - rstlon Exploitation and ' -ember 2-3 In Engineering “ * > < *-7 t - . ut '■>•».•)* v * • '■ r a a r # f o r management Poaltion* o p e n f o r s t o r e m a n a g e m e n t Make t r a i n e e # a p p o i n t m e n t t h # I n t e r v i e w * S t u d e n t E m p l o y m e n t B u r e a u . P A a r c # Hall IDS. f or i n t * r - i * ' * o ne w i l l h a v e a r e p r e a e n t a - « t.pu* T h u r s d a y . N o v e m b e r * > * r v ! # w g r a d u a t i n g » e n ! o r * w i t h » n I . h e r * ! a r t * o r p h \ i l e a l e d u - H r p o a l t i o n * a* S a l e # R e p r e - f o r I n t e r v i e w # e s A p p o i n t m e n t * ■« m a d e In t h e S t u d e n t E m p l o y * t o I n t e r v i e w r • ' t B u r e a u . P e a r c # H a l l IO*. L o c a t i o n w i l l • J e d e r l # L a h o r a t o r l e * w i l l h a v e Mr. . a m R C u r r i e o n c a n t p u a T h u r a - f o r t o N o v e m b e r 3 .'■rr.areutlcal n l r i d* C d- f n l t e l v b e T e x t * S t a r t i n g a a l a r v o f S IV ) p l u a c a r e x p e n a e # , a n d b o n u * . G r a d u a t i n g a e n l o r a f r o m a n y R a i d w i t h - I n t e r v i e w m a v m a k e a p p o i n t ­ Inn » t u d e n t m e n t * E m p l o y m e n t in B u r e a u P e a r c # H a l l 106. • N a t i o n a l L i f e a n d A c c i d e n t I n s u r a n c e C o m p a n y w i l l h a v e r e p r e s e n t a t i v e * o n In ­ c a to p u s T u e a d a v N o v e m b e r I s e n i o r * O p e n i n g s t e r v i e w g r a d u a t i n g a r e f o r m a n a g e m e n t t r a i n i n g c o u r s e P r o b a b l e io c . i t I o n w o u l d b e In A u s t i n v i c i n i t y I n t e r e s t e d * t u d e n t * m a v m a k e a p ­ p o i n t m e n t * t h e S t u d e n t E m p l o y ­ m e n t B u r e a u . P e a r c # H a l l 106. s e l l i n g a n d u n d e r w r i t i n g t h e f u r t o in • A i par is w i l l be o n r e p r e s e n t a t i v e o f VV T . G r a n t ' i m p u i T y i e a d a y , O N o v e m b e r I l o i n t e r v i e w g r a d u a t e s in l i b e r a l ax ta or bu* mass admlxuatxauoo. l l t o a n d f e m a l e F o l e y • o f H o u l t o n w i l l b e o n c a m p u # i n t e r v i e w W * d n e * d a v . N o v e m b e r 2 p r o * D « c U v e g r a d u a t e * f o r po* ’.Io n* In t h e i r J u n i o r E x e c u t i v e T r a i n i n g P r o ­ g r a m T h e 1' w i n t a l k t o s t u d e n t * w i t h m a j o r # In h o r n # l i b e r a l a r t s P l a n b u s i n e * * e c o n o m i c # a d m i n s t r a ­ i n t e r e s t In r e t a i l i n g t i o n o r w i t h a n y I n t e r e s t e d m a l e s t u d e n t # o r • h o u l d m a k e a p p o i n t m e n t * In t h e S t u ­ d e n t E m p l o y m e n t B u r e a u . P e a r c # H a l l 106. • N e w E n g l a n d M u t u a l L i f e I n a u r a n c # C o m p a n y w i l l h a v a a r e p r e * e n t a t i v # o n c a m p u a W e d n e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 2, t o I n t e r v i e w g r a d u a t e * f o r p o r t i o n * in t h a S a l e * M a n a g e m e n t P r o g r a m L o c a t i o n f o r w o u l d b e I n t e r v i e w * m a v be m a d e t h e S t u ­ d e n t E m p l o y m e n t B u r e a u . P e a r c e H a l l 106 . in D a l l a * A p p o i n t m e n t * in • I n # S t u d e n t * e n r o l l e d In T h e U m v e r * l t y o f T e x a s w h o a t t e n d e d a n o t h e r e o f - 1960 l e g e o r u n i v e r s i t y d u r i n g s u m m e r s e s s i o n h a v e b e e n n o t i f i e d lf t h e i r s u m m e r r e c o r d ha# b e e n r e c e i v e d b v t h e R e g i s t r a r s O f f l e An.- s t u d e n t a n o t h e r c o l l e g e d u r n g w h o a t t e n d e d s u n ! <>r a n d w h o h a s not t h e p a i t r e c e i v e d a c r e d o n o t e * a h o u . d < a ll a t t h e R e g i s t r a r * O f f e r Ma n B i n d i n g , R o o m j (Jf f u r t h e r i r u t r u c - Won*. s e c t i o n 6 Well, o l ’ H a ir y has really stirred up a hornet s n e st with his la st H T. on so r o r ities . And a lthough he has r e c e i v e d e v er y th in g from or ch id s to t ic k in g p a c k a g e s , be has in a run­ /to d e sir e to ta k e part ning gun b a ttle with P a n h e lle n ic . If any group of atudents w ish to band to geth er at the U n iver­ sity, g iv e th em selv es a name like Sigm a O m ega Sigm a, and decide all their friends should w ear the sa m e kind of Jewelry, th at’s their business. If they wish to k e e p out all red head s, Catholics. R e­ Sem inoles, F ilipinos, publicans, tuba p la y ers, or stam p collectors, that, too, Is their business. On t h e y c a n ’t keep up What th e y do, drink, sing, s a y , or think d o e s not fall under the ju risdiction of the AFI.-CIO, Tow er, Ku K lu x K lan . o r Sp ee c h B u ild ­ ing. T h e G r e e k s ’ b u sin e ss is the G r e e k s ’ b u s i n e s s , and no one e ls e s. If it ta k e s h o n e y w a lk s to k e e p O ly m p u s p u re, then okay. I t ’s j u s t the too had G r e e k s w it h o u t a paddle. tho other side, how ever, H airy m ust sa y that these hands of brothers (or sisters) m ust r e a l­ ise that th ey are not above c r iti­ cism , that a pin Is not a s u i t of arm or, and that lf they ca n ’t stand the kitchen, to quote a Mlseourl ha­ berdasher. the G r e e k s h a v e a l w a y s N o w c la i m e d the p ow er behind R ound-Up T h i s c an be shown b y the fa c t th at the n e x t R-U p a r a d e p r o m i s e s to b e the b ig g e st, b e s t e s t , g r e a t e s t e v e r ; with 715 f l o a t s , 212 hands, and a c a st of tho u­ san ds. I f s o n ly fair that t h e y get the c re d it, and H airy, to coin a p h ra se, c a n ’t b e l ie v e R-U will be so s u a v e . H e ’s snowed. the heat, get out of to He Ro to sum It up, Hairy Is not anti-Greek, and is a firm b eliever that th© Pin Is M ightier than th© Horde. H e ’s got nothing again st G reeks; he Just w ouldn’t want on© to m arry his sister. Meanw’hile. b a c k at the U n io n , the In d e p e n d e n t s gather. T his I* the first y e a r since. G en eral Cos v isited tho A l a m o that UT h a s n 't had an ind ep en d e n t student group. Mica w’qpt. s o did Wica. ISA d e ­ c ea s ed . and the Tea-Sip Club h a r d ­ ly s t a y e d to get a long e nough So this y e a r the parkin g tick et. the i n d ep en d e n ts a re fac ed with ta sk of being ind ep en d e n t. B e a r up. brav © sou ls. the fault but U n fo rtu nately, the fact that th* G re ek s do h a v e all of the p a r t i e s In d e ­ is nobody's pendents. E v e r y S a tu rd a y nigh t the m e ns' an d w o m e n s ’ dorm s things are just aching to g o out on the tow n . i f s go out and In Austin s c a s e , fe w h a ir c u t s or fla ts w a t c h a fixed. full of w a r m y o u n g thinks Anyhow, Hairy t h © s • lyonghorns should figure out so m e w ay to get out of their rut and go raise hell on Saturday night. I^et at least once a w eek be d e­ voted to forgetting about th© other sLx days of sro-pro, diets, park­ ing football g a m es, and ath lete’s foot. tickets, Such doin gs as an occasion al w a r m -m ilk -a n d -c o ff e e hop o n l y sc r a tc h the su r fa c e , and the G reat in their room s U n w a s h e d still sit listen to the c r ic k e t s or go and out with the g a n g and get stoned tw o ch o ices to the gills. T h e s e us u a lly d e p e n d on the gender of th e individual. for However, H airy Is not on© ta slam without offering a sim ply rem edy or tw o th© slam©©. First off, why not have s o m e ©vent to g et all th© un dropped, un pinned, un spoiled fem a le s to­ gether with all the un shaved , un­ w ashed, u n su n g m a les? O n e © the rest this barrier Is cleared w ill adequately be handled b r M other N ature, providing she has clea ra n ce with the Speech B uild ­ ing. of course. N o w w h at kind of an © vent? Ah-ha, H air y a g a i n h a s s o m e su g g e s tio n s. W hat about a b an k run? Think o f the thrills of t a k ­ in g part in w r e c k i n g the s t o c k m a r k e t. Or a p a n ty raid. A n ­ is a b a r n o th e r su re-fire e v e n t bu rning, or a V ig ila n t e L y n c h Mob, a l w a y s go o d for lau g h s. There are others, su ch aa a draw and-qim rterlng on the W est Mall, vandalizing W aggener H all, draining Ijik e Austin, tossing all the library honks (and the libra­ rians) off the tow er, storm ing th© Capitol, and m arching down to Washington (to shake hands with John W ilkes B ooth). So now H a ir y R a n g e r , the poor m a n s D a g H a m m a r s k j o l d , has kept the p e a c e and m a d e the c a m ­ pus safe for d e m a g o g u e r y . W hat have, you done t o d a y ? T h e F irin g JJn e An "Anti” Answer l e t t e r s w h ic h atta ck I, for one. n m d isg u ste d wnth th© the student Austin Anti - C o m m u n i s t l e a g u e s F r e e d o m W eek . S e v e r a l a p p e a r e d in the F ir i n g Line c olu m n of the la st w eek. Are w e 19,000 T e x a n plus all so s e c u r e and s m u g about that w e sit our c o u n t r y 's idly by an d a llo w a few " i n te l li ­ g e n t ” stu d e n ts to ridicule thp good work b e in g d o n e by this o r g a n i z a ­ t i o n ’’ future In th© O ctober t i laau© of the T exan, R a j M ullen asks In his le t­ ter what " th ese super patriots" hop© to accom p lish by their n eg a ­ tive attitude. He realizes that the league Is opposed to com m u n ism , but wonder* w hat It la to r. group and oth e r s lik e it a r e tr y in g to m a k e the A m e r i c a n pu blic a w a r e o f the G o m m u n i s t threat to our f r e e d o m . It is t r y in g to sh o w us w h a t c o m ­ m u n is m it w a n ts, and how g o in g abou t a c h i e v i n g th e s e g o a ls. Mr. M ullen, is, w h a t this i t s This o r g a n i z a t i o n also sh o w s us th e best w a y t o fight c o m m u n i s m in fo r m e d nation is the H a v in g a n in this fight. If w e a l­ first ste p low o u rselv es to k e e p on b e l ie v i n g that th© C o m m u n i s t s will n e v e r c o n q u er the w o r ld , then they w ill - and it w ill be too late for us to do a n y t h in g a b o u t it! I w h oleh earted ly a g r e e with Mr. Mullen th at A m erica has a basic core of d e c en cy w h ic h I* e p i t o m ­ ized by individual freedom found in few if an y other nations; and that w e need to "clean house ’ be­ fore w e can se r v e as a true m odel of d em o cra cy for the rest of the world. The fa ct rem ain s, how ever, that th© • C om m unist this ha© nothing to do with a lm s of th© Anti League*. in h it What he Is doing fa lla c y ! T heir aim s are letter is this: he rid icu les the group that is fighting com m un ism and th ere­ by m ak es it seem that their b eliefs and a im s are ridiculous also. T his to ts a m ake us a w a re of the com m u n ist threat to the free world so that w e will ed u ca te o u rselv es on the prob­ in unison ag a in st lem and w'ork com m unism . T here is nothing ri­ diculous about this. What has been brought out In the letters criticizin g the work of the league in question is not r e le ­ vant to the m ain issue. It doesn t change the fact that c o m m u n i s m is a g ain st ev ery decent and hu­ m ane principle held by a d e m o c ­ racy, T hat is p recisely w hat w e have in the U S a dem ocracy R eader, ask yourself the fo llo w ­ ing questions w henever yon run across an article or speech that •v a d e* am is s o s i la ll true? D o es It have cold fa cts to hark It tip? If your answ er Is "ye©" to both questions, then you can he certain that you are not being m isled. In other w o r d s , it d oesn t m a t t e r it s w h a t they sa y it, w h o s a y s that counts. —Oar ar L. H inojosa 2804 W hltls A venue J a c k ” favorably Figures Never Lie I w a s v ery p le a s e d , and so m e ­ w h at su rp rise d , to find "It s AH so Right, r e ­ in F ri­ v ie w e d by M r Hampton day's Texan H ow ever, T do not think Mr. H a m p to n g a v e su fficien t credit to one o f the co-stars, who, as he h i m s e l f m u s t ad m it, turned far the m o s t in w h at w a s by r e m a r k a b le p e r f o r m a n c e of th© I am r e 'e r r in g . of course, film. to T e r r y -T h o m a s . "T erry-T hom as. a co m ic a l d e lig h t in his own . . ." Mr. Hampton was obviously th© in the audience who only person perceived th# true value of T erry- T hom as's p erform ­ rem arkable ance, yet he barely m entioned him In his review . Of the entire au­ dience, Mr. Hampton w as proba­ bly the only one vv ho realized that the young the a m p le lady with figure and the flowing blond hair wa© actually ’T e r r y T hom as, m com ical delight In his own . . the film. from c le a r up I w as a l s o v e r y glad to h a v e certain Mr. H a m p t o n other m i s c o n c e p t io n s minor ones to be su re — with which I cam© I a ctu a lly a w a y thought, until I read th© review*, that b v P eter S e lle r s w as a Hitler m o u s­ tache rather than a Stalin m ou s­ tache. and that the m ale co-star'» than Jan Ian rather nam e w as C arm ichael. the m o u s t a c h e sported H ow ever confusing those points w ere, s© they w ere not nearly confusing as T erry Thorn©*. M ost of the au dience had thought, as I did. that Terry T hom as w as a c ­ tually a rather shapely y o u n g lady. Ronald M. F a r r is t m e . w 'i Musings Emerald Bay It w as a day w-hen the sun shone cold B e s id e the se a w ith stin g in g w ind And the w h it e to n g u e s la s h e d a g a in st the sid e s Of the pitted w-alls o f sto n e TYie s e a w as bro w n and laughed Spitting salt intr) the m ist But her lip s c u r le d dow nward aloud sa y i n g An angry se a u best left atone —J i l l X D A T T h e D a il y t e x a n Sports 'Tween the Horns By H O Y T PURVIS Associate Sports Editor Texas No. 1 Target Coach D arrell Royal let fly with asked incredulously. “ You bet I his own viewpoint about a favorite am. It rips you u p .’’ attitude of other Southwest Confer- ence schools hreaking a season with a victory over T ex a s- a t his Monday press conference. rubbing Then he that of making or his thumb across a rath e r menac- ing letter-opener, and turned to the upcoming g am e with Baylor. leaned back, “ Baylor is a real good football te a m ,” he said. “ I guess that s about all you can say. I don’t think Royal we can afford to m a k e the mis- \ Asked takes we have been making, on I 0f jconngi p l . y , Not a ga inst Baylor j (or ^ I rn sure Baylor will have a top rf- fort, especially happened last y e a r . ” The lo nghorns beat the Bears, ' in view of what *pnse' Roj’al answered, We ll just ; plan our norm al attack. Of course, situations that arise in a game 13-12 after recovering a late fum- dictate w hat you do. hie in Baylor te rritory. —CHARLIE SMITH if he planned any kind sucfi aR increased passing, , p u n e r ,„8 L o n d o n , of- , * , “ I really feel w e’re the most popular No. I team to defeat, be­ the the state university and ing largest “ I school,” Royal said. that ’beating T exas don’t believe and losing ail the others can give you a good season’- that's f a r too extreme. But I do think if some of the others w ere offered one vic­ tory free and their chances on the like others, to have would be Texas.” the one they’d most In reviewing the Longhorns’ 17-7 victorj' over winless S o u t h e r n 1 Methodist, Royal said, “ SMU play-I ed good football. They played us four quarters th e y ’ve played one quarter against e v e ry ­ one else.” the way Concerning the sloppy condition of the turf at Memorial Stadium he said, “ Mud s the equalizer. If there is a difference (in football te am s!, faster that equalizes than anything else.’’ it Tarpaulins, which had been laid in advance of the F rid ay night rains, w ere rolled up allowing w a ­ ter to flood the field. One theory was that gam blers might have been behind the skullduggery. T ex­ as was a 20-point favorite. “ Our effort has been good," Royal emphasized. “ It s discourag­ ing to lose close games, and its discouraging to get touchdown runs called back But as far as trying goes, the y're (the Longhorns) tr y ­ ing hard enough.” Texas had scoring plays of 43 and 15 yards called hack against the Mustangs. Saxton brought the I crowd of 34,000 to its feet in the third period with one of his p aten t­ ed sensations and George Lewis broke for another touchdown in the last period. Both were called h ark due to penalties. “ Am I concerned about having those plays railed h a r k ^ ” Royal Yanks Complete S taff W ith A ddition of Moses NEW YORK if) The New York Yankees completed their coaching staff Monday by signing Wally Moses, as batting and first base coach, and holdover Jim Hegan, as catching and bullpen coach. the second newcomer Moses, 50-year-old form er Ath­ letics star, will take over M anager Ralph Houk s coaching duties. Ha is the staff. Houk previously p i c k e d Johnny Sain to replace E ddie lyv pat as pitching coach. F ra n k Cro- setti, a Yankee fixture, rem ains as third base coach. to when it comes BASKETBALL EQUIPMENT C & S equips B asketball Shoes low quarter and hi-tops Athletic Socks cotton and woo! Uniform s in exciting colors S w eat Clothing to fit any size man Eye-glass Protectors Supporters ALL STAR taal wrinkle-frae new d**iqn front quarter q u a rt*. instep »upport. Cu»* anura* non-chafmg. heel tomed-ihaped S T 9 5 J Top* for intramural basketball! N O BETTER SELECTION IN T O W N ! C L S SPORTING GOODS C O M P A N Y A th le tic C tittie* it 1 1 2 0 O u a d a f u p a t k O n TK* Drog ♦ OR 2 - 4 1 4 4 Tuesday, November I, I960 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 Alvin Dark Named To Manage Giants SAN FRANCISCO (J* — Alvin the sparkplug shortstop of D ark, tile National League champion Gi- I a n ts in 1951 and 1954, Monday be­ c a m e the club's m anag er with a two-year contract. The 38-year-old National League v e te ra n player, with no previous m a n ag e ria l experience, succeeds Tom Sheehan, tile head scout w'ho interim pilot when took over as last June Bill Rigney was fired 18. Addressing a crowded p r e s s room throng. D ark said he would not go to training cam p as an ac­ tive player but h as n ’t decided Handball Champion To Play UT Stars A four-time national open hand­ ball champion, J im m y Jacobs, will play an exhibition m atch with top local players at 7 p m. Tuesday In G regory Gym. Jacobs, who won the national open crown in 1955-56-57-60, is cur­ rently on a nation-wide tour and the University will stop off at for one day. Jacobs represents the Los Angeles Athletic Club. He was sidelined during the 1958- 89 season because of an injury. Loyd Hampton, P ete Tyson, and R ich a rd Beeler will be J a c o b s opponents in the matches Tuesday evening. After the matches, a movie of some of J a c o b ’s recent m a tc h e s will be shown in A Hall, north of G regory Gym. A discus­ sion period on handball wall also follow. “ J im m y (Jacobs! picked The U niversity of Texas as one of his stops on the tour because of the top-rated handball players the U niversity has produced and the interest shown for h a n d - g r e a t ball h ere ,” Dick Roberson, for­ m e r I T handball coach, said. This will he first Ja co b s has m a d e a visit University. the t i m e the to whether he might a playing m anager. later become Speaking quietly. D ark also said ive had no for trades and that, “ I'm going into this with an open m ind.” im m ediate plans To get Dark, w'ho finished the the 1960 season with Milwaukee, Giants traded utility infielder An- : dre Rodgers to the Braves. The new m a n ag e r sta rre d w-ith the Gi­ ants clubs of 1950-55, as the “ take charge guy” and field captain. Asked if he had wanted a free hand, D ark answered that the only thing he asked was to be included in conversations before trad e s are the made. He also said he felt m a n a g e r should determ ine which players are on the field. The new m a n ag e r said he had not j e t derided who he would se­ lect as the te a m 's coaches. !Mural Schedule G O L F S IN G L E S F i r s t r o u n d golfers sc h ed u led to plnv r e p o r t T u e sd a y fro m 1:45 to 2:30 p m. a t t h e Munici­ pal Golf C o urse Inst T u e s d a y B A S K E T B A L L I n t r a m u r a l B ask etb all e n t r i e s d ue bv 5 p rn. at G re g o ry G v m 114. Classes A. B a n d Mullet. F O O T B A L L ( lass A 5 p m .— R lo m q uist vs Rat P i e c e r s 7 p . m . — K a p p a S i g m a v< S I e rn a Alpha M u; S i g m a N u vs. P h i G am m a Del ta a p m —Delta K a p p a E p s i l o n vs Alpha Epsilon Pl D e lta T a u Delta vs S ig m a Alpha E psilon. ( l a s s B 4 n rn,—M e rc h a n ts vs. B locke r 5 p m .—O ak Grove vs. C a m p u s Guild. M u llrt 4 p . m .—P u r p l e P a ss io n s vs. Big Red. I.aw School 7 p m —S c r u b s vs. D e lta T h e t a Phi. 'Mural Scores F O O T B A L L S COR ES 4 las* A R o b e rts 7. B r a c k e n r i d g e 6 P ierson 19. C hickens 0. AIChE 27 ASME 20; Navy 14 O ak Grove 13 TL#OK 13. S t a g 7, A rm y 19. T o la s 0. I las* B D o rm A I X D 30 R o b e rt s A Delta K a p p a Upsilon 7, K a p p a S ig m a 6 Phi Delta T h e t a 17. S igm a Chi 0 Delta T au Delta 13 Pi K app a Alpha 6 P F M 14 Navy 7. L a m b d a Chi Alpha 14 Acacia 9 | M-G-M want! to know W HERE THE BOYS ARE who would like to be publicity men for the new motion picture . . .“W HERE THE BOYS ARE.” In your spare time, you can earn while you learn (about Dolores Hart.Yvette Mimieux, Paula Prentiss, Connie Francis and Barbara Nichols). Write: Publicity Director, Box A, Metro-Goldwyn- Mayer, Inc., 1540 Broadway, New York 36, N. Y. OUTSTANDING SENIOR STUDENTS: CwpamA£eek Sell executive J, Dianaferd rV I WF Bell Telephone System Is one of the fastest growing large businesses rn the United States. As the Bell com panies continue to grow, there is a need for m ore and more vital, intelligent, positive and imaginative men. lf you are an outstanding senior student m ajor­ ing in business adm inistration, you won t want to miss the chance to investigate the opportunities and challenges of a career with the Bell System . Tuesday, Novem ber 8, Marshall Kemp, Bell System Coordinator, and representatives of the follow ing com panies will be at the Placem ent O ffice to talk with U niversity of Texas men who can qualify as potential executives and m anagers. • W e s t e r n E l e c t r i c . . . m a n u fa c tu r in g unit of the Bell System. A lso develops, makes and services electronic products for the armed forces. • S o u t h w e s t e r n Bell . . . builds, m a i n ­ tains and operates Southw est’* vast c o m ­ munications system . • A . T . & T . C o m p a n y . . builds, m ain­ tains and operates nation s interstate and overseas com m unications systems. . Baylor's Star Still Shines Baylor may have lost some national eclat after last w eek’s loss to T exas Christian. But as far as the Texas Longhorns are concerned that Fort Worth game just proved that things are tougher than ever. Schedules and contracts being what th ey are, the ’Horns must go against the bounce-back-minded Bears this w eek and the no-longer-slumbering* giants from T C U , W h O are to spend New Y ear s by the near- — — — not be lacking About this eclat that Baylor m a y has been threatening to send everybody up the n e a re st beanstalk, the fob spirjt either. Texas lowing Saturday. in is a “ big ” game for the B ears and always i t took a terrific effort have lost. Actually this little f i v e - ; by a cham pionship 'Horn te a m to letterer is a Homeric donation per- down fifth place Baylor 13-12 last to brilliancy of a c h ie v e - 1 ypar This tim e the Bruins a r e run- taining merit greeted with acclaim . But top spot and have Baylor looks no w eaker th a n ever ( re m e m b e r that 28-14 win ov er Ar­ kansas). Instead the Baptists re­ semble as much as ever H o m er's boy Achilles, with a gardol shield on his heel. ning for plenty to run with. the the other off Baylor and Texas have had big fun knocking the top. An outstanding exa m ple of this was the big upset by T exas in 1953. T hat how ever cam e afte r “ burning” spirit campaign by the student body and such a great game by the ’Horns that Coach Fd Price said. “ I think every boy we the hest g am e he's have played ever pla y ed .” Those kind of things seldom h ap ­ pen. So Baylor still deserves the eclat it has been having such trouble finding, and the F o rt Worth F ro g ­ gies a re coming along just in time to grab the glory too. B aylor w a s n ’t disgraced. The Bears hav e a 5-1 record which w asn't easily earned. And TCU tied Pitt, the te a m that earned itself some Texas friends by taking the juice out of the Orange from Syracuse. Texas has this taken year, and the ’Horns feel like r e ­ versing the procedure. They have come up with good efforts every against Baylor. Nobody Is denying week, paying off at tim es (Okla- that. But how easy do these super homa), but not enough against showings c o m e ” A rkansas and Rice. Texas will need a superior effort licks its Desire is the first prerequisite, and the ’Horns shouldn’t hurt here. Hie Longhorns have had tim e to think about it And Pat Culpepper. the bustling linebacker, went so far as to call this a “ Bowl G a m e ” for Texas, since the ’Horns are due * * But it will take some rea l oc­ casion-rising for the Tower to turn this week. B aylor has a g r e a t fleet of hacks, com parable to the 1953 crew of Cotton Davidson, J e r r y Coody, L. G. Dupre, and Allen Jones. ................ Bears Long on Ronnies alu m s forgetting J e rr y Cook the Mustangs there are o th e r Nowadays Baylor In 1953 Baylor was 6-0, ranked are well a ga inst last week. Then th e re are fellows like their newborn sons Ron­ naming Bobby Gurwitz, Ray Poage, John nie. and it s no wonder. The B e a r s ’ Cook, and Bobby Nunis, and don’t three R ’s —Goodwin, Stanley, and be and Bull—a r e all among the le a g u e ’s George Lewis Mike Gotten will be fine hest. And there as always, and Johnny Ge- backs too, among them little Tom- | ming got som e valuable experience my Minter, Q uarterback Bobby Ply against SMU. and F ullback Jim E vans. Collins has been sort of a mys- tery m an all year, and everyone third nationally, Texas, fresh from has shied aw a y from discussing it a 16-7 (familiar! win o ver SMU. for fear of Jinxing Jack, but he won 21-20 and the B ears couldn’t already seem s to have run across win again, losing next to mediocre some black cats. from Houston 37-7, and two m ore con- some of the had breaks h e ’s had. Jack s punts suddenly bounce vvild- ferenee dates. ly into the end zone, his passes Marvel, c o m b i n e s speed and are b are ly dropped, or a sim ilar strength In great fashion. H e’s a misfortune occurs. 190-poimder with every sort of all-1 But Collins was hitting Saxton America credential. And his back- wonderfully well on his option pass Saturday, and he was rutting those field friends a r e n ’t far behind. Texas can also brag about a corners like he and very few others good backfield, and no one knocks can. and the Bear scouts undruht- the had news to the Texas for not hitting. Bull, as aptly named as Captain rdl.v relayed judging The 'Horn stable seem s to be Waco clan ready. J a m e s Saxton releases pent- This could be the one for Texas Horns realize up emotions all over the field e v e n ' Saturday, and Jack Collins showed how tough a task it will he. largely because the Leaders Retain Holds In S W C Statistics By TH E ASSOCIATED T R E ** There were only two change; in Southwest Conference statisti­ cal leadership last week, and only one of them came through a win­ ning effort into the total offense when he Ronnie Stanley, B a y lo r’s bulls­ lead eye passer, moved in flung nine passes for 106 yards against Ile has 596 yard* Texas Christian. on 106 plavs Buddy lies of Texas Christian took over in pass-recrlving when he caught four shots against Bay­ in lor. They were instrum ental sending TCU over Baylor in cant g am e of lins 16 catches for 154 yards to a 14-6 v ictory’ the mo#u signifi­ l i e s the week Coolidge Hunt of T e x e s Tech picked tip o n ’v 22 yards against Rice as his team lost 30-6 but it kept him on top in hall-carrying He has gained 381 yards on 91 rushes. The biggest advance was made by Sam Byer of T e x a s AAM, who rolled tip 91 y a r d s against Arkansas B y e r moved within 40 yards of Hunt leads 11 completions out of 73 for 582 yards. the passers with throws Stanley D O N ’T FO R G ET the special get ac q u a in te d o t t e r in the S T I ' D E N T I N M O N an d the B O W L I N G A LL EY on N o v. I, 2 and V A FREE C om panion C igarette Lighter will be given away with the purchase of 5 packages o f Ken! S e t - port, Spring or Old Gold a r n aet. SAN JA C IN TO CAFE S P E C IA LIZ IN G IN DELICIO US M E X IC A N A N D A M E R I C A N FOODS REGULAR L U N C H E S EVERY D A Y AT REASONABLE PRICES Viiif Our Rainbow Dining Room OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 16 yr*. Experience on Sam* Corner I6 T H A N D SAN J A C I N T O GR 8-3984 Piecer m ake arru nn en u 'n t' at the P lacem ent O I fire ta talk w ith th e w officials. 2010 Speedway G R 8-6609 THE UNIVERSITY’S ONLY EXCLUSIVE RADIO A N D HI-FI SALES A N D SERVICE CENTER S e r v i n g t h e U n i v e r s i t y a r e a f o r I O y e a r s BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES . . , proWdi Mf ce*m«e*c*f teal fee HM Baft**. • J E E D W A Y " H I G H FIDELITY a 1 REASONABLE PRICES" INTU VII W* w it ba WM t rn. ............ In the event of error* made In an advertisement. Immediate notice mu*t be given as the publisher* ar# responsible for only on* incorrect l n s e r tio a CALL JOHNNY GR 2-2473 Rooms for Rent Alterations Lost and Found Typing ACCOMODATIONS KOR T U R FIE men air conditioned linens maid serv­ ice. paved parking. 306 E ast 30th. N (■ Arms Dorm ROOMS FOR BOYS Close to campus Singles Double Meals Ample park- , Ixiw rates New C e n ta u r House. \ : Ing G R * - TRIANGLE H HAS unexpected va­ for male student Quiet, air conditioned room with d a I I v maid service 711 West 22'?, OR 2-0638 c a n c y Room and Board UNIVERSITY APPROVED ONE va­ cancy in double room Private hath conditioning Mer­ San Student House. Refrigerated chants Gabriel GR 6-8213 19"6 air Furnished A p a r t m e n t s GIRLS UNIVERSITY APPROVED Large modern Living room, kitch­ enette two bedroom, bath Fu r­ bished fur two to four girls STRATFORD ARMS MRS WALK ER HOSTESS GR 7-9373 UNIVERSITY MODERN EFFICIEN­ CY. Foam bed off street parking p a i d $65.00 single, $7000 Utilities double GR 8 9125 Wanted BLOOD DONORS—All type* of blood needed for usage In Austin Proles slona) donors now accepted Travis County Blood Bank 2907B Red River GR 8-6457 MEN'S EXPERT ALTERATIONS don# reasonably Quick service, see M's Jacob son s M e n s Wear 2332 LOST ON BOTTOM floor Main Build log Gold Gruen Wrist Watch. Call Miller. GR 6-5712 Reward: Arnold Gu adalup e ALTERATIONS AND DRESSMAKING. 715 West 25th Street GR 6-3360 LOST ON FRESHMAN field, silver El­ gin watch Call GU 8-2415. Reward! For S a le UN BELIEVABLE BARGAINS' MUF­ skirts duals—$11.95; split- lakes plugs, rrors accessories. TEXAS FL E R S S5 95 $ 6 : 0 m am fo.d ' AUTO. 1114 East 1st hula .ids L IK E NEW, GU LI FT T ! Actual value $375 Will accordlan. take $200. ‘Iii Weinberger. 217 College Wr «e Blvd. Sun Antonio. tonneau cover overdriv p 1957 AUSTIN HF ALV t Ii r o u g b o u t . GR 7-2623 seats Immaculate 1315 West Ninth J u m p TRR •ED TO SEL L 1958 MGA Road- Ste r WSWU hen ter. GIL 3-7426. 12 W ATT BOGEN Amplifier D C to I lonset PM car radio. B r a w n I n g 22 Semi* utom ath • rife. GR 2-3963 A C co averter VOLK.SWAGON 1957 DEL U X E sedan o n l y 3 IOO W S VV.'# Leather seats m i l e * M e c h a n i c a l l y GL 2-5882. p e r f e c t . $995 1959 AUSTIN HEALEY -eater Black hardtop and Deluxe 4 cloth tup. 19 OK) miles. Perfect con­ dition Must sell. $2,000. Call GR 2-6383 1414 Newfield Lane. Special Services RE NT — PURCHASE T V s Alpha Television Rental GR 2-2692 NEW OPENING AUSTIN Health and Beauty Home All WU 24th. GR 2-7776 Relaxing ann su n ­ reducing lamps g> mnastics yoga massage. In ­ dividual treatm ent table* DANCING AN NE TT E DUVAL STUDIOS. Univer­ sity ballroom clashes or private lessons ar# now bein* offered s t reasonable rates Exercise classes have student also In along with classes ballet, la/z. Fo r In form ation, call or come bv Th* Univer­ sity Studio from 1-5 p m. GR 8-3951. tap and modern sta rte d FOR HOME W ASHING use our rental 'leva* Appliance vv fishers Ventral 904 Lamar GR 6 2653. I * Com pan' Typing DISSERTATIONS ETC ELECTROMA- I IG (Symbols). Mrs. Ritchie. Close In GR 6-7079 E X CE LL E N T TYPING REASONABLE rates t all HO 5-9015 LAW NOTES THEMES, outlines 25c page GR 6-4717 ey'’ Let me help SHORT ON TYPING, time and mon­ typing your themes outlines notes, report*. Mis* Graham. C L 3-5725. in MARTHA ANN Z I V L O M B A A complete professional typing serv­ ice tailored to the needs of Univer­ keyboard sity science. equipment these* and dla- end engineering sertstlon# Special language, stud e nts for Rho GR 2-3210 Conveniently located at GOODALL WOOTEN DORM BEDO. 21o2 Guadalupe DISSERTATIONS RE­ PORTS professionally and competent­ ly typed Experienced electric I.B M . Four block* c a m p u s . Mrs. Bodour GR 8-8113 T R E S F, 8 from TYPING P R O B L E M S’ Call R W. Holley GR 6-3018 after 5:00 Muitl- Itth mats a I B M . Electric G uaranteed accuracy Rapid Servic*. speciality New D E L A F I E L D TY PING SERVICE. T h e s e s Mimeographing Photocopie*. Multlllthlng HI 2-6522 tromatlc Reports EXPE RIE N CE D COMPETENT. E le o disserta­ theses tions. All types. G ra d u a te /u n d e r g ra d ­ uate Close to campus. Mrs. DeButta. GR 8-3298 ACCURATE STUDENT PAPERS. Ex- perirn< ed Reasonable New electro- mat.. Manu.v ti pts a s p .'.a lt Cl..-* to U n i v e r s e Mrs Albright GE 3-2941. REPORTS DISSERTATIONS TH PUS ES 1508 D Mr* RobcriH B wonkier. West 13th GR 7-7554 THESES DISSERTATIONS RUK) KS, .-t v w i ' i c o m a t i c Mrs .Petmecky, I I La ‘WJi* TYPING DONE IN my home Electric. Mrs Morgan —GL 3-0354. IBM W^ J ^ rYPIN(J <1° *n mv horn* VICINI J- DONIHUE . TECHNICOLOR® • WARNE R BROS . VARSITY N O W ! 5 I i —7 TO— a ; IS ' Metro Goldwyn Mater Awm* to »** ADU* KEY W it l e s s t i CiNEMASCOPf Bon IEI I N I Mi m i l ! • i i i i • i i i i i • s n i n • i n n ira ■ I W W - l l l l —mmmm I l l IU i i M i ii » ■ * . - » g a s - , i - i M M M ECLtiQEl N O W S H O W I N G FIRST S H O W 6 P.M. M itt LANCASTER • JEM SIMMONS FOB ADULTS ONLY ti o Children Under 16 Mmitltd Unless kern- pan-ed By An Adult i m e r GjwthtJ — n r — —*1- — r— rfi Brigance Wins T h e D a il y T e x a n WU Goes On WTere Tuesday 8-12 — Registration for Ten Most Journalism Building Beautiful, 206. 8:30-12:30 and 1:30-4:30 — Sopho­ for the Cactus, m ore pictures Jo u rn a lism Building 5. a Ii tit s ” at Cotta* Hour, Hillel Foundation. 3-5— G rievan ce Committee invites students to register complaints, Texas Union 321. J — R a c e Relations Committee, Uni versify “ Y. 9-11 — Benefit snack sale, Home 4 ;15—Catholic inquiry class. New- Classrooms, 2016 Guada- Eeonom ics Building. man lupe. Poetry Reading J o Anne Brigance. sophomore dram a m ajor, Thursday night won thet O ratorical Association's poe­ try reading contest. The contest is held e ve ry semester. Liz K e lly took second p l a c e honors while Thelm a M ille r won third place. The winners were selected from 81 participants. 10-10- Arts and C rafts Center. Texas Union 333. IO _ professor Leon Lebow itz to speak on “ G reat Je w is h Person- 4—Helm ut Motekat to lecture on “ The Significance of Hegel for .. . H e,n m * H em ,, ing 203 Other students who reached the finals were B e v e rly Rates, last ye a r's winner, Don Flournoy, Rob- English Build- hy Ja n e Harrison, »nd P a t Tay- ., _ „ . . , lor. Greeks Provide Halloween Treat Fourteen Greek organizations 6 30 and 9 — Cultural E n te r t a in ­ ment Committee presents Fred W aring and His Pennsylvanians, Gregory’ Gym . 7—Freshm an engineers to organ­ ize, Texas Union 302. went back to school M on d ay night tor » Halloween p a rly for retarded 11 »"ear Ashmore, M rs Mau- rine Am is, and Brooks Alexan­ der judged the contestants. Vaughn to Speak „ ' w u o c r 1 ^ 1 l _ l Q M o t h e r s i v i u u i c i o C a m p u s U t e Tuesday, November I, I9 6 0 T H E D A ILY T E X A N Page 5 C ap and Gown to Sponsor Political Panel W ednesday Cap and Gown, senior women's organization, w ill sponsor a poli­ tical panel Wednesday night at 7 in the U n iversity um. ' Y " Auditori­ The panel, composed of women from in the Austin area active politics on the national and local is the first in a series of scene, four programs for the year spon­ sored by Cap and Gown. Mrs. Malcolm M illburn and Mrs. Fe ld er Thornhill J r . w ill represent the Republicans, and M rs. W il­ lard Nitschke and M iss Ba rb a ra Nan Wilkinson w ill speak for the Dem ocrats Mrs. H. S. W a l l , from the state Attorney G eneral’s office, will give a non-partisan talk on election procedure. . S e n i o r women students and invited to interested persons are attend. There w ill he no admis­ sion and refreshments w ill b* served. Zeta Tau Alpha and P h i G am m a D elta decorated for the annual party. M u sic and re­ freshments were provided. the booths F o u r to six students w ere at each booth to help the children. F ra tern ities participating were Alpha T au Omega, B e ta Tau P i, P h i G a m m a Delta. P h i Sig m a D e l­ ta, P i Kappa Alpha, and S i g m a P h i Epsilon. .Sororities participating w ere A l­ pha D elta P i, Alpha Ep silo n P h i, Alpha P h i. Delta G a m m a , Kappa Alpha Theta, Phi M u, Sig m a Del- j ta Tau, and Zeta T a u Alpha. 7—Ja m e s Medford to speak M r. D ick Vaughn w ill s p e a k Southwestern Rocket Society on on the subject of “ F ra te rn itie s " at “ Large Solid Propellant G rains J ^ m eetinc of the various fra- for Rocket Boosters, mental Science Building 223. ternity housemothers Tuesday 7:15 p.m. meeting E x p e ri­ to at 7 :15— D irk Vaugnn to Fra tern ity Housemothers, Delta Upsilon house. to speak 7 :3(V-Dr. Donald W eism an to ad­ The meeting will he held at fraternity the D e l t a Upsilon house, 2510 Leon. dress Architecture W ives C lu b : . on “ The Fundam entals of A r t,” j U I L Q O l G S \ _ H U D Texas Union 325. ^ . .. . . i 8 Otis Dozier to lecture on “ The ^ j D O n S O P S C _ ^ O i T G G A rt of Ja p a n ,” Laguna Gloria. 8 Dr. Ralph W. T y le r to speak M rs. R . N. L ittle and M rs W, T. G u y J r . w ill be ro-hostesses for at social work conference on . . -The P l» c . of the Pro(e»»ionel ! th* N ovem ber m eetlnc of the Im - the U n iv e rsity,” v a rsity Ladies club. M em ber* will S c h o o l in he honored with a coffee at Wost- Towme* Hall. 1 wood Country Club from IO a rn. 9-10:30 — The O verplayers. Cliche . . . . . . ., , Coffee House until noon Wednesday FALL SEMESTER >j ye cit T w o for the Price o f One B ring a F rie n d and Share th e Cost K E ( i l L A R 15 T re a tm e n t* 25.00 S P E C I A L 15 T re a tm e n ts 12.50 4 Scientific S len d e r izin g and S p o t R ed u cin g UL ch ijstem E N F I E L D S H O P P IN G C E N T E R , G R 7-5905 Sophomores!r Wednesday, November 2 is the deadline for making your Class Picture Appointment for the 1961 CACTUS FEE 1.25 come by Journalism Building 107 to make your appointment T H E A L P H A T A U chapter of Kappa K aopa Psi, national honorary fraternity for college La n d s­ men, is c e !e b rah rg its *wen*'e*h anniversary this y e a r. The local chapper includes approxim ately 60 Longhorn Bandsmen. Also pictured are Vincent R. DiNino, band director, and Richard D. Blair, assistant director, of the "Show band of the Southw est." Twenty-Four Hours W ith the Herd' By Frank Reaugh in Barker Center The late Fra n k R ea u g h s art col- 1 of them on the longhorn steer, “ Twenty-four Hours w i t h the lection, containing the $50,000 col- “ Twenty-four H o u r s Herd” is the greatest collection of lection of long- with the H e rd ,” has been housed paintings on the vanishing It consists of in the m ain reading room of the horn in existence. B a rk e r Texas History Center since a series of seven paintings por- the April, 1950. full maying a day s work with It w as M r. Reaugh’s wish that herd. The art shows it as a the University' get this collection 24-hour .job. after his death. M r. Reaugh has been judged by and both Am erican painters a i the greatest painter of the longhorn that has ever lived. He began sketching in 1876 at the age of 15. His fa m ily came to Texas from Illinois that ye a r in a covered wagon. The great cattle drives f r o m to the northern railroads from 1875 their peak Texas were at to 1881. F ra n k Reaugh rode herd on sev­ eral of these cattle drives, living outdoors for weeks at a time. The the H erd .” first painting “ D riving is It shows the h e r d European moving out on the long trail north. The second painting is entitled “ W atering the H erd” and s h o w s the longhorns standing up to their chests drinking their fill. “ Bedding The third and fourth paintings are and “ Guarding the Herd.” The herd is bedded down at sunset and guarded by two lone cowboys. the H e rd ” The fourth and fifth paintings are entitled “ The Stampede” and “ The M illing Cattle.” T h e s e two tell the story of the dreaded The artist made his first brush stampede in the black of night from cat's hair. ginning of a career produced over 5,OOO w-orks, most i dawn. in which he tie It was the he- and the control of the restless cnf- few minutes of in the first The last painting is “ The Herd Moves On.” Things are hack to normal, and the herd is s e e n moving across the prairie, leaving a cloud of dust as it goes. This work in pastel, is a 24-hour history of M r. Reaugh s life. He lived this life on the range, and his paintings are a realistic pic­ ture of this life. P a tric ia Ann W illia m s, U n iv e r­ to C a lv in T e r r y sity student, Westbrook. Eloise M cGuire, U n iv e rs ity grad­ uate, to Dr. Fra n k Dobinson, U n i­ v ersity research fellow. ★ ★ Jea n n ie Real, U n iv e rs ity cum laude graduate, to Ja m e s R ichard Holland ITT, U n ive rsity graduate. o lan­ guage foreign one studying a is a Living Language The practical gift for every stu­ Record set from the Co-O p. dent, and especially useful to English French German Hebrew Italian Japanese Russian Spanish o Give the Gift of Language * 5x a ? o X •O P « C O * O P * C O « O P « C O « O P « C O « O P « C O « O P * C O * O P « a. o •o o • 0.o •o o • CL o •o o • fi.o •o •a. o •o •a. o •o •a. o 5 * course outlines, and many other truly useful g ift yourself while giving the best when you do your Th* Textbook Department, downstairs in the C o - O p items, whether for yourself or for gifts. You help Living Language records are ideal as study aids, or as a re­ Christm as shopping at the C o - O p . fresher course. $9.95. ? o X Oc o X ? o x o CL O • •O P * C O * O P * C O « O P « C O « O P * C O « O P « C O * O P * C O * O P 2246 Guadalupe Street offers Living dictionaries, Language records, o ? 0 c © o o o X1 ? o X D R . D O N A L D W E IS M A N , professor c f art, po nts to some arf ch eek s. Last year he broadcast teevision classes en "Introduction to Visual A rts." A m ong his pa ating* is T rn# and Arm or, which won him the $500 purchase p r za at the Second Annua1 Exhibition of Southwest Am erican A rt. He judged Arizona S*a*e Fair s Fine A r t Show Friday. Architects Wives Club To Hear Dr. D r. Donald Weismann, profes­ sor of art, will talk on “ Funda­ m entals of A rt” at the Student Architects Wives Club meeting Tuesday at 7:30 in Texas Union 325. D r. Weismann, in addition to hi* teaching Is also an artist of prominence. He has disposed his the annual Exhibition svorks at of Southwest Am erican Art in Oklahom a City, where he won the $300 purchase prize for his paint­ ing “ Tim e and Armor to show invited He has been an oil painting in the Sarasota Art Association s National Asso­ ciation of P a i n t i n g s , Drawings, and Sculpture, to be held at the R in g ­ ling Museum of Art in Flo rid a . He w as chosen to Arizona State F a ir's Show held October 28. judge the Fin e Art Hostesses for the evening w ill he M rs. G erald Houston. M r*. Rob­ ert Reed, and Mrs. Ja c k W eber. NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR FAST SERVICE /ne most Laundry Service Open 7 a.rn to 6:30 p m. Monday-Saturday — ** IM* «| MU .IL. Dear Diary... Af I take my pen in hand, I take my bottle of Coke in the other hand! Ye«, dear diary, where would I be without Coca-Cola? Ju«t a social outcast. Why, everybody drinks Coke! John and Bill and B a r r y and C h a rle y. Horace too. Confidentially, I think IU have another bottle of Coke. Cu“('. Choo'-e from the * rqe v°- eotion of beau tifu l, p ra c tic e ' g ift Hem* a t the C o - O p , a^d re m e m b e r yo u r C ash R eo a*® on al! g 'fts and supplies. •ftsfincfite M n O n The D rag 2268 G u a d a lu p e 2246 G u a d a lu p e S tre e t O • O P » C O * O P » C O * O P t C O « O P * C O * O P * C O « O P * C O * O P « C O « O P « C O * O P * C O « O F Salem re fre sh e s y o u r taste -'air-softens" every p u ff o ? o ■V• o o O ■o• o o• o ■o• o o• o a• o o• o “0• o o• o • o o• o *0• o o• 0 1 • o o• 0 1 • n o• 0 1 • o o• Solid opportunities with solid state devices rf nf W estern E le c tr a s job i* to m a n u fa c tu re the ■ "n ew arts products that are ( hanging the science mut ations. It s a job w h ic h offers you a t halleng- r--a chance to pl.in n e w methods of m ass produc- ie r n te devices, -im proving kinds of transistors, [Aecial purpose electron tubes, etc. be w ith a com p an y that is expanding rapid!** in \t present our A lle n to w n and L a u re ld a le , P a , e devoted exclusive);, to making electro n devices, g new plant is under construction in K a n sas ( itv. is of the B ell T elephone System for these products ■asing daily and w ill m u ltip ly enorm ously w ith the I ha (rom e ( crilra l Offic e s w itc h in g now boti of rial operation. devices are ch an g in g the scene at all ou r Miami- (m n I plants as thev go into the startling new on* products d e v e lo p e d by our associates at Bel ne Laboratories. transm ission ut to submarine c a b le am plifiers, our p ro d u c ts vail I rom m icrow ave for c re a tiv e production engineering, inst an d m erchandising m eth o d*, (lu r nib for and the U S governm ent bas grown to thi art* n o w ou r of the n a tio n s ‘Top l l ” in \n d so u r chance to p la y an important p gi ow th is solid! on planning, B e ll Svstpm tit vv lie) p vv a ast rial sale*. ii our future O p p o r t u n i t i e s •*(»• t o r e l e c t r i c a l m e c h a n ic a l c h e m i c a l e n g i n e e r , a» w e l l a t p h y t i c a l *o e n c e , i n d u s t r i a l , ci v i l a n d l i b e r a l o r t * , a n d b u n - n « » » m a jo r * fo r m o i# i n f o r m a t i o n g a t yo u r c o p y o f C o n n d n i a C a i e e r a l W e t t e r n H e c l n c fr o m y o u r P la c e m e n t O ffic e r O r w r it e C o lle g e R e l a t i o n * R o o m 6105, W e * » e r n E le c tric C o m p a n y , 195 B t o o d w a y , N e w Y o r k 7, N Y Se »ur* to a r r a n g e fo r a W e it e r n E le c t r ic i n t e r v i e w w h e n th e B r ll S y s te m re c ru itin g t e e m v is it* y o u r c o m p u t . Western MSMUUCtutttafc ANO turn* UN r or TMI U U *rt'|M . TH -I Man* * J -t ig * * n t e * « md t u f f M Pa ti * *'* tv -is ( Mn f .■"’Bi*. O' h ■ a Bg Recrate,Ii f*ttl#t Pf nr»>nn * j - UP- a I . d em I f 8 ‘fa« K Y North Andover. III., **4 f**tyg* C■ 32 c n - u and m e a at on N u c q . v ; j> r , » 16 e itiN G#n*rai H M oq ti»rt*ti, 1S5 B ro a c e a / , M e Y o n 7. ll, i, (. rested C / For the cool, fresh soft­ ness in Salem's smoke is the very essence of springtime. This most refreshing cigarette of all is made even more so by Salem's special High Porosity paper that “ air-soften§” the s m o k e . Y ou’ll be delighted with Salem's springtime freshness -- its rich, tobacco taste. Smoke refreshed . . « smoke Salem! • menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • modern filter, too